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sovay: (Lord Peter Wimsey: passion)
[personal profile] sovay
I had such a nice Readercon!

I went into my last round of programming on just as little sleep as my first because of the fox that screamed in the yard for what felt like all night, but the epically freewheeling breadth of "The Odyssey in 2026" can be gauged by the fact that one of my co-panelists talked about the anarchic receptions of Katerina Gogou and another the diametric adaptational differences between Armand Assante and Ralph Fiennes and a third the modern moralities of Epic: The Musical (2024) while I had the chance for the first time in several decades to mention my master's thesis on the archaic lyric transformation of Homeric motifs. The audience was full of brilliant questions about the oral tradition and the epic cycle and we barely even got into the polyphony of translations. We could have gone another thousand hexameters easy. "Reckoning at 10" came out about half reading and half craft beer-and-cider tasting courtesy of Michael J. DeLuca and his harvesting of post-industrial orchards and spruce tips. I enjoyed the technical discussion and the notes from the audience. The room sang happy birthday to the magazine.

Beyond this point I was already beginning to slump into a pumpkin, but I managed to collapse on a portion of outdoor sofa adjacent to Kate Nepveu and Marissa Lingen and Gwynne Garfinkle and Greer Gilman with interludes of Catherine Rockwood and Michael McAfee and [personal profile] ckd and Romie Stott. Dean offered me peaches. [personal profile] choco_frosh had to run off to dismantle the con. I caught Mike and Anita as they were loading out and now I have copies of the phantasmagorically endpapered Trail of Shadows (2025) and the brand-new edition of Strange Wisdoms of the Dead (2006/18). The sole reading I made it to was Michael Cisco's. Briefly there was a Cameron Roberson. I hugged a lot of people.

Then I was a pumpkin that had to run a lot of errands, but so long as the monkey's paw does not curl slowly shut, I have not had a nicer weekend this year and I have not had such a professional one in seven. I will feel fragile about my immune system until some days have passed. I will need to sleep a lot. I didn't remember to bring my four-year-old collection which would have been convention-new. I was asked for my website and my social media and the spelling of my name. I have not felt for a long time that I could rely on either my intellect or my stamina and I am still not sure if I can start again, but I made it through all three days of my panels and loved them. It was like being alive to talk with people. At the moment I am looking forward to NecronomiCon.

Architectural terms, stairs

Jul. 12th, 2026 09:45 pm
oldshrewsburyian: (Default)
[personal profile] oldshrewsburyian posting in [community profile] little_details
Hello all, I'm trying to find specific vocabulary for staircases. I'm looking at an interior staircase in a Georgian home (but the stair itself might be later.) The thing that strikes me as distinctive is that it surrounds a hall on three sides, having one landing that runs along an exterior wall. I love the look of it, and I'm trying to find vocabulary more specific than risers, balustrades, landings, which is what I tend to get when looking for glossaries.
kitewithfish: (daisy face)
[personal profile] kitewithfish
Bookish friends (and foes, too, I guess) - I have been to ReaderCon 2026! It was lovely - my first time, and it was a very chill and bookish place.

As per my usual mission, I like to walk away with a robust list of books I have never heard of before to add to my reading list - these suggestions mostly come from panels, conversations with other nerds, and things in the bookshop that I did not let myself immediately buy. 

(I will admit, some of these were bookmarked less because the specific title was praised, and more because I was using Storygraph to track this in real time. If a panelist did not mention a specific book, just picked what looked most interesting to me/most book-shaped.) 

