sonia: Quilted wall-hanging (Default)
[personal profile] sonia
The Balkan choir I sing with performed at a center for adults with disabilities on Friday, and we were vocally and enthusiastically received by the audience in their power and manual wheelchairs. It was stressful to prepare the songs for it, but fun once we were there, and I hope we'll do more like that.

One of the songs we sang is Otche Nash, a 4-part setting of the Lord's Prayer in Old Church Slavonic, which is like a mix of Bulgarian and Russian.

When someone proposed learning the song at the ad hoc monthly group a year ago, I was grumpy about having something so fundamentally Christian shoved down my throat, and we put it aside. In this weekly choir we learn whatever the teacher gives us, so I had to make my peace with it. Another singer said she doesn't mind it because it's asking the Universe for good things. I guess so...

Eva Quartet recorded it, and here's a live performance.

random question generator

Dec. 7th, 2025 09:30 pm
chazzbanner: (tenting tonight)
[personal profile] chazzbanner
What animals live in the wild in your country?

This is from an ESL teaching site, so I understand how the question is phrased. I'll narrow it down to 'state': moose, white-tailed deer, black bear, wolves, bobcats, coyotes, foxes.

What was the last book you read?

Ready for My Close-Up: The Making of Sunset Boulevard and the Dark Side of the Hollywood Dream, David M. Lubin. A fun read, and I'm ready to watch the movie again!

Do you know the time of day you were born?

Yes, it was on my birth certificate I think. 11:58 a.m. I was told that 'the baby cried, and the siren went off!' (noon siren)

Do you like old black and white movies?

Yes! Why not? They aren't stark white and pitch black, there's plenty of beautiful cinematography, the lack of 'color' is irrelevant.

-

(no subject)

Dec. 7th, 2025 07:44 pm
skygiants: Hohenheim from Fullmetal Alchemist with tears streaming down his cheeks; text 'I'm a monsteeeer' (man of constant sorrow)
[personal profile] skygiants
The other movie I saw recently -- not on a plane! but in a real theater! -- was Guillermo del Toro's Frankenstein (do I need to spoiler cut this? well, let's be safe) )

vital functions

Dec. 7th, 2025 10:45 pm
kaberett: Trans symbol with Swiss Army knife tools at other positions around the central circle. (Default)
[personal profile] kaberett

(Last week's also now exists and is no longer a placeholder!)

Reading. Pain, Abdul-Ghaaliq Lalkhen. I want to be very, very clear: unless you are specifically researching attitudes and beliefs in pain clinics in early 2020s England, or similar, do not read this book. There are bad history and no references, appalling opinions on patients (), quite possibly the worst hyphenation choice I have ever seen, stunning omissions and misrepresentations of pain science, and It's Weird That It Happened Twice soup metaphors. Fuller review (or at least annotated bibliography entry) to follow, maybe.

Some further progress on Florencia Clifford's Feeding Orchids to the Slugs ("Tales from a Zen kitchen"), which I acquired from Oxfam in a moment of weakness primarily for EYB purposes at a point when it was extremely discounted. It is primarily a somewhat disjointed memoir for which I am not the target audience, but hey, Books To Go Back In The Charity Shop Pile but that I wouldn't actually hate reading were exactly the goal, so that's a victory. Mostly. I'm a little over halfway through it, sticking book darts on pages that contain recipes for easier reference when I go back through on the actual indexing pass.

I absolutely needed something that was not going to make me furious and furthermore that was not going to be demanding, and there's a new one in the series, so I have now reread several Scalzi: Old Man's War and The Ghost Brigades completed, The Lost Colony in progress.

I've also had a very quick flick through the mentions of Descartes in Joanna Bourke's The Story of Pain, which is my next Pain Book. She does better than everyone else I've read, but I still think she's misinterpreting Treatise on Man. (Why do I have strongly-held opinions on Descartes now. CAN I NOT.)

Playing. Inkulinati, Monument Valley )

Cooking. SOUP.

smitten kitchen's braised chickpeas with zucchini and pesto, two batches thereof, because I had promised A burrata to go with and then (1) the supermarket was out of it and (2) the opened part-pack of feta wound up doing two days quite comfortably, so the second batch was required For Burrata Purposes.

I have also established that the pistachio croissant strata works very well in one of the loaf tins if you scale it down to 50% quantities because there were only 3 discount croissants at the supermarket (... because you had to wait and watch the person who got there JUST ahead of you taking Most Of Them...), which also conveniently used up the dregs of the cream that I had in the fridge.

