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Jul. 9th, 2026 09:53 pm[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
Scientists Have Found Climate-Resistant Coral Reefs Around the World Totaling the Size of Wisconsin

A sophisticated AI-powered examination of coral reef resistance extrapolated into the future found that there’re about 64,000 square miles of coral reefs on Earth that could still be resisting climate change by 2050.

The common theory states that CO2 emissions create a greenhouse effect which warms the seas which causes coral reefs to bleach or even die, yet there are environments—as GNN has frequently reported—where corals seem to be more resilient.



It would be nice if Earth didn't have to reinvent reefs again, and could keep this version.

dialecticdreamer: My work (Default)
Emergency Meeting
By Dialecticdreamer/Sarah Williams
Part 1 of 8
Word count (story only): 1129
[2 pm on Wednesday, 29 November of 2017]


:: With his support at hand, Jules is called to a meeting with the Ambassador. She is determined to straighten out the mess that Ritter has caused, figure out how this supposed “archivist” fits in, and, as a moment of personal pleasure, give Jules his paycheck. Part of the Lodestar story arc in the Polychrome Heroics universe. ::




Pips held the door for Jules, offering a flicker of a smile to the taller young man. “Are you ready for this?”

“No,” Jules admitted, then waited for the troubleshooter to follow them into the conference room. A yeoman in uniform, about Jules’ own age, calmly set out insulated tumblers with travel lids, then arranged a cart of hot and cold drinks in the corner nearest the head of the oval table. “Please don’t get between Ambassador Loudmouth and the coffee pot,” the yeoman murmured in a honey-rich tenor. “I’ve been told that she bites.”

Jules patted the air, then paused. He made a show of checking something in his phone, then scrawled on the screen with a fingertip. “I’ll just make sure to get my tetanus booster before taking that risk.”

The yeoman’s shoulders trembled with suppressed laughter as he let himself out.
Read more... )
bluedreaming: (pseudonym - little elephant)
Fandom: Domundi (Thai BL) Actor RPF (RyujinPatji)
Rating: G
Length: 200 words
Content notes: none
Author notes: The title is from Among the Stones of the Earth by Fernando Linero, translated by Nicolás Suescún, and Delhi Summer, Early Afternoon by Kamlesh, translated by Teji Grover. Again, this is entirely fictional.
Summary: Sometimes everything is weird. And sometimes it’s okay again.

Read more... )

Update

Jul. 9th, 2026 04:03 pm[personal profile] ranunculus
ranunculus: (Default)
Faucet and hose repaired.  New trough standing by to be installed as soon as the old one is emptied (it is almost empty now), AND the overflow trough is full.  The overflow trough has 6 inches of water in it. That is because I watered this morning and it took a while for the tanks to recover. 
Got a haircut. Short, short, short!
Getting ready for tomorrow's departure to Santa Cruz for the weekend.  Probably back on Sunday.
canyonwalker: Pill bottle and pills (being sick sucks)
I've been on The Pill for 3 months now. "The Pill", of course, is Ozempic (technically, Rybelsus), a GLP-1 drug. I'm taking it for reducing blood sugar and losing weight.

How's it going? Well, after I experienced noticeable improvements the first two months things flattened out a bit in Month 3. I've lost more weight, though at a slower pace this month than in the first two. I lost 3 pounds this month, bringing my total to 21.

Losing just 3 pounds is frustrating because it's such a slowdown from the first two months. Yes, I know, 3 pounds in a month is a run rate of 36 pounds a year, which would be a great sustained rate for weight loss. But whether 3 pounds/month sustains is the question. With my monthly weight losses of 10 pounds, then 8 pounds, then 3 pounds... well, you can see the declining trend there. I'm concerned that in another month or two I'll bottom out at around 25-30 pounds down from where I started and not lose any more beyond that.

My blood sugar levels, as measured by daily glucose tests, are actually up over the past two weeks, which is concerning. They should be continuing down, or at least staying level with where they were last month. I'll get a better handle on this when I have my next blood test, probably in about a month. The A1C level measured in a blood test is more indicative than the daily glucose checks I can do at home.

On the positive side I continue having only mild side effects. Symptoms like diarrhea and nausea are in check. My eat two-thirds practice I started early in the course has continued serving me well. I even tested that a few nights ago with dinner at a Brazilian steakhouse.

All the above could change in another month. I'm currently taking the medium dose of the pill. My doctor advised that she'll likely advance me to the high dose next, possibly as soon as my followup in another month. The high dose is double what I'm taking currently. It could juice my reductions in blood sugar and weight... and/or juice those unwanted side effects. 🤢

Update Time!

Jul. 9th, 2026 05:17 pm[personal profile] fuzzyred
fuzzyred: Me wearing my fuzzy red bathrobe. (Default)
Hi everybody! I don't have a lot of brain today, so this might not be a very coherent post. The last two weeks have been good. We had a heatwave, but we came out the other side fine and it's a bit cooler now. I had a few fun weekends, with more fun coming up.

I've done okay on my goals, although I hit a rough patch for yoga at the beginning of July. I have started a new book and a new baby blanket and have made good first steps on both.

Today I saw my grandma for her 80th birthday, which was very nice, and I get to do lunch with my good friend tomorrow. In the coming weeks, I hope to get more reading, knitting, and yoga done, as well as sticking with my coffee and treat goals for the month.

I hope you all are doing well and staying cool! See you again soon!

heavenly path

Jul. 9th, 2026 07:07 am[personal profile] starandrea
starandrea: (Default)
zhoumojun: welcome to our danmei club
zhoumojun: I mean our chinese learning server
rionaleonhart: goes wrong: unparalleled actor robert grove looks handsomely at the camera. (unappreciated in my own time)
The trouble with putting Chris and Robert of The Goes Wrong Show in bed together, and I say this as a big Chris/Robert fan, is that I feel Robert is romantic and vanilla in bed, whereas Chris has a masochistic streak a mile wide and just wants someone to tie him up and whip him. I attempted to write a fic in which Chris asks Robert to hurt him, and it never got anywhere because Robert's response was just '??? that doesn't seem right.'

Robert will hurt you unintentionally in the course of acting, and he'll hurt you deliberately in order to steal your role, but he just doesn't think the bedroom is the place for that sort of thing. Which is, I'll be honest, Robert, extremely inconvenient for me personally.

Anyway! While I'm talking about Chris/Robert, I received an anonymous question on Tumblr:

I was wondering if you had any thoughts about how the Robert/Chris dynamic would be if Chris were a trans man. I imagine Chris would be stealth so Robert might not even know until they started whatever you would call their bizarre but fascinating relationship.

I can see exactly how this would come to light. Chris and Robert end up furiously making out after an argument, unplanned and unexpected, and then Chris feels Robert's hands heading below the belt and panics, starts pulling away, "There's something I need to tell you—"

"Chris," Robert says, with a concerned frown, "your penis appears to be missing."

Chris is so thrown - by the situation as a whole, but particularly by the fact that Robert is imparting this information as if he's worried that Chris might not know - that he completely forgets anything he was about to say.

"Do you need the hospital?" Robert asks.

Chris swallows, with some difficulty. "No, I'm... I'm fine. This is the, er, the intended state of affairs."

Robert's frown eases, but only a little. "Do you have any genitalia at all? Because I did rather have plans."

Does Robert... does Robert know what being trans is? "Er, I..."

How is Chris supposed to articulate this? It's a tricky thing to phrase at the best of times, let alone when he's so aroused he can't think straight and faced by someone to whom the entire concept is apparently new.

"May I check?" Robert asks. "If you're not sure?"

Chris shrugs, helplessly. "I... I suppose."

Robert strips off Chris's trousers and pants, swiftly and matter-of-factly. Contemplates him for a moment. All Chris can do is stand there, blushing furiously.

"Oh," Robert says, brightening, "that's fine. I know exactly what to do with one of these."

And, as it turns out, he does.

Books read in June

Jul. 9th, 2026 11:18 am[personal profile] mistressofmuses
mistressofmuses: Image of nebulae in the colors of the bi pride flag: pink, purple, and blue (Default)
For the month of June, I finished seven books! Fewer than the previous month, but I’m perfectly happy with seven.

It did feel a little bit like I fell behind where I’d wanted, but clearly not too far! Still trying to carve time out pretty consistently, but it was a bit harder to do this month. My biggest reading time tends to be right before I go to bed, but this month I had more days where I started to doze off and had to put the book down, or where something else took longer than I wanted and cut into that time. (I am also realizing that overall health-wise… I probably need to go to bed before 1:30 or 2:00am, which has been my standard for the last year or so. That only gives me about five and a half hours a night, and that’s probably just not enough for me. So going to need to adjust my reading time to make room for the sleep, ha.)

This month…

BERJAYA
(I like the covers for this series.)
Artificial Condition by Martha Wells
Book 2 of The Murderbot Diaries
2018
Science fiction - physical novella
5/5

Murderbot is on its own, truly a rogue unit. Despite the Preservation team purchasing its contract, and offering it a place on their colony, it knows there’s little use for a SecUnit there, and it knows it would still be owned. Besides, it still has questions about its past: it knows that something happened that caused it to kill the human clients on one of its jobs, but its own memories and all records of “the incident” have been erased.
Posing as an augmented human, Murderbot plans to visit the RaviHyral mining installation, where the incident occurred, looking for answers to whether it was deliberately behind what happened. Not everything goes according to plan. The bot-driven transport that it catches a ride on turns out to be a terrifyingly advanced machine intelligence, that now has an interest in Murderbot’s activities. And in order to access RaviHyral, it needs an employment contract, meaning it has to put its human disguise to the test by taking on human clients. Those human clients are in genuine need of protection, and Murderbot will do its best to provide it, even as it searches out the truth to its own history.


My thoughts, some spoilers:
I really enjoy this book! As always, I feel like I have a lot less to say about the things I love than the things that don’t work for me, but I can at least try to list what I love!
- Murderbot is, of course, a fantastic character, and I like getting to see it in new situations. The type of hiding its doing is different than the way it had to hide itself in All Systems Red. I also really like getting to watch it make its own decisions, again, to a much more complete extent than in the first book.
- ART is also a fantastic character, and I am constantly delighted by the way it and Murderbot interact.
- I love Murderbot continuing to find comfort in rewatching its favorite episodes of media, and the way it contrasts with the media that it turns out ART prefers, and what that says about both of them and the way they interact with the world. There’s a lot to be said about how they both find representation in the media they’re watching. (Which Murderbot makes explicit, when it explains to ART why it doesn’t like any media that actually involves SecUnits, because it knows what roles SecUnits occupy.)
- I love the investigation of RaviHyral and the discovery of what happened.
- Murderbot genuinely fears that it hacked its governor module in the past to cause the murders… yet even before we find out whether that’s true or not, we see how seriously it takes the safety of its clients. (It complains the whole time, but the desire to protect them is so clearly genuine.)
- We do get to see Murderbot being kind of judgmental, not just toward humans, but toward ComfortUnits - or sexbots, as it continues to call them. It’s really interesting to see how some of its own assumptions get challenged during its investigations. (Also a little heartbreaking.)
- I also love watching Murderbot get to fuck shit up. :)


BERJAYA
(I like the cover incorporating both the vultures and the roses.)
A House with Good Bones by T. Kingfisher
2023
Horror (subgenres: southern gothic, haunted house, occult) - very background m/f - physical novel
5/5

When archeoentomologist Samantha has her next project put on hold, it provides her an excellent chance for an extended visit to her mother. Arriving to her childhood home in North Carolina, Sam quickly discovers something seems off about the house and about her mother. Her mother’s usual anxiety has apparently gotten far worse, even straying toward fear. Stranger, many of her mother’s choices, from interior decorating to new insistence on prayer before meals, seem far more in line with Gran Mae, Sam’s late, somewhat tyrannical grandmother who used to own the house. When Sam starts to do a bit of casual research on the family, she discovers dark, occult roots that she would never have suspected.


