Bundle of Holding: The Burning Wheel

Dec. 29th, 2025 02:08 pm
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[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll


An all-new Burning Wheel Bundle presenting The Burning Wheel, the medieval-themed tabletop fantasy roleplaying game about vibrant, dynamic characters whose beliefs propel the story.

Bundle of Holding: The Burning Wheel

Rain, rain go away; come again in May

Dec. 29th, 2025 06:24 pm
[syndicated profile] sharonlee_feed

Posted by Sharon

The Long Back Yard

#
It’s being a rather difficult day. Went to bed late and unhappy; woke up about 4:30, still unhappy, whereupon the Coon Cats leapt into action — or at least, onto the bed. In less time than it takes to tell it, I had a cat on top of me, a cat to the right of me, and yes! a cat to the left of me. These guys know their job; I went right back to sleep, and didn’t wake until after 8.

It was very nice to sleep and wake up rested, but it has kinda thrown the whole day sideways.

I’ve done a little bit of writing, and will maybe do some more, later, if I don’t just decide to make a blanket fort and read. I did manage to call Dead River to find out when my next oil delivery is, because we’re coming up on another multi-day interruption in the Usual, and my oil tank is down to less than a quarter. It’s a big tank, but I don’t want to test exactly how big. The good news is that my next delivery is!

Tomorrow.

It’s looking some miserable out there in the Real World. There’s water pooled on my driveway, which will this evening become an ice rink, and it would just be better all around, if, once Winter was Declared, we just stuck to snow as our default precipitation.

Well.

I’ve done some writing, one round of PT homework, more or less decided what lunch will be, though I still need to turn on the oven. Still need to do my duty to the cats, which I guess I’ll do while the oven’s warming.

And then? We’ll see. Though honestly, that blanket fort is looking dern good.

How’s everybody doing today?

The cats agree with the blanket fort idea:

[syndicated profile] notalwaysworking_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

Read The Cups Runneth Over With Common Sense

A couple of years ago, I was attending a music festival where you had to buy tokens in order to exchange them for drinks. They would charge you an additional token for the reusable cup they would serve the drink in, and to encourage people not to throw them. You could bring back the cups to get back money equivalent to one token.

Read The Cups Runneth Over With Common Sense

Rain, rain go away; come again in May

Dec. 29th, 2025 01:24 pm
rolanni: (Default)
[personal profile] rolanni

The Long Back Yard

#
It's being a rather difficult day. Went to bed late and unhappy; woke up about 4:30, still unhappy, whereupon the Coon Cats leapt into action -- or at least, onto the bed. In less time than it takes to tell it, I had a cat on top of me, a cat to the right of me, and yes! a cat to the left of me. These guys know their job; I went right back to sleep, and didn't wake until after 8.

It was very nice to sleep and wake up rested, but it has kinda thrown the whole day sideways.

I've done a little bit of writing, and will maybe do some more, later, if I don't just decide to make a blanket fort and read. I did manage to call Dead River to find out when my next oil delivery is, because we're coming up on another multi-day interruption in the Usual, and my oil tank is down to less than a quarter. It's a big tank, but I don't want to test exactly how big. The good news is that my next delivery is!

Tomorrow.

It's looking some miserable out there in the Real World. There's water pooled on my driveway, which will this evening become an ice rink, and it would just be better all around, if, once Winter was Declared, we just stuck to snow as our default precipitation.

Well.

I've done some writing, one round of PT homework, more or less decided what lunch will be, though I still need to turn on the oven. Still need to do my duty to the cats, which I guess I'll do while the oven's warming.

And then? We'll see. Though honestly, that blanket fort is looking dern good.

How's everybody doing today?

The cats agree with the blanket fort idea:


[syndicated profile] notalwaysworking_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

Read When The One Checking You In Has Already Checked Out

Check-in took a while because the receptionist was very thorough and just generally engaging in small talk; sauna hours, restaurant locations, breakfast times, where we were from, the whole nine yards. Eventually, we made it to our room, exhausted and ready to collapse. 

Read When The One Checking You In Has Already Checked Out

Monday Blues

Dec. 29th, 2025 10:47 am
lydamorehouse: (Default)
[personal profile] lydamorehouse
 Hey, y'all, I hope you're doing well.

I'm feeling sort of low. Does anyone have a cheerful story to share? If so, I'd love to hear it!

