isis: (squid etching)
[personal profile] isis
But I was flying back from the Bay Area on Wednesday, and catching up with things the last few days, and heading down to the Phoenix area on Monday for a Thanksgiving Week vacation, so it's now or never.

This past trip was to visit my brother and his family, and also to do crosswords and cryptics with his group, who I meet every Saturday morning on a Zoom-equivalent for puzzling; I was there in person two years ago and wanted to do it again. But since I was going to be in the area I coordinated with an OTW meet-up group for dim sum on Sunday and met several of my fellow tag wranglers and other volunteers, and then got together with [personal profile] hamsterwoman for a lovely afternoon of chatting and walking and sightseeing along the Embarcadero.

So, part of traveling is being on planes! And being on planes means lots of time for reading! I had been intrigued by a Yuletide promo post about a book duology, and though I didn't manage to get to it before Yuletide, I did find it at my library in time for this trip:

The Philosopher's Flight and The Philosopher's War by Tom Miller - this is an alt-history set in World War I with an odd kind of magic, "empirical philosophy", which involves drawing arcane sigils with different materials to do things like make plants grow faster, heal the sick, fly, and summon the wind. It's dominated by women, who are generally more talented at it, but the protagonist of the series is a young man who dreams of following in his mother's footsteps as a rescue and evacuation flier (literally, flying) for the military. Alt history and unusual magic systems are catnip for me, but I was a little worried that it being about the rare talented man in a woman's field would detract.

Actually, it was fun and funny, and inverted some sexist tropes and history in an entertaining way. Robert is not better than all the women, he's just pretty good, and better than most men. And seeing how the system is rigged against him in ways both overt and inherent holds up a mirror to real-world sexism: he has to work twice as hard to be considered half as good as a woman, he needs a special dispensation to study sigilry at Radcliffe, and a (female) general's recommendation to join the rescue corps, where he's called Sigilwoman 3rd Class, and addressed as "ma'am" - but eventually is regarded by the women around him as their "little brother", and distinguishes himself in his work as equal to his "sisters". A thoughtful treatment of politics and the military, too, and loads of unintended consequences wherever you turn. I enjoyed it!

What I've recently finished watching:

S3 of The Diplomat, but woohoo, that was a fun one. A little more relationship drama than I personally would have liked, but it was interesting to watch Kate basically being Hal while being oblivious to that fact, and also, people being shitty to each other while also acting in what they honestly perceived as being in the best interest of their country (or the world), and also, how actions have (often unintended, see above) consequences, and you just have to grit your teeth and deal. Also, can I just say how great it was to see a competent president? Especially a competent female president, who gives no fucks as to what she looks like to people who at the end of the day don't matter, for the important things. (Not that she's not flawed, but still. Better than the actual venial disaster we have.)

While I was at my brother's, we watched the French stop-motion animated comedy A Town Called Panic, which was an absurd fantasy-adventure delight. I laughed a lot! It was very weird! One of my nieces insisted I watch a couple of episodes of Bee and Puppycat with her, and - that was also very weird. I am not really sure what it is about! It is a cartoon about a girl and her possibly alien pet, who brings her to ... an interspacial temp agency? I may actually try to watch it more seriously this winter while riding the stationary bike, it's very pretty, and part of my ??? is that I couldn't hear the audio very well, but if I watch it at home at least I can use subtitles (and headphones).

We are now watching S4 of The Witcher.

What I'm playing now:

I finished Monument Valley, and have started poking at Monument Valley 2 (put it on my laptop and played a little while I was in California). I also have started playing Marvel's Spider-Man Remastered, though I'm not sure I'm going to stick (heh) with it. It's really designed for a controller, so that's what I'm using (and the haptic feedback is nifty) but I also suck at using a controller, so my web-swinging movement is far from smooth and combat is mostly random button-mashing. I also feel like it's very distracting, with all of the CRIMES! I'm supposed to go stop while I'm just trying to get to my next quest!

So as I mentioned last time, B started playing Horizon Forbidden West and I've been looking over his shoulder every so often because I loved that game. Finally I decided...to start a NG+! Which I've never done. I never replay games! I tried to replay Dragon Age II and it annoyed me so much I didn't even get to Kirkwall. But I went right through the tutorial (fun!) and into Chainscrape, and..I might keep playing? We shall see! I've turned up the difficulty since I'm so buff and have so much gear. I think I need to look up how these things go...