My thoughts:
I really loved this book!

Sam is extremely relatable to me. My actual degree is in anthropology (with an emphasis on archeology), and it’s probably no surprise to anyone here that I have a pretty strong interest in hobby entomology. Had I summoned a bit more drive and not squandered some opportunities, Sam’s career is something I could very well have ended up doing, or would have loved to do. I also had a southern grandmother (though mine was on my paternal side) that there’s a lot of Complicated Family Shit around.

One of the strange occurrences that Sam encounters is the fact that the house’s garden seems like an ecological deadzone, with nothing living except Gran Mae’s roses. I love this, because that’s the sort of thing that I find so extremely offputting and horrible the handful of times I’ve encountered gardens that have been pesticide-bombed into sterility. I DO take note of all the bugs I get to see in a given space, and having them be conspicuously gone is creepy, but I’m not sure that many people would notice or agree, so I liked it in the book. (It’s also a fun inversion of how insects are often a “symptom” of some aspect of the horror. We get the more played-straight version with the ladybugs, but even that is not the usual kind of insect activity that horror leans on.)

Sam’s character in general really did shine, I thought. I enjoyed that she related to so much through the lens of her entomology.
The only other T. Kingfisher books that I’ve read are the Sworn Soldier novellas, and Sam and Alex’s voices are somewhat similar—they both have a very dry sense of humor—but I did find them to still be distinct from each other.
That particular dry tone works really well for me in terms of humor. Sam’s description of her phone consistently failing to connect to the wifi was extremely funny, and will probably be one of those things that I think of every time I struggle with a bad connection. (Paraphrasing, but: “Her phone assured her that it had an excellent relationship with the wifi. She went to load a page, and the phone informed her it wasn’t that kind of relationship.”)

I also love black vultures (though we mainly have turkey vultures in Colorado.) We had a fun encounter with a black vulture that was roosting inside the ruins of an old Pentecostal church we visited in Maryland, and that felt like one of the most southern gothic things to possibly happen to me.

The early vibes of the story, where things were just creepy and wrong and unsettling was the strongest part for me. Even so, the reveal/conclusion/resolution didn’t feel weak to me at all.

And of course, it has a lot of the typical themes you’d expect from haunted house/southern gothic type stories. There’s a lot about what it means to cling to the past, what an “idealized past” actually idealizes, what it means on several levels when it comes to an unwillingness to move on, whether something is truly “normal” if it requires coercion to enforce. (And I think that having someone who studies the past as an archeologist, and who categorizes things as an entomologist makes for an excellent contrast to the past-as-tradition and categorization-as-judgment.)

This was excellent, and I really want both Taylor and Alex to read it, ha.



BERJAYA
(Again, I like pretty much all the Murderbot covers.)
Rogue Protocol by Martha Wells
Book 3 of The Murderbot Diaries
2018
Science fiction - physical novella
4.5/5

After investigating its past on RaviHyral failed to provide hoped-for closure, Murderbot is at a loss for where to go next. It discovers from a news broadcast that the case between Preservation (the group Murderbot was contracted to,) and GrayCris (the corporation that tried to kill them,) is ongoing. There is some evidence that GrayCris has engaged in similar activities in their past, including their time on the planet Milu. Officially listed as a failed terraforming attempt, there is credible suspicion that it was actually an illegal attempt to mine alien remnants. If Murderbot could find evidence confirming this, it could help Preservation’s case.
A human team is going to Milu to assess GrayCris’ abandoned facility, which makes Murderbot’s plan simple: hitch a ride to Milu, perform its investigation, and hitch a ride back, with the human team none the wiser. Unfortunately, the humans from GoodNightLander Independent have no idea the lengths GrayCris will go to keep their wrongdoing from being exposed… but Murderbot does. Once again it finds itself in the position of choosing to protect a group of humans.


My thoughts, some spoilers for both this book and Artificial Condition:
Another good one! Though I will say that I understand why, in my initial read of the first four novellas back-to-back, that I sort of conflated parts of books two and three, because they have fairly similar arcs. (Murderbot visits a distant planet/station that has been abandoned, in order to find evidence that was supposed to be hidden, sneaking into the mostly-inaccessible place by way of subterfuge and joining up with a group that does have permission to be there, that it then has to protect, while it also encounters different machine intelligences/bots.) THAT SAID. The stories are still quite different, and the similarities and differences both highlight things about Murderbot’s character and personal arc.

My other thoughts:
- Miki. ;-;
- I really like how Murderbot’s interactions with both ART and Miki really throw its existence (and the existence of SecUnits in general) into relief. ART and Miki are extremely different, ART being an impossibly complex and powerful machine intelligence, and Miki being what Murderbot disparagingly calls a “pet bot.” Yet both genuinely care for and value the humans they work with, and those humans genuinely care about them. It makes Murderbot/SecUnits’ situation that much sadder, in multiple ways.
It’s awful that SecUnits—a mix of mechanical parts and cloned human tissue—are treated so much worse than bots. Yet it also makes sense, as we see how readily humans are exploited.
Murderbot’s repeated insistence that it obviously isn’t jealous of Miki is already kind of heartbreaking, but it’s extra so when [redacted] is what prompts it to return to Preservation in person.
- Another thing that comes up in both Artificial Condition and this one is getting to see Murderbot change a (judgmental) opinion after it learns more about the thing in question. In Artificial Condition it really seems to dislike “ComfortUnits,” calling them Sexbots, and seeming to be uncomfortable with them in general. Then it discovers that the ones on RaviHyral sacrificed themselves in an attempt to avert disaster, and it very clearly softens its opinion. In Rogue Protocol, it’s very dismissive of Miki’s relationship with Don Abene and the rest of the human team, refusing to believe that their connection was genuine… until it’s clear that it was. I like this.
- While we’ve already seen it, this book also helps to highlight how extremely effective Murderbot is without the control of the Governor Module. It’s so extremely good at figuring out how best to protect the team, even against extremely dangerous situations. Its ability to act under its own orders are the only way it can successfully do so; if it were forced to obey, it would have been destroyed, and members of the human team would have been killed.
- It is also clear that the sort of “rogue SecUnit” that is fearmongered about—one that truly does want to cause destruction and kill as many people as possible—would be extremely, terrifyingly lethal… but we keep seeing Murderbot’s drive to protect the teams it encounters, even the ones it has no external reason to. Again, I like that we see this multiple times and in various situations.



BERJAYA
(This cover is fine. Not amazing, but perfectly fine. I'm not sure I think all the elements gel, but I'll take it over AI slop any day.)
Before the Broken Star by Emily R. King
Book 1 of The Evermore Chronicles trilogy
2019
Fantasy (subgenre: YA, steampunk [barely]) - m/f - ebook novel
2.5/5

Everley should be dead, and would be if not for the miraculous clockwork heart her uncle used to save her life. She is very aware that her life is literally lived on borrowed time, with no idea when Father Time may come to collect. Her deepest hope is that she has enough time to get revenge. Governor Markham murdered her parents and siblings, leaving her for dead, and Everley intends to make him pay… if she can ever get close enough to him.
Then a raid on the docks gives Everley her chance. The raid was intended to sweep up as many women—mostly streetwalkers and thieves—as possible, convict them, and sentence them to transportation to an island prison colony. Here they will serve as wives for the existing convicts, helping to establish a settlement on the island to serve the queen’s expansionist aims. Governor Markham, who first mapped the island with Everley’s father, is the one in charge of the colony. Getting herself sentenced to the island may be her best chance to access him.
Everley wants no distractions from her singular focus, not even her accidental marriage of convenience to the charming Lieutenant Jamison Callahan, or friendships with any of the other women being sent to the island. Everley hopes her opportunity for revenge is approaching, but both the island and Markham himself are hiding secrets she’d never imagined, secrets that could connect to the creation of the world, stories long dismissed as myth and heresy.


My thoughts, vague spoilers:
This one wasn’t terrible, but was definitely a story that was Not For Me. I could see it maybe having had a bit more of a hold on me back when I was more the target audience for YA, and there were aspects that were enjoyable, but as a whole, it felt a bit forgettable.

The good:
This really did do a good job of making every character feel like the protagonist of their own story. I can envision interesting “versions” of the plot with almost any of them as the main character.

The set up to share the myths/relevant fairy tales felt pretty natural, and not like an obvious exposition info-dump, or like the book was trying to wink at the reader to make sure you knew it was going to be important. (It could have come across as that meme of Mickey Mouse, where he’s whispering in an aside to the viewer about how “this is a special tool that will help us later.”) I honestly thought it was just worldbuilding flavor.

The mixed:
The downside of all the characters feeling like their own protagonist is that I’m not completely convinced that Everley is the most interesting one to follow. She probably has the most interesting plotline, but in terms of character? I’m not sure.

Everley’s clockwork heart. It’s really the only steampunk-ish thing, which is a bit of a bummer. I love the steampunk aesthetic, but it’s basically nonexistent outside of the one thing. The book seems to get tagged as being steampunk fairly often, but it very much isn’t. I do like that the clockwork heart comes with genuine, serious drawbacks for Everley, from the risk of strong emotions causing the mechanism to malfunction, to the fear of water getting into it, to the plain fear of discovery. This does limit her… at times. Unfortunately, those limits seem to disappear when convenient for the plot. For something we’re told is uncontrollable, she sure does control it in a lot of “important” situations.
(I also couldn’t ever quite adjust to her calling it her “ticker.” I so deeply associate that with like… old men talking about “their ticker” when they want to avoid a heart attack that it was always jarring, haha. I DO agree it’s a perfect term for something that’s both a heart and a clock, but it just sounds so unserious!)

Some of the things I found the most fun were things like the little aside/side quests in the forest, like the evil illusory cottage. However, those bits could have been chopped out with minimal impact on the story, and also just kept reminding me of Deltora Quest and making me wish I was reading that instead, ha.

The not great:
The book and characters are a little weird about sex work, even though I get the feeling that it’s trying not to be? Everley falsely pleads guilty to sex work (“street walking”) to get sentenced to the island, and some of the other characters (the Cat and the Fox) were sex workers… which is apparently a capital offense, and is basically always treated as shameful. Everley seems to be trying to be non-judgmental about it, but sometimes she does get judgey. There’s never really any push back from the actual sex worker characters beyond taking minor offense, and there’s a pervasive vibe that of course none of them would ever have chosen to do it, but were forced into it. It’s very much treated as a plot device.

Everley’s character sometimes really frustrated me. Part of it is probably it being YA, and it being understandable that she’s a bit impulsive or at war with herself, because she is young. But it seems we’re supposed to think that she’s a master planner, building up this entire plot in service to her singular goal of revenge… yet she seems utterly unprepared for it. I understand her utterly pacifistic religion causing conflict for her about killing… but girl, what was your plan, then?? That was always supposedly your goal! I also understand or can appreciate a conflict between who she would be if she could/who she has been forced to be/who she wants to be… but the execution makes her seem a bit wishy washy.

