brithistorian: (Default)
[personal profile] brithistorian

You can see them here. They look really great, and you can pre-order them by 9AM PST on 12 November 2025, for delivery in October 2026. Unfortunately, you can only order them as a set of three for $150, which seems a bit excessive to me. I'm sure they'll set a bunch of them, but not to me.

I even double-checked to be sure this wasn't just another example of "prices going up while I wasn't looking," and it wasn't — $50 per doll is 4-5 times the price of a regular Barbie doll, which just strikes me as excessive. I could see twice the price of a regular Barbie, and at that price I'd think about it. But that at this price. At this price I look at the page and immediately nope right out.

Today is my grandmother's birthday

Nov. 11th, 2025 04:30 pm
conuly: (Default)
[personal profile] conuly
She was inordinately pleased to have been born on the anniversary of the Armistice, not that it kept her country from being invaded again when she was a young woman.

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


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three things make a post

Nov. 11th, 2025 10:38 pm
julian: Picture of the sign for Julian Street. (Default)
[personal profile] julian
1) My nephew (who is currently thinking thoughts about either being transgender or non-binary) is now 7. Time flies. We had a brief family party today before the incursion of 20 1st and 2nd graders, which I bailed from to go back to work.

My niece, who is 4 3/4, is reading to the extent that she has conversations with my brother about a pluralization on her cereal box without having talked to him/been read to from it before, so that's ... impressive.

2) We have a very nice washing machine (LG, but not "smart") which started throwing errors at us today, and which we then fixed. This involved a minor flood because I didn't put one of the three different filters back the right way, but we set up a fan and a bunch of towels and *that's* fine. So: hey, we fixed a thing! On our own!

3) Apparently people in Somerville are seeing the aurora without artificial enhancements; what we got up here was, basically, a faintly green sky, but it was measurably different and pretty cool.

This is currently erroring at me, but will presumably get better soon: NOAA Aurora predictor.
dialecticdreamer: My work (Default)
[personal profile] dialecticdreamer
Night Guest, Right Guest?
By Dialecticdreamer/Sarah Williams
Part 1 of 1, complete
Word count (story only): 1189
[Sunday, May 10, 2020, night]


:: Declan pleads his case among the Teagues. Part of the Edison’s Mirror universe. ::



Declan scanned the enormous pallet made on the living room floor next to one cluster of couches and armchairs. “Wha--” He froze, swallowing the last sound of the word, staring at Ed’s impressive scowl.

‘Sit down,” Vic suggested. He turned to the preteen. “Ed, can you eat a few bites? I was thinking of a peanut butter cookie sandwich, and I’d love company.”

“I’ll make some tea,” Aidan offered. “Declan, would you like some? It’s raspberry leaf.”

Declan kept looking around the living room. “Sure. Yeah. Thanks.” He spun in a slow circle. “What’s going on with the three of you?”
Read more... )

Off to Austin. First Trip in 8 Weeks.

Nov. 11th, 2025 05:14 pm
canyonwalker: Planes, Trains, and Automobiles. Travel! (planes trains and automobiles)
[personal profile] canyonwalker
I'm headed out on a business trip this evening. I'm flaying to Austin, TX where I'll get in late tonight— or possibly early tomorrow morning, given how air travel has been scrambled the past week or two with staffing chaos at the FAA during the government shutdown. At least my flight is slated to leave on time.

This is my first trip in a while. I did no travel the whole month of October. 😨 My last trip before that was a leisure trip to Phoenix in late September. My last business trip was a brief one to Los Angeles 8 weeks ago.

I've got a packed schedule in Texas on this trip. Wednesday I've got meetings all day. I'll work from the hotel. You may think, "So why not travel tomorrow, then?" Well, I'm taking a prospective customer to dinner Wednesday evening, and I don't want to have to reschedule all my Wednesday meetings to travel for it. So I'm flying tonight.

After working in the hotel Wednesday and doing a client dinner Wednesday evening, I'll meet a couple of clients in their offices around Austin on Thursday. When I'm done with those meetings I'll drive down to San Antonio Thursday afternoon/evening. Friday morning I'll meet a client in San Antonio, then I'll drive back up to Austin to fly home Friday evening.

