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Nov. 16th, 2025 06:41 pm
watersword: Colin Morgan as Merlin in Merlin (2008, BB) (Merlin: Merlin)
[personal profile] watersword

Yesterday's treadmill session was the longest yet and incredibly boring, even with A Court of Fey and Flowers distracting me. I ended up with the beginning of a blister and no willpower left to resist the prospect of samosas and saag paneer at the Indian restaurant down the block, but honestly $45 for three meals is pretty reasonable.

And then I was awake from 4:30 to 6:30 and am not happy about it. But I made decent hash with fried eggs for breakfast and put the cast iron re-seasoning in the oven alongside a packet of garlic, and made a small pot of cranberry applesauce with red wine on the stove, and sent the robovac trundling around my bedroom, so I rescued my Sunday from a pretty dismal start.

Yet again I have to go to campus more than once this week, and this can only end badly.

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Posted by Mike Glyer

SFWA has selected N. K. Jemisin as the latest recipient of its Damon Knight Memorial Grand Master Award, recognizing her “lifetime achievement in science fiction and/or fantasy.” The award is named after author Damon Knight, SFWA’s founder and the organization’s … Continue reading

clever girl

Nov. 16th, 2025 05:44 pm
marginaliana: five ducklings in water (Duck - ducklings)
[personal profile] marginaliana
Recent, in film:

--Sunset Boulevard - what a beautifully shot movie in which everyone is complicit in a woman's mental breakdown. Hooray for Hollywood.

--Blade Runner - I took A to this because she hadn't seen it and was fascinated to hear her thoughts. It was only my second watch but apparently I had a lot more to say about it than after the first one. Notably, A was fascinated by all the worldbuilding that was left unexplained, and had absolutely zero of the 'oh, that's where that quote is from' moments that I expected.

In terms of the eternal question (Is Deckard a replicant?), A remains undecided. My friend D believes that both a) to even ask the question is missing the point and b) of course he's a replicant because that makes for a better story. Whereas I believe the exact opposite, that it's vital for viewers to ask the question but impossible not only to establish the answer but indeed for there even to be an answer.

I refuse to get obsessed with this movie because I have a plentiful supply of things I could get obsessed with already and also I'm pretty sure that the 'Blade Runner microfixation' fandom is full of assholes. But if any of y'all want to tell me your opinions on the eternal question, I am interested.

--The Warriors (1979) - damn, being in a gang does not look like any fun, except for the lesbian one, and even they looked kind of glum. Hard pass.

--Jurassic Park - I forgot how little Ian Malcolm actually does in this movie. He provides quips and allegedly knowledge for the first third, gets injured, and then sits around shirtless and pointless for the rest of it. I am told that many people had their sexual awakening to Jeff Goldblum in this movie. I hope you all have not stuck with 'shirtless and pointless' all your life.

Dinosaurs are cool, though.
shadowkat: (Default)
[personal profile] shadowkat
Been battling a sick sinus headache from hell all weekend and got really sick last night with it. TMID )

***

Not wanting to watch anything that requires too much concentration or movement. I watched Grey's Anatomy's Season Finale, and have been watching per yourlibrarian's rec on tv talk, "Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward, the Last Movie Stars" - a documentary on HBO MAX directed/edited by Ethan Hawk, and the Newman children, along with someone else. It surprised me. It's not just a documentary, but rather a series similar to what was done with Billy Joel. And Hawk, who was given the task during the pandemic, decides to approach it from the angel of well, a fellow actor, director, and artist - not a gossip columnist or journalist. Which from my perspective - makes it far more entertaining and interesting. And looks at how the personal lives of the actors interacted with, informed, enhanced, and at times got in the way of their work - and how the work often got in the way of their personal lives.

Read more... )

Be prepared for more on this, since I liked it. Oh, Ken Burns documentary, The American Revolution is on PBS tonight. You know the guy who did The Civil War documentary, Jazz, and Baseball. I've discovered I like documentary's well enough depending on the subject and how they are done. I don't like watching people talk to me through a television or computer screen, but over video footage or film footage - works really well for me.
sovay: (Lord Peter Wimsey: passion)
[personal profile] sovay
My poem "The Avalon Procedure" has been accepted by Not One of Us. It is finally Arthuriana; it owes its title as well as a debt of argument to Bryher and the rest is diaspora and geology. I still have apples on my table from earlier, brighter this autumn, and their scent of sweet orchards and cooling earth. If you want in on the saddle-stapled pages of this enduringly black-and-white 'zine, I can only recommend it.

