My Mother's Holiday Message

Jan. 4th, 2026 09:55 pm
labingi: (Default)
[personal profile] labingi
A bit late, I wanted to share my mother's holiday letter (with her permission):

My Year of Not-doing

by Patricia Spicer

In 2025, while friends and relatives were busy with many accomplishments, I did NOT do several things:

My house was painted, but not by me. A painter did it.

A tiny home was installed on my property in Glen Ellen, but I did not do it. My remarkable tenant, Juan Sanchez, did it.

A new gate was added to my front porch railing, but I did not do it. A carpenter did it.

You can see how much I did NOT do. And there was much more.

But I did make two trips to Iceland, one with Rick Steves and one through the remarkable pictures of my cousin Holly, who also took me to all the film sites for the Lord of the Rings in New Zealand. How beautiful and what an easy way to travel!

Yes, Arwen and I did take one actual trip to Glen Ellen in June, very brief, due to my painful back injury. Much better now.

I look forward to another year of Not-doing, when I expect to xeriscape my front yard, but I will let the landscaper do it.

New Years Book Meme

Jan. 4th, 2026 08:27 pm
muccamukk: A figure on a dune holding a lamp. Text: "Your word is a lamp." (Christian: Your Word)
[personal profile] muccamukk
From [personal profile] sanguinity:

  1. Grab the nearest book.
  2. Turn to page 126
  3. The 6th full sentence is your life in 2026.

Nearest book is Glitter Blessed: Already Whole, Already Holy edited by Sean Neil-Barron, but it doesn't have 126 pages.

Next nearest book is A Beautiful Year: 52 Meditations on Faith, Wisdom, and Perseverance by Diana Butler Bass, which gives me:

Mark beckons us to a radical Lenten faith—to trust in rainbows even when covered with ash.

Which, given how the year is looking to shape up, is probably accurate. Hopefully accurate?

New Year's Book Prediction Meme

Jan. 5th, 2026 02:38 pm
vass: a jar of Vegemite (Happy Little Vegemite)
[personal profile] vass
via [personal profile] sanguinity

  1. Grab the nearest book.
  2. Turn to page 126
  3. The 6th full sentence is your life in 2026.


Immortalized in ballads, they became a central part of the mythology of the Australian past.

Fandom Snowflake, Challenge #2

Jan. 4th, 2026 08:01 pm
the_wanlorn: The Doubtful Quest with a pride flag-colored background (Default)
[personal profile] the_wanlorn
Challenge #2: Pets of Fandom

Loosely defined! Post about your pets, pets from your canon, anything you want!


Forgot to do this yesterday (Saturday) because I was at the emergency vet with Gremlin Steve! As one does! He's """""""""fine""""""""" in that the emergency vet said that x-rays can wait until Monday at my regular vet, he is not fine in that he's been limping for a month, month and a half, and the (regular) vet thought it was because of a split toenail that then split further (a valid conclusion) but now he has a lump of swelling on his wrist joint. So into the emergency vet we went.

The thing is, the e-vet decided it was nbd based on Grem letting him move his leg and flex the joint, and how he didn't have a temp. Grem will not let me even touch his leg so like clearly it hurts which to me says something is up. At least they sent me home with pain meds for him?

Ugh. Anyway. I have more pets but Grem is my problem (expensive) child.

two log cabins with snow on the roofs in a wintery forest the text snowflake challenge january 1 - 31 in white cursive text

(no subject)

Jan. 4th, 2026 07:31 pm
redbird: closeup of me drinking tea, in a friend's kitchen (Default)
[personal profile] redbird
The skin on the tips of my fingers has been splitting again (as it does in winter even if I try to use enough lotion) and I discovered yesterday evening that my left middle finger and thumb both hurt to touch right now, which makes lifting even light-weight things painful or difficult. Fortunately I don't live alone, and Adrian ct up my salmon for me.

