LS and I have finished posting another of our Matthew McCormick main stories, and this one was a bit of a milestone for a couple of different reasons.
Small Town Mentality (30614 words) by argentum_ls, Teratornis
Chapters: 9/9
Fandom: Highlander: The Series
Rating: Teen And Up Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Characters: Matthew McCormick, Original Characters, Gregor Powers
Additional Tags: Canon-Typical Violence, Case Fic, TV Logic, Minor Character Death
Series: Part 12 of Highlander: The Agent
Summary: With Talbot on leave, Matthew travels on his own to assist with a months-old serial case in a small, insular town. As he digs deeper and the murderer accelerates, he's forced to confront his assumptions about who is a friend, and who is a foe.
( Read more... )
Small Town Mentality (30614 words) by argentum_ls, Teratornis
Chapters: 9/9
Fandom: Highlander: The Series
Rating: Teen And Up Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Characters: Matthew McCormick, Original Characters, Gregor Powers
Additional Tags: Canon-Typical Violence, Case Fic, TV Logic, Minor Character Death
Series: Part 12 of Highlander: The Agent
Summary: With Talbot on leave, Matthew travels on his own to assist with a months-old serial case in a small, insular town. As he digs deeper and the murderer accelerates, he's forced to confront his assumptions about who is a friend, and who is a foe.
( Read more... )
First and foremost, I'd like to offer up a huge "Thank You!!" to you for creating a gift for me. I know how difficult it can be to put any part of your creative process into the hands of another individual, so I will do my best to treat that trust with the care and respect it deserves. ^_^
Gifting is turned on and treats of any variety are welcome. ^_^
AO3: eirenical (chibi1723)
tumblr: eirenical
Fic versus Art/Gifs/photosets
Most of the more specific prompts have been written mostly with fic in mind just because I’m a writer and that’s how my brain works, but there are more nonspecific prompts in the “Likes” sections that I think would make good art prompts? Of course, you are also welcome to delve into the more specific prompts as well if something strikes your fancy. ^_^
Vid prompts
I'm honestly game for just about anything you'd like to do with a video, since I know that you're going to be limited by what scenes are available in canon, so feel free to borrow from any of the prompts below if they're helpful or to come up with your own ideas. ^_^ In terms of music... ok, that's a hard one. XD My music taste is quite eclectic.
Some current favorites:
And that's all I can think of off the top of my head, but if none of those are speaking to you, feel free to reach out to the mod and I can look for other songs. ^_^
Notes on rating, kink and general likes and dislikes (DNWs):
( Rating and kink )
( Likes )
( DNWs (do not wants )
Prompts:
(Overall disclaimer: for any of these general prompts that aren’t sexual, Fang Duobing can absolutely be around, too, if it makes sense for him to be there, but I do not want him as part of the ship or implied to be part of the ship.)
Feel free to take these as pre-ten years Li Xiangyi and Di Feisheng if that makes sense for the prompt. ^_^
Gifting is turned on and treats of any variety are welcome. ^_^
AO3: eirenical (chibi1723)
tumblr: eirenical
Fic versus Art/Gifs/photosets
Most of the more specific prompts have been written mostly with fic in mind just because I’m a writer and that’s how my brain works, but there are more nonspecific prompts in the “Likes” sections that I think would make good art prompts? Of course, you are also welcome to delve into the more specific prompts as well if something strikes your fancy. ^_^
Vid prompts
I'm honestly game for just about anything you'd like to do with a video, since I know that you're going to be limited by what scenes are available in canon, so feel free to borrow from any of the prompts below if they're helpful or to come up with your own ideas. ^_^ In terms of music... ok, that's a hard one. XD My music taste is quite eclectic.
Some current favorites:
- Мельница – «Прощай» (Official video) (Melnitsa - "Goodbye") is a song I've been obsessed with since I saw it in a Fanghua vid which has since disappeared from Youtube. TT^TT (If anyone has that vid saved and wants to share, I'd love you forever, btw.)
