kaffy_r: Bang Chan in paint (Channie paint)
[personal profile] kaffy_r
Job One: Remember that Computers Are Stupid

Job Two: bake Bob's favorite cookies to thank him for setting up my new laptop, and putting up with the occasional stupidity that's part of dealing with ones and zeroes.

We both knew it would take a couple of days, or even more than that, and I'm trying to be patient as he preps the new one (an Asus Vivo) so that we can download all my files from my slowly dying Lenovo, files that have been downloaded onto a delightful little red portable 2T hard drive.

That drive may will come in handy after the transfer, since I might need to keep it connected to my new laptop for a few weeks, or maybe months. My Lenovo has 1.82 T of storage, whilst my Asus only has 1T. We'll eventually see about getting a new, larger, drive in the Asus, but I don't foresee me using up the 1T of storage the Asus has. 

I've named the little hard drive Ada, and my new laptop is officially Alice-Alyx. It's the first time I've named a laptop, but it seemed the right thing to do with this one. I'm laughing a bit at myself, but hell, why not name some things that will help keep me happy for a good long time?

Now one of the remaining questions is whether Alice-Alyx will recognize my Samsung Galaxy ear buds. We tried to get them paired up yesterday, and the Asus laughed at us. Once again, I'm reminded that computers are stupid; they only do what we tell their ones and zeroes to do. 

In the non-computer part of the weekend, I was able to get in touch with a skiffy fannish acquaintance whose holiday card came back to me a bit ago. It turns out that he and his partner had indeed moved from the address I had for him, so I can send him something soon, and most definitely this coming holiday season. 

I also cleaned the bathroom, and sorted a small mountain of paperwork that had grown so high it was in danger of toppling over. I'm terrible at organizing and sorting, but I managed to do it today. I'm inordinately proud of myself. (I probably shouldn't be quite so loudly proud, because the universe will undoubtedly send something my way to punish me for such hubris. Heh.)

So that's my excitement for the weekend, and I am very happy that that's the most excitement I've had to deal with. Compared to this time last week, it's easy-peasy. 

Mid-February reading roundup

Feb. 22nd, 2026 03:40 pm
atamascolily: (Default)
[personal profile] atamascolily
Slayers of Old by Jim C. Hines - standalone urban fantasy about 3 veterans of various magical scuffles who have settled down and moved in together (platonically) only to be drawn into a fresh new conflict with the fate of the world in the balance. Fun, but not especially memorable; I liked this better than Hines's earlier Ex Libris series, where I only read the first two volumes.

What Stalks the Deep (Sworn Soldier #3) by T. Kingfisher - Novella following our nonbinary hero from a fictional eastern European country with an abundance of pronouns to America, where they confront eldritch horrors in an abandoned West Virginia coal mine. I saw a lot of twists coming, but the vibes are great, and the worldbuilding was fun.

Through Gates of Garnet and Gold (Wayward Children #????) by Seanan McGuire - I've kind of lost count of where we are at this point, but I enjoyed learning more about the Halls, and how we appear to be building towards a larger plot re: the doors' agenda. Also, I love pomegranates and moths, and the statues' aesthetic is great, as is its origins in "playing freeze tag so the horrors can't get you".

Emily of New Moon by LM Montgomery - Similar formula to Anne of Green Gables but even more autobiographical. Emily is not charismatic as Anne, but she's a born writer, which is its own kind of appeal. I'm not thrilled by the "guy old enough to be her father who is heavily and unsubtly foreshadowed as a future love interest" who turns up in the last third or so, even though it's also pretty clear she's going to end up with an artist kid her own age. We'll see how the other two books play out.

Manga:

-Apparently, "cute cottagecore fantasy witch" is its own subgenre these days - what surprised me the most about Aria of the Beech Forest is that the second chapter takes an abrupt turn by revealing the story is actually set in modern-day Ireland, which I was not expecting, hahaha. 3 volumes, complete, I read this mostly because it was on the library shelves.

-The Failure at God School's story is by the same person who did The Apothecary Diaries (which I loved) but unfortunately the first volume of this doesn't rise above "spunky girl gets sent to magic boarding school and turns out to be the most powerful of all" formula - no surprises here.

