Back from the Amazon!

Apr. 28th, 2026 07:39 pm
asakiyume: (shaft of light)
[personal profile] asakiyume
In spite of near crippling pre-trip nerves, my visit in Leticia was wonderful!
--I was a passenger on a motorbike multiple times!
--I swam in a river! (Not The river, but a river)
-- I saw a pink river dolphin and many gray ones!
--I made asaí juice!
--I did a craft project with the kids of one of my friends and played chase games with them!
--I made the acquaintance of a truly grandísima ceiba!
--I visited a shelter for stray dogs run by a friend of one of my friends!
--I saw a parade for the 159th anniversary of Leticia's founding!

But probably the thing that people would most enjoy seeing at this point in time is... an encounter with a pet capybara. He was a sweetie ^_^

rachelmanija: (Books: old)
[personal profile] rachelmanija


This was Robinson's first novel, one of a set of three set in future Orange County, Californias, exploring three different futures for America. The second one is about a future much like the present day, hyper-capitalist and dystopian. The third is set in an ecotopia which apparently involves lots of softball. (I've only read The Wild Shore, and gleaned this information from reviews of the others.) After reading The Ministry of the Future, I thought I'd give Robinson another try, and this book sounded most relevant to my personal interests. (I've attempted Years of Rice and Salt multiple times and never gotten very far in. It sounds so interesting!)

The Wild Shore is set about sixty years after the US was shattered by multiple neutron bombs, then quarantined by the rest of the world. It's now a bunch of extremely small, struggling towns which are kept separated from each other as the rest of the world uses satellite imagery to bomb them any time they attempt to do something like build railroad tracks. The California coast is patrolled by Japanese vessels who prevent them from sailing too far out. No one in the book has any idea who bombed the US or why, but given the quarantine I assume the US started the war and someone else finished it.

The book is narrated by Henry, who is 17 and lives in a village of 60. He hangs out with a bunch of mostly-indistinguishable other teenage boys. (I spent three-quarters of the book thinking Steve and Nicolin were two different boys. They are not. I wish writers wouldn't randomly call characters by their first or last name.) They fish and farm and trade with scavengers. Henry is the prize student of Tom, one of four elders who recall the pre-catastrophe days. It is immediately obvious that Tom's teachings are a mix of real and complete bullshit, but as the younger generation has no context or means of fact-checking, they tend to think it's either all true or all bullshit.

The village gets contacted by the remnants of San Diego, which wants to build a rail line and fight back against the quarantine. Henry gets sucked into this, with disastrous results.

This book is SLOW. I often like books that are mostly about daily life, but Henry's daily life was not that interesting - he spends a lot of time hanging out with boys and talking and thinking about girls and daddy issues, and you can get that in any contemporary novel about teenage boys. The only real character is Tom - everyone else is lightly sketched in at best. Girls and women are only present as girlfriends, potential girlfriends, and moms. (There's one girl who's the leader of the farmers, who are mostly women - the men are mostly fishers - but she doesn't get much to do.) The book was just barely interesting enough that I finished it, but it didn't end anywhere more interesting than the rest of it.

Read more... )

Content note: Characters use racial slurs for Japanese people.
rachelmanija: (Books: old)
[personal profile] rachelmanija


An incredibly beautiful book and a very faithful adaptation. Much of the language is word-for-word from the book. I would happily hang most panels on my wall.

A number of sequences are completely wordless, and while very beautiful I don't think I would have understood what was going on in all of them if I hadn't already read the book. There's also a lot of panels which are extremely dark, so much so that it's hard to tell what's happening. Most of these are indoors. I know there's no electricity but in most of these there is magelight!

Also, the otak is the size of a mouse and looks very much like a mouse. That is too small - in the book it catches a mouse and brings it to Ged, and other people tease Ged that it's a rat or a dog. I pictured it the size of a kitten or squirrel, and looking somewhat like a stockier weasel, or a small wolverine or marten. Definitely not a mouse!