Changeling by Delia Sherman
Bouncing Off the Moon by David Gerrold
South Riding by Winifred Holtby
Herlands: Exploring the Women's Land Movement in the United States by Keridwen N. Luis
Swords and Deviltry by Fritz Leiber
The Wizard's Map by Jane Yolen
How to Be Gay by David M. Halperin
Anyway: Angie by Daniel José Older
The Winter Prince by Elizabeth Wein
The Rampant by Julie C. Day
The Battle of Jedha by George Mann
Sheepfarmer's Daughter by Elizabeth Moon
Tea with the Black Dragon by R.A. MacAvoy
Rose Macaulay – The Early Years Collection (7 Books including The Furnace, The Lee Shore, Non-Combatants and Others, What Not, Potterism - A Tragi-Farcical Tract, Dangerous Ages & Mystery At Geneva) by Rose Macaulay
A Fish Dinner in Memison by E.R. Eddison
The Unraveling by Benjamin Rosenbaum
Among You Taking Notes...: The Wartime Diaries of Naomi Mitchison 1939-1945 by Naomi Mitchison
The Teller of Small Fortunes by Julie Leong
Fantasy's Othering Fetish by P. Djèlí Clark
A Modest Proposal by Jonathan Swift
Ode to the Half-Broken by Suzanne Palmer
Jumping Off the Planet by David Gerrold
The Barefoot Book of Ballet Stories by Jane Yolen, Heidi E.Y. Stemple
Caliban Landing by Steven Popkes
This Nonviolent Stuff'll Get You Killed: How Guns Made the Civil Rights Movement Possible by Charles E. Cobb Jr.
Death at the Crystal Palace by Jennifer Ashley
Mistress of Mistresses by E.R. Eddison
A Dubious Clamor by Marissa Lingen
Escape from Valo by Daniel José Older, Alyssa Wong
The Fall of the Kings by Delia Sherman, Ellen Kushner
Comrade Grandmother and Other Stories by Naomi Kritzer
Silent Spring by Rachel Carson
Higher Magic by Courtney Floyd
The Last Unicorn by Beagle, Peter S. published by Ballantine (1969) [Mass Market Paperback] by Peter S. Beagle
Hammer's Slammers by David Drake
Finder by Suzanne Palmer
The Tragedy of King Alexander the Stag by Delia Sherman
Tremontaine: The Complete Season One by Patty Bryant, Malinda Lo, Racheline Maltese, Joel Derfner, Ellen Kushner, Paul Witcover, Alaya Dawn Johnson
The Year's Best Science Fiction: Thirtieth Annual Collection by Gardner Dozois
The Deed of Paksenarrion by Elizabeth Moon
The Dark Descent by David G. Hartwell
The Man with the Knives by Tom Canty, Ellen Kushner
Fritz Leiber's Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser by Howard Chaykin, Mike Mignola, Al Williamson
The Man Who Folded Himself by David Gerrold
Fafhrd y el Ratonero Gris by Howard Chaykin, Mike Mignola, Fritz Leiber
The Armless Maiden: And Other Tales for Childhood's Survivors by Terri Windling
Doctor Mirabilis by James Blish
Hogfather by Terry Pratchett
Engine Summer by John Crowley
The Summer Book by Tove Jansson
Spider in a Tree by Susan Stinson
Heaven Official's Blessing: Tian Guan Ci Fu (Novel) Vol. 1 by Mo Xiang Tong Xiu
Counter Attack by 柴鸡蛋
Unconquered Countries by Geoff Ryman
A Darker Shade of Magic by V.E. Schwab
The Eyes Are the Best Part by Monika Kim
Agent of Change by Sharon Lee, Steve Miller
Lex Talionis by R.S.A. Garcia
The Last Soul Among Wolves by Melissa Caruso
Solaris by Stanisław Lem
Your Shadow Half Remains by Sunny Moraine
The Mystery of the Bitten Peach by Cecilia Tan
Her Smoke Rose Up Forever by James Tiptree Jr.
No Harmless Power: The Life and Times of the Ukrainian Anarchist Nestor Makhno by Charlie Allison
The Starving Saints by Caitlin Starling
Angel Down by Daniel Kraus
The Obsidian Tower by Melissa Caruso
Nothing Tastes as Good by Luke Dumas
The Kids Came Back Wrong by Wen-yi Lee
Dhalgren by Samuel R. Delany
The Last Hour Between Worlds by Melissa Caruso
The Ministry for the Future by Kim Stanley Robinson
The Husband Stitch by Carmen Maria Machado
Kalpa Imperial: The Greatest Empire That Never Was by Angélica Gorodischer
The Amazing Mrs. Pollifax by Dorothy Gilman
These Fragile Graces, This Fugitive Heart by Izzy Wasserstein
These Deathless Shores by P.H. Low
Columbus and Other Cannibals: The Wetiko Disease of Exploitation, Imperialism, and Terrorism by Jack D. Forbes
The Night Library of Sternendach by Jessica Lévai

Casino table games

Jul. 12th, 2026 05:42 pm
elisheva_m: a water colour rainbow on a water colour sky with the word hope (Default)
[personal profile] elisheva_m posting in [community profile] little_details
Is there anyone here who knows enough about betting on casino table games to help me work out a few things for my novel? Table games please, not slots. Sitting at a machine stuffing coins isn't that interesting in prose and doesn't provide much room for interaction.

One scenario is that he loses big and blames another player for it. Or something else happens which is plausible for a casino and makes him mad but doesn't involve the gambling directly. I have no experience. It doesn't have to be justified anger, he's hair trigger. My one idea is that another player scatters his chips, but I'm not sold on that. Spilling drinks happens in a hotel bar five chapters earlier.

The other scenario is that someone is intentionally egging him on to bet badly. This isn't necessary, just a slightly wicked idea. It would be a later scene.

He favours simpler games as he's always drunk & high. From what I've been able to find, roulette might be the best - simple mechanism but a complex set of betting options. I could pick and choose from pages about the game but I have no idea how the flow of it might go and it would be cool to write the scene around a plausibly realistic sequence of bets. The other players know what they're doing and how to play the odds.

If you can suggest something around another simple table game, please do. I'm not attached to roulette - his eyes can go blurry watching it go round and round another time. Poker is probably too complicated, blackjack is easy and I use that for a scene where there's little detail about the gambling.

Thanks for any help.
 

Cooking with crushed grain

Jul. 12th, 2026 02:49 pm
luzula: a Luzula pilosa, or hairy wood-rush (Default)
[personal profile] luzula
Den nya gröten av Sébastien Boudet (2025) (translation: The New Porridge)
Very inspiring book on how to use cereals! It's like discovering a whole new area of food. The author has also written a book on baking. What I've used the most is to crush whole grains of wheat (or emmer, einkorn, dinkel, barley, oats, or rye) in our mill such that you get both large fragments and a bit of what's basically flour. This happens naturally when you grind it. Then you soak it in water overnight, but importantly you should use only half the amount of water as compared to grain (by weight). The purpose of this is to shorten the cooking time next day, but also to improve nutrition as the phytates get broken down when the grain thinks it's starting to germinate. The next day, you fry the grain in fat to get a browning reaction, then slowly add liquid and salt and cook under a lid until soft. This is the basic form, like a more delicious and flavorful version of bulgur. Keep the added liquid to a minimum. The flour component contributes a pleasing slight stickiness, like the starch in sticky rice. You can also of course do it without crushing the grain first, if you don't want any stickiness, but then the cooking time will be a little longer. Or you could sift away the flour.