-Smoking Behind the Supermarket with You volume 4 introduces a few new characters and fleshes out the supporting cast, which is good because the leads' relationship is stuck in stasis (which they acknowledge) because they're scared of change. Considering how many more volumes have already been published, it's going to be a long road.

Hard Hat Mack (1983)

Feb. 22nd, 2026 09:54 am
pauraque: Guybrush writing in his journal adrift on the sea in a bumper car (monkey island adrift)
[personal profile] pauraque
This early PC platformer is of no small historical interest, as it was the first game released by everybody's favorite totally uncontroversial and non-resented game publishing company, Electronic Arts. Like most of their titles then and now, it wasn't developed in-house; Michael Abbott and Matthew Alexander get the design and programming credit for this one.

grid of construction scaffolding with gaps and chains hanging down to climb

But you don't need to me to tell you the illustrious history of EA (or, as it was briefly called at its inception, "Amazin' Software"—and I can't tell you how disappointed I am that we don't live in the timeline where they kept that name). I guess you also don't technically need me to tell you about this ridiculous game and my memories of playing it while being unable to identify most of the characters and objects it contains, but I'm going to go ahead anyway.

In Hard Hat Mack you play as a construction worker. I did understand that much. In the first level you have to collect pieces of a beam and use them to fill in the gaps, and then grab a wandering jackhammer to hammer them into place. This is where my understanding of the game began to break down; I thought the jackhammer was a tornado. )

Hard Hat Mack is... well, it sure is a game. You can find it on abandonware sites, but I couldn't really get it to run well on any version or emulator I tried. The DOS version (which I had as a kid) runs too fast in DOSBox by default, but when I reduced the clock speed I found that it lagged badly when multiple objects were moving, which made the second level pretty much unplayable. We probably shouldn't hold our breaths for EA to offer a re-release, and maybe that's for the best.

Recent Reading: Our Share of Night

Feb. 21st, 2026 06:16 pm
rocky41_7: (Default)
[personal profile] rocky41_7 posting in [community profile] books
If Mexican Gothic left you craving more South American fantasy horror, Our Share of Night by Mariana Enriquez of Argentina (translated from Spanish by Megan McDowell) has you covered. This is a family epic intertwined with the dark machinations of a macabre cult and its impact. It's also a splendid allegory for the evils of colonialism and generational trauma. This book was #15 from the "Women in Translation" rec list.

The book begins with Juan, a powerful but ill man who acts as a "medium" for the cult to commune with its dark god. Juan, struggling with the health of his defective heart, the wear-and-tear of years as the medium, and the grief and rage of his wife's recent death (he suspects, at the orders of the cult he serves) is desperate to keep his son Gaspar from stepping into his shoes, as the cult wants. Juan's opening segment of the book is about his efforts to protect Gaspar.

From there, the book branches off into other perspectives which give background to both the cult and the family. This is a great way of giving us a holistic and generational view of the cult, but it does drag occasionally. Gaspar's sections--in his childhood and then later in his teens/young adulthood--together make up the majority of the book, and while enjoyable, do amble off into great detail about his and his friends' day-to-day lives, such that I did wonder sometimes when we were getting back to the plot. I don't like to cite pacing issues, because I think that gets thrown around a lot whenever someone didn't vibe with a book, but the drawn-out length of these quotidian sections doesn't fit well with how quickly the climax of the book passes and is wrapped up. I would have liked to have spent less time with Gaspar at soccer games and more on his plans for addressing the cult.

However, on the whole, the book is a fun, if very dark read. It also serves well as a critique of Argentina's moneyed class and of colonialism in general, and how money sticks with money even across borders. Here, Argentina's wealthy have more in common with English money than with the Argentine lower classes (and that's how they want it). The cult, populated at its upper echelons by the privileged, is an almost literal blight on the land, willing to sacrifice an endless amount of blood, local and otherwise, to beg power off a hungry and unknown supernatural entity.

It brutalizes its mediums, which it often plucks from poverty to wring for power and then discard. Juan was adopted away from his own poor family at six, under the insistence his parents would not be able to pay for the medical care he needed, and he is the least-abused of the cult's line of mediums. As soon as the cult sets their eye on his son, Juan must begin scheming how to keep Gaspar away from them.