It's always interesting to see other people's visualizations of books. The dragon of Pendor is seen mostly through a thick fog, all glowing eyes and fiery breath and insinuation. The flying creatures that pursue Ged and Serret from the Court of the Terrenon are not monstrous pterodactyls, as I always imagined them, but hideous living gargoyles.

I highly recommend this to anyone who's already read the novel, but I don't suggest reading it instead of or before the novel.

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philomytha: Biggles & Co book cover (Biggles & Co)
[personal profile] philomytha
The fabulous [personal profile] rosanicus has been investigating the long-lost 1960s Biggles TV series, of which up till now we have only had one very bad episode on Youtube featuring a toy boat sinking. But now Rosie has discovered more, embedded in a collection of clips from old tv: a six minute clip of Bertie making good use of the NATO phonetic alphabet, and Biggles trying to work out how to behave in a pub (Biggles starts at 33.59). Also Rosie found the summaries of all the episodes and put them together in a single document, so now we know what it was about, approximately speaking. Don't miss 'Follows On Up The Amazon', or the grand finale which features Biggles and von Stalhein trapped together in a collapsing Egyptian tomb.... you can see all the details at [personal profile] rosanicus's post here. If Rosie's efforts come to something we might get to be able to watch more of the show one day soon, but in the meantime I feel like the episode summaries would make fantastic fic prompts.

And as well as all that, we have also finally solved a fannish mystery, which is probably interesting to about six people in the world but I'm one of them. Judging by the episode descriptions, it's clear that in the TV series continuity Buries a Hatchet hasn't happened and von Stalhein continues to be a villain-for-hire and Biggles's nemesis, and - since all villains need a sidekick - he has a sidekick named Laxter.

Now, some while back I posted about the mystery of Laxter, who is mentioned as von Stalhein's sidekick in a short story in Biggles Flies To Work, but doesn't appear anywhere else in connection with von Stalhein, and I had no idea where he had come from or why, or why von Stalhein was suddenly evil again in a story well after Buries a Hatchet.

But now it's obvious. He's from the TV series. The TV series is 1960, Flies To Work is 1961. So the best explanation for the sudden appearance both of Erich as a villain again and with Laxter as his sidekick is that Flies To Work is in TV continuity, and not the main book canon continuity.

And while von Stalhein does not appear in any of the currently extant TV, the detective efforts of the WEJ discord have produced a few photos of Carl Duering in that role, which are below the cut.

images below the cut )
sovay: (Lord Peter Wimsey: passion)
[personal profile] sovay
My poem "Reap the Rules" is now online at Reckoning.

It is my first publication with the magazine; it appears as part of the special issue on war, conflict, and environmental justice. I was honored to have it chosen when I had submitted it for another call and it should not have become more relevant than when I wrote it last summer, after the first U.S. strikes on Iran. The Elamite cuneiform means a prayer to Pinikir, the oldest goddess I know in that region. The English title is a mondegreen from Johnny Flynn and Robert Macfarlane's "Coins for the Eyes" (2022). I wanted it so much to be an artifact of that moment's anger. The need for curse tablets appears inexhaustible.

Recent reading

Apr. 26th, 2026 07:42 pm
troisoiseaux: (reading 11)
[personal profile] troisoiseaux
Finished The Ritz of the Bayou by Nancy Lemann, a novelist's-eye nonfiction account of her time as a "girl reporter" covering the 1985 racketeering trial (and 1986 retrial) of the then-sitting Governor of Louisiana Edwin Edwards on assignment for Vanity Fair,* in airy snapshots with a vivid eye for personality and atmosphere, populated by characters referred to obliquely as "the jazz-crazed assistant prosecutor," "the courtroom existentialist" (distinguishable from "the courtroom philosopher" by his quirk of keeping a diary, since the 1950s, to rate every oyster he'd eaten), "the man from the train", "the Yankee reporter", etc. Truly just 100% vibes rather than any sort of political or legal commentary, but I found myself thinking, throughout, that there were still dots to connect between the attitude that, in the mid-1980s, Lemann credited specifically to "Louisiana politics"— that the public seemed to enjoy charismatic politicians behaving badly, as "the two great enemies of Louisianians are boredom and lack of style"; that, at one point, an "alleged bribe . . . was scoffed at {by the defense} as being an amount too low to constitute a decent bribe, an indication of the moral tenor"— and American Politics These Days; Lemann does in fact connect them in her afterword to this new 40th anniversary edition.