This basic form can be used like rice, bulgur or pasta to accompany a sauce or stew or stir-fry. But you can do a lot more with it:
- Make a more flavorful, fiber-rich, and nutritious breakfast porridge than you get from oatmeal. For this you should soak the crushed grain in equal amounts of water, rather than half, to get a wetter consistency, and also add more water in the cooking step.
- Make an all-in-one "bolognese": after the first frying step, add chopped tomatoes/passata, chopped onions, some other vegetables of your choice, herbs of your choice, black pepper, some white wine, and either fried minced meat or cooked beans. Great for feeding a lot of people.
- Make a salad: after the grain is cooked, add chopped vegetables and legumes of your choice, then mix with a dressing of tahini, olive oil, pomegranate syrup, lemon juice, salt, and chopped parsley. At the end, add pieces of feta cheese and sprinkle with toasted sunflower and pumpkin seeds.
- Make a "risotto": fry the grain in lots of butter, and add chopped onions and celery, and dried bolete mushrooms. Add whatever other vegetables and legumes you want (or bacon). For the liquid, use white wine and stock alternately. At the end, add copious amounts of shredded parmesan.
- Make this (but modified to use crushed grains).
- Make this (but modified to use crushed grains).

So I'm sorry to promote something delicious that requires you to have a grain mill and access to whole grains, preferably from local organic farmers! But really there are so many other good things you can do with that, like bake awesome bread! Do consider it. There are small tabletop electric mills that are a lot cheaper than the one I got. Next step: grow the grain ourselves. : D
sovay: (Cho Hakkai: intelligence)
[personal profile] sovay
For my second day of Readercon I had a blast.

Both panels were bangers. I was not joking when I said early in "The Bog Body Motif in Trans SFF" that we should edit an anthology on the topic: we had audience members with bog body stories, not to mention at least one non-me panelist. The conversation started with readings from Izzy Wasserstein and Seamus Heaney and ranged through questions of transformation, ecosystems, illegibility, persistence, continuity, fragility, and protection. I may have given instructions on how to sink someone in the Great Meadows. "SFF and Queer Cultural Memory" was anchored by an intergenerational span of forty years across five panelists and a vivid embodiment of pre-Stonewall and gay liberation memories in the person of David Gerrold, who taught me something I hadn't known about how custody and adoption laws shifted for queer people in America. (It was lesbians.) I feel I ran true to form by leaping straight from a formative encounter with Theodore Sturgeon's Venus Plus X (1960) to a recommendation for Irene Clyde's Beatrice the Sixteenth (1909). The audiences always ask moderator-grade questions.

I saw April Grant and Anke Kriske in flyby. I still spent most of my time in the dealer's room talking to Mike and Anita, but I walked out with Owen Hill's The Incredible Double (2009) and was handed copies of Antisocieties (2021), Ethics (2022), and Black Brane (2025) by Michael Cisco, each with their crimson seal-stamp of a hand of glory. I bailed on the Shirley Jackson Awards, but Ellen Datlow complimented the sea-blue waistcoat I was wearing for the first time, newly gifted by Merav.

And I can't remember the last time I ate at two restaurants in a week, but I had dinner with Michael and [personal profile] choco_frosh at the superlative Treasury, which we found via its advertisement of outdoor seating. It is slotted a little counterintuitively into a bland box of stores where I have purchased jeans from the L.L. Bean and seated us without a reservation and furnished us with tall thick petal-pink rose lassi and a smoke-deep dal makhani and a velvety stunner of an awadhi korma which won out over the mutton ghee roast because of the bone-in goat. The jeera rice was delicately savory enough to eat by itself. The butter naan flavored all our fingers. I could not think about tasting the masala chai negroni because of the chai, but it smelled like an intricate mechanism of spice and mahogany and reduced my dining companions to silence and poetry. When the server discovered that I couldn't eat the rasmalai tiramisu because of the coffee—it was on the house—she brought me a plate of rasmalai by itself, soaked in a minor kingdom's ransom of saffron and pistachio. It was nuts. I have leftovers for a week. It had been years.

Naturally my last panels are the earliest. This time, Homeric epic.

Recent reading

Jul. 11th, 2026 12:51 pm
regshoe: Black and white picture of a man reading a large book (Reading 2)
[personal profile] regshoe
From Cabin 'Boys' to Captains: 250 Years of Women at Sea by Jo Stanley (2015). Very various history of the many different things women have done on ships, particularly outside the Royal Navy on cruise ships, cargo ships and so on. A lot of it is about the later half of the period, the recent feminist context in which women are openly working to do a wider range of jobs and get paid and treated properly, often recent enough that Stanley got her information by talking to the people involved. Interesting, as learning about parts of the world one doesn't often think about can be interesting, but there's not much on the earlier period I most wanted to find out about, and much of what there is comes from Suzanne Stark's book which I'd just read. (Also Stanley is oddly insistent on referring to crossdressing sailors as 'boys', as if many of them didn't pass successfully for/as adult men for years at a time—and it's not like she doesn't acknowledge and describe these cases, so I don't know what that was about.)