Holiday Cards!

Nov. 22nd, 2025 09:36 am
elayna: (Xmas Santa Channing)
[personal profile] elayna
It's already that time! I'll be starting on my holiday cards as soon as Thanksgiving is done. I begin with last year's list. If you'd like one or need to update your address, please let me know. Comments are screened. Reciprocation is nice but not required.
[syndicated profile] phys_environment_feed
As the climate crisis accelerates, there's a desperate need to rapidly reduce carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere, both by slashing emissions and by pulling carbon out of the air.
elayna: (elayna)
[personal profile] elayna
Every year, we have a recs panel at ConStrict where mostly people rec TV shows, movies, and books, media on which fandoms are based, but every once in a while, someone will rec some random thing they think others might enjoy/find helpful/etc. In that spirit, I'm posting about Classical Stretch/Essentrics with Miranda Esmonde-White. There will be health TMI.

I had two attacks of sciatica and a herniated disc in 2020. Lockdown was a blessing for me, as I don't know that I could have walked from the parking lot to my cubicle every day. I was in bad shape, on heavy doses of gabapentin and doing physical therapy. I had a spinal steroid shot in the fall, which did squat, and we were talking about surgery when I retired at the end of the year. Not having to sit 9 hours a day instantly helped and I gradually recovered.

By 2023, I was better, though somewhat resigned to having back problems for the rest of my life, but thinking it was time to try yoga again. I checked out my local PBS station, and only found a chair yoga class, which didn't seem quite enough, but also this Classical Stretch show. Okay, stretching good, I'll give it a try.

This show has been a blessing for me. It's only 22 minutes, done in my living room with minimal equipment, not needing to change clothes, I've got no excuses to put it off. Honestly, I need these conditions.

It's stretching, often with exercises that use your own body weight to add strengthening. It's a little tai chi, yoga, ballet, but not really any of those. A lot is standing, some using a chair, some on the ground. My PBS is showing episodes from four different seasons, so though she definitely has some standard exercises, it also has a lot more variety than the weekly meetings with the physical therapist.

She focuses a lot on the spine, posture, alignment. She's very into stretching and strengthening, 'liberating' all your muscles. It's very 'whole body,' being aware of how all your muscles interact and the chains of muscles impact each other. Many episodes cover the whole body but a lot focus on individual areas, hamstrings, neck pain, etc. The exercises are easy to follow and do.

I have done an episode pretty much every day since 2023. I tapered down and eliminated the gabapentin entirely. I have taken no pain meds for a year or more now. I'm still conscious of my back and that herniated disc, trying to not sit for too long or in a bad position, but I have no back pain. NO. BACK. PAIN.

I have a friend who has had back surgery and I'm so grateful to have avoided that. Which is a combination of circumstances and not just this one show, but I really feel continuing to do this show will help me avoid more problems in the future.

It is an exercise show, she overpromises and says some annoying things (or maybe they've become annoying as I've heard them so often?) but I really do rec it, especially if you have back problems, but even if you don't and would like to avoid them. If your local PBS doesn't show it, some episodes are on YouTube and there is a separate Essentrics channel (though that costs, so last resort). This show has been great at helping my flexibility and mobility, and those are so essential in staying healthy, especially as we age. Try it!
[syndicated profile] smbc_comics_feed

Posted by Zach Weinersmith



Click here to go see the bonus panel!

Hovertext:
Apparently this used to actually happen, according to the book The Lore and Language of Schoolchildren, which Tomer Ullman recommended to me.


Today's News:
[syndicated profile] scalziwhatever_feed

Posted by John Scalzi

If you’re an author, or honestly if you just happen to be standing near an author these days, then you have probably seen a flood of emails in the past couple of months promising you that whoever is sending you the email can promote [Insert name of one of your works here, even if it is over a decade old] to Amazon/Goodreads/their book club/a nebulous agglomeration of readers/etc. Either up front, or after an email exchange, will come the ask of some amount of money, usually a couple hundred dollars but sometimes more, as “administrative fees” or some such.

Just to be clear, so there is no doubt about these things: Every single one of these emails is absolutely a scam, none of these promoters and/or book clubs are real*, and if you send money to any of these accounts, either directly or through a third-party service, you will get nothing for your money and you will never see that money or those scammers again. Never send money to these people. Ever.