* She turned in her story and the Vanity Fair editor "basically said Huh? What?" and paid her a "kill fee" and then Lemann turned that story into this book.

Turned back to War and Peace, which I've been neglecting lately. Since joining the Freemasons, Pierre has made a half-hearted (or, rather, whole-hearted but half-assed?) attempt at improving the lot of his serfs— unfortunately, he let himself be talked into downgrading Plan A: free the serfs!!! into Plan B: improve the lives and workload of the serfs...?, which under self-serving estate managers turned into paving the road to hell with good intentions— and visited the Bolkonskys, while an increasingly cynical Andrew tries to adjust to widowered fatherhood and civilian life.
wychwood: the side of Ronon's face (SGA - Ronon eye)
[personal profile] wychwood
It's [community profile] 3weeks4dreamwidth time! I'm not sure how much I have to contribute (and I already know that I'm never going to succeed at any sort of "post every day" routine), but I'm enjoying seeing other people's posts about it.

This has been an entirely delightful weekend of doing basically nothing; I did a handful of one-off tiny tasks, which is always very satisfying (e.g. Tesco finally brought me the funnel I had ordered, so I decanted shower gel from the big tub I used to capture the contents of the leaking shower gel refill packet a few months back into saved and washed-out shower gel bottles) and the laundry, but that was about it. I do need to get back into doing the washing up more-or-less every day, though; after three days of avoidance I forced myself to do it this afternoon, but only had space for half on the draining board, so it's all to do again tomorrow...

But the weather has been beautiful (I've had all the windows open except when I was out at church) and I have done some pleasant reading, including some fanfic and most of the Tablet backlog, and I've done another grocery shop because I suddenly realised that my entire fruit and veg stock was down to two-thirds of a cabbage and some apples, and I played some more Terra Nil, and I have not touched any of the obligations I might have done, and sometimes that is just what I want from a weekend.

And then tonight it's "Signs and Portents" and shit is about to get real on Babylon 5. Excited to see it!

Dinosaurs!!

Apr. 26th, 2026 10:55 am
sholio: dragon with quill pen (Dragon)
[personal profile] sholio
I'm reading a book on recent research on dinosaur evolution (The Rise and Fall of the Dinosaurs by Steve Brusatte - apparently he has a book on bird evolution coming out soon and I'm definitely picking that up when I can) and it is blowing my miiiiiiind.

For example!

Did you know birds don't have hollow bones because they evolved them to fly? Birds have hollow bones because dinosaurs (saurians in particular - like Brontosaurus type creatures - but some of the other lineages as well) evolved them because it gave them an edge on growing large without being overly heavy, cooling themselves, and efficiently extracting oxygen from the air to support their enormous bodies. The super-efficient lungs that birds have were also a dinosaur adaptation to being big in hot climates, not a bird adaptation to flight. So basically, birds have ultralight bones and efficient lungs not because they evolved them to fly, but because dinosaurs needed these things in order to grow huge, and this turned out to be incidentally useful in radiating out into aerial niches when they began to evolve wings.

I also find it a fascinating experience to read this paleontology book when I've done so much reading on archaeology as a hobby interest. Archaeology books go into great depth on careful excavation techniques, sifting all the tiny bits of material and keeping everything in its proper location, and how incredibly tragic it is that so many sites of the past were excavated carelessly and so all of that information on the relative positioning of discoveries and small bits of material is lost ...