Wakenhyrst by Michelle Paver (2019). A Gothic horror novel, of sorts, set in the Suffolk Fens in the Edwardian period. At the start of the book we learn, via a framing story taking place sixty years after the main events, of a horrible murder committed there by a hitherto-respectable local gentleman and witnessed only by his teenage daughter; we then go back in time and see events over the years leading up to the murder, via interspersed chapters of the daughter's third-person POV and the murderer's diary. As modern historical fiction goes it's good; it is hammering the message of Patriarchy Is Really Bad pretty hard but not as far as I could see unrealistically (though the handling of Ivy's character lets that down somewhat), and the diary sections in particular, barring a few lapses into modern vocabulary and sentence structure, were really a decent pastiche of actual Victwardian epistolary horror. I was increasingly irritated by the artificial drama of the prose, especially in the third-person sections; Paver is very fond of rather contrived dramatic chapter endings and of what you might call emphatic redundancy. She repeats the same information in a new sentence so you know it's really important.—which takes away from the power of what might sometimes have been a good single dramatic reveal. (I thought the repeated twists as to the identity of the intended victim(s) were especially weak, and the final twist right at the end was pathetic. Speaking of the former, I also thought it was rather obvious which pieces of information the opening framing story was carefully not giving us in order to preserve drama later on.) I do like a book that combines disparate influences in interesting ways, which this book does—fenland history and folklore, medieval mysticism and beliefs about demons, various pieces of the author's own family history and experiences—but, reading over her detailed explanation of them all in the afterword, it did strike me that she perhaps hadn't done enough fictionalising and recombining of them. (The medieval churchy bits in particular seem hardly to have been altered at all; why change one letter in a real saint's name and then repeat his story exactly as-is? Either make up a character properly or just use the real saint!) I was also very disappointed by
some spoilery details: the way the eventual resolution of the story collapses almost all the supernatural elements down to nothing but patriarchal/religio-historical madness. Also, while we're doing spoilers, my mild-to-moderate dislike of the third-person prose got worse on the reveal near the end that it's intended to be Maud's own narrative; sure, it's the sixties now, but I don't believe a recluse with a 'cut-glass accent' raised and educated in a strict Edwardian household would use so many sentence fragments!
Hmm, I did like a lot about the book despite the weaknesses I'm complaining about here. It's just flawed and generally not very subtle.

Micah Clarke by Arthur Conan Doyle (1889). Hey, ACD, look! People ARE reading your non-Holmes historical fiction! :) Anyway, some people on Tumblr were talking about this adventure novel set during the Monmouth rebellion (a Protestant/Whig uprising against James II in the southwest of England in 1685) and [tumblr.com profile] ratuszarsenal said it was reminding him of Kidnapped, so of course I had to check it out. Narrated in first person by the title character talking to his grandchildren years later, the story follows Micah's decision to join the rising, the course it takes, various adventures he and his friends get into along the way and its eventual end. There are, loosely speaking, four main characters: Micah, a young man from Hampshire; Reuben Lockarby, his slightly bumbling BFF; Decimus Saxon, a morally dubious career mercenary who brings them the news of Monmouth's rising and then decides to join it; and Sir Gervas Jerome, a London fop fallen on hard times who also joins in for an adventure. I think this is one that wants thoughts in list form:
  • Having a group rather than a pair of main characters means there isn't one single central relationship like in Kidnapped. There is one sequence between Micah and Saxon early on which strongly recalls Alan/Davie, but I don't think Saxon and Alan really have that much in common (Alan shocks Davie by having a moral code very different to his own; Saxon shocks Micah by not having much of one at all), and while his memory lingers in a significant way at the end, Saxon isn't as important to Micah personally as Alan is to Davie. Sir Gervas also has some of Alan's comical vanity, but not the rest of his personality! On the whole I liked the dynamics between the four main characters, if none of them really grabbed me. They're a good complementary set.
  • There's not very much romance. Obviously Micah has married at some point in the time since the events he narrates, and he occasionally refers to 'your grandmother', but she's not a character in the story at all. Reuben falls in love with a side character and ultimately marries her, but it's mostly in the background.
  • I knew very little about the Monmouth rebellion before reading this (he was an illegitimate son of Charles II who decided that the accession of his unpopular Catholic uncle was a good chance to pretend to be legitimate and try to seize the throne), and it was interesting to learn more about this episode in the pre-Jacobite Stuart wrangles period. It is kind of eerie how closely the events as portrayed here recall those of the '45, with the sides swapped: a rising led by a charismatic but undependable prince who comes over from the continent; the ranks filled by admirably loyal peasants from one particular region, often motivated by religious belief; its defeat after an ill-judged and disastrous attempted night attack on the government army's camp; horrific cruelty by the government army towards both captive soldiers and random people from the surrounding countryside; show trials of the prisoners, hundreds of whom are executed or transported. One fairly important difference, of course, is that the Jacobite cause didn't go on to triumph three years later, and it is an interesting choice to set a historical novel during an unsuccessful rising by a cause that was to succeed so soon afterwards.
  • Is it a good adventure story? Yes, I think so; it doesn't stand out as one of the most memorable, but it's pretty solid.
  • A substantial part of this book's Wikipedia page is devoted to a debate over whether or not Oscar Wilde liked it. Good priorities there.
  • Apparently alchemy is real??
sovay: (Sovay: David Owen)
[personal profile] sovay
Readercon! I had not thought that my body was capable any longer of a reading and three panels on two hours of sleep and as far as I can tell, I had a great time. I talked about the Bacchae for Mirrlees and Rika Lesser for classical reception and film noir for moral ambiguity, news at eleven. I heard other panelists talk about the boundary conditions of fantasy and the topical relevance of the Sicilian Expedition and Walter Mosley's Mouse, especially as played by Don Cheadle in Carl Franklin's Devil in a Blue Dress (1995). All could have gone on cheerfully past the five-minute card and then the vaudeville-hook STOP. The auto-transcription had not existed the last time I was part of this convention and it was particularly inventive in its mondegreens for Lud-in-the-Mist (1926). I was complimented more than once on my cat-Neptune T-shirt from the Coney Island Mermaid Parade. I may have socialized more in eight hours than in the total last two or three years. Incompletely, I have seen and even spent meaningful time with Dean Grodzins, Greer Gilman, Merav Hoffman, Michael Cisco, Gwynne Garfinkle, Rachel Gutin, Rebecca Fraimow and Elizabeth Birdsall, Mike and Anita Allen, Jim Freund and Barbara Krasnoff, Romie Stott, and [personal profile] choco_frosh. I did not stay for Meet the Pros(e) because I was flat by the last of my panels and needed to check on my mother, but I have still managed to have conversations about Shirley Jackson and Walter de la Mare and family histories and chapbooks and what everyone has been doing with themselves in the up to seven years since last I saw them. I barely managed to look into the dealer's room, but I am still in possession of a field guide to urban lichens which Greer had foreseen had my name on it and two beautiful, familially inherited waistcoats from Merav which I am determined to wear with at least one of the other T-shirts I packed for this layer-less weekend. They made me a dinner of rainbow trout and glass noodles in their air-filtered room; otherwise I spent a lot of time on the patio where the cast-iron tables were just tolerably shaded enough for hanging out in the open air. I am appreciating the adherence to masking in all the con spaces, without which I could not hope to spend this much immunosuppressed time around other, indoor people. Fingers crossed against even con crud. Tomorrow, bog bodies.
kitewithfish: (mary poppins suffragettes)
[personal profile] kitewithfish
Reading journal for July 8 2026

