100fandomicons table for 2025
Nov. 29th, 2025 03:12 pmWith a single day to spare, I made the last icon for my
100fandomicons! As always, a few stubborn themes just didn't want to be filled by other challenges, so I had to make them specifically for the table. This year there were six of those. Hover for fandom:
key | books | blend
bow | mirror | bear
Here's the complete table, 100 icons in 100 different fandoms:
https://tinny.dreamwidth.org/766214.html
Concrit welcome! Comments adored! Credit appreciated! Take and use as many icons as you like. If you want to know whose textures and brushes I use, take a look at my resource post.
Previous icon posts:
key | books | blend
bow | mirror | bear
Here's the complete table, 100 icons in 100 different fandoms:
https://tinny.dreamwidth.org/766214.html
Concrit welcome! Comments adored! Credit appreciated! Take and use as many icons as you like. If you want to know whose textures and brushes I use, take a look at my resource post.
Signal Boost: Santow tips the bucket on AI slop
Nov. 29th, 2025 10:17 pmFrom The Mandarin: Santow tips the bucket on AI slop
In a landmark speech delivered to the Sir Vincent Fairfax Oration in Sydney on Thursday, former human rights commissioner and now sought-after ethical adviser and academic Ed Santow delivered a serious wake-up call to assorted artificial intelligence cheer squad leaders and positivity meme flunkies.
Santow is positive about AI but also highly aware of its impact on societal functions, governance, and culture.
In a tightly woven speech that planted a deep stake in the necessity of the retention of knowledge and memory, Santow argued that “history matters on its own terms”, and its interpretation is also powering the next version of what we know as language models dip into the well.
“As AI disrupts our economy, politics, society and environment, I will make three arguments today:
AI might seem like it comes from the future, but it learns from the past, and so it also anchors us to that past.
Our history — or rather our choices about the versions of history that are recorded and remembered — influences how AI takes shape.
It is not enough that we expose AI systems to a ‘more accurate’ view of history; we must also draw the right lessons from history if we are to avoid repeating the mistakes and injustices of the past,” Santow said.
Exposure of AI to better feedstock is a difficult topic because, in large part, it assumes that the quality of inputs will self-correct problematic outputs. Yeah nah.
“Throughout history, we have built machines that are born like Venus — fully formed. When a car rolls off the production line, all it needs is a twist of a key or the press of a button, and it will work as intended. This is not true of AI,” Santow argued.
“AI systems start as ignorant as a newborn — perhaps even more so. A baby will search for its mother’s breast even before the baby can see. An AI system possesses none of a baby’s genetic instincts. Nothing can be assumed. All knowledge must be learned. The process of teaching an AI system — known as ‘machine learning’ — involves exposing the machine to our world.”
There’s a further problem, too, and it’s a systemic one. As internet pioneers like Vint Cerf noted, the great tech behemoth has trouble retaining both memory and history.
“The regime that should be in place [is] one in which old software is preserved; hardware can be emulated in the files so we can run old operating systems and old software so we can actually do something with the digital objects that have been captured and stored,” Cerf said in 2018.
“Think of all the papers we read now, especially academic papers that have URL references. Think about what happens 10, 20, 50 years from now when those don’t resolve anymore because the domain names were abandoned or someone forgot to pay the rent.”
That’s now happening.
But the warnings are at least a decade old.
I am wary of the about-face in my thinking on Large Language Models. Right through my time in lit academia, I was unusually positive about LLM and its uses in my field. I do not have the skillset, for instance, to work with or for Digipal, but I find their stuff REALLY COOL. It was something of a frustration to my mentors (and me, tbh) that the kind of literary scholarship I wanted to do just... didn't call for these kinds of digital tools. Even in the literary composition realm - while I encountered some truly un-informed uses of LMMs - I was significantly more willing than most literature scholars to believe that LLM linguistics could make findings as to authorship, at least on a "more likely than not" level.
