Jack of Hearts song by [personal profile] smokingboot

Apr. 8th, 2026 05:06 pm
asakiyume: (highwayman)
[personal profile] asakiyume
Last entry I mused on the mystique surrounding the Jack of Hearts. Is it just me? I asked. [personal profile] sartorias and [profile] pamaladean referred me to the Bob Dylan song "Lily, Rosemary and the Jack of Hearts," which absolutely is right on target with what I was feeling, and Wakanomori pointed out to me that the Jacks are also known as Knaves, which also goes to the mystique. But best of all was when [personal profile] smokingboot shared this song she'd written about each of the jacks. Truly marvelous! And she said I could feature it here, so, without further ado ...

The Jack-of-Hearts song, or maybe better called, the Jacks song, since it's about all of them, by [personal profile] smokingboot!

Jack o'Hearts oh, Jack o'Hearts oh,
Each maiden you charm
My hopes you have broken
And my heart you disarm
If you swear you love me
I'll count that no harm
Jack o'Hearts oh, Jack o' Hearts oh,
Each maiden you charm!

Jack o'Diamonds, Jack o'Diamonds
You bagman you thief
You promise such plenty
It beggars belief
Then you wink at a penny
And bring all to grief
Jack o' Diamonds, Jack o' Diamonds
You bagman you thief!

Jack o'Clubs oh Jack o'Clubs oh
Work hard and you'll gain,
The world gladly gives you
much gold and more fame
If you risk it on a ticket
For sure you'll know shame
Jack o' Clubs oh, Jack o' Clubs oh
Work hard and you'll gain!

Jack o' Spades oh, Jack o Spades oh,
You cutthroat you knave!
More blood on your hands
than a barber's worst shave,
and if you ain't at the funeral
You're right by the grave.
Jack o' Spades oh, Jack o spades oh
You cutthroat you knave!

Four Jacks oh Four Jacks oh
Most sly in the land,
Whatever's to come oh
It won't be as planned.
Box clever my darlin'
And keep close your hand,
Four Jack oh Four Jacks oh
Most sly in the land!

Wednesday Reading Meme

Apr. 8th, 2026 02:04 pm
sineala: Detail of Harry Wilson Watrous, "Just a Couple of Girls" (Reading)
[personal profile] sineala
What I Just Finished Reading

KD Casey, Breakout Year: A m/m baseball romance that the author apparently wrote in response to feedback saying her books had too many Jewish characters, so now everyone in this book is Jewish, which is clearly the best way to respond to bigoted criticism. A+. Loved that. I wish I could say the same about the rest of the book, which is a fake-dating second-chance romance where only one of the main characters currently plays baseball, which means there's way less baseball than in her other books, which made it kind of meh for me because the author is really amazing at putting baseball as an integral part of her baseball romances (sometimes it's hard to find sports romances where the author seems like they actually care about the sport) so unfortunately I spent most of the book hoping for more baseball in the baseball book and not getting it.

What I'm Reading Now

Comics Wednesday!

Iron Man #4 )

What I'm Reading Next

No idea. But, hey, maybe I can read books now? Here's hoping, anyway.

march booklog

Apr. 8th, 2026 04:28 pm
wychwood: Zelenka is worried because the city is in danger and McKay is winning at Tetris (SGA - Zelenka Weir Tetris)
[personal profile] wychwood
42. The Return of Fitzroy Angursell - Victoria Goddard ) I really liked this one - both as a view of his history and of his life as he steps away from being emperor. I'd like to re-read it and then follow up with the relevant parts of At the Feet of the Sun to see how they fit together, too.


43. Mountains of Fire - Clive Oppenheimer ) An interesting book; more human-focussed than I was expecting, but not in a bad way.


44. Something Human - AJ Demas ) Not my favourite Demas, but this was still pretty good.


45. Strange Houses - Uketsu ) The first book was weird in a fun way; this was mostly just weird, in the sense that even the characters that weren't supposed to be involved in creepiness are stranger than seemed at all reasonable.


46. Adventures of Huckleberry Finn - Mark Twain ) Still relatively fun, though full of more horrible things than I'd remembered.


47. Irresponsible Adult - Lucy Dillon ) I can't quite call this a soothing read when Robyn starts out making so many mistakes, but it was satisfying and enjoyable.


48. Windmaster's Bane - Tom Deitz ) Not a bad example of its kind.


49. The Anglo-Saxons - Marc Morris ) A good survey of what we know about the basic history - kings and whatnot - of the era.