What I’ve Read

OK, look, I read nothing to completion this week. I got sucked into a deeply unhinged Chinese boy love drama and I rode that till the wheels came off! And I’d do it again! Subtitles take up a similar level of eye strain as reading a book!

So here’s my review of that:
Revenged Love (2025) is a gay (BL) Chinese language drama that focuses on a young man who gets dumped by his girlfriend and decides to seduce the rich man she replaces him with. The story starts out with magnificent levels of plotting and scheming, and gradually shifts from a story about manipulating people to get what you want to a story about knowing people deeply and loving them with your whole heart. The young revenger falls, and falls HARD, for the rich young man that his girlfriend replaced him with, and it’s a great set of performances from these two. It’s comic and goofy and heartfelt. It also involves someone having a deep care for his pet snakes – a thing that I find fairly rare in TV!

The whole series can be watched in Mandarin with English subtitles on YouTube:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tlCSMHgOKbE&list=PLiCVOcxScfwh-Gkl0A0SeugdHQUg4QZIu
Trigger warnings for: suicide attempts, self destructive behavior of several kinds, tossing a twink to a gang, OODLES of manipulative behavior, LOTS OF SNAKES

What I’m Reading

I have abandoned the sheep book – I had too little time left on the audiobook to finish and after I found out the reason for the murder, I lost interest.

Shroud – Adrian Tchaikovsky – about 85%

逆袭 - 柴鸡蛋 | Counterattack - Chai Jidan – the English language translation of the novel that is the basis for Revenged Love. It’s absurd and very, very funny.

What I'll Read Next 
Hugos! No changes
Death of the Author Nnedi Okorafor Novel
Colourfields: Writing About Writing About Science Fiction Paul Kincaid Related Work
A Wizard of Earthsea: A Graphic Novel written by Ursula K. Le Guin Graphic Story
Positive Obsession: The Life and Times of Octavia E. Butler Susana M. Morris Related Work
Absolute Wonder Woman Vol. 1: The Last Amazon written by Kelly Thompson Graphic Story
The Space Cat written by Nnedi Okorafor Graphic Story
Automatic Noodle Annalee Newitz Novella
The Summer War Naomi Novik Novella
The Power Fantasy Volume 1: The Superpowers written by Kieron Gillen Graphic Story
The River Has Roots Amal El-Mohtar Novella
Murder by Memory Olivia Waite Novella

Hum 110 Adjacent Children's Books

Jul. 10th, 2026 01:23 pm
sanguinity: woodcut by M.C. Escher, "Snakes" (Default)
[personal profile] sanguinity
And while I'm wrapping up Hum 110 posting for the (academic) year, here are a bunch of topically-adjacent children's books we wandered into while reading the assigned curriculum. (To be clear, none of these were assigned: they're all things we found that are based on stuff we read in bookgroup, or drew upon art styles we studied, etc.)


