When the man history would call Napoleon the Fourth arrived at Charles de Gaul airport, Chloe walked off the plane arm in arm with him with a shiny new robotic body that could pass as utterly human. She waved to the cameras and her fellow Frenchmen while bouncing down the stairs in her pink jacket and purple dress. Napoleon walked down the stairs in a black suit with a sedate and measured pace. She walked up to the microphone and shouted “Vive la France!” and the crowd went wild. He gave a measured speech calling for law and order and peace in France, and the crowd grew far more earnest. He gained the undying loyalty of the French with that speech and the actions that soon followed.
Pretty much every agrarian culture has some form of a Harvest Celebration in the fall. It’s usually after the food has been brought in from the fields and before the real cold sits in. It’s the time when we celebrate the food we’ll have to last through the winter, and often look to start slaughtering the animals we’re not going to need and won’t want to feed through that same winter.
Our own American version of Thanksgiving had its genesis when our earliest Colonists worked together with the local Indians to grow and harvest enough food for their coming winter. We weren’t prepared for the alien soil, weather, and types of plants, but the Indians knew it well and helped us prepare. So we had the traditional Indian and Pilgrim feast that children all over America reenact in plays and stories.
We didn’t call that first one Thanksgiving at the time of course. And turkey as we know it was not on the menu. It was a three-day feast, celebration, and game playing extravaganza between around fifty Pilgrims and twice that number of Indians. They ate deer, geese, ducks, wild turkeys, and fish and played shooting and throwing games. Probably did some healthy races to burn off the calories too.
We celebrated these Thanksgivings on and off over the next couple centuries until the Civil War changed everything. President Lincoln ordered the official adoption of a Day of Thanksgiving to celebrate and remember what we’ve lost and gained. The toil and suffering, the triumph and joy. To thank the Most High God for the gifts He’s given us.
That was the first of the modern American Thanksgivings, and we have done this every year since. Thanksgiving has become one of our Big Seven Holidays, and opens the entire Holiday Season in America that stretches through to Christmas and New Years. An entire season dedicated to bringing families and friends together, to eat, drink, and be merry. It all starts with Thanksgiving.
So have a Happy Thanksgiving and an amazing Holiday Season. And please remember why we do.
Trump pardoned a turkey today in honor of Thanksgiving Day. He had some fun with it, so I decided to have some fun with it as well. I hope you enjoy it.
Chloe established herself as a major part of the French Resistance against the Islamic Brotherhoods as the French government failed to effectively respond to the chaos. Her name and face filled billboards and computers everywhere, and she was one of many boogiemen the Brotherhoods pursued with single-minded abandon. She’d deployed her robotic bodies against them to good effect and enough could pass as human for her needs. She was ready for the big reveal of both herself and the man she’d picked to help her save France once and for all.
I watched Crimes of Grindelwald this weekend, making it my first movie in a while. I will say off the bat that it is a different beast from the first movie, and feels very much like the middle act in a trilogy. Fantastic Beasts is basically a monster hunter movie with a twist that introduces us to the new hero, and gives us a glimpse into the big bad and many of the supporting characters. It is a very good stand-alone film.
Crimes of Grindelwald is not a stand-alone film at all. It takes the characters we already know from the first movie, and gives them a bigger story to play in. It is a story about the future of the world as we know it and what the wizards will do about it. And it is a true prequel lead-in to the Harry Potter stories. We meet numerous characters and names we recognize from Harry Potter, and it really feels to me like Grindelwald is putting together the movement that Voldemort leads in Harry Potter’s time.
Fantastic Beasts is a movie you can watch without ever seeing any Harry Potter film. It’s just a fun movie set in the 1920s with wizards and fantastic beasts in it. Crimes of Grindelwald I think is a foundational movie of the franchise that will help show how the world Harry Potter grew up in came to be. It’s also just plain a fun movie to watch. It’s more serious, has fewer fantastic hi-jinks in it, and is a much more adult story than the first. It feels much more like the last Harry Potter film in a lot of good ways.
I enjoyed it, and I think most fans of Harry Potter will enjoy it. I give it two fantastic artifact-snatching grubby little paws way up.


Forge of War on Amazon
Angel Flight on Amazon
Angel Strike on Amazon
Angel War on Amazon
Wolfenheim Rising on Amazon
Wolfenheim Emergent on Amazon