Chuck Wendig: Terribleminds

Apple-Obsessed Author Fella

Apple Review #11: Holstein (With bonus Ruminations On Art Vs Audience)

The push and pull of art is, I think, the part where you do it for yourself versus where you do it for other people.

And yes, this is sort of about me making my weird apple videos.

And no, I don’t think my weird apple videos are art.

Bear with me.

When we talk about art and writing and the making of cool things we sometimes frame it as ART vs COMMERCE, but I think that’s a bit of a false dichotomy — or, at least, the deeper struggle is that thing I said at the fore: making it for yourself versus making it for an audience. Commerce in that sense is represented by audience — the thing you make? You want it to be seen or heard or experienced, and in theory (and in hope) someone is willing to throw money at you for that thing. At the same time, you had to kind of get there on your own, somehow. You had a love of a thing and at some point just wanted to make the thing, do the thing, be the thing, without necessarily having that muddied by the expectations of a mass, invisible, unknowable audience.

It’s important to find that balance. I expect that people who just make art for themselves — they’re probably pretty happy about it, I guess, and I don’t think it’s wrong to be that way or approach the making of cool things in that manner. On the other hand, art is so keenly part of the human experience and the human connection — you make a thing, sometimes inadvertently, sometimes quite on purpose, in order to put this squirming tether into the world in the hopes that your seeking tendril finds another seeking tendril and forms a connection. I often say storytelling is a shout in the dark: you’re hoping someone will hear you, and shout back. It’s an exhortation against loneliness, but it’s also fine if it’s an emblem of that loneliness, instead. Just you making something in the midst of your own existence, kept and considered only by you.

On the other hand, I think there are people who only care about the audience (or, the crass version, only care about the money and attention it brings). I don’t think this is wrong or bad, either — it just is. I think the danger is maybe you have no creative True North, right? You’re just a compass spinning, willing to make whatever others want rather than having any kind of perspective or an angle that’s yours or anything lensed through the unique human experience that is you. You want to please everyone, but that’s impossible, and at a certain point one of the things that actually attracts other humans to your work is how you parse an idea through all the squishy gnarly filters that comprise your heart and mind. They want the weird shape your own personal Play-Doh Shape-Making Factory extrudes, y’know?

I knew someone in the game writing space Way Back When who was genuinely a very very good writer but had little interest in doing what outlines asked of him and didn’t really like editorial notes or feedback from anyone, and as a result was in this space of making his own content by resisting the audience (and, further, the client). I also know writers who are like freelance guns-for-hire, and will write anything at all for anyone — not just for the paycheck but just to say YES to whatever comes across their door, and ultimately I think the work can end up reading a little hollow because it doesn’t have that mark of their own individual spiritual-emotional-intellectual fingerprint. There’s just no special sauce, you know? Like it’s missing a bit of soul. Again, there’s no wrong to any of this — it’s all about choice and who you are as a maker of cool things, but at the end of the day, for me, the goal is to find the balance of making stuff I want to make and making stuff people want to in some way experience. Letting my own freak flag fly, but also hoping very hard it looks like your freak flag, a little bit, too.

So anyway yeah okay I’ll still make my doofy little apple videos. I like making ’em and some folks seem to like watching ’em so away we go.

And now, an apple review.

My review of a Holstein apple from Scott Farm, VT, rec’d late Sept:

No, it’s not a cow.

It moos not, for ’tis an apple.

There is frankly nothing cow-like about the apple, not in taste or smell or appearance. Fruit is mysterious!

Anyway.

The Holstein — or the Holsteiner Cox, the Holsteinerapfel — is a German apple that either has Cox’s Orange Pippin as a parent or was a sport of the Cox’s. (A sport is a random genetic mutation that produces a divergent fruit, and then you take that sucker and graft its branches onto another tree to continue this new alternate universe version of the original fruit. Because clearly mutations are actually just intrusions from an alternate dimension. This is just science, you cannot disagree.)