Although he acts out of love of his son, Juan is also a deeply flawed person. He is secretive, moody, lies constantly (there is actual gaslighting here) and doesn't hesitate to knock Gaspar around to make him obey. The more he deteriorates--a common problem with all cult mediums--the less human he becomes. Part of this is his work, but much of it is also attributable to years of being used by the cult for its ends and the accumulated emotional trauma. This, of course, is then inflicted on Gaspar through his father's tempers and secrets.

Similarly flawed are the other members of the immediate family. Juan's wife Rosario, despite a better nature than her parents, still supports this cult and is eager for Gaspar to follow in his father's footsteps as a cult medium, in part for the prestige it will bring her as his mother. Gaspar, although far more empathetic and gentle than either of his parents, eventually grows up with his father's temper. Watching him grow from a sweet-natured little boy into the troubled young adult he becomes after years of his father's abuse and neglect is painful, but realistic.

The book is also unexpectedly queer. It's not often a book surprises me with its queerness, because that's usually what landed it on my radar in the first place, but this one did. Juan and Rosario are both bisexual and later in the book we spend some active time in Argentina's queer scene, including during the AIDS crisis in the 1980s. 

The translation was great! It read very naturally, even the dialogue, and it never felt stilted or awkward in its phrasing.

An ambitious novel that for the most part, pulls off what it's trying to do. As mentioned, I wish the ending had gotten more room to breathe, and I would not have minded this coming at the cost of some of the middle bits of navel-gazing, but I still felt the story was satisfying. 

rionaleonhart: goes wrong: unparalleled actor robert grove looks handsomely at the camera. (unappreciated in my own time)
[personal profile] rionaleonhart
It can be a real challenge to characterise the fictional members of the Cornley Drama Society, given that they spend so much of Goes Wrong canon playing other characters. Therefore, I thought I'd see if I could put together a character profile of Robert Grove.

'Are you going to write characterisation guides for the entire drama society?' No. I'll be honest: I just wanted an excuse to talk at length about Robert Grove, because he's perfect.


Robert Grove: a character summary. )


Robert's best quality as a friend: he will give generously of his time and effort to fix your problem, or at least to fix what he has decided is your problem. This... may not actually be helpful, but it will at least be well-intentioned.

Robert's worst quality as a friend: he will sleep with your mother, insult your acting and throw you under the bus to play the Dane, and he won't even understand why you're annoyed with him afterwards.


In short, Robert is an egotistic and outspoken man with a passion for theatre, an intense sincerity, a vast capacity for self-absorption, a need to be important, a desire for company and an absolute lack of self-awareness. He's relentlessly loud and dramatic. He will refuse to apologise if he doesn't think he's in the wrong, and he will never think he's in the wrong. He's a nightmare. I love him.
author_by_night: (From Pexels)
[personal profile] author_by_night posting in [community profile] fictional_fans
I don't know if this post is allowed, I just wasn't sure where else to ask. 

I'm currently working on a Strangers Thing fic. I am very new to the fandom. I'd like someone I can bounce off of, and maybe a beta down the line? It's an AU with a better ending to El's story, giving her what I think she deserved. There might be some Canon Divergence for S4 as well.  The fic is Byler, not Mileven, although she and Mike will remain good friends. 

Any takers? 

Again, Modly Beings, feel free to delete. 

Jazz by Toni Morrison (1992)

Feb. 20th, 2026 05:08 pm
pauraque: drawing of a wolf reading a book with a coffee cup (customer service wolf)
[personal profile] pauraque
Opening in the days of the Harlem Renaissance, the first page of this novel states the culmination of its story: A door-to-door cosmetics salesman shot his eighteen-year-old mistress, and then the salesman's wife crashed the funeral to try to stab the girl's corpse. Why? The reader wants to know, and so do many of the characters. The book offers answers only indirectly, taking a sprawling path into the characters' pasts, where their families came from, and the intergenerational trauma of the slavery era that's still in living memory at this time.

The prose style of this book really worked for me and did a lot of the heavy lifting of drawing me into the story. It's lyrical and artistic without ever sacrificing readability. If there's a bit you don't understand, you will understand it in time, but first we have to go back to the beginning of another character's story and circle back around to connect to the main plot—and it does always connect. I think this is the meaning of the title; the book is not about jazz music, but it has the shape of jazz in the way it can state a melody, wander off and explore for a while until you've almost forgotten what song it is, and then return very satisfyingly before passing it off to another player in the ensemble.