50. The Anthropocene Reviewed - John Green ) A delightful collection of extremely random reviews.


51. A Tempest of Tea - Hafsah Faizal ) Maybe it's just me, but I thought this was terrible.


52. The Raven Scholar - Antonia Hodgson ) I just don't understand why any of the half-decent folk would stay.


53. James - Percival Everett ) I still don't think I really know what Everett wanted to do with this book, but I'm not at all sure it worked.


54. Moonstorm - Yoon Ha Lee ) Normally I love Lee's writing, but this just didn't quite work for me somehow.


55. Slow Horses - Mick Herron ) Well-done, but I'm just not going to be a spy fan.


56. The Republic of Salt - Ariel Kaplan ) I really thought this volume was going to actually finish the immediate story; more fool me.


57. Faerie Queene vol 1 - Edmund Spenser ) The first part of this was genuinely fun, but all of the moral / religious underpinnings are so confused. Interested to see where volume 2 goes.


58. Swordcrossed - Freya Marske ) This does a good job of earning the resolution; I enjoyed it.


59. Chalet School Reunion - Elinor M Brent-Dyer ) A fun chance to see various early pupils twenty years down the line.


60. Couple Goals - Kit Williams ) Cute sports romance! With a sapphic relationship as well as a het one.

what i'm reading wednesday 8/4/2026

Apr. 8th, 2026 09:05 am
lirazel: Abigail Masham from The Favourite reads under a tree ([film] reading outside)
[personal profile] lirazel
Trying to bring this back!

What I finished:

+ Disciples of White Jesus: The Radicalization of American Boyhood by Angela Denker. This was not exactly what I expected, which was a more sociological exploration of the way that white Christian boys are being taught white supremacist/Christian nationalist beliefs. Instead, it was a very personal journalistic exploration that drew on sociological data. Denker did things like travel to Columbia, SC to meet the pastor of the young man who murdered worshipers at Mother Emanuel church in Charleston, talked to pastor teaching confirmation classes in rural Midwestern communities, and drew on her own work as a pastor to get an angle on what white Christian boys are being taught about masculinity.

This is very much a book for Christians; it is written from a progressive Christian perspective and as such would probably be annoying to people who are progressive but not Christian. Still, I don't regret listening to it and I am glad this resource is out there for Christians who are trying to combat extremism within the church.

What I'm reading:

+ Orlando by Virginia Woolf for book club. I'm about 1/3 of the way through, and I am glad this wasn't my first Woolf. The language and the flashing insights are gorgeous, of course, and I actually love how deeply weird it is with things like time--it's absolutely written on a mythic scale which I think is very cool--but I think if this was my first Woolf I would be more wtf??? about it. The casual racism is a lot!

I don't know that I will ever love this like I do Mrs. Dalloway, but it's certainly an interesting reading experience and I am enjoying myself! We'll see how I feel when I'm done.

+ The Magician's Daughter by H.G. Parry. Despite my intense annoyance at books about female protagonists whose titles frame them in relationship to a man, I checked this one out on a whim. It has the energy of an old-school YA fantasy novel (complimentary) and I'm enjoying it! It doesn't feel formulaic or as simplistic as most YA does today, even if it doesn't quite have the richness of my old faves.

I was taken from the beginning; the story starts out with a teenage girl who's been raised on a magical island in a crumbling castle, knowing nothing about the rest of the world except what she's read through books. Classic Lauren-bait, 11/10, no notes. Once we leave the island, things don't hit quite as hard for me, though I'm reserving my judgement until I finish it.

It turns out it's one of those "magic is disappearing!" books, which I think is an overdone trope, but this is certainly one of the better versions of that story I've read. The worldbuilding is quite fun, even if it isn't very innovative. There's no romance, the main relationship is between the protagonist and the man who raised her, which is well done. Hopefully we'll get some real emotional oomph in the last third of the book and I will be able to unabashedly recommend this to people who are looking for a light but not insubstantial read.

+ "You Just Need to Lose Weight" and 19 Other Myths About Fat People by Aubrey Gordon. I just needed an audiobook to listen to while I was cooking on Sunday, and I was like, "Wait! Aubrey from my beloved Maintenance Phase podcast has books! I can just listen to her read them!"

I knew a lot of this stuff already, but Aubrey is such a great person to hang out with--funny, compassionate, uncompromising when she needs to be. The work of fat advocacy she does must be exhausting considering the everything of our current culture (for a while there in the 2010s I really did think we were making strides on the topic of bodies, and then the one-two punch of Covid and weight loss drugs happened and now we're right back to heroin chic and it's so awful), but I admire her so much for doing it.

