Pleasant weather at last!

Feb. 25th, 2026 12:39 am
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Probably the best day of the year today (well, yesterday now), with temperatures into the mid-teens and a good amount of sunshine. That sun's starting to get some noticeable warmth to it, too. The crocuses and early daffodils are out, which is allowing the snowdrops to start to step back from their lonely vigils. Down in town, people were out and about and the place felt nicely busy, always a sign of approaching spring in a tourist town like Bewdley. The Sainsbury's delivery turned up on time this evening, too. All in all, a pretty decent day. :)

Film post: The Aristocats (1970)

Feb. 23rd, 2026 03:38 pm
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The Aristocats (1970) film poster
The Aristocats (1970)

I had a pretty good time with this, even if it is remarkably similar in its underlying storyline to One Hundred and One Dalmatians. Like that film, it's animated in the "Xerox" style, and I think it works well here; the movie is very appealing and bright to look at. I know some people find fault with it, but it never got in my way. The Parisian (and environs) setting gives it a different texture from the swamps of Dalmatians, which helps to distinguish it from the earlier film beyond "cats not dogs".

At heart, it's a clichéd "upper-class woman meets loveable rogue" story, but both Duchess and Thomas O'Malley are solid enough characters and the humour is usually good. The kittens are amusing without (mostly) being impossibly saccharine, the geese are funny in their way, and supporting cast of jazz cats are generally excellent. The exception is the achingly racist, though thankfully relatively little seen, Shun Gon (played by a white American guy...) That aside, the main drawback is that Edgar, the villain, is rather a fool and is simply not as hissable as Cruella de Vil.

The great joy of The Aristocats is its music, with the excellent jazz a delight, not least thanks to the very good Scatman Crothers as Scat Cat. "Ev'rybody Wants to Be a Cat" is a classic for a reason, and "Scales and Arpeggios" shows you can make a good song out of very little. I'm slightly less enamoured of Maurice Chevalier's title number, a pity since it was his very last film song, but it's decent enough. This might have squeezed a four, but half a star off for Shun Gon. ★★★½

Stafford Challenge Update

Feb. 22nd, 2026 04:50 pm
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It’s now been over a month since the Stafford Challenge started (on January 17th) and I’ve continued to write a poem every day. It’s an interesting exercise. I started out thinking in terms of writing poems related to the wreck of the Congressional Limited train in 1943. I did write 7 poems on that subject, but I quickly realized I have a lot more research to do before I can really get deeper into it. Leveraging off that, I wrote six other poems relating to trains (including the Washington metro, the Long Island Railroad, and Amtrak).

I’ve already posted titles of the poems I wrote for weeks 1 and 2. Here are the remaining titles of poems I’ve written so far.

Week 3:

31 January 2026 - Both Sides Now

1 February 2026 - A Eulogy for X. J. Kennedy

2 February 2026 - A Eulogy for X. J. Kennedy (revised)

3 February 2026 - With Reservations

4 February 2026 - Blackberry Jam

5 February 2026 - The Lily Jean

6 February 2026 - Amtrak Acela

Week 4:

7 February 2026 - Amtrak #2

8 February 2026 - Weather Woes

9 February 2026 - The Bicycle

10 February 2026 - Life Is

11 February 2026 - Sleeping in Hotels

12 February 2026 - Household Archaeology

13 February 2026 - Lucky or Not?

Week 5:

14 February 2026 - The Afghan Song (to the tune of The Garden Song)

15 February 2026 - Post Valentine’s Day

16 February 2026 - Presidents Day

17 February 2026 - Spectral Haiku

18 February 2026 - Cuddly

19 February 2026 - Seeking My Muse

20 February 2026 - The Idea Shop

A Brief Sample

I won’t post anything I might want to submit to a magazine/ journal / anthology someday, since most publications count things published on-line as prior publication and won’t accept it. But I’m pretty sure I won’t do anything with this one and it’s a good example of my fondness for turning lists into poems. I got the idea for this poem while walking back to my hotel after going to the cabaret show I saw recently in New York and thinking “life is a cabaret.” I crowd sourced phrases starting with “life is” via the hive mind (i.e. my Facebook friends) and this is what I came up with.