I am ever a fan of this apple — it’s very much like the Cox’s Orange Pippin, usually just bigger, and sometimes with punchier flavors. It’s often an aromatic apple (which is a romantic way of saying smelly but in a good way) — tropical fruit forward with big pineapple karate happening in the mouth. Usually got a big burst of juice. (I was going to say, “it’s a squirter,” but I didn’t, and you’re welcome.) Further, it’s a fairly pretty apple. A little lopsidey, maybe, but that gives it character — and it takes the blushing orange of the Cox’s and dials it up, brighter, sunnier, bolder.

This batch brought all of that. And it also brought some curious additions.

I ate two out of the three I have and both had these, ahh, additions.

First: smell, very buttery pineapple smell.

Second: the bite. First apple was a bit softer, second apple, firmer. The first apple seems to be on its way out of the Zone of Deliciousness in terms of its time off the tree. Gonna judge more on the second apple regarding its score, but both were coarse-grained, and if this apple wore Yoga pants, those pants would have JUICY written across in the ass in a jaunty cursive font.

Third: the flavor, you know, yeah, it’s pineapple, it’s a bit vanilla-sugar-cookie, it’s a little lemon-orange brightness, though not as bright as some have been, not quite buzzing on the lips.

And now, the weird part.

Both apples had this smell-slash-taste that on the video I kind of described as a bleachy, cleaning detergenty vibe, but umm, there’s also something else it reminds me of? If you know, some trees (like old chestnut trees, RIP the American Chestnut, also please watch this fascinating video about the American Chestnut tree and efforts to bring it back from its weird interstitial realm of not-quite-extinct) when they blossom have an, uhhh, odor, that some have described to smell a little like, err, well, ahh, let’s call it jizz. So, this apple brought a little of that. Not a lot! Just, “what if vanilla jizz were a scent at Yankee Candle?”

And then the second apple also brought with it this faintly sulfurous eggy hell-stink with it. Just a moment’s whiff. So brief you barely notice it but also it’s an eggy hell-stink, so you’re gonna notice it.

What’s fascinating is, when I peeled the rest of each, these off-flavors dissipated. I’m not entirely sure why that is, as I am no APPLEOLOGIST and merely an AMATEUR HOUR APPLE ADVENTURER, and though I am head of the APPLE SNACK GANG, that confers upon me no special knowledge! But! I do know that the skin contains a lot of zesty molecules and volatile esters concentrated there, and so certainly the skin brings different flavors and scents to the party, and removing the skin and revealing only the sweet precious apple meat isolates different expressions.

Whatever. Anyway. Once peeled, they got infinitely more pleasing.

So, I’m still gonna call these an 8.2, even though on a better year they’d be a full point or more higher.

(Reviews so far this yearHoneycrispSweetieCrimson CrispKnobbed RussetCortlandMaiden’s BlushCox’s Orange PippinReine des ReinettesIngrid Marie, Hudson’s Golden Gem)

Holstein: Not a cow, nor a pineapple, peel for maximum non-jizziness?

Kathleen S. Allen: Five Things I Learned Writing The Resurrectionist

Death is just the beginning.



When seventeen-year-old Dilly Rothbart finds her recently deceased father’s hidden journal, her entire world is upended―for what she finds within are the steps to bring a dead soul back to life. 

Intent on finishing her father’s work and establishing herself as the greatest scientist in history, Dilly plunges into a medical underworld of corpse-stealing, grave-robbing, and even murder. And when her twin sister steps in the way of her studies, she’ll do whatever is necessary to secure the recognition she deserves.



This twisty, atmospheric, Frankensteinian tale is about a group of ambitious young scientists who descend into corruption when a breakthrough discovery grants them the power of gods.


IT’S OKAY TO START OVER AS MANY TIMES AS YOU NEED TO

I started this novel in 2014 as a young adult reimagining of Jack the Ripper with the main character being the daughter of JTR. However, because it evolved into being more the father’s story than the daughter’s, I decided to start over and write a reimagining of my favorite book. 

