Animal Crossing: New Horizons
Jan. 28th, 2026 08:28 pmThey've added a hotel which means you can have more visitors to your island every day, and they're all wandering around instead of staying in one spot like visitors who are at the campsite do. The only thing that I'm disappointed about is that there doesn't appear to be any way to get hotel visitors to move to your island like with campsite visitors, which made me very sad when Raymond showed up a few days ago. That said, I've discovered that former residents of your island remember you and talk about coming back to their old home for a visit, which is amazing. I'd forgotten that a few of them even used to live on my island until I saw them again.
I've currently put over 1000 hours into this game, which I quite honestly find hilarious. The four Dragon Age games beat that, as I've put around 1500 hours into them, but the four Mass Effect games are only around 980 hours and Baldur's Gate 3 is only around 820 hours. So far, at least. The way I'm going, it may be in the 900s at least before my birthday next month.
Considering this was my very first Animal Crossing game, I really can't believe that it's second only to Dragon Age when it comes to my hours played. I only bought it because one of the players in my Friday night D&D game made an impassioned argument to convince us all to get it so that we could play together during the early days of the pandemic. Yet here I am, almost six years later, still playing it regularly.
(no subject)
Jan. 28th, 2026 08:03 pmUnfortunately, the sequel, Anne of Avonlea feels like diminishing returns - trying to capture the magic of the original with the same kinds of wacky hijinks while also having the character grow up, and it doesn't quite work. Ditto for Anne of the Island and Anne of Windy Poplars.
Basically, the more important Gilbert Blythe becomes to the narrative, the less I enjoy the books. I do not like Gilbert - I think Anne is absolutely right to crack the slate over his head - and I resent the way the narrative keeps pushing them together in less and less subtle ways as the series progresses. Maybe I would like him more if he was an actual character, but he mostly just hovers around on the edges for a couple books, and then she decides to marry him, which does not feel like romance to me.
After learning more about LM Montgomery's life, it's very clear that certain bits of the books are autobiographical, and also she is working out some things about her marriage - my distinct impression is that she is keenly aware that marriage is the key decision in a woman's life that shapes everything after that, and wants to give her heroine everything she didn't get, but at the same time, Anne's strongest relationships are with her friends and with older women, so it just feels hollow and more than a little comphet. I kind of wish Montgomery had let Anne remain unmarried and living with other women (and Windy Poplars is her getting one more book out of this premise before the actual marriage) but I don't think Montgomery or her contemporary readers would have considered that to be a "happy" ending. But I also suspect this tension is why Gilbert feels so perfunctory and ineffectual as a romantic lead, and why Montgomery goes to great pains to keep him out of the narrative. This won't last - the next book is Anne's House of Dreams about her married life - but even then, I'm skeptical that she can make Gilbert interesting enough to make him a main focus.
Anyway, I have been learning a lot about Prince Edward Island, since one of Montgomery's greatest strengths are her landscape descriptions. In an ironic twist, the book has become one of its major industries. It sounds like an interesting place to visit in the summer and early fall, but I would not be happy living there.
It's also a good thing I didn't read these books earlier, because I would have enjoyed the first one, but the others would have annoyed me in the same ways that Little Women and the Little House books annoyed me re: the options available for female characters.
I also read The Blue Castle, a later adult romance by the same author, which followed the classic formula of setting up various tropes and symbolism at the beginning for payoff by the end. I'm not the target audience, but the structure is sound.
