neonvincent: For posts about cats and activities involving uniforms. (Krosp)
[personal profile] neonvincent
I went in another direction for 'Human Footprint' on PBS Terra reports 'This Bee Is Worth Millions (And You've Never Heard Of It)' for World Honey Bee Day.

dialecticdreamer: My work (Default)
[personal profile] dialecticdreamer
Matchmaker, Matchmaker
By Dialecticdreamer/Sarah Williams
Part 1 of 1, complete
Word count (story only): 1361



:: Officer Pink has a visitor at work, who has a very unusual request. Part of the Mercedes and Officer Pink story threads in the Polychrome Heroics universe, this story was prompted by [personal profile] chanter and sponsored by [personal profile] fuzzyred, with my great thanks. They’ll get credit for the sequel, as well. ::




The Asian boy shifted from one foot to the other, standing in the Bluehill police station waiting room, though there were at least a dozen empty seats. He waved off the polite young woman in a cadet’s uniform. “No, thanks. I’ll wait for Officer Pink.” He pulled a steno book from his teardrop bag, opened it to his current spot because a rubber band held previously used pages together with the front cover, and dipped into the bag again to retrieve a four-color pen.

He paced, only three steps in each direction, toward the empty corner, then back. His writing never slowed as he walked, nor as he turned. Only when he stopped walking did the pen stop, hovering an inch above the green-tinted paper as he thought.
Read more... )
dialecticdreamer: My work (Default)
[personal profile] dialecticdreamer
Done! YAAY. After an unexpected struggle last month, I am inexpressibly relieved to be back “on track” with the prompt call! Doing this, and keeping abreast of the writing for the “Lost Son” arc has been a truly wonderful stretch. It wouldn’t have happened without my wonderful readers!
Read more... )
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll


Ten books new to me: five fantasy, two mysteries, and three science fiction novels. Four are series books and the other six seem to be stand-alone.

Books Received, August 9 — August 15


Poll #33494 Books Received, August 9 - August 15
Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 29


Which of these look interesting?

View Answers

Love Binds by Cynthia St. Aubin (December 2024
3 (10.3%)

Druid Cursed by C. J. Burright (October 2025)
1 (3.4%)

Hell’s Heart by Alexis Hall (March 2026)
5 (17.2%)

The Quiet Mother by Arnaldur Indridason (December 2025)
6 (20.7%)

Dark Matter by Kathe Koja (December 2025)
7 (24.1%)

Butterfly Effects by Seanan McGuire (March 2026)
8 (27.6%)

How to Get Away With Murder by Rebecca Philipson (February 2026)
4 (13.8%)

Cabaret in Flames by Hache Pueyo (March 2026)
4 (13.8%)

The Entanglement of Rival Wizards by Sara Raasch (August 2025)
6 (20.7%)

What We Are Seeking by Cameron Reed (April 2026)
14 (48.3%)

Some other option (see comments)
0 (0.0%)

Cats!
20 (69.0%)

rionaleonhart: final fantasy x-2: the sun is rising, yuna looks to the future. (hope is all we have)
[personal profile] rionaleonhart
Just realised I've written two different fics within the past two months - Communication (Deltarune) and Common Ground (Star Trek DS9) - that conclude with an arrangement to play the piano between a person and the intangible, inescapable part of themselves they have a complicated relationship with. I know I have a tendency to revisit themes, but this is ridiculous.

Come to think of it, I've also got a couple of earlier fics that conclude with the protagonist deciding to play music, or reaching a point where they're able to play music again. I just like making characters play music when they're in a dark place! It feels like such a hopeful thing to me.

The piano's been on my mind lately; somehow I keep encountering it in fiction! Kris of Deltarune plays the piano. Verso of Clair Obscur plays the piano. I started watching Your Lie in April on a whim, knowing very little about it, and it turns out it's largely about the musical development of a young pianist. When I was writing my DS9 fic, I looked up Joran and went, Oh, he's a musician? Maybe I could use that in this fic. What does he play? Probably some sort of weird future instrument, right? ...no, he's a pianist, of course.