I found this book in a free box and then it sat on my shelf for years (shout-out to [personal profile] lebateleur, my read-books-we-already-own accountability buddy!). It has a lot of underlining, highlighting, and marginal notes from whoever had it before, pointing out themes of dehumanization, rehumanization, and the necessity of deep context for understanding. They underlined "Something else you have to figure in before you figure it out" and also wrote it in pen on the title page. On multiple pages they wrote "Jazzonia" in the margin, by which I assume they meant the Langston Hughes poem.
Jazzonia (1926)

Oh, silver tree!
Oh, shining rivers of the soul!

In a Harlem cabaret
Six long-headed jazzers play.
A dancing girl whose eyes are bold
Lifts high a dress of silken gold.

Oh, singing tree!
Oh, shining rivers of the soul!

Were Eve’s eyes
In the first garden
Just a bit too bold?
Was Cleopatra gorgeous
In a gown of gold?

Oh, shining tree!
Oh, silver rivers of the soul!

In a whirling cabaret
Six long-headed jazzers play.

Angel’s Month Indulgence #7

Feb. 20th, 2026 01:27 pm
lovelyangel: Belldandy Illustration from A!MG OVA Mook (Belldandy Sweet)
[personal profile] lovelyangel
Gyudon at Ikenohana
Gyudon at Ikenohana

Today I went to my local Japanese restaurant, Ikenohana, specifically for a gyudon makeup lunch. I already know that Ikenohana has excellent gyudon – and it would be the unicorn chaser for the Donburi Factory experience.

I had actually made a lunch reservation – and got my usual table. Service was fast and excellent. I received hot green tea, ice water, a salad, and miso soup for starters. This all was included in the price of the donburi.

Salad, Miso Soup, and Green Tea at Ikenohana
Salad, Miso Soup, and Green Tea at Ikenohana

(I’d actually eaten about half of the salad before the miso soup arrived and I took the picture.)

The miso soup was prepared, not instant – and had a rich taste not present in the thin soup at Donburi Factory.

The donburi was delicious, as always. This is to be expected from a restaurant that also serves excellent sukiyaki. And benishoga (red pickled ginger) is always provided. (I could have used some for the Donburi Factory gyudon.) Presentation is a huge step up from Donburi Factory, as the gyudon was served in a ceramic bowl, the miso soup served in a lacquer bowl, and restaurant non-disposable chopsticks were provided.

The Japanese servers recognized me and called me by name – and were super polite as always. I always feel spoiled by them. This is all to say that atmosphere and service were outstanding. I was very happy with lunch.

Because service was quick, I was finished with lunch in 40 minutes, even as I was reading Apple News during lunch.

A price comparison between my two donburi lunches this week is revealing:

PicTitle
Gyudon Price Comparison

Guess where I’ll be getting my donburi from here on out (not that there was any question)?
facethestrange: (zhubai: sunshine)
[personal profile] facethestrange posting in [community profile] 100words
Title: See Nothing
Fandom: Guardian RPF
Pairing: Bai Yu/Zhu Yilong (& Li Yan)
Rating: T
Notes: No warnings apply.
Tags: Beard Burn, Innuendo, Silly, Light-Hearted, No Homophobia, POV Outsider

[ Read on AO3 ]
anneapocalypse: Ariane Clairiere, a wildwood elezen FFXIV character. (ffxiv ariane crystarium suite)
[personal profile] anneapocalypse