2026.01.28
Jan. 28th, 2026 07:19 pm“Gov. Tim Walz said that President Donald Trump pledged to “do things differently” on the federal immigration surge during a 10-minute Monday morning call,” according to MPR News. Walz also said “Trump agreed to consider reducing the number of immigration enforcement agents in the Twin Cities and ensure the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension could conduct independent investigations into the killings of [Alex] Pretti and Renee Macklin Good.” Via MinnPost
https://www.mprnews.org/story/2026/01/26/gov-tim-walzs-first-sit-down-interview-since-dropping-out-of-2026-race
“Border czar” Tom Homan is taking over ICE operations in Minnesota at President Donald Trump’s behest. The 64 year old “became the face of Trump’s immigration policy when the president began his second term. Homan, a staunch supporter of Trump, was on record advocating for deporting illegal immigrants and opposing sanctuary-city policies,” according to the Minnesota Star Tribune. Homan was investigated for allegedly accepting a $50,000 bribe from undercover agents posing as businessmen during an FBI operation; the Department of Justice shut the investigation down, citing insufficient evidence. Via MinnPost
https://www.startribune.com/tom-homan-is-coming-to-minneapolis-to-lead-ice-who-is-he/601571692?utm_source=gift
Two women are facing federal charges “after allegedly biting the fingers of federal agents during the protests that followed the shooting of Alex Pretti in Minneapolis on Saturday,” KARE11 reports. “Claire Feng and Emily Baierl are each charged with assaulting and interfering with a federal law enforcement officer in violation of U.S. codes.” Via MinnPost
https://www.kare11.com/article/news/local/ice-in-minnesota/federal-charges-filed-against-2-women-accused-of-biting-federal-agents-fingers/89-ca186edd-5ebb-40ad-8565-470b5acb33d6
A federal judge has ruled that “any removal or transfer of 5-year-old Liam Conejo Ramos and his father, Adrian Alexander Conejo Arias, is on hold while a court case proceeds,” PBS reports. “The father and son are now at family detention facility in Dilley, Texas, near San Antonio.” Via MinnPost
https://www.pbs.org/newshour/politics/judge-issues-temporary-order-barring-removal-of-5-year-old-and-father-detained-in-minnesota ( Read more... )</cut?
Be a Goldfish WEEK 4
Jan. 28th, 2026 08:05 pmKitchen Raktajino Recipe
*1/4 tsp dried minced ginger (added to the grounds before brewing)
*1/4 tsp roasted garlic powder
*2 drops liquid smoke
*1/2 tsp molasses
*add sweetener and half & half as desired
Kitchen Raktajino-lite
*stir in some molasses
*2 drops liquid smoke
*make it fancy with a few shakes of roasted garlic powder
Beautiful collage by

[image description: Three photographs of a mug of raktajino and ingredients, surrounded by quotes. From top to bottom: 1. "You're the second person to order that today. What is it?" 2. That's actually surprisingly delicious. 3. You really can put garlic in anything. 4. I tried it without molasses first, and it wasn't quite weird enough. The molasses helped. 5. RAKTAJINO 6. Still not sure I can taste the liquid smoke. 7. "Coffee that's forged in battle and sweetened with the blood of my enemies."]
The Full Adventure:
*Background, Preparation, & Day 1
*Day 2
*Day 3 (with full recipe)
*Day 4 (lite recipe) & collage
第五年第十九天
Jan. 29th, 2026 09:00 am手 part 6
扶, to support; 批, to criticize; 找, to look for ( pinyin )
https://www.mdbg.net/chinese/dictionary?cdqrad=64
词汇
抽, to pick out; 抽奖, lottery; 抽烟, smoking ( pinyin )
https://mandarinbean.com/new-hsk-4-word-list/
Guardian:
我先扶你回去来, I'll help you get home
抽时间去看一下你的父亲, make some time to go and see your father
Me:
如果找不到的话,买新一个就好。
她讨厌抽烟的男人。
Hel to Ho.
Jan. 28th, 2026 11:13 pmI know “odd British pronunciations” is a hoary old trope, and we’ve had posts about it before, but I was struck when looking something up in my trusty BBC Pronouncing Dictionary of British Names by the density of names with unpredictable pronunciations on the spread pp. 70-71. Many of them, of course, are easy enough, e.g. Heriot [ˈherɪət] (hérriot), but around half seemed worth reproducing here:
Helwick Shoals and lightship [ˈhelɪk] (héllick)
Hely, f.n. [ˈhilɪ] (heeli)
Helyer, f.n. [ˈhelɪər] (hélli-er)
Heman, f.n. [ˈhimən] (heeman)
Heming, f.n. [ˈhemɪŋ] (hémming)
Hemingbrough [ˈhemɪŋbrʌf] (hémming-bruff)
Hemmerde, f.n. [ˈhemərdɪ] (hémmerdi)
Hene [ˈhinɪ] (heeni)
Heneage, f.n. [ˈhenɪdʒ] (hénnij) Appropriate also for the Barony of ~.
