aurumcalendula: gold, blue, orange, and purple shapes on a black background (Default)
AurumCalendula ([personal profile] aurumcalendula) wrote2025-07-09 10:27 pm
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A bunch of books I've read lately

A Dark and Drowning Tide by Allison Saft:

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A Treachery of Swans by A.B. Poranek:

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I'd heard of Melissa Scott's Astreiant novels, but hadn't gotten to them until recently. I like the combination of plotty mysteries and slowburn romance. It reminded me of Swordspoint at times, although with more magic and a matriarchal-ish society (it was interesting to notice 'she' being used as default pronoun for an unknown person the way 'he' sometimes used to be, iirc). I'm very fond of the main characters, but I would really like to read something like this with a f/f main couple. More on specific books (I have two more left in the series to read) below.


Point of Hopes by Melissa Scott & Lisa A. Barnett:

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Point of Knives by Melissa Scott:

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Point of Dreams by Melissa Scott & Lisa A. Barnett:

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Fairs' Point by Melissa Scott:

Read more... )
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StarWatcher ([personal profile] starwatcher) wrote in [community profile] fandom_checkin2025-07-09 06:04 pm
Entry tags:

Daily Check-in

 
This is your check-in post for today. The poll will be open from midnight Universal or Zulu Time (8pm Eastern Time) on Wednesday, July 9, to midnight on Thursday, July 10. (8pm Eastern Time).

Poll #33344 Daily Check-in
Open to: Access List, detailed results viewable to: Access List, participants: 17

How are you doing?

I am OK.
11 (64.7%)

I am not OK, but don't need help right now.
6 (35.3%)

I could use some help.
0 (0.0%)

How many other humans live with you?

I am living single.
7 (41.2%)

One other person.
7 (41.2%)

More than one other person.
3 (17.6%)




Please, talk about how things are going for you in the comments, ask for advice or help if you need it, or just discuss whatever you feel like.
 
althea_valara: Icon of Althea Valara, my main character from Final Fantasy XIV. (Althea Valara)
Althea Valara ([personal profile] althea_valara) wrote in [community profile] your_favourites2025-07-09 06:21 pm

Challenge #219 - Magical Creature



I am not usually an icon maker, but I saw this challenge and couldn't resist. My favorite magical creature is Feo Ul, a pixie from the Final Fantasy XIV MMORPG. Pixies are playful and love to play tricks on non-pixie races. Feo Ul is a rare pixie who works in conjunction with the player character, and eventually Feo Ul becomes Titania (King of the Pixies).

links )

(I will need a username tag.)
kaberett: Trans symbol with Swiss Army knife tools at other positions around the central circle. (Default)
kaberett ([personal profile] kaberett) wrote2025-07-09 11:58 pm

today I have mostly been at the plot

I had a first-thing physio appointment, so I dragged myself over to the hospital for that and then nestled down in my Surrounded By Green and... mostly read Murderbot, with occasional fruit harvest and weeding.

(I have also had lots of opportunities to practise self-compassion, both in re the number of things I did not manage to harvest before they went over and in terms of having realised within the last half hour or so that one of my pens has vanished from all of the bags it was nominally in; I hope that if I go and poke around the table etc tomorrow it will rematerialise...)

china_shop: Changcheng with Chu Shuzhi in the background. (Guardian - ChuGuo by tinny)
The Gauche in the Machine ([personal profile] china_shop) wrote in [community profile] sid_guardian2025-07-10 10:57 am
Entry tags:

Poll: Guo Changcheng's major (drama)

Poll #33343 Changcheng's qualifications
Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 7


What did Guo Changcheng study at university?

View Answers

Anthropology
0 (0.0%)

Chinese Language Teaching and Applied Chinese Language Studies
1 (14.3%)

Computer Science
0 (0.0%)

Corporate Governance and Sustainability
2 (28.6%)

Creative Writing
1 (14.3%)

Criminology
2 (28.6%)

Economics
2 (28.6%)

Environmental Studies
0 (0.0%)

Financial Accounting and Management
1 (14.3%)

History or Art History
0 (0.0%)

Law
0 (0.0%)

Media Studies
0 (0.0%)

Philosophy
0 (0.0%)

Psychology
1 (14.3%)

Visual Communication Design
0 (0.0%)

other
0 (0.0%)

he couldn't settle on a major and kept switching
3 (42.9%)

Best forgiveness/redemption moment

View Answers

Wang Xiangyang relinquishing the Merit Brush on his deathbed
0 (0.0%)