Today has been if anything worse. Mousing Ok, a few tasks are OK, I managed several PT exercises but it has been a hard day. Typing, including comments, is particularly bad.
rachelmanija: (Books: old)
[personal profile] rachelmanija


I picked up this 1969 novel at a library book sale based on its premise. I had never heard of the author. One of the great pleasures of reading, at least for me, is trying random old books I've never heard of. In addition to the possibility that they might be good, they're also an interesting window into other times. (Often, alas, extremely racist and sexist times.)

Sixteen people, eight women and eight men, who were on a flight to London, wake up in plastic boxes on a short strip of road with a hotel, a grocery store, and two cars without engines. Everything else is a forest. Naturally, most of the women scream, faint, and cry, while most of the men randomly fight each other (!), or run around yelling. Our hero does this:

Russell Grahame, feeling oddly detached from the whole absurd carnival, ran his left hand mechanically and repeatedly through his hair in the characteristic manner that had earned him the sobriquet Brainstroker among his few friends in the House of Commons.

He then goes to the hotel, finds the bar, and has a drink. Everyone else eventually follows him, and he fixes them all drinks. They are a semi-random set of passengers, including two husband and wife couples, plus three young female domestic science students, one Indian, and one West Indian girl improbably named Selene Bergere. I have no idea why that name is improbable, but it's remarked on frequently as unlikely and eventually turns out to not be her real name (but everyone goes on calling her Selene, as she prefers it.) They can all understand each other despite speaking different languages.

Russell takes charge and appoints himself group leader. They find food (and cigarettes) at the market, select hotel rooms, and then the husband-and-wife physics teachers point out that 1) the constellations are not Earth's, 2) gravity is only 2/3rds Earth's and they can all jump six feet in the air! Astonishing that none of the others noticed before. I personally would have immediately run outside and fulfilled my lifelong dream of being able to do weightless leaping. Sadly none of them do this and the low gravity is never mentioned again.

They theorize that possibly they've been kidnapped by aliens, maybe for a zoo or experiment, and the gender balance means they're supposed to breed. Russell approvingly notes that many of the single people pair up immediately, and three of them threesome-up. This is like six hours after they arrived!

On the second night, one of the three female domestic science students kills herself because she feels unable to cope. The next day, a party goes exploring (Russell reluctantly allows women to take part as the Russian woman journalist reminds him that women are different from men but have their own strength) and one of the men falls in a spiked pit and dies. Good going, Russell! Three days and you've already lost one-eighth of your party!

All the supplies they take are replenished, and one of the men spies on the market and sees metal spiders adding more cartons of cigarettes. He freaks out and tries to kill himself.

I feel like a random selection of sixteen people ought to be slightly less suicidal, even under pressure. In fact probably especially under a sort of pressure in which everyone has quite nice food and shelter, and they seem perfectly safe as long as they don't explore the forest.

One of the guys tries to capture a spider robot, but gets tangled up in the wire he used as a trap and dragged to death. Again, this group is really not the best at survival.

We randomly get some diary entries from a gay guy who's sad that no one else is gay. He confesses to Russell that he's gay and Russell, in definitely his best moment, just says, "Wow, that must be really hard for you to not have any sexual partners here." Those are the only diary entries we get, and none of this ever comes up again.

They soon find that there are three other groups. One is a kind of feudal warrior people from a world that isn't earth where they ride and live off deer-horse creatures. Another is Stone Age people, who dug the spiked pits to hunt for food. The third are fairies. The language spell allows them all to communicate, except no one can speak to the fairies as they just appear for an instant then vanish. The non-fairy groups confirm that they were also vanished from where they come from.

Russell and his now-girlfriend Anna the Russian journalist theorize that the fairies are the ones who kidnapped them. They and a Stone Age guy set out to find the fairies...

And then chickens save the day! )

So, was this a good book? Not really. Did anyone edit it? Doubtful. Did it have some interesting ideas and a good twist? Yes. Did I enjoy the hour and a half I spent reading it? Also yes. Would I ever re-read it? No. Do I recommend it? Only if you happen to also find it at a library book sale.

