Recent reading

Apr. 20th, 2025 08:26 pm
troisoiseaux: (reading 4)
[personal profile] troisoiseaux
Read A Gallery of Rogues by Beth Lincoln, sequel to The Swifts: A Dictionary of Scoundrels, collectively a rollicking middle-grade series about young Shenanigan Swift and her sprawling extended family of nominatively-determined eccentrics— and, in this one, the Swifts' estranged French relatives, the Martinets. And a gang of theatrical art thieves! And an Interpol agent who is the long-standing ~nemesis~ of Shenanigan's uncle Maelstrom! Once again, this book feels like was written specifically to appeal to my 10-year-old self - it somehow reminds me of a whole bunch of memorable MG books circa the mid-2000s, including The Mysterious Benedict Society, Lemony Snicket, The Willoughbys (by Lois Lowry, apparently??), and Roxie and the Hooligans, with the added bonus of being casually, joyfully LGBT-affirming and diverse - but I don't actually begrudge it for arriving two decades late.

Read The Novices of Lerna by Ángel Bonomini (and translated from Spanish by Jordan Landsman), a collection of short stories I picked up after hearing about the titular novella, in which a young man is offered a secretive academic fellowship alongside - it turns out - his twenty-three doppelgängers. I'd actually gotten my wires slightly crossed and assumed that this book was only the titular novella - which I had also assumed was, like, an actual novel? - so the short stories were a surprise, but they were great: lyrical, atmospheric, and strange, with a tendency to end on an abrupt, unsettling note that rattled around my head for a while afterwards.

(no subject)

Apr. 20th, 2025 07:56 pm
flemmings: (Default)
[personal profile] flemmings
Laundromat achieved, more or less. Got clothes washed but because I'd been letting things pile up I had to exclude sheets and towels ie the things I must take to the laundromat. Well, ok: grey sleep hoodie is washed, though I'm now in the red one. And if temps become seasonable, will switch to the threadbare white one. 

Phone was unimpressed by my walking stats even though I hoofed it over several blocks to my old coffee shop where I don't think I've been in over a year.

Washed kitchen floor, a much postponed task, and then got pad thai delivered because tomorrow will rain all day, again, and all I have in the house is indifferent homemade tabbouleh, andI didn't want to walk anymore because my elbows are bitching at me, again possibly because of rain but mostly because they're them.

At least Easter is over, sort of: banks, library, schools all closed tomorrow. But I trust I'm not going anywhere.

vital functions

Apr. 20th, 2025 10:53 pm
kaberett: Trans symbol with Swiss Army knife tools at other positions around the central circle. (Default)
[personal profile] kaberett

Reading. I continue to make slow progress with both What An Owl Knows (Jennifer Ackerman) and Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell (Susanna Clarke).

Writing. Grumpy e-mails to Labour, mostly? Grumpy e-mails to Labour. Oh, and separately to the DWP courtesy of My UC Journal.

Playing. I have tripped and fallen back into 2048. I do not know why I have tripped and fallen thus. There are other things I would rather be doing. Brain whyyy.

I Love Hue current status: just started The Alchemy/Knowledge/12.

Cooking. Two new-to-us recipes from East: caramelised fennel and carrot salad with mung beans and herbs, of which I am a fan but about which A is a bit meh; and Amritsari pomegranate chickpeas, with the decaf English Breakfast I bought the other week, which I also quite liked but A was mildly dubious of.

Today has featured a different Welsh cake recipe, from one of the charity-shop books I acquired for the purposes of the special interest in EYB indexing. This one includes honey and ground mixed spice; I am decidedly disconcerted by how much they taste like Wrong Texture Mince Pies when cool.

Eating. ... yeah it's been A Migrainey Week, and has consequently contained two rounds of Wagamama. TRAGICALLY I decided on the first of these to branch out and try Not My Usual. Not My Usual turned out to contain The Dread Mayonnaise (I had been lulled into a false sense of security by the number of things called "slaw" I had recently encountered that did not contain mayo). It was mostly salvageable...