Ya Qing switching sides and then kneeling to Zhu Hong
1 (14.3%)

Ye Zun's posthumous reconciliation with Shen Wei
1 (14.3%)

Zhao Xinci fighting alongside the Yashou elders
1 (14.3%)

Cong Bo agreeing to work for the SID
1 (14.3%)

Ye Huo acknowledging the Envoy's authority
1 (14.3%)

Lin Jing becoming a double agent
3 (42.9%)

Da Ji fighting to protect Dragon City
0 (0.0%)

Wang Yike crying after accidentally ageing her girlfriend
0 (0.0%)

Dr Feng Qubing giving his life force to reverse the harm he did
3 (42.9%)

other
0 (0.0%)

NASA Earth Observatory Image of the Day ([syndicated profile] earthobservatory_iod_feed) wrote2025-07-10 12:00 am

Santorini’s Hidden Worlds

Posted by NASA Earth Observatory

Santorini’s Hidden Worlds
An explosive eruption thousands of years ago transformed the volcanic island but preserved a Bronze Age town under a layer of ash.

Read More...

cupcake_goth: (LilyDrawing)
cupcake_goth ([personal profile] cupcake_goth) wrote2025-07-09 03:06 pm

Buy yourself the motivation

Remember how I said the Wegovy has cut down on the impulse shopping noise in my brain? It still has, but when a bunch of things on my "to buy someday Real Soon Now" all have sales over the 4th of July weekend? Yeah, I spent a lot of money. But this means that a dress, jacket, pendant, and art book were less than they had been, so yay?

... and this will certainly keep me from buying ALL THE MERCH at the MCR concert. Yes, it will. 

:: shifty eyes ::
reeby10: the lower half of a person laying on grass and reading with the words 'time to escape' and a ripped looking border (reading)
Reeby ([personal profile] reeby10) wrote2025-07-09 05:54 pm
Entry tags:

Wednesday What I'm...

Reading
  • I've read nothing but fic this week lol Still on Gradence. Currently I'm rereading The Standard Book of Spells by [archiveofourown.org profile] canis_m , which I don't really remember, but I'm enjoying it.
Watching
  • I continued watching movies my roommate wouldn't want to watch. This week was:
    • Bitten. I thought the premise of this movie was interesting, but the soul deep romance fell a bit flat. I also could not figure out who they thought the audience was, with the divorced middle aged man "fucking women amirite" jokes and the twelve year old boy poop jokes.
    • Ghost Shark. Even more ridiculous than it sounds tbh, but overall pretty fun.
    • Planet of the Sharks. Very interesting worldbuilding that I wish wold have gotten explored some more. They went hard on the climate change stuff, which was not bad.
    • Mega Shark vs. Crocosaurus. Pretty ridiculous, but about on par for what I expected from this franchise lol
    • Hoax. I'm always down for a Bigfoot hunt, so pretty fun. I feel like the twist discovery at the end kind of ruined it a bit for me though, I don't love a cannibal redneck story.
    • Ozark Sharks. A pretty fun movie cribbed very much from Jaws. But I liked the characters and relationships.
    • Mississippi River Sharks. This was so funny to watch right after Ozark Sharks bc it's the same director and even uses some of the same b roll footage. It also has a character that ties the movies together, plus has a in canon shark movie series that shares names with the director's shark movies, so that was interesting.
  • I was craving a BL romance, so I started a Thai series called Your Sky. I stayed up until after midnight two nights this week because I didn't want to stop watching lol I also got the bff to start watching and she's obsessed as well. It's just so fun and so cute! And great side romances!
  • Watched one more PBS Nova episode, Lost Tombs of Notre Dame. Very interesting!
  • AEW as usual. Kyle Fletcher remains my favorite guy regularly on at the moment.
Listening
  • Been wanting some seasonal music, so I found a summer alt rock playlist. It was ok. I should probably just make myself one.
Writing
  • I wrote a poem for a NaPoWriMo prompt.
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sartorias ([personal profile] sartorias) wrote2025-07-09 02:24 pm
Entry tags:

It's Wednesday! And I've been reading!

Actually I've been doing a ton of reading while I shake off the last of this influenza, which is mostly now lingering chest crud and zero stamina.

While nothing has blown me away, and I've abandoned some other "not for me" books, I did make a virtuous start on The Cull. Beginning with C.S. Lewis's Out of the Silent Planet, first published in 1938.

