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The layers of anxiety
Made some major strides ahead on one of my
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And I did say it was going to be Science Saturday so here are some links
Could a new vaccine help prevent colorectal, pancreatic cancer recurrence?
Diabetic man produces his own insulin after gene-edited cell transplant This is amazing (it's also a very slippery slope with what we can do with gene editing)
Archaeologists locate 'La Fortuna,' a Spanish ship that exploded in 1748 along North Carolina's coast
A braided stream, not a family tree: How new evidence upends our understanding of how humans evolved
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The Last Leaf
Now, I think anyone who’s kept their eye on me for over two minutes will understand why The Last Leaf appealed to me so strongly. While The Trimmed Lamp was also quite enjoyable, it’s the former that bewitched me more. Unlike so many of the other stories in the volume I read, here we have female protagonists and, to make things better, when a doctor suggests positive thoughts as additional “medicine” in order to cure one of them of their illness, this is the exchange we read:
( Read more... )
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Tiny House, Big Fix, by Gail Anderson-Dargatz

Of the MANY bait-and-switch books I've been tricked into reading, this takes the prize for the biggest switch. The back cover says it's about a single mom carpenter who builds a tiny house for herself and her daughters to live in. The title is about tiny houses. There is a tiny house on the cover. I read the book because I thought it would be about building a tiny house.
The book is actually about the events leading up to her building the tiny house. She doesn't build the tiny house until the LAST CHAPTER. It takes up about four pages.
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jason todd's birthday fic (in absentia)
Jason Todd leaves a mark on the world.I don't think Jason haunted the Bats enough in canon, so I'm always ready to remedy that.
Alfred, Dick, Barbara, and Tim, in the aftermath of a Death in the Family. 3.5k, rated M.
(one day, I will write a fic with Jason as an actual ghost wrecking havoc, just
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Play-Watching in London I
Globe Theatre: The Merry Wives of Windsor
Rarely performed these days, and actually one I never read, which is one of the reasons why I used the chance to watch it in an afternoon performance, that and the way watching plays at the Globe, in a perfectly reconstructed Elizabethan theatre, has yet to cease being special to me.
( Shakespearean Spoilers have mixed feelings )
The Garrick: Mrs Warren’s Profession
One of George Bernard Shaw’s early “problem plays” and scandals. (He wrote it in the early 1890s, and except for a club performance in 1902, it would take two decades to make it to the London stage. By contrast, it was already performed in Germany in the 1890s as well. Legendary producer Max Reinhardt was a big Shaw fan and so were a lot of Wilhelmians.) This production is starring Imelda Staunton as the titular Mrs. Warren, and her real life daughter Bessie Carter (known to the general audience probably best as Prudence Featherington in Bridgerton) as Vivie Warren; the director is Dominic Cooke.
( Shavian Spoilers argue about the ways of making money )
Having thus watched Shakespeare and Shaw, I have on my schedule next: Robert Bolt, and then a new play, which from the sound of it is Shakespeare/Marlowe slash, starring Ncuti Gatwa as Kit M. Stay tuned!
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Murderbot fic: Natal Day Gifting
Title: Natal Day Gifting
Word Count: 1400 words
Characters: Gen, Murderbot & Gurathin, PresAux in general
Summary: Murderbot gets dragged along on a birthday present shopping expedition. It enjoys this surprisingly somewhat more than expected.
AO3: https://archiveofourown.org/works/69306156
( Notes and Prompt )
( Fic under the cut )
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There's always more history to learn
TIL about the economics of managing a Chinese merchant ship in the 18th and 19th centuries:
The operations of junks were labor intensive — they required about ninety sailors per vessel — but these sailors were not paid. Instead, they were permitted to carry a certain amount in freight (by the early nineteenth century, about seven piculs — 933 pounds — in freight)."
Melissa Macauley, "Does the 'Indo-Pacific' Have a History?" American History Review, vol. 130 no. 2 (June 2025), p. 689.
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They had to be giving things away
And since that was the most exciting thing to happen all day, here have the fandom recs for two weeks including this one!!
Warmth In The Chest Hazbin Hotel this was written for me in
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Sleeping Beauties Torchwood
Thunder And Lightning Stargate SG-1
The Best (Friend) Hazbin Hotel
In The Doghouse Torchwood
Springtime Picnic FAKE
Chase Away the Cold Teen Wolf
To Be Tamaranean Teen Titan
Melolagnia Hazbin Hotel
Pizza 'Pology Hazbin Hotel
what we were searching for. KPop Demon Hunters
Goodbye For Now 光渊 | Justice in the Dark
Make It Count Hazbin Hotel
A Practical Gift Torchwood
What Friends Do Criminal Minds
Oops, I Married an Alien Eerie Indiana
None of It Was Accidental 逆爱 | Revenged Love
rewritten. 陈情令 | The Untamed (TV)魔道祖师 - 墨香铜臭 | Módào Zǔshī - Mòxiāng Tóngxiù
Finding a New Home
9-1-1
The Final Straw. Teen Wolf
Breaking Free Stargate Atlantis
A radio demon's daisy in hell. Hazbin Hotel
Leap Of Disaster Torchwood
Transparent The Murderbot Diaries
What You Have Done to Me
Hazbin Hotel
Torchwood Life Torchwood
Too Many Times. Torchwood
Hurts To Say Goodbye
Buffy the Vampire Slayer
Drunk Hazbin Hotel
An Important Stop in the Journey 91-1
here, now (in this cage).
魔道祖师 - 墨香铜臭 | Módào Zǔshī - Mòxiāng Tóngxiù
All The Girly Things Horrid Henry
Getting Picked Up Teen Wolf
Royal Flush Hazbin Hotel
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Trapped, by Michael Northrop

Seven teenagers get trapped in their high school during a blizzard when they miss the bus that evacuated the rest of the school.
This was easily the worst book I've read all year, and I've read some doozies. I read it because I'd bought a copy for the shop for the niche of "children's/younger YA survival books for kids who've already read all of Gary Paulson and "I Survived."" I am going to return it to the publisher (Scholastic, which should be ashamed of itself) forthwith, because it is AWFUL.
Why is this book so bad?
1. It's incredibly misogynist. The narrator, Scotty Weems, is constantly thinking of girls in a gross, slimy, objectifying way.
The two girl characters, who get trapped in the high school along with five boys, never do anything useful. One's entire personality is "hot" and every time she's mentioned, it's with a gross leering description of her body. The other girl's entire personality is "hot girl's friend."
2. The characters have exactly one characteristic each, and even that one often gets forgotten, to the extent that I kept mixing up "normal boy" with "mechanically inclined boy." The others are "dangerous boy" and "weird boy." The latter gets downgraded to "not actually weird, just funny" (as in makes one supposedly humorous comment once.) We get no insight into them, their backstories, their home lives, etc, because none of them ever really talk to each other about anything interesting despite being trapped together for a week!
3. SO MANY gross descriptions of pimples, peeing, and pooping.
4. The book is boring. No one does anything interesting on-page until the second to last chapter, when it FINALLY occurs to Scotty to make snowshoes. Most of the book is Scotty's inner monologue about pimples, pooping, peeing, and hot girls. The kids barely interact!
5. The kids keep saying that help won't come because no one even knows they're missing, but that makes no sense. Every single one of them was supposed to get picked up. It's never explained why SEVEN DIFFERENT FAMILIES wouldn't notice that their kids never came home.
6. The incredibly contrived scene where Best Friend Girl comes staggering in screaming and disheveled, repeating, "Les, Les!" This is the name of Dangerous Boy. One of Indistinguishable Boys assumes Les sexually assaulted her and runs out and attacks Les. Best Friend Girl recovers enough to explain that she went to a room and it was dark and cold and she got lost, and she was trying to say there was LESS light and heat there. Because that's what you'd naturally gasp out when freaking out, instead of, say, "Dark! Cold!"
I feel like the existence of this scene in a PUBLISHED BOOK lowered the collective intelligence of the universe by at least half a point.
7. No interesting use is made of the school setting. The kids open their own lockers to get extra clothes and snacks, find pudding and canned peaches in the cafeteria, and spend the rest of the time silently huddled in classrooms, occasionally checking their useless cellphones that don't have any signal. Toward the end, they start a fire, and then, OFF-PAGE, construct a snowmobile (!).
Things they don't do: Break into other kids' lockers in the hope of finding useful stuff. Attempt to cook the cafeteria food. Search the library for survival tips. Get mats from the gym so they're not sleeping on freezing floors. Search classrooms and the teacher's lounge for useful stuff. Have a pick-up ball game to keep warm. Find ways of entertaining themselves without cell phones. HAVE GETTING TO KNOW YOU CONVERSATIONS - WHAT IS THE POINT OF DOING THE BREAKFAST CLUB WITHOUT THIS?
Spoilers! ( Read more... )
Truly terrible.
ETA: I just discovered that it went out of print soon after I purchased it (GOOD) and so is not returnable (DAMMIT).
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Collage Journaling: jellyfish!
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Superman (2025)
(Subtle, this movie is not.)
I loved how absolutely committed to its comics origin the film is, most obviously with Krypto. If you’ve seen the trailer: Krypto’s appearances in the movie are all like this in tone during the movie, and it’s adorable even for a cat person like me. Most of all, I loved that Lois Lane, played by Rachel “Mrs. Maisel” Brosnahan, really gets to be a reporter in every fibre of her being, in a show, not tell manner. The scene in which after Clark made the mistake of saying he’d let her interview him as Superman she relentlessly grills him (not in an unfair way, I hasten to add, but asking exactly all the questions which a good reporter WOULD ask in this particular situation) is as good as advertised, and it’s Lois’ reporter instincts that hugely lead to saving the day. (Along with various other factors and people, making this in addition to everything else a good ensemble movie. Also, since the movie starts with her and Clark already in a relationship and with her knowing he’s Superman, we skip the Lois-Clark-Superman-secret identity trope. (Look, I loved Lois & Clark in the 1990s, but it really would not work anymore today if we’re to believe in Lois the excellent reporter. )
( Somewhat more spoilery from here )
In conclusion, I really liked this one, and look forward to Gunn’s further contributions to the DC movieverse.
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Murderbot promptfic from Tumblr
***
1. A prompt for Murderbot and Gurathin undercover in the Corporation Rim. Originally posted here.
( 1000 words or so )
2. A request for de-aged Gurathin. Originally posted here.
( About 1100 words )
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I am full of sodium
I spent the rest of my day tearing out my hair. I got the syllabi in but was sidetracked by a text from Holzer about a follow up ultrasound tomorrow. Nope. Didn't schedule this. Not in my portal. I call them. Your ob/gyn did this (because holzer told her she ordered it originally) I told them to cancel it. If you do you'll need a new order. Fine since I'm not coming here for this period.
Got a notice from the loans about my income based loan repayment which I started and then needed my W2s etc. I go to finish that and it's stuck in a loop. Nothing gets it out. Finally I give up and call them. She suggests going into incognitio mode since that might be the issue. Nope. It just keeps taking me to the what I need to do this page. She tries to help and I whine about why in the world did they change it from the easy push the IRS allowed button. She says 'oh we still do that.' We check I'm set up for that. She says your stuff will automatically submit when it's time. WTF WHY am I doing this then? Why have I been doing this for years? I hope the hell she's right (she did email me the paperwork that says this is true because I insisted and got her name)
It's community rec time
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Song of the day: Ji Suyeon, "Love Without Pain" (cover
Going through old links today, I came across this cover from Weki Meki's Ji Suyeon that I'd set aside to listen to back in February and then forgotten about.
The original, sung by Choi Yu Ree for the Disney+ original series Call It Love is available here, if you're interested. Choi Yu Ree's voice seems to be stronger than Suyeon's, but that could be a side-effect of production — even though they're both singing over the same backing track, they're not recorded under identical conditions, so it's still not completely a 1:1 comparison. If you skip ahead to 3:00, I think Suyeon's voice is stronger on the higher notes (come on: did you really expect me not to find a way to defend Suyeon?), but they both sang really well.
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Had a day out in London yesterday
After the appointment, I walked to Green Park. The forecast, even in the morning, had suggested full-on sunshine, but in the end it was steadily cloudy. I was relieved about that because it would have been very hot and uncomfortable otherwise and it was still very warm and uncomfortable. After some time wandering around in the park I walked to the Royal Academy of Arts and sat in the courtyard for a while before getting inside to see the summer exhibition. Lots to see across all the rooms. From there I walked to the Waterstones and spent some time browsing. A thundery shower started coming down while I was there and it was raining, although not heavily, when I walked to John Lewis for some more browsing and sitting in the cafe to read.
Finally, onwards to the Royal Albert Hall for the concert with BBC Symphony Orchestra, who performed Edgard Varèse's Intégrales, the UK premiere of Anna Thorvaldsdottir's cello concerto Before we fall, Ravel's Boléro and finally Stravinsky's The Rite of Spring. All sounded great. The cello concerto certainly sounded new and interesting.
The journey home went smoothly, although the tube I was on to Paddington kept having to stop at red signals. I still managed to avoid a 15-minute wait for the next train there, and also succeeded in only having to wait a couple of minutes for a bus rather than 10 minutes or more.
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Hominids, by Robert Sawyer

A Neanderthal from an alternate universe where Homo Sapiens went extinct and Neanderthals lived into the present day is sucked into our world due to an experiment gone wrong. The book follows his interactions with humans in one storyline, and the repercussions in Neanderthal World in another.
I picked up this book because I like Neanderthals and alternate dimensions that aren't about relatively recent history (ie, not about "What if Nazis won WWII?"). The parts of the book that are actually about Neanderthal World are really fun. It's a genuinely different society, where men and women live separately for the most part, surveillance by implanted computers prevents most crime, mammoths and other large mammals did not go extinct, there are back scratching posts in homes, they wear special eating gloves rather than using utensils or eating barehanded, etc. This was all great.
The problem with this book was everything not directly about Neanderthal society. Bizarrely, this included almost the entire plotline on Neanderthal World, which consisted of a murder investigation and trial of the missing Neanderthal's male partner (what we would call his husband or lover), which was mostly tedious and ensured that we see very little of Neanderthal society. The Neanderthal interactions on our world were fun, but the non-Neanderthal parts were painful. There is a very graphic, on-page stranger rape of the main female character, solely so she can realize that Neanderthal dude is not like human men. There's two sequels, which I will not read.
It got some pretty entertaining reviews:
"☆☆☆☆☆1 out of 5 stars.
No. JUST NO.
I am sorry, but the premise of inherently and innately peaceful cultures with more advanced technology than conflict-driven cultures is patently absurd. Read Alistair Reynolds' Century Rain for an examination of how technological advancement depends on strife: necessity is the mother of invention, and the greatest necessity of all is fighting for survival. I will not be lectured for my male homosapien hubris by a creature that would never have gotten past the late neolithic in technology."
Hominids won a Hugo! Here are the other nominees.
1st place: Hominids by Robert J. Sawyer (Canadian)
2nd place: Kiln People by David Brin (American)
3rd place: Bones of the Earth by Michael Swanwick (American)
4th place: The Scar by China Miéville (British)
5th place: The Years of Rice and Salt by Kim Stanley Robinson (American)
Amazingly, I have read or attempted to read all of them. My ratings:
1st place: Bones of the Earth by Michael Swanwick (American)
2nd place: The Scar by China Miéville (British).
3rd place: The Years of Rice and Salt by Kim Stanley Robinson (American)
4th place: Hominids by Robert J. Sawyer (Canadian)
5th place: Kiln People by David Brin (American)
If I'd voted, it would be very close between Bones of the Earth and The Scar, both of which I loved. I made a valiant attempt at The Years of Rice and Salt. Like all of KSR's books, I'm sure it's quite good but not for me. I know I read Kiln People but recall literally nothing about it, so I'll give Hominids a place above it for having some nice Neanderthal stuff.
The actual ballot is a complete embarrassment.
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WorldCon has Loaded (ISH)
ETA: Both 10:30 panels I want to see either not streaming or not with sound.
ETA2: Caught the back half of one 10:30 panel (idk if the other one ever worked), and the sound was back for most of the noon panel, though it dropped out completely ten minutes from the end. Folks attending have been amazing with posting running notes to the discord, linking to works mentioned by the panellists.