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Writerly Ways

Apr. 19th, 2026 11:22 pm
cornerofmadness: (writing atwood)
[personal profile] cornerofmadness
I am going to keep this short as my contacts messed up my right eye again. It's swollen and I can barely see out of it. Sigh.

So between yesterday's con and today's author meet up at the book store I wanted to talk about interacting with your potential readers. Of course there are no hard and fast rules to this and the readers are individuals too. But let me compare yesterday's young man to today's young woman. He was enthusiastic. He sold the book far better than his blurb did. Today, she was entirely hands off letting me look at the blurbs. The only thing she said was that the book in my hand was book 2 in the series. Made zero attempts to sell her work.

The sweet spot is somewhere between these two most likely. Did I buy a book? Yes because I want my new book store to succeed (and in my heart of hearts I doubt it will) But if she had been at the con yesterday I would have walked on past. I'm not saying be a carnival barker but hoping for the blurb to do all the work when you are there might also not be your best bet. You seem...disinterested.

I've only done this once. I wasn't as interactive as I probably should have been and I definitely sold worse than my companions who were far more interactive with the potential readers. None of this is helped by the fact that some of us are deeply introverted and just being there is tough. I swing back and forth between extrovert and introvert so I need to find better ways because I want to be the author behind the table again.

If you'd done the in person book sales, what are your tips? your don't do this stories?


Open Call


Slasher Summer Slasher Summer (female identifying/non binary authors only)

The Rotting Leaf Eco-fiction and environmental storytelling

Orion’s Belt Science fiction, fantasy, slipstream, magical realism, horror, and other speculative genres

Dancing Star Press Is Open To Novellas Science fiction and fantasy

here.

The Metaworker: Now Seeking Submissions

90 Publishing Opportunities for Historically Underrepresented Writers



From around the web

Draft2Digital’s New Fees Will Create Real Problems for Indie Authors and Small Publishers

First Look at a First Draft: How to Revise Your Manuscript

Charting Your Course #3: Self-Publish Online (Part 1)

How Compassion Changed My Writing

How I Published in 50 Litmags in Less Than a Year: A Strategy That Works

A Quick Start Guide to Children’s and Young Adult Publishing


From Betty

The Why & How of Second Person

Introducing Characters

Why Horror Becomes Action and How to Prevent It

Can My Hero Give Up Revenge?

Why "The Story Behind Your Story" is So Important

Charting Your Course #3: Self-Publish Online (Part 1)

Want Stronger Writing? Start Writing Less.

The Bullet Point Guide to Digital Self-Publishing

Dialogue That Kills It: Crafting Conversations Full of Suspense

I Think. Therefore I Don’t Amble

Dialogue Bloat

How Does Fear Play Into Character Arc (Part 2)

YouTube for Writers, Part 8: Crafting Titles and Thumbnails That Work Together

Why Blog Traffic Drops in the Summer (and What Writers Should Do About It)

Internal Conflict vs. External Conflict: The Shift From Projection to Agency in Character Arc


You’ve Got Main Character Energy

Nature

Apr. 19th, 2026 09:57 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Spring is a perfect time to start a nature journal. I've been talking about it with some friends so I wanted to share some resources here. It doesn't have to be fancy. It can have text, art, photos, pressed leaves, whatever you want to include. There are different approaches; all of them are good. Grab a blank book with plain or lined pages as you prefer, something to write or draw with, and head out to your yard, garden, or a nearby park.

Read more... )

Bridge Building

Apr. 19th, 2026 06:38 pm
ranunculus: (Default)
[personal profile] ranunculus
We should all build bridges in our lives, metaphorically and in real terms.  I was working on the latter today. 



the exercise plan

Apr. 19th, 2026 09:43 pm
lauradi7dw: (saucony sneakers)
[personal profile] lauradi7dw
I ran/walked (in 1:30 to 0:30 intervals) in the Lexington 5 mile race yesterday, finishing in 58:54, faster than I expected. The conditions were good - in the 50s and overcast. I only ran the first two miles masked. I definitely got lungs full of pollen, I hope nothing else bad. I don't guess I could be ready to run Mount Wachusett in a month (the race is 10K, so 1.2 miles farther, and a mountain, not rolling hills). My plan is to get to that distance anyway, probably not much more. From home to the far end of the trail in the Minute Man (sic) NHP nearby is about that distance but then I would have to get back, so closer to half-marathon length to do the RT.
I have (most days) been rowing for ten minutes in the morning.
I (most days) do a minute and a half plank.
I plan (but usually don't follow through) to increase the duration of swinging around a 20+ pound dumbbell to get my strength up for playing the jing.
When I don't forget, I squeeze stress things (neither of them actual balls) to improve my grip, which is terrible.
Continue with tap and Tai Chi and ringing and using walking as transportation some.

The other running thing that I want to maintain but don't do focused practice on is getting from the Red line platform to the busway in about a minute. I did it today, thinking I was about to miss the bus, but the bus actually was ten minutes late, so I could have casually ridden up the escalators to get to street level and had time to spare. Or running to catch the outbound train at Charles/MGH, but that is more complicated because it requires good luck with the crosswalk light. Or running from train level to busway at Harvard. I think those are my main occasions for sprinting.
lauradi7dw: leafless tree and gray sky (bare branches)
[personal profile] lauradi7dw
https://lexobserver.org/2026/04/18/deadly-police-shooting-in-lexington-saturday/

This was the second time in four years that a police officer shot dead someone doing threatening things with a knife in Lexington. The claim was that they tried twice to get the knife away. What did they try? In this case it was an officer from Wilmington, not Lexington, who killed him, but many of the neighboring police forces practice shooting at a firing range at the composting facility on Hartwell Ave. One can hear them from the bike path. I usually yell fuck guns or something similar. It's my impression that they are trained to shoot to kill, not to shoot a knife out of someone's hand, but still, they could have tried something like that. Or gone after him with a baseball bat. I don't know, anything might have been better than killing him. In 2020 I wrote to all my town meeting representatives* asking that they make a local law that the Lexington police not carry firearms. Of the 9 folks, one sent a reply about how hard a choice it would be. Another said that there are crimes in Lexington, so they had to carry guns. I responded that I had lived in Lexington for decades and could not think of a crime that had been deterred by armed police officers. The two murders that came to mind would not have been prevented (but one of them might not have been a murder if we had had better dispatchers at the time. The victim bled to death before anyone was sent. That at least resulted in a much better 911 system). None of the other reps responded at all.
Lexington legally doesn't allow gas-powered leaf blowers, but a number of the landscaping companies ignore that. The enforcement mechanism is supposed to be that a neighbor of the yard being illegally stunk up calls the police non-emergency number, and the police show up (no sirens or flashing lights, since it's not an emergency) and issue a ticket. I hate gas powered leaf blowers with a fiery passion, but would I call the police? Heck no.

* unlike some New England communities, we don't have town meetings that include the whole populace. Instead, we have a representative town meeting system, with folks voted in by precinct. There are standing committees and such. It works fairly well. We also have a select board, school board, and planning committee that get voted on separately.

Fossils

Apr. 19th, 2026 07:28 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Scientists just solved a 160-million-year fossil mystery “I’ve never seen anything like it”

A rare fossil reveals that Earth’s earliest sponges were hiding in plain sight—too soft to leave a trace.

A rare fossil discovery is shedding light on the “missing years” of early sponge evolution. Scientists found a 550-million-year-old sponge that likely lacked hard skeletal parts, explaining why earlier fossils are so scarce. This supports the idea that the earliest sponges were soft-bodied and rarely preserved. The finding changes how researchers hunt for the origins of animal life.



Well, that was obvious. Soft organisms typically predate those with rigid parts that preserve better. It's still really cool to find evidence.

Busy our hands.

Apr. 19th, 2026 08:00 pm
hannah: (Breadmaking - fooish_icons)
[personal profile] hannah
Thanks to neighbors moving out of their apartments, not only do I have enough laundry pods to last at least another six months, I've got more lentils than I know what to do with. No, really. There's six kinds of lentils in my apartment right now, not counting the dried chickpeas, unroasted peanuts, and dried red beans. It's going to be the summer of lentils. My strategy's going to be to work through the smaller amounts first before moving onto the larger ones - there's enough red lentils for one or two meals, but the green ones will keep me fed for weeks.

I'm checking the usual websites, looking through my cookbook shelf, thinking of how to make them interesting and palatable when I'll be eating so much of them. I figure that once I'm done with Rome, a dive through the rest of Steven Spielberg's movies should be good enough distraction to carry the lentils those last few days when I don't want to pay too much attention to what I'm having for lunch.

I've also got some quinoa and rice and black soybeans, if I want to shake things up somewhat. Farro, too, down in a bag somewhere.

(Probably Enough)

Apr. 19th, 2026 07:23 pm
kalloway: (Xmas Lights 20 Drape)
[personal profile] kalloway
Now that it's time to go back to work for the week, the brainweasels of "you didn't get enough done this weekend" have come to circle. Could I have done more? Probably. But did I do an absolute lot? Sure did! (Just ask my back!)

While digging through stacks of books that I didn't realize I had, I came to two conclusions. First, swapping out the short, long bookcase in degrading condition would be a good plan. There have been two tall, thin bookcases at the 'rents that were 'given' to me years ago that I just didn't think I had space for. If those will fit in the same spot, it'll be perfect. And second, I completely fell off with Accidental Advent, which is fine and not terribly surprising. I'll see about re-starting in the near future because I did enjoy the nudge. (The old bookcase can probably go to the garage if I can get it up on cinderblocks. It's still fine to hold non-book things but if the bottom shelf has started a chemical reaction, I don't assume it'll magically stop.)

I suppose plans for the rest of spring/summer are going to involve clearing every shelf, cleaning it, and checking conditions of things. I also need to get fresh air into the place more often. I'd wanted to get things opened up already but it's also rained every day for like two weeks now. Except right now, because it's snowing heavily. (WTF)

Also got a good percentage of my gunpla logged. I want to eventually have a good list of what I have both unbuilt and built. While just my backlog sounds like a slightly better time, I definitely know that I've built things and then forgotten about them as time passed. (In my defense, I mean built in like ~2010.)

I stirred up a lot of dust, which mostly means that I have a lot of dust and need to do some work tetris-ing things around so I can do a more thorough vacuum and whatnot.

I know I declare every year as the year I finally sort through everything but I'm feeling the motivation and am going to try to run with it.

needy girl overdose thoughts

Apr. 19th, 2026 06:56 pm
meningioma: (MISC - society)
[personal profile] meningioma
its only been 3 episodes, but i have a few things to say.
Read more... )
tagging as review even tho it kinda isnt. whatever who gaf

SVR Spring Steam Gala

Apr. 19th, 2026 11:24 pm
loganberrybunny: From an old station seat (GWR)
[personal profile] loganberrybunny
Public

I'm extremely tired right now, so I won't write much tonight, but I was at the Severn Valley Railway's Spring Steam Gala today and for the most part I had a good time. Over 18,000 steps walked, which is not any kind of personal record but is well above my average. There were two lengthy delays, one near the start of the day and one near the end, which are an occupational hazard with galas but still tried my patience a bit. The weather was dry and largely bright, though, which helped a lot, and I found the Sunday atmosphere quite nice – the lack of late evening services also meant a lack of the small number of people on Friday and Saturday nights who behave rather too much as if they were in the pub, including in terms of volume. I might well attend on Sunday again at a gala in the future. Anyway, that's all for now. I might put up a photo or two tomorrow. :)

I saw a red-winged blackbird!

Apr. 21st, 2026 09:29 pm
conuly: (Default)
[personal profile] conuly
I didn't get a good look, seeing it as I did out a bus window, but did I have to? They're not that hard to identify.

************************


Read more... )

Great Bridgewater Night

Apr. 19th, 2026 09:59 pm
[personal profile] cosmolinguist

Since the day that I had no brain juice, I feel like I've been improving slowly, but from a low bar.

I had to miss a social thing that D's girlfriend organized on Thursday night, and I didn't go to D&D (also at her house) this afternoon because I've had a stabby bad-nystagmus-day headache on and off all afternoon and didn't think anything so visuals-intensive would be good for me. Between this and no lift club yesterday, I've been feeling in need of more socializing. And I feel like I didn't make much of my weekend, last night aside.

Last night was amazing though. After a little bit of annoyance at the insufficiency of the transport information given between the Britain First rally (ugh) that afternoon and preparations for the marathon today, both of which were between my house and the Bridgewater Hall, I determined the train would be best and -- with a little bit of running at the last minute -- it went smoothly. Like I said, it was [personal profile] angelofthenorth's first visit to the Bridgewater Hall, and I was glad that she liked it as much as I hoped she would -- she already wants to go back in the next few days.

We had surprisingly great seats, considering that when I called up to get tickets and was asked where I want to sit, I said I didn;'t care and I just didn't want to pay a lot. I don't think I'd heard Duke Ellington's Harlem before, but just like all the Duke Ellington I had heard it was a delight -- highlights were watching the conductor Joshua Weilerstein bouncing and flailing around, almost as if he was dancing to the music himself. Miriam exclaimed to me afterwards about the harp matching the double-basses.

The second piece, Nikolai Kapustin's Piano Concerto No. 4 was introduced to us as "wacky jazz but with rock, soul and maybe even funk hiding behind the very bland name. From where we were sitting, I could admire the pano soloist Frank Dupree in his forest-green suit who always had his hans flying around the piano keyboard, but next to his grand piano was a drummer at a trap set who was arguably a second soloist for the piece. It was really extraordinary, a ton of fun. When they finished, the pianist said "Would you like to hear some more?" (much to the surprise of the conductor, M later told me! she did the best audio description) and the well-mannered audience cheered enthusiastically enough that he seemed genuinely surprised in his reply, "Wow!"

For this obviously the orchestra wasn't involved, just him and his drummer pal whose name I didn't catch. The other musicians on stage watched along with the rest of the audience as these two played Kapustin's Concert etude No. 1. It had a drum solo! During which Dupree "snuck" away from his piano to come up behind the drum kit, theatrically grab a couple of drum sticks, and play right along with the drummer in a call-and-response way that deserved the chuckles it got (including what sounded like some use of the music stands etc.), with him getting back to his piano stool and send his fingers flying across the keys.

And then after the interval the main event, Antonín Dvořák's Symphony No. 9 in E minor, ‘From the New World’ which the intro said some of those players might have played 100 times, or 50 times. He described it as helping them pay their mortgages. The audience was asked how many had seen it performed before, how many had listened to it... M was expecting us to be asked how many of us had played it, to which of course I'd have been so excited to raise my hand. I hadn't listened to it in about 20 years, but I knew almost all of the symphony, and when we got to my beloved last movement, I couldn't sit still in my seat. I played bassoon for that in a band that didn't have strings, so I heard familiar parts not just in the bassoon but cello and double bass. Neurons that haven't gotten to light up for 25 years got to glow.

We joined the crowds decanting ourselves into the shiny darkness and on to Oxford Road station, with about ten minutes before our train home. I was still so excited I couldn't sit down while we waited.

So I wish I'd made more of my weekend to fend off burnout and some challenging things ahead of me this week, but last night was better than I had any expectation it would be.

[ SECRET POST #7044 ]

Apr. 19th, 2026 03:29 pm
case: (Default)
[personal profile] case posting in [community profile] fandomsecrets

⌈ Secret Post #7044 ⌋

Warning: Some secrets are NOT worksafe and may contain SPOILERS.


01.



More! )


Notes:

Secrets Left to Post: 02 pages, 33 secrets from Secret Submission Post #1006.
Secrets Not Posted: [ 0 - broken links ], [ 0 - not!secrets ], [ 0 - not!fandom ], [ 0 - too big ], [ 0 - repeat ].
Current Secret Submissions Post: here.
Suggestions, comments, and concerns should go here.

Challenge #1086: obviate

Apr. 19th, 2026 09:16 pm
mad_jaks: 6th Doctor in profile (06)
[personal profile] mad_jaks posting in [community profile] dw100
Welcome to [community profile] dw100! Challenges are posted approximately once a week.

Challenge #1086 is obviate.
The rules:
  • All stories must be 100 words long
  • Please place your story behind a cut if it contains spoilers for any upcoming episodes
  • You don't have to use the challenge word or phrase in your story; it's just there for inspiration
  • Please include the challenge word or phrase in the subject line of your post
  • Please use the challenge tag 1086: obviate on any story posted to this challenge
Good luck!

vital functions

Apr. 19th, 2026 08:17 pm
kaberett: Trans symbol with Swiss Army knife tools at other positions around the central circle. (Default)
[personal profile] kaberett

Reading. She's A Beast: up to November 2024. (Does it count as book research? Maybe, possibly: I'm having a lot of thoughts about the extent to which exercise reduces versus increases risk of injuries.)

Writing. I've... added another section or, perhaps, done another rearrangement? I continue to make notes on the current special interest that is movement? I am... not managing focussed writing time.

Listening. Hidden Almanac! I had The Realisation that it would be a good thing to play while we were laminating infinite potions! We have Emerged from the Accursed Hole! The paper wasps do architecture!

Cooking. O V E N. Still v excited about this. More Kaiserschmarrn, and I am about to bake some bread, and additionally and furthermore I successfully added protein to noodles.

Eating. A celebratory burger for reaching a nice round number on a lift. I have subsequently achieved said nice round number on a second lift, but that one is being banked for The Future.

More fancy bakery treats. :)

Exploring. On Wednesday A gave me a lift into town, and then rather than getting the bus the rest of the way to the gym I decided I would wander. Thus I encountered the former Enfield Electrical Works, a delightful building, and also had a brief adventure through a park I had not previously met.

Making & mending. Have I woven in the ends on A's glove? HAHAHAHAHA.

Growing. I have managed several short trips to the plot! And the free agapanthus I acquired from a garden post in Salisbury is looking happy with its new living arrangements. There are many things I wish to sow and none that I have got around to.

Observing. MANY BIRDS: a goldfinch on a trip down to the bakery! Ducklings! Multiple families of baby coots! The Egyptian goslings are all now happy to Paddle Industriously!

Plantwise: there is a fascinating tulip in a garden near coots the first that I do not understand at all; it's lily-flowered, with very pointed petals, and it started out all white except for some tiny blotches of red on the very very tips. The surprising (to me) part is that as it has unfurled further the red has gradually spread down the petal edges, and it's now got this bright red rim feathering ever-so-slightly into the still-white main body of the petal. (I do have photos and might even manage to post them, but not tonight.) The wisteria are firmly on their way out; my cherry tree has finally finally flowered; the redcurrant and gooseberry are flowering, and the josta is setting fruit. It's warm. I'm enjoying it so much.

merricatb: Image of Kala Dandekar (Default)
[personal profile] merricatb posting in [community profile] fandomweekly
Theme Prompt: Unexpected Kindness
Title: The Kindness of Strangers
Fandom: Sense8
Rating/Warnings: Teen for referenced homophobia
Bonus: No
Word Count:655
Summary: Watching a movie with his Family, Lito sees a familiar face

 

Read more... )

Vert #14; Warm Heart #19 [Starfall]

Apr. 19th, 2026 08:33 pm
thisbluespirit: (viyony)
[personal profile] thisbluespirit posting in [community profile] rainbowfic
Name: Picnic in Ruins
Story: Starfall
Colors: Vert #14 (True love grows); Warm Heart #19 (Naivety)
Supplies and Styles: Silhouette
Word Count: 2626
Rating: PG
Warnings: None.
Notes: Portcallan, 1313; Viyony Eseray/Leion Valerno, Leily, Nin & Ivonna Valerno.
Summary: Leion arranges for one last outing with Viyony and has a revelation.


Picnic in Ruins )

Fic: Horns Up, Fangs Out (Dragon Age)

Apr. 19th, 2026 03:14 pm
settiai: (Iron Bull -- zombieproof)
[personal profile] settiai
Horns Up, Fangs Out (2564 words) by Settiai
Chapters: 1/1
Fandom: Dragon Age: Inquisition, Dragon Age - All Media Types
Rating: Teen And Up Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Relationships: The Iron Bull/Solas (Dragon Age)
Characters: The Iron Bull (Dragon Age), Solas (Dragon Age)
Additional Tags: Complicated Relationships, Developing Relationship, Fade to Black, One Shot, Pride's Solace Exchange
Summary: The Iron Bull was a complication that Solas hadn't planned on.
musesfool: "We'll sleep later! Time for cake!" (time for cake!)
[personal profile] musesfool
I realize I never followed up on the vanilla cupcakes and they did stay moist for 4 days in an airtight container and didn't get that weird texture where you can tell they're going bad, nor did they dry out, so. A++ on the hot milk method. So I am making them today, as well as my favorite chocolate cupcake recipe (it is actually a cake recipe but it makes 40 mini cupcakes as written) and then tomorrow I will make whipped ganache for the vanilla and vanilla Swiss meringue buttercream for the chocolate, and bring them to work on Tuesday, since one of my attorneys is pregnant, and this is likely the last time she'll be in the office with us until the fall. She was all, "no need to make a fuss!" but my boss was like, "Cupakes? :D :D :D" so of course, I was also like, "Cupcakes! :D :D :D"

*

Today's poem:

Mother, Kitchen
By Ouyang Jianghe
(Translated from the Chinese by Austin Woerner )

Where the immemorial and the instant meet, opening and distance appear.
Through the opening: a door, crack of light.
Behind the door, a kitchen.

Where the knife rises and falls, clouds gather, disperse.
A lightspeed joining of life and death, cut
in two: halves of a sun, of slowness.

Halves of a turnip.
A mother in the kitchen, a lifetime of cuts.
A cabbage cut into mountains and rivers,
a fish, cut along its leaping curves,
laid on the table
still yearning for the pond.

Summer's tofu
cut into premonitions of snow.
A potato listens to the onion-counterpoint
of the knife, dropping petals at its strokes:
self and thing, halves of nothing
at the center of time.
Where gone and here meet, the knife rises, falls.

But this mother is not holding a knife.

What she has been given is not a knife
but a few fallen leaves.
The fish leaps over the blade from the sea
to the stars. The table is in the sky now,
the market has been crammed into the refrigerator,
and she cannot open cold time.

***
veronyxk84: (Vero#DemirViola)
[personal profile] veronyxk84 posting in [community profile] fan_flashworks
Title: The Wall Between Us
Fandom: Viola come il mare (category: tv)
Author: [personal profile] veronyxk84
Pairing: Viola Vitale/Francesco Demir
Rating: PG-13
Warnings: some coarse language
Word count: 525 (Ellipsus)
Spoilers/Setting: Set in an alternate early S2.
Summary: Paralyzed by insecurities he can’t shake, Francesco must face the consequences of standing Viola up. Again. But if he keeps building walls between them, this time she may walk away for good.
Disclaimer: This is a work of fiction created for fun and no profit has been made. All rights belong to the respective owners.

Challenge: #512 - Obstacle


READ: The Wall Between Us )

☙ ☙ ☙
 

Culinary

Apr. 19th, 2026 07:25 pm
oursin: Frontispiece from C17th household manual (Accomplisht Lady)
[personal profile] oursin

This week's bread: brown oatmeal loaf: strong brown flour, medium oatmeal, turned out a little dense and crust a little cracking, the yeast that was rather delayed in transit coming to the end of its useful life.

Saturday breakfast rolls: (fresh yeast acquired) brown grated apple, light spelt flour, molasses.

Today's lunch: chestnut mushrooms quartered in olive oil, when checking recipe in Claudia Roden's New Book of Middle Eastern Food spotted the adjacent recipe for sweet and sour okra - saute for 5 minutes in olive oil, add sugar, salt, pepper and lemon juice (as I had half a lime going spare I also added that) and a little water and simmer for 20 or so minutes, I also added half of a red bell pepper than was going spare (possibly rather younger okra would have been nicer but this turned out quite well); aubergine cuts into rounds, placed on oiled foil on grill and grilled (turning a few times) until tender (the recipe was a little optimistic as to how long this might take) and then splashed with teriyaki sauce mixed with ginger paste; served with couscous with raisins.

Read "Carcinization"

Apr. 19th, 2026 01:33 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
This is a poem about how things turn into crabs.

(no subject)

Apr. 19th, 2026 08:26 am
skygiants: Na Yeo Kyeung from Capital Scandal punching Sun Woo Wan in the FACE (kdrama punch)
[personal profile] skygiants
I've been meaning for months to write up Knight Flower, the Joseon-era kdrama about a RESPECTABLE WIDOW BY DAY, VIGILANTE BY NIGHT who spends her days dutifully kneeling by her husband's portrait and serving her mother-in-law and her nights running around town in a black mask dispensing justice by the sword.

I enjoyed this drama very much, but it's kind of an odd beast -- it's genuinely interested in the awful constraints on Joseon's women's worlds and widow's worlds in particular and wants to explore that seriously, and it also wants have our heroine be extremely cool and fight off five guys in an alley every episode and toss off a one-liner about it, and it also wants our [middle-aged! widow!] heroine to be a charming sitcom naif who gets comically overcome by the sight of a man's midriff and is shocked! shocked! to learn about some of the various injustices going on in Joseon despite the fact that she's been wandering the streets dispensing vigilante justice for ten years. (They attempt to square some of this circle by virtue of the fact that our heroine's arranged husband was killed! by bandits! on his very wedding day! and so she has spent ten years dutifully mourning a man she never actually met, let alone slept with.)

And because Lee Hanee is a talented actress, she can almost more or less pull all of that off and make RESPECTABLE WIDOW SECRET VIGILANTE JO YEO-HWA a coherent character -- helped in large part by the various interesting women around her, including:

- Yeo-hwa's hard-nosed and cynical maid, whom Yeo-hwa rescued off the streets as a teenager, and who has spent her years since then in the single-minded pursuit of enough money for An Independent Place, which she is going to move into JUST as soon as her chaotic mistress to whom she is unfortunately absolutely loyal is Out Of This Fucking House and No Longer Doing This Stupid Vigilante Shit
- Yeo-hwa's mother-in-law, who holds Yeo-hwa harshly to the extremely narrow line of conduct allowed for widows [go nowhere; speak to no one; serve your husband's family; accept that it's an embarrassment for you to be alive when your husband is dead] and sees her largely as a walking reputational vector for the family -- but hey, at least she would never pressure Yeo-hwa to commit honorable suicide, like some other mother-in-laws-of-widows of their acquaintance, so that's something! In any other drama this character would be a cruel stereotype but in this drama she's played by Kim Mi-kyung with sympathy and complexity; she's the immediate bane of Yeo-hwa's life, and nonetheless she and Yeo-hwa have spent a decade bound together as family with a kind of affection, and Yeo-hwa understands perfectly well that her mother-in-law is also trapped by the only rules she knows
- Yeo-hwa's business partner and accomplice, a merchant whom Yeo-hwa also rescued on the streets and who has also spent the time since then like You Could Just Leave This Fucking House, I will prepare a fake identity for you, it won't be hard
- the main female villain, who is somewhat of a spoiler though this all starts to come out pretty early on )

Obviously Jo Yeo-hwa also has a love interest. He's an honorable baby cop who wants to fight corruption and also has a backstory tied up in the ten-years-ago political plot. He's completely fine. His older brother, an upright schemer who's been helping the virtuous king lay long-term plots to take back control from his evil ministers,* has an very cute B-plot bookstore romance with the cynical maid that I frankly found much more compelling in the glimpses of it that we got. More compelling yet is spoilers again! )

*there's nothing kdramas love more than a virtuous king who's trying to take back control from his evil ministers

Check-In Post - April 19th 2026

Apr. 19th, 2026 07:04 pm
badly_knitted: (Get Knitted)
[personal profile] badly_knitted posting in [community profile] get_knitted

Hello to all members, passers-by, curious onlookers, and shy lurkers, and welcome to our regular daily check-in post. Just leave a comment below to let us know how your current projects are progressing, or even if they're not.

Checking in is NOT compulsory, check in as often or as seldom as you want, this community isn't about pressure it's about encouragement, motivation, and support. Crafting is meant to be fun, and what's more fun than sharing achievements and seeing the wonderful things everyone else is creating?

There may also occasionally be questions, but again you don't have to answer them, they're just a way of getting to know each other a bit better.


This Week's Question: Does your crafting change with the seasons, certain crafts at certain times of the year?


If anyone has any questions of their own about the community, or suggestions for tags, questions to be asked on the check-in posts, or if anyone is interested in playing check-in host for a week here on the community, which would entail putting up the daily check-in posts and responding to comments, go to the Questions & Suggestions post and leave a comment.

I now declare this Check-In OPEN!



Birdfeeding

Apr. 19th, 2026 12:29 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Today is partly sunny, breezy, and cool. There is a frost warning for tonight, so I'm doing non-planting tasks today.

I set out my flats of plants to get some sun.

EDIT 4/19/26 -- I fed the birds. I've seen a few house finches.

I put out water for the birds.

EDIT 4/19/26 -- I wanted to waterseal the solid-top pallet today. But while I was trying to lay out the dropcloth for that, the wind picked up so much that it wouldn't lay still no matter how I weighted the edges or middle. I had to give up and undo everything. >_< Frustrating.

EDIT 4/19/26 -- I started finishing the apothecary cabinet that I plan to use as a spice cabinet. It has doors over the shelves to block light. We set up the worktable in the garden shed and covered it with a garbage bag, then set the cabinet on top. I used an old hand towel to spread the finish, which is made of orange oil and beeswax, very pleasant to work with. I wanted something reasonably natural for a spice cabinet, although it doesn't need a finish meant for food preparation like butcher block wax. I spread on a very thin coat over the top and sides, and that will need some time to dry before I do another section. I still need to coat the inside and the back. While I don't have the woodworking skills of my parents and grandparents, I did pick up the "assistant" level skills, so I'm very pleased that I still know how to finish a piece of furniture that someone else constructed. :D

EDIT 4/19/26 -- I did more work on the apothecary cabinet, covering the inside with the door open. It turns out there will be very little work to do on the back, as much of that space is covered by a thin fiberboard to minimize weight, which doesn't need to be waxed. Progress!

EDIT 4/19/26 -- We did some stick pickup in the south lot. We filled the wagon, mostly with big dead stems from field weeds. We're about halfway down the south lot now, just past the apricot tree.

I've seen more house finches, a few sparrows, a pair of cardinals, a brown-headed cowbird, and a fox squirrel.

EDIT 4/19/26 -- I finished the back of the cabinet. The waxing is done. \o/ I'll let that dry overnight. Tomorrow I'll buff it with a dry cloth, and then it should be ready to hang.

EDIT 4/19/26 -- I did a bit of work around the patio.

EDIT 4/19/26 -- I did more work around the patio.

EDIT 4/19/26 -- I did more work around the patio.

As it is now dark, I am done for the night.
badly_knitted: (Dee & Ryo black & white)
[personal profile] badly_knitted posting in [community profile] drabble_zone

Title: Not Afraid Anymore
Fandom: FAKE
Author: [personal profile] badly_knitted
Characters: Ryo, Dee.
Rating: PG
Written For: Challenge 498: Remember.
Setting: After the manga.
Summary: Ryo doesn’t remember anymore why he was scared to admit the truth.
Disclaimer: I don’t own FAKE, or the characters. They belong to the wonderful Sanami Matoh.
A/N: Double drabble.



Not Afraid Anymore


flareonfury: (Bex/Jacob/Shane)
[personal profile] flareonfury posting in [community profile] smallfandomfest
Never did one of these fandom pimps before, unless you count me gushing about fandoms on my journal.... so without further ado, I give you:

The Hunting Party

What Is the Show About?
A secret prison. A killer escape. The hunt is on...... )

Main Characters (don't worry no major spoilers!)
the characters.... )

If you liked...
Mindhunter, Fringe, Criminal Minds, The Blacklist, and various other similar cop related shows, you'd probably enjoy this show. It's filled with light and dark moments.

Where can I find it?
Read more... )

The Fandom?
Read more... )

(no subject)

Apr. 19th, 2026 12:31 pm
stardust_rifle: A cartoon-style image of of a fluffy brown cat sitting upright and reading a book, overlayed over a sparkly purple circle. (Default)
[personal profile] stardust_rifle
So excited for Three Weeks For Dreamwidth, because this time, I'm actually going to finish the damn thing (probably), given how many posts I've been storing up, but this means I've been sitting on a bunch of stuff that I'm super excited to talk about. I just love fandom history and fandom culture and tracking the evolution of fandom trends, especially when it's a fandom that not many people know about (visual kei RPF), but that heavily rubs up against other fandoms (general RPF and anime spaces), and I just can't wait to talk about it with people...

But, I have to wait for the 25th. Such are my woes...
[syndicated profile] smbc_comics_feed

Posted by Zach Weinersmith



Click here to go see the bonus panel!

Hovertext:
The funny part is every action in your life turns SOME torture dial!


Today's News:

Media Post

Apr. 19th, 2026 10:50 am
inchoatewords: Miss Piggy from the Muppets, dressed like a librarian with hair swept back, a long-sleeved white blouse, and a purple skirt. She is holding a book and is reaching up with her other hand to a case full of books. Above her head is the word book and a heart (books)
[personal profile] inchoatewords
Movies: None.

Television/Streaming: There is a new season of Taskmaster out; they're a fun happy group so far and I'm enjoying them!

We're nearly done with Buffy season 3. Since last post, we've watched:
  • "Bad Girls," where Faith gets Buffy to be a little wild, but then Faith ends up killing the deputy mayor
  • "Consequences," where Buffy is haunted by the actions of the previous episode, but Faith is still pulling her tough-guy persona and claims she doesn't care
  • "Doppelgangland," where the alternate-universe Willow is brought into the current Sunnydale
  • "Enemies," where the Mayor and Faith conspire to rob Angel of his soul, so that he will hopefully destroy Buffy
  • "Earshot," where Buffy is touched by the mouthless demons and suddenly can hear everyone's thoughts
  • "Choices," where Buffy tries to shut down the Mayor's ascension and where the gang talk about their future plans after graduation

    Faith irritates the hell out of me still; I understand she's had a rough life but the "tough-guy" try-hard stuff gets old. Again, this is a 40+ year old person commenting on teenagers' actions so take that how you will.

    It also annoys me how Angel is just going along with Buffy's delusions of the fact that they can have a normal life together. The Mayor, as evil as he is, is right - Angel can never be truly happy as otherwise he will lose his soul (as we have previously seen) and he will never age whereas Buffy will, and that could definitely lead to resentment down the line. Plus, they have even discussed that he can't take her out during the day and what kind of life is that?

    We also are nearly done with Season 3 of Farscape. Episodes watched:
  • "Revenging Angel," where D'Argo puts Crichton into a coma and he keeps going through these Looney Tunes-style scenarios. Very silly, but Farscape can do that quirkiness well.
  • "The Choice," where Aeryn goes to a planet with all the supernatural beings to deal with all her current losses
  • "Fractures," where Talyn once again reconnects with Moya and Aeryn has difficulty interacting with a not-dead, alternate Crichton.