Image

Fandom: Final Fantasy XIV
Rating: Mature
Archive Warnings: Major Character Death
Relationships: Haurchefant Greystone/Warrior of Light, Alphinaud Leveilleur & Warrior of Light, Unrequited Minfilia Warde/Warrior of Light, Unrequited Aymeric de Borel/Warrior of Light, Pre-Urianger Augurelt/Warrior of Light, Alisaie Leveilleur & Warrior of Light, Warrior of Light & Thancred Waters, Y'shtola Rhul & Warrior of Light, Midgardsormr & Warrior of Light, Hydaelyn & Warrior of Light, Urianger Augurelt & Warrior of Light, Minfilia Warde & Warrior of Light, Ardbert & Warrior of Light
Characters: Warrior of Light, Haurchefant Greystone, Alphinaud Leveilleur, Urianger Augurelt, Y'shtola Rhul, Thancred Waters, Emmanellain de Fortemps, Artoirel de Fortemps, Edmont de Fortemps, Alisaie Leveilleur, Minfilia Warde, Midgardsormr (Final Fantasy XIV), Tataru Taru, Ardbert (Final Fantasy XIV), Warriors of Darkness (Final Fantasy XIV), Scions of the Seventh Dawn, Unukalhai (Final Fantasy XIV)
Additional Tags: Grief/Mourning, Survivor Guilt, Elezen Warrior of Light, Female Warrior of Light, Healer Warrior of Ligh, Angst, Suicidal Thoughts, Religious Angst, Depression, Patch 3.0: Heavensward Spoilers (Final Fantasy XIV), Patch 3.4: Soul Surrender Spoilers (Final Fantasy XIV), Canon-Typical Violence
Series: With Lilies and With Laurel
Length: 33,875 / 82,000
Chapter: 8/15

Summary:

A heartbroken Warrior of Light struggles to come to terms with loss, and the world she has been left to save.

Notes:

If you're new here, please start with Chapter 1!

Final Fantasy XIV is owned by Square Enix. This is a non-commercial work of fanfiction.

( Read on AO3 )

...or below! )

Previous Chapter | Next Chapter

rionaleonhart: goes wrong: unparalleled actor robert grove looks handsomely at the camera. (unappreciated in my own time)
[personal profile] rionaleonhart
I keep thinking 'okay, I must be out of Goes Wrong ideas now' and then writing more! After seeing The Play That Goes Wrong, I'm really curious about how awkward things were between Annie and the rest of the drama society afterwards.


Title: Cast and Crew
Fandom: The Play That Goes Wrong
Rating: PG
Wordcount: 1,800
Summary: In The Murder at Haversham Manor, Annie finds her calling; she wants to be an actress. After the events of the play, though, her relationship with the drama society might be a little strained.

Cast and Crew )
atamascolily: (Default)
[personal profile] atamascolily
AO3 link.

This was a crossover I originally came up with several years ago as part of a brainstorming exercise, of which I scrawled a few paragraphs in a notebook and forgot about it. Discovered it this week when I was cleaning, realized that I didn't want to write a longer story after all, and rewrote it to be its own thing. Feels good to have it out in the world rather than in my head, even if it took way longer than I had ever envisioned.

This is very silly, but I had a lot of fun with it and the punchline makes me laugh. I enjoy writing microfiction because it forces me to pay attention to my phrasing; every word counts. I can't hit that level of detail in longer stuff, but every little bit of practice helps build the skills. Constructing a tiny story is like building a little ship in a bottle or a watch - very intricate work despite the small size - and I find it soothing.

The title took forever to think up - the original one I'd selected presuming a longer story about Arthur going on a quest to return the misdelivered mail didn't work so I had to come up with something on the spot. (This is why I prefer to do titles, summaries, and tags at the beginning, to get them out of the way!)

This story is 250 words exactly, which does not have a specific name, but the arbitrary evenness pleases me nonetheless.
veronyxk84: (Vero#DemirViola)
[personal profile] veronyxk84 posting in [community profile] 100words
Title: Shatter
Fandom: Viola come il mare (Italian TV series)
Author: [personal profile] veronyxk84
Characters/Pairing: Viola Vitale/Francesco Demir
Rating: PG-13
Warnings: none
Word count: 100 (Ellipsus)
Spoilers/Setting: Set at the end of S1.
Summary: After Francesco runs, Viola understands the truth: the damage is done.
Disclaimer: This is a work of fiction created for fun and no profit has been made. All rights belong to the respective owners.

Prompt: #482 - Neutral

Crossposted: [community profile] drabble_zone, [community profile] anythingdrabble, [community profile] emotion100, My journal


READ: Shatter )
forestofglory: Cup of tea on a pile of books (books)
[personal profile] forestofglory
I was sick for the last three days and couldn’t really look at screens for long, so now I’m so behind on my reading page! I might declare amnesty so if you posted something you’d like me to see let me know!