Characters almost always end up confirming what Everley thinks of them, even if there’s a brief moment where it seems like there’ll be a subversion. There’s no tension over whether Markham is a villain, even though it seemed like the reader was supposed to be wondering. He insists there’s so much Everley doesn’t understand, that there are secret reasons and context that will change everything she assumes about him… and immediately kills off that question by threatening to facilitate the abuse of a child in order to make Everley do something. And then it turns out, yup, he is the villain. No special absolving context, just context that explains “yup. Evil.” (Bummer, because I love “this changes everything!” context.)

While the stakes have definitely raised by the end of the story, and I know it’s setting up the rest of the trilogy, it also feels like a lot of things have just returned to status quo by the end. Everley is still consumed with a desire for revenge against the same man. She still resents and rejects attempts at emotional connection. One of the big reveals ([redacted] is actually alive!) is reset when [redacted] is one of the only named characters to then die, so that’s a bit of a wash.

This is silly, but there’s a scene of Callahan playing the violin, and it is maybe the worst description of violin playing I’ve read. “Lieutenant Callahan strums a violin alongside a drummer and a whistle player. His fingers fly across the strings as he moves the bow up and down the neck of the instrument.” Lol. (Did she mean the bow flies and his fingers move up and down? But then why strumming? You can pluck the strings, but in that case the bow wouldn’t be doing anything…)

I could see this having appealed a bit more to me if I’d been able to vibe with Everley and just enjoy the adventure aspects, which might have been something I’d have been more inclined toward when I was younger. But also maybe not. Like I said, I’m sure it’s for someone, just not for me.
It also felt just… so extremely het. (Even if I was hoping for Everley and Harlow to have an enemies to lovers arc, or for the Fox and the Cat to be partners in more than crime wink.)
No regrets having read it, but I do not see myself picking up the remainder of the trilogy.



BERJAYA
(I do think this has a great cover.)
Camp Damascus by Chuck Tingle
2023
Horror (subgenre: queer, religious) - f/f - physical novella - read with Alex
4/5

Rose Darling is a devoted and devout member of Kingdom of the Pine, a conservative Christian church that all but owns the town of Neverton, MT. Their main claim to fame is Camp Damascus, the only ex-gay conversion camp in the world to boast a 100% success rate.
As she starts to take her first steps into adulthood, strange things start to happen to Rose. She vomits black flies; she begins to see a strange, inhuman woman following her, who may even be responsible for the death of one of her friends; she begins having impossible memories of a relationship with a girl that she doesn’t know. Her parents and her church-appointed therapist are dismissive of these occurrences, chalking them up to strange coincidence, or psychological manifestations of some secret guilt she’s harboring. Dissatisfied with this lack of explanation, Rose continues to investigate, despite Kingdom of the Pine’s reminder that curiosity is a sin.
The more she looks into things, the more certain she is that the answers are at Camp Damascus. She—and others she meets—have no recollection of the camp, despite apparently having attended. It seems like Kingdom of the Pines is doing something even worse than anyone could have guessed.


My thoughts, slight spoilers:
I enjoyed this one a little bit more on this second read, so I nudged it up from a 3.5 to a 4.

My thoughts are mostly the same as they were last year.

The good:
I like Rose’s character and perspective. Her analytical, scientific way of looking at things informs the way she acts, and what things she notices as well as how she thinks about them.

I mean… a church making a literal deal with the devil (demons) in order to more successfully attempt to force the gay out, while finding infinite justifications for it, really does feel quite real.

There are a lot of aspects of the religious control that really do feel quite real. I like the way in which Rose is being pushed into adulthood, with her parents trying to set her up with a boy, and seeming in part to expect her to be moving on to her own life… while also doing everything possible to prevent that from happening. Rose is just graduating high school at age 20, because members of the church are required to take two years off to do mission service, which puts them at a social delay compared to the norm. She’s an adult, but her father takes away her laptop as punishment for just trying to research something happening to her. She’s being kept sort of childlike, even when her family seems to resent that fact. It’s very “you need to be a responsible adult and make your own choices… but only if you’re making the choices we want you to make.”

The other bit that sticks out to me is her mom’s “bonding activity” for them, where they go on walks and “diagnose” their neighbors/friends/total strangers with sins, and “prescribe” the way they would spiritually fix them or have them repent. Her mom does treat it as a fun activity, but it’s just such a creepy and gross way to behave! Extremely realistic, ha.

The meh:
I do still find some of the stylistic things awkward. Rose refers to her parents by first name sometimes, which seems super weird and jarring. I again tried to tell if it was something that was indicating her emotional distance from them, but it didn’t seem to be. She also uses “my friend” as an epithet pretty often, in situations where it again, feels unnatural. In that case, just using the friend’s name would seem more natural. Those two things make it seem a bit like an attempt to avoid monotony, but instead it sticks out as jarring to me.

I realized that I misread something the previous time, where I thought that Rose’s girlfriend, Willow, is a sort of undefined pagan. She isn’t; she’s actually a presumable atheist, who simply likes the witchy aesthetic (girl, same!) (I’m not sure why I missed it, so I have no excuse.) That does at least slightly soften one of the thematic things that I had an issue with previously. The first time, it really rubbed me the wrong way that Saul remained a devoted Christian, Willow had (I misinterpreted) a sort of undefined non-Christian faith, and then Rose swung to atheistic, before deciding that that was the pendulum swinging too far, and coming to the decision that she should have some faith. Now, with Willow providing that atheistic counterpoint, it bothers me less that Rose ends up sort of settling in the middle. It’s still a “meh” thing for me, because I don’t necessarily like that as an answer, but it no longer feels quite so invalidating, ha.

It did strike me even more this time how little Camp Damascus actually features, which feels strange, with it sort of looming large over the narrative. It’s not bad per se, to have the sort of lurking threat, but it feels very weird to see the remaining pages dwindle, without having even reached the camp yet.

I still feel like this would ideally be like… a SyFy original movie, but it’d be a really good one, haha.



BERJAYA
(Apparently this cover artist is willing to trace shit, so I feel no need to be nice, so I'll say that this one is at best extremely bland and does nothing to convey anything in particular about the book. Also, if book 1 was the secretly-Stucky-fic, why is this the cover where it looks like them?)
Common Goal by Rachel Reid
Book 4 of Game Changers
2020
M/M Romance (subgenre: hockey romance) - ebook novel
2.5/5

Eric Bennett, veteran goalie, knows that his life is going to change. First, he knows it’s time to start seriously thinking about retirement. Second, after his divorce, he’s starting to consider the possibility of dating men.
Kyle Swift, a grad student and bartender, has definitely had more than enough of closeted older men interested in using him for a bit of fun. Despite his certainty that Eric would be exactly that, he can’t deny that Eric is exactly the sort of man he’s attracted to.
Despite their mutual certainty that a real relationship has to be off the table, the two strike up a friendship… with benefits. Kyle is happy enough to indulge in his attraction to Eric while giving Eric some good “firsts” to put him on a path to eventually dating a man for real.
Regardless of their intentions, neither of them can switch off the emotions that leave them wanting more with each other.


My thoughts, spoilers:
This book felt pretty solidly “meh.” I was going to give it a 3, and then I realized how little I have to put in the positive column. :/ 2 feels super harsh, so… 2.5 it is.

The good(?):
I like having a bisexual protagonist, and while it’s never labeled as such on-page, I’d argue that Eric seems to also probably be demisexual. (Which should be super duper relatable to me! Unfortunately, it didn’t quite hit as well as I would have wished, but I still appreciate the characterization.)
I also appreciate that it didn’t totally demonize his ex-wife. There’s a bit of “well, maybe I was never really satisfied with her…” but she isn’t made out to have been awful or anything.

Hooray for a Maria redemption? (In book 1 she wanted to go become a cop. In this book she quit cop school to study human services and “actually” help people.)

I did genuinely feel for Kyle, and his struggles with the past relationship that went extremely sour, and how that's left him with some baggage. (It felt like he harbored more guilt than he should over it, but I sympathized.)

In theory I like the idea of "we're going to have sex, because I'm helping you get over your nerves about it, and this is supposed to be no strings attached... but oh no, the strings!" Unfortunately, it's probably not a good sign that one of my positives is "well... I could have liked something like this..."

The meh:
I know I mentioned that Heated Rivalry had a very slight kink dynamic, but one that worked well for me, and was basically right at the point where I enjoy it, and don’t start disliking it. The Dom/sub kink dynamic here is much more overt, and did cross that line of “diminishing returns,” where I do not enjoy it, and hit the point where I actively enjoy it less. Not to the point of squick or anything, and it’s not like it’s super extreme kink or anything, it just got to the point where I was not into it. This is entirely a personal taste/personal baggage thing, and not something I’d knock the book for, but as a result I did personally think the sex scenes were less appealing. (And my ratings are subjective related to my enjoyment!)

One thing that I’ve enjoyed previously about the series was how different each book and the couples in them felt. They all had very different dynamics with each other and as individual characters, and that was something I liked. This book… doesn’t feel that way. It feels like this book was built out of pieces of the previous ones.
Eric is friends with Scott, and Kyle is friends with Kip, and they sort of feel like a rehash of the Game Changer storyline. It’s another closeted-for-now hockey player x out grad student/service industry worker couple. Sure, Kyle is a bartender not a smoothie barista, but Kip has since also started working at the bar, an them being coworkers kind of highlights the similarity.
There’s the friends-with-benefits “oh no I can’t let him know I caught feelings” aspect that Heated Rivalry has, but where I was all-in for Shane and Ilya, it felt really artificial here. Shane and Ilya at least arguably have external forces that keep them from wanting to acknowledge the relationship; for Eric and Kyle it’s purely internal, and felt far weaker to me.
There’s even the “I’m planning to stop playing hockey” aspect like Ryan (even if Eric’s exit is a much more positive one), while Kyle serves as Eric’s introduction to some aspects of queer culture, not entirely unlike Fabian does for Ryan in Tough Guy.
Eric and Kyle aren’t exact retreads, and it is probably the kink dynamic and age difference that I’d say sets them apart the most, but it still sort of feels like the previous three books got tossed in a blender and came out as a much blander story.

The bad:
The most minor bad thing: more typos this time around than I’ve noticed in any of the previous books in the series. Still not egregious, and frankly in line with most tradpub stuff, but it still bugs me to notice.

The biggest sin in my opinion is that it eventually got to a point where the emotional beats felt so repetitive that I stopped caring. Eric and Kyle’s mutual “I enjoy the sex, but a relationship would be a ~bad idea~, so I can’t let feelings factor in” thing lasts the whole book. After 300-odd pages of “no, he’s bad for me! I’m bad for him! We can’t be together, because it’s a bad idea!” I started to hope they’d just give it up. Like, if you’re that sure that the relationship is all wrong for you, then call it quits!
On page 295 (of 321), it says “For the millionth time, Eric shut all of his thoughts and feelings about Kyle into a box and locked it.” I’m reading it going “yeah! And I feel like I’ve heard about it all million times! Just fucking break up all the way already, if you’re going to keep doing this!” and that should absolutely not be how I feel about the main couple in a romance! I don’t usually mind (and even sometimes enjoy!) the “I want to, but I can’t! Woe is me!” emotional beats, but this drew it out for far too long, with far too little true reason behind it.