- Barns Courtney -- Glitter and Gold -- I also like a lot of his other songs, so feel free to explore. ^_^
- Pretty much anything by WILD -- Silver and Gold was the first of their songs I fell in love with and I've made vids of my own for Just Begun and Haunted Heart, but I don't think I've ever heard a song of theirs that I don't like, so have fun? ^_^
- The Arcadian Wild -- This is another band that I don't think I've ever really disliked a song from, but my favorite album is their self-titled album, The Arcadian Wild, and a few of their singles: Wolves of the Revolution, The Storm, Envy Green, Dopamine, and Willow. I also like Hey, Runner from the Finch in the Pantry album.
- A bit obsessed with the Kill Me Love Me OST song 焰 | Flame.
- She Keeps Me Warm by Mary Lambert seems a nice soft song, too. ^_^
And that's all I can think of off the top of my head, but if none of those are speaking to you, feel free to reach out to the mod and I can look for other songs. ^_^
Notes on rating, kink and general likes and dislikes (DNWs):
( Rating and kink )
( Likes )
( DNWs (do not wants )
Prompts:
(Overall disclaimer: for any of these general prompts that aren’t sexual, Fang Duobing can absolutely be around, too, if it makes sense for him to be there, but I do not want him as part of the ship or implied to be part of the ship.)
Feel free to take these as pre-ten years Li Xiangyi and Di Feisheng if that makes sense for the prompt. ^_^
- Li Lianhua gets injured and Di Feisheng has to take care of him/get him home safely.
- Li Lianhua gets sick and Di Feisheng has to take care of him. This can be anything from a minor cold with more fussing than is at all necessary to the canon Bicha poisoning.
- Getting together/first time fic: who makes the first move? Is it either of their first times? When does this happen? Does either of them think it’s just sex and if so, how does that complicate things?
- Cozy domestic Dihua. Curling up in Lianhualou together, reading to each other, soft, gentle caretaking like bathing together or brushing each other’s hair, soft gentle massages and/or hair petting, sitting inside warm and toasty with blankets and a fire going while snow falls outside (...probably not in Lianhualou for that one XD), IDEK, but just… anything soft, cozy and domestic. ^_^
- Li Lianhua taking Di Feisheng out to have some fun somewhere, maybe? The beach? An outdoor festival? Fireworks? <-- (I think these would work pretty well for pre-10 years) Or maybe post-ten years, the two of them trying to find recreational activities they enjoy doing together?
- Time Loop: one of them gets caught in a time loop and has to get them out of it, maybe falling in love with the other through the process?
- Time travel fix-it: One of them goes back in time and has to decide whether or not they want the course of their time together to change, and if so, what do they decide to change?
- Reincarnation AU: either Li Lianhua gets reincarnated into the canon timeline and finds Di Feisheng again or they both get reincarnated into the present day, or Di Feisheng cultivates to immortality somehow and finds Li Lianhua in the future -- this prompt would be my one exception to the "I prefer to avoid modern AUs DNW."
- Both Li Lianhua and Di Feisheng have been through so much betrayal in their lives, and neither of them has ever had a chance to process it really. I'd love to see them both get a chance to at least purge some of that or have a good breakdown over it. ^_^
- Huli Jing POV: maybe Huli Jing really is a fox spirit or some other kind of demon/spirit/god either hiding in their animal form or who has not yet cultivate to a human form? Or maybe she's just intelligent enough to have a POV as a dog?
- I do so enjoy those two episodes where they're both trapped in the dungeon. What if they were trapped together at some point? What if they had to take care of each other? ^_^
- Noncon prompts(If you click this by accident, just reload the page and it will put the spoiler cover back on.)*coughs* As mentioned, I have a noncon kink a mile wide, so… Li Lianhua gets raped and Di Feisheng has to help him through it/after the fact. (This could be a person or group of people or some creature they encounter… tentacles could be fun… just saying… ^_^) Bonus: maybe Di Feisheng has to watch it happening because he can’t interfere just yet or he’ll get them both killed? That would be a fun twist during the dungeon episodes.