Vivian Mansour (illus. Emmanuel Valtierra, trans. Carlos Rodriguez Cortez), Pilgrim Codex (2025)

Heroic account of a Mexican family who, driven from their homes by violence, cross the US-Mexico border to try to find a safer home. Re-imagined through the lens of Mesoamerican codices, the family's peril, sacrifices, and bravery are told with sympathy and pride. Alas, not everyone in the family makes it alive to the US, and some of the scenes are genuinely harrowing. Nevertheless, I'd still call this age-appropriate: given that some children have themselves survived similar events (or have classmates or playmates who did), this could be a useful text for helping children discuss and make sense of their world.


Duncan Tonatiuh, A Land of Books: Dreams of Young Mexihcah Word Painters (2022)

Story of young tlahcuiloqueh (scribes) in training, learning to paint amoxtin (books, aka codices). Illustrations draw heavily on Mesoamerican glyphs, and shows several example of completed codex-pages in progress. The more one knows about how to read Mesoamerican codices, the richer this book becomes. Glossary of Nahuatl in the back (used liberally in the text), but unfortunately does not include a guide to Mesoamerican glyphs, dating systems, or other conventions of the Mixteca writing system. I highly recommend pairing this with Gordon Whittaker's Deciphering Aztec Hieroglyphs (not a children's picture book) or similar, to get insight into everything Tonatiuh is doing here.


Duncan Tonatiuh, The Princess and the Warrior (2016)

Tonatiuh's version of the Mixteca origin story of the volcanoes Iztaccihuatl and Popocatepetl, which are visible from Tenochtitlan / Mexico City. As above, the illustrations are inspired by Mesoamerican codices, and the text is rich with Nahuatl vocabulary. As ever, I am caught by random side-characters: what became of the messenger who was bribed to betray Popoca? He lucked out that Popoca was too caught up in Itza's illness to hunt him down for revenge...


Duncan Tonatiuh, Feathered Serpent and the Five Suns (2020)

Another Mixteca origin story, this one for humanity itself. We read in bookgroup one of the sources Tonatiuh draws upon, but I didn't recognize the middle section of Tonatiuh's narrative--and the afterword suggests that the novel-to-me section was Tonatiuh's own creation, imaging that Quetzalcoatl faced the same challenges on the path to the underworld that the dead do.


Duncan Tonatiuh, Diego Rivera: His World and Ours (2011)

Introduction to the life and works of Diego Rivera, who was one of the principal artists of the Mexican government's muralism campaign of the 1920s and 30s. The art is a Mixtecan riff on Rivera's style, and alternates between Rivera's work, reimagined in Tonatiuh's style, and speculation about what archetypically Mexican subjects he might have immortalized had he been working today.



There may or may not be further posts of Hum-110-adjacent materials dribbling in as we go: there are a number of books I checked out from the library as potentially interesting, but which I didn't get to while we were reading related units. We'll see how it goes!
sanguinity: woodcut by M.C. Escher, "Snakes" (Default)
[personal profile] sanguinity
I've been in remiss in logging our Hum 110 reading/viewing for the second half of the year! As previously mentioned, we centered our studies on Mexico City this last year. The material blogged here runs from the seventeeth century through the near-present, and took us half of an academic year to cover.

Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz (trans. Margaret Sayers Peden), Poems, Protest, and a Dream, (late seventeenth century / 1997)

This was a fascinating collection of works. Sor Juana was both a courtier and a nun (at different times), and this collection samples both eras: at the one end we have secular diss poems and show-off pieces composed for competitions, while the other end includes a virtuoso defense of scholarship by female clerics and education for women. (The defense is the titular "Protest", which is a politically complex work in which Sor Juana responds to a rebuke by a church official who himself took on a female pseudonym for the purpose of chastising Sor Juana. Sor Juana then proceeded to play a "tee-hee, we're all just girls here" card while absolutely eviscerating the man -- while keeping up her own pretense of subjecting herself to church authority.) There's also a complex interplay between new world and old world symbols and signifiers in these works, which reflected tensions over whether New Spain or the Iberian Peninsula was the true center of the empire. Also, shoutout to the lesbian poem: we were very pleased to see it.

III: One of Five Burlesque Sonnets )

Spanish and English on facing pages, for the convenience of the multilingual.


H.N. Branch (trans), The Mexican Constitution of 1917 compared with the Mexican Constitution of 1857

We leapt from the seventeenth century to the nineteenth and twentieth century, which was an unbelievable degree of whiplash: I had soooooooo many Britannica tabs open, trying to figure out what was going on with the century-plus of revolutions, counter-revolutions, deposings, assassinations, the Mexican-American war, and oh yes, the brief installation of an emperor again (by France, when the US was too busy with its own Civil War to meddle).

Discussion this month was mostly trying to get a grasp on the history and the problem of cultivating a stable government. But we also had a lot of admiration for the 1917 Mexican Constitution, which was extremely forward thinking in terms of labor rights, up to and including things like worker safety, union protections, and paid pregnancy leaves. (The seething envy in the room could be cut with a knife!) Surprisingly to us, the 1917 Constitution was also strongly anti-Catholic, seizing Church property and mandating secular (and universal!) education. (The weakening of the Church's power led to a few more years of revolution, of course, as pro-Catholic forces objected to that part of the Constitution.)