Exploring. ADVENTURES in VAN HIRE for the purposes of moving SHED. This involved heading out to Hatfield, because the one fifteen minutes up the road was already Thoroughly Booked. We got to observe MORE FLOWERS and lo they were good.

... I think that's it? I think that's it. (A also went on another adventure to acquire roof box and appropriate rack, but I stayed at home for that one.)

Making & mending. I have not, technically, actually resumed A's pair of gloves, BUT I have now got the information from A I need in order to do so! So that's a progress.

... there has also been. Event prep. So much event prep. The meal ticket booklets for crew are all done; the potions are all sliced and folded ready for laminating (except for the one that needed someone to actually finish writing what it did); ... progress?

Growing. SO MANY SQUASH. Not all of the ones I sowed, but... a lot... have come up.

Somewhat irritated that somebody found my Bravest Dwarf Pea, which had actually managed to find and attach itself to the pea sticks, and severed the stem a little below said attachment. :|

Main infrastructural progress this week was getting all the railway sleepers and shed bits up to the plot (with significant and indispensable help from A). I've not done anything with them yet but they are there, I have plans, necessary hardware is en route, etc.

What else what else? First of the beans are in the ground. I was feeling decidedly surly about my redcurrant but this turns out to have been premature and unfair -- since last weekend it's unfurled a little more and is looking much more promising in terms of potential harvest. The raspberries also seem to be very much enjoying the mulch + semi-regular watering, which is pleasing.

Observing. I totally forgot to mention in last week's section on this topic that on the ride back from Anglesey Abbey we observed Many Cowslips, including at least one that was red!

Tulips continue fantastic. Irises are getting into the swing of things at this point. The bindweed is definitely waking up...

Haikai Fest: "Small Child Adventures"

Apr. 20th, 2025 07:05 am
jjhunter: a person who waves their hand over a castle tower changes size depending on your perspective (perspective matters)
[personal profile] jjhunter
Let's take a breath for poetry. It is April, and as good a time as any for a collaborative poetry fest. Please find below a starting stanza or two of a brand new haikai (what's a haikai, you ask? Think extended haiku: alternating stanzas of 5-7-5 and 7-7). Comment with a following stanza to build on that seed. Someone (most likely me) will respond with another stanza, and so on and so forth throughout the day.
===

every wooded path
The Lost Forest, every hole
home to mystery

_
sovay: (Silver: against blue)
[personal profile] sovay
From my office window, I just watched a visitor deliberately smell a Bradford pear and regret it. The trees have really broken into bloom, so I took my camera out into the blotter-paper overcast that kept thinking about raining and then not quite.

Once I was outside Penn Station, selling red and white carnations. )

[personal profile] spatch has been showing me Hill Street Blues (1981–87), which after a season and a handful I can see resembled nothing else in the Nielsen ratings of its time, structurally, tonally, perhaps even politically, since what I would not have expected from a cop show of the early Reagan administration is so much emphasis on what we would now call non-toxic masculinity as an ideal if not always achieved. Its attitudinal snapshots are fascinating. It is working seriously for diversity. Its interlocking narratives and human messiness make sense of it as the yardstick for J. Michael Straczynski in creating Babylon 5 (1993–98), which is how I heard of the show originally and what it is currently doing in my eyes. I am also enjoying the worldbuilding of its fictional city, whose geographical location is deliberately obscure but whose individual neighborhoods and businesses and sports teams are throwing out runners all over the plot. Actually, to my surprised pleasure, it reminds me distinctly of Frederick Nebel's Kennedy and MacBride.
kaberett: Trans symbol with Swiss Army knife tools at other positions around the central circle. (Default)
[personal profile] kaberett

Conveniently I can no longer find the bit of the allotment rules that says No Bringing In Gravel, so I am making plans to blithely bring in gravel for the sake of a base for The Shed, which is Definitely going to Happen this time, Honest.