There are other canons I've experienced that involve the piano, of course! (Omori comes to mind. Omori always comes to mind. I cannot escape or forget Omori.) But I feel I've run into a real concentration within the last couple of months.

This is nice because it's got me playing the piano again, after neglecting it for a little while! I'm not a masterful player, largely because I rarely have the patience to learn a new piece - my repertoire mainly consists of songs I've been playing over and over again for a decade or two, with the occasional clumsy and simplified attempt to play by ear - but I do enjoy it. There's something so calming about sitting down and letting instinct and muscle memory carry you through a piece of music.

I wonder how Kris of Deltarune would react if, while controlling them, I played the piano in a way that made it clear to them that I actually know how to play. I wonder if that would change our relationship.

Is this piano rambling going anywhere? No. The rest of this post will be an account of my recent dreams.


Assorted dreams over the summer. )


Last night, I dreamt I posted a fic to AO3 and tried to title it 'Little Talks' (you've used this title before, Riona!). I did not notice until the next day that I'd accidentally called it 'Coggled Sprogs', which I have at least not used before.

WSFS MPC Retirement

Aug. 15th, 2025 08:43 pm
kevin_standlee: Logo created for 2005 Worldcon and sometimes used for World Science Fiction Society business (WSFS Logo)
[personal profile] kevin_standlee
On Thursday morning of Worldcon Seattle 2025, I attended the final meeting of my term as an elected member of the WSFS Mark Protection Committee. There was a fair bit of confusion about where the meeting would be, but we did eventually end up at a meeting room in the Sheraton.

As is typical these days, all we did was receive some reports and punt most decision on to the MPC's next term. I did address the members at the end and thanked them for having been able to serve as an elected member for so many years. The MPC then officially thanked me and I got a round of applause.

I told them at the meeting that they might want to take a good look at me, as there's a non-zero chance that this would have been the last time they were going to see me.

After the meeting, Don Eastlake and I both had errands best suited to Walgreens, and since I knew where is was, we walked there together and got our stuff. I'd initially considered getting a burrito from Chipotle to have later, but the lunchtime queue there was out the door, so I thought better of it.

That was the sole item at Seattle 2025 for which we needed my membership badge. Kayla will do the rest of the work this week.

There's always more history to learn

Aug. 15th, 2025 03:54 pm
brithistorian: (Default)
[personal profile] brithistorian

TIL about the economics of managing a Chinese merchant ship in the 18th and 19th centuries:

The operations of junks were labor intensive — they required about ninety sailors per vessel — but these sailors were not paid. Instead, they were permitted to carry a certain amount in freight (by the early nineteenth century, about seven piculs — 933 pounds — in freight)."

Melissa Macauley, "Does the 'Indo-Pacific' Have a History?" American History Review, vol. 130 no. 2 (June 2025), p. 689.

Pooped Out After a Business Trip

Aug. 15th, 2025 06:49 pm
canyonwalker: Uh-oh, physics (Wile E. Coyote)
[personal profile] canyonwalker
Chicago Trip Log #n+1
Back Home for 18 hours

I'm worn out today. I got home from a business trip late last night and I've just been kind of coasting all day. I would've slept in if I could, but I had to start my workday with an 8am meeting. Fortunately today was meeting-light— light being a relative thing meaning only slightly less than half the day tied up in meetings 😨— so I could take it easy.

Mid-afternoon I went out to the pool with Hawk. She'd already been there for at least 45 minutes. I did slow walking laps in the pool for a bit, hoping the exercise would wake me up. It didn't. Though it did help a small bit with stretching sore/tired muscles. Then I sat for a soak in the hot tub. I could've vegged the rest of the afternoon on a lounge chair after that, but I did need to get back to my desk to finish up a few late-day responsibilities. Taking 90 minutes for a pool break wasn't a problem as I'm already at over 55 hours marked for the week.