(
starandrea Feb. 27th, 2026 07:37 am)
It appears that tomorrow is the last day of February. What were my goals this month? Am I still working on goals for the year? (The fact that I don't know seems to indicate either I am not yet successful, or I am already so successful I don't even think about it.) (I'm sure it's the latter, right?)
I haven't finished my Grade 1 Chinese textbooks, but in my defense I added math, so it's four textbooks per grade instead of two. They're really fun. I remember that reading them the first time is how I learned the word for "equals". (In that I still remember it, rather than just seeing it and forgetting it, which is apparently what I did with "greater than" and "less than".)
I've been in the 75fluent discord a bit, and a lot of people are using the SuperChinese app. I looked back through the scores of Chinese learning apps I've tried, and that's not one of them, so I feel like I should check it out. (My Chinese learning app knowledge is now, after just a few years, completely outdated. That's pretty neat.)
2024 was the year it got easier to listen, and 2025 was the year it got easier to write. Dare I decide that 2026 will be the year it gets easier to speak?
Last night I saw a video about how, when reading a book, the first chapter is the hardest and it gets immediately easier after that. So I started reading the first Chinese book I found in my kindle library that was A) new to me, and B) not a graded reader. (I love graded readers, but after you've read hundreds of them, they're a bit repetitive. By design, of course.) It seems to be about good study habits for high schoolers. I don't remember how this is in my library, but the first chapter was pretty interesting, so I assume that's why.)
I did not diamond paint except to start the irises, but I did photograph a bunch of legos, make some graphics, and handwrite some cool zines for
beagoldfish. Plus wrote stories for
chenqing_100!
I also sowed a bunch of seeds in containers now covered by snow, and looked at enough of my tubers to determine that 1) the dahlias look largely viable, and 2) there was probably some layering of cold in my canna storage, because the ones in the top box are trying to sprout while the ones in the bottom box are soundly asleep. (That's reasonable; they were by the back door where the floor is pretty cold, but the pipes above the floor run warm for the dog's comfort.)
I haven't finished my Grade 1 Chinese textbooks, but in my defense I added math, so it's four textbooks per grade instead of two. They're really fun. I remember that reading them the first time is how I learned the word for "equals". (In that I still remember it, rather than just seeing it and forgetting it, which is apparently what I did with "greater than" and "less than".)
I've been in the 75fluent discord a bit, and a lot of people are using the SuperChinese app. I looked back through the scores of Chinese learning apps I've tried, and that's not one of them, so I feel like I should check it out. (My Chinese learning app knowledge is now, after just a few years, completely outdated. That's pretty neat.)
2024 was the year it got easier to listen, and 2025 was the year it got easier to write. Dare I decide that 2026 will be the year it gets easier to speak?
Last night I saw a video about how, when reading a book, the first chapter is the hardest and it gets immediately easier after that. So I started reading the first Chinese book I found in my kindle library that was A) new to me, and B) not a graded reader. (I love graded readers, but after you've read hundreds of them, they're a bit repetitive. By design, of course.) It seems to be about good study habits for high schoolers. I don't remember how this is in my library, but the first chapter was pretty interesting, so I assume that's why.)
I did not diamond paint except to start the irises, but I did photograph a bunch of legos, make some graphics, and handwrite some cool zines for
I also sowed a bunch of seeds in containers now covered by snow, and looked at enough of my tubers to determine that 1) the dahlias look largely viable, and 2) there was probably some layering of cold in my canna storage, because the ones in the top box are trying to sprout while the ones in the bottom box are soundly asleep. (That's reasonable; they were by the back door where the floor is pretty cold, but the pipes above the floor run warm for the dog's comfort.)