Henebery [ˈhenɪbərɪ] (hénneberi)
Heneghan, f.n. [ˈhenɪgən] (hénnegan)
Heneglwys [henˈegluɪs] (henégloo-iss)
Heneker, fm. [ˈhenɪkər] (hénneker)
Henig, f.n. [ˈhenɪg] (hénnig)
Henlere, f.n. [ˈhenlɪər] (hénleer)
Henriques, f.n. (henˈrikɪz] (henreekez)
Hepburn, f.n. [ˈheb3rn] (hébburn); [ˈhebərn] (hébbŭrn)
Hepburn [ˈheb3rn] (hébbŭrn)
Heppell, f.n. [ˈhepl] (heppl)
Hereford [ˈherɪfərd] (hérreferd) Appropriate also for Viscount ~.
Hergest Ridge [ˈhargɪst] (haargest)
Herklots, f.n. [ˈh3rklɒts] (hérklots)
Herkness, f.n. [ˈharknɪs] (haarkness)
Hermges, f.n. [ˈh3rmdʒiz] (hérmjeez)
Herries, Baron [ˈherɪs] (hérriss)
Herstmonceux, also spelt Hurstmonceux, Hurstmonceaux [ˌh3rstmənˈsju] (herstmo6n-séw); [ˌh3rstmənˈsu] (herst-mon-soo)
Hertford [ˈharfərd] (haarford) Appropriate also for the Marquess of ~.
Hertingfordbury [ˈhartɪŋfərdberɪ] (haartingfordberri)
Hervey, f.n. [ˈharvɪ] (haarvi)
Herwald, f.n. [ˈh3rwəld] (hérwald)
Heseltine, f.n. [ˈhesltain] (héssltin) Also the pronunciation of Peter Warlock, composer, for his nom-de-plume of Philip ~.
Heselton, f.n. [ˈhesltən] (hésslton)
Hesilrige, f.n. [ˈhezɪlrɪdʒ] (hézzilrij)
Hesleden [ˈhesldən] (hésslden)
Hesmondhalgh, f.n. [ˈhezməndhælʃ] (hézmənd-halsh) ; [ˈhezməndhɔ] (hézmond-haw)
Hespe, f.n. [hesp] (hessp)
Hessé, f.n. [ˈhesɪ] (héssi)
Hessle [ˈhezl] (hezzl)
Hethel [ˈhiθl] (heethl) ; [ˈheθl] (hethl)
Heugh, f.n. [hju] (hew)
Heugh, Northumberland [hjuf] (hewf)
Hever [ˈhivər] (heever)
Hewardine, f.n. [ˈhjuərdin] (héw-ardeen)
Heyrod [ˈherəd] (hérred)
Heysham [ˈhiʃəm] (hee-sham)
Heyshott [ˈheɪʃɒt] (hay-shot)
Heythrop [ˈhiθrəp] (heethrop) Appropriate also for the ~ Hunt.
Hibaldstow [ˈhɪblstoʊ] (hibblsto)
High Legh [ˈhaɪ ˈli] (hi lee)
High Wych [ˈhaɪ ˈwaɪtʃ] (hi witch)
High Wycombe [ˈhaɪ ˈwɪkəm] (hi wickem)
Higham, f.n. [ˈhaɪəm] (hi-am)
Higham, East Suffolk, West Suffolk [ˈhaɪəm] (hi-em); [ˈhɪgəm] (higgam)
Higham, Yorks. [ˈhaɪəm] (hi-em); [ˈhɪkəm] (hickam)
Hinchingbrooke, Viscountcy of [ˈhɪnʃɪŋ-brʊk] (hinshing-brook)
Hindolveston, also spelt Hindolvestone [ˈhɪndlˈvestən] (hindlvéston); [ˈhilvistən]
(hilvéston)
Hindsley, f.n. [ˈhaɪndzlɪ] (hindzli)
Hinwick [ˈhɪnɪk] (hinnick)
Hiorns, f.n. [ˈhaɪərnz] (hi-ornz)
Hippisley, f.n. [ˈhɪpslɪ] (hipsli)
Hiron, f.n. [ˈhaɪərɒn] (hiron)
Hirwaun, also spelt Hirwain [ˈhɪərwaɪn] (heerwin); [ˈh3rwɪn] (hirwin)
Hoathly, East and West [hoʊθˈlaɪ] (hoth-li)
Hodder & Stoughton, publishers [ˈhɒdər ənd ˈstautən] (hodder and stowton)
Hodghton, f.n. [ˈhɒdʒten] (hojton)
Hoenes, f.n. [ˈhoʊnes] (honess)
Hogarth, fm. [ˈhoʊgarθ] (hogaarth); [ˈhɒgərt] (hoggart) The first is traditional for William ~, painter and engraver. The second is usual in Cumberland and Westmorland.