My copy, the 1965 paperback edition printed in the US, has a cover that actually sort of fits the book, unlike a lot of SF covers of the time depicting generic space skies and cigar rocket ships, with or without a scantily clad lady joined by guys in glass helmets and bulky space suits.

No woman on the cover here, which would have been false advertising as the only woman on stage during the entire novel is a distraught country housewife in the first few pages. (And no, I do not think that this is a sign that Lewis despised women, so much as that he had spent all his childhood and early manhood among males, so his default characters are going to be "he" among "hims". But that's a discussion for another book.)

I've had Lewis's space trilogy since high school (1968). This one I read I think twice, once that year, and then again when the Mythopoeic Society had branches and our West LA discussion group covered the three books.

Teen-me trudged through the first reading looking for story elements that would interest me, and though a line here and there was promising, I found it overall tedious, missing the humor entirely. On that second reading during my college years I saw the humor, and found more to appreciate in Lewis's thematic argument, but that was a lukewarm enough response that I never reread it during the ensuing fifty years.

Now in old age it's time to cull a massive print library that neither of my kids wants to inherit. What to keep and what to donate? I reread this book finally, and found myself largely charmed. The structure is strongly reminiscent of the fin de siecle SF of Wells, Verne, etc--inheritors of the immensely popular "travelogue" of the 1600-1700s--which means it moves rather slowly, full of the description of discovery (and anticipatory terror) as its protagonist, a scholar named Ransom, stumbles into a situation that gets him kidnapped by a figure from his boarding school days, Weston, and Weston's companion, a man named Devine.

As was common in the all-male world of British men of Lewis's social strata, the men all go by last names--I don't think Weston or Devine are ever given a first name, and there are at most two mentions of Ransom's first name, Elwin, which I suspect was only added as a nod to JRRT. Apparently this book owes its origin to a bet made between Lewis and Tolkien, which I think worth mentioning because of the (I think totally wrong) assumptions that Lewis was anti-science. The bet, and the dedication to Lewis's brother, make it plain that they read and enjoyed science fiction--had as boys.

I suppose it's possible to eagerly read SF and still be anti-science, but I don't think that's the case here; accusations that Lewis hates scientific progress seem to go hand-in-hand with scorn for Lewis's Christianity. But I see the scientific knowledge of mid-thirties all over this book. In fact, I don't recollect reading in other contemporary SF (admittedly I haven't read a lot of it) the idea that once you're out of Earth's gravity well, notions of up and down become entirely arbitrary. Though Lewis seems not to understand freefall, he does represent the changes in gravity and in light and heat--it seems to me that the science, though full of errors that are now common knowledge, was as up-to-date as he could make it. That also shows in the meticulous worldbuilding--and to some extent in the fun he had building his Martian language.

What he argues against when the three men are at last brought before the god-like Oyarsa, is a certain attitude toward Progress as understood then, and also up through my entire childhood: that it didn't matter what you did to other beings or to the environment, as long as it was in the name of Progress or Humanity. We get little throwaways right from the start that Lewis's stance clear, such as when Devine and Weston squabble about having a guard dog to protect their secret space ship, but Devine points out that Weston had had one but experimented on it.

Lewis hated vivisection. He knew it was torture for the poor helpless beasts in the hands of the vivisectionists, who believed animals had no feelings, etc etc. He also hated the byproducts of mass industrialization, as he makes plain in vivid images. Lewis also makes reference to splitting the atom and its possible results; I think it worthwhile to note that during the thirties no one knew what the result would be--but there was a lot of rhetoric hammering that we need bigger and better bombs, and splitting the atom would give us that. All in the name of Humanity. Individual lives have no meaning, and can be sacrificed with impunity as long as it's in the name of "saving Humanity."

As his theme develops, it's made very clear that moral dilemmas trouble Ransom--he's aware that humans contain the capability for brilliant innovation and for vast cruelty. He also holds up for scruntiny the idea that the (white) man is the pinnacle of intelligence in the cosmos. The scene when Weston talks excruciating pidgin in his determination to subordinate the Martians and their culture to the level of "tribal witch doctors" is equally hilarious and cringey.