The other part that I had the worst time with was that it sometimes felt like the characters were reacting to scenes that never happened. This was especially egregious at the start, but it set the tone for the whole book to me. Early on (somewhere around the 40-45 page range), Eric thinks about how Kyle had obviously and firmly rejected him at their first meeting. Around this same time, Kyle is thinking about how Eric is obviously one of those shitty married guys who wants a gay fling on the side… but neither of those reactions felt set up by that first, casual meeting at the bar. Kyle had noticed Eric’s wedding ring, but didn’t have the same sort of vitriol about it, and instead just figured that meant that Eric wasn’t interested. There wasn’t really a “rejection,” certainly not a firm one, because there was never an overture to reject; they chatted, and both privately thought the other was attractive, and then they parted ways.
I have zero proof of this, but to me it feels like the first scene where Eric and Kyle meet each other got rewritten at some point, or some parts got reshuffled, and some of those later bits are still “reacting” to the original version. That might not be the case, but that’s how it felt. It was whiplash to have Eric say on page 36 that he plans to flirt with Kyle the next time he sees him, seeming excited by the idea, to saying on page 40 (after a chapter break, but no significant time skip) that he thinks it’s a bad idea to go back to the bar at all when Scott invites him to, because Kyle had rejected him.

I am given to understand that the next two books are better again, so looking forward to those, but yeah… this one felt like a backslide in quality, or like it was an idea that hadn’t quite baked all the way.



BERJAYA
(I really like the cover for this one.)
Inkpot Gods by Seanan McGuire
Book 4 of Alchemical Journeys
2026
Urban fantasy - m/f and f/f - physical novel
4.5/5

In 1870s Boston, alchemist John Baker adopts a niece he’d never known. The girl wants to please her uncle, and becomes his assistant in his alchemical workings. Eventually naming herself “Asphodel,” she wants to become an alchemist in her own right… but the North American Alchemical Congress will never allow a woman to attain that status. She will do more than prove them wrong; she will find ways to punish them for it.
In the modern day, Lilianne, a self-taught alchemist, comes to Berkeley, in search of the lab she knows the Alchemical Congress abandoned. She meets Smita, and through her, Rodger, Dodger, and the rest of the cuckoos, constructs, and incarnates with connections to the alchemical world. Most of them have plenty of reasons to distrust and dislike alchemists, but they know the lab could be dangerous and needs to be dealt with. They take Lily with to investigate. The lab is supposed to be abandoned, but something has been left behind, and that something may have designs of its own.


My thoughts, some spoilers:
I really liked this one! The series as a whole has felt a bit mixed (I generally like it but don’t love it, but this was one of the entries I’ve enjoyed the most.)

The good:
The dual timelines were good. Again, I really enjoyed both time periods that we were following, so while sometimes I did want to get back to what happened with one group, I was never disappointed when we switched to the other.

I love getting to see Asphodel. She’s been such an important figure, lurking in the background of the series, and with such a complicated legacy. And she’s terrible! Just the fucking worst! Yet at the same time, I sympathize. She did get a raw deal, she did have to fight for what she deserved… But she’s terrible!
I do love seeing her at full murdering-for-personal-gain horribleness, and letting that give really interesting context to that current legacy that she’s left. It makes the cuckoos and the brutality of so much in alchemy make more sense. It also is such a good contrast to the fact that she’s most publicly known as a beloved children’s book author.
Along with that… I enjoyed the sort of rug pull with Deborah. (Which may have just been me.) Knowing that Asphodel would eventually go by “A. Deborah Baker” makes Deborah’s introduction interesting. Like “oh, so is this person going to be important to her? That she’d later adopt her name?” Woof. I mean… she was important. But Not As I Expected.

Lilianne is a trans woman, and I love getting trans protagonists in anything, but particularly in a story that isn’t overtly About Being Trans. It’s still extremely relevant to her character: alchemy allowing for a lot of very literal reinvention and alteration and influence over reality would of course appeal! But I appreciate that she’s just getting to be the protagonist of this story.

The bad:
…how many times am I allowed to gripe about typos? I will never stop griping until they stop being such a problem. There’s one on the first page of the first chapter where a character’s name is wrong! And because of the way it’s wrong, it’s sort of an immediate spoiler! (Only spoiling a familial relation that would be revealed fairly quickly, but still!) Can some of these major publishers please fucking invest in some damn copyeditors??

I really don’t have much ‘bad’ to say about this book!

It does end on a bit of a cliffhanger, with the next book slated to be the last. I don’t know if it has an official date yet, but at a guess I’d say 2028. (I’d be happy if it was 2027, but I’m not counting on that.)

This does also make me more excited to read the Up and Under books (four novellas published “as” A. Deborah Baker; the children’s books that she’s canonically the author of.) Those will be coming up before too long in my TBR. I sort of wonder how reading them now will feel (having learned more directly about Asphodel) as opposed to how it would have felt reading them earlier on.





Bonus novelette/short story

BERJAYA
(I think a good illustration of the space station that they're visiting.)
“Rapport: Friendship, Solidarity, Communion, Empathy” by Martha Wells
A Murderbot Diaries novelette, set after Artificial Condition
2025
Science fiction - online novelette
Published on Tor.com (now Reactormag) here.
4/5

The crew of the research transport ship Perihelion, one of the most powerful and advanced artificial intelligences ever, are heading to a station where they hope to find and study a Pre-Corporation Rim site. When they arrive, they discover the station is in the midst of a hostile takeover, and their already secretive mission has gotten significantly more dangerous. As they move through the station, Perihelion offers its assistance, as usual… but it seems to have gotten a lot of interesting new ideas and strategies regarding surveillance and how to manipulate security systems. Iris, one of the crew members, is quite interested in where ‘Peri’ may have gotten these new ideas.


My thoughts:
(I am reading The Murderbot Diaries in chronological order this time, rather than publishing order, so despite this being one of the more recent pieces, I read it now.)

This is a really fun story! I was excited about it when it came out last year, but never got around to reading it, in part because I felt like it had been too long since I’d read other parts of the series, particularly Artificial Condition, which it’s set after. I probably did not need to wait for the reread, but I did like getting it in the chronological context. That said, there are a lot of characters mentioned as parts of ART’s/Perihelion’s crew, and recognizing them from later books was helpful. I do think that it would have been an okay introduction to those characters, but I can’t say for sure.
I loved seeing ART’s interest in security systems and surveillance drones and such, because it’s absolutely obvious where it learned about those and how to use them. (And how to do so “creatively.”)
It’s also nice to see ART spending time with its crew. We know from the series how much it values and cares for them, and I like getting to see them doing things in the course of their normal lives and activities. We get to see them through Murderbot’s perspective later, but getting a bit of a sense of the baseline is good.




Reading goals for 2026:
- Read 50 books (38/50)
- Read more genre classics (Tolkien, Le Guin, Pratchett) (5/x)
- Re/read the Murderbot Diaries (3/8)
- Read the 2025 Pride ebook bundle (7/14)
- Read some short story collections (2/x)



It took me a while to get caught up on June’s reviews, so I’ve so far read two more books:
- Butterfly Effects by Seanan McGuire, a co-read with Taylor
- The Tombs of Atuan by Ursula K. Le Guin

I am currently reading four books:
- Exit Strategy by Martha Wells, the next Murderbot book (which I may finish today)
- The Fever King by Victoria Lee, my ebook side-read
- Diavola by Jennifer Thorne, my co-read with Alex
- A House with Good Bones by T. Kingfisher (again), my co-read with Taylor

My plans for what to read next:
- Luminescent Machinations a short story collection, one of the Pride ebooks
- Fugitive Telemetry by Martha Wells, continuing Murderbot, reading in chronological rather than release order
- The Starving Saints by Caitlin Starling
- Network Effect by Martha Wells, more Murderbot
- The Farthest Shore by Ursula K. Le Guin, the next Earthsea book
- System Collapse by Martha Wells, more Murderbot
- Fair’s Point by Melissa Scott, another from the Pride ebooks
- For my ebook side-read, I’ll probably read the next Game Changers book, and then either another non-romance ebook or another short story collection

My TBR has somehow hit 855 books.
A chunk of those came from another humble bundle of books, which I sort of regret, because none of them were ones that were already on my wishlist. (But at the time it was more of a “ooh, stuff I’ve never heard of, but was well-received! This is good for expanding my reading horizons!” But with this much on the list, I probably don’t need to worry about that so much.)
Now I’m resisting the Tannith Lee bundle they currently have, because I do want to read more of her work, and only one of the books in the bundle is one I already have. I will probably give in and explode the TBR even further.




Bonus book-related thoughts that don’t quite deserve their own posts…

Now that we’re (more than) halfway through the year, I’m at the point that I was going to “allow” myself to reorganize my TBR if I wanted to. (In order to quell the temptation to constantly reshuffle things, I told myself I had to stick with it for six months first.) At this point… I’m not planning a reshuffle. I still want to finish the Murderbot reread/get to read this year’s, keep reading the Earthsea books, and I’d really love to finish the Pride ebooks (which is the “stretch goal” that I most hope to hit for the year.) With those still being my main goals, I’m sticking with the plan that lets those be the main focus (with a few other things mixed in.)

However I have started to think about what I want to do for next year, even if that is getting ahead of myself a little. I’ve been pretty happy with my reading this year so far, so I will probably do roughly the same thing, alternating between the classics I’ve wanted to read, individual books/trilogies/etc. on the TBR, and things that I did get from bundles and such. I’ll also still have my ebook side-reads, probably still also alternating between indie romance stuff, the fairly random non-romance ones I’ve picked up via FirstReads or elsewise on kindle, and short story collections.
While that’s the overall plan, I also do need to actually organize and prioritize the list. (I prefer actually having a list, so I always know what I’ll be reading next, rather than allowing decision paralysis to keep me from picking up a new book for days or weeks.) Prioritizing is tricky for me, because I have a lot that I really want to read and am looking forward to. I could read JUST things in that category for a couple years, probably! However, I’ve really enjoyed the bundles of books that have included books I probably wouldn’t have picked up otherwise, so I do want to still allow myself to be surprised by the sorts of things I wouldn’t have personally put at the top of the list. (It has meant I read stuff I didn’t like, too. But I think bad books or fine books that aren’t for me are also a good part of my book diet.) The TBR does also include quite a lot of rereads, and I’m still hoping to actually get to some of them, too!
So we’ll see.



A while ago, I posted about the sort of conflicted feelings I have surrounding books that I own copies of, but that are no longer available for sale. (Though I think I’ve come down on the side of treating them no differently than the other things on my TBR.) I’d mentioned the sort of worry that it awoke for me about things on my wishlist disappearing before I purchased them, and the FOMO worry about losing the chance to read something at all.
Well, two things on my wishlist have indeed since been removed. (The book cover and title still show up on my list, but no price, and the product page is now a 404.) One book, an indie novella, appears to still be available via the author’s website, so I will likely eventually buy it there. The other is part of an anthology series (not short story anthologies, but stand-alone novels written by different authors) that was tradpub.
The publisher is still around, and there are at least two upcoming entries in that same series that they’re actively advertising. The book is listed on their website, but hard copies are sold out, and all the ebook links lead to 404s. There’s a bsky post about the cover for one of the upcoming entries in the series, that mentions the new look for the series, so I’m hopeful the book I’m interested in will be available again, and is just getting a new cover or something… but I’m frustrated that the ebooks were taken down. (True of other books in the series, too.) I couldn’t find any mention of the earlier entries being taken down or being reworked or anything, so it’s also possible they’re just gone, which seems sucky for a series that you’re still publishing and promoting.
So… I guess a couple more data points regarding books disappearing.