Meanwhile, paleontologists: so we took our hammers and started hacking up this rock formation to get the bones out. :D Also a local rancher sold us a dinosaur skeleton he found!!

(I mean I'm exaggerating a bit and the huge time difference is important, but also, lol.)

Another thing I was thinking about in one particular chapter, though the book doesn't address it specifically, is something I've thought about before, which is that we assume some creatures are primitive representations of what their kind used to look like, when in fact they are perfectly well adapted to their current niche, and their ancestors looked nothing like that. Alligators and crocodiles are the thing I was thinking of here - they look primitive, with those sprawling legs and inefficient means of walking, but in fact, early crocodiles hundreds of millions of years ago had their legs under the body and could sprint like a greyhound. (Which is terrifying, by the way.) They look like they do now, not because they could never run - they could! - but because other, more efficient dry-land runners out-competed them and they lost the running ability and retreated into the amphibious predator niche that they currently occupy.

Another example of this, not from this book - recent research on the human evolutionary tree suggests (at least according to one book I was reading a while back on the Miocene period) that the ancestor of both humans and chimpanzees was a sort of generalist creature, a couple of tens of million years back, that could both climb trees and walk upright. Humans ended up adapting to the walking/striding niche and losing the tree climbing, while chimpanzees did the opposite, adapted to climbing trees and became much less efficient at moving about on the ground. So rather than descending from a chimpanzee-like tree climber, we and chimpanzees are both specialized creatures who do not resemble our common ancestor all that much.

I just love this kind of thing.

The Biggles TV Series

Apr. 26th, 2026 06:28 pm
rosanicus: (trail)
[personal profile] rosanicus
As yet another method of novel work procrastination (really don't want to replan this stupid line graphs lesson, but alas...) I have spent the weekend once again scouring the internet for information about the Biggles series. And this time I have actually FOUND THINGS!!

You may already be aware that back in 2024 an episode of the show was uploaded to Youtube. At the time I left an effusive comment and was informed that the rest of the show was extant, but the uploader only had that one single episode. Said episode was pretty naff, and Biggles doesn't even show up until almost eight minutes into a twenty four minute episode. It's not helped by the fact that it's the final of three parts, so we all lack the context necessary to truly appreciate the tragedy of the sinking toy boat.



Read more... )

(no subject)

Apr. 26th, 2026 12:37 pm
skygiants: Princess Tutu, facing darkness with a green light in the distance (Default)
[personal profile] skygiants
It's been several days since I finished Cristina Rivera Garcia's No One Will See Me Cry (translated by Andrew Hurley) and I've still sort of singularly failed to formulate an opinion about it; I just keep sort of mentally picking the book up and turning it over and putting it uneasily down again.

In some ways this book reminds me of A Month in the Country, in that both are historical novels that delicately build up a picture of lives destabilized by and lived in the cracks after an epoch-shaking event, while carefully avoiding -- tracing the parameters of, writing around, turning the camera consistently away from -- the event itself. The difference is that A Month in the Country does in fact feel light, delicate, balanced against the heavy thing at its center, while No One Will See Me Cry isn't in any way a light book; aside from the heaviness of its subject matter, feels laden with symbolism at every turn, although the symbolism itself is often specific and startling.

The premise: in 1920s Mexico City, an aging, morphine-addicted photographer who's been hired to take portraits of asylum inmates meets Matilda, a woman he last photographed many years ago, when she was a prostitute. Joaquin engages in a kind of narrative barter with, first the asylum doctor, then with Matilda herself, in an attempt to understand her story and how it intersects with his own to bring them both to this asylum. Both of them, it turns out, formatively knew and formatively loved the same woman, a revolutionary, in the years before the war -- but neither of them was actually involved in the Revolution, neither of them were active agents for or against the transformation of their livetimes; Joaquin describes himself more than once as the only photographer of his generation who didn't take any photographs of the war, and Matilda was, at the time, involved in an emotional affair with a desert landscape.

