james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll


The June 2023 Dark Eye Megabundle featuring the English-language edition from Ulisses Spiele of the leading German tabletop roleplaying game of heroic fantasy, The Dark Eye.

Bundle of Holding: The Dark Eye MEGA (from 2023)

Ideas to block the current bill

Jul. 2nd, 2025 11:23 am
fabrisse: (Default)
[personal profile] fabrisse posting in [community profile] thisfinecrew
There are 17 medical professionals in the current House of Representatives. 11 are Republicans. Trying to argue on most issues with the bill is difficult with such a tight deadline, but the one item most people -- including Congressional Representatives -- are reacting to negatively is the closure of Rural and Regional hospitals. This should be a negative for all of the Republicans, but the ones who understand what lack of medical provision can do should be especially ripe to listen, perhaps even be persuaded.

I live in Georgia. Rich McCormick is Georgia District 6, and I live in District 1. But he's more likely to respond to someone from the same state, especially if he has Senate or Gubernatorial ambitions in the future.

The list I found is through The Patients Action Network. If you are in a District with one of these Republican representatives, particularly if they specialize in Emergency or Family medicine, start calling and/or emailing. If you are in the same state, email them and let them know you have a long memory if they're thinking of statewide offices.

In the meantime, send support to the few Republicans in the House who have already voted against it and continue to oppose it. At the very least, let's make them miss their deadline for vacation.
neonvincent: For general posts about politics not covered by other icons (Uncle V wants you)
[personal profile] neonvincent
I didn't bother to fit this into John Oliver dissects 'Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill'.

canyonwalker: wiseguy (Default)
[personal profile] canyonwalker
Oregon Cascades Travelog #4
Bend, OR - Tue, 1 Jul 2025, 8:30pm

It's been a good first day of our vacation in the Oregon Cascades. After starting this first day of my vacation with a day of work from a hotel in Klamath Falls, Hawk met me back at the room after she finished her shopping fun and we drove northward toward Bend, stopping to hike at Paulina Falls in the Newberry Crater Volcanic National Monument along the way. The blog for those waterfalls is currently in my backlog, awaiting attention on the photos. I'll share it soon.

After Paulina Falls we tried to visit another falls on the way to Bend but got rained out. For that matter we were almost rained out of Paulina. We hiked those falls despite a gray sky, drizzle, and rumbling thunder(!). By the time we got close to the other falls the sky was dark and the rain was falling a lot faster than a drizzle. We pulled the plug and got back on the road to Bend.

In Bend we checked into our hotel, another Days Inn like the one in Klamath Falls— but without tweakers or drug dealers loitering in the parking lot. We stowed our bags in the room and headed out right away for dinner.

Deschutes Brewery & Restaurant in Bend, Oregon (Jul 2025)

Hawk wasn't feeling too particular on dinner, other than "no pizza/Italian", and left the choice mostly up to me. I took the opportunity to pick something genuinely interesting to me— a brewpub! In this case the Deschutes Brewery & Public House. It's just over 1/2 mile from our hotel. And it has pizza, which I enjoyed eating, plus not-pizza that fulfilled Hawk's preferences. She ordered a gut-busting burger with guacamole with french fries with barbecue sauce.

Along with my pizza I enjoyed a few glasses of beer. The standout among them was one of the brewery-only specials, a limited anniversary edition of their Obsidian Stout made with bourbon. It tasted kind of like a beer Manhattan, but in a really good way. It was too rich to enjoy with food so I save the glass for dessert, after drinking a few pints of regular beer with my pizza. 🍕🍺😋

smuttymcsmutface: Kink Mod (mod2)
[personal profile] smuttymcsmutface posting in [site community profile] dw_community_promo
Kink Hub: A Sharing & Reccing Community for Kink Fics

Links:[community profile] kinkhub | Community Rules | Posting Guidelines | Monthly Themes & Free-For-All | July: Sex on the Beach

Description: Kink Hub is an 18+ comm for anything kink fic, where you can self-promote, share and rec fanfics of all fandoms and original works. RPF is welcome.

For the month of July, the theme for all shared fics is "Sex on the Beach", which means any kinks related to outdoor fun (no actual beach required) and/or alcoholic beverages (no cocktail required). If you've written or read fics featuring any related kink, you're very welcome to share the links to them in this comm.
dialecticdreamer: My work (Default)
[personal profile] dialecticdreamer
Shifting Tension
By Dialecticdreamer/Sarah Williams
Part 1 of 1, complete
Word count (story only): 1528
[Wednesday, 2 August, 2017, 4:30 p.m]]


:: Key people assemble to react to an unexpected development. Part of the Unfair Trades arc in Mercedes, within the Polychrome Heroics universe. ::




Robert stepped back to allow Officer Pryn into the room, but the Canadian’s frown seemed etched below his cheekbones. “What’s caused that expression on your face, Gerta?”

She shook her head faintly. “Nothing that anybody is going to like,” she warned. When she spotted Cold Cash, the police officer froze, one foot lifted off the thick carpet. “Especially not your friends,” she warned.

Diane Cort swallowed. “What’s going on?”
Read more... )

Saved comments during June 2025

Jul. 1st, 2025 07:13 pm
neonvincent: Spider Jerusalem blogging on a taxi hood with a dagger in his mouth. (Spider Jerusalem)
[personal profile] neonvincent
I left all my comments on my own blog last month. )

2025 CSFFA Hall of Fame Inductees

Jul. 1st, 2025 06:02 pm
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll
The quotation below is a quotation


CSFFA (The Canadian Science Fiction and Fantasy Association) is proud to announce the 2025 CSFFA Hall of Fame inductees.