(The asterisk above for “none of these book clubs is real” is there because sometimes the scammers will pretend to be representing an actual online book club and might point to their site or page to give the illusion of legitimacy. They are not legit.)

These sort of scam emails have been around for years, of course, but it seems like there’s a real upswing in both the number and variety of emails. I myself get a couple dozen of them a day recently. Here are the headers of some that have arrived in the last few hours, and yes, emojis are part of headers now, we truly live in a benighted age:

  • Can I Borrow Your Book? …To Show 55k People 👀😂: This one promises me access to book-promo networks across TikTok and Linkedin, which is a cursed combination if there ever was one;
  • Growing Constituent Service’s Visibility on Goodreads During Peak Q4 Discovery”: This one promises exposure in Goodreads’ “Listopia” section, which is asserted to be very important here in the holiday season;
  • Did Amazon lock your book in the basement, or did Jeff Bezos just ghost you? 👻📚🚪: This spammer is trying to neg me into using its “service” by suggesting Amazon is not doing enough to promote The Shattering Peace, an odd statement to make inasmuch as Amazon is one of the book’s publishers (via Audible, who, incidentally, sent me a very handsome marketing document, which they executed upon perfectly) and the book itself was a New York Times best seller;
  • Cinematic AI Visuals for your book”: Because what could be a better way to spend money promoting your work than to pay some dude to type a prompt into Sora;
  • Before the book-buying madness starts…”: This one is using the tactic of asking me if I would like to know more about how they can help me, the idea being that if you actually respond to this sort of soft-pedal approach, they know they have a sucker;
  • Quick Goodreads Visibility Boost for ‘Wildfire'”: Another Goodreads Listopia booster, promising eyeballs for my audiobook “Wildfire,” which is fun, since I don’t have an audiobook named “Wildfire.”

That’s just from this morning, mind you; I cleared out my spam last night before I went to sleep. These were waiting for me when I woke up. Soon I will have many, many more.

“But the email said nice things about my book and it seems like whoever is sending the email read it!” Sure, because “AI” is a thing now and it will spit out highly complimentary lines instantly. Here, look, this is Gemini telling me how awesome When the Moon Hits Your Eye is:

Dear Mr. Scalzi,

I simply had to write and express my profound, uncontainable joy after finishing When the Moon Hits Your Eye. I’ve been a fan of your work for years, but this novel has instantly vaulted to the top of my all-time favorites list. It’s not just a science fiction story; it’s a perfect, shimmering symphony of everything I love about your writing.

But beyond the genius plot mechanics, what truly elevates When the Moon Hits Your Eye is the heart and the humor. Even amidst planetary catastrophe, your characters remain so beautifully, painfully human. The witty dialogue provided necessary relief, making the high-concept ideas feel grounded and accessible.

Wow, Gemini truly loved my book! And it took it mere milliseconds to write that note!

I do suspect that the advent of “AI” is one of the reasons that these sort of scam emails have taken off recently; it allows scammers, at very little cost to themselves (but at significant cost to the environment, energy bills and the local water table of wherever the “AI” data sites are) to personalize their scam pitches and make them seem more legitimate, especially to writers, who generally want nothing more than to know their work has been read and appreciated by someone.

I assure you, these scammers have not read your book. Hell, as you can see above, sometimes they can’t even get right the books you’ve written. These emails are being churned out by the thousands to see who is desperate enough to bite. If they get one nibble out of a thousand emails, that’s going to be a decent return for their trouble. And whoever nibbles is going to get scammed.

Here’s a good rule of thumb, not just for writers but for humans in general: Random unsolicited email wants you to send money? Don’t send the money. Toss the email in the spam folder and block that email address forever.

There are actual independent publicists and marketing folks who can help you promote your work; as an example, here’s one such PR company, who I work with regularly because they query me for Big Idea slots here on the site. These folks have verifiable career track records — for example, one of the principals of this company was head of PR for Tor, which is where I met her, an actual human who exists in the real world. Their contact emails have the same domain as the web site, and are not, say, a Gmail account whose user name includes a long string of numbers. Their client lists include names who are independently contactable and can confirm their legitimacy. And so on.

Do these firms cost money? Oh, my, yes, they do. Do these firms randomly spam thousands of accounts offering their services? No, they absolutely do not.