There are some tropes that one expects, and is braced for, around Women and Lost Women and Madwomen, especially when insanity is used as a thematic metaphor around national trajectory, especially when all that is inextrictable from questions of poverty and indigineity. Rivera Garcia is definitely deploying some of those tropes with purpose and to a point and I absolutely do not know enough to have a full sense of what she's doing with them. This is one of those situations where I wish I was reading a book in context of a class or a club. As it is, what I'm left with is interest, unease, some beautiful and surprising images, and a sense that I ought to read a lot more about the Mexican Revolution.

Cleanliness, clutter and a new clock

Apr. 25th, 2026 05:13 pm
ladyherenya: (Lizzie)
[personal profile] ladyherenya
Lately I’ve noticed that the comments on content about cleaning and personal hygiene are often particularly closed-minded and judgemental. There’s lots of telling other people that they are wrong, that they must just be unaware of how gross they are and that their reasons for doing things a certain way are not valid. There’s lots of insistence that there is only one right way of doing things. There’s not much recognition of the fact that people’s bodies are different and so are their circumstances. There’s not much acknowledgement that what works for one might not suit another.

I mentioned this to someone who said, “Isn’t that just what the internet is like?”

And it isn’t – at least not the corners of the internet that I spend most of my time!

I wonder if the difference is that those corners attract people with specific interests or abilities, and so those discussions are dominated by people who have certain qualities and values – for instance, like readers, writers and teachers, who usually have a high level of literacy (and often a high level of formal education, too). Cleaning and hygiene, by contrast, are topics that are personally relevant to everyone and so pretty much anyone can contribute to the discussion.

Or is the difference that people are usually only fully informed about the cleaning and hygiene habits of the people they are closest to, and so they are forming conclusions based on limited data?

I can see how it could become easy, if you and everyone you know intimately does things a certain way, to unthinkingly assume that everyone should do things the same. And if you know that you and your closest connections need to do things a certain way in order to avoid being unclean and smelly, it could be easy to assume that everyone else on the planet becomes obviously unclean and stinky if they don’t do things that certain way… if they don’t wash their hair or change their pjs every second day, or whatever it is…

I’m sure there is a point where I would think that someone’s cleaning and hygiene habits were objectively wrong. But I don’t feel a need to tell a stranger on the internet that? I certainly don’t feel a need to tell people who I don’t know from a bar of soap exactly how and how they should clean themselves or their houses.


One piece of content about cleaning that I keep thinking about was advice for maintaining a clean and tidy house. The woman had a series of steps she recommended people follow every day. She promised that the steps were easy – but before you could follow them, you needed to remove all the clutter from your home.

I am well aware that clutter can be a stumbling block to keeping things clean and tidy. But I think telling people that they would be able to keep their house clean and tidy if only they got rid of the clutter can be disingenuous advice that overlooks WHY clutter can be so challenging to deal with. )
sovay: (Lord Peter Wimsey: passion)
[personal profile] sovay
I made no sea creatures in marzipan for my father's birthday observed, but he still liked his strawberry-variant marmalade cake. My brother told stories about driving the Nürburgring with a minivan. I curled up with my husbands.

Doors of Sleep, by Tim Pratt

Apr. 25th, 2026 01:47 pm
rachelmanija: (Books: old)
[personal profile] rachelmanija


This is the first book I've read by Tim Pratt. I had somehow gotten the impression that they wrote very highbrow, abstract sf that I probably wouldn't enjoy. I have no idea where that came from because this novel, which I tried because of the delightful premise, is completely not that and I enjoyed it very much.

Zax Delatree, a social worker/mediator from a utopian post-scarcity world, develops a condition where he travels to a random other world every time he sleeps. Through a lot of trial and error, he also discovers that he can take with him items on his person, and also other people if he's touching them when he falls asleep. If they're asleep too, they will arrive fine. If they're not, they arrive insane. ("The Jaunt" is one of many spottable influences.) Here's Zax and his companion, Minna, explaining their situation:

"Do you know the word 'multiverse?' [...] We're travelers, sort of. Sort of explorers. And sort of refugees."