Life Is

Life is too short
Life is too long
Life is hard
Life is easy
Life is like a box of chocolates
Life is just a bowl of cherries
Life is what you make of it
Life is a song worth singing
Life is a highway
Life is a river
Life is strange
Life is funny
Life is a journey, not a destination
Life is a cabaret
Life is life

Community:

One of the main reasons for doing the Stafford Challenge is the community fostered by the cohort. There are roughly 1300 people doing it this year. There’s a private Facebook group. And there are monthly talks by guest poets. There is apparently going to be a conference in the summer, which I think will actually work with my schedule.

The other benefit of being part of the cohort is access to monthly guest poet talks. The January kick-off talk was by Kim Stafford, the son of the late William Stafford whose practice of writing a poem a day is behind the whole thing. I wasn’t able to make it to that one live, but I did listen to the recording and here are three takeaways from it:


  1. ”Poetry is our native language.” We speak in units of breath.

  2. Betty Sue Flowers wrote that the progress of the artistic process is Madman, Architect, Carpenter, Judge. I really like this concept. Your ideas can be completely wild, but then you have to make plans and do the work to construct the product from them. Then you can look at what you’ve done and assess whether or not it meets your goal and go through this whole process again to revise it.

  3. The muse is the inner voice , waiting for an audience.



The second talk was Thursday night and was by Emmett Wheatfall. Here are my takeaways:


  1. He presented a 7 point challenge, which didn’t particularly resonate with me because most of them seemed fairly obvious, e.g. “listen to the feedback of your readers.”

  2. I did like his statement that Hemingway wrote down seven rules a day, but I’m not sure if those were the same rules or he came up with new ones every day. At any rate, seven is a number with a lot of mystical significance.

  3. He said that a quote of poetry is called a “stretch.” I’ve never heard that before.



Three is also a mystical number. I don’t think I can find more than three takeaways in most hour-long presentations. I did also write down one snarky note. Namely, he quoted somebody talking about the artist, Edgar Degas. But he pronounced the surname as “DEE-gus” instead of “Day-GAH.” Aargh!

And Now

I need to find a topic for today’s poem.
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I went up to New York a couple of weeks ago for a long weekend. (That was after several days of not going outside at all, due to what they called “snowcrete,” i.e. icy sleet on top of snow, which created a disgusting substance with the texture of concrete.) I had originally scheduled an evening Acela, which would have arrived about 9:30 p.m. but I was notified a couple of days in advance that it was canceled, so I took a train that was scheduled to get in about 5 p.m. I usually just take a northeast regional since the time difference from the Acela is minimal, but this was one of those rare times when the cost differences was minimal. In the end, my train was delayed about an hour, which was annoying mostly because they kept changing the time it was going to leave. And, several times, the text they sent claimed that the new time was the original time, despite what was being announced. It didn’t matter much to me, since I was still getting in quite a bit earlier than my original plans. And Amtrak did send me compensation, which will be helpful since I have 2 or 3 more Amtrak trips in the next couple of months.

I had enough time to grab takeout pizza before going to my hotel. I’d gotten a reasonable price at the Fairfield Inn & Suites right across the street from Moynihan Train Hall. I ate my pizza and watched the Olympic opening ceremonies, which annoyed me because of NBC’s overemphasis on Team USA. I wanted to know more about things like the sole competitor from Guinea Bissau. I was also following the Israeli bobsleigh team because their captain, A.J. Edelman is an MIT alumnus (and even course 2, like me and Senator Alex Pedilla!) He was the first Orthodox Jew to compete in the Winter Olympics (in Skeleton in 2018) and his brother is the comedian Alex Edelman, whose show Just For Us has to do with his experiences with a white supremacist group. And, by the way, one of the members of that Israeli bobsleigh team is Druze.