In short, it took over fifty years for me to appreciate this book within the context of its time. I don't feel any impulse to eagerly reread it, but I might some day. At any rate, it stays on the shelf.
Whatever ([syndicated profile] scalziwhatever_feed) wrote2025-07-09 09:11 pm

Into the Woods

Posted by John Scalzi

Krissy is off visiting friends for a couple of days, and so it falls to me to take the dog for her daily walk through the local nature preserve. I mean, I could not do it, but then I would disappoint Charlie, and, look, you just do not want to disappoint a dog. She will look at you all mopey and sad for the whole rest of the day. No thank you. A walk is vastly preferable. Plus, you know. I need the exercise too.

How has your Wednesday been?

— JS

conuly: (Default)
conuly ([personal profile] conuly) wrote2025-07-11 11:20 am

Points for honesty in this job description....

"Why work here?"

"Weekly pay!"

Yup, that's why I would like to apply for any and all jobs!

(On a side note, A has been sending me a lot of job links today. I'm a bit inundated, but I somehow don't think that "Great, please don't send them to me, just fill them out with my resume for me" is going to go over very well.)

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


Read more... )
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
ysabetwordsmith ([personal profile] ysabetwordsmith) wrote2025-07-09 03:03 pm

Activism

Scientists host 'science fair of canceled grants' on Capitol Hill to fight funding cuts

The researchers gathered, alongside the House Committee on Science, Space, and Technology, to present posters in a good, old-fashioned science fair, titled “The Things We’ll Never Know: A Science Fair of Canceled Grants.”


It's a great tactic, and one that other fields could use too. "Here are some useful things you could have had, but these specific people took them away from you." That's guaranteed to piss off a lot of people.

It's also among the standard protest techniques in Terramagne. Not only is it sound activism for pounding the perpetrators, it also has a pretty good chance of someone else deciding to sponsor your canceled project if they like your pitch. Feel free to prompt me for that.
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
ysabetwordsmith ([personal profile] ysabetwordsmith) wrote2025-07-09 03:01 pm
Entry tags:

Cuddle Party

Everyone needs contact comfort sometimes. Not everyone has ample opportunities for this in facetime. So here is a chance for a cuddle party in cyberspace. Virtual cuddling can help people feel better.

We have a
cuddle room that comes with fort cushions, fort frames, sheets for draping, and a weighted blanket. A nest full of colorful egg pillows sits in one corner. There is a basket of grooming brushes, hairbrushes, and styling combs. A bin holds textured pillows. There is a big basket of craft supplies along with art markers, coloring pages, and blank paper. The kitchen has a popcorn machine. Labels are available to mark dietary needs, recipe ingredients, and level of spiciness. Here is the bathroom, open to everyone. There is a lawn tent and an outdoor hot tub. Bathers should post a sign for nude or clothed activity. Come snuggle up!
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
ysabetwordsmith ([personal profile] ysabetwordsmith) wrote2025-07-09 02:38 pm

Birdfeeding

Today is mostly sunny, humid, and hot.  Yesterday it rained for half the day and into the night.

I fed the birds.  I've seen a mixed flock of sparrows and house finches.  They've drained half the thistle feeder but I still need to refill that one.

I put out water for the birds.

EDIT 7/9/25 -- I filled the thistle feeder.

I've seen a male cardinal and a fox squirrel.

EDIT 7/9/25 -- I did a bit of work around the patio.

EDIT 7/9/25 -- I sprayed weedkiller on poison ivy around the yard.

EDIT 7/9/25 -- I potted up two apricot seeds.



.

ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
ysabetwordsmith ([personal profile] ysabetwordsmith) wrote2025-07-09 12:44 pm
Entry tags:

Sunshine Revival Challenge 3: Food

Sunshine Revival Challenge 3: Food

Journaling prompt: What are your favorite summer-associated foods?

Creative prompt: Draw art of or make graphics of summer foods, or post your favorite summer recipes. Post your answer to today’s challenge in your own space and leave a comment in this post saying you did it. Include a link to your post if you feel comfortable doing so
.

Sunshine-Revival-Carnival-2.png


This is actually from 7/7/25 but it wasn't up when I checked, and then the net was down.

Read more... )
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ysabetwordsmith ([personal profile] ysabetwordsmith) wrote2025-07-08 08:38 pm

Today's Adventures

We went up to Champaign-Urbana today.

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skysedge ([personal profile] skysedge) wrote in [community profile] iconthat2025-07-09 05:20 pm
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Challenge 196: Yellow

Cardcaptor Sakura



https://i.imgur.com/wjLV1Af.png

Next color: Green!


My feed updated late, sorry! I've fixed it :)

Cardcaptor Sakura



https://i.imgur.com/q4qjeXe.png

Next color: Cyan