Again you might ask, "Why not fly home from San Antonio?" The main reason is I can't get a nonstop flight from there back to SJC. Meanwhile there are multiple nonstops throughout the day from Austin. Purely on a door-to-door time basis, driving to Austin and flying from there is about equal to flying from San Antonio. The tiebreaker is the reduced risk of flying nonstop. Especially with so many flight delays and cancellations recently, I preferred to book the nonstop versus the connecting route. The nonstop flight might be delayed, but the worst that will happen is I get home late. If my first of two connecting flights is delayed badly, I could be stuck overnight in a connecting city like Phoenix or Las Vegas.

Recent Reading: Flight of the Fallen

Nov. 11th, 2025 03:32 pm
rocky41_7: (Default)
[personal profile] rocky41_7

It’s been a bit! Timing conspired to prevent me from reviewing my last audiobook (Katherine Addison’s The Grief of Stones), but I’m here with the conclusion of the Magebike Courier duology by Hana Lee, Flight of the Fallen.

On the whole, I think if you liked the first book, you’ll like the second. It’s more of the same, which is no complaint from me. Lee digs only slightly more into the worldbuilding of the Wastes, but as with the first book, it’s clear that’s not where Lee’s strengths or interests lie, and so she doesn’t overreach herself there, which I think is best.

The main trio—Jin, Yi-Nereen, and Kadrin—continue to be fun and engaging characters, although Jin’s self-pitying act that began at the end of book 1 grows a little tiresome, even if it is understandable. (Fortunately, she gets over it and her best traits--her courage, her determination to keep trying, her capacity to love--win resoundingly in the end.) Making a surprisingly delightful reappearance is Sou-zelle, who actually threatens to usurp our lovers as the most interesting protagonist for the first third of the book. Book 1 did a good job of making Sou-zelle a more dynamic character than merely Yi-Nereen’s jilted fiancé, and book 2 continues to give him more depth.

Yi-Nereen is a very fun character to read; I enjoyed both her power and her continual debate over her own morality. Despite being a princess and Jin a hardscrabble commoner, it's Yi-Nereen who often feels like the edgier character and I think that makes for a fun dynamic. Between her and Jin, it’s fortunate they have Kadrin around to be the heart of the trio and keep them both above water. And support is his main role. Not that he doesn’t do anything, but narratively he very much acts to back up the women in his life, and he also gets to play the dude in distress. Personally, I enjoyed this—fighting and power are simply not Kadrin’s strengths and the story never reneges on this to preserve his masculinity. His value is elsewhere, and it is cherished by those close to him.

I whined a little bit that the lack of resolution to the main trio’s relationship at the end of the last book felt a little contrived, and it feels similarly just slightly contrived here how they manage to go most of the book without discussing their relationship or acknowledging that they’re all very down to make this a menage a trois situation. I would have also liked a bit more down time between them, especially during the denouement, but slice of life this series is not and never has been.

There’s perhaps slightly less combat in this book, but there’s still plenty of dashing across the hazardous Mana Wastes and action and protagonists experiencing injuries and needing to be cared for. I was a little worried this book would feel it needed to up the scale of violence as a sequel, so the final confrontations were actually quite satisfying in that they remained personal to the protagonists and not so excessive as to wear me out.

There's more engagement with the politics of the Wastes, which I always enjoy in a fantasy story. Watching Yi-Nereen try to navigate life in her new home city was both exciting and had me watching from between my fingers at moments. This woman is either zero or a hundred MPH; no in-between.

Once again though, I find myself wanting more from the ending. Despite all the drama over the main trio’s relationship, Jin’s final scenes are not with Yi-Nereen and Kadrin, but with others. Which wouldn’t bother me if we’d gotten to see more of the trio being together. It would have just been rewarding to see more of what an active romance looks like between them, although I am grateful the book continues to value their platonic relationships as well.

Overall, the book continued to be fun. Is it the next great fantasy novel? Certainly not. Did I enjoy my time with it? I sure did. Will I read something else by this author? Possibly, depends on the book. I enjoyed my time with the Magebike Courier series and would definitely be open to more projects by this author.


Breaking the Codes

Nov. 11th, 2025 09:41 pm
[personal profile] cosmolinguist

I never got around to talking about the other two things that D and I saw that week, Breaking the Code or Guillermo del Toro's Frankenstein.