In part, that is because in first-year English I was assigned some readings (in a sub-unit module on functional linguistics for literary studies) which looked at how forensic linguistics, focused not only on easily-identifiable dialect words but on patterns of "filler" words and sentence structure, had demonstrated throughout the 90s that Australian police were influencing interview records, particularly from Indigenous subjects, in ways which ranged from outright fabrication to shaping/skewing interview reports.** The case made by pragmatics is that individual speakers' uses of function words, sentence structure, etc, are shaped by context (e.g. are you or are you not a policeman), but can also, with sufficient corpus, be distinguished among individuals. I don't really see any reason to suppose that Billy Shakes is any more unique than the wrongfully convicted Mr Kelvin Condren, or that imitators of/collaborators with Billy Shakes would be less detectable to an algorithm than false police reports. Oh, there are other factors - can't use punctuation for early modern texts, because the printers did that part; medieval texts have layers of author, scribe, oral retellings and subsequent copyings, etc. I've never yet encountered such an identification that I'd hang my hat on as absolutely conclusive out of nowhere, but such studies never come out of nowhere and texts always have some context you can look at. Likely enough to work with? Sure.
I am very wary, therefore, of my current tendency to reskeet dunkings upon AI, sweeping statements about the "word association machine", etc. There are, in addition to fascinating historical uses of LLMs, very important practical ones! I would like to see those continue and be improved upon!***
I don't think I'm 100% wrong about generative LLMs producing "slop" at the moment, that's pretty clear. But I am concerned that I'm plugged in to a social media feed of academics and wonks who not only see all the current problems but also seem to be unaware of or walking back on the previously attested promising uses. So. I am not recirculating nearly as much as I read, and I am trying to weight my reading via sources like The Mandarin, rather than via Academics Despairing or other versions of the BlueSky Hot Take mill.
The article above says that Santow is "positive about AI". I rather wish it had covered what Santow is positive about, because from what they've quoted from him as to the things to be wary of, he seems to have a nuanced grip on things.
* A stand-out was a linguist using the out-of-copyright editions in the Corpus of Middle English Prose and Verse, apparently unaware how much editorial shaping went into them, or that they are not at all up-to-date, or, upon quizzing by one of my colleagues, that the poetic texts might predate the manuscripts and differ significantly from spoken English at the time of the manuscript composition while also not reflecting spoken English of the putative poem composition date.
** I don't have my 2005 syllabi to hand anymore, more fool me. I do not think that the article we were given was Diana Eades, "The case for Condren: Aboriginal English, pragmatics and the law", Journal of Pragmatics 20.2 (1993) 141-162, but it definitely cited that article and Condren's case. Condren is a QLD case and I think the article I read was about a cohort of WA police transcripts - but that article I just cited is useful in that it has a good-enough overview in the unpaywalled abstract to illustrate my point.
*** For instance, PHREDSS, the system which monitors presentations to NSW emergency departments and produces a read-out with alerts of Public Health Interest, is an LLM. You can find a fairly readable evaluation of its use in regional NSW in relation to large gatherings and public health disaster response on the Department of Health and Aging's website. What I know from my Sources in stats is that the surveilance model is designed specifically for how emergency departments use language and record presentations, and then even the simplest-seeming uses for public health are looked at by experts in both this kind of stats, and epidemology.
The example I was given by my Sources was "pneumonia": in 2020, every day our good friend PHREDSS delivered unto the NSW government its ED data, tagged by presenting condition and location. Pneumonia was a leading indicator for COVID-19 at the time. However, someone has to check and weed out the "person didn't actually drown but they got water on the lungs" kind of pneumonia. (Given what I now know about the frequency of aspiration risks in the elderly and people with chronic illnesses, it's not going to be the surfing accidents that are the main reason you need a human to look at it: it's that if you get a statistical spike in pneumonia admissions from aged care homes in X region, you could be looking at a viral outbreak or you could be looking at some systemic failure of care leading to a whole bunch of elderly people aspirating and it not being addressed appropriately, leading to pneumonia.) This 2015 article looks at the ED-side data capture problems relating to "alcohol syndrome", and whether such data has "positive predictive" value for public health, if this sort of thing tickles your brain.
