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Paul Morley "Words and Music: A History of Pop in the Shape of a City" (Bloomsbury Publishing)




This is a bit of a re-read as it is a very esoteric history of pop, which I like. A ride in a very fast car. Insightful and entertaining. Lots and lots of lists some of which will interest you and some won't. It will alomost certainly make you curious about some artist or genre you have never heard of. Plenty of philosphy and ideas - for example a discussion of celebrity. Goes well beyond a history of pop and leaves out as much as it takes in. Eclectic and wacky. I still take it off the shelf to get inspiration as to what to listen to next- or what to challenge Amazon music with.

I have always been that adventurous with music, so I would definitely recommend this book to the very curious music lover.

Foundation 3.01

Jul. 13th, 2025 11:26 am
selenak: (Demerzel and Terminus)
[personal profile] selenak
In which we make another time jump, the Foundation is now in its monarchical phase, while Empire seems to approach its version of the Third Century Crisis. Also: Demerzel is still my favourite.

Spoilers are explaining the Three Laws of Robotics and the Zeroth Law )
alethia: (GK Doc)
[personal profile] alethia
State of Play (5241 words) by Alethia
Chapters: 1/1
Fandom: The Pitt (TV)
Rating: Explicit
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Relationships: Jack Abbot/Michael "Robby" Robinavitch
Characters: Jack Abbot (The Pitt), Michael "Robby" Robinavitch, Jake (The Pitt)
Additional Tags: Post-Season/Series 01, Established Relationship, Advice, Cross-Generational Friendship, Porn, Barebacking, Period-Typical Homophobia, let's talk about sex baby, gen z meets gen x
Summary:

Jack was poised for a beautiful three-pointer when Jake spoke, "So, hey, what's it feel like to get fucked?"

The surprise of it scattered his focus for an instant, but figuring that was what Jake wanted, Jack let muscle memory pull him through, releasing the basketball—and getting nothing but net, fuck yeah.

Then he looked over at Jake and tipped his head, nonchalant. "Vulnerable."

(no subject)

Jul. 13th, 2025 04:17 am

Book 29 - Janina Ramirez "Femina"

Jul. 13th, 2025 10:18 am
jazzy_dave: (books n tea)
[personal profile] jazzy_dave
Janina Ramirez "Femina : A New History of the Middle Ages, Through the Women Written Out of It" (W. H Allen)




A book asserting that there are lots of interesting stories to tell about the centrality of women in the Middle Ages, which basically is preaching to the converted as far as I am concerned. It starts however in 1913: Emily Davison, who was trampled to death by the King’s horse when her suffragette protest went wrong at the Derby, was a qualified and enthusiastic medievalist who saw the political empowerment of women as fully consistent with history.

Ramirez goes on to look at the Loftus Princess; Cyneðryð and Æðelflæd of Mercia; the Viking woman from Birka; Hildegard of Bingen; the women who made the Bayeux Tapestry; the women of the Cathars; Jadwiga of Poland; and Margery Kempe. It’s a solid piece of work which simultaneously rides the two horses of “these were remarkable individuals” and “women in general were much more important in the Middle Ages than you have probably been told”.

I didn’t know much about any of these particular cases, and had never heard of some of them – and I’ve read quite a lot of medieval history in my time, since I did an arts degree course back in the eigtie, and I covered the middle ages for my final dissertation. So I felt enlightened and encouraged by the end of the book and would recommend this to any budding historian or curious reader.

Book 28 - Graham Swift "Waterland"

Jul. 13th, 2025 09:06 am
jazzy_dave: (books n tea)
[personal profile] jazzy_dave
Graham Swift "Waterland" (Picador)



Not my first book by the author, I read Last Orders wile travelling a few years ago, but I had forgotten his roundabout, yet entertaining, way of spinning a yarn.

Set in the Fens, the characters are as much tied to the land, the titular Waterland. Like the water in its springy earth, the Fens seem to move, retract and then burst their banks as the try to get back to their previous untamed state.

The book has 3 threads. The first is that of a history teacher, Crick, being given his marching orders, partly for his unorthodox teaching methods and partly because of an incident in his personal life. In his classes, he tells the students about the other two threads - the history of his family in the Fens and the death of a childhood friend, both of which have contributed to the current state of events.

Price, a clever boy in Crick's class, questions the relevance of history in a world which has a bleak, if any, future. Written in the early '80s, it is a fear that my own generation dismissed with the fall of the Iron Curtain, only for it to have reared its head again in the wake of 9/11 and the current economic crisis.