Likewise there are actual book clubs who would love for authors to come chat with them about their work. They are not going to ask for “administrative” fees or whatever. I do feel sorry for the actual book clubs out there right about now; this absolute flood of spam email means their more modest entreaties for authors to pop into their Zoom session are far more likely to get ported into the trash. Sorry, folks. It’s just how it is at the moment.

So to recap and re-emphasize: Authors, you’re being spammed; yes, it’s a lot and no, it’s not just you; don’t send them any money ever; if you do want actual independent marketing and publicity, it exists and you will have to go out to find it, it’s almost certainly not going to come to you, and in any event will never fucking use emoji in the header of a business email.

Be wary, be suspicious and be safe, and again: don’t send money to random email spammers, ever.

— JS

Trump Under Pressure

Nov. 22nd, 2025 10:38 am
[syndicated profile] theatlantic_national_feed

Posted by The Editors

Editor’s Note: Washington Week With The Atlantic is a partnership between NewsHour Productions, WETA, and The Atlantic airing every Friday on PBS stations nationwide. Check your local listings, watch full episodes here, or listen to the weekly podcast here.

Earlier this week Donald Trump told a journalist “Quiet, piggy,” and later lashed out at another reporter in the Oval Office. On Washington Week With The Atlantic, panelists joined to discuss what could be behind the president’s comments, and more.

November has been “a really tough month for Trump,” Toluse Olorunnipa, a staff writer at The Atlantic, said last night. A year ago, Trump was “at the peak of his political power,” and his first 10 months in office “were pretty much signs that there was very little that” could be done to stop him. But then, Olorunnipa noted, “we had the elections in the first part of this month.”

Following major victories for Democrats in New York, New Jersey, and Virginia, Trump is beginning to realize “that he’s going to be a lame duck very soon,” Olorunnipa argued—and “people within his own party are starting to look past him.”

Meanwhile, Trump has signed legislation ordering the release of the government’s Jeffrey Epstein investigation files. “My sense is that he’s rattled,” Jonathan Karl, the chief Washington correspondent at ABC News, said last night. “Republicans who have been entirely supplicant to him” are “suddenly standing up and going in a different direction.”

Joining the editor in chief of The Atlantic, Jeffrey Goldberg, to discuss this and more: Leigh Ann Caldwell, the chief Washington correspondent at Puck; Peter Baker, the chief White House correspondent for The New York Times; Karl, the chief Washington correspondent at ABC News; and Olorunnipa, a staff writer at The Atlantic.

Watch the full episode here.

Drown them in a pail of caudle

Nov. 22nd, 2025 04:36 pm
oursin: Illustration from medieval manuscript of the female physician Trotula of Salerno holding up a urine flask (trotula)
[personal profile] oursin

These people are AWFUL: Influencers made millions pushing ‘wild’ births – now the Free Birth Society is linked to baby deaths around the world

(And I can't believe that there aren't women who didn't survive, particularly given the whole 'germs aren't a thing' ideology that's mixed up with it. Or at least pretty badly damaged.)

I've always been somewhat side-eyeing Grantly Dick Read and his gospel of 'natural childbirth' without fear and pain, because it was a bit vibes based on anecdotal stuff of his, but at least he was a trained medical professional, and he advocated antenatal classes teaching women what to expect when they went into labour, and giving them breathing exercises so that they could breathe through the contractions and so on and he did not suggest women giving birth alone without support.

This is also - like being anti-vaccine - coming from a very short period of historical time: in this case one in which maternal and infant mortality had plummeted and was no longer something people were more or less used to, or had at least heard cases of within their general circles.

These people are delusional.

Okay, there can be a lot wrong with modern obstetric practice - ?particularly in the USA, for reasons - but nature is so not your friend in this matter.

[syndicated profile] languagelog_feed

Posted by Victor Mair

I have observed the author working on this 749 page volume for many years, so it is with great rejoicing that it is available in time to send to friends, colleagues, and students as a Yuletide gift:

South Coblin, Common Shē and Common Hakka-Shē: A Comparative Study
Language and Linguistics Monograph Series 68

Institute of Linguistics, Academia Sinica (Taipei:  November, 2025)

Introduction

The present work is divided into two parts. Part I is devoted to the reconstruction of the phonology of Common Shē, the ancestral form of the closely related Sinitic dialects spoken by the Shē ethnic minority of China. The approach applied is the classical comparative method, in which modern data from seventeen modern dialects are subjected to comparative reconstructive analysis. Data from additional Shē varieties are also adduced as needed. The end product of these procedures is a hypothetical phonological system, which for the sake of brevity we call Common Shē, though this term should more precisely encompass not only phonology but also syntax and lexicon.