I Caught the Ball. Now What?
Nov. 29th, 2025 11:00 am
Photo by Teagan Dumont, via Mark Dumont
Seasonal Cards
Nov. 30th, 2025 12:40 amIt's that time of year again! Mine are more like New Year cards as I'm slow to start making them.
If you're on my card list but your mailing address has changed, let me know - replies to this post are screened.
And if you're not on my seasonal cards list and would like to be, also drop me a reply below, with your preferred postal name and address. I send them all over the world, so no worries about that.
If you're on my card list but your mailing address has changed, let me know - replies to this post are screened.
And if you're not on my seasonal cards list and would like to be, also drop me a reply below, with your preferred postal name and address. I send them all over the world, so no worries about that.
Welcome to Winterfaire 2025
Nov. 29th, 2025 12:51 amThe Winterfaire spreads out as far as the eye can see. Some booths show streamers of red and green, while others sport blue and silver. All of them offer treasure after shining treasure. Music fills the air with lyrics of Christmas, Hannukah, Kwanzaa, Solstice, and Yule. From the Wordsmith's Forge comes the bright chiming of words being hammered into literature. Delicious scents of hot chocolate, spiced cider, peppermint, baking cookies, and gingerbread tantalize the appetite. Smiling, laughing shoppers amble from booth to booth with lists in hand. Vendors grin back, calling out, "Come try, come buy...!"
I know a lot of artists, writers, musicians, crafters, and other talented folks who make some of their living from their creative endeavors. I don't always have the money to support them as much as I'd like, but what I can do is set up a virtual faire where vendors can offer their wares to an audience that likes crafts, literature, and small businesses. For those of you doing your holiday shopping, here's an opportunity to buy or barter or find something made with love, something unusual or unique, in a way that helps make it possible for creative people to go on creating wonders. And there will be no traffic jams, stampedes, or gunfights at the Winterfaire!

( Read more... )
I know a lot of artists, writers, musicians, crafters, and other talented folks who make some of their living from their creative endeavors. I don't always have the money to support them as much as I'd like, but what I can do is set up a virtual faire where vendors can offer their wares to an audience that likes crafts, literature, and small businesses. For those of you doing your holiday shopping, here's an opportunity to buy or barter or find something made with love, something unusual or unique, in a way that helps make it possible for creative people to go on creating wonders. And there will be no traffic jams, stampedes, or gunfights at the Winterfaire!

( Read more... )
Wildlife
Nov. 29th, 2025 12:29 amScientists discover a hidden deep sea hotspot bursting with life
Beneath the waters off Papua New Guinea lies an extraordinary deep-sea environment where scorching hydrothermal vents and cool methane seeps coexist side by side — a pairing never before seen. This unusual chemistry fuels a vibrant oasis teeming with mussels, tube worms, shrimp, and even purple sea cucumbers, many of which may be unknown to science. The rocks themselves shimmer with traces of gold, silver, and other metals deposited by past volcanic activity.
Beneath the waters off Papua New Guinea lies an extraordinary deep-sea environment where scorching hydrothermal vents and cool methane seeps coexist side by side — a pairing never before seen. This unusual chemistry fuels a vibrant oasis teeming with mussels, tube worms, shrimp, and even purple sea cucumbers, many of which may be unknown to science. The rocks themselves shimmer with traces of gold, silver, and other metals deposited by past volcanic activity.
Philosophical Questions: Wants
Nov. 29th, 2025 12:11 amPeople have expressed interest in deep topics, so this list focuses on philosophical questions.
If all humans want the same basic things, why is there so much violence and strife between people?
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If all humans want the same basic things, why is there so much violence and strife between people?
( Read more... )
Small Business Saturday
Nov. 29th, 2025 12:06 amCelebrate Small Business Saturday. Shop small, shop local! What are you doing for Small Business Saturday?