Birdfeeding

Jul. 9th, 2026 11:12 am[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
Today is partly cloudy and warm.

I fed the birds.  I haven't seen any activity yet.

I put out water for the birds.

EDIT 7/9/26 -- I did a bit of work around the patio.

EDIT 7/9/26 -- We went up to Champaign-Urbana today.  There were so many flocks of geese and nearly-adult goslings!  :D  Some of them were mixed ages, like one much younger gosling among older ones.  I think the rough breeding season made some families merge.  We also saw a murder of crows in one parking lot.  I cawed at them and they all turned their heads to stare at me.  At twilight, I think I saw a nightjar flying overhead, or more precisely, I heard the "peent, peent" call they make and looked up and spotted a bird.

I am done for the night.
canyonwalker: Hangin' in a hammock (life's a beach)
Mammoth Lakes Travelog #9
At the Westin · Mon, 6 Jul 2026. 9pm.

We decided to call it a day after hiking Twin Falls today. We had another hike on our list that we'd hoped to do today but we just didn't have the energy for it. The 9,000' altitude at Twin Falls had hit me hard. So we went back to the hotel— which is at merely 8,100' elevation 😅— and relaxed.

We trudged up to our room, stripped off our sweaty hiking gear, changed into swimsuits, and headed back downstairs to the pool deck.

Enjoying the hot tub at the Westin Monache in Mammoth Lakes (Jul 2026)

The water in the swimming pool was a bit too cool for us, especially with a not-warm wind whipping past us every time we stood up. So we soaked in the hot tub and tried to stay mostly submerged.

After a good long soak— I believe we were out there for almost an hour— we headed back up to the room. I peeled off my swim trunks and went straight for a shower as I felt slimy still from the sweat and dust and bug spray and suntan lotion. Plus I wanted to look nice as we'd decided to treat ourselves to dinner this evening at a fancy restaurant: a Brazilian steakhouse!

We hadn't eaten at a churrascaria in, oh, at least a few years at this point. Hawk's been on a medication that makes that type of food not fit her appetite... and now I am, too. Being on Ozempic the past few months I've wondered, with my reduced appetite would I get the value of spending $100pp at an all-you-can-eat steakhouse? And would the food be so tempting that I'd be prone to overeat and get sick after?

We'd been waiting until the stars aligned: It had to be a day when Hawk was ready to enjoy red meat, and both of us had exercised to work up a fair appetite, and I had eaten a minimal lunch. Well, items 1 and 2 were ✅, and for lunch I'd only nibbled on a protein bar. So off to the Brazilian steakhouse for dinner we went! 😋

Back at the room, stuffed and happy, we relaxed on the sofa and enjoyed watching the sunset through our balcony doors.

Watching the sun set from our hotel in Mammoth Lakes (Jul 2026)

It's about 9pm now (I snapped the sunset photo above at 8:18) and I feel like I'm fighting off sleep. Of course I did wake up at 5:30am today with morning light pouring through our windows. And since that's likely to happen again tomorrow, plus we're planning a full day of hiking, I should get to bed soon.

astrakhan

Jul. 9th, 2026 08:09 am[personal profile] prettygoodword
prettygoodword: text: words are sexy (Default)
astrakhan (AS-truh-kuhn, AS-truh-kan) - n., a closely-curled black or grey fleece of very young karakul lambs from Astrakhan, Russia; a cloth, usually wool and/or mohair, with a curled pile resembling this.


The fleece is also called karakul, sometimes more often called that, but the made imitation isn't ever. (Hats made from the fleece are also called karakul.) Astrakhan is in the upper Volga delta, which is still a good 100km/60mi from the Caspian Sea, and the sheep is bred throughout Central Asia because of its drought and famine hardiness -- for some reason, the fleece specifically from Astrakhan became known in western Europe, specifically in France, and we got the name from French (in the 1760s).

---L.
osprey_archer: (books)
A few weeks ago, scrolling through Tumblr, I was arrested by a quote:

“I can’t think what it’s like to be certain. I’m afraid that it’s impossible for me. There isn’t a place for me.”

His voice was tense, excited, full of passion. As he went on, it became louder, louder than the voice I was used to, but still very clear.

“Listen, Lewis. I could believe in all the rest. I could believe in the catholic church. I could believe in miracles. I could believe in the inquisition. I could believe in eternal damnation. If only I could believe in God.”

“But you can’t, I said, with his cry still in my ears.

“I can’t begin to,” he said, his tone quiet once more. “I can’t get as far as ‘help Thou mine unbelief.’”

We left the ridge of the Roman road, and began to cross the shining fields.

“The nearest I’ve got is this,” he said. “It has happened twice. It’s completely clear – and terrible. Each time has been on a night when I couldn’t sleep. I’ve had the absolute conviction – it’s much more real than anything one can see or touch – that God and His world exist. And everyone can enter and find their rest. Except me. I’m infinitely far away for ever. I am alone and apart and infinitesimally small – and I can’t come near.”


This comes from C. P. Snow’s The Light and the Dark, and of course I had to read it at once.

Now unfortunately this turns out to be one of those rare times when my book instincts have led me astray. The above excerpt electrified me, but the rest of the book was… it’s fine. It’s well-written. Our narrator (Lewis) is telling us the story of his friend Roy (the speaker in the above extract) and his struggles with recurring melancholia.

Roy hopes that if he can come to believe in God, that will cure his bouts of despair. When that doesn’t work, he decides to try the next best thing, “a feeble simulacrum of his search for God,” by attempting to embrace the Third Reich.

Given the kind of God Roy was looking for, based on his passionate declamation that “I could believe in the inquisition…in eternal damnation,” it strikes me the move from God to Hitler actually makes perfect sense. God the Fuhrer seems like just the sort of deity who would delight in damning people for the hell of it, too.

You might imagine that Roy’s flirtation with Nazism put me off the book, but in fact I had gotten annoyed with Roy much earlier, simply because I felt that the author was continually leaning over my shoulder breathing “Isn’t he dreamy?” Young, handsome, deeply and romantically sad; slender yet strong, intellectually brilliant, showered in honors to which he is indifferent; a notorious womanizer who had a brief gay love affair in his youth –

I did entertain the possibility that Snow may have meant us to read Roy as gay, adding an extra subtext to his despairing “There isn’t a place for me.” But upon reflection I think this briefly-alluded-to affair is simply meant to add to Roy’s aura of irresistible dreaminess. Women want him, men want to be him; but men also just want him. Don’t you, dear reader, also want…

“NO,” I said, heaping rejection like coals of fire on poor Roy’s head, like an angry god myself.

So in a way it was a bit of a relief when Roy started flirting with Nazism, as I felt released from any obligation to like this beautiful sad boy. Look how sad he is. How could you dislike anyone so sad and so beautiful at the same time? He does perhaps allow his sadness to lead him into excesses, but it’s just because he’s so darn SAD, don’t you understand? Well, look, I think we can all agree that “fanboy for the Third Reich” is simply an excess too far.

Unfortunately, now that I’d decided I was allowed to hate him, I began to find him far less annoying. It helps that when the war starts, he signs up to fly for the RAF, mostly because he knows the death rates for pilots is high, but at least he’s fighting for the right side even if he is also sighing re: the Nazis “If they had been just a little different, they would have been the last best hope.” Last best hope for WHAT, Roy? This is genuinely unclear to me, because he recoils whenever he has to interface with a specific example of Nazi doctrine, like their policies toward the Jews or their desire to conquer Europe, when considered as a concrete fact rather than in the abstract. (In the abstract he thinks unification is a good idea and, after all, it will never be accomplished peacefully.)

So he’s still fumbling about in basic political incoherence, but he nonetheless achieves a certain pathos in this section. Despite myself, I felt some of the tragedy of this beautiful sad full-grown man who is clearly always going to be spiritually a beloved boy in C. P. Snow’s heart.

Snow is actually quite a good writer, I think, but would have been even better if he could have gotten out of his own way. There’s no need to constantly point out Roy’s dreaminess. He’s put enough of it on the page that readers could notice it on their own, if they were only left alone.

Thursday Word: Crypsis

Jul. 9th, 2026 10:42 am[personal profile] bethctg posting in [community profile] 1word1day
bethctg: illustration of a girl with flowers around her (Default)
crypsis (noun)
cryp·​sis

• The ability of an organism to conceal itself especially from a predator by having a color, pattern, and shape that allows it to blend into the surrounding environment

etymology: 1956; cryp(tic) + -sis, or borrowed from Greek krýpsis "hiding, concealment," from kryp- (stem of krýptein "to hide, conceal") + -sis -sis

Crypsis in action!

Mossy leaf-tailed gecko demonstrating crypsis
from Wikipedia entry
veronyxk84: (Vero#DemirViola)
Title: Winter Cold
Fandom: Viola come il mare
Author: [personal profile] veronyxk84
Pairing: Viola Vitale/Francesco Demir
Rating: PG-13
Warnings: none
Word count: 100 (Ellipsus)
Spoilers/Setting: Set during S2.
Summary: Viola braves the winter cold with absurd ear muffs that Francesco calls ridiculous… but finds adorable.
Disclaimer: This is a work of fiction created for fun and no profit has been made. All rights belong to the respective owners.

Challenge: #520 Ear


READ: Winter Cold )

☙ ☙ ☙
 

Thankful Thursday

Jul. 9th, 2026 02:33 pm[personal profile] mdlbear
mdlbear: Wild turkey hen close-up (turkey)

Today I am thankful for...

  • Compression gloves and socks, diclofenac topical gel, and associated equipment and exercises. Now if only I could see some actual results.
  • Still being able to walk, at least a little. And having a physical therapist within easy walking distance.
  • Finally getting one of my prescriptions un-screwed-up.
  • A good, long video chat with my son on his birthday. NO thanks for crappy audio in Discord -- we had to switch to Zoom. Also no thanks for Zoom's UI, though most of my problems were probably due to unfamiliarity.
  • Electric fans; the one on my desk in particular.
  • The indoor/outdoor thermometer that G bought recently.

workaday Thursday

Jul. 9th, 2026 07:24 am[personal profile] marcicat
marcicat: (stripey cat)
*It's Thursday! Got to sleep my extra hour last night since I don't need to drive to the office today, and it was delightful.

*More hot nights on the way: less delightful.

*But I've got all the sofa cushions and blankets set up as a lil' nest in the room with the air conditioner, so I'm prepared to move back in there until conditions are more favorable (to me, personally).

*I'm currently working on two crochet projects (in the sense that I started one, then started a different one) and one writing project (in the sense that I opened a file that is still currently blank). Gotta love that creative process!

*Oh right, this was a work post. Work is boggling, but everyone seems equally boggled, which I guess is something?

Thursday 09/07/2026

Jul. 9th, 2026 10:42 am[personal profile] dark_kana posting in [community profile] 3_good_things_a_day
dark_kana: (3_good_things_a_day official icon)

1) the hot-air balloon ride was awesome yesterday evening! <3

2) watching tele this evening with hubby ^^

3) very early night in 

Just One Thing (09 August 2026)

Jul. 9th, 2026 08:31 am[personal profile] nanila posting in [community profile] awesomeers
nanila: me (Default)
It's challenge time!

Comment with Just One Thing you've accomplished in the last 24 hours or so. It doesn't have to be a hard thing, or even a thing that you think is particularly awesome. Just a thing that you did.

Feel free to share more than one thing if you're feeling particularly accomplished! Extra credit: find someone in the comments and give them props for what they achieved!