Meanwhile I have continued reading many graphic novels (and not watching anything) so here are some thoughts on my most recent reads.

Lumberjanes, Vol. 3-7 by N.D. Stevenson and Shannon Watters, et al.— These continue to be very fun! Lots of friendship and adventure, plus I love how colorful they are. The camper who is transitioning from a Scouting Lad to a Lumberjane is also very charming! I’m glad I’m rereading these! (And only a few more volumes until I get to new to me stuff)

Batman: The Golden Age, Vol. 1 by Bill Finger, Bob Kane et al— I have a habit of turning anything I’m interested in into a historical research project of some type. Thus I ended up reading this collection of the very first Batman comics. They are not especially good stories, but it's fun seeing bits of lore that feel essential to Batman slowly being added. The batplane and batarangs both show up before the Batcave and the batmobile! Neither of which showed up in these comics. Bruce just keeps his batman stuff in a chest in a room with windows, and drives around in a normal car. The causal racism in these sure is a lot though.

City of Secrets and City of Illusion by Victoria Ying— fun middle grade steampunk adventures! These are not very dense (not a lot of words on any one page) so they are very fast reads. I enjoyed the art, theirs a good sense of motion and lots of fun gears and things

Doughnuts and Doomby Balazs Lorinczi— A short graphic novel about a witch and a singer who meet by chance when both of them are having a really bad day. This was very cute but it was so short there wasn’t really time to develop the characters or their relationship much

Roller Girl by Victoria Jamieson— So I’m not big on contemporary middle grade fiction, because stuff about making new friends, dealing with bullies and other school social dynamics stresses me out most of the time. But several people who I think have good taste recommended this graphic novel about a girl who is not getting along with her best friend and ends up attending a roller derby camp without knowing anyone else there. I’m glad I read it because it was really good!

The Legend of Brightblade by Ethan M. Aldridge— Another graphic novel by Aldridge – this one is about a prince who wants to be a bard. He ends up running away and forming a band. It’s very charming, though definitely not a book that’s thinking critically about monarchy. The art as always with Aldridge is great!
tozka: (spring comes)
[personal profile] tozka

Took a few weeks off from social media and came back to sad news about [personal profile] spikedluv; she was really great and I'll miss seeing her around here.

Internet Stuff

"Maybe for you, it didn’t start on Twitter. Maybe was forums or the blogosphere or Reddit. Maybe it was Facebook with terrible people from high school or TikTok with people who hate you for liking a thing, or not liking it enough. But we built the machines around our weird amygdalas and then we went inside them and now the machine is no longer confined to a stack of software + policy + vibes; we carry it in ourselves. We haunt each new place we enter. We can feel this happening in our bodies, which is why touch grass is so accidentally real.

We shape our structures and afterward our structures shape us, but the we of the first clause and the us of the second are not the same." - Tomorrow & Tomorrow & Tomorrow by Erin Kissane

Books

RSS Feeds

I also subscribed to the Persephone Books monthly newsletter, as I read two previous issues and enjoyed them. They're subtle marketing, more about vibes, focused on sharing things similar to Persephone Books/the people who enjoy them then about blasting sales info or whatever.

<- previous linkspam | link library | all link posts ->

RAM and Server Garbage

Feb. 18th, 2026 10:39 pm
grayestofghosts: (percy)
[personal profile] grayestofghosts
The RAM shortage, which I'm sure people have been hearing about (if you haven't -- AI corporations have already purchased all the RAM that will be made by chip manufacturers in 2026 for datacenters that don't exist yet to fulfill uncertain demand for AI, causing a shortage for everything else that uses RAM, which is... essentially everything, because aside from your game systems, and your personal phone and computer, are also used in non-Ai datacenters that keep online services running, and also every point of sale device, and also in a whole lot of systems that one would not think would use it, like various medical machines etc., because it's easier for devs to just stick software into a Microsoft/Android/etc base than to develop whole new machines, essentially) has gotten me a bit freaked out. It just seems to converge perfectly with the restrictions of all sorts of online services that want to slurp up all your personal identifying information and the only sort-of-not-really-viable-alternative is "make your own server", the parts of which are set to become exponentially more expensive even if you have the know how.

