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james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2026-03-15 09:38 am
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2026-03-15 08:50 am

Bring the Jubilee by Ward Moore



Hodge would like nothing better than to study American history. Be careful what you wish for.

Bring the Jubilee by Ward Moore
andrewducker: (Vaudeville for the next five miles)
andrewducker ([personal profile] andrewducker) wrote2026-03-15 08:50 am

Life with two children: Gideon updates

Following yesterday's illness, I was vaguely hoping that he would stay asleep through the night. Alas:

12:05
"I need a wee"
Took him to the toilet.
"Daddy, my tummy hurts"
Gave him some medicine
"Do you want to be in pyjamas or just straight back to bed?"
"Back to bed"
And then he closed his eyes.

12:20
Thundering footsteps "Daddy, I feel sick"
Told him to go to the toilet. Kept him company, got him a bucket.
He wasn't sick.
Persuaded him to take the bucket to bed.
Sat on the floor next to his bed until he closed his eyes.

12:35
More thundering steps
"Daddy, my arm and leg hurt"
By the time I'd found him medicine he was asleep again.
But woke up again and let me give him some Calpol.

03:30
"I'm hungry" (not surprising as he didn't eat yesterday)
We agreed on cream cheese crackers.
He ate ⅘ of the cracker and drank some juice and passed out again.

06:30
"I checked the light coming under the curtain and it's morning time"
I told him to go play games on the Switch downstairs.
Fifteen minutes later I could still hear him wandering about and I hadn't heard any game noises.
Went to check on him and he told him that he'd found various points around the house where the floor isn't flat.
Got him settled with the Switch, and then went back to bed and stared vacantly at my phone for an hour, before getting up to face the day.
the_siobhan: (Dufferin station)
the_siobhan ([personal profile] the_siobhan) wrote2026-03-14 09:05 pm

our house. in the middle of our creek

Last week the temperature here went up to 18 degrees. All the snow melted. Then the next day it rained heavily, pretty much the whole day. Then the next day it snowed.

I looked out the back window at one point and realized the drainage ditch was completely full of water. Like an inch from overflowing. The opening to the pipe from the sump pump was completely submerged. Now that the snow has melted I can open my back door again so I went to have a look, and the walls I had built up with broken concrete had collapsed and there had been several clay landslides into the ditch.

I should have expected that really. Lesson learned. I have some pea gravel I had intended to dump on the top, now I realize I should have been using it to fill in the gaps between the larger rocks, both to give them support and to try to keep the silt from settling in the cracks. When the soil is dryer I'll dig it out and re-do it properly. Fortunately Facething Marketplace has tons of people giving away left over rocks from their landscaping projects because I'm mostly out.

On the plus side, the drainage ditch did operate entirely as intended in that there was no flooding of the rest of the yard. The basement stayed bone dry and the pump didn't get any backwash.

***

Saw a rat back behind the shed while I was out there. I kind of figure rats are like the coyotes, they're always there, just sometimes we also see them.

Still. He was a big fucker.

***

Left the house today to go to a seed swap that was happening a couple of blocks away. Didn't swap any seeds but I did have a lovely conversation with a man from a local group that runs workshops on things like pollinator gardens and composting. There were also some people there from the Anishnawbe food & medicine garden.

I remember walking past a storefront on my way to the gf's place last week and passing what used to be a big art supply store. It's been divided in half, part of it is now a medspa and the other half is a thrift store.

That kind of encapsulates the current state of the neighbourhood perfectly, we have condos and gentrification and chic designer stores. But we also have the Community Centre with the needle exchange program and the lawyers who will give you advice about your immigration case or your lawsuit against your landlord. The slumlords who own the highrise behind me lost an attempt to shut down a food bank that was started in a couple of empty units by the tenants. There are signs on every light pole supporting the latest rent strike against yet another slum lord.

There's also a goth/industrial club right at the end of my street, and do you think I've managed to drop in there even once? No I have not. Maybe when it warms up and the wastewater numbers are less dire. I know about a half-dozen DJs who hold nights there, so I should get one of those straw holder thingys you can fix to your mask.

Actually, now that I think about it, that would be a good idea for the days I have to go into the office and it's too cold to eat outside.

dialecticdreamer: My work (Default)
dialecticdreamer ([personal profile] dialecticdreamer) wrote2026-03-14 08:11 pm

Touching Base (part 1 of 1, complete)

Touching Base
By Dialecticdreamer/Sarah Williams
Part 1 of 1, complete
Word count (story only): 1236
[Evening of Thursday, 2 November of 2017]



:: Jules can’t sleep, thinking of the approaching plane trip which will bring him, finally, home ot Mercedes and his family. He calls a friend with a thin excuse. Part of the “Lodestar” arc, set in the Polychrome Heroics universe. ::




Somewhere in the maze of hostel rooms, someone was playing an out of tune guitar in desultory, awkward scales. Jules glared at the bedside alarm clock and sighed. It wasn’t yet nine at night, and it wasn’t the stranger’s fault that he had to be at the boarding gate at three in the morning to catch a four a.m. flight.