You had a 50-50 shot!

Apr. 7th, 2026 11:03 pm
sineala: Fred (from Young Wizards); the text reads "let's just call him Fred" (Young Wizards: Fred)
[personal profile] sineala
Today in Fandom Complaints, I wish to preface my complaint by saying that since, obviously, I am enjoying watching the entire back catalog of Dimension 20 and also Campaign 4 of Critical Role, that clearly I enjoy watching Brennan Lee Mulligan's DMing.

However, I think it's really, deeply weird, that for a guy who clearly defines himself by being a big nerd who knows a lot of stuff about stuff (and, I mean, sure, that's great, I am also a big nerd) -- anyway, that basically everything I have ever seen him say about Latin is totally wrong. If there's Latin, it's wrong. (If there's Greek, it's also often wrong, but there's less Greek, at least. Still bewildered at CR C4 featuring him defining "dithyramb" essentially as "amphitheater" and then telling the audience to "look it up." I... did? It doesn't mean that.)

Yes, I was annoyed while watching D20 Fantasy High that he consistently stresses "Avernus" wrong -- the Latin stress rule is not hard, I promise -- but I told myself that, okay, maybe it's a D&D thing and D&D decided to pronounce the name of their thing differently from the real thing. Sure. Fine. Okay. I was annoyed that D20 Unsleeping City S2 decided to make the cornerstone of its season the quotation "Nulla dies umquam memori vos eximet aevo" because then that meant I had to listen to it be mispronounced and mistranslated and taken out of context a lot -- and because it's one of [personal profile] lysimache's favorite bits of the Aeneid it's also one of my favorite bits of the Aeneid. But everyone takes this one out of context a lot now (it's part of the 9/11 memorial, for some weird reason) and I guess I can accept that people don't know it's about Being Gay and Doing War Crimes and that's just how it is.

But, okay, so, I am coming up on the end of the season Mice & Murder, which is basically "The Wind in the Willows but what if we just murdered a bunch of animals at Toad Hall and then a fox version of Sherlock Holmes had to solve the mystery" which I assume is not what the book is actually about although I haven't read it. Anyway, here in the penultimate episode, the characters are given a clue to a passcode, and the clue is in Latin, and they are asked if any of their characters know Latin.

The clue is "mors est in gloria." He repeats this, like, two or three times, and he's clearly reading it off something -- it is definitely the thing he intended to say. (The closed captions spell it wrong, but that is absolutely the thing he is saying. He pronounces it very carefully.)

Because I have clearly put several points into Knowing Latin while building my real life human character my first thought is "well, that's a weird clue." Like, what the hell? "Death is in glory?" Okay, sure. Whatever. It didn't occur to me that it could have been meant to say something else. I just thought it was weird on purpose.

Then he tells the player whose character would definitely know Latin (the character is a vicar) what this is supposed to mean, privately, and they excitedly report to the rest of the group that it means "glory in death."

No. No, it does not.

It's four words. Come on. How do you get this wrong? How do you get this exactly backwards? How do you look at the phrase "in gloria" that you have constructed and decide that you nailed it and that that for sure means "in death?"

I don't expect most pop culture to get Latin right, but, like... I expect better of Pop Culture For Total Nerds, I guess. I would really like D20 to do better. Please. For me. Get someone to check your Latin.

(I also did not buy the two Game Changer pins with Latin mottos from the episode where they gave them Latin mottos because both of them had bad Latin to varying degrees. One of them was bad to a degree where it was like "okay, this contains words that obviously are Not Actual Words and therefore makes very little sense, what the fuck" and the other one was only bad to the degree of "if you know what it is trying to say, you can see how they got there, but this really only means that in Medieval and not Classical Latin." Which, eh. I guess clearly it could be worse.)

Jack of Hearts and Captain Morgan

Apr. 7th, 2026 03:49 pm
asakiyume: (highwayman)
[personal profile] asakiyume
I was taking a shortcut from one strip of depressing stores to another, and it had me scrabbling down a slope, covered in these landscaping rocks, when I spotted this playing card and nips bottle:

A faded playing card and a nips bottle lying amid landscaping rocks.

Like out of a story.

The Jack of Hearts strikes me as a trickster character. Is that an established thing, or just something I'm imagining? I mean, the jack isn't as powerful as the king, he's the interloping male who can enchant the women, steal them away from the king. And hearts! Hearts is hearts.