The chief component I am now missing is a floor. Conveniently, there's an almost-complete house being built just up the road, with a big skip outside it, which currently contains several large sheets of plyboard. I can't actually get at them (it's all behind gates), but I am intending to show up on Tuesday morning and look hopeful at whoever's working there then.

(I am also missing enough sharp sand to level, and the gravel, but gravel at least should be fairly readily acquirable. It is possible I am also missing Some Important Bits Of Wood, but I care less about that because I have so many bits of misc wood at the allotment that I am pretty sure I can cobble something together.)

I am not going to manage to get all of this together before I disappear off to a field for a week, but I'm optimistic about getting it done in time to e.g. actually fill the greenhouse with chillis for the summer (an irritating amount of said greenhouse is currently functioning as storage space and actually I'd prefer it to be growing space. Actually.) Even I have now read enough guides to putting sheds together that I'm at least half-convinced I can probably actually more-or-less work it out.

... I will report back either triumphantly or shamefacedly in a few weeks' time. Watch This Space, etc.

grab bag / edited to add

Apr. 19th, 2025 04:01 pm
blotthis: (Default)
[personal profile] blotthis
One:
Inspired by [personal profile] shati 's post about Duolingo, I picked it back up again to use as enrichment. (More on that later if it ever gets interesting beyond "heheheh new sounds and orthographies," but don't hold your breath.)

It's hard to get a sense of where a language is held in the mouth--at least for me--on Duo. No moving humans, and all that. So I was looking up a guide to Greek pronunciation, and I just wanted to share this absolute treasure from the nineties web: http://greek.kanlis.com/phonology.html

Such a fan of the guy-with-hyperfixation-makes-a-website genre. This one thinks the IPA is too precise for Greek pronunciation. I love him. I hope you enjoy.

Two:
I almost forgot!!! I've been really enjoying Fish Dessert, a new podcast about IRON Chef. It's hosted and produced by my friend Lito and his friend Trevor. Lito is an incredible home cook, student of Japanese, IRON Chef fan, and all-around fact-knower; Trevor is a guy who likes food a lot, doesn't speak any Japanese, has never seen any Iron Chef, and is just the most game guy ever.

The episodes discuss whether the food looks good, the cultural and material histories of the food and its ingredients, Japanese literature and its effect on Japanese cuisine, incredible fashion choices, camera angles, whether you can or should put fish in ice cream, the circumstances of weekly translation, and did you know the guy who made Earthbound was a regular on IRON Chef.

The episodes are long (2 hours), and a great way to keep yourself entertained while doing chores. In my experience. Recommend!

EDITED: IRON CHEF IRON CHEF IRON CHEF IM AN IDIOT. if you saw me call it top chef no you didn't

Three:
I meant to update this when the discussion on the Hill House sentences post was actually happening, but time got away from me. I just wanted to share that my friends ([personal profile] skygiants and b in this case) did, as suspected, have corrections to make about my scansion that I think are delightful.

Becca: even larks and katydids are supposed, by some, to dream is almost a perfect fourteener i'll tell you that much
me: ok, i had to read that umpteen times to get it. does it start with trochees
Becca: yeah EVen LARKS and KAtyDIDS are is a trochee set and then //supposed switches it to iambs
me: also damn now im thinking of to sleep, perhchance, to dream. did she do that on purpose, putting the parenthetical iamb right before it in the same place
Becca: SHE MIGHT'VE

so that's been living in my head and I love it. Eleanor spends so much time quoting "Journeys end in lovers meeting" from Twelfth Night, we know Shirley was on that Billy shit.

Then, b:

b: to me [the start of the second sentence, which I proposed was two iambs] sounds like a trochee and a spondee or even two spondees.. HILL house, NOT SANE,

and of course they're right. It also is a better explanation for the way NOT SANE makes me feel both like a slapped fish and one slapped with a fish.

God, I wish I was better at scansion. If only there was a way to improve! oh well!!  