The impression you get of the Fens is that of a fierce, resistant people. Resistant to those who tried to tame the waters, independent from the world outside until it strategic position and the source of man power were discovered by the powers that be. I suppose you could argue nature versus nurture, but how can you separate the two when both seem to be governed by the Fens? Most of all, though, there is a feeling of guilt that pervades in its pages - for what has happened, whether it could have been prevented. Absent mothers and madness are two other recurring notes.

Highly recommended.
jazzy_dave: (books n tea)
[personal profile] jazzy_dave
M. R. James "The Haunted Doll's House and Other Ghost Stories" (Penguin Classics)





This finally made its slow way to the top of the to be read pile, and I thought a nice long weekend would be the perfect time to dip into the stories. I was not disappointed.

While the editor calls the stories included here "generally inferior" to those in the other volume, which includes James' earlier stories (and which I've now ordered up), I quite enjoyed those between these covers. James captures supernatural visitations and unexplained events very well, and has a way of lending very creepy powers to seemingly benign, inanimate objects (among them are binoculars, fabric, and, as might be expected from the title, even a dollhouse).

All of the stories here are well worth reading, but if I had to pick just a few, I'd highlight "The Residence at Whitminster", "The Diary of Mr. Poynter", "Two Doctors," "The Haunted Dolls' House", "A View from a Hill," and "The Uncommon Prayer-Book" (which takes as its supernatural element a bibliographically-mysterious Commonwealth-period Book of Common Prayer). One of the things I really like (and I'm sure you'll be shocked, shocked at this) about James' stories is the inclusion of books, libraries, book auctions and antiquarianism in the plots (he was a medievalist and manuscript cataloger).

Some of my favorite Conan Doyle stories are his supernatural tales, and these reminded me (in a good way) of those. Creepy, but highly enjoyable, and very much recommended.

get down, get down

Jul. 12th, 2025 09:52 pm
musesfool: iconic supergirl (up up and away)
[personal profile] musesfool
As I may have mentioned, Baby Miss L loves potatoes, so when I saw a t-shirt on Etsy that said, "Potatoes gonna potate!" around a picture of a potato, I thought, I have to get it for her! Unfortunately, it was only available in neon green, which I did not like the look of. Luckily, many other vendors were also selling t-shirts with pictures of friendly potatoes on them, so I got her this one that says, "Tater tot!"

This morning, I received a series of glamour shots and a video of Baby Miss L thoroughly excited about wearing the t-shirt. It was so great!

I also learned that The Muppets covering Jungle Boogie is one of her current favorite videos. AMAZING!

On all counts, her vibes are immaculate.

Tomorrow, I'm going to a birthday bbq at my brother's, and I'm bringing her the Batman and Robin t-shirts, plus some toddler books about Batman and the Justice League. Hopefully she enjoys them almost as much! (I also recently sent her a Captain America t-shirt, which I believe she wore for the 4th, and I also got pics of her in the Superman dress, with her arms up like she was flying. 😍😍😍)

In other news, I found this review of the new Superman movie really moving. Will I venture out to a theater to see it? Probably not, but I will be very excited to watch it when it makes its way onto HBO in a few months.

*

Murderbot Interview

Jul. 12th, 2025 03:05 pm
marthawells: Murderbot with helmet (Default)
[personal profile] marthawells
Here's a gift link for the New York Times interview with Paul and Chris Weitz, who wrote, directed, and produced Murderbot:

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/11/arts/television/murderbot-season-finale-chris-paul-weitz.html?unlocked_article_code=1.V08.exvw.M_qE37ROOT58&smid=url-share

Saturday Splash Page #185

Jul. 12th, 2025 12:25 pm
[syndicated profile] calvinpitt_feed

Posted by CalvinPitt

"Spare Parts," in The Secret Voice, by Zack Soto (writer/artist), Jason Fischer (color assists)

The Secret Voice centers on Dr. Issac Galapagos, a sorcerer/fighter of the Red College, a group of magic-wielders trying to help hold back the forces of Wux Heng. Wux Heng isn't simply a conqueror, as he reduces the places he takes to rubble, using up every resource they have. The Red College has had some success slowing his advance and forming alliances between various kingdoms, but they've by no means stopped him.

Wux Heng's forces also carry a poison on their weapons, one that reduces those afflicted to shuffling zombies. Soto draws their innards as having been replaced with something fungal-like. Issac was wounded in a battle but has thus far staved off this final undeath, though not without cost. He's losing focus, hallucinating, having difficulty distinguishing reality and fantasy (he's not supposed to be holding a severed hand right then.)