Hoggan, f.n. [ˈhɒgən] (hoggan)
Hoggard, f.n. [ˈhɒgard] (hoggaard)
Hoggarth, f.n. [ˈhɒgərt] (hoggart)
Hogh, f.n. [hoʊ] (ho)
Hoghton, f.n. [ˈhɔtən] (hawton)
Boy, that was a lot more work than I expected — I think I’ve got the bracketed pronunciations right, but the respelled ones in parens are catch-as-catch-can: I haven’t tried to reproduce the breves and what have you. I trust you’ll get the idea.
CRUD Challenge: A Shriek in the Night
Jan. 28th, 2026 04:15 pmThis movie delivers on the title right after the credits as wealthy philanthropist Adam Harker (uncredited) plunges screaming to his death from the skyscraper apartment building he lived in. The obvious assumption is that he fell from the balcony of his penthouse. So it's there that Police Inspector Russell (Purnell Pratt) and his meek assistant Wilfred (Arthur Hoyt) go looking for initial clues. There they meet Mr. Harker's live in secretary, the lovely Miss Terry (Ginger Rogers) and dim-witted housekeeper Augusta (Lillian Harmer). Both claim to have been asleep at the time.
The inspector suspects not all is as it seems, and he's right. "Miss Terry" is actually Pat Morgan, a newspaper reporter who had gone undercover to infiltrate Mr. Harker's life as her editor Perkins (Clarence Wilson) had suspected the philanthropist had a darker side. She's discovered a clue she hasn't told the police about yet, and tries to phone a preliminary story in to her paper.
However, rival reporter Ted Rand (Lyle Talbot) has managed to access the apartment with a "borrowed" police badge, and uses the phone extension to trick Pat into thinking she's talking to the "rewrite man" at her paper. Armed with her juicy inside knowledge, he steals the scoop. Despite the friction this causes between the two, they're soon forced to work together to investigate the continuing deaths.
Inspector Russell has his hands full dealing not just with the nosy reporters, but the many suspects. Harker had been having an affair with the married woman in the apartment directly below his, and her husband is missing. He'd also been getting late night visits from Josephus Martini (Maurice Black), reputed racketeer. And then there's the building staff, Peterson the janitor (Harvey Clark) and the maid (Louise Beavers).
This is a relatively early movie for Ginger Rogers, before she got teamed up with Fred Astaire for dancing roles. Her Pat is cute and sharp-tongued, particularly toward Ted. Unsurprisingly, while frequently quarreling, it's clear that they have romantic feelings for each other. This makes the movie more of a comedy-mystery. Lyle Talbot is good in this role, assured and daunting.
Inspector Russell isn't particularly stupid, which is a nice change for police detectives of this vintage, but he's hampered both by the reporters withholding evidence, and an assumption he's made about the people around him.
Louise Beavers' character is stuck with the stereotypical "black people are scared of spooky stuff" routine, though it might also be a classism thing as white Augusta is also comic relief. The latter is a big fan of Detective Fiction Weekly, which I reviewed some years ago.
This isn't a top-flight movie, the coda is particularly weak, but it's enjoyable and only an hour long. It might make a good double feature with a grittier mystery. Recommended to fans of 30s comedy-mystery.
I'll stay out until my mind is like a clear glass
Jan. 28th, 2026 04:55 pm
The current sunset is one of those violet riots, but at the time of this photo, the clouds above the fan of trees were just starting to flush gilt-grey. That attenuated stretch of the Mystic that always looks more like an industrial canal than a river was a glaucous freeze at its margins and flat-skimmed snow down its center. I cannot believe I never encountered Socalled's Ghettoblaster (2006) until its twentieth anniversary. Then again, only forty years after the fact did it occur to me that I would have accepted The Last Battle (1956) much more readily if Lewis had made it Ragnarök instead of Revelations.
happy Mozart
Jan. 28th, 2026 02:48 pmIncidentally, it's properly pronounced in English as "mote zart," with a T in it, an approximation of the German pronunciation. I often hear non-musicians saying "moe's art," which is understandable but not au courant.
January-February Manga TBR
Jan. 28th, 2026 04:44 pmI finished 5/6 on my last challenge, a couple were ehh but a couple were great too. Honestly since I'm sick reading manga is the easiest thing besides gaming for me to do right now.