2025.12.29

Dec. 29th, 2025 08:41 am
lsanderson: (Default)
[personal profile] lsanderson
Munich’s surfers foiled again after city thwarts effort to restart river wave
Authorities remove beam placed on Christmas Day to recreate Eisbach wave, which vanished in October
Agence France-Presse in Berlin
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/dec/28/munichs-surfers-foiled-again-as-authorities-remove-access-to-famous-river-wave

‘It would drive some people crazy’: Victoria’s French Island remains remote, and that’s how most like it
Just 70km from Melbourne yet only accessible by ferry, the island’s isolation is the source of its appeal and its biggest drawback
Stephanie Convery with photography by Penny Stephens
https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2025/dec/28/it-would-drive-some-people-crazy-victorias-french-island-remains-remote-and-thats-how-most-like-it Read more... )
[syndicated profile] notalwaysfriendly_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

Read Getting A Leg Up On The Wrestling Match

Adorable Children

One of my mom's friends came to visit when I was a toddler; he'd lost his leg years prior in a motorcycle accident and wore a prosthetic. While we were play wrestling, I hit whatever mechanism released it.
Mom's Friend: *Pauses, grabbing his now loose leg.*

Read Getting A Leg Up On The Wrestling Match

Eve-olution Gone Wrong

Dec. 29th, 2025 01:30 pm
[syndicated profile] notalwayslearning_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

Read Eve-olution Gone Wrong

I'm in a class talking about genetics. The professor gets onto the subject of genetic lineage.
Professor: "…This brings us to the topic of Mitochondrial Eve. She's a woman from whom the whole of the human race can be traced back. Just one woman in Africa!"

Read Eve-olution Gone Wrong

[syndicated profile] mpr_daily_download_feed

Johan Svendsen - Symphony No. 1: 1st movement


Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra


Bjarte Engeset, conductor


More info about today’s track: Naxos 8.553898


Courtesy of Naxos of America Inc.



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Purchase this recording


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2025 books

Dec. 28th, 2025 08:40 pm
johnridley: (Default)
[personal profile] johnridley
I'm not going to finish any more books in the next 2 days so I'm getting this done now.

2025 totals: 103 books, 34,250 pages. Significantly down from some recent years, but this year I set my goal at only 50 and didn't put any thought into reaching any goals, I just read when I felt like it.

Linked here is my 2025 recap.

Looking through the list below, what gets me rollin' is humor, relationships, and, I suppose, romance. Huh. Who'da thought?

And of course a good story.