I CAN NEVER HAVE TOO MANY COPIES OF FRANKENSTEIN (20 so far) AND WHY IT SPEAKS TO ME

Frankenstein is my favorite book (I read it when I was eight and fell in love with gothic horror). It’s—dare I say it—the book of my heart. It led me down the path of other gothic novels like Dracula, Wuthering Heights, Jane Eyre, The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, The Picture of Dorian Gray, The Raven and other Edgar Allan Poe works to name a few.

The gist of it is I wrote this novel because I’ve always been fascinated by the concept of “the other” which Mary Shelley explores in Frankenstein. The term “the other” is a philosophy term used by several philosophers and writers to describe someone who is different than the societal norm. This “other” is ostracized from regular society and is perceived as different from society and therefore shunned. As a child I often felt like “the other.” I was a gifted child often bored with schoolwork. I learned to read at the age of three and by five I was reading adult (no not those kinds!) books way beyond my age. I often lugged giant tomes to school like The Complete Works of Shakespeare (in the third grade) to read during silent  reading time. Or when I finished my work which was usually quickly done. I memorized The Raven by Poe in the third grade to recite in front of the class. Add to the fact my family moved often so it was difficult to make friends since I never knew how long I’d be staying, I didn’t fit in. 

Writing a character who didn’t fit into whatever role society deemed she should fit into appealed to me. 

This led me to write a story from the point-of-view from a seventeen-year-old Victorian who despite being told over and over again she can’t pursue her dream of becoming a surgeon she persists. She is relentless in her pursuit of this ambition to the eventual detriment to herself shaking her belief in what she’s capable of doing. She fights to claw her way back to her own true self as she questions her motives surrounding the decisions she makes.

WRITING HISTORICAL FICTION IS FUN! 

I love to do research. I even worked as a research assistant for a university professor once and so I went down the rabbit hole of all things Mary Shelley. Did you know she had a half-sister named Fanny Imlay (she was three when Mary was born) who unalived herself at the age of twenty-two soon after Mary wrote Frankenstein? In fact she was helping Mary edit Frankenstein. It was rumored she might have been in love with Mary’s beau, the poet Percy Bysshe Shelley and her feelings were not reciprocated. Or perhaps she failed to find her footings among the strict societal standards for women of the Victorian era. We’ll never know. 

EDITING IS IMPORTANT AND IT’S WHERE YOUR STORY SHINES

So many writers, especially new ones think they’ll edit once maybe twice and be done. Oh, sweet summer child…no. This is my process and it’s not everyone’s. You have to find what works for you. 

I usually start with a character. I consider myself a pantser meaning I don’t plot or outline. I rarely know the ending ahead of time either. I let the story show me where it’s going. My first drafts are bare bones but each edit puts more and more flesh on the bones until it’s a fully-formed story. And I did many, many, many (ad infinitum) edits.

EASTER EGGS GALORE

I like doing plot twists and putting Easter eggs about Mary Shelley in the book because how could I not? See if you can find them!

Writing Dilly’s story was and is one of my greatest achievements. I hope you enjoy reading this book as much as I enjoyed writing it.


Kathleen S. Allen is a young adult writer of gothic horror, historical, fantasy, and speculative fiction. She has published poems, short stories, novellas, and novels. She prefers dark to light, salty to sweet, and tea to coffee. She is a fan of K-Pop, classic rock, and British detective shows. She lives in Los Angeles with a sassy Tortoiseshell cat.