Nothing is too big, too small, too strange or too cryptic. And in case you'd rather do this in private, anonymous comments are screened. I will only unscreen if you ask me to.

Go!

The Friday Five for 10 July 2026

Jul. 9th, 2026 02:04 am[personal profile] anais_pf posting in [community profile] thefridayfive
anais_pf: (Default)
1. What would you do right now, if money were not an issue?

2. What would you do for the next three years, if money were not an issue?

3. What is bringing you the most joy right now that requires little or no money?

4. What types of things do you find enjoyable that require no money?

5. Is there anything you've been meaning to do for a long time, but put off because of money?

Copy and paste to your own journal, then reply to this post with a link to your answers. If your journal is private or friends-only, you can post your full answers in the comments below.

If you'd like to suggest questions for a future Friday Five, then do so on DreamWidth or LiveJournal. Old sets that were used have been deleted, so we encourage you to suggest some more!

Community Thursdays

Jul. 9th, 2026 12:01 am[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
ysabetwordsmith: A blue sheep holding a quill dreams of Dreamwidth (Dreamsheep)
This year I'm doing Community Thursdays. Some of my activity will involve maintaining communities I run, and my favorites. Some will involve checking my list of subscriptions and posting in lower-traffic ones. Today I have interacted with the following communities...


* Comment on Just One Thing (8 July 2026) in [community profile] awesomeers.

* Commented on Check-In Post - July 8th 2026 in [community profile] get_knitted.

* Commented on "Speak Up Saturday" in [community profile] tv_talk.

* Posted "Agriculture" in [community profile] first_nations_freaks.

Bookshelf: 2026 Edition

Jul. 8th, 2026 05:16 pm[personal profile] citrakayah
citrakayah: (Default)
Better late with this than never, I guess. Current book count: 13.

Fiction:
Children of Strife by Adrian Tchaikovsky -- Latest in the Children of... series. After feeling that Children of Memory was lackluster, I enjoyed this book much more. We got more of a look at nonhuman psychology than we did for Children of Memory, though
Green City Wars by Adrian Tchaikovsky -- Imagine made a solarpunk dystopia. That is basically this book. Humans enjoy beautiful ecologically friendly cities that effortlessly blend the built environment and greenery. All their needs are fulfilled. The needs of the "uplifted" animals who support them, however, are not--they are literally collared by what corporation owns them and have to work themselves to the bones just to afford the drugs they're dependent on. You could read this as a reference to modern class issues, though I don't think it was particularly intended as allegorical. Either way I enjoyed it.
Hemlock and Silver by T. Kingfisher -- The second of Kingfisher's books I read this year (I started Wolf Worm, but didn't have the time to finish it and felt kind of squeamish about it). While I preferred Snake-Eater, I liked this one a lot too. Kingfisher is always good at creating very original fantasy, with compelling characters, and this was no exception.
River of Bones and Other Stories by Rebecca Roanhorse -- Enjoyable, but kind of one note at times. I like Roanhorse's longer works better.
Rosewater
by Tade Thompson -- Been meaning to read this one forever--it's apparently a classic of Nigerian science fiction. Having read it, I found it... a bit middling, to be honest. It's well-written, it's just grittier than I tend to like. I didn't really get into it for the same reason I don't really tend to like cyberpunk.
Seasons of Glass and Iron by Amal El-Mohtar -- Excellent imagery and metaphor. The stories are short, so while not all of them were my cup of tea it wasn't too hard to read them all.
Snake-Eater by T. Kingfisher -- Really liked this one. This is the first novel by T. Kingfisher I've read that does much with the Southwest, so it was interesting to later read Hemlock and Silver and see what's clearly a fantastical Southwest.
The Fox Hunt by Caitlin Breeze -- One of my favorite books so far of the year. I'm a sucker for anything involving characters getting a little more feral, and the transformation of the main character into a vulpine fae was well done. The ending set up for the expected sequel well, so I'm looking forward to that.
The Rose Field by Philip Pullman -- Difficult to follow at times. There were dropped plot points and plot points that were never fully explained. The end of the book is not conclusive. But in retrospect I believe that was part of the point, because an important part of the book is the importance of the imagination and unsolved mysteries to the psyche.
Venomous Lumpsucker by Ned Beauman -- An extremely depressing eco-dystopia where killing species is as simple as paying a modest fine that can be neatly priced into a corporation's operating expenses. Reading it wasn't fun, but it was a good book that hits a whole lot harder after hearing about how in the wake of the Exxon Valdez disaster, Exxon tried to make sure that payouts for environmental damages would be easily predictable, relatively low, and easily factored into their budgets.


Non-Fiction:
Coyote at the Kitchen Door: Living with Wildlife in Suburbia by Stephen DeStefano -- Probably a good book for beginners, but not particularly interesting for someone like me who has a background in science. The illustrations were pretty nice, though.
In Amazonia: A Natural History by Hugh Raffles -- For a long time, I've been interested in pre-Columbian Amazonian civilizations. Unfortunately, this book is not about that. It's about post-Columbian ecological change, mostly due to hydraulic engineering, in one community. Undoubtedly a good book but not what I wanted.
The Last Flight of the Scarlet Macaw: One Woman's Fight to Save the World's Most Beautiful Bird by Bruce Barcott -- An informative look at the struggle around a hydroelectric dam in Belize. Raises some interesting questions about colonialism, but also how anti-colonial rhetoric sometimes gets used to shove through developmental projects that are sweetheart deals for foreign corporations even over substantial local opposition.

Jokes

Jul. 8th, 2026 08:15 pm[personal profile] pattrose
pattrose: Elian (0 HR 1)
* What month is the shortest of the year? May, it only has three letters.
* Why do we tell actors to "break a leg?" Because every play has a cast.
* What do you call it when a snowman throws a tantrum? A meltdown.
* My uncle named his dogs Timex and Rolex. They're his watch dogs.
* Did you hear about the guy whose left side was cut off? He's all right now.
* What did the left eye say to the right eye? Between you and me, something smells.
* I'm so good at sleeping I can do it with my eyes closed!
* What do you call a pudgy psychic? A four-chin teller.
* If April showers bring May flowers, what do May flowers bring? Pilgrims.

July questions.

Jul. 8th, 2026 07:51 pm[personal profile] pattrose
pattrose: From Aly (jim-blair-alyjude)
6.    Today is the beginning of Great British Pea Week in the UK.  Do you like eating peas? Have you ever grown them?

I love peas. I use them in a lot of recipes. And I crave slit pea soup often.



7.    It’s the seventh day of the seventh month, and in Japan, it’s the day of the Star Festival (Tanabata). For one day only, wishes, hopes, poetry and dreams are written onto streamers and tied to trees. What would you write on a streamer today?

I would have written something about cancer. My brother is starting his second two-month aggressive chemotherapy. He can use all the prayers he can get.


8.    Artemisia Gentileschi was born today in 1593. She was incredibly famous during her career, but largely forgotten until the 20th century. Have you ever seen any of her paintings?

I do know who she is. Her work is lovely but not anything I would want to own.
dialecticdreamer: My work (Default)
Unwanted Update
By Dialecticdreamer/Sarah Williams
Part 2 of 2, complete
Word count (story only): 1502
[1 pm on Wednesday, 29 November of 2017]


:: Jules has to handle a glitch in his waiting job… or is it a glitch? Part of the Lodestar story arc in the Polychrome Heroics universe. ::


Back to part one
:: Thanks for reading! ::




Jules waited until both the troubleshooter and Pips had taken seats in the living room before he joined them. “Start with the reason that you’re not on call, but I only need an overview, a way to put the emotional turmoil I’m seeing over what seem to be simple texts into some kind of context,” the troubleshooter began. “Also, please just call me Stone. I keep looking around for my father when someone says ‘Mister Larrent.”

“Got it. I’m Jules. I’d been asked to put in the same system for files that I’d set up at the local Thalassian embassy, out in the kids’ camp, but we were still on the basic tour when someone abandoned a baby at the gate. He had chicken pox. I went into quarantine with the baby, with the understanding that I’d come back to the job I was actually hired for, and that I’d be paid at the same rate while taking care of the little boy.”
Read more... )

Hiking Twin Falls

Jul. 8th, 2026 06:41 pm[personal profile] canyonwalker
canyonwalker: My other car is a pair of hiking boots (in beauty I walk)
Mammoth Lakes Travelog #8
Twin Lakes · Mon, 6 Jul 2026. 12:15pm.

As Hawk and I were putting together a list of possible trails to hike on this visit to Mammoth Lakes, she suggested Twin Falls just outside of town and showed me a map. It's practically right next to the start of a trail we hiked on a previous visit. "I think we looked at that from the side of the road and considered it 'done'," I said. But then she showed me a pic on AllTrails.com, and I realized we had definitely not seen Twin Falls before— and if we had, I wouldn't have pooh-poohed it!

To put this falls in perspective I'll start with the view we got to last.

Twin Falls, viewed from across Twin Lakes in the Mammoth Lakes area (Jul 2026)

This is Twin Falls as seen from across one of the Twin Lakes. It falls almost 300' down a steep ridge from Mamie Lake. There's a trail from the bottom that switch-backs up the mountainside but doesn't really get close to the falls.... Then, according to AllTrails.com at least, there's a trail from the top that drops like a shot right next to the falls. We opted to hike the latter.

What AllTrails.com marked wasn't an established trail but rather a "social route" as people call it nowadays. Use trail was the term we hikers used years ago. Either way, it's a path that's beaten down from people walking on it, it's very dicey in spots, and it's not maintained. The trail notes promised us view of Upper and Lower Twin Falls, which are near the top and about halfway down the long cascade you see in the pic above.



Here's a video showing Upper Twin Falls in action. Much of the time I post stills of waterfalls from my hikes. Here I chose to share the video because it captures the scope and activity of the falls better than a still image can convey.

As we headed to Lower Twin Falls next we faced a decision about how to get there. The route indicated on AllTrails.com did not exist. The trail going straight down from this point was... notional, at best, and looked treacherous. AllTrails also showed we should cross the stream here. Uh, no! 😨

We lateraled over to the switchback trail, the official trail in this area, and zigzagged more than halfway down the ridge. The problem with this trail, presumably the reason why the social trail exists, is that it veers away from the falls! We used our orienteering skills to pick a route back over to the stream not far below where it looked like the Lower Falls tier would be. After a bit of bushwhacking and scrambling over deadfall we found an old use trail that cleaved close to the stream and ascended to Lower Falls.



In this video you can also see Twin Lakes below us when I pan away from the falls. And did you spot that little bridge spanning between the Twin Lakes? That's where I stood to capture the first pic in this blog.

When we were done enjoying the Lower Falls we continued hiking up the use trail to Upper Falls. There was a use trail between the two! It's just in such poor condition that it wasn't really visible from above. I mean, climbing up from below we were doing things like climbing almost vertical sections of hillside by grabbing onto exposed tree routes. Here's a pic Hawk took of me coming up the trail:

Climbing a difficult trail at Twin Falls in the Mammoth Lakes area (Jul 2026)

When we got back up to Upper Falls I felt like my butt had been thoroughly kicked. Well, actually it was my butt that was in agony, it was my lungs. The elevation up here is nearly 9,000', and having barely 24 hours to acclimate from sea level is not enough for a person of my age. So from here we lateraled back over to the switchback-y trail and zigzagged our way back up to the trailhead at the top.