"If this is true, the implications are immense."

"The implications are also very small and also personal," said Minna.


This is the most charming and heartfelt novel I've read in a while. It's mostly a picaresque, with Zax and Minna (and assorted friends and pursuing enemies) visiting all sorts of colorful other worlds, exploring and surviving and trying to be of use. The many worlds are great, I loved Zax and Minna and the friends they meet, and it's full of sense of wonder and hopefulness and people being kind under extremely difficult circumstances. I also liked that Zax and Minna are friends who are explicitly not romantically or sexually involved with each other.

There is a sequel, Prison of Sleep, which I have ordered.

Icon meme

Apr. 25th, 2026 05:17 pm
regshoe: Alan and Davie at the end of NTS Kidnapped, standing hand in hand with Alan's arm round Davie (Happily ever after)
[personal profile] regshoe
Three Weeks for Dreamwidth begins today! Over on the community [personal profile] goodbyebird has posted a set of memes to give people some ideas for what to post about. This one is about icons; the ability to collect icons and use different ones for different posts or comments is something I love about Dreamwidth, and I think we should celebrate them :D So let's do this:

Reply to this post saying 'icon', and I will tell you my favourite icon of yours. Then post this to your own journal using your own favourite icon if you're one of those inhuman things that are actually capable of choosing between YOUR PRECIOUS BABIES! userpics.
ladyherenya: (Default)
[personal profile] ladyherenya
Two books I loved, with lots of quotes.

Katabasis by R.F. Kuang: I remember being curious about Kuang’s first fantasy novel but whatever I read about it led me to conclude that the book sounded a bit too dark for my taste, and any details I gleaned over the years about her subsequent novels did not encourage me to reconsider.

Last year I kept scrolling past discussions about people’s reactions to Katabasis. I had absolutely no intention of reading about two Cambridge PhD students journeying into hell to retrieve their advisor’s soul, for all that it’s a fantasy novel about academia, so I was not paying too much attention to these discussions. Neither was I trying to avoid spoilers.

I actually didn’t encounter any spoilers. But I started noticing a theme. People who liked the novel said it was a love story. And people who didn’t objected to the academic tone of the worldbuilding. After a while, it occurred to me that that probably wasn’t something I’d object to.

So I looked at the opening chapters on Libby and after the line about how Alice’s preparation for journeying into Hell had included consulting The Waste Land, I was sold. And by sold, I mean I put the book on hold and then waited months and months to borrow it. (I wasn’t actually sold-sold until I was a third of the way through – that was when I bought it.)

I absolutely loved this book!

I love how the story develops. At first, there were things I didn’t know (even if Alice did) and also things that Alice didn’t know yet, and the way these are revealed and explained throughout the book was compelling.

I liked the prose. I loved the intertextuality and the fact that, even though Alice’s field of study (analytic magick) does not exist in my world, Alice’s research involves literary works that were discussed and referenced in my university classes (because, for Alice, these texts are not purely fictional). I loved how, even though this story is set in Hell, so much of the book manages to actually be about academia – because there are lots of flashbacks and references to Alice’s experiences at university, and the different Courts of Hell mimic and distort different aspects of academia. )

It has occurred to me that quite a few of my favourite books involve trying to save someone’s soul from Hell. Usually trying to save them before they end up in Hell (e.g. most Tam Lin retellings) but I still came away reflecting that Katabasis is, if not directly in conversation with those particular books, then at least in conversation about many of the same topics as those books. It’s a “This book should be friends with that book!” sort of feeling.

Katabasis is not perfectly to my tastes in absolutely everything, and not only because of those later chapters I mentioned. But it came close.

‘To be honest she had never gotten round to trying Proust, but Cambridge had made her the kind of person who wanted to have read Proust, and she figured Hell was a good place to start.’ )



A Theory of Dreaming by Ava Reid: When I reviewed A Study in Drowning, I said that Taylor Swift’s “Lavender Haze - Acoustic Version” kept reminding me of this book – not because the lyrics fitted the story particularly but because I’d discovered the song the same weekend I read the book and my memory had linked the two.