Eating. Tagine out the freezer (thank you past Alex). Relatively fresh dried apple. A very plain lunch at Teras in Seydikemer, which was apparently the magic my digestive system needed to settle itself down! And I am very much enjoying my dark chocolate raspberry stars. :)

Write every day: Day 7

Dec. 7th, 2025 10:58 pm
luzula: a Luzula pilosa, or hairy wood-rush (Default)
[personal profile] luzula
Had a writing session with [personal profile] garonne and ended up with 200 words. How did your writing go?

Tally:
Read more... )
Day 6: [personal profile] badly_knitted, [personal profile] ysilme, [personal profile] trobadora, [personal profile] goddess47, [personal profile] the_siobhan, [personal profile] chestnut_pod, [personal profile] brithistorian, [personal profile] cornerofmadness, [personal profile] sanguinity, [personal profile] ysilme,

Day 7: [personal profile] ysilme, [personal profile] china_shop

Bonus farm news: Made borscht and ate with grilled sandwiches with funnel chanterelle stew and cheese on top. Yum.

Chocolate

Dec. 7th, 2025 02:28 pm
filkferengi: (Default)
[personal profile] filkferengi
I like chocolate. From this first principle, interesting adventures derive [themselves]. I used to favor Hershey's Kisses, but the logistics of fiddling with tiny wrappers during an arthritis flare were an obstacle. Then I hit upon the bag of milk chocolate chips as my delivery vector of choice; direct chocolate hit, chocolatier taste, no fiddly wrappers - what's not to like?

When they're not to be found, that's what. Over a couple of weeks, due to scarcity, my sweet spouse went to more than one store, for me. Then, last week, there were none to be found anywhere. He brought me a bag of Kroger's store brand and a bag of Ghirardelli. While not as chocolatey and with more beat-up looking chips, the Kroger was still an acceptable alternative. Ironically enough, the Ghirardelli bag combined being significantly more expensive with larger chips. My spouse called the chocolate taste "understated." I called it "nonexistent." Nothing like paying more for less flavor.

This week, relief was in sight, as he returned home victorious with the desired chocolate. Those first chips after a week of deprivation were intensely pleasurable. [I may have to do extra walks this week, weather permitting.]

As I went towards the fridge this afternoon, in anticipation of more chocolate chip goodness, I heard music in my head. I'm a filker; this isn't exactly a surprise. Bill & Gretchen Roper have an excellent song on the subject, "My Husband The Filker." As I let the tune play out to see which one it was, "Sha bop, sha bop" flowed into "I Only Have Eyes For You", a decidedly apt tune for chocolate on an overcast winter afternoon.

Culinary

Dec. 7th, 2025 06:31 pm
oursin: Frontispiece from C17th household manual (Accomplisht Lady)
[personal profile] oursin

This week's bread: Country Oatmeal aka Monastery Loaf from Eric Treuille and Ursula Ferrigno's Bread (2:1:1 wholemeal/strong white/pinhead oatmeal), a bit dense and rough-textured - the recipe says medium oatmeal, which has seemed hard to come by for months now (I actually physically popped into a Holland and Barrett when I was out and about the other day and boy, they are all about the Supplements these days and a lot less about the nice organic grains and pulses, sigh, no oatmeal, no cornmeal, etc etc wo wo deth of siv etc). Bread tasty though.

Friday night supper: groceries arrived sufficiently early in the pm for me to have time to make up the dough and put the filling to simmer for sardegnera with pepperoni.

Saturday breakfast rolls: adaptable soft rolls recipe, 4:1 strong white/buckwheat flour, dried blueberries, Rayner's Barley Malt Extracxt, turned out very nicely.

Today's lunch: savoury clafoutis with Exotic Mushroom Mix (shiitake + 3 sorts of oyster mushroom) and garlic, served with baby (adolescent) rainbow carrots roasted in sunflower and sesame oil, tossed with a little sugar and mirin at the end, and sweetstem cauliflower (some of which was PURPLE) roasted in pumpkin seed oil with cumin seeds.

LadiesBingo: Teenagers

Dec. 7th, 2025 12:36 pm
senmut: All five Justice League members standing in a circle (Comics: JLA YO)
[personal profile] senmut
AO3 Link | Cat and Bird (300 words) by Merfilly
Chapters: 1/1
Fandom: DC Comics (General)
Rating: General Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Relationships: Selina Kyle & Dinah Lance
Characters: Selina Kyle, Dinah Lance
Additional Tags: Triple Drabble, Post-Crisis, +Modern Age (1986-Present)
Summary:

Selina's in the neighborhood



Cat and Bird

"Hey there, little birdie," came a voice from above Dinah, and she looked up to see her friend Selina on the roof. That made Dinah's mood much better, and she hastily made use of the fire-escapes — and walls — to get up there.

