jesse_the_k: kitty pawing the surface of vinyl record (scratch this!)
Jesse the K ([personal profile] jesse_the_k) wrote2025-07-24 03:57 pm

boost: Jeangu Macrooy's Political Music Video That Made Me Smile

Thanks to the YouTube algorithm actually paying attention, as well as [personal profile] petra, please enjoy this snappy video with on-screen handwritten captions:

ExpandJeangu Macrooy - Independent Girls & Nasty Evil Gays )

used_songs: (Default)
opal trelore ([personal profile] used_songs) wrote2025-07-24 07:42 am
Entry tags:

Meme

Meme stolen from [personal profile] dine 

Last song I listened to: B-Boys Makin with the Freak - Beastie Boys (When I started this. Now, as I finish it, it's Hank Williams and the Drifting Cowboys' I Saw the Light)

Favorite color: Purple. Then dark green and black.

Currently watching: The last thing I watched was about 5 minutes of Astrid on the PBS app this morning.

Last movie: One of the Hunger Games movies was on while I was reading. E was watching it.

Currently reading:
The AI Con: How to Fight Big Tech's Hype and Create the Future We Want by Emily Bender

Coffee or tea: COFFEE! I like tea a lot, but I NEED coffee.

Sweet/savory/spicy: Spicy

Relationship status: Married (until they outlaw gay marriage again)

Looking forward to: If I'm honest, it's hard to look forward to anything right now. I guess I'm looking forward to little stuff like DC coming over again Friday, sending some Postcrossing cards, making stuff ... someday I would like to travel again. 

Current obsessions: AI, the new job, Ted Lasso (I finished seasons 1-3 and am now hips deep in the subreddit, Stephen Graham Jones (Buffalo Hunter Hunter), and going to bookstores.

Last Googled: 3I/ATLAS - Someone here posted a link to this story and I thought there might be the potential for a fic in it, so I did some googling. It's going in the idea file.

Last thing you ate and really enjoyed: E's vegan stew from last night

Currently working on:
Replacing several light fixtures downstairs and looking for an idea that will inspire sriting.
galadhir: a blue octopus sits in a golden armchair reading a black backed novel (Default)
galadhir ([personal profile] galadhir) wrote2025-07-24 12:35 pm
Entry tags:

Recent reading

Maybe I should make a note of what I read, so they don't all blur into one.

Recently (in the last two weeks):

  1. The Masquerades of Spring, by Ben Aaronovitch
  2. A Wizard's Guide to Defensive Baking, by T.Kingfisher
  3. Nettle and Bone, by T. Kingfisher
  4. Rose/House by Arkady Martine
  5. Grandmother's Secrets by Rosina-Fawzia al Rawi

    (1) is a novella in the Rivers of London series about Isaac Newton's line of British official government wizards. Starring Thomas Nightingale in a rare trip abroad to visit 1920s New York and hunt down the maker of an enchanted saxophone.

Very Bertie Wooster dancing the Charleston in a gay club, and it's the novella that reveals Nightingale to be asexual. A rare win for the aces :)

(2) is a children's book in which a young wizard whose only gift is for working with dough is forced to find out exactly what she can do with it when her kingdom is in peril.

It's very well written - the plot escalates smoothly and it keeps you reading without being too busy or hectic. The prose is powerful but doesn't intrude. I enjoyed it but didn't really connect emotionally.

(3) follows a slow and unworldly (third, spare, novice nun) princess as she makes/finds allies in a quest to rescue her sister from the sister's husband. He is the prince of a neighbouring, much more powerful kingdom, and having murdered their elder sister is now abusing the middle sister.

I enjoyed this one much more for its blend of realistic dynastic politics and weird wizardly powers. I liked the characters more too, and they combined with the excellent workmanship of the author in a way I almost had feels about. (Not quite - my feels don't get engaged much any more, sadly.)

(4) A dead man turns up inside a hermetically sealed house run by a powerful AI, and a detective goes inside the house to try to solve the murder. This turns out to be a mistake. I enjoyed Arkady Martine's Teixcalaan series (A Memory Called Empire and A Desolation Called Peace) so I thought I might enjoy this too.

I am finding it haunting, and I appreciate her attempts to construct intelligences that are not human, but this one feels a bit like there is no plot, just an experience. And it's not a particularly pleasant experience. Rose House is not a particularly likeable character, even if its murder was in self defense. (Or was it?)

(5) A non-fiction book, partially a treatise on the origin of belly dancing and partially an autobiography.

