Music Monday

May. 18th, 2026 10:36 am
muccamukk: The PresAux team hug Murderbot, who looks confused. (Murderbot: -hugs-)
[personal profile] muccamukk
G Flip & The Beaches: Lez Go! (Live)

I already posted the lyric video for this, but it's even more fucking wholesome live. It really shows off Jordan's voice; she and G Flip sound amazing together.

Picture Book Monday: 2026 Caldecott

May. 18th, 2026 08:06 am
osprey_archer: (art)
[personal profile] osprey_archer
I have ambled through this year’s Caldecott winners, and generally quite enjoyed them! Every Monday Mabel got the Actual Toddler(™) stamp of approval from my three-year-old niece.

Fireworks, Matthew Burgess, illustrated Cátia Chien. An explosion of joy! A hot summer day in New York City, with water spurting from a fire hydrant and a man playing a sax in the park and a juicy red watermelon, all leading up to watching the fireworks from the roof. KABOOM KABOOM.

Every Monday Mabel, written and illustrated by Jashar Awan. Also an explosion of joy! Every Monday, Mabel drags a chair outside to sit on the driveway and watch… THE GARBAGE TRUCK. When the garbage truck arrives the text goes ALL CAPS and there are words for the SOUNDS (gah-dump as the trash goes into the belly of the truck) and you can really feel the thrill right alongside Mabel.

Stalactite and Stalagmite: A Big Tale from a Little Cave, written and illustrated by Drew Beckmeyer. A stalactite and a stalagmite slowly grow closer and closer together over eons of geologic time. Love the concept, found the spacing of the stalactite and stalagmite’s dialogue weirdly hard to follow. Snorted at the glossary when it defined humans as “the only native species to develop language and culture” (that really depends how you define both language and culture) who have left “a beautiful and sometimes terrible mark on this planet.” I am not convinced that any other species on this planet would put “beautiful” in that sentence first or indeed at all.

Our Lake, written and illustrated by Angie Kang. Gorgeous illustrations, blue for the lake and blue shading into green for the forest and yellow for the hot summer sky, with an explosion into warm gold and orange and red for the brief flashback to the days when Dad used to take the boys to the lake before he died. Yes, death has come for the Caldecotts too.

Sundust, written and illustrated by Zeke Peña. This is not an illustration style to which I am spontaneously drawn, but I tried to look at it through the eyes of the Caldecott committee and decided that it is a style that allows a great deal of movement. And of course I loved the part where the two kids ride the hummingbird.

***

You will I’m sure be SHOCKED to hear that I’m contemplating a Caldecott Honor project. I intend to wrap up one of my current reading projects before I add another, though!

Vid: Crusade - Pride

May. 18th, 2026 01:36 am
sholio: (B5-station)
[personal profile] sholio
The threatened promised Crusade vid!

No Babylon 5 spoilers; this is just clips from Crusade. It's my usual style of teamy found-family-on-a-spaceship vid. I'm sure everyone is shocked.



Song: Bye Bye Pride
Artist: Del Amitri
Download: Download 260 Mb zip file (MP4)
Crosspost: Also posted on AO3.

WisCon Schedule! And stuff!

May. 17th, 2026 10:00 pm
catherineldf: (Default)
[personal profile] catherineldf
Where in the world has Catherine been? Working mostly. Trying to keep track of ill, injured or moving out of the country friends (please stop with all this and the dying :-( ). Writing, reviewing SO MANY grant proposals, having a yard sale. In short, all the things. Had a very nice day tabling at Rochester Pride yesterday. And at the end of the day, the mom of a teen trans kid who I talked to at Rochester Pride some years back and gave some advice to about venues and marketing for her son's artwork (which was good even then - I still have one of his stickers). Turned out they took the advice, the son now has a burgeoning commercial art career, got a residency with TC Pride and all and is thriving. So that was lovely to hear. :-D

Anyhoo, this weekend is virtual WisCon!

Here is my Friday and Sunday schedule:
What's New in Queer Speculative Fiction
Online Zoom Room 3 • Reading, Viewing, and Critiquing Science Fiction • Fri 7:00 PM–8:15 PM
A discussion of everything new and exciting in queer science fiction, fantasy, and horror over the last two years. What great new stories are being told? Who are the exciting new voices to look for? What themes and tropes are popular right now? Panelists will share recommendations and analysis, as well as their thoughts on what they'd like to see more of in the future.