"Hey yourself, tabby cat," she said with a grin, barely breathing hard for that exercise. "A bit out of your territory, aren't you?" She plopped herself down on the roof-edge next to the other girl.

"Hmm, came to check on one of the ones that got adopted out, make sure it was on the up and up."

"This neighborhood? It better be, or word will get around. Bunch of nosy people around. And Dad hears all the rumors like that."

"Nice older couple, and the kid was from their faith. How he wound up in a Catholic orphanage is anyone's guess," Selina said, giving Dinah the clues to keep her own ears out for the kid.

"Glad you decided to stick around when you got done," Dinah admitted, leaning over against Selina.

"Knew you'd be out sooner rather than later. Make any money today?"

"No; this tutoring is a trade. I help the blockhead learn, Mom gets her bad cooler fixed for free."

"You seem to be the one giving up time and effort a lot for these trades," Selina said, disapproving.

"Family business, Selina. Have to support mom somehow, and Dad uses it as an excuse to keep her off my back when I go out in the evenings." She slung her arm around Selina's shoulders and squeezed. "I get what I need."

"If you say so." Selina shrugged. "C'mon. I know who's working the door at the Regal. We can catch a movie and be irresponsible teenagers for once."

Dinah considered, then grinned broadly. "Sounds fun!"

[syndicated profile] smbc_comics_feed

Posted by Zach Weinersmith



Click here to go see the bonus panel!

Hovertext:
The fantasy of reacting to reactions to cultural ephemera grows more vivid every night until he can bear it no longer.


Today's News:
alicebentley: (Default)
[personal profile] alicebentley
My love affair with reading books started early, helped along no small bit by enthusiastic parents with a hodgepodge but large collection of books. The actual -amount- of books I read has varied wildly, impacted by work, activities, inclinations and supply.

I was reading very few books during the last handful of years of my bookstore, for instance. Just too busy/tired. And for a span of time after that, as if I'd lost the knack.

In previous decades acquiring a book always meant a paper copy to me. I'd nab the occasional ebook when that was extra convenient, but I really love the whole experience of holding a book, turning the pages, enjoying all the design choices the publisher makes to bring them into being. But as we all know, that leads to having thousands of books to provide habitat for, or potentially (shudder) move. So over the last half-dozen years I've been making a concerted effort to buy ebook variants, and gift or sell a bunch of the paper ones.

It's not the same experience, but it's easier on my aging eyes (thank you backlights and adjustable text sizes) and storage issues are much reduced.

A couple years ago my process at work changed. My day was filled with assembling models, sometimes ones I'd already done many times. The perfect environment to have an audiobook on headphones - especially if it's an audio version of a book I'd already read and didn't need to be completely immersed.

The books that really swayed me to this was Murderbot. I had already bought and read each of Martha Well's books as they came out, usually with a re-read of all the previous ones once a new one arrived. Kevin R. Free's audiobook was an unexpected delight, bringing me a way to revisit this favorite story while giving me a new view of the characters and events. And while still getting good work done!

After that I started binging audiobooks quite as badly as I've ever tucked into paper - and it's past time I wrote up more of these experiences. That's my big plan for more DreamWidth posting and I hope I will hold to it.

Dear fanfic writer:

Dec. 10th, 2025 06:54 am
conuly: (Default)
[personal profile] conuly
I can see you're not a cook. You can't exactly dice thyme. The leaves are pretty tiny. If they're fresh, you just strip them from the stem. I suppose you can then chop them more finely, but dicing? You'd have more luck trying to dice time.

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


Read more... )

Doing the work

Dec. 7th, 2025 06:09 am
alicebentley: (Default)
[personal profile] alicebentley
I love the idea of what social media can do for me, and what I could bring to it. But actually putting in the time and thought to keep up my end of the bargain endlessly escapes me.

This week I had work news to share, that I'd enjoy talking over with friends, and realized once again that I haven't been making a space for that.

I'll post quips or photos on FB, I doomscroll on Bluesky, and I enjoy the creative insanity that rumbles through Tumblr. But each of them has only a scant handful of friends I can expect to interact with.

The same is true here on DreamWidth of course. And I've been even worse than elsewhere on posting, or commenting, or sometimes even opening the page to read.