It was particularly windy and frigid out, which limited the amount of random walking around that I did. My plans were for a theatre day, so that wasn’t a huge issue. The first show I saw was the matinee performance of Buena Vista Social Club. This was an easy choice for me to make since I like Cuban music and have loved both the movie and CD for years. And it was, indeed, very enjoyable. The performances were heartfelt and I really appreciated the booklet about the songs that was included inside the Playbill. And the band was incredible, well deserving of the special Tony award they got. By the way, the real Omara Portuondo is still alive (in her mid 90’s) and has recorded an album as recently as 2023. Highly recommended.

Saturday night’s selection was Death Becomes Her. I didn’t know a lot about this musical going in and had chosen it largely because the reviews were good. The basic premise is that Viola Van Horn (played by Michelle Williams, who had started her career in Destiny’s Child) has access to a potion that promises eternal youth - and life. The actual story has to do with the rivalry between an actress named Madeline Ashton, and the friend (named Helen Sharp) who she abuses all her life, down to stealing her plastic surgeon fiance. And that’s exactly the problem I had with this show. The songs have amusing lyrics and there is plenty of funny material and the special effects are impressive. But do we really need a show that is based on two women attempting to sabotage one another?

By the way, how cold was it out? They were claiming the wind chill made it feel like -17 Fahrenheit. In more practical terms, I walked 4 blocks (to 43rd street) and got on the subway for the remaining 10 blocks because I just couldn’t handle the temperature any more. And I was wearing 3 layers of clothes, as well as my warmest jacket.

Sunday wasn’t much better, though I had the sense to add yet another layer to my clothes. I headed cross-town to meet up with a group of folks from FlyerTalk at the 2nd Avenue Deli. Josh organizes Deli Do a couple of times a year and there were about 20 attendees. I’ve been once or twice before and I’ve eaten at that deli lots of times, going all the way back to when it was actually on 2nd Avenue. I noticed that the menu no longer has hot open faced sandwiches, which used to be one of my go-to orders in my childhood. A tongue sandwich and a kasha knish is my most common deli order these days. But, given the cold weather, I thought that the soup and half sandwich option was a good idea. I got the mushroom barley soup and half a chopped liver sandwich. Both were quite good. And, of course, a Dr. Brown’s diet cream soda, since I never acquired the taste for cel-ray. Jewish soul food and talk about flying / travel - what better way to spend a long lunch? Several of us walked over to Blue Haven East afterwards for adult beverages and more conversation. I have a long standing quest for the best hot buttered rum in NYC and theirs was pretty good. And it was nice to be able to mingle and chat with people who had been sitting at the far end of the deli from the table I ended up at.

I took advantage of proximity to walk over to the Morgan Library, which had been on my list of places in New York that I had not been to before. I was particularly eager to get there since they have a Caravaggio painting temporarily on loan from the Galleria Borghese in Rome. In addition to Boy with a Basket of Fruit, there were other naturalist works, mostly by contemporaries of Caravaggio and other painters influenced by his style. I’m mostly a modern art aficionado, but I was awestruck by Caravaggio’s use of color and light when I saw two of his paintings at Saint John’s Co-Cathedral in Valetta, Malta some 25 years ago and consider him the greatest painter of the late 16th / early 17th centuries.

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It was also the last day of an exhibit of Renoir drawings. I’m not particularly keen on Renoir (or, frankly, the impressionists, in general). But a quick look through that exhibit left me impressed with Renoir’s skill as a draftsman.

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But, of course, the real highlight of the Morgan Library is the actual library, which is spectacular.

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Don’t forget to look up at the ceilings, too!

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I wandered over to Grand Central Terminal for a bit, then headed back to the west side to go to a cabaret show. I had heard of Don’t Tell Mama from a couple of puzzle people, but had never been there before. I was impressed with the number of people who went there alone, which is a bit unusual in my past experience at cabaret venues. I had a lively and interesting conversation with the woman sitting at the table next to mine, who I found out at the end of the evening was a somewhat well-known actress, Neva Small. As for the actual show, it was called Jewish Caroling: The Music of Carole King, Carole Bayer-Sager and Carolyn Leigh. The performer, Deborah Zecher,is a singer, storyteller, and rabbi and she put together an interesting mix of songs by those three Jewish women. I hadn’t known this going in, but the proceeds from the show are being donated to Beth Israel, the synagogue in Mississippi that was burned down.