Mexican Murals: Diego, Orozco, and Sisquieros (1920s-30s) (online gallery)
David Alfaro Siqueiros, Diego Rivera, and Xavier Guerrero, "Manifesto of the Syndication of Technical Workers, Painters, and Sculptors," (1923-1924)

Cool art! Also, interesting things to discuss re auteur's vision vs. government propaganda; the radically ethno-nationalistic and peasant-centric vision of Mexico (vs. the context of European-trained artists who had been working in the U.S. for a living, and all painted on urban buildings, not so easily accessible to the rural peasantry); and murals as a public form of art (in contrast to easel painting).


Los Olvidados | The Forgotten Ones | The Young and the Damned (1950, dir. Luis Buñuel)
Cesare Zavattini, "Some ideas on the Cinema" (1953)

Realist film about life in the economic/criminal underclass of Mexico City. The original cut of the film depicts the inescapability of the circle of violence, but that ending played badly to test audiences, so a second, "happy" ending was filmed, in which the child protagonist slays his abuser (instead of being slayed by him), and returns to reform school. (Yay?)

discussion )

All that said, I kinda enjoyed... maybe not watching the film, but having watched it? There was a lot of toothy chewy shit going on in and around the film, and it was satisfying to discuss, at a number of different levels.

Available on youtube with English subtitles, if you're interested.


José Emilio Pacheco (trans. Katharine Silver), Battles in the Desert (1980)

Novella of a man's remembrances of a specific year of his childhood, when he fell in love with his best friend's mother, and her ultimate erasure from (apparently) all memory and record but his own.

A LOT going on )

We discussed this one to death and came to no agreement on it, but I can say it was one of the most enthusiastically discussed works of the unit.


Elena Poniatowska (trans. Helen R. Lane), Massacre in Mexico (1971 / trans. 1975)

content warning for state violence, including massacre, imprisonment, and torture )

It's a powerhouse of the book, although most in my book group did not read it, or only read sections of it, because of the violence it relates. I found that frustrating, for in addition to discussion of the content, there's also ample opportunity to discuss the format of the book: how does one take reams of interviews and publicize their content, especially before one could dump a massive file of sources on the internet? How does one handle the vagaries of eyewitness accounts, the multiplicity of viewpoints, the uncertainty of memory, and conflicting testimonies? How does one do all this under a hostile government, that would much rather see your book suppressed than published? I'm a little reluctant to call this book my favorite of the course, given how challenging its content was, and yet it was definitely the one I found most rewarding, both to read and to discuss. Excellent choice for capstone of the Mexico City unit!

In your actual English

Jul. 9th, 2026 05:05 pm
sovay: (Mr Palfrey: a prissy bastard)
[personal profile] sovay
Afterward I felt that I should have recognized Brian Fairbairn and Karl Eccleston's Tommies (2022) at once as the work of the same filmmakers who introduced half the internet to Polari with Putting on the Dish (2015), not least because the two short films make such a nice double feature for the viewer who shares their abiding interest in historical diction, coded communications, and the infectious paranoia of the pre-decriminalization queer male UK. Dense for their snapshot runtimes, they require a similar willingness from their audience to entertain the past on its own terms and learn how to listen to it, whether it's a bombshell of intricate argot or an event horizon of the politely unspeakable.

Six pyrotechnic minutes on Hampstead Heath in 1962, Putting on the Dish is the wittier, higher-wire of the two, sustaining even through its hard zag of an ending a rapid-fire exposition of Polari to scream for. On top of a crash course in the range and variety of marginalized influences that cascaded into one voraciously colorful anti-language, it concisely demonstrates how two strangers side by side on a public park bench could have anatomized the exuberantly unexpurgated adventures of acquaintances or exchanged their own appraisals of well-packaged passers-by, openly under the radar of Lily Law. "Real fantabulosa bit of hard." Its barbed ciphers form a fragile safe space, advanced as casually as a noncommittal naff or bona and then more colloquially relaxed into with talk of floweries and dinarly and disappointingly dolly HPs. "Nada to vada in the larder?" – "Bijou." Nothing else automatically links the bolder and cagier persons of Steve Wickenden and Neil Chinneck—the invaluable screenplay gives their camp names as Maureen and Roberta—but in their shared appreciation of a zinger of defiant backchat, the hillside seems tranquil with possibility, at least until recalled to the realities that oblige a furtive countercultural jargon in the first place. Polari defaults so naturally to irony, getting a heart-punch out of it is an achievement, one of the few direct gestures in a vignette that rewards cryptography. Even the book in its pink jacket encodes its own implications. What English signals is nothing to say.