Now it's Friday evening and... I'm glad I don't have any plans. Hawk and I discussed going out for dinner but then decided to stay in as we both felt we didn't have the energy to dine out. Then I decided to get a take-in pizza as I lost the energy even to cook dinner. For tonight I'll probably just fritter on my computer for a while then get to bed early. Getting older sucks.


conuly: (Default)
[personal profile] conuly
Which I guess I can sum up as "trenchant criticism of capitalism, maybe a little preachy, not subtle at all". This might not sound like a big endorsement, but then again, I'm pretty sure most of you are Star Trek and even Babylon 5 fans, so actually it is!

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


Read more... )
dialecticdreamer: My work (Default)
[personal profile] dialecticdreamer
Questions in the Dark
By Dialecticdreamer/Sarah Williams
Part 1 of 1, complete
Word count (story only): 1560
[End of March 179-]


:: Long after the group parts ways for the night, Laszlo and Igor have a far more difficult conversation in the fragile blanket of darkness. Part of the “Lost Son” story arc in the Frankenstein’s Family universe. ::




The fire had long since been banked, and even the embers seemed drowsy in their bed of coals. Laszlo lay on his stomach, his head propped on his folded arms. His feet swayed first left and right, then toward his head before dropping to a stop inches above the cold floor.

He couldn’t sleep, and even wandering in front of the forest of books did not help him to relax.

Footsteps brought a flickering light, then paused in front of the closed door.
Read more... )

Giving my brain a brush

Aug. 15th, 2025 10:01 pm
[personal profile] cosmolinguist

Despite the misery of getting there, the conference was worth attending. Thanks to D's help I got the bus I needed, I wandered in the direction I thought I was supposed to go from the bus stop and immediately was spotted by someone calling my name; it was one of two event organizers who'd recognize me. That felt very lucky.

My keynote speech was the second of three, which meant I didn't have to deal with all the technical failures of the first one and I wasn't the last thing in the day so I could decide after little sleep and long days in hot rooms and trains that I could leave early. My travel home was much smoother (if sweatier) and being home at dinnertime instead of bedtime did wonders for me.

The conference only had a couple dozen in-person attendees but apparently seven hundred online. I forgot the whole introductory section I had worked so hard on, but it went fine without it. There was still good discussion in the room during the Q&A bit, people are saying nice things on LinkedIn, and I was able to make friends with the first keynote speaker over lunch and she's a very useful work contact for me.

Yesterday at work was rough. I slept through my alarm -- something I never do -- and when I turned on my laptop an hour late I already had missed a call from my manager who'd had to route around me not being available when his manager tagged me to do something. So that was stressful but I was able to complete the task in a reasonably timely fashion, and while it is not my best work I think it ended up being one of those things that we didn't end up needing anyway. It was a slow day at work otherwise.

Unusually for a Thursday, there was no Doof so D and I decided to go to a queer social that we usually miss because it's every Thursday. He'd also invited a person new to the local discord and it was great to meet them too. We stayed out late (for us: he had to do his last-minute before-midnight duolingo lesson while we were waiting at the bus stop to go home!) and had a great time.

Today, the editing process my report has to go through was finished unexpectedly early, so I had to decide whether to accept or reject thousands of track changes. The editing was a weird process last time which we tried to streamline this time because we're up against a tight deadline. I tried to write to the style guide (now that I've laid eyes on it! I didn't know there was one before), but the style guide sucks and the editor I have to work with isn't good at using it. He also thinks all his own opinions and foibles are "just general grammar" and twice lately he mentioned "not using the passive voice" as if that was a) desirable or b) well understood by people who claim to care about it. I cannot cope with someone who doesn't know the difference between what's "correct" by even the widest interpretation of that word, what's a matter of register, and what's stylistics.