(Side Quest: You are in charge of creating four new suits of cards. What are they?)

And then the nips bottle. Cards and drink are stereotypical downfalls, but there's something extra mean and tragic about a nips bottle, fortunes fallen so low that that's all you can afford. Maybe the Jack of Hearts was your lucky card... now it's lying in a wasteland between strips of stores, beside a state highway, next to the nips bottle.

(Side Note: Actually now it is lying in the pocket of my coat. I am not sure what quest I've accepted by picking it up.)

The real-life Captain Morgan raided Spanish galleons hither and yon, plundered cities, engaged in torture now and then, and owned several slave-run plantations. He also drank a lot. I wonder what he'd think about his image decorating nips bottles?

(ETA Side Note 2: Wow, "Lily, Rosemary, and the Jack of Hearts" is a great story-song! Thanks [personal profile] sartorias and [personal profile] pameladean for recommending it!)

The latest book

Apr. 6th, 2026 03:59 pm
sholio: bear raising paw and text that says "hi" (Bear)
[personal profile] sholio
I finished edits on Luke over the weekend (Westerly Cove 4). Feel free to grab a copy 'til it goes live on Amazon on April 17!

book cover with a bear framed against a sunset

Get it on Bookfunnel:
https://dl.bookfunnel.com/30s06n16u7

(Blurb is still a work in progress.)

You might be the strange delightful

Apr. 6th, 2026 05:23 pm
sovay: (Silver: against blue)
[personal profile] sovay
It took a month to wing its way from Münster in a small international envelope stickered with a great tit, but a bisexual oystercatcher just arrived in the mail courtesy of [personal profile] spatch. It is currently in situ on my shelf between the axolotl and the white quartz, backed by A. E. Housman, A. C. Jacobs, and Robinson Jeffers. I saw some ordinary and really nice ivy while out walking.

wychwood: bread and roses (gen - bread and roses)
[personal profile] wychwood
We made it through the Triduum! Actually, in some ways I felt like this year was less stressful than it often is; somehow I just... wasn't as worried about things going wrong. I knew we would cope if they did. And, in fact, nothing really did go wrong, although as ever I have notes for next year. Between that and the free time I did manage to find (taking Maundy Thursday off work so that I have the day free before the service in the evening is the best idea, and I desperately needed that break this year) I have bounced back pretty well already. Although Fr A decided that we were going to kneel down between every single intercession on Good Friday, and my thighs were so stiff the next day! I felt very feeble for it, but also, ow.

Yesterday was family Easter, which is always nice but a bit exhausting just from the sheer volume of people (we had thirteen for dinner this year) (didn't seem unlucky though!). But today I slept in, refused to shower or get dressed, and ended up with enough energy to do the first couple of rounds of moving things back to where they ought to be after several days of dumping bags and pocket contents and so on on the nearest surface; the desperately overdue washing up (I've not been home for many meals, so it wasn't as bad as it could have been, but it wasn't great!); and, unexpectedly, even some of the "I must at some point" tasks.

I washed the net curtains in my bedroom - turns out they're actually white, who knew. They were already up when I moved in here and I haven't taken them down since, so it really was time. I hung them straight back up as the best drying option - it was a lovely fresh day, bizarrely for a bank holiday. I still need to do the spare room net curtains; maybe tomorrow. And I've added a reminder to my to-do list to wash them once a year, although I have no idea whether that's a reasonable length of time... anyone have any opinions?

And I did three of my sewing projects pile - I've had a t-shirt and a hoodie sitting on the blanket chest for at least six months, and I tore the pocket of my new hoodie slightly on Saturday, as well as bringing my horrible sweaty alb home from church to wash again, with the fraying sleeve I meant to fix last time. So the two hoodies and the alb sleeve were all hand-stitching projects and are now done; the alb hem and the t-shirt need the sewing machine really, and I have hopes for tomorrow on that. I'm so bad at sewing, but none of these are really visible and they're better than they were before I started, so that will have to do.

My reading took up most of the rest of the day; I finished the initial ebook collection I'd made on Thursday, and made a new one with 23 books in it which I am very much enjoying working on.

Your body cannot lie

Apr. 6th, 2026 01:55 pm
sovay: (Rotwang)
[personal profile] sovay
Following a rather friably sleepless Easter, I slept nine or ten hours and resent dreaming of poetry without bringing it out with me this time. I was spending time in evocatively broken-down places by the sea.