    Books: I read Little Bosses Everywhere, which is about MLMs. Informative and infuriating. I'm glad that the author pretty much reiterates how much these are a scam and folks don't make their money back. I had not idea that Herbalife was still so prevalent, and I knew that the likes of Amway meddled in politics, but I don't think I was fully aware of the extent of it.

    I also read all three volumes of Warbeck of Wolfstein by Margaret Holford. This book came to my attention via a TikTok someone shared with me, and billed as an anti-Byron novel. There is not a lot about this book available online to get any sort of background on it other than that. I am not a Byron scholar but I know that he was very cruel to a lot of the women around him and abusive to his wife, and I think Holford was friends with Lady Byron, which is what probably prompted this book. I also did see in my internet wanderings that Byron did criticize some of Holford's work (she was a prolific poet, as well), so that probably had something to do with it, too.

    Our titular character does not show up for several chapters, as the scene must be set by the fragile Baron Marchfeldt, returning home to his castle and beloved sister after suffering ill health during battle. The reader learns along with Louisa about the wonderful Casimir and the brutish Warbeck, and that the Baron loves Casimir like a brother and made him promise to marry his sister after he, the Baron, is dead. Louisa is hesitant because she wants to get to know the guy first, after all.

    The Baron dies, and some time later, this handsome soldier shows up and claims to be Casimir. A series of events follows where Louisa falls in love with Casimir and they are pledged to marry, and at the 11th hour it is discovered that this gentleman is not Casimir at all, but Wolfstein! He leaves, the real Casimir shows up, but Louisa has heard some bullshit about him from other sources so she doesn't trust him at all.

    There's some political intrigue with Casimir and his father, the Duke. Casimir is trying to get over Louisa, and it's all very melodramatic, as these old books tend to be. Wolfstein comes back sometime later, claiming to be penitent and supposedly had a religious conversion, so will Louisa forgive him? She does, over time, realizes she still loves this man, despite his lies from earlier, and they get married.

    Of course, after marriage he becomes a tyrant and basically keeps her a prisoner in the castle. More political intrigue, Casimir's father keeps him prisoner, but not in his OWN castle, but in Wolfstein's, and neither of the star-crossed lovers knows about the existence of the other until the very last pages. Of course, it all winds up positively.

    Overall, it was decently entertaining but a bit long in the tooth.

    Listening to: I have only listened to one album from the Rolling Stone list recently, Lady Gaga's Born This Way, which is number 484 on the current list. It was not on the original list from 2012.

    Rolling Stone blurb:
    “Over-the-top” isn’t an insult in Gaga’s world; it’s a statement of purpose. Her second album is a work of blessed bombast, all arena-size sonics and Springsteenian romanticism, complete with a Clarence Clemons sax solo. There’s a thumping, half-in-Spanish song that proposes marriage to “a girl in east L.A.” (“Americano”), a synth-pop jam that includes a come-on on to John F. Kennedy (“Government Hooker”), and a touching ballad about a guy from Nebraska (“You and I”). Fittingly, the glam-slam title track became an LGBTQ anthem.


    This is a good album, very danceable. I like the title track, "Marry the Night," and "Edge of Glory" the best.

    Playing: the first Danganronpa game, Trigger Happy Havoc. After finishing the Zero Escape games, I had gone looking around Reddit and Steam forums for similar games. The main recommendations were AI: The Somnium Files and Paranormasight for the escape room elements. Others also recommended the Danganronpa games, which are less escape room, but definitely have the visual novel elements as well as murder mystery (and courtroom trials, a la the Ace Attorney games). I bought the first two on a Steam sale a while ago, and then the more recent Steam sale this year had a bundle of the first two Danganronpa games for pretty cheap, so I got them. After getting frustrated with Bendy and the Ink Machine, I turned to Trigger Happy Havoc.

    I am enjoying it but a few of the game mechanics in the first game are a bit annoying. Such as the difficulty level, which I set to the middle/default, which I presumed wouldn't be "baby" level, but also not hellishly difficult. However, it doesn't really explain at the outset how that all works, so in the courtroom trials, it will occasionally throw more difficulties in and it's occasionally frustrating if you want to just work on the story. You cannot change the difficulty without restarting the game in the first volume, but apparently in the second game, you can change the difficulty before each new chapter if you want to. Hopefully it doesn't get too much harder past the Chapter 3 trial, which I just finished. But overall, I do like the game and am curious to see how it all ends.
  • Creators revealed!

    Apr. 19th, 2026 05:15 pm
    extrapenguin: Picture of the Horsehead Nebula, with the horse wearing a hat and the text "MOD". (ssmod)
    [personal profile] extrapenguin posting in [community profile] space_swap
    Creators have been revealed! Thank you to all of you for another successful year of Space Swap. <3

    [#297] Stray (The Lord of the Rings)

    Apr. 19th, 2026 04:38 pm
    vamp_ress: (Default)
    [personal profile] vamp_ress posting in [community profile] fandomweekly
    Theme Prompt: #297 "Unexpected Kindness"
    Title: Stray
    Fandom: The Lord of the Rings
    Rating/Warnings: None, General Audiences
    Bonus: No
    Word Count: 1000
    Summary: The Tale of Aragorn and Arwen, with the addition of some fantastical whimsy.

    Read more )

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