As outlined elsewhere (Coblin 2018; 2019), we hold that Common Shē and Common Neo-Hakka, the proto-language from which the modern Neo-Hakka dialects derive, are closely related sister languages descended from a common speech form which in the present work we call Common Hakka-Shē. Part II below is accordingly devoted to the comparison of Common Shē and Common Neo-Hakka, so as to arrive at a higher order Common Hakka-Shē reconstructed system. This comparative exercise takes as its basis the Common Shē forms reconstructed in Part I and the Common Neo-Hakka ones presented in our earlier study of comparative Hakka (Coblin 2019). The final chapter of Part II summarizes and assesses our findings regarding Common Hakka-Shē and concludes with suggestions for the future study of even earlier stages in the history of early south central spoken Chinese.

At the end of the work, Appendix I gives the entire corpus of 647 Shē and Neo-Hakka comparative syllable sets used in the basic reconstruction of Common Hakka-Shē. Following this, in Appendix II, is a corpus of 658 comparative Shē lexical sets. Lexical material of this sort, which comprises both monosyllabic and polysyllabic words, is collected in a number of published Shē dialect surveys and sometimes studied in more or less detail there, but to our knowledge these data have not so far been treated from the standpoint of comparative reconstruction. We take this step here, first because the Shē dialects are relatively less well-known among students of Sinitic languages and, secondly, in order to present an experimental model for how a full comparative Shē etymological dictionary might someday be constructed. The data are arranged topically, and the entire Appendix is followed by an English index. Some data from this appendix are also adduced in the Hakka-Shē reconstructive work in Part II. Finally, a brief general index to pertinent topics in the work as a whole concludes the monograph.

References

Coblin, W. South. 2018. “Neo-Hakka, Paleo-Hakka, and Early Southern Highlands Chinese”, Yǔyán yánjiù jíkān 語言研究集刊 [Bulletin of Linguistic Studies], vol. 21 (2018). Shanghai:  Shanghai cishu chubanshe. (Special number in honor of Jerry Norman.) pp. 175-238.

Coblin, W. South.  2019.  Common Neo-Hakka: a Comparative Reconstruction. Language and Linguistics Monograph Series Number 63, Taipei: Institute of Linguistics, Academia Sinica.

[VHM:  If someone would like to have either / both of these two items, I think that I can supply them.  The copy of 2018 I can send restores all of the maps, which the publisher deleted without consulting the author.  

As to 2019, the electronic version of that is downloadable from the same Academia Sinica, Institute of Language and Linguistics website where the Hakka-She thing is found. The hard copy version has to be purchased, of course. Since about 2018 the electronic versions of all new monographs from there are available for free download. So you can get for free anything there that interests you from now on.]

The thirteen-page Table of Contents includes a two-page summary, a four-page preface, a two-page list of maps, and a two-page list of abbreviations and signs.  After that comes a detailed list of chapters and sub-chapters.  The book concludes with two appendices:

Hakka-Shē comparative data (262 pages)

Lexical sets (120 pages), which I find to be of extraordinary value and interest, so I will list them here:

1. Natural Phenomena   607
2. Earth, Fire, and Water   611
3. Man and Nature   616
4. Animals   616
5. Fowl    617
6. Domestic Animals   619
7. Insects   621
8. Fish   623
9. Man and Animals   624
10. Plants   625
11. Flowers and Grasses   627
12. Grains   627
13. Vegetables   629
14. Fruits   631
15. Man and Plants   632
16. Food and Drink   635
17. Cooking   638
18.Drugs   644
19. Clothing and Adornment   644
20. Dwelling   651
21. Furniture   655
22. Tools   657
23. Town and Country   660
24. Commerce   661
25. Measures   662
26. Communication and Travel   663
27. Culture and Education   664
28. Games and Entertainment   666
29. Religion   666
30. Social Customs   667
31. Human Body   669
32. Body Movements   675
33. Grooming   681
34. Life and Death   682
35. Sickness   683
36. Weapons   684
37. Human Relationships   685
38. Categories of People   691
39. Occupations    694
40. Activities   696
41. Mental Activities and Emotions   698
42. Sensations   701
43. Taste and Smell   702
44. Shape, Dimension, and Color   703               
45. Sound   707
46. Quality   707
47. Time    712
48. Place   714
49. Motion   717
50. Existence, Location, and Possession   718
51. Quantity   719
52. Pro-words   722
53. Grammatical Functors   724