Never-Too-Late Futures
Online Zoom Room 7 • The Craft and Business of Writing • Sun 4:00 PM–5:15 PM
Publishing discourse loves "30 under 30," but many speculative fiction authors publish their first novel in their 40s, 50s, 60s, or later. This panel invites older debuts and late-blooming writers to talk about craft, career realities, disability and energy, caretaking, and ageism in the field. What pressures and freedoms come with starting "late," and what does a sustainable, politically engaged writing life look like beyond the hustle? 

Queen of Swords Press will also be in the virtual Dealer's Room with books and deals! Come say hi!
And now to bed in hopes of kitty letting me sleep in a bit past 4.
 

maybe take me with you, we can hide

May. 17th, 2026 10:28 pm
musesfool: serenity quote icon (eek)
[personal profile] musesfool
Usually, I shower at night, but last night, I stayed up too late reading and didn't feel like delaying bedtime so I put the shower off until this morning. While I was in there, I noticed a spider, but it was on the far wall, and I was naked and without my glasses, so I let it live and it disappeared somewhere (the whole room is tiled, floor to ceiling, so I don't know where? but also. I don't want to know where).

This evening, I had to wash my hair, so there I was back in the shower, and I turned off the water and stepped back while I was lathering the shampoo, and there was the spider, dropping down from god knows where right in the middle of my shower!

So I had to get out - with my hair still full of shampoo - grab my glasses and a paper towel, so I could kill it, because come the fuck on, spider, that is not okay! The shower is sacrosanct!

It's a good thing I still have to stay up for an hour to detangle because I would not have been able to go to sleep right away after that, omg.

*

Blorp

May. 17th, 2026 08:33 pm
kitewithfish: (late night early mornings)
[personal profile] kitewithfish
Busy season at work - had to come into my remote job for the first of two weekends doing semi-useful gruntwork for our annual constituent conferences. It's a long ass drive, plus overnights, on the weekend - I felt like a squeezed lemon slice by the end of it.

I do get time off to compensate, but I have not used much of it since most of next week is also quite busy for work and personal travel reasons. 

All this is really to say, I got to sit at a desk and be asked repetitive questions and answer them, and was unbothered the majority of the time, so I got some reading time! 
lightreads: a partial image of a etymology tree for the Indo-European word 'leuk done in white neon on black'; in the lower left is (Default)
[personal profile] lightreads
Children of Strife

3/5. Fourth book in this loose series about uplifted spiders etc. in a spreading galactic civilization that only functions because humans have been infected with an empathy virus. This is the shrimp one, nominally, though that is not terribly important to what is going on aside from on the thematic argument level.

A good if overlong entry. I have the opposite opinion of many, apparently. I thought the last book (Children of Memory) was tight and poignant and layered. And I thought this fourth book was bloated and pretty obvious. Whereas a lot of other people did not like the third book and are calling this a return to form. Shrug.

Anyway, yes, he needed to cut a huge amount of the villain POV here, as he could have done just as much with half as much. I do think this book is making a more nuanced argument about the empathy virus than he’s made before. It’s this weird thing where he pitches a very dystopic idea in utopic terms. I.e. that humans would be incapable of participating peacefully in a multi-species society of explorers without having our brains permanently altered. He’s always been to ‘isn’t that just such a great solution?’ about something that I think is complicated at best. Anyway, this book lets it be more complicated, and lets us live more in the state of being unable to fit in, unable to get along. It's by way of tearing down the idea that only through conflict can we grow, which is fine if obvious, but still.

Content notes: Violence, attempted human sacrifice, alien body horror stuff
musesfool: key lime pie (pie = love)
[personal profile] musesfool
Yesterday, I made these ricotta cheesecake bars, for which I had to shell 62g of pistachios (oh, the humanity!), and they are okay, but either there is not enough butter or I had too much graham cracker crumb because the crust does not cohere. (I used pre-smashed crumbs because that is what I had and probably used too much. Recipes really should give you some sort of measurement beyond "7 or 8 graham crackers, crushed" for these things.)

I also made KAB pretzel rolls (half the recipe) and as always, they are delicious, even if the whole boiling step is annoying. I definitely recommend them, and if like me, you never remember that they have a small amount of butter (2 tbsp) that needs to be softened ahead of time, you can always just substitute the same amount of olive oil, also like me. *wry*

With the LIRR on strike, I'm not going into the office this week (I had already decided that anyway), so I didn't have to do any other baking, and I just bought some spring mix and grilled chicken strips so that'll be lunch for the week.