After work I had two startling and unsettling things happen in the space of about 15 minutes, the first of which I won't talk about here but the second of which is that I'd forgotten about my mom mentioning that some family friends were traveling to England on vacation and "are going to be somewhere near you." Of course I asked where and of course she didn't remember. She wanted to know if she should tell T to call me when they got here, "...if their phones even work there..." FFS. She should know their phones won't work here because hers and my dad's phones never work when they are here but of course she hadn't thought about it that deeply. She just is a boomer so would call. Well we're millennials so we can email!

I forgot immediately about this of course, in the sea of parental nonsense. T is an anglophile and a history teacher so tends to come to London and Canterbury and whatnot with school trips of teenagers. At least one other time, before covid, we vaguely arranged to meet up when she was here on a vacation but she was in London then and I think it was around Christmas so the trains were all fucked up and I was too poor to go to London on short notice anyway.

My mom might think they're "close to me" when they're in Ireland or something so I wasn't worried about it. But it turns out they are close to me! D and I now have plans to go see them on Sunday!

This does bring up the awkward point of how, if at all, I'll hide my life from them. My parents exhibit untold levels of oblivousness but surely other people might think my beard and voice and everything are surprising enough to be remarked upon when they get home!

I made the plan like normal but am not sure how to approach it now.

james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll
will feature an idealistic would-be knight, an idealistic but extremely cynical town watch member, a 600-year-old wood elf who has a little magic and is terrible keen on progress as it applies to firearms, and an artisan who adheres to most dwarven stereotypes but is in fact a short human.

The knight is the only one who can read, and the elf is their best medic, in the sense they have a 50% chance of binding wounds, rather than under 40%.

After one session:

The knight is a killing machine, with poor social graces in his current context. Well, that isn't quite true: he knows courtly manners. He just doesn't think they apply in the Empire and is very irritated that the peasants keep making eye contact.

The artisan is a relentless engine of effort, quite good at hitting things with a hammer but not so good at dodging. However, unlike the knight, he didn't stay in melee range to get bit.

The elf has almost supernatural reflexes and situational awareness and is a crack shot... but the dice were not on their side.

The town watchman is oddly crap in combat to the point they wanted to sell their sword for something where if they missed, at least they weren't next to whatever they missed. They are, however, keen-eyed and socially adept.

Amusingly enough, had the elf examined the adorable girl who accosted them, their tiny knack for magic would have revealed the revenant was somehow magical... but they were the one person who didn't side-eye the dead girl as she led them into an ambush.
rocky41_7: (Default)
[personal profile] rocky41_7
Today I finished book #11 on the "Women in Translation" rec list: Concerning My Daughter by Kim Hye-Jin, translated from Korean by Jamie Chang. Also I got laid off. This book is about an a widow in her mid-70s who ends up sharing a home with her adult daughter and her daughter's partner. Her contentious relationship with her daughter pits her long-held beliefs and societal viewpoints against her love for her child; simultaneously, she struggles in her job caring for an elderly dementia patient in a nursing home.
 
The protagonist is a person who values, above all, keeping your head down and doing what's expected of you. She does not believe in standing out; she does not believe in involving yourself in other people's problems; perhaps for these reasons, she believes the only people you can ever count on are family. This is how she's lived her whole life, and she believes it was for the best. However, this mindset puts her directly in conflict with her daughter, a lesbian activist who is fighting for equal employment treatment for queer professors and teachers in the South Korean educational system. 
 
When her daughter, Green, runs out of money to pay rent after a quarrel with the university where she was lecturing, the protagonist allows Green and her partner Lane to move in, despite their fractious relationship.
 
It is difficult to be in the point of view of someone like the protagonist, but the picture that Hye-Jin paints of her feels very realistic. The protagonist obviously loves her daughter as much as she is frustrated with her; she wants Green to give up her activism not because the protagonist is opposed to the idea of societal change, but because she sees the hardship Green's fights put on her, and she wants her daughter to have an easier, less dangerous life. Similarly, she opposes Green's queerness not because she has a fiery moral crusade against The Homosexuals, but because she sees how the rest of society treats gay women and she doesn't want a life of such struggles for her daughter (which is not to say she's not homophobic—she is, sometimes aggressively, but it's the sort of amorphous discomfort and "but which of you is the man in bed?" and "but what will the neighbors think?" kind of homophobia rather than the "you're going to burn in hell forever" kind).
 