Squirming restlessly on the luxurious single occupancy room with ensuite, Jules couldn’t keep his eyes shut for more than a few heartbeats at a time. When he sat up, he automatically reached for his phone to scroll slowly through his contacts. He checked the local time, then dialed.
Read more... )
kaberett: Trans symbol with Swiss Army knife tools at other positions around the central circle. (Default)
kaberett ([personal profile] kaberett) wrote2026-03-14 10:49 pm
Entry tags:

zoo!

highlights included:

otherwise everything is still Migraine World Summit (though I have once again learned a useful thing today! neck pain can be a prodrome symptom!) and Special Interest.

Fanlore ([syndicated profile] fanlore_tumblr_feed) wrote2026-03-14 07:30 pm

Vorkosigan Saga

The text "Vorkosigan Saga" over a background of stars and planets. A spaceship is flying right under, with a white-blue streak behind it.ALT

Today is all about the Vorkosigan Saga, the ongoing book series written by Lois McMaster Bujold.

The Saga was first published in 1986 and features the character Miles Vorkosigan and his parents. Though described as a space opera, the books are said to incorporate a myriad of genres like comedy, tragedy, romance, mystery, and adventure.

A fic rec post from 2011 praises Bujold for creating character-centered works that function well on the literary level with deeply moving and relevant themes and “some of the most beautiful prose I’ve ever seen.”

The fandom was nominated and accepted into Yuletide until 2010, when the number of extant fics had grown too large for it to be considered a “rare” fandom (a decision that has since been reversed). This led to the fandom making their own gift exchange and creating “Winterfair”, an exchange that integrated the English and Russian language sides of the fandom into one event.

The saga has a huge following within the Russian community, but not a lot of information on its page. Check out Fanlore, where we’re looking for help to expand the page with international and/or non-English perspectives!

———

We value every contribution to our shared fandom history. If you’re new to editing Fanlore or wikis in general, visit our New Visitor Portal to get started or ask us questions here!

andrewducker: (Default)
andrewducker ([personal profile] andrewducker) wrote2026-03-14 12:33 pm
Entry tags:

Photo cross-post


The first time Gideon fell asleep in front of the toilet we moved him to a comfy chair. From where he woke up still feeling sick and Jane found him lying on the floor with a bucket he'd found and relocated him back to the toilet, where he then fell asleep again.

I missed all of this because I had passed out in bed feeling rubbish. I did wake up to various noises, but each time I did I tried to open my eyelids, failed, and fell back to sleep again. Thankfully Jane isn't feeling as bad as me, and Sophia was off having a play date at the other end of the street.

So far nobody has actually thrown up. Fingers crossed that continues.
Original is here on Pixelfed.scot.

james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2026-03-14 12:21 pm
Entry tags:

Books Received, March 7 — March 13



Seven books new to me: four fantasies, one science fantasy, one science fiction, and I am not sure how to categorize the Shepard. At least three are series books.

Books Received, March 7 — March 13


Poll #34364 Books Received, March 7 — March 13
Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 34


Which of these look interesting?

View Answers

The Lion and the Deathless Dark by Carissa Broadbent (July 2026)
4 (11.8%)

Teach Me to Prey by Jenni Howell (December 2026)
0 (0.0%)

Heart of Thieves by Jessica S. Olson (September 2026)
0 (0.0%)

The Dagger in Vichy by Alastair Reynolds (October 2025)
14 (41.2%)

Crows and Silences by Lucius Shepard (December 2024)
12 (35.3%)

Engines of Reason by Adrian Tchaikovsky (September 2026)
16 (47.1%)

The Heart of the Reproach by Adrian Tchaikovsky (July 2025)
13 (38.2%)

Some other option (see comments)
0 (0.0%)

Cats!
23 (67.6%)

oursin: Frankie Howerd, probably in Up Pompeii, overwritten Don't Mock (Don't Mock)
oursin ([personal profile] oursin) wrote2026-03-14 04:11 pm

Yet another thing to worry about???

Goodness knows, some real weirdness is revealed in You Be the Judge in Guardian Saturday, but today's produces a theory which is entirely new to me -

You be the judge: should my housemate stop warming her mug and then pouring the water back into the kettle?

But apart from all this hoohah about HYGIENE, I am rather taken with New Health Scare Theory:

Boiling water twice is a no-no for me – there is a change in quality and taste. My life had a certain drabness to it – I now attribute that to consuming poor-quality water for so long without realising.