March ran out so disastrously, I never got around to linking either of these novelettes: M.E. Bronstein's "Bitter as the Sea" (2026) and Michael Cisco's "Tatterdemalion" (2026).

After nearly twenty years of doing nothing with the extras on my Criterion DVD of A Canterbury Tale (1944), I watched the interview with Sheila Sim which was recorded in 2006. I had never seen her as herself with so much time between her memories and her own ghost of hillsides and reflected sunlight, the house in the country where Alison exclaimed, "What wouldn't I give to grow old in a place like that!" exactly as Sim realizes, as if she caught her character's dream, in the more than sixty years since she spoke that line she has done. It was her first film, straight out of drama school with the careful accent that sounds so artificial to her now; she had to learn to act for the camera, in the open air; she did not have to know that the part had been written originally for someone else, whom I have never been able to imagine in it without losing the earth wire of the character. She was right that it became its own kind of continuity through time, more so than even the regular haunting of film:

"I think I'm a little surprised that the film works for young people today—not necessarily young people, middle-aged people as well—but I'm very touched and very pleased in the best sense of the word that it does. Maybe we feel today, rightly or wrongly, that we are losing certain things that we had then. Maybe a kind of nostalgia that makes people love the film. The connection with history and the people who've gone before and the countryside that goes on, the countryside that we to some extent take for granted. We're realizing now in our present world that we are not entitled to take it for granted. It's not going to last."

Not even the film is going to, but on its own terms of folk anti-horror, I do not expect that hillside ever to be without the imprint of Alison Smith and Sheila Sim, even when it's under ocean again, even after the seas run dry.

Recent reading

Apr. 6th, 2026 11:15 am
regshoe: (Reading 1)
[personal profile] regshoe
The Wrong Box by Robert Louis Stevenson and Lloyd Osbourne (1889). This novel, co-written by RLS and his stepson, is a rather macabre comedy of errors and unfortunately I find that style of heavily misunderstanding-based humour and plotting stressful rather than funny, so I didn't enjoy it very much. (It also had me repeatedly thinking, surely that's as much contrived coincidence as you need to make the plot work?... No, evidently not, here's another one...) But on the level of sentences and dialogue it's very well-constructed and I admired that. As I noted of The Dynamiter (co-written by Fanny), it doesn't show obvious signs of having two different authors, and if the style and subject are rather different from RLS's other books it's not clear how much of that was due to Osbourne's style and how much was RLS varying things as he was wont to do.


They Were Defeated by Rose Macaulay (1932). I can remember the title of this book catching my eye years ago, but I didn't get round to reading it until I recently found a copy in a second-hand bookshop with a cover design immediately making clear that it's set in the 1640s in Cambridge. That sounds interesting, thought I, and the good thing about the Civil War is that you can call your book They Were Defeated without giving away which side you're writing about, because do you stop in 1649 or keep going to 1660? In fact it's more complicated than that: the book is set in 1640-41 and only reaches the actual war briefly in the epilogue, the title is not a straightforward reference to one side or the other and the average main character's viewpoint is that the Puritans in Parliament are worse than the King but the King is hardly worthy of ardent loyalty either. It is a strange book and has several aspects worth discussing, so I'll take it in points:

1) Macaulay really commits to the use of historical language in dialogue. She warns the reader of this in a prefaratory note and apologises for any inaccuracies; I don't know the period well enough to comment on how accurate it really is, but it's certainly believable and doesn't feel forced or unnatural. Occasionally there are letters written by the characters which—between unfamiliar language use and abbreviations and period-typical bad spelling—get genuinely difficult to read, and I say that while having some experience of reading seventeenth-century letters and diaries. I'm impressed.

2) Barbara Pym might have liked this book, because it has a lot of her seventeenth-century poets in it. The book is divided into three parts, each of which has a poetic epigraph whose author appears as a major character, with the most major being Robert Herrick. (Herrick's Wikipedia page notes that he wrote a lot of love poems addressed to women, but that he was a lifelong bachelor and it's generally supposed that these women were fictional; Macaulay conjectures that they were mostly fictional but one of them was real, while also giving a definite impression that Herrick is in love with the recently-deceased Ben Jonson.) Anyway, I'm not a huge poetry fan but it was an interesting aspect of history to see in a book.