Stand out reads for the year that I gave 5 stars:
* Chimes at Midnight (Seanan McGuire, October Daye #7)
* Even Though I Knew The End (C.L. Polk)
* When The Moon Hits Your Eye (John Scalzi)
* The Mystery at Dunvegan Castle (T.L. Huchu, Edinburgh Nights #3)
* The Legacy of Arniston House (T.L. Huchu, Edinburgh Nights #4)
* The Brightest Fell (Seanan McGuire, October Daye #11
* This Is How You Lose the Time War (Amal El-Mohtar)
* Lost in the Moment and Found (Seanan McGuire, Wayward Children #8)
* Paladin's Grace (T. Kingfisher, The Saint of Steel #1)
* The House in the Cerulean Sea (T.J. Klune, Cerulean Chronicles #1)
* The Shattering Peace (John Scalzi, Old Man's War #7)
* Paladin's Strength (T. Kingfisher, The Saint of Steel #2)
* Paladin's Hope (T. Kingfisher, The Saint of Steel #3)
* Paladin's Faith (T. Kingfisher, The Saint of Steel #4)
* A Wizard's Guide to Defensive Baking (T. Kingfisher)
* What Moves the Dead (T. Kingfisher, Sworn Soldier #1)
* Somewhere Beyond the Sea (T.J. Klune, Cerulean Chronicles #2)
* Slayers of Old (Jim C. Hines)
* Brigands and Breadknives (Travis Baldree, Legends & Lattes #2)
* A Jesuit's Guide to the Stars (Guy Consolmagno)
* The Unkindest Tide (Seanan Mcguire, October Daye #13)
catherineldf: (Default)
[personal profile] catherineldf
Okay, so apart from the horrors at the national and international level, my 2025 was defined by the following events:
  • My wife and partner of 29 years, bookbinder and conservator Jana Pullman, died in February after a 5 year struggle with dementia (the same week as my mom's birthday, which will be super fun this year).
  • My boy kitty, Shu, got diagnosed with feline diabetes requiring multiple insulin injections per day at the ripe old age of 15 in early March.
  • I was awarded a 2025 Alice B. Readers Award in March. This is an anonymous juried award for an author's body of work in sapphic fiction, nonfiction, poetry and/or drama. Previous winners have included such "lightweights" as Joanna Russ, Dorothy Allison and this year, Emma Donoghue. I was floored and thrilled and floored again. It is a lovely thing and it made my year much better.
  • In June, my friend Anne Shaw died unexpectedly (I didn't find out about it until several weeks later, for reasons I won't go into now) and I miss her a lot. Other folks who passed in 2025 who were friends/colleagues to one degree or another: bi activist and organizer Lou Hoffman; poet and WisCon/organizer.volunteer Terry Garey; and Tiptree Award/WisCon/lots of other things artist Freddie Baer.
  • In July, my IT contract ended (this was expected). But in the ensuing months of unemployment, it has become clear that between my age, the fact that I have to work remotely due to kitty care needs and changes in the job market, I am probably involuntarily retired from IT after 25 years. I have some mixed feels, but acknowledge that I was completely and utterly burned out and that, money aside, it is time for a change.
  • I started writing fiction again! And nonfiction! I had a new story up at Heather Rose Jones's LHMPodcast, "An Encounter with a Lady" and an short nonfiction piece at New Edge Sword & Sorcery Magazine, "Joanna Russ: Sword & Sorcery Pioneer?" I will have a second nonfiction piece out in New Edge in 2026, "Thula the Maid and Her Creator," date TBD. Thanks to embracing the writing sprint model, I currently have 2 short stories, a novella and the next werewolf novel in progress.
  • I am knuckling down on making Queen of Swords Press profitable enough to pay me on a considerably more regular basis, to which end, I have enrolled in the State of Minnesota's CLIMB Program for entrepreneurs and Hennepin County's Elevate program, which does small business mentoring. I am also attending a crap ton of  classes and such and am trying to spin up an editing business (hire me!). You can also check out my Ko-fi store for sundry workshops, coaching, downloadable things to read, boxes by Jana, etc. 
  • I set myself a goal of doing one new thing and one thing that I hadn't done since before lockdown in 2020 each month. This included some travel adventures: a weekend in Red Wing, MN, at a historic hotel by myself; going to Seattle Worldcon and coming back by sleeper car with friends on the train; and flying first class for the first time in my life to Readercon in Boston. I've also been visiting new to me places around the Twin Cities, like Raspberry Island for the Alebrijes show this summer, and places I keep meaning to check out again, like the new location of the Somali Museum of Minnesota and the Landmark Center in St. Paul. Lately, I've been working on making some new friends as well as connecting with my old ones.
  • I continued with my weekly online movement and isolation dance/exercise class with local Middle Eastern Dance maven, Cassandra Shore (apparently, I can now "Shimmy Like Your Sister Kate" at a very basic level). I found a massage therapist I really like. Apart from ongoing pain issues and the occasional migraine, I'm pretty healthy.
  • I'm ending this year with some hopeful financial news, which is lovely. So overall, a very mixed bag of year from devastating to stupendous and back again.
Next up, publishing news!

Liaden Read Along

Dec. 29th, 2025 12:09 am
[syndicated profile] sharonlee_feed

Posted by Sharon

For those interested in the Liaden read-along, commentary on the first two chapters is now live, here.

The intro page is here

Please accept this in the spirit of a first attempt, while we work together toward a format that’s fun for everybody involved.

To be perfectly honest, I’m reading a lot faster than this and I want to read at my usual rate, as if (as close to “as if” as it’s possible for me to be) I’m reading a book for enjoyment. I’m making some notes, but not very detailed ones. So! the chapter-by-chapter approach may not work for me, which ultimately means that it won’t work for you.

I would therefore appreciate input on what would be most fun for participants who are not me.

Thanks for your help — and enjoy!

jsburbidge: (Default)
[personal profile] jsburbidge
 This is, in a way, an answer to The Dunciad.
 