Breaking the Code is a play that D had seen a TV movie version of (starring Derek Jacobi, that sounds amazing) of a book he's also read and considers the best biography of Alan Turing. D knows quite a lot more about Turing than I do, so I consider this high praise. My knowledge is more on the did-the-walking-tour that that guy (Ed something?) does around "Turing's Manchester," I've seen his mug chained to the radiator at Bletchley Park and for the afternoon I was there I did understand how the bombe worked but I've forgotten again now...and of course I know the tragic ending to his story that queers absorb: prosecution, chemical castration, suicide. I was really enjoying the walking tour until I remembered that bit was coming up at the end...

Anyway, I really enjoyed the play. I liked the epilogue that has been added to it, where a modern-day pupil at the school Turing went to is doing a presentation or something about him for LGBT History Month, which adds his pardon and a little more context to what's otherwise an utterly pointless loss of life. This life also happened to be really important to the second world war, but I am always mindful of how many ordinary lives were diminished in similar ways. I do think that having to be secretive about what he did during the war, even afterward, does offer a sad parallel to his isolation.

The play is set during his time in Manchester, with flashbacks to school and Bletchley and everything and I've no idea how true to life this is but in the play anyway he's wistful about his time at Bletchley, seeing it as a period of freedom, getting to be himself -- he's played with a very autistic affect and a stammer that can be severe, he could be weird and queer and chain his mug to the radiator and he could get away with whatever he wanted because his brain was so important to the war effort.

"Breaking the code" at first seemed an odd name for the play because breaking the code is exactly what -- D taught me -- Turing did not do; three Polish cryptologists did. (Turing developed optimizations to their methods, and created an electromechanical computer which allowed Enigma to be brute-forced much faster. He was a genius and deserves to be recognised as such. But he was part of a team at Bletchley who were building on Polish work, and Marian Rejewski, Jerzy Różycki and Henryk Zygalski deserve recognition along with the French spy Hans-Thilo Schmidt and many others.) But of course the phrase can also of course to social codes, which included compulsory heterosexuality. When Turing reports a burglary to the police and in the process tells them he has broken the law -- "gross indecency" -- they have to act on that; he has broken a part of the legal code.

The other metric that D judges a biography of Alan Turing on is whether it says he invented the computer -- he didn't, or if he did it depends on what you mean by "computer" and for that matter "invent" -- and the play could probably have done better at that but it didn't feel egregiously inaccurate either. Turing does at one point say something like "we won the war because of me," but of course saying it doesn't make it so, and he says it to his "bit of rough picked up from the Oxford Road" as the police officer describes the young man, so the possibility of exaggeration to impress (or dismiss?) seems plausible.

Finally in a thing that probably only I noticed, near the end of the play when Turing has met up with an old Bletchley friend, who's now a wife and mother, and he's now infamous for his gay crime. So they have a lot to catch up on. At one point Turing is explaining about his "chemical castration," which was the option he took to avoid prison. I'd known about this, but I'd somehow never until this moment considered that what he'd been given was of course estrogen. They gave him dysphoria, I thought. What an awful thing to do to anybody. Anyway, the thing I noticed is that when Turing tells his friend in his matter-of-fact tone "I'm growing breasts!" all around the auditorium there was a chuckle from the white, older audience who like D and I were spending our Halloween at t the theater. I didn't laugh. Turing cheerfully went on to say something like "No one knows what'll happen to them when I stop getting the injections, if they'll go away or what!" Sitting there, seventy-one years later and a short walk from the stop where we'd gotten off the bus, which I just learned is where he met his "bit of rough from the Oxford Road" as the police officer in the play describes his lover, and a chest flattened with modern compression fabric, I winced. No. If only they just went away again... I was disappointed but not surprised at the room full of respectable theatergoers laughing at this. (The idea that taking estrogen would make someone less horny seemed much more amusing to me, but that's based on knowing so many trans women, and they are of course women and not men who are being punished.)

Oh wait, one other me-specific thing: in the play, Turing's mother did not accept that her son had died by suicide. It reminded me of my own mom, who was outraged when asked by police if my brother might have crashed his car intentionally. I understood that they have to ask but she was livid at the question. Maybe some mothers are just always going to be. You think you know your son so well, maybe better than anyone else, and then it turns out that no one gets to know him any more. I saw this play the day when I'd had that dream about being called my brother's brother so maybe that's why I thought of this.

Live bleepy goodness!