I've tried before, but I'm going to try again and make this a place where I post more, and reach out more. I'm even going to start rambling about all the terrible wonderful books I've been reading.

Advent calendar 7

Dec. 7th, 2025 12:38 pm
antisoppist: (Christmas)
[personal profile] antisoppist
Earlier, as Christmas Eve had turned into Christmas Day, she had listened at the window to the faraway church bell from the village ringing midnight. It was a still night and not cold, the wind in the direction to send the sound of the bell here; it would be a warm start to Christmas after the storms, and the lack of frost and cold left the landscape wintry without dignity; the bell's resonance was more pedestrian than it'd have been on the kind of crisp cold winter night tonight ideally ought to have been. Dead. Dead. Dead, the bell went. Or maybe: Head. Head. Head. The village church had only one bell so couldn't play a tune. It sounded, she thought, like someone at the back of memory hitting at stone with an axe, which is an act that'll do nothing but ruin a good blade.
sturgeonslawyer: (Default)
[personal profile] sturgeonslawyer
I have commented, in another forum, that one of the basic questions to ask of the various posthumous books "by JRR Tolkien" is, to what extent is it actually by JRRT. In the particular case of The Bovadium Fragments, this is an unusually easy question to ask.

The book is 124 + xx pages long, which is to say 144. Of these pages, there are 44 which could, with complete legitimacy, have been published as a chapbook by JRRT, with minimal notes by Christopher Tolkien (CJRT). Another ten pages could well have been added to that chapbook as an appendix.

The remaining ninety pages are apparatus. The xx include the usual vi of title page, copyright notices, table of contents, that sort of thing; another v of a Publisher's Note by one Chris Smith; and an Introduction by CJRT. With the possible exception of the Publisher's Note, this material could also have fit legitimtely into such a chapbook, amking it 74 pages long -- so, slightly over half the length of this admittedly slim volume.

The remainder is taken up by an essay, "The Origin of Bovadium," by Richard Ovenden, "Bodley's Librarian," meaning the head of Oxford University's most important library. It is, basically, a history of the incursion of the motor-car into the geography and culture of England in general and Oxford in particular, with special discussion of the decades of debate that went into attempting to find a solution to the destruction of Oxford's traditionally tranquil nature by said incursion taking over Oxford's High Street, or "the High."

Occasionally, and especially towards the end of the essay, Overton discusses how this bears on JRRT and his composition of the Fragments.

Which brings me to the Fragments themselves.

The Bovadium Fragments are, I think, the closest JRRT could ever have come to writing actual science fiction. The conceit is that, in some distant(ish) future, archaeologists excavating "Bovadium" (which is a Latinish sort of name for Oxford itself, meaning, more or less, the Way of the Ox) find these fragments and decipher them into their tongue.

Aside from the actual historical facts about motor-cars in Oxford, the springboard for the Fragments is a 1914 poem by A.D. Godley, an Oxford scholar himself, called "Motor Bus," a very early satire on motor culture whose primary point of amusement is its careful utilization of, and rhyming with, the various declensions of a Latin backformation of the word "bus" (which in fact comes from the Latin word omnibus).

JRRT takes this conceit to a much higher level of satire. "Bovadium," it seems, was a place of two languages, which equate, roughly, to demotic English and scholarly Latin. The Fragments, then, are translated from the scholarly language, and so motor-cars are, in them, referred to as motores. They are introduced into Bovadium by a "Daemon," for the purpose of destroying peace among the people thereof: a purpose which succeeds fully.

An important part of the satire is the introduction of a factory for the creation of these motores, taking its cue from the actual creation and growth of the company which came to be known as Morris Motors in the greater Oxford, which not only brought more cars to Oxford, but caused a massive population explosion as workers (not all English) came to build the cars, tend the factory, and run the business.

In the end, the civilization of Bovadium is destroyed in what may be the first appearance in fiction of the Terminal Traffic Jam.

There are three Fragments. The first is a short piece in Latin; the second, a longer piece which -- beginning with a rough translation of the first -- tells the entire sad story of Bovadium and the Daemon; and the third, a sort of postscript. There is also a bit of scholarly apparatus by the people studying the Fragments.

Is this a book by JRR Tolkien? Well, about half of it is; the other half ought, perhaps, to have been published in a scholarly journal. Overton's essay is not overly scholarly -- certainly easy enough for a lay reader like me to follow -- but I can't help feeling that it was largely added to provide the semblance of a full-sized book.

Eight out of ten stalled vehicles.
sturgeonslawyer: (Default)
[personal profile] sturgeonslawyer
Cassidy's Challenge is the third volume of the "Russian Amerika" trilogy. This volume is easy enough to follow without the benefit of its predecessors.