( Read more... )

( Read more... )
Fandom Fifty: #40
Nov. 28th, 2025 10:48 pm2014 -- not heavy on the movie going.
Maleficent - Okay. I was skeptical as fuck, waited for video release. OMG, I was so wrong. This was just the slight twist I needed on the original to make it work for me. The cast played their hearts out. Diaval IS SO GOOD! I just love this movie to bits and pieces.
Annie (2014) - Another seen after the theater, but this time caught on DirecTV. And HOT DAMN I am glad I did. I love and adore it as a remake. The cast played it superbly, updated for the modern era and all! Just, magnificent.
Maleficent - Okay. I was skeptical as fuck, waited for video release. OMG, I was so wrong. This was just the slight twist I needed on the original to make it work for me. The cast played their hearts out. Diaval IS SO GOOD! I just love this movie to bits and pieces.
Annie (2014) - Another seen after the theater, but this time caught on DirecTV. And HOT DAMN I am glad I did. I love and adore it as a remake. The cast played it superbly, updated for the modern era and all! Just, magnificent.
For Sale: Nintendo Switch games
Nov. 28th, 2025 09:54 pmI've made this post a few times without any luck, but I wanted to try again just in case I have better luck this time. Would anyone be interested in any of the following Nintendo Switch games?
Pokémon: Let's Go, Pikachu! (example on Amazon)
Spyro Reignited Trilogy (example on Amazon)
TemTem (example on Amazon)
If you're not interested but know someone who might be, please point them my way. I'm about $65 shy of where I need to be to pay for my storage unit this month, because the universe hates me, and it would help a lot if I could manage to sell even one of them.
For payment, I have CashApp ($Settiai), PayPal, Venmo, or Zelle (nancy.lynn.foster@gmail.com).
Pokémon: Let's Go, Pikachu! (example on Amazon)
Spyro Reignited Trilogy (example on Amazon)
TemTem (example on Amazon)
If you're not interested but know someone who might be, please point them my way. I'm about $65 shy of where I need to be to pay for my storage unit this month, because the universe hates me, and it would help a lot if I could manage to sell even one of them.
For payment, I have CashApp ($Settiai), PayPal, Venmo, or Zelle (nancy.lynn.foster@gmail.com).
The whole Tom King Situation
Nov. 28th, 2025 05:20 pmSome impactful opinion pieces by First Nations authors:
Niigaan Sinclair: The inconvenient truth: Thomas King’s admission he isn’t Cherokee hits hard.
Tanya Talaga: Thomas King’s storytelling now feels like a betrayal.
Jesse Wente: Jesse Wente on Thomas King and finding hope in a hard moment (Video: 42min).
Thoughts:
I'm glad Lee Maracle and Murray Sinclair didn't see this betrayal. I wonder how many more are to come.
Personally, as a basic white girl who casually follows CanLit discourse, I'd heard the rumours for close to ten years, and assumed they weren't true because it seemed like the Cherokee Nation would've said something. And it just felt to obvious, maybe? Surely someone would've looked into it when the Michelle Latimer situation happened? Guess not! Or maybe they did, and this is how long it takes to gather that level of detail.
My hot take (which I've heard going around a bit): you can't be in King's position and not know that. A lot of us with roots in that part of the world have family stories about Cherokee ancestors, myself included. Which a lot of people believe because why would their families lie to them? Then you learn it's a whole trope, and look into it, and realise it's just family mythology. Or don't, because you're not claiming anything based on it, anyway. But if you're speaking on behalf of a people, as King was, not having the least curiosity, or desire to reconnect with family, feels like wilful ignorance at best. (Which is why the rumours felt too obvious. Surely, I thought, he must have made sure.)
It's not something that is making me, personally, reconsider my CanLit canon. I read a few books by King, and enjoyed them, but he wasn't a favourite author.