English Index to Appendix II   727

—————-

She language

The She language (Mandarin: 畲語, Shēyǔ), autonym Ho Le or Ho Ne, /hɔ22 ne53/ or Ho Nte, is a critically endangered Hmong–Mien language spoken by the She people. Most of the over 709,000 She people today speak She Chinese (possibly a variety of Hakka Chinese). Those who speak Sheyu—approximately 1,200 individuals in Guangdong Province—call themselves Ho Ne, "mountain people" (活聶; huóniè).

(Wikipedia)

She Chinese

She or Shehua (畲话, Shēhuà, meaning 'She speech') is an unclassified Sinitic language spoken by the She people of Southeastern China. It is also called Shanha, San-hak (山哈) or Shanhahua (山哈话). She speakers are located mainly in Fujian and Zhejiang provinces of Southeastern China, with smaller numbers of speakers in a few locations of Jiangxi (in Guixi and Yanshan County), Guangdong (in Chaozhou and Fengshun County) and Anhui (in Ningguo) provinces.

She (畲话) is not to be confused with Shēyǔ (畲语, also known as Ho Ne), which is a Hmong–Mien language spoken in East-Central Guangdong. She and Sheyu speakers have separate histories and identities, although both are officially classified by the Chinese government as She people. The Dongjia of Majiang County, Guizhou are also officially classified as She people, but speak a Western Hmongic language closely related to Chong'anjiang Miao (重安江苗语).

(Wikipedia)

Hakka language and people

Hakka (Chinese: 客家话; pinyin: Kèjiāhuà; Pha̍k-fa-sṳ: Hak-kâ-va / Hak-kâ-fa, Chinese: 客家语; pinyin: Kèjiāyǔ; Pha̍k-fa-sṳ: Hak-kâ-ngî) forms a language group of varieties of Chinese, spoken natively by the Hakka people in parts of Southern China, Taiwan, some diaspora areas of Southeast Asia and in overseas Chinese communities around the world.

(Wikipedia — language)

The Hakka (Chinese: 客家), also referred to as Hakka Chinese or Hakka-speaking Chinese, are an ethnic group and subgroup of Han Chinese whose principal settlements and ancestral homes are dispersed widely across the provinces of southern China and who speak a language that is closely related to Gan, a Chinese language spoken in Jiangxi province. They are differentiated from other southern Han Chinese by their dispersed nature and tendency to occupy marginal lands and remote hilly areas. The Chinese characters for Hakka () literally mean "guest families".

(Wikipedia — people)

 

Selected readings

Just One Thing (22 November 2025)

Nov. 22nd, 2025 12:22 pm
nanila: me (Default)
[personal profile] nanila posting in [community profile] awesomeers
It's challenge time!

Comment with Just One Thing you've accomplished in the last 24 hours or so. It doesn't have to be a hard thing, or even a thing that you think is particularly awesome. Just a thing that you did.

Feel free to share more than one thing if you're feeling particularly accomplished! Extra credit: find someone in the comments and give them props for what they achieved!

Nothing is too big, too small, too strange or too cryptic. And in case you'd rather do this in private, anonymous comments are screened. I will only unscreen if you ask me to.

Go!
[syndicated profile] phys_environment_feed
When militia attacks disrupted shipping lanes in the Red Sea, few imagined the ripple effects would reach the clouds over the South Atlantic. But for Florida State University atmospheric scientist Michael Diamond, the rerouting of cargo ships offered a rare opportunity to clarify a pressing climate question—How much do cleaner fuels change how clouds form?
[syndicated profile] phys_environment_feed
The varied topography of the Western United States—a patchwork of valleys and mountains, basins and plateaus—results in minutely localized weather. Accordingly, snowfall forecasts for the mountain West often suffer from a lack of precision, with predictions provided as broad ranges of inch depths for a given day or storm cycle.