One of the reasons for this is that, despite a fairly interesting backstory, it's a pretty routine bit of military SF, with routine milSF characters and incidents. It's competently written, but no more than that; the characters speak in familiar patterns to anyone who's read any amount of milSF, and the stakes are purely black-and-white, meaning that there are no moral dilemmas: the good guys are unmistakably Good Guys while their foes are clearly Bad.

The fairly interesting backstory is the alternate history which can be picked up from the text and the maps that go with it. The North seems to have lost the Civil War. There is a California Republic, plus colonial French and British Canadas; a large swath of the continent belongs to the First Nations Republic; and, with the failure of the North, Alaska was never purchased from Russia.

In the first two books of this trilogy (or perhaps it is an ongoing series; there is plenty left hanging in this one to power at least one more sequel), apparently, the various Good Guys succeeded, sometime in the twentieth or early twenty-first century, in throwing off Russian rule and establishing a new Alaskan Republik, to the annoyance not only of Russia, but of England, France, and, apparently, Austria (whose position in all this remained pretty much vague to me; they may simply be selling arms.)

And that's pretty much the setup. Much of what follows in this book is pretty predictable from that setup, as various international factions seek to overthrow the Republikan government and return the territory to colonial rule.

Frankly, it isn't even very good milSF: the battles are inevitably too easy for the good guys for much excitement to build up on that level, and, while the stakes are ostensibly high, we are never made to feel them.

Four out of ten ground-to-air missiles.
sturgeonslawyer: (Default)
[personal profile] sturgeonslawyer
Pretty much what the title says, a collection of the correspondence of Teresa de Jesus, the foundress of the Discalced Carmelite order, in the later years of her life after her Reform was pretty firmly established, though there was still some opposition among various factions in the Catholic Church.

If one has (as I do) a degree of devotion to this Saint, it provides glimpses into her daily life as she continues to establish convents of her order across Spain, at a more quotidian level than what appears in her autobiographical works, the Life and the Foundations.

One frustrating feature of the particular edition I read is that the letters are in no particularly discernable sequence: certainly not chronological. While the letters to a particular correspondent are sometime grouped together, this is not always the case, and even when they are, no strict chronology is imposed upon them.

Nor am I at all clear who the translator, in this ebook of Teresa's complete works, actually is. I have the impression that (a) this is not a complete Letters, and (b) the order in the original Spanish edition -- though probably no more helpfully ordered than this version -- is different from what is seen here.

Seven out of ten incorruptible bodies.
sovay: (I Claudius)
[personal profile] sovay
Crossing recent streams, tonight I participated with [personal profile] rushthatspeaks in a reading of The Invention of Love (1997) in memoriam Tom Stoppard with a Discord group that does a different play every week. I was assigned Moses Jackson, the straightest himbo ever to play a sport. I consider it a triumph for the profession that I did not catch on fire enthusing about field athletics.

When I read in passing that Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead (1966) had begun life as a one-act comedy entitled Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Meet King Lear, I went to fact-check this assertion immediately because it sounded like a joke, you know, like one of the great tragedies of the English stage starting out as the farcical Romeo and Ethel the Pirate's Daughter and then a ringing sound in my ears indicated that the penny had dropped.

Speaking of, I have seen going around the quotation from Arcadia (1993) on the destruction and endurance of history:

We shed as we pick up, like travellers who must carry everything in their arms, and what we let fall will be picked up by those behind. The procession is very long and life is very short. We die on the march. But there is nothing outside the march so nothing can be lost to it. The missing plays of Sophocles will turn up piece by piece, or be written again in another language. Ancient cures for diseases will reveal themselves once more. Mathematical discoveries glimpsed and lost to view will have their time again. You do not suppose, my lady, that if all of Archimedes had been hiding in the great library of Alexandria, we would be at a loss for a corkscrew?

Stoppard was not supposed to have known the full extent of his Jewishness until midlife, but it is such a diasporic way of thinking, the convergent echo of Emeric Pressburger is difficult for me not to hear. I keep writing of the coins in the field, everything that time gives back, if not always to those who lost it.

For a cat, with love

Dec. 6th, 2025 08:09 pm
sonia: Chocolate fluffy cat on a chair in the sun (basil chair)
[personal profile] sonia
Gina posted this lovely photo of a ramp her dad made for their 18 year old cat. The comments on the original post are worth reading too. <3

Photo of a ramp for an elderly cat )

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