Still, his persistence in the face of the infection may have given him some greater insight into what the Red College is up against. Or, if the presence in his mind really did gain sentience because he's so stubbornly resisted succumbing, he's made things even worse.

Hard to say, since as far as I know, Soto hasn't released any more of this in this last half-dozen years. He set up a lot of backstory and intrigue, such as why Wux Heng is so destructive. Wouldn't it be more useful to keep the lands he conquers in a state where they can continue to produce? Soto draws Heng with a noticeable purple bullseye centered over his right ear, which feels significant to his claims that he's got certain foreknowledge of how things are going to go. But then, why does he need the help of a witch (though we don't actually see her help)? There's an immense wall holding back a collapse in reality in one corner of the world. No one seems to know why reality collapsed, or why there. Is it connected to the thing in Issac's mind, or Wux Heng? Don't know.

Huh

Jul. 12th, 2025 12:02 pm
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll
This is probably in no way significant, but it just occurred to me to check to see where WorldCon was the years I was nominated:

2010: Melbourne, Australia
2011: Reno, USA
2019: Dublin, Ireland
2020: Wellington, New Zealand
2024: Glasgow, Scotland

(I was nowhere near the ballot in 2009, Montreal)

At a guess, those are years where vote totals were a bit lower?

Read more... )

(no subject)

Jul. 12th, 2025 11:29 am
skygiants: the aunts from Pushing Daisies reading and sipping wine on a couch (wine and books)
[personal profile] skygiants
lest you think that having returned The Pushcart War to its rightful owner I went away with my bookshelves lighter! I did NOT, as she pushed 84, Charing Cross Road into my hands at the airport as I was leaving again with strict instructions to read it ASAP.

This is another one that's been on my list for years -- specifically, since I read Between Silk and Cyanide, as cryptography wunderkind Leo Marks chronicling the desperate heroism and impossible failures of the SOE is of course the son of the owner of Marks & Co., the bookstore featuring in 84, Charing Cross Road, because the whole of England contains approximately fifteen people tops.

84, Charing Cross Road collects the correspondence between jobbing writer Helene Hanff -- who started ordering various idiosyncratic books at Marks & Co. in 1949 -- and the various bookstore employees, primarily but not exclusively chief buyer Frank Doel. Not only does Hanff has strong and funny opinions about the books she wants to read and the editions she's being sent, she also spends much of the late forties and early fifties expressing her appreciation by sending parcels of rationed items to the store employees. A friendship develops, and the store employees enthusiastically invite Hanff to visit them in England, but there always seems to be something that comes up to prevent it. Hanff gets and loses jobs, and some of the staff move on. Rationing ends, and Hanff doesn't send so many parcels, but keeps buying books. Twenty years go by like this.

Since 84, Charing Cross Road was a bestseller in 1970 and subsequently multiply adapted to stage and screen, and Between Silk and Cyanide did not receive publication permission until 1998, I think most people familiar with these two books have read them in the reverse order that I did. I think it did make sort of a difference to feel the shadow of Between Silk and Cyanide hanging over this charming correspondence -- not for the worse, as an experience, just certain elements emphasized. Something about the strength and fragility of a letter or a telegram as a thread to connect people, and how much of a story it does and doesn't tell.

As a sidenote, in looking up specific publication dates I have also learned by way of Wikipedia that there is apparently a Chinese romcom about two people who both independently read 84, Charing Cross Road, decide that the book has ruined their lives for reasons that are obscure to me in the Wikipedia summary, write angry letters to the address 84 Charing Cross Road, and then get matchmade by the man who lives there now. Extremely funny and I kind of do want to watch it.
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll


Four books new to me.Two are SF, one is fantasy, one is a mix of both. I don't see anything unambiguously labelled as series works.

Books Received, July 5 — July 11

Poll #33350 Books Received, July 5 — July 11
Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 40


Which of these look interesting?

View Answers

Secrets, Spells, and Chocolate by Marisa Churchill (December 2025)
14 (35.0%)

Spread Me by Sarah Gailey (September 2025)
14 (35.0%)

The Forest on the Edge of Time by Jasmin Kirkbride (February 2026)
15 (37.5%)

The Universe Box by Michael Swanwick (February 2026)
18 (45.0%)

Some other option (see comments)
1 (2.5%)

Cats!
31 (77.5%)

RPG checklist

Jul. 11th, 2025 10:43 pm
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll
Specifically Fabula Ultima

Read more... )
lannamichaels: Brachos 2a, caption: "There's a debate about that" (daf yomi)
[personal profile] lannamichaels


Fun with idolatry and "I'm doing Avoda Zara" jokes! The perek ended yesterday but RL is being busy.