For women of my generation, Carole King’s Tapestry was a truly iconic album. I remember listening to it with my best friend in the bedroom of an older girl who lived on our block, who would go on to tell us that an orgasm is like a sneeze between the legs! And, yes, I do still have my own copy of it. Anyway, it was a very enjoyable show and I’ll check out the offerings at Don’t Tell Mama for future New York trips. By the way, the wind had died down and walking back to the hotel was tolerable.

I went down to the Lower East Side on Monday. Walking through Penn Station to get to the F train, I passed this interesting glass mosaic mural. It is called Garden of Circus Delights and was done by Eric Fischl. There is actually quite a lot of interesting art in the New York City subway system and it would be fun to spend most of a day exploring it.

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My goal was seeing a temporary art exhibit, sponsored by Manischewitz in honor of a new line of bottled soups.

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They also had some cute merchandise, e.g. aprons, baseball caps, and patches with various Yiddish slogans. But none of that is anything that I’d ever use. And neither my brother nor the gentleman with whom I’m conducting the world’s longest running brief meaningless fling ever wear any type of hat. They were also selling soup from a food truck nearby, but I had other intentions.

Specifically, I had lunch at Russ & Daughters. The “Super Heebster” consists of whitefish and baked salmon salad with horseradish-dill aream cheese and wasabi roe. I got it on a bialy, and it was very tasty. It also came with half sour pickles and, while I normally favor full sours, they worked well with the mild spiciness.

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And I couldn’t resist their halvah ice cream. While I enjoyed it, I would have actually liked a smaller portion and I didn’t think the salted caramel topping added much to it.

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The food was pricy, but worth it.

I spent a lazy afternoon catching up on some reading and puzzles, before heading uptown towards Lincoln Center, where the subway station had another attractive set of glass mosaics (but I didn’t photograph those). From there, it was a short walk to the Marjorie S. Dean Little Theatre to see Going Bacharach. This was (obviously) a tribute to Burt Bacharach, performed by three singers with a small band. All three singers were excellent. I was not thrilled by the musical arrangements, which lacked brass. The music director, Adrian Galante, was impressive on the clarinet, but the flamboyance of his piano playing annoyed me. I’d also have liked to actually learn something about Burt Bacharach as a person. One of the singers did talk a bit about his use of mixed meter, which I thought was interesting. But, overall, I found the show disappointing.

Speaking of disappointing, I ‘d stayed at that Fairfield several times before. While the rooms are comfortable, the breakfast offerings have deteriorated. The breakfast on the weekend was better, but on weekdays, they didn’t have salsa for the scrambled eggs (though they did have bottles of a few types of hot sauce) and they didn’t have pancakes or waffles. More egregiously, the only fresh fruit they had were bananas (yuk). On the weekend, they had salad, but not on weekdays. This is a minor annoyance as there are plenty of places to get a decent breakfast within easy walking distance. But there used to be more variety. Another issues is that one of the three elevators wouldn’t recognize my room key, nor those of several other people, and this did not get repaired during my stay. My biggest complaint is that the rate for Monday night was considerably higher than for the previous three nights and this was not clearly displayed when making the reservation on line. I’ll have to rethink whether or not to stay there in the future.

I didn’t have any issues with Amtrak going home on Tuesday morning. The metro also cooperated and I was able to get in a lovely afternoon nap, before catching up on some household chores.

...and none?

Feb. 21st, 2026 11:34 am
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I happened across this House of Lords exchange from November 2024 recently, and it seriously irritated me. The Bishop of St Albans was expressing concern about the persecution of Christians in China and Iran. Absolutely no problem with that – given his position, it is an entirely reasonable question to ask.

The government's response was given by Baroness Chapman, and most of it too was reasonable, including a direct response regarding the persecution of Christians in those countries. She also said that the UK government "stands firm in its advocacy of human rights, including the right to freedom of religion or belief". No problems at all so far. But after that? This:

"More broadly, this Government will champion freedom of religion or belief for members of all faiths worldwide."