Palate cleansers:
Elamin asked Jesse Wente for some recs, and here's his list (copied from the episode description on YouTube):
Finally, let's laugh about a funny time someone got fooled: 'Made-up quote' in Canadian satire site The Beaverton fools Time Magazine.
Niigaan Sinclair: The inconvenient truth: Thomas King’s admission he isn’t Cherokee hits hard.
Tanya Talaga: Thomas King’s storytelling now feels like a betrayal.
Jesse Wente: Jesse Wente on Thomas King and finding hope in a hard moment (Video: 42min).
Thoughts:
I'm glad Lee Maracle and Murray Sinclair didn't see this betrayal. I wonder how many more are to come.
Personally, as a basic white girl who casually follows CanLit discourse, I'd heard the rumours for close to ten years, and assumed they weren't true because it seemed like the Cherokee Nation would've said something. And it just felt to obvious, maybe? Surely someone would've looked into it when the Michelle Latimer situation happened? Guess not! Or maybe they did, and this is how long it takes to gather that level of detail.
My hot take (which I've heard going around a bit): you can't be in King's position and not know that. A lot of us with roots in that part of the world have family stories about Cherokee ancestors, myself included. Which a lot of people believe because why would their families lie to them? Then you learn it's a whole trope, and look into it, and realise it's just family mythology. Or don't, because you're not claiming anything based on it, anyway. But if you're speaking on behalf of a people, as King was, not having the least curiosity, or desire to reconnect with family, feels like wilful ignorance at best. (Which is why the rumours felt too obvious. Surely, I thought, he must have made sure.)
It's not something that is making me, personally, reconsider my CanLit canon. I read a few books by King, and enjoyed them, but he wasn't a favourite author.
Palate cleansers:
Elamin asked Jesse Wente for some recs, and here's his list (copied from the episode description on YouTube):
Books:
The Knowing by Tanya Talaga
Bad Indians Book Club by Patty Krawec
The Idea of an Entire Life by Billy Ray Belcourt
The Boy From Buzwah: A Life in Indian Education by Cecil King
Survival Ojibwe by Patricia Ningewance
Danger Eagle written by Jesse Wente and illustrated by Shaikara David
Film & TV:
Saints and Warriors (coming soon to Crave)
The Knowing - documentary series based on Tanya Talaga's book (on CBC Gem)
Aki by Darlene Naponse
Uiksaringitara: Wrong Husband by Zacharias Kunuk
Meadowlarks by Tasha Hubbard (coming soon to theatres -- it’s a drama adaptation of her documentary, Birth of a Family, available on the NFB website)
Siksikakowan: The Blackfoot Man by Sinakson Trevor Solway
Finally, let's laugh about a funny time someone got fooled: 'Made-up quote' in Canadian satire site The Beaverton fools Time Magazine.
better living through chemistry
Nov. 28th, 2025 04:52 pmBeen a minute. Again.
September was rough. October was actively bad and November showed every sign of being worse. Sometime around the end of October I made an appointment with my doctor to talk about antidepressants.
I had intended to try them once I got my job situation sorted out. Then again I had intended to have my job situation sorted out long before it got this bad. The thing about me and depression is that episodes always have an external trigger. It's not precisely something that's a part of me. Except for how it's always lurking, waiting for something to go wrong badly enough that it can slip through.
Long story short, I've been on Wellbutrin for a little over a week. It's been ... good? The week or two before I had reached the point of strugging with getting up off the couch to do anything fun, because I couldn't conceive of enjoying anything. That particular weight is lessened. I'm baking, and generally making decent food, and reading things for fun rather than "because this is what i'm reading now".
It's disrupting my sleep, I think. I'm waking up three or four times a night rather than once or twice. I am sticking with it for at least another week in the hope that this sorts itself out; if not, there's plenty of other flavours of drug I can try.
So that's what I've been up to for the last couple of months.
Other than that ... reading, playing with and sitting with Mr Tuppert, applying for jobs. Some boardgaming. More videogaming than I care to admit, less Getting Outside or Seeing People than I would like.
Hanging in, I guess.