The absolute requisite note on Avoda Zara is one that gets stressed constantly, which is that this is referring specifically to the religious groups amongst whom the tanaim and amoraim were living, and only them. Among the reasons the commentators have said this for a long time is 1) actual real differences between the avoda zarah described in the mishna/gemara and the goysche practices they lived amongst, combined with 2) because if they kept to all of this, there would be many practical problems, because they were a lot more interconnected by that time and working in specific professions, and 3) the outside world thinks it gets a say in Jewish religious texts and would be violently offended if this refers to them.

But definitely there were times when dealing with Artscroll commentary when I had to snap and actually look up when the Meiri lived, and it's like, ah, 13th century France, I understand completely.


Read more... )

[syndicated profile] calvinpitt_feed

Posted by CalvinPitt

Superman's working hard to get his pizza rolls just the right temperature.

Mxyzptlk is now two siblings, who are hawking a complete set of the Encyclopedia Universal. They put Perry White in a coma when he didn't go for their sales pitch, but after Superman proved a tougher nut to crack they went big and canceled Earth's gravity.

As the Earth falls to pieces, buildings start soaring into space, and a S.T.A.R. Labs space station begins drifting into the void, Superman and the Atom make tracks to the Fortress of Solitude. Atom's brought the white dwarf star that powered his size-changing belt. Superman says it feels heavy, though the Atom says it's 100 tons. That's not much to Superman, right, let alone for a star? Was it supposed to read 100 million tons? I guess it's a star fragment, because even a neutron star probably wouldn't fit in your hands.

Anyway, the weight is no big deal because the starlight is charging Superman up, and oh come on, it's a yellow sun that does that! I mean, yes, yellow light is contained within white light, but so is red, which would cancel out any gains of the yellow! Dang it Joe Casey, have you no respect for fictional stellar physics?

The Mxys are just floating around, watching the show, playing word association games, for some reason retconning something from earlier in Casey's run to be their doing instead of the Prankster's. They're also debating if they'd like to level up to something more than an 'annoyance.' Maybe become real super-villains, which is a terrifying notion. But as the Great Wall of China disintegrates, they find themselves encased in glowing green light. Alan Scott and John Stewart are creating a breathable forcefield around the entire planet, to hold it together.

(It's odd that, even though Superman tells everyone this is being caused by magic, we don't see any magic-users trying to do anything. Unless whatever Tempest was doing riding an orca counts.)

That gives Superman time to drill his way to the Earth's core, stuff the dwarf fragment there, then alternately heat and cool it with his powers, because the expansion and contraction produces more gravity. That done, Supes zips into space, hauls the space station back before everyone freezes of suffocates. Then it's off to confront the Mxys.

He offers to take a set of the encyclopedias, though he doesn't specify how he's going to pay, which seems like not very carefully defining the terms of a contract with the Devil. Then he pokes the bull by saying he liked them better as a funny little imp. As they reset all the damage (including to Perry's brain), speaking in unison, they disappear with a promise that, 'next time, we won't hit the reset button.' 

{1st longbox, 18th comic. Adventures of Superman #618, by Joe Casey (writer), Charlie Adlard (artist), Tanya and Rich Horie (colorists), Comiccraft (letterer)}

the read on the speed-meter says

Jul. 11th, 2025 03:20 pm
musesfool: (easy like sunday morning)
[personal profile] musesfool
Two guys came and measured the space for my new dishwasher and it will apparently fit, but there are as always several - okay, 2 - unexpected wrinkles: 1. the current machine is hardwired into the electric, but the new dishwasher needs a plug, so the installers are going to have to build an outlet? These 2 guys didn't seem to think it was a big deal but it is another $75, which at this point is whatever, fine. Secondly, they were concerned that the installation might damage the drain pipe under my sink, and I was like, can we wrap it in something to protect it from being dinged? and they were like, "Eh, maybe, but if it breaks you're responsible for fixing it." Which, thanks. I suppose I can get under there and wrap a towel around it if necessary.

So we'll see how this goes on Tuesday. Keep your fingers crossed that it doesn't completely wreck my kitchen!

Speaking of wrecking my kitchen, my current HGTV viewing is "Help! I wrecked my house!" which I'm enjoying, but oh my god, the sheer hubris of some of these mediocre white men, who think they can demo a kitchen or a bathroom down to the studs and then figure out how to put in a new one, and then have to call Jasmine because of course they can't. I don't understand these people, tbh. There is nothing wrong with asking a trained professional to come in and do that kind of work, especially if you're not particularly handy. (And even you are handy in the "can change a washer in the faucet" variety, what makes you think you can install a shower from the ground up??? WTF?) On the other hand, I am really sympathetic to the folks who did hire a contractor who turned out to be shady and didn't do the work properly and stiffed them of their money to boot!