It will come as no surprise to those of you who know my lack of religious belief that this raised my hackles. It seemed especially insensitive since atheists have been severely persecuted in Iran, one of the countries named. Those of us without a religious belief do not generally see ourselves as part of "all faiths" – which is why the perfectly standard and acceptable term "all faiths and none" is widely used. Baroness Chapman should have used it.

Women's Storytelling Festival tickets

Feb. 20th, 2026 03:34 pm
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I have a lot of catching up to do, starting with a trip I took to New York a couple of weeks ago. I’m also going through the clippings file, celebrity death watch, and my progress on the Stafford Challenge.

But the Shameless Self-Promotion Department comes first. The 6th annual Women’s Storytelling Festival is coming up in just about a month and today is the last day to get discount tickets. For a mere $35 you can get a virtual festival pass, while a full festival pass (which includes in-person performances in Fairfax, Virginia) is only $55. Both include access to the live stream and access to the videos through April 28th.

To take advantage of this fabulous deal, go to the WSF ticket page.

podcast friday

Feb. 20th, 2026 07:14 am
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I know I've been going on a lot about Charles R. Saunders for an author whose books I still haven't read but. Here's a podcast about him! Wizards & Spaceships' "Charles R. Saunders ft. Jon Tattrie" talks about his life, his works, his mysterious death, and the politics that shaped his life, from the Black Power movement to the Vietnam War to bigotry in SFF publishing and to Black Lives Matter. It's really a wide-ranging, fascinating discussion and I hope you'll give it a listen and maybe even share it with people.

Happy Black History Month everyone!

Grump

Feb. 19th, 2026 08:51 pm
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What have you done to my "Create Entries" page, Dreamwidth? Tags aren't auto-completing any more, which is really annoying. Hopefully a temporary glitch.

Hello everynyan

Feb. 18th, 2026 08:16 pm
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[personal profile] axlraimi posting in [community profile] addme
ImageName:Morgan :) 

ImageAge: 23 

ImageI mostly post about: The media I consume and my opinions on it, daily life occurences and complaints, thoughts about the internet and modern life 

ImageMy hobbies are: Playing videogames, watching movies and tv shows, drawing digitally, roleplaying in discord, coding 

ImageMy fandoms are: Game of thrones books, whatever actor I might be obssesed with ATM (currently daniel ings and david dastmalchian), dcu, doctor who, death stranding, fallout new vegas, cyberpunk 2077, kingdom come deliverance 

ImageI'm looking to meet people who: are interested in interacting in eachothers posts even in small ways, like liking. creating and building an active community. people who read entire journal entries and anyone with interests similar to mine, also lgbt and neurodivergent people.

ImageMy posting schedule tends to be:It's sporadic, although I try to hit a daily pace

ImageWhen I add people, my dealbreakers are: I have no deal breakers... for now? I just have fun with it

ImageBefore adding me, you should know: I'm a huuuuge leftist. I don't want right wing people interacting with me, ever. Also I complain alot, I swear like a sailor... if you're sensitive to swearing don't add me. Yay 

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Yep, you're getting a film post and a music post today! This is The Beautiful South's number eight hit, "Don't Marry Her", which was included on their generally excellent if at times rather dark-toned 1996 album Blue is the Colour. It's got some really excellent songwriting – make sure you listen to the lyrics! It's also extremely catchy, so I make no apologies if it earworms you. The one you're hearing here is the single version, which had to be cleaned up a little to get broadcast. The album version keeps the original explicit lyrics and can be heard here. I'd have posted that one, but it doesn't have the video, so the family-friendly single is what you're getting!
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Name: Em

Age: Mid-20s

I mostly post about: Lately, I've mostly used Dreamwidth for life updates related to my quest to get a teaching certification in my area. I also use it for fandom exchanges and general writing community.

My hobbies are: Writing is the big one. I write poetry and original short fiction. In fandom spaces, I tend to write a lot of short form erotica.

My fandoms are: Many and varied. Some of the favorites at the moment are BBC Merlin, October Daye, the Young Justice cartoon, and Wooden Overcoats.