Running parallel to that is the protagonist's relationship with her work. She cares for a woman, Jen, in a nursing home who is in the latening stages of dementia. Jen in her younger years was a remarkable woman with multiple degrees who worked in diplomacy and traveled the world. However, she never married or had children, and as such, the nursing home is increasingly encouraging the protagonist to deprioritize Jen's care, because there will be no one to complain on her behalf. Jen keeps a stack of her awards and diplomas in her bedside table, but the protagonist's coworkers frequently lament that Jen wasted her life because she never had kids.  
 
The book is quite short, but the first half manages still to be somewhat repetitive—the protagonist is locked into repeating thought patterns and an active refusal to grow, but as the urgency of both plotlines rises at the midpoint of the novel, it leaves behind any repetitiveness. I was teary-eyed for much of the final third of the book. Both situations push the protagonist to realize that she is choosing not to do anything, not to change, not to grow, not to understand these situations as fully as she could. Even this woman reaches a point where she must put her foot down, to say no, this isn't right, I can't just watch this happen.
 
"It's not my fault, it's not your fault, it's no one's fault. If we keep telling ourselves that, then who should all the victims of the world go to for their apology?"
 
In this way, the book pushes back firmly against the idea of simply being old and unable to learn. The protagonist voices a feeling that she is fighting between two halves of herself—the half that wants to stick with what she knows, to do what's comfortable even though it's making her unhappy and destroying her relationship with her daughter; and the half that wants to change, to engage, at the risk of letting the unfamiliar into her life. But the struggle exists, change is possible, she just has to make it happen.
 
The ending is not going to make the Hallmark channel anytime soon; but again, it feels real. It is not a tearful falling into each other's arms between mother and daughter as they finally grasp a full understanding of each other; it is not even a total repudiation of the protagonist's earlier thoughts. But it is a promise to try to do better. I imagine it will be disappointing for readers who want radical change from (or else condemnation of) the protagonist, but it felt appropriate for a stubborn 70+ year old woman who loves her daughter but is fighting so many of her own instincts not to bother changing her perspective, to insist that she's been right all along. 
 
The book is also critical commentary on South Korean society, both in how it treats queer people and how it treats old people. As one of the most rapidly aging societies in the world, the questions about the treatment of the elderly feel particularly pertinent in South Korea, but are applicable globally. At its heart, Concerning My Daughter is asking questions about what "counts" as a family. Do Green and Lane count, even though they can't, at the time this novel was published, get married? Does the protagonist count as a part of Jen's family, since she has no one else? Does the man whose education Jen financed when she was younger count? 
 
The book shows how rigid concepts of family and acceptability can harm everyone involved, as well as how a broader view of these things can create joy, even where there may also be hardship.
 
The translation by Jamie Chang was serviceable. It brought through the blunt, hard-hitting language of the more difficult scenes, but it did come off somewhat stilted at other times. On the whole, it worked. However, for reasons I do not know, the book doesn't use quotation marks, which can make it very difficult to tell when someone is talking and when we're reading narration. If this was a stylistic choice, it wasn't worth the confusion it creates. 
 
This book was a tough read despite its brevity, because of its subject-matter, but it also deals with extremely relevant and important issues, and presents them in a realistic and visceral way. This book won the Shin Dong-yup Prize for Literature in 2018 and I think it was earned.

Crossposted to [community profile] books , [community profile] booknook , and [community profile] fffriday 

kitewithfish: (daisy face)
[personal profile] kitewithfish
Personal life: I am back from my travels - family was seen, babies were hoisted, toddlers were obeyed, much delicious cheese was eaten! Pokemon Go was a definite add to the experience - I even decided it was worth it to me to throw $5 at it to get myself some more game functions, and I had a fun time using it on walks, and making friends with it was an unexpected plus!