Permaculture

Jul. 8th, 2026 05:36 pm[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
“IMPOSSIBLE!” No Work Food Gardens Based on Wild Edible Ecosystems

About 20 years ago, after I first started studying Permaculture, I went to work for a very sustainable Permaculture-oriented CSA farm. One day, after working all morning painfully tending, pruning, and weeding a patch of cane berries, I went for a bike ride along my favorite trail. Black raspberries were in season, so I went home, grabbed 3 3 gallon buckets and filled them up with raspberries.

That was when it hit me. NOBODY was working tending these, except for perhaps the deer and birds fertilizing them. Meanwhile, my own hands were covered with scratches from my morning work
.


This is an example of humanity's earliest agriculture: encouraging plants we find useful in places where we go, and occasionally ripping out ones we don't want there. Wild plants can mostly take care of themselves. You don't have to fuss over them like delicate domestic fruits and vegetables.

My approach to laissez-faire permaculture is similar. I plant new things that seem promising. I try to help them establish. They live or die. The ones that live, I expect to take care of themselves. Some of what I grow is really good at that. \o/

(no subject)

Jul. 8th, 2026 01:54 pm[personal profile] arcanetrivia
arcanetrivia: animated gif of Guybrush, dizzy with stars over his head after jumping through the window of the Bloody Lip bar (monkey island (guybrush dizzy))
dskfkdshjf I have a minor hole to paper over in my WIP, in that there's a place that is currently a rough jump cut that I would like to make into a smooth transition, so maybe 100-200 words; but other than that, after more than two years of struggle (significantly complicated by all the medical problems that my dad has had in those same two years), as of about midnight last night I have what appears to be a complete narrative of 31,703 words. It's still full of first-draft problems, of course, and I know that doesn't impress people who regularly knock out long fanfics, but assuming it doesn't lose a bunch in editing, it would be the longest thing I've ever written by a pretty comfortable margin. I know word count isn't everything, and who the hell knows if either of those fics even deserves to be that long or if they could be cut in half and still get all the essential points across, but wotthehell, archy.

Questions

Jul. 8th, 2026 01:42 pm[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
"Plural Checklist" by leathersys on tumblr -- copied on DW by [personal profile] synecdoches

I recently found an interesting survey on Tumblr by leathersys, called the Plural Checklist. They made this as a quiz for people who think they may be plural/multiple, but don't have classic amnesiac barriers, since a lot of quizzes and diagnostic tests are geared toward the most obvious dissociative symptoms. I like the questions, but I strongly dislike Google and don't want to send this info to a stranger, so I'm going to copy the questions here and consider my answers. Most of the questions were very insightful-- some shockingly so-- and only one or two of them made me feel like an out of touch old man.

Vocabulary: Doff

Jul. 8th, 2026 01:39 pm[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
Today's word is "doff."  Many folks will know it from "doff a hat" meaning to tip or take off.  However, it's also used widely in fibercrafting to mean removing fiber from a tool. 

Water

Jul. 8th, 2026 11:20 am[personal profile] ranunculus
ranunculus: (Default)

Water is still taking up a lot of bandwidth. It’s the cows, the time of year and the age of the system. Yesterday I used quite a lot of water in the garden, including some that escaped when a connection on the drip system came apart.   Fortunately there was water in the overflow trough, and some in the trough at the house so I wasn’t too worried. I did talk to Cody because, by yesterday we had had water for a couple of days and I had seen exactly 2 cows and their calves. The rest of the herd was missing.  Cody thought about it, and decided to go find the cows in the easiest, fastest way. He went out at noon, when the cows were “shaded up”, that is lying down in the shade near water. Smart cows, they take a nap during the hot part of the day. They were quite grumpy and hard to move when he insisted on driving them down to the House Pasture.

Pics )
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
Pop Culture Squad has a post about current Batman threads. In one of those, Oliver Queen / Green Arrow explains to Bruce Wayne / Batman what is wrong with the tech industry nowadays:

Ollie has a turn as the crusading liberal ex-millionaire, as he has a few opportunities to let us all know what he really thinks of Generative AI companies founded by tech bros. There’s one point where Ollie fills Batman in on it all. "They’re another generative AI company. Scraping personal data. Stealing art and stories and knowledge. Polluting and poisoning. Using masses of energy and water. Taking what the world actually needs to produce what nobody wants."


It's that last line I want people to remember and use to describe what is wrong with generative AI: "Taking what the world actually needs to produce what nobody wants." That's it in a nutshell.

Update

Jul. 7th, 2026 01:40 pm[personal profile] ranunculus
ranunculus: (Default)
I'm STILL not done with the water project.  Only one more project involving gluing PVC left to do; however I now also want to replace the problamatic bit of pipe that is in the creek. That pipe is never going to stop trying to coil back up into its original coil and every time it does so it cuts off my water supply by airlocking.  I might as well put a new piece of pipe in there that will lie flat without being weighted down by piles of rocks that will wash away with the next heavy rain. 
 Day before yesterday involved another visit to Fort Bragg.  My body feels ever so much better!   
This morning Mark O came up to help. I was going to have him help replace the pipe, but he is terribly allergic to poison oak and there is a lot of it up there.  So instead we moved the old 6 ft tank into position in the garden. I threw some wood in the bottom and we shoveled out the last of the wood compost from the truck into it.  A trip to town filled the truck back up with a planting mix. We put most of the load into the old tank.  It is really, really nice mix, the plants will love it. I have a couple winter squash planted and a couple okra will go in this evening when it cools off. 
BERJAYA

We also worked for a few minutes on the solar, driving rebar through the wooden and the brick paving base to make a really sturdy footing for it. 

In the last couple of days I've gotten a lot of the remaining plant materials removed from right next to the house.  Should be more fire safe now.   

Birdfeeding

Jul. 8th, 2026 12:40 pm[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
Today is partly sunny and warm.

I fed the birds. I've seen a small flock of sparrows and house finches.

I put out water for the birds.

EDIT 7/8/26 -- I did a bit of work around the patio.

EDIT 7/8/26 -- I did more work around the patio.

EDIT 7/8/26 -- I did more work around the patio.

EDIT 7/8/26 -- We started breaking up the parts of the birdgift tree that had fallen into the south lot. There's about twice as much mow path past it now. We dumped 2 wheelbarrows of sticks into the firepit in the ritual meadow.

EDIT 7/8/26 -- I did more work around the patio.

EDIT 7/8/26 -- I cracked open 2 apricot pits and got 2 big perfect seeds. I cracked open two batches of cherry pits and got several good seeds. I think the advice to let seeds air-dry for a few days is bad. One day at most. They shrivel up pretty fast.

I walked around for a bit. I saw 2 bats flying quite low in the house yard, and more flying high over the road and other places. I'm not sure if they're the same bats or not. I don't know how many I actually have.

As it is getting dark, I am done for the night.
dannye_chase: (Default)
BERJAYA 

Hey, y’all, it’s Weird Wednesday! Where on some Wednesdays, I blog about weird stuff and give writing prompts.

Today: Vanished in Mid Air: D. B. Cooper

Welcome on this Weird Wednesday! Today we’re going to take off in a plane, but land without one…somewhere over the vast Pacific Northwest. Sound fun? Then put those tray tables up, because we’re heading out.

It’s a strange phenomenon to have a person who’s famous for being unidentified. Everybody knows who they are, precisely because nobody knows who they are. “Dan Cooper” is one of those people. The name was an alias, and was further misreported by the press as D. B. Cooper. So who was he? Well, let’s take a look.

On Nov 24, 1971, the day before Thanksgiving, a man boarded Northwest Orient Airlines Flight 305 for a short hop between Portland, OR, and Seattle, WA. This man, holding a ticket under the name “Dan Cooper,”  passed a flight attendant a note saying he had a bomb, and asking for what today would be $1.6 million and four parachutes. (Why four? Possibly Cooper wanted to be sure he was given working parachutes, by insinuating he was going to take a hostage with him—a main and a backup parachute for each of them.)

Cooper proved a gentleman highjacker: when the plane landed in Seattle, and the $200,000 ransom was paid, Cooper let the passengers go. He then asked the flight crew to take him to Mexico City. But partway through that second flight, after ordering all crew to the cockpit, Cooper opened a door and extended an airstair.

Around 8 p.m., in the dark of night, Cooper parachuted out somewhere over Washington, with the vast Pacific Northwest forest below him. And from there, he vanished.

Check out the blog post for the whole story and some writing prompts, such as:

Murder most foul. What if D. B. Cooper vanished because he was murdered? Say he landed safely and started making his way out of the forest with the money. Maybe he had an accomplice who was hungry for the cash. Maybe he randomly met someone who noticed he was carrying $200,000 in a bag. Or maybe the killer didn’t even know about the money—the PNW has its share of serial killers who pick up hitchhikers on the road. You could write a story where the hijacker’s luck only holds out long enough for him to put his feet on the ground—after that, he’s in more danger than he was jumping out of the plane.

DannyeChase.com ~ AO3 ~ Linktree ~ The Vampire Haven erotic romance series ~ Weird Wednesday writing prompts blog ~ Resources for Writers


Image credit

Are We Connected?

Jul. 8th, 2026 04:42 pm[personal profile] rionaleonhart
rionaleonhart: top gear: the start button on a bugatti veyron. (going down tonight)
I was trying something a little weird and experimental with Through the Cracks, my Deltarune fic set in chapter five's weird route, so I thought I'd reflect a bit on how things went!


Notes on an experimental fic! )


I wouldn't want to do this with every fic, but it's been fun as a one-off experiment!

elote

Jul. 8th, 2026 08:20 am[personal profile] prettygoodword
prettygoodword: text: words are sexy (Default)
elote (eh-LOH-tay) - n., corn/maize harvested before maturity; a Central American street food consisting of grilled or boiled young corn on the cob served on a stick and seasoned with a creamy sauce (such as mayonnaise, sour cream, or crema) and garnished with toppings (such as lime juice, cotija cheese, and chili powder).


elote on a stick
Thanks, WikiMedia! Though it'd be a better shot if the stick wasn't blurred out

Also called Mexican street corn, though it's eaten this way throughout Central America with much regional variation in seasoning. Not to be confused with esquites, which is kernels of corn with the same dressings, served in a cup. We got the name from Mexican Spanish, where its primary meaning is the first one above (the street food is also called that, but because of the young cob not the preparation), in turn from Nahuatl ēlōtl, young/fresh ear of corn/maize. (Esquites fwiw is also from Nahuatl, from īzquitl, toasted corn kernels.)


Admin note: posting might be spotty over the next week due to external obligations (aka: adulting, ugh).

---L.
conuly: (Default)
This has to have been an EARLY scifi novel. 80s- to early 00s at the latest.

********************


Read more... )

A Stroll at Convict Lake

Jul. 8th, 2026 06:39 am[personal profile] canyonwalker
canyonwalker: My other car is a pair of hiking boots (in beauty I walk)
Mammoth Lakes Travelog #7
Convict Lake · Mon, 6 Jul 2026. 12:15pm.

I mentioned earlier today that we're looking to do a bunch of shorter hikes ranging out from Mammoth Lakes today. Part of "a bunch" means that some things are misfires. We started with the columns at Crowley Lake, which was slightly a misfire because this time we couldn't get all the way up to the columns; they were in wading-depth water that was disgusting with algae. After that we drove a 4x4 road through part of the Owens Gorge. I didn't take pictures there, though I should have. Then I went exploring a few side canyons off US-395 on the eastern Sierra Nevada. No dice on that. Not everything that looks like a massive canyon has a road into it.