In other news, I am now on vacation and very excited about it! Except shit, I forgot to set up my out of office message. I will have to log back in and do that.

*

Demonic Ox arrives today!

Jul. 11th, 2025 11:29 am
[syndicated profile] lois_mcmaster_bujold_feed
The newest Penric & Desdemona e-novella, "The Adventure of the Demonic Ox", is being uploaded today. The time for an upload to penetrate the system varies wildly, from an hour to a day week, but I'll post direct links here as each of our 5 vendors goes live.

Amazon Kindle is first out the gate:

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0FHBMR3DN

Not yet up, but pending:

Kobo, Google Play Books, and Apple Books are interesting if you search by my name, because they each carry so many foreign language titles, if you scroll down. (Amazon ditto, I suppose.) These pages should populate in due course, though it may take a while for a new entry to sift to the top:

https://www.kobo.com/us/en/search?que...

7/15 - Kobo is up! https://www.kobo.com/us/en/ebook/the-...

https://play.google.com/store/info/na...

7/18 - Google Play direct link at last --
https://play.google.com/store/books/d...

https://books.apple.com/us/author/loi...

Direct Apple US link: https://books.apple.com/us/book/the-a...

(Some readers are reporting problems finding my Spectrum titles on Apple outside the US, as per Bo, below. If you are one, chime in in the comments with details. Though I suppose we should give it a bit more time to propagate...)

B&N Nook, same deal:

https://www.barnesandnoble.com/s/lois...

Direct link is up! : https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/the-...

To recap:



The Adventure of the Demonic Ox

When sorcerer Learned Penric hears of the suspected demonic possession of an ox at his brother-in-law’s bridgebuilding worksite, he thinks it an excellent opportunity to tutor his adopted daughter and student sorceress Otta in one of their Temple duties: identifying and restraining such wild chaos elementals before harm comes to their hosts or surroundings.

What begins as an instructive family outing turns anything but routine when a mountain search becomes a much more frightening adventure for Penric and his charges. What is undergone there by both mentor and students will yield lessons both unexpected and far-reaching.

***

I'll make my usual spoiler discussion space post tomorrow, for the speed readers.

As always, reader mentions of the new title out and about on the internet and elsewhere are always greatly appreciated, as this blog and word of mouth are the only advertising my indie books get. Amazon always gets plenty of reviews; the other vendors are usually more in need. But no one will see any vendor pages unless they've already heard of the story someplace else, and go to look, so outside reviews and mentions are especially important.

Ta, L.

posted by Lois McMaster Bujold on July, 18

Murderbot TV, season the first

Jul. 11th, 2025 01:51 pm
lannamichaels: Astronaut Dale Gardner holds up For Sale sign after EVA. (Default)
[personal profile] lannamichaels


So I hated the first part of episode 10, and liked the last ~8 minutes, those were great, truly great. But I really didn't need what came before that; I liked how Murderbot slipped away at the end of the first novella. Oh well.

In general, overall, I really enjoyed Murderbot The Television Show, although there were parts of it I had to skip or not watch. They did a really good job at translating a novella into a tv show; the changes were understandable and made sense for the medium, even when they were ones I disliked. The show fleshed out the characters very well, and they had just so so so so much fun with the in-universe tv shows.

If this show has one thesis, it is Murderbot = Gurathin, and with my complaints about the first part of episode 10, I did like how it went so, are you not convinced that Murderbot = Gurathin yet? Here, let me show it to you again.

Anyway, I assume five seconds after the end of ep10, ART says hello. (okay that's probably not ART. But it would make sense to begin s2 immediately after s1 ends)

james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll


New Dawn requires only that people conform without exception or face memory erasure and worse. Yet, a minority insists on being individuals.

The Memory Librarian by Janelle Monáe

alt text issues

Jul. 11th, 2025 12:38 am
solarbird: our bike hill girl standing back to the camera facing her bike, which spans the image (biking)
[personal profile] solarbird

The last couple of posts I’ve made with images didn’t have their alt text make it to the Federation. It made it to Dreamwidth, but didn’t federate.

Let’s try this one:

A highly complicated cluster of street names on bike infrastructure and/or high-bike-use streets in east Seattle around Madrona. Is this alt-text visible to the Fediverse?

Posted via Solarbird{y|z|yz}, Collected.