Down to the riddle of its title, Tommies is the more somberly ambitious slow burn, circling its fifteen minutes in the wings of the haut ton in 1814 around an invented yet all too imaginable coda to the infamous treatment of the Vere Street Coterie. An exercise in negative space, it never looks inside the molly house itself, shows nothing of the men who patronized it except through their social radioactivity, the cishet fascination with their queer customs. "When the police raided their den, they found a dozen men in a bed in one room and in the other a midwife helping a female grenadier give birth to a Wiltshire loaf!" Its Mayfair house is a curdled chocolate box, thick with the stifling half-light of a summer's evening and frantic with the trills and flutters of canaries like the tight catch in a throat or the snap of an expertly wielded fan. Sarah Winter as Georgina Ashton has a look of Psyche not only because of the white fillet her bronze-dark hair is caught up with, but because she stands on the black-and-white chequers of the stair hall as if facing into hell. How she fits into the loose, allusive swirl of gossip that gradually overtakes the women's conversation may be clocked first by students of the queer Regency, but it still has to be deciphered from the ellipses left between the more overt shocks as the cross-currents of schadenfreude, sympathy, and self-preservation gather to a point of no return. As with so much paranoid cinema, even at pocket-size, the question of who knows what is really asking the use of which the knowledge will be made. "When a man holds fire to his chest, it is not only his own clothes he burns." It's a tense, trickily layered tour-de-force for its all-female ensemble—the rest of its cameos are precisely razored in by Marion Bailey, Claudia Jolly, Elizabeth Roberts, and Susie Trayling—and it doesn't not land the wraparound of its final scenes to the unsettled Gainsborough of its cold open, but it feels like more of a fragment than its predecessor despite or because of its greater craft. Its apophatic technique might have to let up for a feature. As a chip of history, it can still haunt.

Beyond their adroit ear and eye for period detail, both films are attractive little objects. Shot on open-air digital by Benjamin Barber, Putting on the Dish has a sort of Eastmancolor overcast that suits both the year and the season; its men look unglamorous and attainable, the imperfections of their faces as expressive as the artifice of their language. Tommies looks like a heritage ghost on slightly powdery 16 mm, a gallery of revealingly shadowed portraits hung by DP Brian Fawcett; its women emerge from their era with all the mixed and inconvenient reality of facts escaping the historical record. I can best compliment the characterfully inhabited costume design by Oliver Cronk by invoking Alexandra Byrne. Impressively, neither feels like just another whack of gay tragedy even when they focus so intimately on the never-beneficial ramifications of a criminalized life; they are too vivid and compassionate, interested in all of their players regardless of their effects. I watched them courtesy of their writer-director-editors' YouTube and would be intrigued by any further foreign countries—how differently and how recognizably things are done there—they choose to add to their many-voiced queer mosaic. This English brought to you by my bona backers at Patreon.
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[personal profile] daughterofshadows posting in [community profile] silwritersguild
A black banner with icons representing different types of media (a typewriter, a movie player, a palette, a zine and a cassette). The banner text reads: Cultus Dispatches "Six Demographic Takeaways from the 2025 Tolkien Fanfiction Survey"

Who writes Tolkien-based fanfiction? Who reads it? As the Tolkien Fanfiction Survey enters its third iteration with up to ten years of demographic data, this month's Cultus Dispatches column tackles evidence from the survey to answer that question.

Ten years ago, the Tolkien fandom saw the final film of the Hobbit trilogy, which brought a boom in activity. With those films a decade behind us and in the midst of the Rings of Power television show, how has the fandom changed? Demographic data shows key changes in gender, educational attainment, and age, as well as sustained trends in race/ethnicity and religion and new insights about neurodiversity.

You can read the article "Six Demographic Takeaways from the 2025 Tolkien Fanfiction Survey" here.

sovay: (Otachi: Pacific Rim)
[personal profile] sovay
Following the successful conclusion of one of [personal profile] spatch's appointments for a change, we returned to Belle Isle Seafood and this time it was a beautiful gold-tilting evening and we could seat ourselves at one of the weather-polished open-air tables and a server came by with her pad of guest checks and for what we estimate to have been the first time in six and a quarter years we ate at a restaurant together. I got a plate of smelts piled just as high and sweetly sanded and ate them down to the fried tips of their tails and the delicate bones. Rob assures me that his baked haddock was as flakily rich as it looked under its crumbs and juiced lemon. We had duly observed the warning sign about the seagulls, but mostly we saw sparrows leaning like acrobats through the diamonds of the chain-link and a common tern that made an air-slicing swoop into the water after a small silver struggle of fish. I twisted corners of napkins into earplugs because of the planes roaring out of the peach-haze over Logan. The serpentine water was full of the shivered reflections of boats and the piers built green shadows under their Plimsoll lines. When we came home by way of Revere Beach where the glass-backed combers were still curling in high, the sun doubled itself fierily in the salt marsh off North Shore Road. Even more so now, the sea feels like a lifeline. Everything feels like choking and it is so important to have reasons to breathe.

BERJAYA
sovay: (Sydney Carton)
[personal profile] sovay
I had no idea until last night that the runaway success of Lock Up Your Daughters at the Mermaid Theatre in 1959 had produced a small boom in Restoration musicals upon the London stage, or at least for two months in 1963 it produced Paul Dehn and James Bernard's Virtue in Danger, a musical translation of John Vanbrugh's 1696 The Relapse which despite a comedically impressive cast including Barrie Ingham, Patricia Routledge, John Moffatt, Patsy Byrne, and Alan Howard fizzled out as a curiosity with an original cast LP. As a musical, it does feel thin on the ground in that most of its songs are glosses on the Vanbrugh, but every now and then it comes up with a minor gem like the devastatingly sincere "I'm in Love with My Husband," the conditional yearning of "Let's Fall Together," or the sweetly clueless "Why Do I Feel What I Feel?" which last is stuck disastrously in my head. It's the catchiest tune in the show and the likeliest to have escaped containment—nothing else in the score rang any bells with me, but this one may have made it as far as Standing Room Only—and its debt to Rodgers and Hart is honorably discharged, but I still couldn't stop thinking of Tom Lehrer.

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