Recent reading

Nov. 16th, 2025 09:57 pm
luzula: a Luzula pilosa, or hairy wood-rush (Default)
[personal profile] luzula
I read some books!

What Fresh Hell Is This? by Heather Corinna (2021)
About perimenopause and menopause. Well, I guess I learned things? It did all feel like a huge and intimidating list of possible symptoms to get, and I don't know yet how it'll shake out for me. But I guess one advantage of knowing what's possible is that it will help me connect the dots when/if various things do happen.

A Nobleman's Guide to Seducing a Scoundrel by K J Charles (2023)
Hmm, hm. Meh. I thought I'd try something that's supposed to be self-indulgent, and this was certainly page-turney enough, but did not really zing for me. I can't tell if it's just that my reading is still far from my previous baseline, or whether this would not have been my favorite Charles in any case. Somehow I could not keep from comparing this to others of her books and seeing commonalities in the types of characters and relationships she often writes, and thus not being entirely able to see the characters as people of their own.

Not a book, but I thought the blog series Life, Work, Death, and the Peasant by the historian Bret Deveraux was interesting. It models the life and labor of pre-modern peasants, using sources from ancient Rome and medieval Europe. And I do mean modeling, trying to estimate such things as the number of pregnancies a woman would have on average, and the number of hours worked on various tasks. It really hammers home that while yes, I do live on a farm now, and I do over time want to try to produce more of the food we eat, there is so much labor pre-modern peasants did that I don't have to do. The amount of time women spent on textile production (mostly spinning) is unbelievable. And I didn't know the medieval spinning wheel is about three times more productive than the spindle of antiquity! Carrying water (back-breaking work!), washing by hand, etc. Obviously I knew people did these things by hand, but it's so interesting seeing estimates of the time it took.

I do think modern civilization is hugely wasteful of energy and materials, but can we not find some appropriate level of energy use and technology? Pumping water for household use, and spinning thread with machines: yes, great use of energy and technology. \o/ Mining bitcoins: nope, terrible use of energy and technology. /o\

four concerts in just over one day

Nov. 16th, 2025 01:31 pm
calimac: (Haydn)
[personal profile] calimac
I had a string quartet concert at Herbst in the City on Friday evening, and another one on Saturday morning, so it made sense to stay up there overnight. I chose an airport hotel, less expensive than in the central city but still close enough to make driving in easy, especially on a weekend morning.

Then Saturday evening was the California Symphony out in Walnut Creek, which I determined to get to after I discovered that the Berkeley Symphony was holding an open rehearsal that afternoon, halfway between the other concerts both geographically and temporally.

Friday evening was the Modigliani Quartet, which played Haydn's Op. 77/2 with a brisk, clean-cut approach, devoid of emotional effect. None of the piece's humor came out either, but the clarity was striking. It may seem silly to talk about subtleties of instrumentation in a string quartet, but Haydn does some interesting things, and you could hear them here.

Then they played Beethoven's Op. 59/3 in exactly the same way, making it sound more like slightly larger-scale Haydn than Beethoven. Puzzlingly, they poured all the emotion they'd omitted from the main program into their encore, the Adagio from Beethoven's Op. 18/1, which they pointed out was written the same year as the Haydn but which, they said, opened up a new sound world - the world they'd done their best to omit from Op. 59.

(Also on the program, ten minutes of Webernian nonsense by György Kurtág, the most superfluous composer since the days of Baroque wallpaper. Why this dreck even bothers to exist in a universe with Haydn and Beethoven in it escapes me.)

Saturday morning, Robert Greenberg gives another lecture on Schubert followed by the Esmé Quartet playing the masterpiece which was the lecture's topic. This week, the G Major Quartet. Both lecture and quartet take about an hour each.

Greenberg is very good at structural analysis of the music, much less good at inventing biographical reasons for Schubert to have written it that way, which serve only to trivialize his genius. As for the music, the Esmé played it as if they were steering a sturdy ship firmly through rough waters. An hour with Greenberg was worth the price for such a fine hour with Schubert.

The Berkeley Symphony opened up their Saturday rehearsal because the Sunday concert, which I wouldn't have been able to make anyway, was sold out. Both rehearsal and concert are in Berkeley's First Congregational Church, a chamber with damp echoing acoustics that's no improvement over the Symphony's previous venue, the infamously dead Zellerbach Hall. The orchestra seems better than deserving this. Conductor Ming Luke devoted most of his attention to Richard Strauss's Four Last Songs, with Laquita Mitchell singing in a foghorn voice I find hard to credit deserving the label "soprano." Thanks to the acoustics, I could not make out a word she was singing, even with the lyrics open in front of me.