I'm looking to meet people who: I like sharing this space with a wide variety of people. Some of my favorite members of my circle post recipes, media reviews, or meaty fandom meta, but other favorites are just sharing links to interesting news articles or talking about life.

My posting schedule tends to be: It's been sporadic in the past, but I've been trying to get in the habit of posting a few times a week. It's been grounding.

When I add people, my dealbreakers are: Don't be a Trump supporter, anti-LGBTQ, or a climate change denier.

Before adding me, you should know:
I'm polyamorous and live in a tight-knit community that includes many platonic and romantic life partners. Sometimes I post about US politics, but that's going to be fairly rare. I am quite left-wing, because my government's right-wing social policies negatively impact my community and my family. If you show up on my reading page and ask a question in your post, I'll probably answer it in the comments.
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Name: You can call me Lina!

Age:35



I mostly post about: Journal entries about writing, social medias/the internet and anything creative, witchcraft, what I'm reading/what I've read, etc. Anything that I'm wanting to write about really.



My hobbies are: Reading, writing, making arts and crafts, drawing, anything that tickles my creative brain. And also watching junk TV because I contain multitude.



My fandoms are Mo Dao Zu Shi and Scum Villain (anything MXTX but I haven't finished Heaven Officials Blessings yet). I've also dipped my toes in Stardew Valley and Bridgerton as a fandom, although I haven't written anything for those yet. I'm Deadfandomswriter on AO3 if you wanna take a look.



I'm looking to meet people who: Are open minded and care about building a sense of community through active participation in their spaces. Are creative and love to see magic in their every day lives (I consider birdwatching to be its own kind of magic for the sense of wonder it brings, for example).



My posting schedule tends to be: So far a couple times a week, but I don't really schedule those.



When I add people, my dealbreakers are:Bigots, small minded people



Before adding me, you should know: Other than everything else above, I'm queer, and that probably will colour what I write about more than once in a while. I also do not speak to my family anymore (although my family-in-law have welcomed me warmly), and that also can come up, so if it's something that is uncomfortable for you, you might want to avoid my blog. Oh! And my first language is French!

Film post: The Young Offenders (2016)

Feb. 18th, 2026 03:59 pm
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The Young Offenders (2016) film poster
The Young Offenders (2016)

Picked for me by a "random iPlayer film" game. The film was hard work at times, but not because it was tedious. It's actually quite entertaining. Conor and Jock are two working-class lads from Cork who have a strained relationship with both their families and the law. Jock's bike thefts arouse the ire of the Gardaí (police), though mostly the somewhat obsessed Sgt. Healy. Still, when the two boys discover a €7m cocaine shipment has washed up on the coast nearby, the lure is irresistible.

The Young Offenders is a fun if foul-mouthed ride, with several surprisingly touching moments along the way. For the most part it rolls along amiably, though I found one late scene too off-puttingly violent to be funny. The toughest thing for this English viewer was understanding the Cork accents and slang; I'll confess to giving up and turning on the subtitles at times! The film spawned a TV series, but probably the movie was enough for me.
★★★

Reading Wednesday

Feb. 18th, 2026 06:47 am
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Just finished: The Threads That Bind Us by Robin Wolfe. Turns out I'd mostly finished this last week with the exception of one story and a very detailed explanation of the embroidery process. Anyway. Holy shit. You need this book in your life. Yes you. Also you.

Simple Sabotage Field Manual by the U.S. Office of Strategic Services. This is a nice little handbook from 1944 about what to do if you are just a regular guy and your country gets taken over by a fascist government. Nowadays I think the recommendation is "vote Democrat harder" but back then they knew that fascism was bad and so the advice was more "fuck their shit up so it's harder for them to do a fascism." Obviously a lot of the specific advice isn't really relevant now because the technology has massively changed, but the principle is worthwhile: wherever you can introduce friction, do so, and every small action helps. If I hadn't read The Threads That Bind Us, this would be the most heartwarming read of the past week.

One other thing I found interesting was the section on meetings. The recommended strategies for sabotaging meetings look a lot like our union meetings, and well. You gotta wonder. Anyway, it's free and it's a quick read.