So I was somewhat amused to discover that the lyrics arguably fit the sequel.
Staring at the ceiling with you
Oh, you don't ever say too much
And you don't really read into
My melancholia

I’ve been under scrutiny (Yeah, oh, yeah)
You handle it beautifully (Yeah, oh, yeah)
All this shit is new to me (Yeah, oh, yeah)

I feel the lavender haze creeping up on me
Surreal, I'm damned if I do give a damn what people say
No deal, the 1950s shit they want from me
I just wanna stay in that lavender haze
Effy and Preston are both back at the University of Llyr and dealing with the aftermath of the events of A Study in Drowning. Effy is under scrutiny as the first woman accepted into the College of Literature, while Preston – unlike the first book, this is dual POV – is under scrutiny because his family is from Argant, which is at war with Llyr.

I found A Theory of Dreaming stressful in a way A Study in Drowning was not. Throughout A Study of Drowning, Effy (and Preston) are essentially visitors at Hiraeth Manor and I felt like they always had the option of retreating if things became too dark and unsafe. But now they are back at university, a place where they ostensibly belong – this is where they both have their own bedrooms with their own possessions, this is where their friends are. Not only would there be serious academic consequences to leaving university (like not being able to finish one’s degree), neither of them have anywhere safe to retreat to – Effy’s family are horribly unsupportive, and although Preston’s are loving, they are on the other side of a border closed by the war.

Another reason this was stressful is that, unlike A Study in Drowning, what happened didn’t feel safely distant from my own experiences. Effy’s anxiety about attending lectures is more relatable than some of her other concerns, and one scene was like something out of my anxiety dreams about falling behind in my studies. (I have these dreams every so often. They’re weird, because it’s years since I was a student – and I didn’t have them when I was a student.) But even though I often did not exactly enjoy reading about Effy and Preston’s experiences at university, it was satisfying to get to read about them. ) I also loved Effy and Preston’s friends. They were a bright spot in this book. The scenes where other people step up to support Effy and/or Preston gave me all the feels.

This book isn’t perfectly to my tastes, either, and arguably it didn’t live up to everything I wanted from a sequel, and yet… I really appreciated this story and reflecting on it has made me want to reread it.

‘Was there any way to protect books, poems, paintings from the ugly, banal reality in which they were composed? She had discovered the truth, about Ardor, about Myrddin, but at what cost? It was not just the soul of the nation she had wounded. It was her own heart, her own mind, all of it going to ruin now, because there was nothing left that she could love without a footnote or asterisk.’ )
sovay: (Otachi: Pacific Rim)
[personal profile] sovay
I am frantically cleaning in expectation of niece, but my mother just called to let me know of the fossil discovery of octopods larger than a school bus. It feels apropros that my niece requested sushi for dinner. It makes me almost as happy as the news itself that everyone involved seems to have thought instantly of kraken.

Here and There

Apr. 24th, 2026 01:20 pm
sartorias: (Default)
[personal profile] sartorias
There's been a situation that has been making life stressful for the past year, and yesterday the stress doubled. My way of dealing with this kind of cosmic ass kick is to bury myself in writing, where I feel I have a pretence at control. I only say this because I might not be as responsive to posts as usual, and if anyone even notices a dearth of commentary from me (very small chance I realize) it's not you, it's me. Not gone, just coping and scribbling away.

The Language of Liars, by S. L. Huang

Apr. 24th, 2026 10:29 am
rachelmanija: (Books: old)
[personal profile] rachelmanija


A science fiction novella about aliens, communication, and certain dark topics which are spoilery to mention. Though if you read the blurb for this book, it very strongly implies those topics and the specific shocking twist that involves them. It reminded me of China Mieville's Embassytown, though the latter benefited from its longer length.