(no subject)

Apr. 19th, 2025 03:27 pm
flemmings: (Default)
[personal profile] flemmings
An interlude of Fool's Spring saw temps soar to near 20/68 yesterday and stick to 15/ 60 sorta, overnight. My house holds cold as it holds heat when either gets in so I went to bed bundled in wool and feathers, and then sweated in the wee hours as, I presume, the heat got in. But today, though grey, was also blowy so I wore a jacket out when I went up to get more wine. At least it wasn't as spring-stinky as yesterday, so I limped down to the Essex school advance poll. This involves passing Fiesta Farms whence the local playwright had just been braving the Only Day This Weekend To Shop!!!! crowds. 'It's like a cocktail party in there,' she groaned. It was like a cocktail party outside as well, people shmoozing all over the sidewalk while parked on their rollators smack dab in the middle. 

However, once past those sidewalk blocks, the polling station was pretty empty and colour-coded as to substations, which is an excellent idea. Pollster thanked me for having my ID ready and this time I remembered to lower my mask so they could check same. Anyway, that's done. 

Temps will drop to 4C/ 39F tonight. Should do a wash and hang in the furnace room because I will need the heat on tonight. Or perhaps not: the warmth has got into the house and won't leave unless the right wind blows from the right direction.

Mom

Apr. 19th, 2025 03:40 pm
redbird: closeup of me drinking tea, in a friend's kitchen (Default)
[personal profile] redbird
Things were looking significantly worse this morning, so the three of us are going to London tonight on a red-eye.

I may not be reading much, or I may be spamming everyone's reading pages.

comfort reads

Apr. 19th, 2025 02:19 pm
adrian_turtle: (Default)
[personal profile] adrian_turtle
Please recommend comforting books for reading aloud. The 3 of us are going to London for what promises to be a difficult trip. We are almost finished with "Return to Gone-Away."

Other books that have worked well for us to read aloud have been the Sarah Caudwell books, the Armitage stories, and Cold Comfort Farm.
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll


Just four works new to me this week: two fantasy novels, two tabletop roleplaying game supplements. One novel is part of a series. Again, not seeing nearly as many series works as I'd expect.

Books Received, April 12 — April 18


Poll #32997 Books Received, April 12 — April 18
Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 36


Which of these look interesting?

View Answers

The Everlasting by Alix E. Harrow (October 2025)
17 (47.2%)

Blood for the Undying Throne by Sung-Il Kim (October 2025)
10 (27.8%)

Keepers of the Elven Rings by Gabriele Quaglia & Francesco Nepitello (April 2025)
4 (11.1%)

Realms of the Three Rings by Gabriele Quaglia & Francesco Nepitello (April 2025)
3 (8.3%)

Some other option (see comments)
0 (0.0%)

Cats!
27 (75.0%)

sovay: (Silver: against blue)
[personal profile] sovay
I may be toast at the end of this week, but I would not trade the gorgeous double feature of David Lynch's Blue Velvet (1986) and Wild at Heart (1990) with which [personal profile] rushthatspeaks and I wound it up. Late to the party, I saw Hoosiers (1986) for the equally first time last month and Dennis Hopper at the top of his game really could do anything. We were passing Porter Square afterward when we saw a loose collection of action along the sidewalk that turned out to be a troop of redcoats marching down Massachusetts Avenue, presumably on their way to fight Lexington. Thanks to the street we lived on in my childhood, my very favorite iteration of Paul Revere's ride was the year in which, instead of clattering under the window shouting per usual, he came in a truck and explained his horse had broken down. No kings.

(no subject)

Apr. 18th, 2025 10:54 pm
flemmings: (Default)
[personal profile] flemmings
Projected rain all day with possible thunderstorms so stayed in and read Stuff. But observed Ollie zooming about SND's back yard along with a young male child who might be NND's M. Face blindness is bad enough without factoring in the fact that kids change out of all recognition in a matter of months and if you rarely see them on ground level the 6 year old you knew back a bit will be unrecognizable at just-turned-9.