*
wychwood: HMS Surprise: "bring me that horizon" (Fan - horizon)
[personal profile] wychwood
I'm feeling very domestic at the moment. I hosted a guest!! [personal profile] shreena stayed overnight, which meant having to remember what you do when there's someone else in the house, and that visitors need things, etc. But I don't think I forgot anything major.

I also got the tragic hot water situation resolved - my boiler suddenly stopped working, and I had to wait nearly a week for the plumber (he could have come on the day, but unfortunately I was in the office by the time he messaged, and had things on in the evening, so it would have been fairly inconvenient). Fortunately the only thing I use it for is washing up water (the shower is electric and I haven't needed to run the central heating even when it's cold never mind in alleged-late-spring), so I didn't think it would be that big a deal. It really was, though!

My washing up bowl isn't big enough to fit a dinner plate into; I'd boil a kettle and pour it in and start washing, but then need to rinse whatever I'd just washed off, and inevitably the cold water went everywhere all over the side around the sink and also into the sink water, so the hot water was lukewarm in minutes; I couldn't refill the kettle once I'd started using the last lot of boiling water because the sink was too full of water to get the kettle under the tap at any kind of useful angle; after about three items the water would be too disgusting to keep using... every single round of washing up was an exercise in extreme frustration, and I had a significant backlog that I was going to clean at the point where I realised the boiler wasn't working. I ate a lot of sandwiches and some takeaway.

However! Fortunately it was just a faulty sensor, and now I only have to fight normal levels of unwillingness to do the washing up and not also all of the logistical complications as well.

And then this morning I finished the current tranche of books in progress and now have a replacement set full of SHINY NEWNESS. The final stages of any batch are always a bit of a slog, because what's left is one fun book and all the things I hadn't been enjoying much which therefore hadn't been finished earlier. But right now everything in there looks exciting! In six weeks I'll find out which were the disappointments...

Culinary

May. 17th, 2026 06:46 pm
oursin: Frontispiece from C17th household manual (Accomplisht Lady)
[personal profile] oursin

Last week's bread held out pretty well.

Grocery delivery came early enough that I had time to get going dough + tomato topping for a sardegnera for Friday night supper, with Salame Milano added before baking.

Saturday breakfast rolls: adaptable soft rolls recipe, 4:1 white spelt/dark rye flour, dried blueberries.

As I was going to an afternoon gathering chez [personal profile] coughingbear and [personal profile] hano, and time did not permit of making foccaccia, I made cornbread (plain white flour + baking powder, half and half with mixture of fine/coarse cornmeal, since sourcing medium cornmeal remains impossible) to take instead.

Today's lunch: had seabass fillets, and for the wild variety, cooked them thus, which worked quite well, served with baby Jersey Royal potatoes roasted in goosefat and asparagus steamed and splashed with lime butter.

Check-In Post - May 17th 2026

May. 17th, 2026 06:13 pm
badly_knitted: (Get Knitted)
[personal profile] badly_knitted posting in [community profile] get_knitted

Hello to all members, passers-by, curious onlookers, and shy lurkers, and welcome to our regular daily check-in post. Just leave a comment below to let us know how your current projects are progressing, or even if they're not.

Checking in is NOT compulsory, check in as often or as seldom as you want, this community isn't about pressure it's about encouragement, motivation, and support. Crafting is meant to be fun, and what's more fun than sharing achievements and seeing the wonderful things everyone else is creating?

There may also occasionally be questions, but again you don't have to answer them, they're just a way of getting to know each other a bit better.


This Week's Question: What do you wish you could get right first time, every time?


If anyone has any questions of their own about the community, or suggestions for tags, questions to be asked on the check-in posts, or if anyone is interested in playing check-in host for a week here on the community, which would entail putting up the daily check-in posts and responding to comments, go to the Questions & Suggestions post and leave a comment.

I now declare this Check-In OPEN!



Round 187 Theme Poll

May. 17th, 2026 07:45 am
runpunkrun: combat boot, pizza, camo pants = punk  (punk rock girl)
[personal profile] runpunkrun posting in [community profile] fancake
Poll #34603 round 187 theme poll
Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: Just the Poll Creator, participants: 97

Pick the next theme of fancake:

Just Like Canon
40 (41.2%)

Power Dynamics
36 (37.1%)

Whump
21 (21.6%)

It really is all laundry all the time

May. 17th, 2026 10:28 am
conuly: (Default)
[personal profile] conuly
Person A: You know you're supposed to finish the laundry if you start it during your shift!