I am now 2 for 2 in reviewing every full length book I read in 2026! (I have not yet gotten to one manga, Night of the Living Cat # 1, and six single-issue comics, three each of Roots of Madness and They're All Terrible.) I think doing so will be good for my mental health and possibly also yours, considering what I and you could be doing on the internet instead of reading books and writing or reading book reviews.

Can I continue this streak??? Are you enjoying it?

Smith and Tolkien and Dunsany

Jan. 4th, 2026 12:58 pm
calimac: (Default)
[personal profile] calimac
A while ago I saw a notice that a day's conference on the works of Clark Ashton Smith was being held in January. I've never read much of Smith's fiction, though I've collected several books of it, and since attendance was limited I decided to sign up: I might learn something, if I was able to go. It's next weekend, and it looks as if I can. It's in Auburn, the Sierra foothills town where Smith lived most of his life, about 3 hours drive from here.

The organizers are asking each of their attendees to name their favorite Smith story. I never really thought in terms of having a favorite Smith story, but I decided on the one with a contemporary setting - a rarity for Smith, who usually preferred lost continents or decadent future ones - whose first line reads "I have seldom been able to resist the allurement of a bookstore." I can identify with that.

Concurrently, in the context of a Zoom meeting commemorating Tolkien's birthday, which was yesterday, we were asked for favorite moments from the legendarium, and I chose for a favorite single line one of Treebeard's from The Lord of the Rings: "I am not very, hm, bendable." I can identify with that one too, and I quote it often.

Renewing and extending my acquaintance with Smith, I find that I like him to the extent that he resembles Dunsany, which he occasionally does. (I have similar feelings about Lovecraft.) Smith's language is more ornate than Dunsany's, which is already ornate enough; and he's more caustic than Dunsany, who is already caustic enough. His plots don't quite land with Dunsany's punch. But despite Smith's esoteric vocabulary, I find his storytelling to be gratifyingly clear: I always understand where I am and what's going on, not true of many of today's highly-touted fantasy authors. My biggest problem with Smith is that, after a few impressive repetitions, I get a little wearied of his favorite recurrent plot, which is of greedy or power-mad people getting their due comeuppance in a truly nasty supernatural manner.

Though I can think of one greedy and power-mad person today who really deserves a due comeuppance in a truly nasty supernatural manner. O for a Clark Ashton Smith to chronicle it.

current indoor temperature: 13.7C

Jan. 4th, 2026 07:05 pm
wychwood: Kitty was busy remembering to put on all her clothes (unlike Emma) (X-Men - Kitty clothes)
[personal profile] wychwood
I moved all the shelves around in the spare CD rack and have turned it into a dedicated shrine to Sir David Attenborough *g*. My entire Attenborough DVD collection in one place, except for my Christmas present of "Asia" (currently by my bed because I'm watching it).

It snowed on Thursday night; about a centimetre lying everywhere when I went out at half six on Friday morning, and about half of that had melted by the time I left the pool to go up to the office, but most of that is still lying now. I had very little trouble getting in, but it sounds like most of my colleagues struggled; my oldest colleague broke her shoulder very badly ice-skating a few years ago (was off work for months) and she's really nervous about ice now - she'd clearly freaked herself out quite badly by the time she got in on Friday. I did look at the trampled and half-melted station car park on my way home and think "this is going to be lethal once it refreezes" but the round trip to church on Saturday was fine. And the bus driver saw me coming and waited as I "ran" for the bus (half the pavement was clear, but I was tiptoeing very carefully over the other half...).

It's mostly stayed below freezing, occasional spikes up to 1 or 2C. And more snow due tonight, although the forecast is no longer saying "bits of snow every day for the next week", and it's going to get warm enough (four or five whole degrees!!!) that it ought to melt by midweek.