3) More relevant to my interests was the discussion of contemporary theological and political controversies: it's very much a book set in the lead-up to the Civil War and the details of King and Parliament, Puritans and Papists and Arminians and Calvinists and what all the different factions are doing and arguing about and I found it all terribly interesting. For an author who's such a stickler for historical accuracy in language I did find the repeated mentions of witch-burning rather odd, and I wondered about the plausibility of one main character's openly-avowed atheism and absolute disbelief in the supernatural, especially its being regarded by the other characters as regrettable and embarrassing in one's friend/father/associate but no worse.

4) About three-quarters of the way through, the book (somewhat suddenly, but not without foreshadowing) plunges into one of the worst het romances I have ever encountered in fiction. Straight up on the shelf that contains Jamaica Inn, The Bostonians and that one Georgette Heyer book I tried to read before running away in horror. I am not known as the world's greatest fan of Lucy Honeychurch/George Emerson, but if I wanted a reminder that 'I want you to have your own thoughts, even when I hold you in my arms' really was a pretty good and important thing for someone's male love interest to say, I clearly only had to read this. Mitigating things slightly, this isn't a romance novel, there's plenty of other interesting stuff in the book and the author is partially (though certainly not fully or with good priorities) aware that it's not a good thing. Aggravating things quite a lot, the plotline is resolved through a ridiculous melodramatic ending.

So what do I make of it on the whole? I don't know. It's a weird one. A deeply flawed book that ultimately doesn't work in saying what it wants to say, but possibly worth reading for the stuff you get along the way.


Ashenden; Or, The British Agent by W. Somerset Maugham (1927). I recently bought an omnibus of some of Maugham's lesser-known novels, and also Of Human Bondage has been on my list of things I really ought to read for a little while, and so naturally I next decided to pick up a book that's neither Of Human Bondage nor in the omnibus. Ashenden is a collection of short stories about a writer who becomes a secret agent during the First World War, closely based on the author's own experiences doing the same thing. It opens with a preface in which Maugham explains and defends his fictionalisation process: real life, and especially the real life of a spy, doesn't have the neat plots, full explanations of what happened and nicely-tied-up loose ends desirable in fiction, so some editing is necessary. There follow a series of stories about Ashenden's time as a spy in Switzerland, Russia and elsewhere, which are remarkably lacking in nicely-tied-up loose ends, neat plots and full explanations of what happened given that introduction. I suppose they're still neater than the real events that inspired them, but the endings definitely incline towards ironic twists and abrupt revelations of inefficacy and sometimes of tragedy that leave a lot of questions unanswered. Thrilling and dramatic spy stories these are not; the general mood is of half-resigned, half-amused cynicism about both the humorous, absurd little details of the spy's life and the horrific larger events in which he takes part (and Ashenden is complicit in some pretty bad actions over the course of the book). It would make an interesting comparison with John le Carré later in the century, probably. I didn't find the prose as enjoyably precise as in Cakes and Ale, there are a lot of comma splices, which I don't particularly remember in that book.
lucymonster: (vampires again)
[personal profile] lucymonster
I'm bouncing around the media landscape like a pinball at the moment. No idea why but I'm having a great time! Icon in honour of Bela Lugosi, who is forever and always a vampire in my heart if not in this specific film selection.

His Girl Friday (1940): This is a really fun screwball comedy about a slick, dodgy newspaper editor trying to win back his journalist ex-wife by manipulating her into covering one last story for him. Hildy is a brilliant reporter who excels at her aggressive, fast-paced job and is very much "one of the guys" among her colleagues - including her ex-husband Walter, hence the divorce. Walter's life revolves around the newspaper; he even cancelled their honeymoon so they could both rush to the site of a breaking story. Hildy pines for a more traditional feminine life in which she is romanced and protected, free to maintain a peaceful home and raise children while her husband works a steady, predictable job to provide for them. To that end, she has left Walter and become engaged to insurance salesman Bruce. The meat of the movie is a chaotic farce in which Walter deploys a wild barrage of sneaky, often criminal tactics to lure Hildy away from Bruce and reawaken her love for her career (and, by assumed extension, for him).