Me, silently: Don't think of it as my three loads of laundry that I didn't finish during my shift, think of it as your three loads of laundry that I got started for you. Though really, if Person B had done her laundry during her shift like she should have then neither of us would be having this conversation today.

(There was no reason for all four of the women to have their hampers literally overflowing with clothes. Somebody, or more like several somebodies, clearly has been falling down on the job here.)

Breathe in, breathe out

May. 17th, 2026 03:28 pm
dolorosa_12: (watering can)
[personal profile] dolorosa_12
It's been a cosy-ish weekend at home, with some gardening, some cooking, and more decluttering.

On Friday, in between bouts of torrential rain (and hailstorms) I managed to get rid of the remainder of Matthias's old books, plus some unwanted gardening equipment. People really will take everything off the street if we put it out on the footpath! There's still stuff to go, but everything feels a lot more manageable now, and we don't have boxes all over the living room floor.

Yesterday was fitness classes, vegetable and fruit from the market (the strawberries at the moment are amazing, and I've just discovered that the discarded strawberry tops can be added to tap water to infuse it in much the same way that I usually do with slices of lime or lemon — it tastes fantastic), momos from the Tibetan stall for lunch, then pottering around at home. Today I spent a lot of time in the garden this morning, mainly repotting seedlings: tomatoes, pickling cucumbers, and some chives. So far the only stuff that's actually ready to eat are the mixed salad greens, which are a variety of shapes and colours, and taste bitter and earthy. We've got unripe strawberries, cherries, apples and pears, but nothing edible at the moment.

Reading this week has involved a great array of books.

I picked up The Draw of the Sea (Wyl Menmuir) on [personal profile] chestnut_pod's recommendation, and I'm glad I did. It's a collection of nature writing, mainly about the Cornish coast (although there are diversions to Svalbard, and other waters), meandering from environmental and social commentary to meditations on surfing and freediving. As suspected, my favourite parts were about the psychological effects of ocean swimming. It paired nicely both with Dee Holloway's fantastic zine Lost Coast (an in depth exploration of the various watery threads connecting Susan Cooper's Greenwitch and the films The Fog and Enys Men), and this new-to-me music (electronic Breton mermaids).

Next was The Bloody Branch (Brigid Lowe), which did for me for the Mabinogi what Pat Barker's The Silence of the Girls did as an Iliad retelling: a complex, nuanced reworking of the source material in a way that does it the courtesy of taking its characters' alienating worldviews and frames of reference seriously, while giving the female characters interiority, voice, and agency within the truly awful situations in which they find themselves. Lowe does an incredible job conveying the sheer weirdness of the original medieval Welsh material, which exists in its own strange universe of blurred lines and shifting boundaries — between human and animal, between the otherworld and the waking world above, between earth and sea, and so on. Her Blodeuwedd felt really believably made of flowers, and the horror at that unbounded floral existence being forced into the shape of a human woman is absolutely visceral; likewise her Arianrhod felt half woman, half ocean. It's a brutal, violent book, in which brutal, violent things are done to its female characters, and sometimes the only possible response is endurance, survival, and the ability to tell their own stories, in their own words. I absolutely loved it.

Finally, I devoured the final novel in Elena Ferrante's Neopolitan quartet of books, The Story of the Lost Child, which covers the later adult life of its pair of childhood friends. While the events of the earlier three novels took place in relatively tight timeframes, this one covers more than thirty years — motherhood, relationships (and their ends), careers, the demands of complicated extended families, and the complex mess of the characters' origins in an impoverished, violent neighbourhood of Naples, and the way they're never fully able to escape this. Both the characters — the narrator in particular — make some truly terrible decisions; the consequences of these decisions are so excruciatingly obvious that I was almost reading through my fingers in horror for the hundred pages or so until the characters caught up with me and realised the same thing. While the intense interiority of the other novels remains, the authorial gaze also sweeps outwards, to take in Italian politics and societal changes during the period, and the ever present struggles against corruption and organised crime, and the ways these brush up against the lives of the characters and their families. I'm so glad that I picked up this quartet of books at last: the hype is so incredibly justified.

I'm almost scared to pick up a new book, because the week's previous reading has been so good!

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