Happy birthday-plus-one to me.
September was rough. October was actively bad and November showed every sign of being worse. Sometime around the end of October I made an appointment with my doctor to talk about antidepressants.
I had intended to try them once I got my job situation sorted out. Then again I had intended to have my job situation sorted out long before it got this bad. The thing about me and depression is that episodes always have an external trigger. It's not precisely something that's a part of me. Except for how it's always lurking, waiting for something to go wrong badly enough that it can slip through.
Long story short, I've been on Wellbutrin for a little over a week. It's been ... good? The week or two before I had reached the point of strugging with getting up off the couch to do anything fun, because I couldn't conceive of enjoying anything. That particular weight is lessened. I'm baking, and generally making decent food, and reading things for fun rather than "because this is what i'm reading now".
It's disrupting my sleep, I think. I'm waking up three or four times a night rather than once or twice. I am sticking with it for at least another week in the hope that this sorts itself out; if not, there's plenty of other flavours of drug I can try.
So that's what I've been up to for the last couple of months.
Other than that ... reading, playing with and sitting with Mr Tuppert, applying for jobs. Some boardgaming. More videogaming than I care to admit, less Getting Outside or Seeing People than I would like.
Hanging in, I guess.
Happy birthday-plus-one to me.
30 in 30: The Fast and the Furious
Nov. 28th, 2025 06:36 pmAO3 Link | Just a Nightmare... (100 words) by Merfilly
Chapters: 1/1
Fandom: The Fast And The Furious [2001]
Rating: General Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Characters: Dominic Toretto
Additional Tags: Drabble, Dreams and Nightmares
Summary:
Dom gasped awake, his whole body thrumming with adrenaline. Jesse dead? Vince maybe dying?
Like hell!
He sat up, glad Letty wasn't in here, wanting to go kick Brian's ass right now. That was a bullshit reaction though; it had just been a nightmare. Letty'd been questioning when they were going to exit this set up, Vince was riding his back about Bri being a cop.
Just a damned nightmare.
Well, he wasn't going back to sleep now. He grabbed the nearest jeans and a tank, heading out to work on the car.
That would settle him down from it.
Chapters: 1/1
Fandom: The Fast And The Furious [2001]
Rating: General Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Characters: Dominic Toretto
Additional Tags: Drabble, Dreams and Nightmares
Summary:
Dom comes up from a dream... or is it more?
Dom gasped awake, his whole body thrumming with adrenaline. Jesse dead? Vince maybe dying?
Like hell!
He sat up, glad Letty wasn't in here, wanting to go kick Brian's ass right now. That was a bullshit reaction though; it had just been a nightmare. Letty'd been questioning when they were going to exit this set up, Vince was riding his back about Bri being a cop.
Just a damned nightmare.
Well, he wasn't going back to sleep now. He grabbed the nearest jeans and a tank, heading out to work on the car.
That would settle him down from it.
Poetry Fishbowl Report for November 4, 2025
Nov. 28th, 2025 05:44 pmThis month's theme was "Fairies and Fey." I wrote from 12 PM to 3 AM, so about 13 hours, allowing for lunch and supper breaks. I wrote 3 poems on Tuesday plus 5 later in the week.
Participation was down slightly, with 9 comments on LiveJournal and another 23 on Dreamwidth. A total of 11 people sent prompts. You have new prompters
ljgeoff and
gs_silva to thank for the second freebie.
Read Some Poetry!
The following poems from the November 4, 2025 Poetry Fishbowl have been posted:
"Better Than Living Alone"
"A Clear Path of Freedom"
"Revealing Itself at Its Most Brilliant"
"Time and Relative Dimensions in Magic"
"To the Rational Mind"
"No Worthless Herbs" (One God's Story of Mid-Life Crisis, October 7, 2025 Poetry Fishbowl)
"The Struggle Against Error" (Polychrome Heroics, April 1, 2025 Poetry Fishbowl)
Buy some poetry!