I appreciated this as coming from within the culture where raqs sharqi originated, and it is a beautiful memoir of the author growing up with the dance. It was interesting to think of it as a private, indoors thing done by the women of the household chiefly for each other

sage: a white coffee cup full of roasted coffee beans (coffee)
sage ([personal profile] sage) wrote2025-07-23 06:22 pm
Entry tags:

What I'm Doing Wednesday

Expandbooks (Oken, Hope, Tarnas, Hamaker-Zondag) )

yarning
no yarn group this week. I was all showered and dressed and ready to go, and boom, migraine. Apparently my pulse skyrocketed to 144 when just out of the shower, so that triggered the migraine. Stupid hEDS.

healthcrap
Had a useless appt with physical medicine Monday, where they put me on the Hypermobile Spectrum Disorder spectrum, instead of doing a full exam for hEDS. Irritating. They also confirmed that they couldn't help me, since I don't need further PT or equipment (like a walker or wheelchair) at this time. HSD is basically the same thing, but you don't meet the diagnostic criteria of hEDS. I wish I'd been up to arguing with them, but I wasn't. Also, still haven't worked out. :(

dirt
I watered the plants today for the first time in over 3 weeks, which means I've been taking my terrible mood out on the innocents in my household. I hope I haven't lost any, but it's the (moderate) depression's fault if I have. At least I did get them watered. That's something.

#resist
August 2: 50501 Rage Against the Regime National Protest
August 3: first Move On "Won't Back Down" rally.

I hope all of y'all are doing well! <333
kitewithfish: (down the rabbit hole)
kitewithfish ([personal profile] kitewithfish) wrote2025-07-23 06:02 pm
Entry tags:

Wednesday Reading Meme July 23 2025

What I’ve Read

The Goblin Emperor by Katherine Addison – easily my fifth time thru this book. Love how this just unfolds slowly. Maia is such an isolated character but with a deeply firm sense of justice and care for his actual subjects – it’s a bit nonsense as a political system (an emperor from fucking nowhere with no real power base getting the throne and it not turning into a bloody mess? Unlikely!) but as personal journey, it was great. Read it with a book group for the first time and lovely to talk about it with a group.

Someone You Can Build a Nest In
– (2024) by John Wiswell – This is a good book! Experimentally gooey and weird first person monster narration, solid set of social and romantic conundrums, solid emotional base, and the story unfolds at a good pace. Overall, a great first novel! At one point, the gooey monster uses the word “allosexual” in their mental narration and I had to put the book down for a minute, but, well, it’s otherwise a pretty good romance and a pretty good adventure. I think I’ll read John Wiswell again. He’s doing interesting things with body horror that is also just… a nonhuman person navigating disability in a convincing way. Some rosemary slander.

Excellent Women by Barbara Pym – (1952) I picked this up at the suggestion of a friend whose favorite writer is Max Beerbohm, which I think tells you something about her general reading – usually she’s reading much earlier books than me! This book is one of those English novels of manners that feels like a comedy poised on the knife edge of tragedy – if the author were any less adept at navigating social folly, it could veer into a giant mess, but she keeps dancing on that edge, and I kept laughing! Our main character is Mildred Lathbury, shabby and respectable and a reliable help to her community, observing the world of the more dramatic and more careless married neighbors who somehow keep involving her in their nonsense. Mildred is too sensible and too English to let herself get totally swept up in their drama, but is nevertheless too kind and too accustomed to ‘being useful’ for other people to totally divorce herself from the awkwardness of it all. The end of the novel reads as a bit wistful to me – Mildred seems to be veering towards an existential crisis, wondering if there’s every going to be more to her life than being one of the ‘excellent women’ whose time is at the disposal of every social need but their own happiness. I *think* from context that the end of the novel, where she agrees to help a pushy academic edits his papers, is meant to be a step towards romance and a more fulfilling life, but it’s 1952 and it’s England and Mildred is too smart to not see the trap she’s in and too accustomed to it to balk and run. It’s not quite Austen but it’s not not Austen.


What I’m Reading


Witness for the Dead by Katherine Addison – 50% - Audiobook – A Re-read inspired by the Goblin Emperor. This novel follows an investigator introduced in Goblin Emperor in his life after that case. It’s a great example of mystery plots and worldbuilding working in tandem – not every petitioner who comes to Thara Celehar for help asks for help with a mystery that is mysterious to them. Sometimes the case is an opportunity for Addison to show the reader something about the world that is totally everyday for them and wildly strange to us – allowing the story to unfold the world as a mystery itself!

Style: Toward Clarity and Grace by Joseph Williams – 1981 book on writing clearly. 20%

Immortal Dark by Tigest Girma – 25% - Audiobook - A habesha-focused YA vampire novel. I’m having a little trouble squaring the idea that vampires formed a pact with humans to limit their predation and the end result was… a university? But the book comes highly recommended and I do like the main character, Kidane Adane (whose name is roughly Amharic for “hero protagonist”). She’s a bit stressful at this point in the narrative, vengeful and grieving by turns.