Of course, some massive canyons do have roads into them. One we're saving for tomorrow because we'll do a big hike there; another we visited today because it's a pleasant short stroll. That's Convict Lake.

Driving to Convict Lake in the Eastern Sierra Nevada (Jul 2026)

On the access road to Convict Lake you can tell you're in for something special. Those 12,000'+ peaks that line the side of US-395... well, there's an obvious gap in them. And a brown sign for Convict Lake.

The road goes up right to the edge of the lake. There are several small parking lots there and a few hiking trails, including one that's an easy stroll along the side of the lake and provides access to gravel beaches popular with picnickers and fishers.

Convict Lake sits below 11,000'+ peaks on the Eastern Sierra Nevada (Jul 2026)

We didn't bring rod and reel or even a picnic basket, just ourselves and our cameras. It's always so dramatic gazing at this colorful rock wall rising 3,000' above the lake. Wouldn't it be special to hike up the way up there? ....Yeah, special and painful. 😅

We visit Convict Lake almost every time we're traveling along this section of US-395. It's a scenic gem on a road that's packed with so many scenic gems. And this one's easy to visit. Well, easy in the not-winter, anyway. Our first visit here was in early December twenty-something years ago. The road was snowed under past the foot of the lake. We clambered over 8' tall snow drifts just to see a view similar to this... and felt the chill of sub-zero wind blowing straight through all our layers of clothes. It's way nicer now in July. ⛄️

Wednesday Reading Meme

Jul. 8th, 2026 08:27 am[personal profile] osprey_archer
osprey_archer: (books)
What I’ve Just Finished Reading

The evening before my birthday, I popped by Barnes and Nobles for a bit of pre-celebration, little realizing that I was going to find a book perfectly tailored to my interests: The Making of American Girl, a gorgeous coffee table book about the early years of Pleasant Company, with lengthy sections about the research and development process for each of the first six American Girls. (Founder Pleasant Rowland left the company after Josefina, which is why that serves as a stopping point.)

LOVED this. Not only do I adore American Girl, but I had so much fun reading about the process of developing the characters and stories, seeing the swatch boards for materials for the characters’ dresses, etc. Now obviously some of the emphasis on material culture is because the books were designed in tandem with the dolls, but there’s inspiration here for any writer who wants to make their characters’ worlds feel rich and detailed.

Also I cackled with glee when I saw Rowland’s original postcard to Valerie Tripp (who wrote many American Girl books) outlining her American Girl idea, which included the phrase “Good illustrations.” Rowland knew what was what!

I also finished Craig L. Symonds’ Lincoln and His Admirals: Abraham Lincoln, the U.S. Navy, and the Civil War, which is a lively and well-written account of the naval side of the Civil War: the blockade, the river fighting on the Mississippi, the terrifying impact of the new iron-clad ships, the political impact when Captain Wilkes puckishly decided to kidnap a couple of would-be Confederate commissioners off a British mail packet…

I was fascinated to learn that, legally speaking, Wilkes would have been in a better position if he had seized the entire mail packet and sent it to a prize court. That would have been more defensible than merely absconding with a couple of passengers. Maritime law! Amazing!

What I’m Reading Now

After allowing it to languish for years on my TBR shelf, I’ve dusted off Margaret Drabble’s The Radiant Way. So far: the characters are assembling for a New Year’s Eve party to celebrate the dawn of 1980! It appears outwardly festive but inwardly roiling with emotional undercurrents.

What I Plan to Read Next

Back on my bullshit with William Dean Howells. I only meant to check out one of his books, but then there was a book about Howells on the shelf right next to it… I managed to cut myself off at two, though.

Just One Thing (08 July 2026)

Jul. 8th, 2026 12:47 pm[personal profile] nanila posting in [community profile] awesomeers
nanila: me (Default)
It's challenge time!

Comment with Just One Thing you've accomplished in the last 24 hours or so. It doesn't have to be a hard thing, or even a thing that you think is particularly awesome. Just a thing that you did.

Feel free to share more than one thing if you're feeling particularly accomplished! Extra credit: find someone in the comments and give them props for what they achieved!

Nothing is too big, too small, too strange or too cryptic. And in case you'd rather do this in private, anonymous comments are screened. I will only unscreen if you ask me to.

Go!

overnight oats report

Jul. 8th, 2026 06:33 am[personal profile] marcicat
marcicat: (today I eat cake)
I wouldn't call the consistency 'oatmeal' exactly. Or even vaguely. It was goop. Very goopy. Not un-tasty, and the consistency was definitely reminiscent of yogurt with hemp hearts or some similar type add-in. The appearance was not great. Luckily it was in an opaque container far too large for it (probably about 4 ounces of goop in a 12 ounce container) so I didn't have to look at it very closely. 

The whole thing was absolutely elevated and saved by the frozen strawberries. To recap, this was:

1/4 cup of 'overnight oats mix'
1/4 cup half and half (I didn't have milk)
8 frozen strawberries

So the strawberries:goop ratio was high, which turned out to be a great choice. It was also very cold, which seems obvious but honestly isn't what my brain associates with oatmeal. 

In Conclusion:
*this is goop, a very neutral food
*an acceptably edible cold snack for Summer Heat
*very good way to eat a lot of frozen strawberries

Would eat again, though it's probably a toss-up as to whether I'll manage to finish the whole bag. It says it has eight 1/2 cup servings, which is sixteen 1/4 cup servings. Do I like it enough to eat it 15 more times, or slightly fewer times but in larger portions??? Uncertain.

Wednesday 08/07/2026

Jul. 8th, 2026 09:17 am[personal profile] dark_kana posting in [community profile] 3_good_things_a_day
dark_kana: (3_good_things_a_day official icon)

1) yum fresh pressed fruit juice

2) lunch with hubby at home, enjoying the good weather in our garden ^^

3) we're going for a hot-air balloon ride this evening. Very much looking forward to that *grins*

Good News

Jul. 8th, 2026 02:50 am[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
Good news includes all the things which make us happy or otherwise feel good. It can be personal or public. We never know when something wonderful will happen, and when it does, most people want to share it with someone. It's disappointing when nobody is there to appreciate it. Happily, blogging allows us to share our joys and pat each other on the back.

What good news have you had recently? Are you anticipating any more? Have you found a cute picture or a video that makes you smile? Is there anything your online friends could do to make your life a little happier?

Tuesday word: Doff

Jul. 7th, 2026 09:34 pm[personal profile] simplyn2deep posting in [community profile] 1word1day
simplyn2deep: (Ocean's 11::Turk Malloy::laugh)
Tuesday, July 7, 2026

Doff (verb, noun)
doff [dof, dawf]


verb (used with object), doffs, doffed, doffing
1. to remove or take off, as clothing.
2. to remove or tip (the hat), as in greeting.
3. to throw off; get rid of: Doff your stupid ideas and join our side!
4. Textiles.
a. to strip (carded fiber) from a carding machine.
b. to remove (full bobbins, material, etc.) from a textile machine.

noun
5. Textiles.
a. the act of removing bobbins, material, etc., and stripping fibers from a textile machine.
b. the material so doffed.

Screenshot 2026-07-07 at 9.19.42PM.png

See more synonyms on Thesaurus.com

Origin: 1300–50; Middle English, contraction of do off; cf. don

Example Sentences
"Long before the civil wars, men and boys were expected to doff their hats, indoors or out, whenever they met a superior," he says.
From Science Daily • May 7, 2026

The sellout crowd, which had long been on its feet, continuing cheering, eventually drawing Kershaw back out onto the field to doff his cap in appreciation.
From Los Angeles Times • Jul. 3, 2025

When they arrive, there is a ceremonial greeting, where the Lords doff their black bicorn hats and the Commons representatives acknowledge this by bowing.
From BBC • May 25, 2024

“Courage Hats” wants a little too forcefully to guide us into “deep” places where we will doff our hidey-hats to reveal our true selves — abstract concepts for the literalizing peewee set.
From New York Times • May 20, 2022

We were required to doff our hats as the warder walked by.
From "Long Walk to Freedom" by Nelson Mandela
starandrea: (Default)
mixed language

I was watching a Chinese vlogger open some mail and she was like, "If you can guess what's in this, leave a comment," and I immediately thought, "yi ben livre." Which is a combination of French and Chinese that I blame on Language Jones because youtube had just shown me a thumbnail of his video "Stop Mixing Languages." (And he speaks French, which I assume was the connection my brain made, since when I started learning Chinese it was ASL that I kept substituting with, probably because it was my most recent non-native working language.)

language in dreams

The other funny thing about that is that it's a reminder of how differently we think, since I know a lot of people don't think in words and I definitely do. The other day I saw a discussion of dreaming in non-native languages, and several advanced language learners seemed convinced this phenomenon is either imaginary or "bogus" (not sure exactly what they meant by that), despite multilingual people assuring them it's real and normal. I remember my glee the first time I woke up and realized I'd been dreaming in Chinese. But I know a lot of people don't remember their dreams, either, so it must just be different brains with different experiences.

AI face editing

Relatedly, I hadn't noticed any AI face editing until tonight, when I was watching my one of my favorite Taiwanese vloggers and suddenly thought, "wait, that's not a real face shape." (China has a relatively extreme "beauty filter" culture, and constant exposure to it may make people more likely to slide across the line from "very idealized" to "straight up anime" face without realizing it.) I googled AI face editing, and now I can't stop noticing people's teeth. I hope that passes quickly.

AI face editing and faceblindness

Oh, but also, I found a helpful English video about a Chinese demonstration of AI face editing (the comments were definitely from non-Chinese viewers), and it included a demonstration of live AI face-swapping at the end. I'm faceblind, which I didn't think about at all until the face-swapping demonstration, because the face-editing was very clear to me. I could easily see the difference between the edited and unedited faces. But I could not see the difference between an original face and a face swap. It was amazing: the narrator would be like, "here's a Tom Cruise face swap" and I was like, "it's the same guy," and then the narrator would be like, "and here, obviously it's Scarlett Johannsen" and I was like, "what obviously; what are you talking about, it's obviously the same person."

So anyway, I don't know what that means, except that there's something different about AI face editing that's visible to me as a faceblind person in a way face-swapping isn't. (By comparison, I mean, I've never recognized editing without a comparison until tonight, and this wasn't "that face looks edited" or even "that face doesn't look real," but literally "that's not a normal human face shape." It looked perfectly real, it just wasn't biologically possible.)

training with the pup

Finally, Daphne and I met with a dog trainer today, and as I told Marci, "I was impressed by him." She was like, "That's not a reaction you usually have to men." I know. So rare. (I often get along better with old men, and he says he's been training for 50 years, so maybe the pattern holds.) On the strength of our first meeting I agreed to a few "private" classes rather than a group class. No money was exchanged until the end of today's session, so I don't want to gush until we meet again, but he did everything right in the initial evaluation.
dialecticdreamer: My work (Default)
Unwanted Update
By Dialecticdreamer/Sarah Williams
Part 1 of 2
Word count (story only): 761
[1 pm on Wednesday, 29 November of 2017]


:: Jules has to handle a glitch in his waiting job… or is it a glitch? Part of the Lodestar story arc in the Polychrome Heroics universe. ::




Jules parked his new surrey in the garage, patting his father’s motorcycle, or at least the custom cover fitted over it, on the way to the door into the utility room. His phone chimed with a text.

Then another.

Then three or four more.
Read more... )

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