Nov. 11th, 2025 02:12 pm
sistawendy: a cartoon of me in club clothes (dolly)
[personal profile] sistawendy
The Tickler got us tickets to the Cut Copy show last night at the Showbox. Sadly, they had a bad IBS day yesterday and couldn't make it. Not at all sadly, they transferred their tickets to yours truly! And a day or two before the show, they informed me that Ora the Molecule, from whom I already have an LP, was to open. Shyeah!

TL;DR: I want to have Ora the Molecule's alien baby. OtM is just one tall blonde woman (?) from Norway, and she walked onstage in a red, quilted jumpsuit with shoulders padded to pointiness, a mirror ball helmet, and shades. Then she started playing a theremin. It was all kinds of dancy – her latest LP is titled Dance Therapy – and bouncy. By the end of her set, she won over the typically reserved Seattle crowd. Hey, she's Norwegian; she's probably used to dealing with reserved crowds.

Then, Cut Copy, whose shows I've been to twice. Sure, they're great, but I have most if not all of their LPs already and I was just listening to their latest last week. So honestly, they didn't have the impact on me that OtM did. And I can't not love the goof that she brought. Yeah, she's pretty cute. Hush. So yeah, I just got Dance Therapy and am playing it as I type and chairdance.

I'll have to find some way to repay the Tickler.

AKICIDW: Regional grocery shopping

Nov. 11th, 2025 01:24 pm
brithistorian: (Default)
[personal profile] brithistorian

I've been intrigued by the idea of Cincinnati chili since I first learned about it, but I never wanted to go through the trouble of cooking it from scratch so that I could experience it. The other night, when it made a repeat appearance in one of my fics, it occurred to me that they probably make canned Cincinnati chili. A quick web search revealed that not only do they, but that Skyline Chili, which is the particular Cincinnati chili restaurant that I've heard the most about, makes canned Cincinnati chili. I was prepared to order a can, only to discover that I could only order it in multipacks (4, 6, 8, or 12), which was not something I was willing to commit to with a food that I didn't know if I liked it.

Which is where you come in: If any of you live near enough to Cincinnati that you can buy canned Skyline chili at your local grocery store and you would be willing to buy a can and mail it to me, please send me a private message so I can send you my address and also arrange some way for me to pay you back, either by sending you money or by me sending you something they have in Minnesota that isn't available where you live or by some other option that would be acceptable to both of us.

*fingers crossed*

brithistorian: (Default)
[personal profile] brithistorian

Last night I dreamed that I was hanging out with Blackpink Jennie — I'm not sure if we were dating or just friends, but we knew each other very well and either option could have been a possibility. Anyway, we were at a convention that was like a combination craft fair/science fair for geology and/or conspiracy theories.[^1] While we were there, we ran into our dentist[^2] and our dentist's new business partner. Jennie and I both agreed that the new business partner was kind of strange — he was obsessed with the idea of some sort of link between diagonally opposing teeth[^4] — but we couldn't say anything about it because we didn't want to offend our dentist. Jennie and I were still trying to come up with a socially acceptable way to ditch our dentist and his partner when I woke up.

[^1] To give a better idea of what it was like, it was kind of like a dealers' room at a con: A huge room filled with tables, each table with a person behind it. Some of the people wanted to sell you something, some just wanted to tell you about their findings/theories. Some seemed to be related to geology, some to conspiracy theories, and some to both.

[^2] Not my IRL dentist, and probably not Jennie's IRL dentist either.[^3]

[^3] I don't know who Jennie's dentist is, but I'd be very, very surprised if her dentist isn't Korean, and this dentist was an elderly white man.

[^4] For example, that a problem with the left upper first molar would also cause problems in the right lower first molar.

Brr! Suddenly got cold!

Nov. 9th, 2025 11:55 am
conuly: (Default)
[personal profile] conuly
My pipe fix needs retooling. I'm not thrilled, but also not surprised. I need to start putting aside cash every week to get it repaired properly, but for now I'll buy more plumber's putty.

In other news, I have to do all of my laundry - boo! - and my new glasses are working nicely now that I'm used to them. I'm in the stage of owning glasses where I vow I'll be super careful not to let gunk build up between the frames and the lenses. We'll see how long that lasts! Wish me luck!

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


Read more... )

Jury Duty, Are You Kidding Me?