(no subject)

Jul. 10th, 2025 11:33 pm
skygiants: the aunts from Pushing Daisies reading and sipping wine on a couch (wine and books)
[personal profile] skygiants
I mentioned that I did in fact read a couple of good books in my late-June travels to counterbalance the bad ones. One of them was The Pushcart War, which I conveniently discovered in my backpack right as I was heading out to stay with the friend who'd loaned it to me a year ago.

I somehow have spent most of my life under the impression that I had already read The Pushcart War, until the plot was actually described to me, at which point it became clear that I'd either read some other Pushcart or some other War but these actual valiant war heroes were actually brand new to me.

The book is science fiction, of a sort, originally published in 1964 and set in 1976 -- Wikipedia tells me that every reprint has moved the date forward to make sure it stays in the future, which I think is very charming -- and purporting to be a work of history for young readers explaining the conflict between Large Truck Corporations and Pugnacious Pushcart Peddlers over the course of one New York City summer. It's a punchy, defiant little book about corporate interest, collective action, and civil disobedience; there's one chapter in particular in which the leaders of the truck companies meet to discuss their master plan of getting everything but trucks off the streets of New York entirely where the metaphor is Quite Dark and Usefully Unsubtle. Also contains charming illustrations! A good read at any time and I'm glad to have finally experienced it.

New Murderbot Short Story

Jul. 10th, 2025 09:33 pm
marthawells: Murderbot with helmet (Default)
[personal profile] marthawells
The new Murderbot short story is up at Reactor Magazine:

Rapport: Friendship, Solidarity, Communion, Empathy

https://reactormag.com/rapport-martha-wells/

Edited by Lee Harris, art by Jaime Jones.


And Murderbot was renewed for a second season!

https://deadline.com/2025/07/murderbot-renewed-season-2-apple-tv-1236453764/

“We’re so grateful for the response that Murderbot has received, and delighted that we’re getting to go back to Martha Wells’ world to work with Alexander, Apple, CBS Studios and the rest of the team,” Chris and Paul Weitz, said in a statement Thursday.
[syndicated profile] savagelove_feed

Posted by Dan Savage

No Struggle Session this week — my summer of dashing around the world to see family continues (next up: chosen family) — but there’s a wonderful conversation unfolding in the comment thread on this week’s column about being non-binary and what binaries need to know about dating non-binaries. (Yes, Alex, there was a master plan!) … Read More »

The post STRUGGLE SESSION: Chosen Family, Pocket Altar Boys, Muppet-Faced Men and more! appeared first on Dan Savage.

fandom things

Jul. 10th, 2025 11:41 am
snickfic: Oasis: Noel and Liam Gallagher, text "Cigarettes & Alcohol" (Oasis Gallaghercest)
[personal profile] snickfic
- As of July 6th, I'd written more words this year than I had in all of 2024. Mostly this tells you how much 2024 sucked creatively, but also damn, that's a pretty good pace! I'm currently working on something for Summer of Horror and daydreaming about that Liam/Liam/Noel time travel fic that I may finally go back to working on.

- H/C Exchange finally went live! I got Re-Animator mpreg, which was DELIGHTFUL, and I wrote... something completely unexpected, literally on the day of the deadline after I finally gave up on all previous plans.

- I did end up signing up for Battleship. I'll participate for the eight days of it that happen before I leave for vacation. I also prompted a variety of forever OTPs (Liam/Noel) and rarepairs I haven't thought about in ages (Dawn/Illyria). Hopefully someone will be inspired.

- I picked up a couple of things in the summer Steam sale, and thus have done basically nothing the last 2-3 days but play Cult of the Lamb, the cutest little cosmic horror game you ever did see.

Leave Only Traces

Jul. 10th, 2025 12:18 pm
[syndicated profile] calvinpitt_feed

Posted by CalvinPitt

A boy named Ethan Carter's gone missing, but not before he sent a letter to Paul Prospero, supernatural detective. So in The Vanishing of Ethan Carter, it's your job to find Ethan. Failing that, learn what happened to him.

The game tells you up front that it will not, 'hold your hand.' Which is certainly true. There's only so far you can wander in any given direction, but within those bounds, it's up to you to figure out what you're supposed to be looking for. The game will, if there's something to interact with, put a word above said object. Like "Read", or "Push." When it turns orange, you're close enough to do whatever the action is.

But you have to find those things first. Early on, I wandered into an abandoned house. There was a scrap of paper on a table. I read it, and all the doorways gained a blue outline. When I started to enter one, the room beyond would change. Sometimes I'd walk through and everything would be fine. Others, there was a red flash and I end up back at the start.