Ro's species, along with some others, can jump into the minds of Star Eaters, the mysterious species that alone can mine the mineral that enables space travel. Ro is told that doing so is the only way to study them, and while jumping into their bodies extinguishes their minds, they are extremely long-lived beings and their minds definitely come back, so Ro is only doing the equivalent of causing a day-long blackout. The Star Eaters were apparently once enslaved, but now work voluntarily; communication with them is difficult and puzzling. Once you jump in, you're stuck for the rest of your life, but Ro is such a curious and skilled linguist that he's willing to give up everything to understand this oddly mysterious race. (I guess the possessing being's mind is supposed to only live for its species's normal lifespan? This is not explained.)

If you've read much science fiction, or many books in general, you have probably already figured out what's really going on. In fact it's so obvious that it seems strange that it takes the characters so long to do so, but of course no one knows exactly what story they're in.

Everything involving alien communication is great. But the plot is so predictable and grim that I didn't enjoy the book much.

Read more... )

(no subject)

Apr. 24th, 2026 08:56 am
summercomfort: (Default)
[personal profile] summercomfort
I survived Quest and Trips, yay!

Quest: Spring break was super productive! I inked 5 whole pages and shaded them, and even wrote historical notes and made it booklet-shaped! Pretty happy with what I managed to get done. Now I "just" need to do the second half -- Thind and Pandit. Quest Day itself went well, and what I have left to do is to (a) chase down the last few Quest videos, and (b) get the advisors to actually rate their students' Quests.

Trips: My trip went really well! No major hiccups, and all of the organizations and speakers worked out!! This is the smoothest it has ever been, and the kids really enjoyed it. Yay! I'd promised myself that I need a year off from running it so that I can go on other trips, but I'm really hoping someone else can take it over and run it for next year. Still todo: (a) return cash, (b) sort and process some of the various docs and stuff I got on the trip, (c) do a trip debrief with myself after I get more survey results (no more bucket hats?)

Something I've been thinking about is how recognition of work ... works. Like, people keep telling me that they enjoyed Quest, and there might be a gift card down the line, but what I really want is two no-homework days on the calendar. Or for advisors to actually rate their students' Quests. Like, I don't need a fist bump, I need structural support and acknowledgement. I need to be part of meetings about how Quest is promoted vs supported. Or trips -- I love running my trip, but also it's so exhausting and this year the chaperones just kept dropping out. And it's like -- I'm not fighting for chaperones, but please give me ones that won't drop out? It feels really bad to be busting my butt for trips but then to hear other people complain about having to do trips because they haven't had to for 3 years is completely demoralizing. To have everything on the school level to be handled last minute is frustrating. To feel like there's no support at home (what were all these purported "school support" people doing? At the very least send the airport release info??) is frustrating. Like, the trip leader compensation is nice, but what I really want is to not have to struggle with all of these other things, and that is really tied to other people caring about Trips.

Anyway, today is my "rest day" -- the child is at school, and the spouse is at work. I'm nominally at work, too, but I guess I should figure out whether I want to drive home and rest-up / do work at home, or linger around work and try to do work that way.

Things I want to get done:
- clean the car
- figure out summer trip plans
- respond to email about character database
- lesson plan for Monday
- wrap up the rest of Quest/Trips stuff
- do some grading
- draw some comic (maybe at least 1 more page?)

Dragaera reread: Hawk

Apr. 23rd, 2026 11:18 am
sholio: dragon with quill pen (Dragon)
[personal profile] sholio
Finally getting back to my Dragaera reread, which was originally happening in late 2025. My reread is all over the place - I'm not doing every book - but the last one I read was Vallista in December, and now I'm rereading Hawk, and I just got to A Thing.

Spoilers for Hawk and Tsalmoth )

Edit: originally had noted this as spoilers for Lyorn and changed it to Tsalmoth, as I had apparently forgotten which book that happened in ...

Edit2: Another spoiler for Hawk: Under here )

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