This could be a whole new thing, couldn't it? Once-boiled water for vitality!

I was going to ask are they living in a log cabin or what in Ohio if the kitchen is so freezingly cold in the mornings they have to warm up the mugs so that they do not immediately chill the coffee but I see the issue is poor insulation.

Maybe they should do something about insulation rather than bicker over 'secondhand water'?

james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2026-03-14 09:22 am

A Christopher Brookmyre checklist

I know my site is down. Giving it an hour before I pester the host.

Meanwhile Read more... )
oursin: Brush the Wandering Hedgehog by the fire (Default)
oursin ([personal profile] oursin) wrote2026-03-14 12:26 pm

(no subject)

Happy birthday, [personal profile] gwynnega!
thistleingrey: (Default)
thistle in grey ([personal profile] thistleingrey) wrote2026-03-13 08:54 pm
Entry tags:

friday five

Via a friend---

1. Have you ever watched illusion magic? Close-up, or in a stage show, or on television? Did it work for you?

I've seen Penn and Teller on YouTube a few times, not recently, and a few illusionists live, because two people I've dated previously were fascinated by the whole thing and somehow unable to understand why I wasn't similarly compelled. To me, it's small-space athletic feats plus emotional manipulation, and I can pretty much always do without the latter.

2. Have you ever wished on a star, or a lucky cat, or a coin in a wishing well? Did it work in some way?

No.

3. Have you ever cast a spell, made a love charm, or tried a curse? Did it work in some way?

Not in terms of rituals. In high school I read a few books on Wicca, went "Huh, okay," and decided it's not for me, a conclusion only strengthened by meeting pagans of assorted types during my few SCA years.

4. Are there any other traditional superstitions you pay attention to? Do they work in some way?

My Oma had a ton of these, and I heed a few of hers. Don't put luggage on the bed; that's gross. Picking up random bits of cash in one's path, if it doesn't belong to someone nearby, is fair game. I guess the person I dated who gave me a set of knives may've felt that it led to bad luck, since we broke up a few months later, but we really weren't well suited. The wooden knife block is still around; I've since swapped out most of the knives, which were cheap serrated ones.

5. Would you want major magical powers like in a fantasy story? Which powers, and how would you use them?

Nope!
dialecticdreamer: My work (Default)
dialecticdreamer ([personal profile] dialecticdreamer) wrote2026-03-13 07:27 pm

First Step Back (part 1 of 1, complete)

First Step Back
By Dialecticdreamer/Sarah Williams
Part 1 of 1, complete
Word count (story only): 1222
[Evening of Thursday, 2 November of 2017]



:: A slow, introspective look at Jules as he packs for his last flight, finally heading home with his shiny new diploma and certificates. This is the first post of the new “Lodestar” arc, set in the Polychrome Heroics universe. ::




Jules fidgeted with the bundle of summer blue ultralight fabric, then frowned at the darker blue and black hiking backpack which had seen him through all but the first two months of his Alexandrian year. The daypack and duffel combination that he’d started with had wrenched his shoulders more than once, and depending on the day’s travel, had happened so often that he’d meticulously priced the cost of a walk-in appointment to see a medical doctor in one of the slum clinics in the morning, his last day in Delhi. As he was scraping together his cash, wincing with every move of either arm, a literal hippie, probably old enough to be Jules’ grandfather, had offered to swap his ultralight for the substantially heavier backpack that fit within the airport guidelines, barely, but which hung off his shoulders like a medieval torture device.
Read more... )
kaberett: Trans symbol with Swiss Army knife tools at other positions around the central circle. (Default)
kaberett ([personal profile] kaberett) wrote2026-03-13 10:48 pm

miscellany

In apparent celebration of Migraine World Summit, I have spent this evening having an unscheduled migraine attack for no obvious reason. I disapprove. (Because I've been doing a lot of audiovisual processing, captions notwithstanding? Because I had my screen much brighter than usual for a while playing a colours game?* Because oven't?)

Nonetheless I have watched and made digital notes on all of 2026 Day 2, watched and made digital notes on 3/4 talks from 2025 Day 2 (which I missed at the time), and made physical notes for 2025 Day 1 and 1/4 of Day 2. I am... sort of catching up.

I am really enjoying my pens. I also find myself with the problem of wanting lots of different notebooks and, also, to keep everything in One Single Solitary Notebook, For Convenience...

* NB I am a rocks nerd. My colour discrimination is ludicrously good. I am sorry that that link is weird and competitive about my ridiculous score, but not sorry enough to provide you with the bare link.

kayre: (Default)
kayre ([personal profile] kayre) wrote2026-03-13 05:17 pm

(no subject)

One of my eight year old students figured out the concept of a key signature by herself.