The gender dynamics in this were fascinating. Hildy's professional competence is about the only thing the film takes seriously; through all the wacky hijinks she is universally respected as a good reporter, with no trace of any "for a woman" caveat. (Nearly every other woman who appears onscreen is a secretary or telephone operator, and in brief interactions Hildy is as collegial with them as she is with her more "esteemed" fellow reporters, but they don't really feature much one way or another.) Of course Hildy's whole inner conflict revolves around the unchallenged premise that women, as a class, belong in the domestic sphere; but Hildy herself is the only character who seems to view the issue along gendered lines. For everyone else, it's about journalists vs non-journalists; people who can be satisfied with staid domestic life (of whom Hildy's classically masculine new fiancé is the prime example) versus people who crave the thrill and challenge of the fast-paced media world. The other career reporters all shake their heads and predict a swift end to the whole Hildy/Bruce business. No way will anyone as thoroughly like them as Hildy be able to stand the tedium of the American picket-fence dream for more than six months. I'm not saying it was some kind of feminist statement in the modern sense; I just enjoyed the nuance of how Hildy's femininity was handled. She was a great character.

The Devil Bat (1940): Bela Lugosi stars as a mad scientist with a vendetta against his employers, the owners of a cosmetics firm who have gotten rich off his designs while paying him only a tiny fraction of the profits. His genius plan for revenge is twofold: firstly he has engineered himself a giant bat large and strong enough to kill a man, and secondly he has trained the bat to become enraged at the scent of a specific chemical, which he has put into a specially formulated aftershave. Target applies aftershave to neck. Bat swoops in to tear out jugular. Bam! Greedy capitalist gets what he deserves.

This was every bit as ridiculous as I hoped it would be. It's billed as straightforward horror, but it's really more of a bat-themed, lightly murderous comedy. A lot of the action is driven by a pair of madcap journalists investigating the story, whose antics include things like using taxidermy to produce fake photos of the devil bat, doctoring out the wires that made it fly but forgetting to remove a label from the wing that says "Made in Japan". I was honestly cheering for the doctor, partly because his evil plan is so delightfully (ahem) batshit, and partly just because, you know. Bela Lugosi. Unlike the other two films in this post, this one is very much not a must-watch of 40s cinema, but it's certainly a why-the-hell-not, especially since its runtime is barely over an hour. I had fun.

The Maltese Falcon (1941): Hardboiled private detective Sam Spade gets hired under false pretences for a job that leads to the death of his business partner and ends up embroiling him in a violent, competitive criminal scheme to gain possession of an unthinkably valuable historical artefact known as the Maltese Falcon. This is, of course, one of the films noir and has all the elements you'd expect: a cynical, street-smart protagonist, a beautiful femme fatale for him to have dangerous chemistry with, a supporting cast of gangsters who are forever double-crossing each other.

I'm kind of drawing a blank on what to say about this one, but I honestly really loved it and it has whet my appetite for more film noir. The pacing is much slower than today's modern crime thrillers and that really worked for me; the latter tend to stress me out so much that I have to be in just the right mood to watch them. This was tense and exciting without forcing me to lie down afterwards. The whole chiaroscuro aesthetic was absolutely gorgeous. My favourite moment was when the femme fatale slaps a gangster, who goes to hit her back, only for Sam to leap in and bellow in the man's face, 'When you're slapped, you'll take it and you'll like it!' Iconic, honestly. Sam Spade is a true ally to femdom fans everywhere. More men should learn from his example.

(no subject)

Apr. 5th, 2026 10:32 pm
blotthis: (Default)
[personal profile] blotthis
Well, I guess. March??? I haven't read anything other than Duncan the Tall getting his shit wrecked literally, sexually and metaphorically by various nobles for a like a week, which is because I Couldn't Read while I was trying to write about reading... Still not Ideal. May switch approaches for April/May. I have a few ideas, but. We'll see. The search for a sustainable and rewarding approach continues.

In the meantime, feel free to request thoughts on the following. Liked a lot of things last month better than I expected to.

10 books, 2 comics, 4+ albums, 1 tv show )

(no subject)

Apr. 5th, 2026 05:04 pm
summercomfort: (Default)
[personal profile] summercomfort
woooooo survived until spring break!!!

The faculty Shakespeare play was fun! There was so good disco music, everyone wore things that were far too shiny, and I was able to make a program Tuesday night that I'm pretty pleased with. One of the things that I've enjoyed about this play and last year's, is that I got to cut up some of my old pants and "upgrade" them to be something wearable again. Last year it was by putting in safety pins, and this year it was by flaring my old jeans with leopard print. It really brought home this sense of "oh, the new fashion is really just taking the tacky stuff in your closet and doing things to it" -- like, cut your parents' old work shirt and sew it to your jeans, etc. But like... we don't do that as much anymore?? It's like ... new fashion is about buying new stuff off the rack. Is it the curse of fast fashion making all of this more accessible? Is it the decline in basic sewing ability? I wish more people felt comfortable just modding their clothes.