Eventually I figured out that it was somehow mirroring the larger house next door. I needed to walk through that house to learn the layout, then go back to the first house and make my way from room to room, only stepping through the doorway when the room I saw matched the one I would have seen from that spot in the larger house, until I'd gone through the every room, which unlocked an "alchemist's workshop." Probably actually a distillery, transformed in Ethan's imagination.

But the game was perfectly content to let me continue on without ever unlocking that whole sequence. Though I probably would have to double back to it eventually, as I had to for the first of those things. So it doesn't hold your hand (if you can call occasional guidance that), but it does erect roadblocks.

At other points you encounter a dead body. Then it's a matter of finding evidence to help piece things together. When you find something, there will often be a word cloud of different conclusions or inferences Prospero is making. Eventually he'll settle on something that will hover and blur wildly in front of you (giving me a headache.) You have to pan across your surroundings until it reduces to one clear image, at which time you can "see" the location of whatever you're looking for.

You put together enough evidence, and the game will have you reconstruct the sequence of events that led to the murder. It's similar to Sinking City in that way, though Ethan Carter's reconstructions are trickier. There's usually more steps, and unlike Sinking City, you only have the ghostly after-images to work from. There's no voiceovers until after you correctly assemble the sequence, so the first one I managed to complete took several tries.

(It wasn't the first one I'd found, but I'd eventually gotten frustrated because I clearly understood the basic construction of the murder, but the game wasn't registering it. Turns out I hadn't parked the railcar used to sever the victim's legs in exactly the right spot. Ugh.)

The game appears to revolve around Ethan having awakened something he shouldn't, which turned most of his family against him. There's a, I guess, twist to that. Depends how literally you take everything you're seeing. I was taking things pretty literally because, well, why not? A supernatural or otherworldly horror controlling a bunch of people out in the middle of nowhere wouldn't be the weirdest thing I've seen in a video game.

I can't see myself playing the game through a second time, but it wasn't a bad way to kill a few hours.

[syndicated profile] lois_mcmaster_bujold_feed
So...

The Vorkosigan novella "The Flowers of Vashnoi" has not been available in a paper version since the Subterranean Press edition sold out. The novella "Winterfair Gifts" has had only scattered paper publication, not easy to find. (Both, of course, are continuously available under their own titles as my indie ebooks, or audio downloads from Blackstone.)

Neither would be economically viable for any pro publisher to handle, but it occurred to me they'd be just the thing to add to my little list of print-on-demand paper editions, including The Spirit Ring and "Knife Children". So I've put them together in a single PoD volume, to be titled Two Tales.

Experience with the long-time reader confusion over the novella "The Borders of Infinity" and the 3-novella collection it's in, Borders of Infinity, made me try to label this paper mini-collection as clearly as possible. We'll have to see how it works out. I'm not yet sure how to make it searchable under either of the novella titles, which is what I suspect most people would first be looking for.

Anyway, I asked artist Ron Miller to do us a cover in the style of my other indie VK ebooks, and here's a sneak peek:



When this paper-only edition becomes available to buy, later this summer, I'll post the ISBN number, which should helps folks trying to order it through bookstores. (Uncle Hugo's will certainly have it; they also carry the other two of my PoDs.)

Ta, L.

posted by Lois McMaster Bujold on July, 10

Starling House by Alix E. Harrow

Jul. 10th, 2025 08:53 am
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Desperate to pay her brother Jasper's way out of Muhlenberg County, Opal accepts a job at an infamously cursed mansion.

Starling House by Alix E. Harrow
[syndicated profile] savagelove_feed

Posted by Nancy Hartunian

For this episode of Sex & Politics, Dan chats with novelist Jonathan Parks-Ramage about his new book “It’s Not the End of the World” a dystopian novel with plenty of GAY SEX. Dan and Jonathan talk about how gay romance is often misrepresented in fiction, queer parenting, why kinky men are turned on the “fascist … Read More »

The post Sex & Politics #40: Jonathan Parks-Ramage appeared first on Dan Savage.

musesfool: Olivia Dunham, PI (there are blondes and blondes)
[personal profile] musesfool
It's no meeting week at work, which is the best week! And then I'm on PTO next week. I carefully portioned out my to-do list so that I have one main thing to do every day (on top of whatever comes up each day) and it's so satisfying to mostly just cross things off it and not have to go to any meetings (which always add things to my list).

Yesterday, it was so quiet that I was able to read a whole book! Just sitting at my desk and answering email occasionally! So, Wednesday reading!

What I've just finished
Stone and Sky by Ben Aaronovitch, the very latest Rivers of London book. And when I say, "very latest" I mean it was released yesterday. I enjoyed it! spoilers )

What I'm reading next
Idk, I'll keep opening books in my library until I find one that holds my interest, I guess.