It was not much of a reading holiday, tho, as you'll see.

What I Reading
Marrying Efficiency to Ideals by thehoyden -
Untamed/ Mo Dao Zu Shi - https://archiveofourown.org/works/66224968 - Have I sung the praises of thehoyden's writing? If not, I should. A really good author in a lot of fandoms, this piece of Untamed/ Mo Dao Zu Shi fanfic is self indulgent in the best ways - taking Meng Yao from canon, making a few minor circumstantial twists, and highlighting all the ways he could have been happy and wonderfully effective as the treasured spouse of a sect leader. I heartily enjoyed it.

King and Lionheart by the hoyden - Hockey RPF - https://archiveofourown.org/works/1010348#main - In fact, I liked the Untamed fic enough that I have been going back thru thehoyden's past work and re-reading my faves! This one is basically my gold standard for the Perfectly Arranged Marriage fic - Sidney Crosby, alleged hockey robot, agrees to marry Evgeni Malkin so that he can come and play hockey in the NHL and bounce on his Russian contract. It's sweet and slow and kind to both of them, showing Sid as the kind of focused person who would, in fact, marry someone for hockey and never regret it, and Geno as the kind of brave idiot who would do it and then feel just a bit bad about it. It's charming and long and full of smut and deeply sweet.

I have read some shorter works by thehoyden, but since I usually limit my reviews to the novel-length stuff I have read, I will simply mention Letters from the Northern Continent (DS9, Garak/Bashir post-canon epistolary fic) is wonderful and takes the canon and just... gently tips it to a better direction.

A Hat Full of Sky by Terry Pratchett - I have not read all of Pratchett's work, and that is on purpose. I am rationing it. This is the second in the Tiffany Aching books, and involves compassion towards you enemies, even the teenage girls who are dicks, even the deathless monsters that want to devour you and leave only your worst parts. Solid work.

What I'm Reading
And Never Been Kissed by thehoyden and twentysomething - this is the horniest piece of work I have ever read. It's simply staggeringly horny, monumentally horny - this fic's horniness is magnificent and impressive, sublte and illuminating. I am blessed and comforted by the horniness in this fic.

Alien Clay by Adrian Tchaikovsky - reminds me that I never finished Derin Edala's Perfectly Normal Spaceship book. Nominee for a hugo, but I'm not far enough in to determine if it should win.

Deal with the Devil by Kit Roch - I can't put this book down fast enough. Book clubs sometimes must face that members have different tastes - this was suggested by a dear friend who likes to read books where the main characters are stalwartly good people who never hurt each other or do morally wrong things, even if they have a history that says they *absolutely should consider doing wrong things* because that is their ENTIRE career. But alas, this is an adventure without conflict. I will finish this book, I will allow it to pass over me, and in the end, only my 2 star review will remain.

The Ministry of Time by Kaliane Bradley - this book seems to have started from the very fanficy idea of, what if one of the crew of the lost Arctic expedition on The Terror was found and brought to modern London? And that's a good premise for a short story! But the book is not fleshed out quite enough around it. I'm only 40% in, I'm having a reasoanble amount of fun, I might be swayed! Nominee for a Hugo, should not win.

What I'll Read Next
I'm coming to the end of this year's Hugos push, so I will try and read some of those books but I'm not going to push myself that much about it.

Book Club books planned
Lent by Jo Walton
The Left Hand of Darkness by Ursula K. Le Guin
Witness for the Dead by Katherine Addison
Space Opera ?
Monsters and Mainframes?
neonvincent: From an icon made by the artists themselves (Bang)
[personal profile] neonvincent
This image didn't make the cut for Nate Bargatze vs. Conan O'Brien for Outstanding Variety Special (Pre-Recorded) at the Emmys.

dialecticdreamer: My work (Default)
[personal profile] dialecticdreamer
Undoing the Ripple
By Dialecticdreamer/Sarah Williams
Part 3 of 3, complete
Word count (this section of story only): 2246
[Impossible to date]