The California Symphony is at Lesher, where the seats are uncomfortable but the acoustics good, and the orchestra getting really impressive. Highlight of this concert under music director Donato Cabrera was Beethoven's Eroica, in an urgent, driven performance full of subtleties of dynamics from the strings, who were at the top of their game.

Also on the program, Mozart's "Elvira Madigan" concerto with the solo part played by Robert Thies in a cool and bloodless manner, and an overture by Jessie Montgomery, featuring lyric melodies played in the form of hideously dissonant chords. Not the most successful work of hers I've heard.

Meals on this trip were good. Dinner Friday at a grungy Chinese place in the Tenderloin with some of the richest and thickest wor won ton soup I've ever had. Breakfast Saturday included at the hotel, sausage and a little bell pepper omelet for me. Lunch, palak saag (spinach) at an Indian place a block from the Berkeley church. Dinner at the last remaining restaurant within walking distance of Lesher that I really like, a tapas place on Bonanza Street: little plates of shrimp and lamb were tasty and enough to eat.

Australian WOTY vote

Nov. 16th, 2025 09:45 pm
[syndicated profile] languagelog_feed

Posted by Mark Liberman

Macquarie Dictionary is soliciting votes for its 2025 Word of the Year choice — the shortlist is here.

Several of the shortlist items are new to me, probably because Australia, so I'm not going to vote.

But it's an interesting set, as always.

Alice Wong

Nov. 16th, 2025 07:59 pm
[syndicated profile] nicolagriffith_feed

Posted by Nicola Griffith

Alice Wong, Asian American woman in a wheelchair with a tracheostomy at her neck connected to a ventilator. She’s wearing a pink plaid shirt, pink pants, and a magenta lip colour. She is smiling—she seems in charge of her world and comfortable in her own skin—and behind her are a bunch of tall prehistoric looking plants.
Alice Wong, Asian American woman in a wheelchair with a tracheostomy at her neck connected to a ventilator. She’s wearing a pink plaid shirt, pink pants, and a magenta lip color. She is smiling and behind her are a bunch of tall prehistoric looking plants. Photo credit: Allison Busch Photography.

I found out late Friday night that Alice Wong had died an hour earlier in a San Francisco hospital. Others will write better obituaries, finer eulogies, but Alice—the woman herself, the activist, the co-conspirator, the mentor and encourager—had an outsized impact on my journey through to and understanding of my identity as a Disabled writer.

We met on Twitter. I long ago deleted my Twitter account and archive and so can’t trace the exact beginnings, but I think it was probably sometime in early 2015, after she has started the Disability Visibility Project and I was beginning to accept that elbow crutches were no longer sufficient to living a full life: that it was time for me to investigate, buy, and start using a wheelchair. I could feel my own resistance to that, and I knew it was ridiculous. I’d already been talking to Riva Lehrer, so I was already waking up to it, but it was reading the conversations with and/or facilitated by Alice in various venues that really helped me begin to wrap my head around how the tentacles of ableism didn’t affect just my immediate day-to-day life but were coiled about and strangling almost every aspect of disabled peoples’ lives, including—especially—our interactions with the world.

This of course includes our cultural lives. Alice and I were chatting on Twitter about writing: disabled writers, disabled characters in fiction. ‘We need a hashtag,’ I said. And was born. Within a few weeks, Alice—the organisational powerhouse behind so very many crip community efforts of the early 21st century—and I were ready to announce the first-ever chat for 23 July 2016. We announced simultaneously on here and on The Disability Visibility Project:

From the very beginning the chat was massive—almost overwhelming. Each chat took a lot of work to prepare—finding occasional co-hosts, working out the questions, scheduling, the intensity of the moderation—but they were worth it. We did one every couple of months for two and half years (they are archived here).1 I firmly believe that those chats moved the needle regarding disability literature. And though the hashtag and idea were mine, it was Alice—her drive, her organisational ability, her sheer forward momentum and refusal to let any barriers stand in her way—who made it possible; it was her energy that was the spine.

Alice was one of my two crip godmothers.2 She was fourteen years younger than me but decades wiser in the ways of disability, ableism, and the power of community engagement. I learnt from her constantly—sometimes in long conversations where I asked many (I’m guessing, looking back, rather tedious) questions, and sometimes just from watching how she handled situations. Alice was smart, brave, clear, definite, kind, and able to able to focus on and lead others to those from whom we can find and draw hope–because it’s hope that sustains us in hard times. Rage is vital—crip rage is powerful; and, oh, we have so much to be angry about—but Alice understood that it’s as important to talk about joy as about difficulty. It helps to be reminded of the positive things we’re fighting towards, not just what we’re fighting against. We don’t just want access; we don’t just want representation; we want power, real power over ourselves and our lives.