*

(no subject)

Jul. 9th, 2025 07:20 pm
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[personal profile] skygiants
When [personal profile] kate_nepveu started doing a real-time readalong for Steven Brust & Emma Bull's epistolary novel Freedom and Necessity in 2023, I read just enough of Kate's posts to realize that this was a book that I probably wanted to read for myself and then stopped clicking on the cut-text links. Now, several years later, I have finally done so!

Freedom and Necessity kicks off in 1849, with British gentleman James Cobham politely writing to his favorite cousin Richard to explain he has just learned that everybody thinks he is dead, he does not remember the last two months or indeed anything since the last party the two of them attended together, he is pretending to be a groom at the stables that found him, and would Richard mind telling him whether he thinks he ought to go on pretending to be dead and doing a little light investigation on his behalf into wtf is going on?

We soon learn that a.) James has been involved in something mysterious and political; b.) Richard thinks that James ought to be more worried about something differently mysterious and supernatural; c.) both Richard and James have a lot of extremely verbose opinions about the exciting new topic of Hegelian logic; and d.) James and Richard are both in respective Its Complicateds with two more cousins, Susan and Kitty, and at this point Susan and Kitty kick in with a correspondence of their own as Susan decides to exorcise her grief about the [fake] death of the cousin she Definitely Was Not In Love With by investigating why James kept disappearing for months at a time before he died.

By a few chapters in, I was describing it to [personal profile] genarti as 'Sorcery and Cecelia if you really muscled it up with nineteenth century radical philosophy' and having a wonderful time.

Then I got a few more chapters in and learned more about WTF indeed was up with James and texted Kate like 'WAIT IS THIS A LYMONDALIKE?' to which she responded 'I thought it was obvious!' And I was still having a wonderful time, and continued doing so all through, but could not stop myself from bursting into laughter every time the narrative lovingly described James' pale and delicate-looking yet surprisingly athletic figure or his venomous light voice etc. etc. mid-book spoilers )

Anyway, if you've read a Lymond, you know that there's often One Worthy Man in a Lymond book who is genuinely wise and can penetrate Lymond's self-loathing to gently explain to him that he should use his many poisoned gifts for the better. Freedom and Necessity dares to ask the question: what if that man? were Dreamy Friedrich Engels. Which is, frankly, an amazing choice.

Now even as I write this, I know that [personal profile] genarti is glaring at me for the fact that I am allowing Francis Crawford of Lymond to take over this booklog just as the spectre of Francis Crawford of Lymond takes over any book in which he appears -- and I do think that James takes over the book a bit more from Richard and Kitty than I would strictly like (I love Kitty and her cheerful opium visions and her endless run-on sentences as she staunchly holds down the home front). But to give Brust and Bull their credit, Susan staunchly holds her own as co-protagonist in agency, page space and character development despite the fact that James is pulling all the book's actual plot (revolutionary politics chaotically colliding with Gothic occult family drama) around after him like a dramatic black cloak.

And what about the radical politics, anyway? Brust and Bull have absolutely done their reading and research, and I very much enjoy and appreciate the point of view that they're writing from. I do think it's quite funny when Engels is like "James, your first duty is to your class," and James is like "well, I am a British aristocrat, so that's depressing," and Engels is like "you don't have to be! you can just decide to be of the proletariat! any day you can decide that! and then your first duty will be to the proletariat!" which like .... not that you can't decide to be in solidarity with the working class ..... but this is sort of a telling stance in an epistolary novel that does not actually center a single working-class POV. How pleasant to keep writing exclusively about verbose and erudite members of the British gentry who have conveniently chosen to be of the proletariat! James does of course have working-class comrades, and he respects them very much, and is tremendously angsty about their off-page deaths. So it goes.

On the other hand, at this present moment, I honestly found it quite comforting to be reading a political adventure novel set in 1849, in the crashing reactionary aftermath to the various revolutions of 1848. One of the major political themes of the book is concerned with how to keep on going through the low point -- how to keep on working and believing for the better future in the long term, even while knowing that unfortunately it hasn't come yet and given the givens probably won't for some time. Acknowledging the low point and the long game is a challenging thing for fiction to do, and I appreciate it a lot when I see it. I'd like to see more of it.

Bundle of Holding: Pyramid 2

Jul. 9th, 2025 03:46 pm
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The latter half of Pyramid's ten-year run, the issues published from November 2013 to December 2018, sixty-two issues in all.

Bundle of Holding: Pyramid 2