Tags:
I had to dig around a bit, but apparently I heard about this game around March of 2016; I bought it on GOG for its full price on March 30th of 2016. At that point, 1.0.6 had been released about 10 days before (and 1.0.7 would be released a week later). Version 1.0 was released on February 26, 2016, so I was about a month late to the party.
Now it's 10 years old, with a retrospective video and the Symphony of Seasons concert showing up on Youtube later today. I've written a bunch of mods for it. Not fancy mods by any stretch, but mods!
Please enjoy this picture from early on when I was playing my first game and romancing Maru (and even somewhat matching the male suits!)

Now it's 10 years old, with a retrospective video and the Symphony of Seasons concert showing up on Youtube later today. I've written a bunch of mods for it. Not fancy mods by any stretch, but mods!
Please enjoy this picture from early on when I was playing my first game and romancing Maru (and even somewhat matching the male suits!)

(
starandrea Feb. 25th, 2026 10:58 pm)
♥ zines!
♥ winter sow round 1 week 1:
( picture )
♥ fuchsia!
( picture )
♥ Daphne is bored with the snow, so we are taking her to quiet parking lots to run around.
( pictures )
She does better without sleeves. I wonder if I can remove them from her Spark Paws sweatshirt without destroying it.
♥ winter sow round 1 week 1:
( picture )
♥ fuchsia!
( picture )
♥ Daphne is bored with the snow, so we are taking her to quiet parking lots to run around.
( pictures )
She does better without sleeves. I wonder if I can remove them from her Spark Paws sweatshirt without destroying it.
Tags:
I picked up both of these from DriveThruRPG. I have yet to play either of them, I'm just looking at their systems.
Cozy MMUGS is $5 USD and Idlewater is Pay-What-You-Want (default $2 USD). They're both variants on the same idea of a life of farming, mining, foraging, and other things you'd expect from their video game equivalents. They're what are considered "solo journaling TTRPGs" (though the author says the journaling is optional), where you write out what you did each day. If you've never heard of journaling RPGs, it's where you have a slightly guided adventure with the dice working more or less as your gamemaster/guide, and you're expected to log/journal in a story format what you did each day as your character.
Of the two, Idlewater is definitely the simpler of the two systems. It's vaguely d20 System based, though it doesn't use the OGL because it doesn't need to. You roll for six stats which very much resemble D&D ones but have different names (for the most part); you also have one skill related to each stat. It comes with its own setting (which is actually based off a related RPG) which seems to be magic-based even though there is no magic in the game, and includes an entire town full of locals. You do the same things that you'd expect in a farming-type cozy video game, such as farming, mining, dungeon delving, blacksmithing, hunting, and selling - oh, and of course, relationships. You are limited by a stamina type system where you have a limit as to how much you can do each day. There's also a weather system, and if you're really unlucky, there will be some days where you feed your animals and then go back to bed.
(This is likely the earlier of the two works and could have used a couple more editing passthroughs; for example, the setting has 12 30-day months split into 4 seasons, but the villagers have the typical "Summer 4" type birthdays; for some reason, the more Constitution stat equivalent you have, the easier it is for you to get hit... and so on. Also, the PDF contains several pages of descriptions about the various ancestries in the setting, some of which supposedly have magic, but there is no magic use in this game....)
Cozy MMUGS is kind of a more detailed version of Idlewater. It uses the author's own dice system (instead of Idlewater's vague d20 System), has a generic setting, and no set village - though you could easily lift Idlewater's characters for it sans that game's setting info regarding their ancestries (or including their ancestries, if you want). It has similar 6 stats (with the same 3-18 number spread as Idlewater), but has more skills, and an xp system so you can go up in level and increase your skills. It also has magic and a related MP system, but no concrete magic powers - very much write your own.
ETA: So there are 3 possible types of rolls: the Oracle Check, which is a simple yes/no question, the rare stat last resort stat check, which is a pretty standard roll at or below stat check, and the regular skill check. The regular skill check goes something like this: roll 2 d12s, and then a die according to how many skill points you have (you can have 0-3) in the related skill. The higher your skill, the bigger your die. If you match or beat at least one of the d12s, you have a success; if you match or are higher than both, it's a great success. If you have a modifier based on the related stat, you add or subtract it from your skill roll before comparing.
Personally, I'd blend the two. Use Cozy MMUGS' system, but include Idlewater's alchemy and plants, along with its calendar system. I'd import Idlewater's village full of folks, use Idlewater's calendar (and set the villagers' birthdays to be spread throughout those months).
( My notes on how I'd merge Idlewater's stuff with Cozy MMUGS )
Cozy MMUGS is $5 USD and Idlewater is Pay-What-You-Want (default $2 USD). They're both variants on the same idea of a life of farming, mining, foraging, and other things you'd expect from their video game equivalents. They're what are considered "solo journaling TTRPGs" (though the author says the journaling is optional), where you write out what you did each day. If you've never heard of journaling RPGs, it's where you have a slightly guided adventure with the dice working more or less as your gamemaster/guide, and you're expected to log/journal in a story format what you did each day as your character.
Of the two, Idlewater is definitely the simpler of the two systems. It's vaguely d20 System based, though it doesn't use the OGL because it doesn't need to. You roll for six stats which very much resemble D&D ones but have different names (for the most part); you also have one skill related to each stat. It comes with its own setting (which is actually based off a related RPG) which seems to be magic-based even though there is no magic in the game, and includes an entire town full of locals. You do the same things that you'd expect in a farming-type cozy video game, such as farming, mining, dungeon delving, blacksmithing, hunting, and selling - oh, and of course, relationships. You are limited by a stamina type system where you have a limit as to how much you can do each day. There's also a weather system, and if you're really unlucky, there will be some days where you feed your animals and then go back to bed.
(This is likely the earlier of the two works and could have used a couple more editing passthroughs; for example, the setting has 12 30-day months split into 4 seasons, but the villagers have the typical "Summer 4" type birthdays; for some reason, the more Constitution stat equivalent you have, the easier it is for you to get hit... and so on. Also, the PDF contains several pages of descriptions about the various ancestries in the setting, some of which supposedly have magic, but there is no magic use in this game....)
Cozy MMUGS is kind of a more detailed version of Idlewater. It uses the author's own dice system (instead of Idlewater's vague d20 System), has a generic setting, and no set village - though you could easily lift Idlewater's characters for it sans that game's setting info regarding their ancestries (or including their ancestries, if you want). It has similar 6 stats (with the same 3-18 number spread as Idlewater), but has more skills, and an xp system so you can go up in level and increase your skills. It also has magic and a related MP system, but no concrete magic powers - very much write your own.
ETA: So there are 3 possible types of rolls: the Oracle Check, which is a simple yes/no question, the rare stat last resort stat check, which is a pretty standard roll at or below stat check, and the regular skill check. The regular skill check goes something like this: roll 2 d12s, and then a die according to how many skill points you have (you can have 0-3) in the related skill. The higher your skill, the bigger your die. If you match or beat at least one of the d12s, you have a success; if you match or are higher than both, it's a great success. If you have a modifier based on the related stat, you add or subtract it from your skill roll before comparing.
Personally, I'd blend the two. Use Cozy MMUGS' system, but include Idlewater's alchemy and plants, along with its calendar system. I'd import Idlewater's village full of folks, use Idlewater's calendar (and set the villagers' birthdays to be spread throughout those months).
( My notes on how I'd merge Idlewater's stuff with Cozy MMUGS )
ETA: Code Tour: 2024-12-01 to 2026-02-25. Some longed for fixes in there. Hopefully we get a code push soon.
Fun Art & Stuff!
PBSVoices: How Navajo Weavers Keep an Ancient Art Alive (Video: 10 minutes).
Very cool! I don't know anything about Navajo weaving, and would love to watch a longer project about it.
spankulert: Icon post #122.
Including The X-Files, Star Treks: Starfleet Academy, Voyager + Discovery, Fallout and more.
Really nice to see the ST:SA icons!
NationalTheatre: Take Your Seats | Announcement | National Theatre at Home (Video: 30 seconds).
FINALLY! I believe it will go up on the NT's subscription streaming site after that.
The Tyee: They Lit the Path for Women Photographers.
A couple of exhibit reviews for shows I can't see. LOLSOB.
Nanaimo News Now: Nanaimo’s Maffeo Sutton Park shines during ‘Lighting a Path’ public art exhibit.
Really cool way to do an art show!
Dead Language Society: How far back in time can you understand English?
I made it to like the fourteen hundreds. I'm sure most of you can get further back.
ecc-poetry/Elisa Chavez: What You Need to Be Warned (Or: Inventory and Appraisement of Neil Gaiman, Hereafter "Decedent").
I'm going to nominate this for a poetry Hugo. I'm haunted by the line:
Technology Bullshit:
The Conversation: This TikTok star sharing Australian animal stories doesn't exist – it's AI Blakface.
Fantastic. Just what Indigenous communities need: computer-generated Pretendians.
Electronic Frontier Foundation: So, You’ve Hit an Age Gate. What Now?
Advice for how to proceed with age verifications, since that's going to be part of our fucking lives now.
The Tyee: AI Is the Elephant in the Newsroom. How Are Journalists Reacting?
404 Media: This App Warns You if Someone Is Wearing Smart Glasses Nearby.
You might have to get a free account to see this? Anyway, nice that people are trying to code around other people's appalling privacy violations? Even if you don't get the app (which I haven't), good info about the stupid smart glasses.
Gender Bullshit (mostly men, tbh):
Comics Beat: Multiple women accuse Spider-Gwen co-creator Jason Latour of misconduct.
This is actually a few years old, but I'd missed it at the time (or forgotten it entirely). FFS.
Maureen Ryan on BlueSky:
Thread about how real journalism is supposed to work. In this section due to the inciting incident.
The Politics of Dancing: Abuse is still rife in dance music: Here's how we break the cycle.
Great essay about structural problems.
The Tyee: SOGI Is Under Attack. Educators Say It’s Never Been More Needed.
It's a municipal and school board election year in B.C., and I think we're in for a fucking fight. PROTECT OUR KIDS!
Fun Art & Stuff!
This short film follows two Navajo weavers whose work preserves memory, identity, and ancestral knowledge.
Very cool! I don't know anything about Navajo weaving, and would love to watch a longer project about it.
Including The X-Files, Star Treks: Starfleet Academy, Voyager + Discovery, Fallout and more.
Really nice to see the ST:SA icons!
On Thursday 12 March (7pm GMT), lose yourself in the hit production of The Importance of Being Earnest at our free YouTube premiere. Can’t make it? The stream will remain accessible on demand, for free, for one week only.
FINALLY! I believe it will go up on the NT's subscription streaming site after that.
The Tyee: They Lit the Path for Women Photographers.
A couple of exhibit reviews for shows I can't see. LOLSOB.
Nanaimo News Now: Nanaimo’s Maffeo Sutton Park shines during ‘Lighting a Path’ public art exhibit.
Really cool way to do an art show!
Dead Language Society: How far back in time can you understand English?
I made it to like the fourteen hundreds. I'm sure most of you can get further back.
I'm going to nominate this for a poetry Hugo. I'm haunted by the line:
Even at your worst, you are replaceable.
Technology Bullshit:
The Conversation: This TikTok star sharing Australian animal stories doesn't exist – it's AI Blakface.
Fantastic. Just what Indigenous communities need: computer-generated Pretendians.
Electronic Frontier Foundation: So, You’ve Hit an Age Gate. What Now?
Advice for how to proceed with age verifications, since that's going to be part of our fucking lives now.
The Tyee: AI Is the Elephant in the Newsroom. How Are Journalists Reacting?
Ask yourself, why are you using the tool to do this? Do I have nine other things to do, and this will make my life faster? Or am I trying not to pay a journalist?
404 Media: This App Warns You if Someone Is Wearing Smart Glasses Nearby.
You might have to get a free account to see this? Anyway, nice that people are trying to code around other people's appalling privacy violations? Even if you don't get the app (which I haven't), good info about the stupid smart glasses.
Gender Bullshit (mostly men, tbh):
Comics Beat: Multiple women accuse Spider-Gwen co-creator Jason Latour of misconduct.
This is actually a few years old, but I'd missed it at the time (or forgotten it entirely). FFS.
Maureen Ryan on BlueSky:
'll just add, as someone who's been doing investigative reporting for decades, all publications doing real journalism (i.e., not a sockpuppet or Some Guy on the Internet)--they have MANY layers of editorial & legal review.
Thread about how real journalism is supposed to work. In this section due to the inciting incident.
The Politics of Dancing: Abuse is still rife in dance music: Here's how we break the cycle.
Great essay about structural problems.
The Tyee: SOGI Is Under Attack. Educators Say It’s Never Been More Needed.
It's a municipal and school board election year in B.C., and I think we're in for a fucking fight. PROTECT OUR KIDS!
Tags:
(
starandrea Feb. 24th, 2026 11:11 pm)
♥ zines for
beagoldfish: started
♥ video for RPM: started, kind of, in that I figured out how to do it probably
♥ winter sowing: finished! all 22 containers are out and covered with snow thanks to the blizzard so it's an authentic experience for them
also I finished Liu Cixin's To Hold Up The Sky anthology, thank goodness because the last story was particularly positive and relatable, but it did make me laugh that he says he's often asked, "what makes it Chinese science fiction?" and literally after the first story I was like, "have you read it."
♥ video for RPM: started, kind of, in that I figured out how to do it probably
♥ winter sowing: finished! all 22 containers are out and covered with snow thanks to the blizzard so it's an authentic experience for them
also I finished Liu Cixin's To Hold Up The Sky anthology, thank goodness because the last story was particularly positive and relatable, but it did make me laugh that he says he's often asked, "what makes it Chinese science fiction?" and literally after the first story I was like, "have you read it."
Tags:
hello! im currently working on a fantasy story where the country it takes place in (or at the very least starts in- im still figuring out plot details) is inspired by indonesia, but im having trouble finding good resources about indonesian architecture in the vague time period im writing in- i dont have a specific idea beyond the vague medieval times setting most fantasy stories use, but im more than willing to try and narrow it down if it helps. if anyone has resources i could look into, that would be very helpful!
Read this because a) I'd been meaning to, b) it was a yuletide EPH (which obviously I didn't fill, but you know... good intentions).
In the past, I've found Donoghue rather bleak, and preferred her non, fiction. (Maybe it was just that I read the one where everyone died of Spanish Influenza?)
This takes place across several hours, on a train that runs from the coast of Normandy to Paris, where it will famously fail to brake and blast through the wall of the train station (this was re-enacted in the movie Hugo, and captured in a tonne of contemporary photographs). Which is not what the book's about, other than as a driving sense of inevitable ruin. The book is about a few dozen characters, including the train itself, a slice of life as the world teeters on the edge of a new century. Many of the characters are historical figures, some of whom were on the train that day, a bunch more who might have been. There's an anarchist with a bomb, the railway employees, a painter, a secretary, several politicians, a sex worker, a medical student, some children, a variety of day labourers, all forced to into each other's company for the course of several hours. Many of them are some flavour of queer, several are not white, each has their own story. All have a complicated relationship with the racing pace of technological and cultural change, at a time when France has only been a Republic (again) for a few decades, and it's (again) not at all clear if this time will stick.
I often get confused by books with this many characters, especially when there's not much in the way of plot, and the book jumps between them pretty fast, but Donoghue makes them all so distinct, with their own voices, that I didn't have trouble this time. I also appreciated her deft touch at making the characters feel of that moment in history, rather than being stand ins for the contemporary reader. We hear about the Dreyfus Affair, for example, and mostly people just believe he's a traitor, even the anarchist, who theoretically should know better. If there's any author stand in, it's an elderly Russian lady's companion, who mostly seems to have things figured out, and is also a cranky weirdo. Actually, a lot of characters are cranky weirdos, and not necessarily good people, but also not the kind of vile that are terrible to spend time with.
I'm perhaps not at my most articulate explaining why I liked this, but mostly that it scratched my brain as a deeply considered idea of how life might have looked at another time, when people were like us, but also different.
"Mr Rowl" by D.K. Broster
I'm not sure if this is the second most popular one after The Jacobite Trilogy, or if The Wounded Name is. Anyway, another 1920s book by a lesbian author, about plausibly deniable Historical Gays. This one is set during the Napoleonic wars, and centres on a French officer who is a prisoner of war in England. He's initial held on parole in a bucolic town, but following Events, he ends up in a prison stockade, then on the prison hulks (de-masted ships floating in the English Channel). He has a low-key romance with one of the girls from the original town, and a series of oddly intense interactions with English officers (one of whom appears to be canonically queer). There's also crossdressing, and quite a bit of hurt/comfort.
Having come in to Broster on The Flight of the Heron, I was expecting the same kind of emotional romance plot, with the pivot of the story being around the relationship between the two main male characters. Thus was initially discombobulated by how meandering the plot ended up being. We follow "Mr Rowl" (the English pronunciation of Raoul) across a series of misfortunes as he wanders about England, not meeting either of the other significant male characters until half way through the book. The most intense action is packed into two chapters in the last third, which makes the structure a little lopsided; however, the plotlines that have been building do come together rather neatly, which I enjoyed.
I started watching the new Star Trek show not long after I finished this, and was immediately struck by the connection between how Broster writes honour-obsessed men in the 18th and 19th century, and the Klingons. Some of the "I must do this Because Honour" choices in this book—though they more or less made sense—did feel a little load-bearing in terms of plot. And the heroine did spend some time going, "Um, holy shit, why?" at a few of those choices. It does also lead to several of the most tropy h/c scenes, however, so I suppose I shouldn't complain.
I like that the main antagonists of the book were a) the controlling asshole boyfriend, and b) the British penal system.
Orbital by Samantha Harvey, narrated by Sarah Naudi
Firstly, I remember some debate about this when this came out: this book is not science fiction. It's literary fiction set on the International Space Station. If you wanted to have an argument for why it was SF, you could say, "Well there's an ongoing Moon mission, which there wasn't at the time of this writing." But there being a Moon mission has been on the books for a decade, so setting it slightly in the future so that the mission could be happening at the same time as the book is, frankly, not science fiction, and I don't know why people thought it was.
Secondly, oh my god why? I guess this was so popular because most people haven't really thought about what life on the I.S.S. might be like, and this was more or less informative on that point. If you've never even one time thought about the space program. It rapidly became clear that someone who's read multiple astronaut biographies may not be the target audience.
There were several neat scenes! I liked the bit about the cosmonaut talking on a HAM radio with random Earthlings, for example. However, the majority of the book was poetic reflections on either inane details of space life, or just looking at the Earth being pretty. Eventually the Astronauts go to bed, and then we just close out with long descriptions of the Earth being pretty. I may not have gotten the point of this book.
(While writing this, I discovered that www.HowManyPeopleAreInSpaceRightNow.com is no longer being maintained, which makes me sad.)
The queen is back! Long live the queen!
Tags:
.