The Resurrectionist: Macmillan | Bookshop.org | Amazon | B&N

Kathleen S. Allen: Website | Bluesky | Instagram | TikTok

Apple Review #10: Hudson’s Golden Gem

WE MUST BETRAY THE ALGORITHM AND BURN IT ALL DOWN wait I’m getting ahead of myself, sorry. Man, that’s a helluva way to open a fucking apple review, isn’t it? All right, to rewind a little —

Yesterday, I posted my video, uhh, “review” (more like a mukbang apple snack gang first impressions video, if we’re being honest) of the Hudson’s Golden Gem apple, but in it I posited the question: should I even keep doing them? The videos, I mean, not necessarily these reviews — it’s just, you know, Instagram is nice enough to show you the metrics on the posts that Instagram isn’t nice enough to actually show other people. Meaning, I get to see how poorly some posts do, largely in part because Instagram does not show everyone everything from the people they follow. The algorithm there is dominant, and prioritizes in your own feed not the accounts you follow but rather, a shit-ton of random accounts. And this has only gotten worse.

(Hilariously, every time I do a video that’s over three minutes, Instagram warns me a couple times — HEY WE DON’T SHOW VIDEOS OVER THREE MINUTES TO PEOPLE, ALERT, ALERT, YOUR CONTENT IS CRUSHINGLY LONG, THREE MINUTES AND THIRTY SECONDS IS TOO MUCH, WE WILL BURY YOU UNDER THE DIGITAL EARTH FOR THIS CRIME OF ATTEMPTING TO TEST PEOPLE’S ATTENTION SPANS, WE HAVE SENT THE POLICE TO YOUR HOUSE, YOU’RE GOING TO JAIL FOR A THOUSAND YEARS — and then I look at my top videos and they’re all videos longer than three fucking minutes. Is Instagram just fucking with me? I think it is.)

The additional fun is, of course, that I’m not only subject to The Almighty Algorithm, but further, I’m posting on yet another social media platform owned and operated by monsters who are actively, not passively, making the world worse. Not just in a, oh ha ha we’re ruining attention spans and posting slop slop slop way, but in the also we’ve helped develop a surveillance state and soon everyone will be wearing our privacy-destroying narc tech and oh sure we’ve helped a genocide or two way.

(You have to love how every tech company with any goodwill has, over the years, not only flagrantly shit itself, but further, has leaned hard into our current dystopia. “Ten years ago, we started our beloved app that delivers cat-themed videos to your phone and cat-based knick-knicks to your door. Now, Catbox CEO Jean-Luc Bandersnoot announces Catbox’s new initiative, where we are investing in a series of hunter-seeker rectal drones who will enter the colons of those who we believe have slandered us online. These drones will attach firmly to the intestinal wall, threatening to explode the next time our enemies even think of saying mean things about us. And don’t forget to subscribe to Jean-Luc’s new newsletter: this week he talks about how being a billionaire is basically like being a god, and how you’re all peons, and how he’s building a rocketship to take his friends to a planet he’s seen in his dreams that he calls NEW NARCISSUS. Thanks for using Catbox!”)

(I think I’ve gotten off the point a little.)

So I was like, what do I do? Are people even seeing these videos? My aim with them was never to like, Gain Clout or Make Content — I was basically going to eat apples and apple-related bullshit anyway, so I might as well film it. Which further gets me more comfortable doing stuff on video, because honestly I’m not that comfy with it? I thought it would be fun. And it is. But being yoked to a merciless algorithm at the same time caaaaan be a bit demoralizing.

Then again, maybe that’s just life in 2025. Endlessly demoralizing moments! Like with AI slop okay I won’t get started on AI slop again sorry, sorry, trying to delete *hits keyboard a few times, gives up*

I thought — do I want to go to TikTok? Maybe there’s an active AppleTok community over there that isn’t posting about capital-A Apple content but rather, lowercase-a apple fruit content. Or maybe I could be the first! Maybe I could colonize that space and ohhh that’s right TikTok is now further compromised by the Trump administration soooo fuck that, I guess.

Jesus, should I post these things to YouTube?

Well, that sounds terrifying.

Anyway, so I posited the question: should I keep doing them? The responses were quite kind. A few folks said they look forward to them, especially given *gesticulates broadly* All The Everything Going On All the Time, and as such, I think that means I’ll keep doing them. Whoever watches them, watches them, and whoever doesn’t, doesn’t — but I do think it’s a nice distraction for me, and maybe for you, too. If I give a little bit of weird apple joy to five people and am allowed to spread my sinister apple gospel, hey, I can take some time out of my week to keep that apple train a-rollin’.

All right, let’s review this next weird little fucker of an apple.

My review of the Hudson’s Golden Gem from Manoff Orchard, early Oct:

Okay, the Hudson’s Golden Gem isn’t that weird of an apple — but I do so love its name, which sounds like a panacea sold by some snake oil salesman out of a rickety wagon. COME GETCHER HUDSON’S GOLDEN GEM! CURES WHAT AILS YOU: IT’LL STIFLE YOUR GOUT, PUT THE VIM IN YOUR VAPORS, IT’LL EXORCIZE ALL YOUR ILL SPIRITS!

My apple encyclopedia (yes, I have one — this one, in fact, a seven-volume beast apparently soon out of print and now on sale) tells me that the apple was discovered in a fencerow by an A.D. Hudson, and sold at his (?) nursery in Tangent, Oregon. A largely unexciting origin, except perhaps for the part where I learned there is a town in Oregon called Tangent, which is great and belongs in a book somewhere. If only I knew someone who wrote those.

The Hudson’s Golden Gem has always been a mixed bag for me — each one has been of considerably different quality, and also each offering divergent qualities. Some of this is due to it being a fruit that apparently hangs long on the tree and does well in storage — and even after a month, changes itself considerably. (So I may need to keep my others in storage, just to see.) The time before last I had one that tasted so much like banana it was fucking silly. Time before that, the one I had was mealy and mushy and made my heart sad. Last time, the taste was good but the crunch was so dense and deep it was uncanny — the texture of raw potato.

So this time, what did I get?

I got a fucking pear.

This was a pear. Sure, it looks like apple and, y’know, is an apple, but also, it’s definitely a pear cosplaying as an apple, or an apple cosplaying as a pear. If you tasted this blindfolded, you’d absolutely believe you were eating a pear. And that’s fine. It’s lovely. It’s juicy. It’s over-sweet, pretty sub-acid, which for me, and not for you, is a ding — but you can look past that little dent by enjoying that it also brings a little complexity to the party: a hit of that fennel-anise vibe, and this time, no strong banana taste, just a distant tastebud kiss of banana Runts candy.

The crunch was not off-putting this time — still a deep, bone-vibrating crunch, with a bit of a chew to the dense, fine-grained applemeat, but this time it didn’t feel quite so existential, quite so cosmic horror.

The skin, roughly russeted, is not something you should care overmuch to eat, but I’m sure eating it will do wonders for your colon. And that’s the second time I’ve referenced bowels in this post, and I can’t do it a third time or I’m pretty sure I get flagged by the algorithm ha ha just kidding there’s no algorithm here, there’s just me blogsharting into the void! But I control it, I own it, and here I can say whatever I want, ha ha ha ha you fools.

Anyway. Nice apple if you can get it. It’s new to my local orchard — they tend to keep their odder heirlooms only for cider production and I’m hoping they also are willing to sell me some Esopus Spitzenburgs as eating apples because I love ’em, but they only turn them into boozy business.

Gonna call this a… let’s be generous, say 8 out of 10.

(Reviews so far this yearHoneycrispSweetieCrimson CrispKnobbed RussetCortlandMaiden’s BlushCox’s Orange PippinReine des Reinettes, Ingrid Marie.)

Hudson’s Golden Gem: It’s a fucking pear

Apple Review #9: Ingrid Marie

I think there’s something interesting too about the association with apples and America. Apples, a non-native fruit, are thought to come from an ancestor in Kazakhstan — and were largely brought here in apple format by Europeans. The Dutch in particular, I believe. It was thought that the indigenous true Americans were unsophisticated regarding agriculture, but we know this isn’t true in a number of directions, including with apples — they had mastered grafting and reportedly had apple orchards grown not from seed but from that grafting practice, and of course this level of abundance and technique could not be tolerated by the intruding colonists, who would run the indigenous owners from the orchards, apparently sometimes girdling the trees so that the whole orchard slowly died and forced the owners to abandon the trees. We brought they apple. They embraced it. We said, no, not for you, not like that, only for us. So even there, so early, the apple is associated with colonization — it is, in a sense, an intrusive, invading fruit. And then I think now of how the apple still represents America so well — how we like things to be sanitized and sweet and uncomplicated, how we don’t like the weird-looking apples, the different apples, how we want them to look a certain way, taste a certain way, and the rest can get fucked. How we still say, no, not for you, not like that, only for us, as we deny prosperity and refuse access and kick people out of the country — zip-tying children before disappearing the parents. Relentlessly pruning this tree even of its healthiest branches and most interesting fruit to satisfy that cruel, colonizer urge. Polishing this old rotten apple until its just raw red mush, yet still insisting, this is how it must be, this is how it must look, eat the apple. Tangentially, I also wonder how lower rates of drinking (supposedly, at least) among younger generations or even older generations (often due to GLP-1 agonists like Ozempic) might impact apple production for cider, which could limit more of those interesting heirloom varieties which only end up in ciders, anyway. What do we lose when we simplify, commodify, when we eradicate nuance and seek uniformity? A lot, I think. So I think a lot about the apple and America. And it’s hard not to think about America right now, being on the very edge of so many bad things. Odd, ramblings, perhaps foolish thoughts. Which is to say, maybe I should just eat a fucking apple and shut up because this has gone on too long.

Today, a very not-American apple —

The Danish-in-origin apple: Ingrid Marie.

(Also called the Karin Schneider, which is to say it’s named after either your homeroom teacher from 8th grade, or the German version of the lady who always has to speak to the manager.)

My review of the Ingrid Marie apple, early Oct, from Scott Farm (VT):

This will be a very good example of why the ratings I give in the videos can change, sometimes dramatically, toward the end. Because initially I ate that apple and was mostly like, “well, fuck this apple,” not in a way where I wanted to step on it and smash it with my heel so that none other may taste its foulness, but rather because it was a dullard’s lump and why bother?

Thing is, I kept eating it — after peeling it, because I tend to peel the second half of the apple I eat, sometimes with a peeler, sometimes like a Neanderthal using my teeth — and found more and more to love about it, to the point where I juggled my score up considerably higher.

Anyway — to start, it’s a pretty apple. Like, very pretty. Richly red, with fingers of pale jade at the top. Almost too pretty to eat.

The initial flavor was honestly a bit underwhelming, or maybe just regular ol’ whelming, I don’t know. Mid, as the kids might say. A tart punctuation with a pleasing sweetness, but nothing off the charts — and texturally, those flavors were packed in a softer apple. Not mealy, really, but with little resistance — a sort of obey in advance kind of apple. An apple that acquiesces to the oppression of the teeth. And yet —

Then I peeled it and kept eating and found myself enjoying it more with every bite. I found a sour, savory pruney-tamarindy tang in there, a hint of date and raisin. The softer apple became less troubling without having to chew the skin in contrast. Its cream-yellow flesh surprised me as I ate it. And in the end, I found myself enjoying it. Reviews I read online were wildly divergent — some calling it bland, others calling about its intense flavor. I found it squarely in the middle, which made it a nice enough apple, indeed.

Bumping it from the 3.5 I gave it in the video here to a healthy 5.

Oh, looks like Staircase in the Woods is still $2.99, if you want to wander up a mysterious staircase and end up in a nightmare place!

(Reviews: HoneycrispSweetieCrimson CrispKnobbed RussetCortland, Maiden’s Blush, Cox’s Orange Pippin, Reine des Reinettes)

Ingrid Marie: A soft shrug turns to a nod and soon yields a small smile

Apple Review #8: Reine Des Reinettes, Plus A Moment On The Subject Of Sadness

Sometimes I think, why apples? Why do I care? Why is this interesting to me? And it’s easy to lean on the… trivia, the history, all the fiddly bits about where the apple comes from, how it fits into American history, American culture, its ties to myth, to religion, to Prohibition, to how it reflects sin and how it reflects purity, how Johnny Appleseed fits into the story, how the FBI burned down cider orchards, why we say the phrase as American as apple pie. The history of apples, the agriculture of apples, the culture of apples — it’s a deep rabbit hole that is, apparently, filled to the brim with apples.

But I don’t think that’s it, for me. Not really.

I think it’s the… sadness they conjure. I don’t mean that an individual apple makes me sad. I don’t eat one, sobbing like a clown. Crunching into a juicy Cosmic Crisp doesn’t make me think about fights I had with my father, or when my dog died or something. But rather, it makes me think about books, and readers, and the culture at large because — okay, follow me here for a second — there are, what, thousands of apple varieties across the globe? In North America alone, some 2500 varieties of apple? And you go to the grocery store, how many do you see? At my store, you get, max, ten varieties, and that’s on a good day. You’ll find maybe more at your local orchard — but generally not many more. If there are 2500 varieties of apple in this country, you’ve never tasted… let’s go with, very optimistically, 2400 of those specimens. And that’s if you’re a diligent applehound, desperate to taste any apple you can slap into your clammy palm.

As a writer and as a reader, that makes me think of all the books no one will ever read. And not just read, but rather, remember. Let’s say there’s half a million books that are traditionally-published each year. Another couple million that are self-published. That’s new books. That come out every year. That you’ll never read, likely never even hear of. Months, years of effort and hope and dreams shoved into a book-shaped story-receptacle that just come and then go. And some of the books you have read will in ten years be forgotten. Maybe even by you! They’ll wander out of print. They’ll sink so low on e-book charts they join the rest of the pixilated slurry at the bottom of the digital drain. They, too, go away.

It’s like — you ever hear a song from a band in, say, the 60s or the 70s, and it’s a fucking banger, and you’ve never heard of the band before? And nobody you know has heard of that band? But that band had a career? And several albums? They did shows, had lives, maybe even had a hit or two, and now they’re ghosts, rarely summoned from the ashpile to wander the halls in the hopes of one grim and blurry sighting? One chord of music touching your ear?

Just as Big Agriculture has found the most basic-ass apples (looking at you, Red Delicious) in order to ship well, cost little, and be palatable to the lowest common denominator tastebuds, so too has Big Culture churned its way through art and music and story and shaved off all the interesting parts and curious bumps and extruded out a more pleasing tube of material — and that’s very cynical, I know, and also, I recognize, kind of wrong. Like, tons and tons of great books (and film and TV and music) get made and get (ugh I hate this word but it works with the apple comparison) consumed every year. It’s not like we’re starving for good art. But at the same time, that’s part of the problem. So much comes out and so much just fades into the wallpaper. And that’s in part because… it didn’t tickle the zeitgeist, it didn’t click with people, it wasn’t actually good, it was good but too weird, it was great but really too weird, it was too similar to something else that came out, or (and this one is quite likely) the companies that dictate the serving-of-said-art to the masses just didn’t put money and effort behind it. They wanted a Red Delicious but your book (or song or movie) is a Knobbed Russet so, eennh, sorry, get fucked, it’s gotta go. And that individual piece of art has its shot, and the shot makes no sound, it leaves no trace, it’s just a puff of smoke and the bullet tumbles forward, hitting nothing, eventually falling into the sea where it sinks, sinks, sinks, to the bottom. A graveyard of shots fired.

So apples, all the lost apples and forgotten apples and weird apples —

They make me a little sad because it makes me think of all the lost books, and the forgotten songs, and the weird art.

