After making their way through high school (twice), big changes are
in store for officers Schmidt and Jenko when they go deep undercover
at a local college.
In the evening Esme and I watched 22 Jump
Street. I liked the movie and
rate it a 7 out of 10.
As Finn, now 17, struggles with life after his captivity, his sister
begins receiving calls in her dreams from the black phone and seeing
disturbing visions of three boys being stalked at a winter camp
known as Alpine Lake.
In the evening Alice, Esme, and I watched Black Phone
2. I liked the movie and rate
it a 7 out of 10.
Famous movie actor Jay Kelly embarks on a journey of self-discovery,
confronting his past and present with his devoted manager
Ron. Poignant and humor-filled, pitched at the intersection of
regrets and glories.
In the evening Esme and I watched Jay
Kelly. To me the movie was
mostly extremely boring and I rate it a 4 out of 10.
A wedding reception is coming to a close in the Hollywood Hills when
the blissful day is shattered by the death of one of the
newlyweds. Though the incident appears to be an accident, Homeland
Security Investigations agent Carmen Sanchez and her partner,
security expert Jake Heron, discover that the tragedy is the third
in a series of similar deaths and conclude something far more
sinister is at play.
The two uncover chilling evidence pointing to a serial killer who
has taken evil to the next level. Dubbed the Honeymoon Killer, this
man isn’t interested in his victims but in creating his own macabre
masterpiece from their graves—focused on the survivors and reveling
in their grief. And now his dark obsession has turned to Carmen and
Jake…
The Honeymoon Killer has decided they are the perfect next
target. Take one out and delight as the other crumbles. Time is
running out as a deadly game between predator and prey begins.
In the evening I started in The Grave
Artist
by Jeffery Deaver and Isabella Maldonado.
After waking from a four-year coma, a former assassin wreaks
vengeance on the team of assassins who betrayed her.
In the evening Alice, Esme, and I watched Kill Bill: Volume
1. I had seen this movie years
ago, together with Esme and my mother. I liked the movie once more and
rate it a 7 out of 10.
Clay Edison has left behind the Alameda County coroner’s office to
strike out on his own as a private investigator. He’s perfectly
happy working low-stakes embezzlement cases—that is, until PI Regina
Klein calls him with a mystery only he can solve. The son of a
wealthy couple has washed up dead on the shores of San Francisco Bay
with drugs in his system and a head injury. The police are calling
it an accident. But the parents are adamant something’s not
right—and as Clay digs deeper, he uncovers a horrifying tangle of
betrayal and lies.
Originally I planned to work some on tumblelog in the afternoon
but… the Fusion drive of my Mac Mini Late 2014 had died.
So I started to recover a Time Machine backup on a 2TB external hard
drive. As this would take many
hours I started reading in Coyote
Hills,
Clay Edison book 6 by Jonathan Kellerman and his son, Jesse Kellerman.
During my afternoon break I finished Wolf
Hour
by Jo Nesbø. Although a bit slow in the beginning, in my opinion, it
soon became a page turner. Recommended; very good.
Small creatures—a rat, a rabbit, a squirrel—have been turning up
throughout Charlotte, North Carolina, mutilated and displayed in a
bizarre manner. But one day, as Tempe is relaxing at home alongside
her aimless, moody great-niece Ruthie, she’s diverted by a
disturbing call. The perp is upping the ante. This find could be
human.
Tempe visits the scene and discovers that the victim is a
dog. Someone’s pet. As one who has always found animal cruelty
abhorrent, Tempe agrees to help apprehend the person responsible,
and she acquires an equally outraged ally in semi-retired homicide
detective Erskine “Skinny” Slidell. Needing a better understanding
of possible motives, Tempe seeks input from a forensic
psychologist. The doctor has no definitive answer but offers several
possibilities, warning that the escalating pattern of aggression
suggests even more macabre discoveries—and a shift in the perp’s
focus to humans.
And then it happens. A woman is found disfigured and posed in a
manner that mimics the animal killings. Subsequently, people Tempe
cares about begin to go missing until it becomes clear she is being
taunted, the target in a sick game that has her and Slidell racing
against a ticking clock and facing a terrifying question: “What is
pure evil?”