Am hearing what is either horror stories or encouraging accounts of line-ups for advance polls being hours long. Maybe shall go on Sunday when it's not supposed to rain and people will be otherwise occupied: though Monday may be better for the latter, since most people will be working, and tomorrow may be better for both. The single shopping day of the weekend means stores are to be avoided.

oh NO

Apr. 18th, 2025 11:09 pm
kaberett: Trans symbol with Swiss Army knife tools at other positions around the central circle. (Default)
[personal profile] kaberett

Okay. SO.

Via THE GATE APPRECIATION SOCIETY on Facebook, earlier today I became aware of the Ginkgo Gates at the Adelaide Botanical Gardens. I took one look at the short sections and went I WANT TO KNIT IT.

Ergo [personal profile] lireavue went and poked Ravelry with sticks, and... this shawl fell out.

There Was Shrieking.

And then the shrieking Intensified because all of a sudden the outline of a possible character for the game that Admin: the LRP supports Arrived All At Once. Namely, one of the nations of the Empire is Navarr (summary of influences: "wood elves"). From the look and feel page for Navarr:

The Navarr look draws heavily on the forests for its inspiration. The colours are primarily greens and browns with occasional splashes of dark autumnal red or yellow. Materials are practical, primarily those that come from hunting - leather and fur. [...] Rather than rich materials or unusual colours the Navarr personalise their appearance by adorning their costume with embroidery, beads, feathers, fetishes, and other accessories. It is also common to weave such items into the hair. [...] Layers of well-worn, practical wool and leather in natural shades often serve as the foundation of Navarr costume.

Also relevant context: the existence of magical items that grant you Additional Tricks. Like, for example, mage robes, where I am raising particular eyebrows at the part where the information for Volhov's Robe notes that even the Navarr "see great value in a skilled individual being able to help an established coven".

Additional and further relevant context: there are four events a year. In-game, these events take place during the Winter Solstice, Spring Equinox, Summer Solstice, and Autumn Equinox.

It Is Also The Case That: a particularly distinctive piece of kit can get very strongly associated with The Specific Character Who Wears It in the general cultural wossname.

... I abruptly very badly want to make myself a set of three shawls identical except in colour: spring green, summer green, autumn blazing yellow. Obviously the conceit is that it is not three shawls, It Is One Single Magic Shawl. It Changes With The Seasons. Do I know anything about this potential character other than "Navarri, magician, magic shawl"? NOPE. Have I ever actually LRPed? NOPE. Am I nonetheless actually kind of tempted? ...

fri five via spiralsheep

Apr. 18th, 2025 09:38 am
thistleingrey: (Default)
[personal profile] thistleingrey
I. Who was your first crush?

A third-grade classmate (8-9yo) who was casually nice to me as though I were their younger sib. (They had an actual younger sib, a year or two younger.) We ate lunch together for part of the school-year.

II. Are you an introvert or an extrovert?

Not an introvert, but I've neither been nor wanted to be the life of a party.

III. What is your favourite non-sexual thing you like to do with the love of your life?

*tilts head* This question seems rather overdetermined---

IV. What is one quirky habit your partner does that either annoys you or makes you grin?

---and this one seems a bit unfair for privacy. If it annoys you, chat with the person about it instead of telling the internet, yes? And if you think it's endearing, the person might appreciate knowing you think so, more than the internet would; if instead you're inclined to laugh at them, consider why, because that's a you-problem.

V. Do you believe in monogamous relationships?

I believe in a shared sense of commitment and belonging, honesty, and not causing deliberate, anticipatable harm ("cheating" is also a matter of perspective). But the word encodes itself: monogamy is about feeling certain that one's gametes---germ cells---have gone whither one expects. I don't believe in tight constraint or entitlement.

I guess this means that person/tissue could be construed as a monogamous relationship, but it's probably not what the question's writer meant.

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rushthatspeaks

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