Nov. 11th, 2025 09:25 am
canyonwalker: wiseguy (Default)
[personal profile] canyonwalker
A week ago I got a summons for jury duty. It was for the week of Thanksgiving. I already have travel plans for the week so I requested a postponement. I got my new notice the other day. It's for... the week of New Year.

I was like, "Are you freaking kidding me?" They move me from the week of one major US holiday when a lot of people travel to the week of another major US holiday when a lot of people travel. Hawk and I already had penciled-in travel plans around New Year. I guess we'll have to cancel those as I don't think I can get a second postponement on jury duty.


Felix Crow by Kay Ryan

Nov. 10th, 2025 12:09 pm
conuly: (Default)
[personal profile] conuly
Crow school
is basic and
short as a rule—
just the rudiments
of quid pro crow
for most students.
Then each lives out
his unenlightened
span, adding his
bit of blight
to the collected
history of pushing out
the sweeter species;
briefly swaggering the
swagger of his
aggravating ancestors
down my street.
And every time
I like him
when we meet.


****


Link

What I Hear

Nov. 11th, 2025 11:37 am
stickmaker: (Default)
[personal profile] stickmaker
 

Politician:
 "Friends, let me tell you about MAHA..."

Curly: "Aha! Razbanyai siati benefuchi timinharongi. Paradeecke mahiha."
letzan: (Default)
[personal profile] letzan

High-level stats for week of 2025-10-28 - 2025-11-03


  • Total works categorized F/F on AO3: 11470 (+706 from last week)

  • Works I classified F/F: 6442 (+382 from last week) (3181 new, 3261 continued)

  • 0.68% of all 954146 AO3 works I've classified F/F were updated this week






A few callouts this week:


  • Apologies, I missed a couple of posts, but this post is now here.
  • KPop Demon Hunters is still at rank 1, and is still beating out second-place League of Legends by almost 100 works per week.
  • Action adventure game series Hollow Knight makes a first-ever appearance, on the strength of the Hornet/Lace ship containing characters from the recently-released sequel game.
  • Uma Musume: Pretty Derby reaches 10 weeks on the chart. MCU celebrates 80 consecutive weeks (out of 598 total appearances).
  • Signups are open through Nov 30 for a new femslash gift exchange, appropriately named Femslash Gift Exchange 2026. Assignments will be due in February.
  • Ace Attorney fans should take a look at the upcoming Fradrian Week event, a prompt event running in mid-December for Franziska von Karma/Adrian Andrews.
  • A couple of F/F-y Halloween exchanges revealed recently: the Worst Witch Hallowe'en Exchange 2025 has 22 F/F works, mostly Hardbroom/Pentangle. The Paternoster Halloween Exchange 2025 has 25 Jenny/Vastra works.



Full top-20 table and description of methodology after the jump )

Thank you driver

Nov. 10th, 2025 09:49 am
[personal profile] cosmolinguist

Bless the bus driver who is not making me pay £2 for a bus that leaves at 9:29 when my disabled pass means I get free bus travel from 9:30. (I don't have to pay at home but I'm outside Greater Manchester for once, and it works within England but only at the statutory minimum times, between 9:30am and 11pm).

The driver said "I set off in one minute so in two minutes you can tap your pass." So I went and sat down and he said "alright mate, scan your pass now!" and I got up from my seat to trot back to the front of the bus and do it.

Between these two events, someone on the bus sneezed (yet more reason to be glad I wear a mask on public transport!), and someone else further back the bus shouted "bless you!" People are so nice here (I'm in Chester).

Though I did feel a bit out of place for thanking the driver, which is pretty normal here but no one else getting off the bus did there. And it was an unusually heartfelt thanks too, he really had helped me out!

malurette: (yaoi)
[personal profile] malurette
Titre : Den sommeren Pappa ble homo
Auteur : Endre Lund Eriksen
Langue : traduction française du norvégien
Type : roman jeunesse
Genre : famille/société/coming of age

1ère parution : 2012/2014
Édition : Thierry Magnier
Format : relié, 280 pages

Read more... )

Plutôt sympa et la fin était assez inattendue ; c'est pas mal, mais je ne pense pas le garder. Si quelqu'un dans mon entourage le veut...

YA novel in which a teenaged boy bordering but having not yet entered puberty, deals with his divorced dad's rebound with... a man!! and complicated feelings for both the teenaged daughter of said man, and his macho homophobic girl-obsessed best friend. Also, there are dogs. And disco public toilets.

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