If you plan to sponsor some poetry but haven't made up your mind yet, see the unsold poetry list from November 4. That includes the title, length, price, and the original thumbnail description for the poems still available.
This month's donors include:
janetmiles,
librarygeek, and Anthony Barrette. All sponsored poems from this fishbowl have been posted. There are 2 tallies toward a bonus fishbowl.
The Poetry Fishbowl has a landing page.
Participation was down slightly, with 9 comments on LiveJournal and another 23 on Dreamwidth. A total of 11 people sent prompts. You have new prompters
Read Some Poetry!
The following poems from the November 4, 2025 Poetry Fishbowl have been posted:
"Better Than Living Alone"
"A Clear Path of Freedom"
"Revealing Itself at Its Most Brilliant"
"Time and Relative Dimensions in Magic"
"To the Rational Mind"
"No Worthless Herbs" (One God's Story of Mid-Life Crisis, October 7, 2025 Poetry Fishbowl)
"The Struggle Against Error" (Polychrome Heroics, April 1, 2025 Poetry Fishbowl)
Buy some poetry!
If you plan to sponsor some poetry but haven't made up your mind yet, see the unsold poetry list from November 4. That includes the title, length, price, and the original thumbnail description for the poems still available.
This month's donors include:
The Poetry Fishbowl has a landing page.
Unsold Poems for the November 4, 2025 Poetry Fishbowl
Nov. 28th, 2025 05:12 pmThe following poems from the November 4, 2025 Poetry Fishbowl are currently available. Poems may be sponsored via PayPal -- there's a permanent donation button on my Dreamwidth profile page -- or you can write to me and discuss other methods. There are still verses left in the linkback poems "Delight in Another," "A Sense of Weather Changes," "Ouroboros Insects," "The Loving Embrace of Night," "Generations of Cooks Past," "Homefree and Clear, " "One Bite at a Time," "Stars and Diamonds," "Mishpocha," "Changing Your Nature," and "Besa."
"The Coracle in the Forest"
Story Date: Wednesday, April 30, 2025]
Summary: Two teens go foraging for food and find something unexpected.
208 lines, Buy It Now = $104
Digby and Maerwynn Aldebourne
grew up in Lancaster until 2022, when
a heat wave killed their parents while
the children were in a programme
at the air-conditioned library.
"The Heart to Change the World"
Story Date: Sunday, May 29, 2016
Summary: A fairy godmother has an idea to clean up after the Big One.
98 lines, Buy It Now = $49
Violanira had always been an oddball.
For a fairy, she was strangely attracted
to human science and technology,
especially now that more of it
consisted of things like plastic
and aluminum instead of cold iron.
"The Universal Assent to the World"
Story Date: Saturday, September 26, 2015
Summary: Nebuly takes some of his friends to a Renaissance Faire.
355 lines, Buy It Now = $355
Double price for research.
Nebuly had convinced some
of his friends to come to
the Lyonesse Faire
just outside River City,
since it included a variety
of fantasy elements.
"The Coracle in the Forest"
Story Date: Wednesday, April 30, 2025]
Summary: Two teens go foraging for food and find something unexpected.
208 lines, Buy It Now = $104
Digby and Maerwynn Aldebourne
grew up in Lancaster until 2022, when
a heat wave killed their parents while
the children were in a programme
at the air-conditioned library.
"The Heart to Change the World"
Story Date: Sunday, May 29, 2016
Summary: A fairy godmother has an idea to clean up after the Big One.
98 lines, Buy It Now = $49
Violanira had always been an oddball.
For a fairy, she was strangely attracted
to human science and technology,
especially now that more of it
consisted of things like plastic
and aluminum instead of cold iron.
"The Universal Assent to the World"
Story Date: Saturday, September 26, 2015
Summary: Nebuly takes some of his friends to a Renaissance Faire.
355 lines, Buy It Now = $355
Double price for research.
Nebuly had convinced some
of his friends to come to
the Lyonesse Faire
just outside River City,
since it included a variety
of fantasy elements.