First day back at work was noisier than I expected; there were half-a-dozen people in on my team, although we were the only ones on the whole floor! The one manager who was in brought a giant tin of fancy M&S biscuits, on the basis that if we all had to be in we deserved something nice. Monday will be back to full normality, though. I'm consoling myself with the fact that I have a day off later this month; I'm going to a Thursday night concert (Mahler 1), and decided to treat myself to not having to get up at six the next morning!

Done Since 2025-12-28

Jan. 4th, 2026 07:56 pm
mdlbear: blue fractal bear with text "since 2002" (Default)
[personal profile] mdlbear

Not a great week. It starts with my mother's 105th birthday -- she died a little before her 100th -- and ends with my 50th wedding anniversary -- the last one Colleen was alive for was our 45th.

The New Year's Eve/Day Zoom filksing was a high point -- I sang 9 songs. It went on for almost another day after I left. R was online too, so I got to hear him sing a little; we decided that this could count as our holiday video chat if we didn't get arouond to an official one. OTOH because I don't plan well and don't multitask at all, there were undoubtedly a number of things that should have been done before year's end that weren't.

In the category of things that ought to be done soon, see this Post by @rahaeli.bsky.social — Bluesky " I strongly suspect, from all these signals, that Sberbank is preparing to either sell the outside-Russia part of LJ if they can find a buyer, or shut it down if they can't. " -- so back up everything you care about from LJ to DW, if you haven't already, or import it all into DW. I did that several years ago.

As for links... Maduro 'captured and flown out' of Venezuela, Trump says -- it's been suggested that Venezuela should return the favor. How We Came To Know Earth | Quanta Magazine's special issue on climate, including A Biography of Earth Across the Age of Animals.

Notes & links, as usual )

Photo cross-post

Jan. 4th, 2026 12:50 pm
andrewducker: (Default)
[personal profile] andrewducker


It snowed today, just a little bit. But it was totally worth taking the children out for a walk round the pond and up the hill to be in it.
Original is here on Pixelfed.scot.

andrewducker: (sheldon)
[personal profile] andrewducker
If you want a picture of the future, imagine me sitting on the sofa trying to read a book with Sophia on my left asking for help with Stardew Valley and Gideon on my right asking for help with Lego Star Wars - for ever.
runpunkrun: combat boot, pizza, camo pants = punk  (punk rock girl)
[personal profile] runpunkrun
Photograph of a young Asian girl using a manual typewriter in an office and looking very serious as she stares straight into the camera. Her black hair is slicked into a low ponytail and her round glasses are so big they extend past her face. She's wearing a shirt and tie and an adult-sized yellow blazer that fits her like a dress, almost as if she has been shrunk. Text, in a typewriter font: Crack Treated Seriously, at Fancake.
[community profile] fancake's first theme of the year is Crack Treated Seriously! We've already got recs in The Magnus Archives, Disco Elysium/Death Note, Our Flag Means Death, Bungou Stray Dogs, and Star Wars.

Over at the comm, [personal profile] full_metal_ox gave us a delightful glimpse at the character in the banner, writing:
The model has the distinct air of a little kid whose obsessions are the War of 1812 and raccoons, settling in to compose her Magnum Opus alternate history: what if the War of 1812 had been fought by raccoons?

(The history and biology will draw upon rigorous research—including thick ponderous tomes from the Grownup Section, interviews with real live zoologists and re-enactors, and get thee behind me, ChatGPT, thou Devil's Easy Button!—with the result that the text will be as footnote-riddled as Discworld. Writing is Serious Business, for which she dons her Official Serious Writing Jacket—and what other color could it be? Yellow is the hue of intellect, as well as yet another of her Special Interests.)

If you have any questions about this theme, or the comm, come talk to me!

The Hive Mind in Pluribus

Jan. 4th, 2026 09:09 am
labingi: (Default)
[personal profile] labingi
I have been enjoying Jessie Gender’s reviews of Pluribus. I appreciate her perspectives and agree on many points but also had some disagreement with points raised in her review of the finale. Namely, I think her use of the word “hegemony” is sometimes inaccurate or, at least, imprecise, and I am not prepared, as she is, to definitively judge the hive mind as “bad.”