When I wrote So Lucky, Alice was kind enough to interview me for her blog.

We connected on Twitter several years ago and are co-partners in , a series of Twitter chats about writing and disability representation with a particular focus on disabled writers. What have you enjoyed so far from these chats? Why do you think there is a need for these types of conversations? What do you see for the future of ?

Nicola: What I like best about is a building sense of excitement, the disability community come together and beginning to flex. We are 20% of this country, maybe 20% of the electorate. We are amazingly diverse and fine. There are some incredible groups coalescing around different focuses; social media is a powerful way to connect. is just one of them. Now we need to find a way to bring all these groups together to form a critical mass, a tipping point. We need to catch fire, to join in a roaring, creative inferno, to pour forth.

Part of that is to start putting together the scaffolding we need to build cultural connections; that scaffolding is story. We don’t know who we are until we can tell a story about ourselves. Stories help us understand we are not alone.

But to write stories we need to know that we’re not just a voice crying into the void: that others are crying out, too. Once we know others are there, to help, to learn, to teach, to support, we can sing out in harmony, build a chorus that will change the world.

That’s what is for.

When she published her anthology of essay of crip wisdom, Resistance & Hope, I returned the favour and interviewed her here. I really hope you’ll go read that interview. It is pure Essence of Alice.

As a disabled activist and media maker, who or what are you most determined to resist? And where do you find hope?

I resist policies and programs that keep disabled people from living the lives they want. I resist low expectations and tokenistic attempts at disability diversity by organizations and institutions. I resist the feelings of shame and isolation that still plague many of us, including me. I resist the idea that nothing can change and that every system is broken. I resist the idea that representation is enough when what we really want is power.

I find hope in my friends and family. I find hope in the amazing ways disabled people create and get things done interdependently. I find hope and joy in the simple things—excellent conversations and meals. And cat videos.

I miss Alice, her clarity, bravery, and joy. I wish she were still here, but her work continues.3


  1. Sadly, all my tweets are missing because when I deleted my Twitter account I also deleted the archive. That missing record is the only thing I regret about leaving that platform. ↩
  2. The other is Riva Lehrer. I’ve talked about Riva often, and will no doubt do so again. ↩
  3. Her family has committed to continue her work, so if you wish to contribute to that, please donate to her GoFundMe, which was originally started to help keep Alice living in the wider community. ↩

Rogue-Storm #2

Nov. 16th, 2025 01:15 pm
mastermahan: (Default)
[personal profile] mastermahan posting in [community profile] scans_daily


One of the odder aspects of Doug's power boost is that everyone's minds automatically translate sound effects.

Read more... )

Books read, early November

Nov. 16th, 2025 02:39 pm
mrissa: (Default)
[personal profile] mrissa
 

William Alexander, Sunward. A charming planetary SF piece with very carefully done robots. Loved this, put it on my list to get several people for Christmas.

Ann Wolbert Burgess and Steven Matthew Constantine, Expert Witness: The Weight of Our Testimony When Justice Hangs in the Balance. I picked this up from a library display table, and I was disappointed in it. It isn't actually very much theory of the use of expert witnesses in the American legal system. Mostly it's about Burgess's personal experiences of being an expert witness in famous trials. She sure was involved in a lot of the famous trials of my lifetime! Each of which you can get a very distant recap of! So if that's your thing, go to; I know a lot of people like "true crime" and this seems adjacent.

Steve Burrows, A Siege of Bitterns. I wanted to fall in love with this series of murders featuring a birder detective. Alas, it was way more sexist than its fairly recent publication date could support--nothing jaw-dropping, lots of small things, enough that I won't be continuing to read the series.

Andrea Long Chu, Authority: Essays. Mostly interesting, and wow does she have an authoritative voice without having an authoritarian one, which is sometimes my complaint about books that are mostly literary criticism.

David Downing, Zoo Station. A spy novel set in Berlin (and other places) just before the outbreak of WWII. I liked but didn't love it--it was reasonably rather than brilliantly written/characterized, though the setting details were great--so I will probably read a few more from the library rather than buying more.

Kate Elliott, The Nameless Land. Discussed elsewhere.

Michael Dylan Foster, The Book of Yokai. Analysis of Japanese supernatural creatures in historical context, plus a large illustrated compendium of examples. A reference work rather than one to sit and read at length.