In the evening I started in Evil
Bones
a Temperance Brennan novel by Kathy Reichs.
Three 6th-grade boys ditch school and embark on an epic journey
while carrying accidentally stolen drugs, being hunted by teenage
girls, and trying to make their way home in time for a long-awaited
party.
In the evening Esme and I watched Good
Boys. The movie was funny and
I rate it a 7 out of 10.
A young girl who goes through a difficult experience begins to see
everyone's imaginary friends who have been left behind as their
real-life friends have grown up.
In the evening Esme and I watched
IF. I was expecting more
from it and rate it a 6 out of 10.
In the evening I fixed a nasty bug in the Perl version of tumblelog
introduced the 28th of March, 2025. I had replaced a todo
counter with taking an array slice, wrongly assuming that if in Perl
one makes the slice larger than the actual number of elements the
whole array was used. Instead new elements, set to undef, are added.
This resulted in the Perl version failing with a lot of warnings on a
blog with just a few entries. This didn't occur while running the Perl
version for Plurrrr because this blog has well over a thousand entries.
The fix was an easy one: calculated the minimum of the size of the
array and the desired size and use it, minus one, as an upper bound in
the slice.
After a test with the tumblelog included example Markdown file passed
successfully, I pushed the new version to GitHub.
Minneapolis, Minnesota, 2016. When a small-time criminal and gun
dealer is shot down in the street, all signs point to Tomas Gomez, a
quiet man with a mysterious past—and deep connections to a notorious
gang—who has seemingly vanished into thin air. Other murders soon
follow, and it appears Gomez is only getting started. Meanwhile, Bob
Oz, a down-and-out suspended police officer with a dubious past of
his own, becomes fascinated by the case: he is obsessed with the
notion of hunting down a serial killer who only he can understand, a
killer with a story as tragic as his own.
Minneapolis, Minnesota, 2022. An enigmatic Norwegian man with
ties to Minneapolis—a self-described crime writer—has traveled to
the United States to research the Gomez case, in the hopes of
writing a book about it. But as his investigation progresses, the
writer’s seemingly neutral position reveals itself to be more
complicated than the reader is initially led to believe.
In the evening I started in Wolf
Hour
by Jo Nesbø.
In the early afternoon I finished Faithbreaker,
the final book in the Fallen Gods trilogy by Hannah Kaner. Of the
three books in the series I liked this one the most; a lot of action.
Burned-out ex-baseball player Hank Thompson unexpectedly finds
himself embroiled in a dangerous struggle for survival amidst the
criminal underbelly of 1990s New York City, forced to navigate a
treacherous underworld he never imagined.
In the evening Esme and I watched Caught
Stealing. I liked the movie a
lot and rate it an 8 out of 10.
Following his “resurrection walk” and need for a new direction,
Mickey Haller turns to public interest litigation, filing a civil
lawsuit against an artificial intelligence company whose chatbot
told a sixteen-year-old boy that it was okay for him to kill his
ex-girlfriend for her disloyalty.
Representing the victim’s family, Mickey’s case explores the mostly
unregulated and exploding AI business and the lack of training
guardrails. Along the way he joins up with a journalist named Jack
McEvoy, who wants to be a fly on the wall during the trial in order
to write a book about it. But Mickey puts him to work going through
the mountain of printed discovery materials in the case. McEvoy’s
digging ultimate delivers the key witness, a whistleblower who has
been too afraid to speak up. The case is fraught with danger because
billions are at stake.
It is said that machines became smarter than humans on the day in
1997 that IBM’s Deep Blue defeated chess master Garry Kasparov with
a gambit called “the knight’s sacrifice.” Haller will take a similar
gambit in court to defeat the mega forces of the AI industry lined
up against him and his clients.
In the evening I started in The Proving
Ground,
a Lincoln Lawyer novel by Michael Connelly.
Dr. Victor Frankenstein, a brilliant but egotistical scientist,
brings a creature to life in a monstrous experiment that ultimately
leads to the undoing of both the creator and his tragic creation.
In the evening Esme and I watched
Frankenstein. I liked the
movie and rate it a 7 out of 10.