One of my big goals this Spring Break is to work on the Citizenship Comic.
- Quest week is week 16 of the year, and by then I should hopefully have 15 pages done.
- What's left to do before Quest week (in 10 days) is to ink 4 more pages, shade all the pages (15), then ideally add historical text, or at least a title page for each section. I think if I spend ~3 hrs per day working on my comics this week, I should be able to get there? Maybe I can do some sort of deal with Miss R re: she gets youtube time while I get drawing time?
- After Quest week, I'll have 10 more weeks until the Supreme Court decision comes down (my self-imposed deadline), and ~11 pages to do (plus the historical notes pages). Which means I need to do 2 pages on a few of those weeks.
- And then I'll be done!!

General tidying/logistics I need to do this week:
- pile next to my bed
- tabletops downstairs
- get haircut for self and Miss R!
- move phone photos to computer
- laundry
- sent out Quest panel slides

Gross things that I need to do this week:
- call the car people again to tell them to register my car insurance (UGH)
- taxes
- call dentist and make appt
- get plane tix for summer

I think what would be helpful is to have at least 1 activity to do with Miss R every day so that the week doesn't turn into a big blob.

Recent theater

Apr. 5th, 2026 02:29 pm
troisoiseaux: (colette)
[personal profile] troisoiseaux
Saw Suzy Eddie Izzard's one-woman Hamlet at the STC (hosting the DC stop on her international tour), which really was a remarkable piece of theater— just watching anyone recite the entirety of Hamlet basically without pausing for breath would be impressive in itself, but this was, in fact, genuinely a really good performance of Hamlet. Given her comedy background, it's unsurprising she killed it at the more comedic parts— Polonius, the gravediggers, Hamlet's mad scenes; for 90% of the characters, she literally moved from place to place around the stage to embody each different role, but Rosencrantz and Guildenstern were mimed as hand puppets, which got a big laugh every time— but as she explained in a pre-show introduction, as Shakespeare progressed from comedy to tragedy through his career, so has she (and "if you're expecting a comedy version of Hamlet, you are going to be sorely disappointed"), and her dramatic turns were equally compelling. This production (understandably!) trimmed the script a little, but did keep in the entirety of the Norway subplot, which is usually the first thing to get cut, so that was an interesting touch. The set was, basically, a white box— a sort of stage-within-the-stage, she mostly performed within the box but stepped out/in front of it, to the "real" stage, to deliver soliloquies* directly to the audience**— and there were no props, only the occasional miming of interacting with things: there was scattered laughter the first time, when her Hamlet mimed pulling his sword for Horatio to swear on, but let me tell you, you know that an audience has been enraptured when when miming Hamlet licking Polonius' blood off of his hands elicits a collective gasp.

* Hamlet's, obviously, but also as Ophelia and Gertrude, which I don't think I've seen other productions emphasize as such?

** In a fun fourth-wall-breaking moment, Hamlet addressed the audience as if they were the players in Act 2, Scene 2— I've seen another production use that scene to break the fourth wall by having Hamlet direct his "keep an eye on the king" instructions to the audience instead of to Horatio, so I thought that was a fun touch.
sovay: (Mr Palfrey: a prissy bastard)
[personal profile] sovay
I freely admit that I ground my way through the protracted heteronormative anxieties of Strange Lady in Town (1955) for the continued presence of twenty-three-year-old Lois Smith as Spurs O'Brien, one of those mixed-up motherless tomboys who just needs her gender trouble sorted out by her father's remarriage to a strong feminine role model if you believe the screenplay and looks such a late nineteenth century baby dyke in her ranch jacket and jingling boots that you feel she's just waiting for motorcycle clubs to be invented. Her crush on a cavalry lieutenant is narratively doomed and might in any case have been envy. Put her in a ball gown, she's right back in trousers and string ties the next scene, heedless and gallant as any young grandee. I mean when Dana Andrews drags his heels on the sub-screwball romance through which the picture manifests its stresses over the place of professional women, Spurs does her best to run off with Greer Garson herself, all the way back to Boston. "I don't know, Doc, except—well, except I can't figure out any sort of life without you." What did the film think it was doing with her? I don't even know what it thought it was doing with the slap-kiss of its textual couple, but I took an awful screencap just because of the lingering way Spurs sees herself out of a room with Garson's Dr. Julia Garth in it. Once she gets over the rebound, she'll make some Eastern belle ring. "But what a woman!"

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