Spoilers below for season 1 of PluribusRead more... )

Books read 2025

Jan. 4th, 2026 04:37 pm
strange_complex: (Tonino reading)
[personal profile] strange_complex
I know I don't post much here any more, but here at least is a list of all the books I read in 2025:

1. David Bramwell (2023), The Sing-Along-a-Wicker-Man Scrapbook
2. Peter Haining, ed. (1974) Christopher Lee's New Chamber of Horrors, hard-back edition
3. P. N. Elrod, ed. (2001) Dracula in London
4. Stephenie Meyer (2005), Twilight
5. Anne Rice (1976), Interview with the Vampire
6. Jane Austen (1817), Northanger Abbey
7. Essie Fox (2025), Dangerous
8. Oscar de Muriel (2017), A Mask of Shadows
9. Robert Simpson (2021), The Willing Fool: the spectacle of The Wicker Man
10. Robin Hardy and Anthony Shaffer (1978), The Wicker Man (novelisation of the film)
11. Alden McWilliams, Otto Binder and Craig Tennis (1975), The Illustrated Dracula
12. Francis K. Young (2023) Shades of Rome: Ghostly Tales of Roman Britain
13. Anthony Williams and Bram Stoker (2023), Dracula (pop-up book)
14. Ann Radcliffe (1794), The Mysteries of Udolpho

Pictures of and fuller comments on each can be found under this cut )

Dear Candy Hearts Creator 2026

Jan. 4th, 2026 10:49 am
scioscribe: (Default)
[personal profile] scioscribe
Thank you so much for creating something for me! I'd be delighted to receive anything for any of these requests.

I have gifts enabled, and treats are very welcome! All requests this year are for fic.

I'm [archiveofourown.org profile] scioscribe on AO3 and [tumblr.com profile] scioscribe on Tumblr.

Likes )

General Sex Likes/Kinks )

DNW )

Gentleman Jim )

Killer Klowns from Outer Space )

Knives Out )

Ladyhawke )

Our Flag Means Death )

Pluribus )

Psych )

Twin Peaks )

Book Awards 2025

Jan. 4th, 2026 09:59 am
kay_brooke: A stack of old books (books)
[personal profile] kay_brooke
This is the best I can do.

Top Five Favorite Fiction Books of 2025 - no spoilers )

Best Nonfiction Book of 2025:
Indigenous Continent: The Epic Contest for North America by Pekka Hämäläinen. Very dry and academic and not for everyone, but I learned so much reading this that I had never known before, and the rigor really put it above all the pop science and history nonfiction I read this year. I appreciated how comprehensive a history this was while still delving into the details.

Best Series I Started in 2025:
The Justice of Kings by Richard Swan. I know I have The Tainted Cup above as a five star read as well as the start of a series, but a) I don't want to repeat books, and b) this book starts off what looks like a traditional trilogy while Bennett's series seems like it's going to be more of a case where each book mostly stands alone. This is good, solid epic fantasy with a world and characters that I want to know more about. I actually only rated this 3.5 stars(!), but the ending left me excited to move on to find out what's going to happen.

Best Re-Read of 2025:
Wizard and Glass by Stephen King. Dark Tower is still my favorite series.

Bottom Five Least Favorite Fiction Books of 2025 - no spoilers )

Worst Nonfiction Book of 2025:
Quackery: A Brief History of the Worst Ways to Cure Everything by Lydia Kang and Nate Pedersen. I actually read their second book first, which was a solid three stars, so I decided to give this one a try. It had everything annoying that made me rate the second book only three stars, only ramped up to intolerable levels. It doesn't even reach the level of a pop science book; it's too shallow even for that. I think the language is supposed to be relatable to laypeople, but it's so casual and dumbed down that it felt insulting to read. The constant quips were awkward and annoying. I learned nothing from this book because there's zero substance.