Avatar:

Gon
Skill: Choose own prompt once
Roll #1:
A 7, okay, getting the trap tile out of the way;; ...Or not. Another 7, and what's funny it was the opposite dice this team (1-6 vs 6-1). Okay here we go, a ten and the prompt is reincarnation. D.Gray-Man.
Roll #2:
A 6, prompt: reverse harem. Men of the Harem.
Roll #3:
An 8, prompt: mystery element. I guesss I should continue Are You Alice?.
Roll #4:
Another 8, using my skill to choose. Picked 'taboo', Ai no DNA.
Roll #5:
A 5, prompt: featuring a group of friends. Oh yay, Mairimashita! Iruma-kun!
Roll #6:
An 8 and the end. The physical BL manga this time is Picnic (Yamada Yugi). I'm going ahead and reading the prequel too to knock them both out.
Most looking forward to: Mairimashita! Iruma-kun
Least looking forward to: Picnic
~Manga TBR List~
[Action/Fantasy] D.Gray-Man
[Fantasy/Harem] Men of the Harem
[Mystery/Fantasy] Are You Alice?
[BL] Ai no DNA
[Fantasy/School Life] Mairimashita! Iruma-kun
[BL/Romance] Boku ni Datte Iibun ga Aru & Picnic
x 1 josei, x3 shounen, x3 BL
Write Every day 2026: January, Day 28
Jan. 28th, 2026 10:43 pm- Many thanks to
sakana17 for offering to host WED in February! We'll continue next month over at
sakanawords. :D - This morning I had the plumber in to have my my gas boiler serviced and the flue replaced. "Oh no, you don't need to remove the stuff under it, it'll be fine," they said. - Never mind the stuff directly under the boiler, the entire room ended up covered in dirt.
- Mystery of the day: am I developing a cold, or did I just breathe in too much dust/soot? /o\
Today's writing
More exchange fic wrangling.
Tally
( Days 1-25 )
Day 26:
Day 27:
Day 28:
Let me know if I missed anyone! And remember you can drop in or out at any time. :)
Usual miscellany and trivia
Jan. 28th, 2026 09:07 pmOur dog L. is still doing reasonably better, which is reassuring. He's seemed quite well lately. I look forward to being able to take him for a good walk again. Right now I'm in the middle of my in-office days for the week so not much else gets done, of course others are home with him.
At work, I'm finally coming to the other side of a tricky project that's gone on for some weeks, I'm glad to be moving on to other, more usual, tasks, though today my current tasks got something of a specification change partway through. The tricky work is getting more testing now, I do hope that goes well. It's been nice to have limited timezone overlap with the person testing, then I can fix things before they start work and they get to test without me also fiddling with things.
Recently, I ran an errand which had me driving along a local road that had what seemed to me to be an absurd bicycle lane (on Google Maps), barely a couple of feet wide right in the door zone alongside the parked cars. If I were cycling, I'd not use it while hoping not to be annoying the cars behind. (When I passed, there were more cars parked further along the road than shown in the link.)
We saw Sinners (2025) and I didn't see what all the fuss is about. I tend to like the Deep South as a setting, and I like the blues, but I feel as if I've largely seen the elements before, it was easy to guess what would happen, the characters and plot seemed fairly thin; I just didn't end up much caring. I'm obviously missing something.
I've also been watching Pluribus (2025) which is an interesting concept but it does move fairly slowly, each episode doesn't come with quite the pace of developments that we get from, say, Fallout (2024). It's enough to keep me watching but, again, I'm not quite the fan that plenty others seem to be.
A Busy Day in the Revolution
Jan. 28th, 2026 03:10 pm
Image: The Portland Frog riding the Minnesota Loon carrying the progressive queer flag and the MN state flag shield, flying towards the resistance by Freddie Schwager.
Yesterday was very busy for me.
I got a text from MONARCA in the late morning that there were 20 heavily armed iCE agents attempting to gain access to the Dorothy Day facility in downtown Saint Paul. I hopped in my car and headed out, but, as seems to be typical of me, I arrived fifteen minutes too late. I talked with a witness and he told me that the staff locked the doors and demanded a warrant. ICE was forced to leave without abducting anyone. I was joking to a friend that they should send me out to every one of these calls because every one I have ever arrived at, it has either been a false alarm or, as in this case, the ICE agents left empty-handed. I am, apparently, some kind of anti-ICE luck charm. ;-)
So, even though, for me, it wasn't a confrontation, I was still really keyed up afterwards. So, I basically just went directly to my Food Communists and spent three hours packing up groceries for folks sheltering in place/in hiding. The nice thing about my Food Communists is that they are also a homeless/unhoused warming shelter and so they have free meals. I can't forget to eat if I'm at ZCC because someone will tell me to sit and eat at some point, which is good.