My Favorite Thing is Monsters Vol 2 – Emil Ferris – 30% - I gave up on the hard copy of this book because it’s a behemoth and I simply cannot hold it comfortably.

Service Model by Adrian Tchaikovsky – 5% - I have known robot valet Charles for 5 minutes but if anything bad happens to him, I will fly to England and beat Tchaikovsky’s mailbox with a bat. This is, oddly, a nice companion to Excellent Woman by providing a POV character who is actually completely devoted to taking care of a single man, as a programmed robot, instead of a coerced woman. Charles is having a bit of a crisis.


What I’ll Read Next


The Deep Dark
Track Changes
Alien Clay
Monstress, Vol. 9: The Possessed
Navigational Entanglements
The Butcher of the Forest
The Practice, the Horizon, and the Chain
Speculative Whiteness: Science Fiction and the Alt-Right
The Brides of High Hill
The Tusks of Extinction
“Charting the Cliff: An Investigation into the 2023 Hugo Nomination Statistics”
“Signs of Life”
“By Salt, By Sea, By Light of Stars”
“The Brotherhood of Montague St. Video”
“Loneliness Universe”
“The 2023 Hugo Awards: A Report on Censorship and Exclusion”
“The Four Sisters Overlooking the Sea”
“Lake of Souls”
purplecat: Romana 1 from Doctor Who (Who:Romana 1)
purplecat ([personal profile] purplecat) wrote2025-07-22 07:33 pm

Costume Bracket: Round 4, Post 7

Two Doctor Who companion outfits for your delectation and delight! Outfits selected by a mixture of ones I, personally, like; lists on the internet; and a certain random element.


ExpandOutfits below the Cut )

Vote for your favourite of these costumes. Use whatever criteria you please - most practical, most outrageously spacey, most of its decade!

Voting will remain open for at least a week, possibly longer!

Costume Bracket Masterlist

Images are a mixture of my own screencaps, screencaps from Lost in Time Graphics, PCJ's Whoniverse Gallery, and random Google searches.
forestofglory: Cup of tea on a pile of books (books)
forestofglory ([personal profile] forestofglory) wrote2025-07-22 11:24 am

Media Round Up: Strong Women

I thought I would have gotten father with my pile of graphic novels form the library by now since I think of them as such quick reads, but I guess I've been reading other things.

Women of the Conquest Dynasties: Gender and Identity in Liao and Jin China by Linda Cooke Johnson —Read for my FTH bibliography. This didn’t have a huge amount about textiles but it did have a lot about interesting and badass women.

Murder by Memory by Olivia Waite —A murder mystery novella set on a space ship. Very much in the style of classic murder mysteries, complete with an older woman detective. There's a bunch of interesting memory based tech in here including something like a replicator that works off memories which is a cool idea but replicating the thing you remember exactly how you remember it doesn’t seem like it would work out for most people. Fabric is mentioned as something that’s easy to replicate, but I don’t remember even fabric I’ve sewn with that precisely. Most of my memories are just not very precise – I would just end up with a lot of blobs if I tried this.

This kind of mystery really depends on the quirky cast, and I liked the characters but felt like we didn’t really get to know them, I think it would have benefited from being longer so the characters could be a bit more developed.

This makes it seem like I didn’t like the book, but actually it's very charming. I especially liked the the main character is a knitter and there are lots of yarn details.

Hovergirls by Geneva Bowers —One of those graphic novels I mentioned checking out from the library. Cousins Jalissa and Kim have recently moved to a new city and have to deal with challenges like working at a coffee shop and fighting mysterious glowing fish. This was fun! I really liked the art style, which was very bright and colorful.

The Moth Keeper by Kay O'Neill —Another graphic novel by the author of The Tea Dragon Society books. This one is actually written before A Song for You & I and it’s not quite as good as that one, there’s few places where it's hard to follow the action. I did really like all the night time desert landscapes, and the moths though!

ExpandMysteries of the Terracotta Warriors, My Uncanny Destiny )
tsuki_no_bara: (Default)
cindy ([personal profile] tsuki_no_bara) wrote2025-07-21 11:54 pm

i drive a volvo. a beige one.

(the rock is on. the second you don't respect this, it kills you. i love this movie.)

happy day after moon landing day! part of me still thinks it should be an actual us holiday. i mean, we put humans on the moon! it was eight years from the first person in space to the first person to stand on another rock besides earth. that's pretty cool. i celebrated by stuffing my face with fried clams with [livejournal.com profile] tamalinn, friend a, and friend a's hubs, then walking around gloucester (cute seaside town and the home of gorton's seafood - trust the gorton's fisherman :D ) and buying chocolate turtles because who doesn't love a good turtle? right? i did not unpack any more but i thought about it. i also did not find a moon pie but to be fair i didn't look that hard.

and saturday i got a pedicure and went outlet shopping with my sister as is tradition before we go on a big trip. i now own slightly more clothes. but one of my toes is already chipped which, seriously? afterwards we went back to her house and watched mission: impossible iii which i liked better than m:i2. possibly i just liked philip seymour hoffman as a villain better than dougray scott. and we meet benji.

and today i did sweet fuck-all at work (ok, i did something altho now i don't remember what) (oh, right, i collected and set up a lunch for admin d who hurt her wrist and was out) and tonight i unpacked one - count it - box because it's the one with the scarves and winter hats and i've been told i might need to bring a hat to iceland.

and i did sweet fuck-all because i spent so. much. time. last week on the summit. like, tuesday i went home at 11:15. oy. wednesday we lost a bunch of name badges which made us look disorganized (program manager m thinks someone took them to make her look bad) and we offered campus tours for small groups of fifteen and that was a mistake because we actually were disorganized - like, one of the tours left without a couple people and the other two tours somehow swapped tour guides - but! we learned from our mistakes (and also begged around and got more tour guides) and thursday everything went much more smoothly. well, except we still didn't have a bunch of name badges. thursday night was a reception which was delicious and i even got to take home some leftover shrimp bao. i do love a good shrimp. overall i think it was a positive experience for the attendees - we had a contingent of teachers and high schoolers from puerto rico and when i met one of the teachers on friday i swear she was so excited she wanted to hug me - but we're not doing it again next year and i am not sorry about that. i made some good overtime tho.

i assume by now everyone has heard about the ceo who was caught on the kiss cam at a coldplay concert snuggling with the woman he's having an affair with. what a fucking idiot. (altho i don't give her credit for brains either.) it's impressive and scary how fast the video went viral and how fast people figured out who the couple was but come on, if you're going to fuck around on your wife and bang one of your coworkers maybe don't go to such a public event together and don't act all coupley where the kiss cam can find you. he resigned - or possibly was asked to resign? - which is the least he can do.

on this date in 1933 the good voters of oregon voted to repeal a tax on... margarine.
m_findlow: (pic#11530014)
m_findlow ([personal profile] m_findlow) wrote2025-07-21 09:37 am

Challenge 874 - Dangerous mood

Title: Dangerous mood
Character: Owen, Ianto
Author: m_findlow
Rating: PG
Length: 300 words
Content notes: None
Author notes: Written for Challenge 874 - Mad at [community profile] torchwood100
Summary: Owen is caught in the crosshairs of Jack's temper. A triple drabble.


ExpandRead more... )
m_findlow: (Team gif)
m_findlow ([personal profile] m_findlow) wrote2025-07-21 09:35 am

Challenge 874 - Insanity is contagious

Title: Insanity is contagious
Character: Torchwood team
Author: m_findlow
Rating: PG
Length: 200 words
Content notes: None
Author notes: Written for Challenge 874 - Mad at [community profile] torchwood100
Summary: The team all know anyone would have to be mad to do this job. A double drabble.

ExpandRead more... )
m_findlow: (Gwen)
m_findlow ([personal profile] m_findlow) wrote2025-07-21 09:33 am

Challenge 874 - Temporary madness

Title: Temporary madness
Character: Gwen
Author: m_findlow
Rating: PG
Length: 200 words
Content notes: None
Author notes: Written for Challenge 874 - Mad at [community profile] torchwood100
Summary: Rhys has a right to be mad. A double drabble.

ExpandRead more... )
m_findlow: (Date)
m_findlow ([personal profile] m_findlow) wrote2025-07-21 09:30 am

Challenge 874 - Moody

Title: Moody
Character: Jack, Ianto
Author: m_findlow
Rating: PG
Length: 200 words
Content notes: None
Author notes: Written for Challenge 874 - Mad at [community profile] torchwood100
Summary: Jack's latest hair-brained idea has Ianto tearing his own hair out. A double drabble.

ExpandRead more... )
jesse_the_k: Scrabble triple-value badge reading "triple nerd score" (word nerd)
Jesse the K ([personal profile] jesse_the_k) wrote2025-07-20 12:38 pm

Nifty New [community profile] fan_writers Community

[community profile] fan_writers community -- for meta about writing

Moderated by [personal profile] china_shop and [personal profile] mific

Banner shows busy hands typing on laptop and handwritten edited page