In a way, Pope's judgement in that last volley in the Querelle des Anciens et Modernes is inerrant: he's correct in seeing the new world of Theobald and Bentley as a rejection of what had been, until that point, the agreed-on values of culture and civilization. In place of a reading of Attic and Augustan texts as a guide to a baseline for culture, we have instead
 
To sound or sink in cano, O or A,
Or give up Cicero to C or K.
Let Freind affect to speak as Terence spoke,
And Alsop never but like Horace joke:
For me, what Virgil, Pliny may deny,
Manilius or Solinus shall supply:
For Attic Phrase in Plato let them seek,
I poach in Suidas for unlicens'd Greek.
In ancient sense if any needs will deal,
Be sure I give them fragments, not a meal...
 
For Pope, Theobald represents the same model as applied to modern culture; a reduction to meaningless details.
 
Yet in a very real way Pope takes a stand on a hill with a weak foundation. He takes it for granted that the key to effective reading is the application of innate good taste. As a corollary, he rejects the need for expertise to determine issues which are no longer (or perhaps never were) obvious.
 
Theobald introduces to the study of Shakespeare an attention to details of the past which has started to be applied to classical authors. In doing so he not only is part of an ongoing assimilation of Shakespeare to the status of a classical author, but a key player in a transition where scholarship tries to work with the works of the past on their own terms. In the future to which Theobald points are the editions of (for example) Malone. (It really does matter how we pronounce the poetry we read if we want to understand how the author meant his effects. Recovering the digamma does affect our understanding of Homeric scansion. And understanding Shakespeare in terms of his own time shifts him from a "natural" poet whose roughnesses are imperfections to be elided away by emendation to an accomplished writer on his own terms whose linguistic frame was different from that of the 18th Century.)
 
The argument of the book, well supported, is that Theobald was not a dunce, and deserves a refurbishment of his reputation.

Apologies

Dec. 28th, 2025 07:04 pm
rolanni: (Default)
[personal profile] rolanni

Press of business yesterday meant that I forgot to update y'all on the ever-fascinating details of my life.  I now make amends.  Thank you for your patience.

What went before

SATURDAY
Wakened early by Tali cursing the universe and the gods who had fashioned it.

Got up to find Rookie in the hall with a mouthful of orange fur, and Tali sitting on the edge of the dining room table (yes, yes, where No Cat is allowed, and it's possibly worth noting that Rook did not follow her up there, so at least somebody pays attention to the treaty). Firefly was squinched under the standup desk in my office.

So! I don't know exactly what the disagreement was about. Possibly Tali told Rook he had a stinky butt -- and if so, she was not wrong. So, we did some cat clean up, and then I took a shower to finish waking up and here we are.

Kettle's on, and Happy Lite also.

And how's your morning going?
#
It says here that I've been playing Finch for 500 days.

. . .not sure how I feel about that, actually. . .
#
Wrote about 800 words, WIP currently weighing in the vicinity of 115,790. Stopping to do PT homework, one's duty the cats, and um. I should eat something. I guess. Maybe a piece of leftover ham onna leftover biscuit. That's lunch, ain't it?
#
Do I look healthy to you?

Time to talk to the virtual-visit nurse.


#
SUNDAY

The Long Back Yard


#
Well. 2:30, hey?

I got Involved. Wrote +/-1,335 words, did some tinking of former words. The WIP entire now weighing in at +/-117,180. I think I have eight more scenes to write.

My Plan is to write those eight scenes, and then put out a call for Beta Readers. NOTE: This is not that call. I'll tell you when.

In between new words, I bought myself some on-sale alpaca socks form a local alpaca farm, and did a couple loads of laundry. I really thought I'd done laundry last week, but -- maybe not. Whatever.

The cats were with me all day -- that would be from 8:15 am until just a couple minutes ago. In fact, they're still in Steve's office, because once you get a good sleeping place primed, you just don't walk away from it.

Though it be late, I have dinner/lunch/whatever on the stove -- leftover chicken in gravy, peas, and mashed potatoes. I may actually have a glass of wine with that, because I am done writing for the day. (Breakfast, for those keeping score was oatmeal with almond butter and chocolate chips mixed in. Yes, again. I'm as baffled as you are.)

What else? Oh. I'm doing an Author Event at the Waterville Library on February 21, so I may start giving some thought as to what I'll be wanting to talk about. I will be reading from Diviner's Bow, and taking questions, along with the talking.

So! How's everybody doing this afternoon?


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