Then, at 6 pm yesterday, I signed up for a legal observer training with COPAL. I'll be honest with you all? I have only ever kind of been half-assed trained in this. I was signed up with MONARCA, but I missed the actual training session, and have been relying on notes taken by a friend. So, this seemed like a really good opportunity to get the whole deal. I'd also attended that national training via the ACLU the night before, and, given that my brain is a soupy seive right now, I figure the more times I hear how it's done, the better.
The Observer trainers were expecting 150 people so I walked over. Despite the temperatures, the church sponsoring this event is only five or six blocks away. The place was packed. They actually had Constitutional Observers outside on ICE watch because... I guess because we no longer trust those jackbooted thugs not to terrorize people just trying to learn how to protect their neighbors.
A couple of funny things about the training. First, Minnesotans are still entirely Minnesotan.
The person running the training tried to get us all to introduce ourselves to our seat mates by asking us to ask a stranger "why they were here." Literally the people I sat by in the pew, were like, "I don't even know where else I would be? I am literally worried about our actual neighbor," I was like, "I know. It's kind of a weird question because the answer is: fascism?? Also, why would we sit by and let our neighbors get kidnapped when fifty of us show up to help someone get out of a ditch?" So, that was both good and very awkward because it was clear that a couple of guys just wanted to shrug because Minnesotan men are like "eh? 'Cuz it's the right place to be??"
Second, the trainer kept trying to get us more engaged by having people "popcorn" (which I guess just means shout out as the spirit moves you??) some of the slides and this was... so very Minnesotan. You could tell people hated being asked to do this, but we were all there because we were willing to get out of our comfort zones so people just FORCED themselves to speak up. It was kind of hilarious because the, like "OMG, FINE I WILL SPEAK WITHOUT RAISING MY HAND THIS IS SO PAINFUL I WILL DIE IF I ACCIDENTALLY TALK OVER SOMEONE" was palpable in the air?
But, it was a good meeting and I am now signed up on COPAL as well as MONARCA.
I woke up really sore from all the physical work at the Food Commies, so I have declared today a mental and phsyical rest from the revolution.
Have I read anything? Just the training manual for the constitutional observers. It's been rough!
January Manga Wrap-Up 2
Jan. 28th, 2026 03:06 pm
Read the BL 30,000 Yen Boyfriend, rated it 6/10. 
Read the first volume of the classic BL Haru o Daiteita! 

(Re) read the BL NightS, kept the rating at 8/10! 
Read chapter 1 of volume 2 of Basara.For The S-Classes that I Raised, I've decided to go forward with the novel instead. I might do what I'm doing with Trash of the Count's Family and read them both at the same time, once I catch up anyway.
Promote your canon!
Jan. 29th, 2026 08:04 amIf you nominated a rare/small canon you're interested in requesting and/or offering, please feel free to create a fandom promo post in the comments below to see if the canon's themes or story is something that may interest others.
Please include the canon and its medium in the subject line, i.e. "Rivers of London - Ben Aaronovich (Books)", "The Thin Man (Movie)", etc., for ease of organisation.
Please try to avoid linking images. Feel free to chat about the canons if something catches your eye and you'd like to know more! (Please try to stay anonymous regarding what you may be trying to match to in our sign-ups.)
Here are some things you can cover in your post, but you're more than welcome to pick and choose and add additional information:
- Title: Please put the canon title in the post as well.
Media: Is it a book, game, comic, movie, television series, recursive work, etc.?
Approximate length: Reading Length is a great resource for books and How Long to Beat is a great resource for video games.
Where is it found?: Please only provide links to legal sources. Is it free or must it be purchased?
Elevator pitch of what it's about: If you have to describe it in the time it takes to travel in an elevator, how would you?
Content warnings: You won't be able to warn for everything that may trigger someone, so please consider what the main trigger warnings would be and know that you won't be able to warn for everything.
What do you love about it?:
What kind of themes would you request for it?: Are you looking for a murder mystery? Heist? Medical drama investigation? Spies? This question does not mean you will request it; it's meant to help others know how it fits in the theme and what kind of creative works it may inspire.
You can copy/paste from here: