Talking meme month: day 2

Feb. 2nd, 2026 10:18 pm
hafnia: Animated drawing of a flickering fire with a pair of eyes peeping out of it, from the film Howl's Moving Castle. (Default)
[personal profile] hafnia
(For all the questions, or to submit one of your own, the post is here ♥ )

What's your favorite TTRPG setting, and why?

Ha. I love this mostly because I don't have one.

details on what I mean beneath the jump. )

SGA: Oblivious by astolat

Feb. 3rd, 2026 06:46 pm
mific: (McShep close kiss)
[personal profile] mific posting in [community profile] fancake
Fandom: Stargate Atlantis
Characters/Pairings: John Sheppard/Rodney McKay, Elizabeth Weir, Carson Beckett, Aiden Ford
Rating: Explicit
Length: 8100
Content Notes: no AO3 warnings apply
Creator Links: astolat on AO3
Themes: Inept in love, Friends to lovers, First time, Favorite fanworks

Summary: In which Rodney and John fail to pay attention.

Reccer's Notes: For me, this is the ultimate "inept in love" fic. It's clever, very funny, and brilliantly written, as Rodney bounces blithely from assumption to oblivious assumption, with John startled by the sudden sex they're having, but somehow never managing to communicate clearly that Rodney's got it all wrong about them being in a relationship - until it's finally totally clear that they both are. An all-time classic!

Fanwork Links: Oblivious on AO3
And there are TWO excellent podfics!
podfic by cookiemom6067
podfic by jenwryn

dustbunny105: (Default)
[personal profile] dustbunny105 posting in [community profile] halfamoon
Title: Business Before Pleasure
Fandom: Transformers (Sunbow G1)
Character(s): Chromia, Firestar, Elita One
Rating: PG
Summary: Not long after losing the Ark crew, Firestar is keen to steal a few moments of fun. Chromia isn't so sure, especially when they find themselves suddenly under Elita One's scrutiny.
Notes: Also for "Chromia, Firestar and Elita One; business before pleasure" at fembot_prompts on Tumblr.

Read more... )

Drive by post

Feb. 2nd, 2026 08:15 pm
sholio: blue and yellow airplane flying (Biggles-Biplane)
[personal profile] sholio
There's a Biggles February prompt fest, Biggletines, going on over at [community profile] bigglesevents:

https://bigglesevents.dreamwidth.org/18654.html

Feel free to leave prompts, answer prompts, or both!
mythicmistress: The sun shining through Stonehenge (Default)
[personal profile] mythicmistress posting in [community profile] toonup
I had been planning on breathing some life into this comm a while back... Oops.

Anyway, I thought I'd post about a bit of early episode weirdness I saw in Courage the Cowardly Dog. Which I will admit is a bit of a strange thing to say for a cartoon with almost no continuity whatsoever. It involves Katz in the first official episode after "The Chicken From Outer Space" (well, going by the episode order from my DVD set at any rate). Namely, the first business he's shown running, the Katz Motel. This struck me as a bit odd on a series rewatch. The other two businesses we see Katz running both involve a hard "C" sound, stylized as a "K" in their names, "Katz Kandy" and "Klub Katz", and I'm willing to bet his submarine cruise enterprise would have been "Katz Kruises".

So, is there a way a motel could fit this naming scheme? I looked for synonyms for "motel" that had that hard "C" sound that could become spelled with a "K", and found "caravansary." Merriam-Webster defines this word as "a place that provides rooms and usually a public dining room for overnight guests." Now, you could easily get a place like this to work with the plot of the episode- say that Eustace is in the dining room, only for Katz to send his spiders in through covered dishes. But then again, your average viewer isn't going to know what a caravansary even is, especially not a kid.

Why this? I'm not sure. Maybe the show's crew just hadn't quite nailed down what they wanted to do with Katz just yet. I just thought it was interesting.

So, if anyone's reading this, have you seen anything in an animated series you would count as early episode weirdness?

Snowcrete

Feb. 3rd, 2026 12:55 am
[syndicated profile] languagelog_feed

Posted by Victor Mair

From François Lang:

The storm that Mother Nature visited upon the Washington DC area was unusually difficult because several inches of snow were followed by several more inches of sleet. This combination resulted in a top layer of solid ice which has been dubbed "snowcrete".

The same storm hit us in Philadelphia, so I know exactly what "snowcrete" is like.

Frustrated by city response, D.C. residents step up to help clear ‘snowcrete’:
As mounds of stubborn snow remained on some residential streets and other areas, many Washingtonians found their own ways of digging out, whether through charity, camaraderieor commerce.
WP (January 31, 2026)
By Brittany Shammas, Michael Laris and Ruby Mellen

I don't know about the city's response in DC, but in the towns and suburbs around Philadelphia, in most cases whole armies of plows were out in force, and they did a respectable job, although the snow was more than man and machine could handle efficiently right away.

Officials in D.C. and its surrounding suburbs have stressed the extraorinary nature of the Jan. 25 storm, which began with 4 to 7 inches of snow and was followed by up to 4 inches of sleet.  The amount of sleet — snow that falls, melts and refreezes into ice pellets before hitting the ground — was more than had hit the region in at least three decades, according to the Capital Weather Gang.  Brutally frigid temperatures in the days since has kept things from melting.

I realize that people were frustrated and badly inconvenienced by the snow and sleet, but I am in sympathy with the public servants who had to move all of that heavy, cumbersome snow and ice.

As François cautioned, "Be careful walking on that snowcrete. I've slipped and fallen on my derrière a couple times already."

The snowcrete was bad enough, but I think even worse were the unremitting weeks of sub-freezing temperatures.  Truly painful.

This is the fiercest winter of my whole life.  I can understand Punxsutawney Phil running back down in his burrow this morning, but I hope that he doesn't stay there for more than six weeks!

 

Selected readings

pendulumscale: (zarcyuu)
[personal profile] pendulumscale posting in [community profile] fandomcalendar

Description: [community profile] ygorarepairs is a mini bang event that focuses on rare pair ships for all Yugioh series (including crossovers), open to writers, artists, and image & video editors.


This year's mini bang is in regular bang order. Authors have drafted fics for their chosen rare pair. Artists will claim at least 1 fic to use as inspiration for fanart. Partners will collaborate and share their fanworks together during the posting period for this event. Please read our specifications page for more details about expectations for event works.

Claims for the 2025-2026 mini bang are open! 

Artists can see summaries and complete the claim submission form here: 
graceful dicehttps://docs.getgrist.com/forms/nmJe1ZZzHoDu1qWfkKNGeM/10skull dice
 

Dates (see Schedule for more info):

  • Signups: Nov 1-Nov 30 (writers may start immediately)
  • Check-in #1 (writers only): Dec 21-23
  • Check-in #2 (writers with claim pitch): Jan 30-Feb 1
  • Claims: Feb 2-6
  • Claims assigned: Feb 7/8
  • Artist WIP share: Feb 20-21
  • Check-in #3 (all participants): Mar 6-7
  • Posting prep: Mar 12-14
  • Posting: Mar 15-Apr 4

Ugh

Feb. 2nd, 2026 04:40 pm
muccamukk: Steve standing with his arms folded, looking disapproving. (Avengers: Judgy Arms)
[personal profile] muccamukk
Niel Gaiman is trying on a redemption tour.

I should've stayed in fucking bed.

AO3 Tag Bingo (January 2026)

Feb. 2nd, 2026 04:30 pm
hafnia: Animated drawing of a flickering fire with a pair of eyes peeping out of it, from the film Howl's Moving Castle. (Default)
[personal profile] hafnia
AO3 added additional "No Fandom" tags!

To celebrate this (and because one of them in particular made me laugh and go, "of course that's a thing", I'm amusing myself by playing Tag Bingo, and if that sounds like fun to you, READ ON.

beneath a jump to be considerate <3 )

Satire Site Makes Me Giggle

Feb. 2nd, 2026 06:33 pm
jesse_the_k: <a href="https://web.archive.org/web/20040204184222/http://developer.apple.com/technotes/tn/tn1031.html">Bitmapped "dogcow" Apple Technote 1013, and appeared in many OS9 print dialogs</a> (dogcow from OS9)
[personal profile] jesse_the_k

BugsAppleLoves.com summarizes 17 long-standing bugs in the Apple computing ecosystem, and calculates entirely bogus yet entertaining cost estimates for the time we Apple users waste -- while trying to select text on an iPhone or trying to maintain window sizing in macOS' Finder.

(At least it confirmed the iPhone text selection issues was not just me).

Teacup Magic by Tansy Rayner Roberts

Feb. 2nd, 2026 07:08 pm
lightreads: a partial image of a etymology tree for the Indo-European word 'leuk done in white neon on black'; in the lower left is (Default)
[personal profile] lightreads
Teacup Magic

3/5. Collection of three gaslamp romantic fantasy novellas (link goes to the first, I couldn’t find the exact collection in print that I got on audio) about a clever young woman who is determined to marry for love and who ends up in various magical problem-solving adventures with a handsome and mysterious spellcracker.

Frothy and fun, and they take themselves exactly as seriously as they ought. These are set on an archipelago of islands one of which is named, wait for it, Town. So you would go to Town for the season. So I liked these, but as always I struggled a bit with this regency-but-also-queer-norm world. Misogyny definitely exists in these stories, but they otherwise skip merrily past all the messy questions of property and inheritance and patriarchy that a queer norm world presents. Not the point, yes, but I always ask the wrong questions of these kinds of settings.

I will keep reading these if I can (a lot of her work apparently doesn’t get audio rights in the U.S.).
suzume: Two female characters sit beneath the eponymous stars (The Stars)
[personal profile] suzume posting in [community profile] halfamoon
Title: Chocoholic
Fandom: Suikoden III
Character(s): Chris Lightfellow
Rating: G
Summary: Chris can't get a break.

Sneaking around, Chris finally thinks she's found a good spot... )

Day 2: Fic - Yu Yu Hakusho - Shizuru

Feb. 2nd, 2026 06:27 pm
alchemicink: Sweed looking smug (Smug Sweed)
[personal profile] alchemicink posting in [community profile] halfamoon
The first character who popped in my head for "Guilty Pleasures" was Shizuru and her cigarette smoking habit. (I don't like real life smoking but I do love fictional smoking 😅)

Title: Rising Smoke
Fandom: Yu Yu Hakusho
Character: Kuwabara Shizuru
Rating: G
Length: 100 words
Summary: Shizuru takes a quiet moment to herself
Link: here on ao3 or you can read it under the cut below

Read more... )

Books read, late January

Feb. 2nd, 2026 04:48 pm
mrissa: (Default)
[personal profile] mrissa
 

Stephanie Burgis, Enchanting the Fae Queen. I always love Steph's writing, and this was a fun book when I needed a fun book. This one felt weighted on the romance side of the romance/fantasy balance early in the book, but the fantasy plot did come roaring back in the last third. I wonder how much that reaction is objective and how much it's that it's an "enemies to lovers" plot, which is a trope that's always a hard sell for me. Looking forward to the third one.

Sophie Burnham, Bloodtide. Book two in its series, please do not start here as a lot of the emotional weight starts with book one in this series, but if you were having fun with this science fiction against empire, here's more, and there's natural disaster and community uprising and good stuff.

Lewis Carroll, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. Reread. Okay but! This is not the Tenniel illustrations, which my godmother gave me when I was small. This is the Tove Jansson illustrations, which I had never seen before, and they're delightful and very Jansson.

Steph Cherrywell, Unboxing Libby. This is a delightful older MG book about a bunch of young humaniform robots on Mars on a voyage of self-discovery opposed to the corporate bullshit that brought them there. I hope Cherrywell does more unique fun books like this.

John Chu, The Subtle Art of Folding Space. Discussed elsewhere.

Samuel K. Cohn Jr., trans., Popular Protest in Late Medieval Europe. A sourcebook of a lot of translated primary sources about uprisings, rebellions, and protests in mostly Italy and France in this era. (When he says "north of the Alps," he means "the region of France that is north of where you would draw the latitude line for the Alps," alas, but still interesting for itself.) Useful if you're super-interested in popular uprisings, which guess who is.

Colin Cotterill, The Coroner's Lunch, Thirty-Three Teeth, Disco for the Departed, and Anarchy and Old Dogs. Rereads. Sometimes you look up and it's been twenty years since a series you like started, and you haven't reread the beginning of it since then. I say "series you like," but what happened here is that I liked the beginning a lot and have sort of grown less interested in the later volumes, so I was worried that it was a case of "my standards went up and his stayed the same." It was not! The first volumes are still quite good, nothing else quite like them. They're historical magical realist murder mysteries set in 1970s Laos, and the setting is a large part of the focus of the books. I firmly believe, as of this reread, that they are marketed as mysteries primarily because that's the subgenre that knew how to market comparatively short series novels with an atypical setting, because the mystery structure is not at all traditional. Some elements are not handled as we'd handle them now, but so far I am feeling that the characters whose identities might be handled differently now are being treated with respect by the narrative if not by the people around them. I can't think of another series that has as good a character with Downs as Mr. Geung. I love him so much. He gets to have his own strengths, interests, sense of humor, agency. Sometimes the people around him call him the r-word or underestimate him, and they are always proven wrong. Similarly, in the fourth book we meet Auntie Bpoo, a trans woman who is joyfully, passionately herself and who does not attempt to pass as cis. I love Auntie Bpoo. The language used to introduce her is not what we would use now, and the protagonist--who was born in the early 1900s and is 73 years old in the book--initially underestimates her, but he very quickly learns that this is very, very wrong--and yet just as Mr. Geung never becomes a cloying angel, Auntie Bpoo is allowed to keep some of her rough edges--she's a person, not a sanitized trans icon. However--even with those caveats, not everyone will want to read ableist slurs, misgendering, etc., so judge accordingly whether that's something you want to go through. I'm going to keep on with this series until I hit the point where I'm no longer enjoying it; we'll see where that is.

Dominique Dickey, Redundancies and Potentials. Kindle. Extremely, extremely full of killing. Oh so much killing. Who knew that time travel was in place for the killing? There ends up being emotional weight to it in ways that I find interesting given that I've been watching the James Bond movies that are the exact opposite (zero time travel, zero emotional weight, still tons of killing). Interesting stuff.

Kieron Gillen, Caspar Wijngaard, Clayton Cowles, and Rian Hughes, The Power Fantasy Vol. 1: The Superpowers. This felt to me like they were afraid they wouldn't get to do as much series as they had plot, and so everything sort of got jammed in on top of each other. The extremely personal take on Mutually Assured Destruction was interesting--but also this is a comic about MAD, so if you're not up for very visceral potential of destroying the world today, maybe save it for later.

Lisa Goldstein, Ivory Apples. Reread. Goldstein definitely knows how to write a sentence, so this was a smooth read that ultimately did not hang together on the reread for me. There are too many places where someone's motivations, especially the villain's, are based on "somehow they got the feeling that xyz" which then turn out to be correct for no particular reason, and I think what the muses are doing as metaphors for creative work simply don't end up working for me when pressed into service for an entire book's worth of material. A lot of the individual chapters are vivid, but the ending just isn't enough for me, alas.

Theodora Goss, Letters from an Imaginary Country. Lots of familiar favorites in this collection as well as some new things, demonstrating once again the breadth of what the field is publishing and of what even a fairly focused author (Goss loves ethereal fairytale-type fantasy) can manage to do.

Rachel Hewitt, Map of Nation: A Biography of the Ordnance Survey. This is about the first surveys of Britain and how the departments involved with them developed, what early technology and staff were used, etc. It's this year's gift to myself for my grandfather's birthday (he worked for a time as a surveyor as a young man) and was, I feel, entirely a success on that front, especially because I like maps and mapping and how people's thinking about them has evolved very much myself.

Jessica Lopez Lyman, Placekeepers: Latina/x Art, Performance, and Organizing in the Twin Cities. It's the nature of this kind of study to overgeneralize and make overemphatic statements in places, and this does probably less of that than most local/contemporary ethnography. It also gave me lots of interesting case studies of a part of my home that's less familiar to me and some things neighbors are getting up to, bracing to read in this time. This isn't all of what we're fighting for, but it's sure what we're fighting for.

Abir Mukherjee, The Burning Grounds. Latest in its mystery series of 1920s Calcutta, exciting and fun, jumps the characters down the line a few years from previous volumes but still probably better if read as part of the series than a stand-alone. Hope he does more.

Arturo Perez-Reverte, The Fencing Master. Much swash very buckle wow.

Teresa Mason Pierre, ed., As the Earth Dreams: Black Canadian Speculative Stories. Read this for book club, and there was an interesting pattern of lack of character agency in most of these stories, which is not my favorite thing. Some stories still a good time, lots of interesting discussion in book club.

Randy Ribay, The Awakening of Roku. Not as strong as the first book in its series, and I felt like it needed another editing pass (sometimes on the sentence level--we've seen Ribay do better than this in the previous book). A fun adventure, but if the Avatar tie-in novelizations had started with this one I'd have shrugged and stopped here. I think in some ways maybe letting Roku off the hook even when it hopes not to be.

Madeleine Robins, Point of Honour, Petty Treason, and The Sleeping Partner. Rereads. When I read the fourth one in this series in the previous fortnight, I remembered how much I liked it, so I went back and reread the whole thing. Yep, still liked it. I think most of them are actually written to be reasonable entry points to the series, so if you're in the market for a slightly-alternate Regency period set of murder mysteries, whatever you can grab here will work pretty well.

Muriel Rukeyser, The Collected Poems of Muriel Rukeyser. This was good enough that I read the whole 600 pages, and yet I did not end up with a favorite poem, I didn't end up vibing with any particular era of her work, and there were some that made me sigh and roll my eyes and go, oh, right, that period. I don't know why not! I can't say, for example, that long, wordy, referential, somewhat-political poems of the 1930s are not my jam--I'm a fan of W.H. Auden. But for whatever reason, the rhythms of Rukeyser's language never caught me up. Well. Now I know.

Melissa Sevigny, Mythical River: Chasing the Mirage of New Water in the American Southwest. Goes back to the Spanish for discussion of what water there is and what water people hoped there would be and what terrible decisions they made around those two things. And a few non-terrible decisions! But. Oof. Interesting stuff, always there for the water, not at all how water works where I am so I can see why the Spanish made some mistakes, and yet, oof.

D.E. Stevenson, Kate Hardy. Kindle. I was expecting this to twist more than it did, because Stevenson sometimes does, and it's better when she does, and also because my Kindle copy had a lot of additional material in the back, biographical sketch and list of other books and so on, so it looked like there was room for more to happen, and then boom, nope, fairly standard happy ending. It was reasonably fun to read but not one of her deeper or more interesting works.

T.H. White, Mistress Masham's Repose. I had picked up several references to this from the ether, but I don't think I actually had a chance to read it when I was small. I'm wondering what it was about the mid-20th century that got us the Borrowers and the Littles and this. Anyway it was cleverly done and reasonably warm and very much of its era, and I'm glad I read it for myself instead of just picking up hints here and there.

james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll
"In 1947 and 1948, Agee wrote an untitled screenplay for Charlie Chaplin, in which the Tramp survives a nuclear holocaust; posthumously titled The Tramp's New World, the text was published in 2005."
kerk_hiraeth: Me and Unidoggy Edinburgh Pride 2015 (Default)
[personal profile] kerk_hiraeth posting in [community profile] halfamoon
 
     TITLE: The Briefest of Heroes https://kerk-hiraeth.dreamwidth.org/21839.html 

     PROMPT: Day One - The Innocent

     FANDOM: Buffy the Vampire Slayer FutureFic AU

     AUTHOR: [personal profile] kerk_hiraeth 

     RATING: PG-13

     LENGTH: 350,

     CHARACTERS: OC Pov & Willow/Kennedy

    SUMMARY: Amongst all the Slayers born into new powers; what happens to those alone; untrained and unfound. This is an account of one such abandoned innocent.

    A/N: This is set in the summer of 2020, in a world where the Buffy/Faith bodyswap of BtVS S4 was not reversed; there is a cold war between the old Council of Watchers and a new Council of Slayers and their allies set up after the destruction of Sunnydale.

    This is not a happy tale with a happy ending

 

 

 

    This is the link to the original Dec 2020 post in case anyone is interested https://kerk-hiraeth.dreamwidth.org/12156.html


   kerk