Michael Livingston, Bloody Crowns: A New History of the Hundred Years War. Extensive and quite good; when the maps for a book go back to the 400s and he takes a moment to say that we're not thinking enough of the effects of the Welsh, I will settle in and feel like I'm in good hands. Livingston's general idea is that the conflict in question meaningfully lasted longer than a hundred years, and he makes a quite strong argument on the earlier side and...not quite as strong on the later side, let's say. But still glad to have it around, yay.

Michael T. Osterholm and Mark Olshaker, The Big One: How We Must Prepare for Future Deadly Pandemics. Also a disappointment. If you've been listening to science news in this decade, you'll know most of this stuff. Osterholm and Olshaker are also miss a couple of key points that shocked me and blur their own political priorities with scientific fact in a fairly careless way. I'd give this one a miss.

Valencia Robin, Lost Cities. Poems, gorgeous and poignant and wow am I glad that I found these, thanks to whichever bookseller at Next Chapter wrote that shelf-talker.

Dana Simpson, Galactic Unicorn. These collections of Phoebe & Her Unicorn strips are very much themselves. This is one to the better end of how they are themselves, or maybe I was very much in the mood for it when I read it. Satisfyingly what it is.

Amanda Vaill, Pride and Pleasure: The Schuyler Sisters in an Age of Revolution. If you were hoping for a lot of detail on And Peggy!, your hope is in vain here, the sisters of the title are very clearly Angelica and Eliza only. Vaill does a really good job with their lives and contexts, though, and is one of the historians who manages to convey the importance of Gouverneur Morris clearly without having to make a whole production of it. (I mean, if Hamilton gets a whole production, why not Gouverneur Morris, but no one asked me.)

Amy Wilson, Snowglobe. MG fantasy with complicated friend relationships for grade school plus evil snowglobes. Sure yes absolutely, will keep reading Wilson as I can get her stuff.

Jane Ziegelman and Andrew Coe, A Square Meal: A Culinary History of the Great Depression. This went interestingly into the details of what people were eating and what other people thought they should be eating, in ways that ground a lot of culinary history for the rest of the century to follow. Ziegelman and Coe either are a bit too ready to believe that giving people enough to eat makes them less motivated to work or were not very careful with their phrasing, so take those bits with a grain of salt, but in general if you want to know what people were eating (and with how many grains of salt!) in the US at the time, this is interesting and worth the time.

[ SECRET POST #6890 ]

Nov. 16th, 2025 03:26 pm
case: (Default)
[personal profile] case posting in [community profile] fandomsecrets

⌈ Secret Post #6890 ⌋

Warning: Some secrets are NOT worksafe and may contain SPOILERS.


01.
[Genshin Impact]


More! )


Notes:

Secrets Left to Post: 02 pages, 30 secrets from Secret Submission Post #984.
Secrets Not Posted: [ 0 - broken links ], [ 0 - not!secrets ], [ 0 - not!fandom ], [ 0 - too big ], [ 0 - repeat ].
Current Secret Submissions Post: here.
Suggestions, comments, and concerns should go here.

Grey Cup Day 2025

Nov. 16th, 2025 02:57 pm
dewline: Text: I am a Rider fan and I cannot remain calm (saskatchewan-2)
[personal profile] dewline
Fair warning: I may be somewhat Distracted tonight, given that we have a Grey Cup game day with Saskatchewan vs. Montréal.

Yeah, I'm looking forward to the Grey Cup Game tonight.

May the players all remain concussion-free, and may Rider Nation prevail. In that order of priority.

Culinary

Nov. 16th, 2025 07:24 pm
oursin: Frontispiece from C17th household manual (Accomplisht Lady)
[personal profile] oursin

Last week's bread actually held out pretty well, though was rather dry by the end, however, that meant there was enough left to make a frittata with pepperoni for Friday night supper.

Saturday breakfast rolls: eclectic vanilla, which for an experiment I tried making with Marriage's Golden Wholegrain, fairly pleasant but I think nicer with strong white.

Today's lunch: bozbash, with Romano peppers, aubergine, okra, baby courgettes, fresh coriander, crushed 5-pepper blend, dried basil, and finished with tayberry vinegar. Was going to serve couscous with this but I was not impressed by the way this turned out given the instructions on the packet. Not really necessary, anyway.

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Posted by Mike Glyer

By Mike Glyer: When time expires at the Worldcon business meeting what happens to proposed constitutional amendments? If their makers want to keep trying, they can submit them again at the next Worldcon. Meanwhile, they’ve lost a year in a … Continue reading