The High Desert by James Spooner. I had this on my iPad for apparently quite a while so I must have bought it at some point but I don't remember when. It's a graphic novel memoir by the guy who did the Afro Punk documentary about growing up Black, punk, and in a crappy little town. Both the writing and the art are top notch and it's a joy watching him go from angry kid to activist.

Currently reading: A Drop Of Corruption by Robert Jackson Bennett. Finally getting around to the sequel to The Tainted Cup. Din and Ana travel to a remote canton that is currently not part of their empire, but will be soon, to investigate the death of a treasury officer who disappeared from his room and was later found mostly eaten by hungry turtles. (It turns out that the turtles are usually very hungry, but this time they were only slightly hungry, otherwise he would have been fully eaten.) This is really fun so far. 

At last!

Feb. 17th, 2026 07:41 pm
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An English-language version of Les Libraries has launched! Head on over to https://www.booksellers.ca/ to check it out! It is basically a collective of independent bookshops with an online store that encourages people to shop for books locally. The French version has been around for 15 years and is basically how I buy all my French books. I'm excited for the English side to take off & give people alternatives to Amazon, Indigo, and the other big-name chains.

Another cool thing is that the English and French sites share a backend. So you can actually buy books in both languages at the same time, if you want (though it looks like in-shop pickup is not fully coordinated, so you would probably have to have them shipped).

Saucy!

Feb. 17th, 2026 11:50 pm
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Image
Lea & Perrins factory, Worcester
Click for a larger, sharper image

I had to go into Worcester today for some routine health stuff, and as it wasn't raining I got some walking in either side of the appointment. Nothing fascinating, but I thought this photo might be of interest to one or two of you. This is the Lea & Perrins factory in Midland Road, which is where Worcestershire Sauce is made. Those orange gates reflect the colour of the label (unless you're American, apparently) which I've always thought is a nice touch. And yes, the smell as you walk past is exactly what you'd expect! It's not overpowering, but it's certainly memorable. Fortunately I like Worcester sauce (many people here leave off the "-shire" bit) and so I found it rather a pleasant experience walking past the place!

(no subject)

Feb. 16th, 2026 01:36 pm
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[personal profile] used_songs
I spent almost $2000 on plumbing repair today.

Film post: Death Race 2000 (1975)

Feb. 16th, 2026 04:31 pm
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Death Race 2000 (1975) film poster
Death Race 2000 (1975)

Back to exploitation movies now, with this Roger Corman-produced (though Paul Bartel-directed) piece of futuristic dystopia. A just pre-superstardom Sylvester Stallone (Rocky was a year away) is the most recognisable name here, despite David Carradine taking top billing. In true Corman style, this was a quickfire and cheap (the budget was under $1m) response to Rollerball. There's an interesting satirical backdrop to the movie, even though Corman scrubbed many of the satirical jokes and leant more heavily into the cars and crashes once he realised that would play better at the box office.

The effects are pretty cheap – surprised? – and a lot of it doesn't actually make much sense. Why is one of the drivers a literal Nazi, complete with swastikas? Why doesn't "Mr President" have an actual name? Why is the scoring system apparently made up as the film goes along despite the race having taken place for years? But honestly, if you want a racing film that makes sense, go and watch Le Mans '66. This one is basically Wacky Races with added (cheerfully unrealistic) gore and bonkers TV reporters. If you ever played Carmageddon way back when, this film is why that exists. ★★½

And finally, the hoodoo is broken

Feb. 15th, 2026 09:19 pm
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It's taken a century, but at last Team GB has managed to score more than one gold medal at a single Winter Olympics! One in the mixed team snowboard cross, and one in the mixed team skeleton. It feels rather good, actually! Considering the number of actual ice tracks we have in Britain is, er, zero our achievements in skeleton are faintly ridiculous, but I'm not complaining. Yes, there have been a lot of frustrations this Games – the women's curlers lost 6-5 to Switzerland after an extra end not long ago – but as a country that really isn't a natural winter sports nation, I'll take three golds over one any day!
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