CODA Short Film Review from @kleffnotes

One of the recent short films to appear in the LA Shorts Film Festival, CODA, focuses on a young dancer who is born to deaf parents. The writer/director of the film, Erika Davis-Marsh, film and television director who recently graduated with her MFA in Film and Television Production from the University of Southern California. She was a finalist for the competitive 2016 Television Academy Foundation’s Episodic Directing Internship. I had the opportunity to check out this film and wanted to share my thoughts on this inclusive work. Continue reading “CODA Short Film Review from @kleffnotes”

Nurturing Our Humanity Book Review from @kleffnotes

Riane Esler challenges the notion that human beings are prone to acts of violence and greed in her upcoming book, with anthropologist Douglas P. Fry, Nurturing Our Humanity: How Domination and Partnership Shape Our Brains, Lives, and Future. What she argues is that caring behavior is actually the default reaction humans will have and that through this we can build more humane and sustainable societies. This interdisciplinary approach to the topic of society and how it is shaped examines how the flexibility of the human brain can be used to create a more positive world. Continue reading “Nurturing Our Humanity Book Review from @kleffnotes”

So Many Angels Book Review from @kleffnotes

So Many Angels: A Family Crisis and the Community That Got Us Through It is the story of author Diane Stelfox Cook and her family’s journey forward after something completely unexpected happened to them. One night while with her two sons she receives a call from her husband that throws her world into turmoil. From that moment things just seem to get worse, but she and her family are never alone. In this story of strength, Cook shares how her community rallied around her and her boys in the moment they needed someone most. Continue reading “So Many Angels Book Review from @kleffnotes”

The Bi Line: Telling Tales in the Dark from @kleffnotes

I’ve been playing a little bit of television catch up now that my schedule is a little bit more flexible. Recently I finally watched Tales of the City, the recent limited series on Netflix, and the new CW show, In The Dark. While that second show isn’t focused on a queer character, her best friend identifies as a lesbian and I wanted to delve into her role. This article is a bit of a catch all since these shows aren’t exactly connected to each other, but that’s sometimes how my watching catch up goes. Continue reading “The Bi Line: Telling Tales in the Dark from @kleffnotes”

Hippie Cult Leader Book Review from @kleffnotes

This year marks 50 year anniversary of the tragic Manson Family Murders. This sensational moment frightened and continues to fixate the world. James Buddy Day, an award winning true crime producer, writer, and director, is recognized for a number of features focused on Charles Manson as well as on Casey Anthony, and The Slender Ma Stabbings. Hippie Cult Leader: The Last Words of Charles Manson presents new and exclusive interviews, including conversations with Charles Manson himself. Day delves into the theory of Helter Skelter and actively works to debunk this idea throughout the course of the narrative. Continue reading “Hippie Cult Leader Book Review from @kleffnotes”

Paper Maps, No Apps Book Review from @kleffnotes

Johnny Welsh has been a professional bartender for twenty-five years and even in a full bar he notices the ever present appearance of smart phones. People tune out and stare deep into their screens ignoring the world going on around them. In Paper Maps, No Apps: An Unplugged Travel Guide, Welsh did a bit of thinking and planning and decided to take on an unplugged experience. He and his girlfriend, Kristy, collected maps and contacted friends and set off on a road trip with no help from their phones once they were on their way. This is a story of their adventure, mostly, off the grid and how they did it all with paper maps and no apps. Continue reading “Paper Maps, No Apps Book Review from @kleffnotes”

Rouge Book Review from @kleffnotes

Richard Kirshenbaum drops readers into the world of excess and influence in the high class business world of America. Focused on four women and their influential careers spanning primarily from the early 1920s to roughly the 1950s, Kirshenbaum highlights powerful women and the secrets that seem to surround their lives. Beginning with an elaborate funeral, Rouge keeps you in the glittering world of the elite as it reveals the work that must be done to gain and maintain your position at the top of society. Continue reading “Rouge Book Review from @kleffnotes”

Dorothy and the Glass Key Book Review from @kleffnotes

Dorothy Alston was just fourteen when her father’s drunken behavior led to the death of her mother. She found a new home with her uncle on a farm in Florida, but thirty-four years after these events Dorothy is in a vegetative state and Ellen Steward, an administrator at the rehab facility Dorothy is being kept in, begins unraveling the story of how a glass key led Dorothy to where she is now. In the pages of Dorothy and the Glass Key Ellen will have to make a choice and if she fails to save the woman in her care she may lose may than she ever expected. Continue reading “Dorothy and the Glass Key Book Review from @kleffnotes”

Best Women’s Erotica of the Year Volume 5 Book Review from @kleffnotes

This year’s Cleis Anthology, Best Women’s Erotica of the Year Volume 5, is noted as the most outrageous one to date. For this new addition to the series authors were asked to submit their most “wild and over-the-top” stories. Some stories are tremendous out there in topic, but there are different takes and presentations of these curious stories that span the erotica genre. The final work is touted as a “ripped-from-real-life” tale that focuses on the specific subculture of aerialists. If you are looking for a read that will bring the heat and also keep you on your toes with each and every curious tale. Continue reading “Best Women’s Erotica of the Year Volume 5 Book Review from @kleffnotes”

In Case You’re Curious Book Review from @kleffnotes

In Case You’re Curious is a book for anyone and everyone. With sex so present in our daily lives, in media and on social media as primary examples, people have a lot of questions that sometimes they just feel too uncomfortable to ask. Now Google does exist, but you know sometimes searching a topic can lead to results that don’t make sense or can even lead to more confusion. With this book, brought to you by Planned Parenthood, you can find answers to an assortment of questions that span sex, sexuality, and really anything else that might pop into your mind no matter how old or experienced you think you might be. This is the perfect resource and I can definitely see it as being something parents with children about to go through or going through puberty finding exceptionally useful. Continue reading “In Case You’re Curious Book Review from @kleffnotes”