But, also, they make me happy because I’m able to rediscover these lost apples and perhaps talking about them makes you find them, too. And we can also do this with books, music, movies, whatever. Not just about the new thing, the shiny thing, the commodified fruit at the Big Mega Grocery Store — but old things, special things, precious things, lost things.

Put differently: find cool lost things and tell people about them.

OKAY, let’s do an apple review.

My review of a Reine des Reinettes apple from Scott Farm (VT), procured late September, eaten early October:

Some apples are really good, but not that interesting.

Some apples are really interesting, but they ain’t that good.

And then sometimes you find an apple that’s both.

And this, I think, is one of those.

The Reine des Reinettes, aka Golden Winter Pearmain, aka King of the Pippins even though Reine means Queen and Reinettes means… uhh, who the fuck knows. Little queen? (Googling it, you’ll find that Adam’s Apples blog talks about rebirth and froglets, so give that a go.) It’s fancy! It’s French!

Ooh-la-la.

A nice-sized apple, lightly russeted if that’s a thing, but not so rough you could scrub barnacles from a tugboat.

Medium to fine grained. Juicy, junior — real juicy.

First bite is full tilt pinball, just zoom to the moon with a tangerine citrus kick that puckers the mouth as it backfills with a complex sweetness — honey, anise, some kiwi. Plus a dried herb scent as you eat. When finished, a savory kind of sour kicks in and lingers — a funky tamarind twist. There is a slight astringency afoot — this almost powdery feel that makes it seem like you’re licking a moth’s wing as you eat. Likely from higher tannins. Still — not so astringent it scours the tongue.

Really love it. Happy to eat it. It’s a tasty, electric treat. The astringency maybe knocks it down a bit, as does the fact that there’s that thing where the flavor leaves before the apple does — it has a bit of a chew to it, so you’re still chewing while the apple goodness has fled the mouth. But just so. This isn’t like gum you’ve chewed hours past its flavor.

So, I didn’t rank it in the video here (I might stop ranking them in the video because honestly, I change it often enough as I eat the rest of the apple) (also does anybody actually watch the videos?) —

But I’m good to call this an 8 outta 10.

(Reviews so far this year: HoneycrispSweetieCrimson CrispKnobbed RussetCortland, Maiden’s Blush, Cox’s Orange Pippin)

(also, Staircase in the Woods is still $2.99 at your favorite e-book monger)

(also the book the apple sits on in that picture is Hot Wax, by ML Rio, an unfuckwithable rock-and-roll trauma bond novel you need to read)

Reine des Reinettes: A fancy French fuckboy, full of life, randy with lust

Spookytime Sales

Real quick, ye mighty Wendig readers on a budget — some sales are happening right now. I don’t know why they’re happening. I don’t know how long they will go on for. But they’re there now, so get on it —

Staircase in the Woods? $2.99 on digital. And that means it’s at all the proper sites, which is to say, Bookshop.orgKoboAmzAppleB&N, and so forth. I continue to be glad people are finding this book. Help others find it!

At the same sites, The Book of Accidents in e-book format: $4.99.

Zeroes and Invasive (two books set in the same world, ignore the stuff that says one is a sequel to the other) are both six bucks.

Blackbirds is apparently on the opposite of a sale, suddenly spiking to $16.99 for some godfucked reason, so I guess don’t buy that.

And Canines and Cocktails by me, Kevin Hearne and Delilah Dawson is an Audible Monthly Deal for October, whatever that means.

OKAY GOOD please check out the books if you haven’t (and libraries are also a truly excellent way to get these). If you’re so inclined to spread the word and tell folks, and leave a review, I’ll love you forever. Even after we die. Our corpses will have long gone to fetid mold and the clump of moist goo that once was my flesh will still love the wad of damp ooze that once was your flesh and one dark night we will run together, our ooze and our goo, and we will become one, and lightning will strike that spot on midnight that night in a fortuitous moment, and we will rise from the earth, alive again, one great miasmatic beast full of love. And lightning, probably.