Key of Valor

Nov. 22nd, 2025 09:35 am
alobear: (Default)
[personal profile] alobear
Key of Valor concludes the Keys trilogy by Nora Roberts.
It follows the same formula as the other two - this time, it's Zoe who has to find the third and final key to unlock the box of trapped souls and brings the overall quest to a conclusion.
Despite being the one of the three women I have the least in common with, Zoe was my favourite, so I was looking forward to spending the book mostly in her perspective - and I did enjoy that.
I loved the continuation of the three women setting up their joint business, I actually really liked spending more time with Zoe's 9-yr-old son, Simon, who was really funny, and the climax of the three-book quest was exciting and satisfying.
BUT - even though I liked how it ended up (especially with the inclusion of Simon), I just couldn't get on board with the romance, because Brad, as in the other two books, was absolutely awful (until he got what he wanted, and then he was amazing, but that might make it worse...).
One scene:
Zoe is annoyed by Brad's continued advances and expresses her rejection of him very clearly.
Brad GRABS her, LIFTS her, SWINGS her round, PRESSES her up against a wall, and KISSES her - all very much without her permission.
Worse scene:
They're in the car and Zoe is annoyed that Brad is always trying to diminish her independence by doing things for her without asking her first. She tells him angrily that she doesn't want a Prince Charming to rescue her.
Brad pulls over, says, "Fuck Prince Charming," squashes Zoe up against the door and kisses her again.
Zoe SCREAMS and STRUGGLES and the narrative says that it's a straight-up contest between her strength and his, that he 'brutally' demonstrates his dominance and that the kiss has 'nothing to do with romance and everything to do with anger'.
YIKES!!
So, no - sadly, I can't condone them getting together, however beautifully their relationship is presented in the end, and however sweet and funny the interactions are between Brad and Simon.
Ah well - I still enjoyed the series a lot overall!
sovay: (Rotwang)
[personal profile] sovay
My mother referred earlier this evening to the state of my health as farshlimmert, which definitely sounds classier than my saying it's gone down the tubes. On the other hand, I do not apparently have TB, so we can hold off on the consumptive poet jokes a little while longer yet.

As a reworking of Stevenson, Dr. Jekyll and Sister Hyde (1971) is trashtacular even beyond the whipsawing of its trans reading when it mixes the novella's Gothic horrors with historical ones—scrunching about six decades in the penny-dreadful process of folding in not only the Whitechapel murders but Burke and Hare, even without throwing in an allusion to Sweeney Todd or a street singer straight out of Val Lewton—but it dovetailed unexpectedly well with an article sent me by [personal profile] selkie about the obtrusiveness of AI-generation in art because it contains an in-camera effect so good that I stopped the film to gush about it to [personal profile] spatch. It's the emergence of the so-called Mrs. Hyde. One-shot, Jekyll wrenched with the effects of his absinthe-green potion buries his face in his hands, slowly straightens to perceive, in the cheval glass where a moment ago he was convulsing, a woman as severely dark-haired, night-pale and shocked as himself, who she is. It's not a trick of double exposures or duplicate sets or dissolves. While the camera tightly pivots behind the hunched protagonist, it looks as though a slight adjustment to the angle of the mirror allows an otherwise offscreen Martine Beswick to reflect beyond the identically dressed shoulder of Ralph Bates, their breath heaving in time, their hands slowly unmasking their shared face. It's very simple and uncannily effective. In some ways I find it more impressive than the red-filter transformation of Fredric March in the 1931 Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde because it's all sightlines. He's never out of shot and she's suddenly in it. Especially to an eye distracted from consideration of the sets or the cinematography by the switch of actors in the glass, it looks impossible. And someone had to think of it, or at least translate it from a stage illusion. It has never broken a film for me to see how a practical effect is done, which feels different from the suspicion of how much of an image is AI-slopped.

The almost talking blues whose first two lines I missed tonight on WERS turned out to be Lucinda Williams' "The World's Gone Wrong" (2025).

P.S. And a random thirty seconds of Clive Francis mixed in with the bleak London ultraviolence of Villain (1971), why not?
[syndicated profile] phys_environment_feed
A yearslong effort to purchase two of the most powerful water rights on the Colorado River has cleared another hurdle after the state water board agreed to manage the rights alongside Western Slope water officials.