I want to try to get a raspberry pi and set up a server. I'm unsure what I'm going to run on it, but it seems like as good a time to start as any. I was actually going to run out today and grab one but there was a sudden snowstorm that was legit terrifying so I'll probably wait until this weekend. If anyone has any recommendations on how to do this, that would be great. What I want to do is not set in stone but I was thinking of trying to run a matrix instance or a VTT or maybe a blog or static website. I don't know. It just seems like something I should start learning probably.
marycatelli: (Golden Hair)
[personal profile] marycatelli posting in [community profile] books
Frieren: Beyond Journey's End, Vol. 14 by Kanehito Yamada

Spoilers ahead for the earlier ones.

Read more... )

Angel’s Month Indulgence #6

Feb. 18th, 2026 03:38 pm
lovelyangel: Chisato Nishikigi from Lycoris Recoil (Chisato Angel)
[personal profile] lovelyangel
Chisato Nishikigi & Takina Inoue
Chisato Nishikigi & Takina Inoue
Lycoris Recoil 1/8 scale figurine by Alter

ChisaTaki!

10 Months Ago I preordered the Lycoris Recoil Chisato Nishikigi & Takina Inoue 1/8 scale figurine by Alter from CDJapan. The figurine costs 22800 yen (about $145) – but shipping, duties, and customs fees added about 17000 yen ($110). Definitely an indulgence.

Well, that was way back in April 2025 - and since then, suspension of the de minimis tariff exemption caused havoc, and certain shipping options were no longer available. When the product was finally released this month (originally scheduled for January), my order was suspended until I chose a different shipping / tariff-handling method. Based on more recent transactions with CDJapan, I chose FedEx FICP – which was cheapest, anyway. The change required an additional 9400 yen (about $60). The final, cumulative damage came to around $315. I guess it would have been cheaper to go through Crunchyroll. Ah, well. Anyway, bird in hand and all that.

The figurine was delivered today. My photography studio is not yet set up, so I’ve improvised a photo locale - and consequently was limited to the kinds of photos I could take. I took the bare minimum.

Lycoris Recoil Chisato Nishikigi & Takina Inoue 1/8 scale figurine by Alter

Lycoris Recoil Chisato Nishikigi & Takina Inoue 1/8 scale figurine by Alter

Lycoris Recoil Chisato Nishikigi & Takina Inoue 1/8 scale figurine by Alter

Lycoris Recoil Chisato Nishikigi & Takina Inoue 1/8 scale figurine by Alter

I love having a ChisaTaki figurine in my collection!
lebateleur: Ukiyo-e image of Japanese woman reading (TWIB)
[personal profile] lebateleur
A short entry for today since I got home late from work and have to scramble to get to the next thing. Anyway, here's what I read over the last six days:

What I Finished Reading This Week

Lake of Souls - Ann Leckie
This is an excellent book (and I say this as someone who vastly prefers novels to short stories). Lake of Souls has three sections: stand-alone short stories, stories in the Imperial Radch universe, and stories in the Raven Tower universe, and they're all excellent. I enjoyed all but one of the stand-alone stories (and the sole story I didn't like, I didn't enjoy only because it's a bit of a downer. But it's also only 1.5 pages long, so hey). I'd read two of the three Imperial Radch stories prior to this anthology's publication and enjoyed them again here (I won't spoil "She Commands Me And I Obey" but IYKYK...and it's good.) The third, new-to-me story was my least favorite of the bunch, but only because it's so obviously a reskinned version of a standard folktale that didn't add much to the Radch universe or benefit from having Radch elements introduced to it. I was surprised by how much I liked the Raven Tower stories; in fact, I liked many of them more than the novel itself. The Raven Tower worldbuilding constraints just work so well in a short story format. And throughout all three sections, Leckie says a ton of incisive and so-sharp-you-won't-know-you're-cut-and-bleeding things to say about gender. This book was delightful and I will absolutely read it again.


What I Am Currently Reading

A Fate Inked in Blood – Danielle Jensen
I'm only about 50 pages into it but enjoying things so far.

The Laws of Brainjo – Josh Turknett
I'll have this one finished by next week.


What I’m Reading Next

I acquired no new books this week.


これで以上です。

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