:: This story picks up perhaps half an hour after the end of Beyond Unexpected, and should be considered intricately tied to it as a sequel. Which, of course, means that all the major characters are, in fact, AU. Earned happy ending, though there are tough conversations before they get there. Written for the August Magpie Monday, this story incorporates prompts from [personal profile] mama_kestrel, [personal profile] siliconshaman, and [personal profile] readera, and sponsored by the incomparable [personal profile] siliconshaman with my thanks! ::


:: Author's note: I have marked "Edison's Mirror," "Beyond Unexpected," and this story with the same tag, "Edison's mirror," because they are so closely intertwined and tell a story altogether, as well as separately. ::

Back to part two
:: Thanks for reading! ::




Elisabeth’s nails scraped gently over the nape of Edison’s skull. She sighed. “He shaved his head, and his eyebrows. I’m almost afraid to find out why.”

Igor raised a brow. “You are surprisingly calm for all of this.”

She laughed softly, smoothing the pads of her fingers over the boy’s head in random swirls. Edison went utterly limp against her. “No, I’ve got strong self-control. I am a doctor, so I had to learn how to keep a calm head in a crisis, whether there is visible blood or not. I became a surgeon, so I had to learn to deal with sudden, extreme changes in the situation.” Her smile widened an inch. “Then, because I wanted more challenge, I became a specialized surgeon, and because that meant working with the parents of the patients, I had to develop a better ability to read people, especially for the details that they can not or will not speak of.”

“There’s… acceptance of your job?” Victor asked dubiously.
Read more... )
dialecticdreamer: My work (Default)
[personal profile] dialecticdreamer
Undoing the Ripple
By Dialecticdreamer/Sarah Williams
Part 2 of 3, complete
Word count (this section of story only): 2236
[Impossible to date]


:: This story picks up perhaps half an hour after the end of Beyond Unexpected, and should be considered intricately tied to it as a sequel. Which, of course, means that all the major characters are, in fact, AU. Earned happy ending, though there are tough conversations before they get there. Written for the August Magpie Monday, this story incorporates prompts from [personal profile] mama_kestrel, [personal profile] siliconshaman, and [personal profile] readera, and sponsored by the incomparable [personal profile] siliconshaman with my thanks! ::


Back to part one
On to part three




“The explanations don’t match,” Victor Frankenstein insisted in soft, urbane tones. Beneath the genteel civility, however, steel and diamond formed a snare, waiting to spring.

The teenager nodded. “I know.”
Read more... )
dialecticdreamer: My work (Default)
[personal profile] dialecticdreamer
Undoing the Ripple
By Dialecticdreamer/Sarah Williams
Part 1 of 3, complete
Word count (this section of story only): 2231
[Impossible to date]


:: This story picks up perhaps half an hour after the end of Beyond Unexpected, and should be considered intricately tied to it as a sequel. Which, of course, means that all the major characters are, in fact, AU. Earned happy ending, though there are tough conversations before they get there. Written for the August Magpie Monday, this story incorporates prompts from [personal profile] mama_kestrel, [personal profile] siliconshaman, and [personal profile] readera, and sponsored by the incomparable [personal profile] siliconshaman with my thanks! ::


On to part two




Elisabeth was too restless to remain on the settee where she’d been placed after she fainted. She waved toward the books. “May I? I might have the patience to read, but if I don’t, I could put together some fresh bread for a later meal, if someone else manages the oven. I’ve used a clay oven every year, but the first batch is always a single loaf of dough cut into two boules, so I can test for hot spots or other potential problems.”

Igor smiled wryly. “You only bake bread once a year? That must cost you dearly at the bakery.”

“It’s--” Elisabeth began.

Reality rippled.
Read more... )

VenCo by Cherie Dimaline

Aug. 15th, 2025 08:54 am
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll


Lucky St. James is offered a dream job: save the world or die trying.

VenCo by Cherie Dimaline

August 2025

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