Clint Budd, fan, convention organizer, modernized CSFFA and created the CSFFA Hall of Fame
Charles R. Saunders, author, journalist, and founder of the “sword and soul” literary genre
Diane L. Walton, editor, mentor, and a founding member of On Spec: The Canadian Magazine of the Fantastic

More information here.


Congratulations to the Inductees!

Finished Patlabor the Mobile Police

Jul. 1st, 2025 04:32 pm
fennectik: Anime (Anime)
[personal profile] fennectik posting in [community profile] anime_manga
Today I finished watching Patlabor and it was a very satisfying series to say the least, even though the final episode felt more like a normal instance than having closure after all the aventures and misadventures the team went through. I do believe the episode before the last would had been better left as THE last episode since it closed so nicely in comparison, but I digress.

But for now...




Mission accomplished.
[personal profile] cosmolinguist

I could barely do the morning chores I usually feel neutral-to-positive about this morning -- I open the curtains, unload the dishwasher, make a pot of tea, get breakfast for myself... Things that are always the same and always different. It can be very grounding.

Today I wasn't especially tired and I wasn't in pain or anything, I just didn't want to. I couldn't imagine doing the first tiniest step.

This is a sign of burnout. I need a break. I was telling my counselor this evening that a break for me has to be somewhere away from my house, because my house is full of reminders of chores I need to do, things that get on my nerves, etc. I am not good at relaxing, but when I can do it it doesn't tend to happen at home.

I did an okay amount of work today but near the end of the day I was in this focus group about "inclusion" in our workplace. These things can be kinda therapeutic but by the end I was thinking that we keep having surveys and stuff like this, where we tell some nice external person all our woes and we're assured that the feedback is anonymized into themes that cannot identify us, but all that means is our specific nuanced articulations all get flattened in to "we all have good colleagues who care about their work but the executive team keep letting us down," and we're going to get the same kind of response from said executive team about how impressed they are at everyone's honesty and how committed they are to addressing these themes, and then we'll do this all over again in a year or two.

I felt really tired by the end of it, which wasn't great because it was almost time for my first counseling session in almost a month. A real "let me explain, no there is too much let me sum up" kind of situation.

My counseling happens on the phone and usually in my bedroom; I normally come right back downstairs in search of dinner, but this time I just lay on my bed for something ridiculous like an hour. I kept trying to get up and go back downstairs but again: so many steps. And it was relatively peaceful just lying there.

Since I had to come downstairs and try to eat dinner I'm feeling more depersonalization, so maybe all of this has been more stressful or triggery than I realized. I hate feeling like this; is probably the most uncomfortable symptom of my anxiety/depression.

letzan: (Default)
[personal profile] letzan

High-level stats for week of 2025-06-17 - 2025-06-23


  • Total works categorized F/F on AO3: 10272 (+319 from last week)

  • Works I classified F/F: 5775 (+93 from last week) (2537 new, 3238 continued)

  • 0.64% of all 900898 AO3 works I've classified F/F were updated this week






A few callouts this week:


  • Hololive, Murder Drones, and She-Ra are all back. They replace Alien Stage, Cookie Run, and Honkai: Star Rail.
  • Once Upon a Time reaches 10 consecutive weeks in its latest chart run, out of 665 total weeks. (I think the latest chart run is just luck, rather than some new content or event somewhere; the fandom remains popular and has never fallen out of the top 20 for more than a month at a time. But let me know if you know otherwise!) Wicked reaches 30 consecutive weeks.
  • Exchange activity of interest: Hidden Gems: Bring On The Heat 2025, a Boku no Hero Academia rare pairs exchange, revealed works recently, and has 8 F/F works.



Full top-20 table and description of methodology after the jump )

Day 1 of Vacation: Work

Jul. 1st, 2025 09:51 am
canyonwalker: wiseguy (Default)
[personal profile] canyonwalker
Oregon Cascades Travelog #2
Klamath Falls, OR - Tue, 1 Jul 2025, 9:45am

Woohoo, the first day of our vacation, amiright? Haha, not exactly. After driving 8 hours to Klamath Falls, Oregon, last night today I'm working from the hotel room in Klamath Falls. My day started with responding to some urgent requests at 7:30am.

"WTF are you doing working on vacation?" you might ask. "Aren't you always writing about how you don't work on vacation?"

The fact is I'm working today because it's not vacation. It's a workday!

One of the benefits of working remotely is that remotely means anywhere I have a good internet/phone connection and the ability to focus on work. It's not just working from home. I'm working from a hotel today because having left yesterday afternoon— and knocked out those 8 hours of driving— means I'm that much closer to starting my actual vacation later today.

brithistorian: (Default)
[personal profile] brithistorian

A book has to really impress me to get a reaction before I've finished it, but Ada Palmer's Inventing the Renaissance has definitely done that. I had read some of Palmer's science fiction and been very impressed by it, and I knew before reading this that she is a historian, so when I first heard of this book, I immediately requested it from my local library.[^1] Not really knowing anything about it when I requested it, I thought it was a history of how the Renaissance came to be. Then I started reading it, and from the way she talked about historians creating the idea of the Renaissance, I thought it was a Renaissance equivalent of Norman Cantor's Inventing the Middle Ages.[^2]. Then I read on and saw that it's both of those things and more. It's also Palmer's academic biography, and an explanation of how academia works, and an exploration of the processes that created the Renaissance (and that created similar shifts in society at other times and places. It's the best history book I've read recently.[^3]

Besides the major historical themes of the book, Palmer has also included a number of interesting trivia and also Easter eggs for science fiction fans: - The genetic changes in Europeans that makes the Black Death no longer the huge plague that it was in the Middles Ages took several hundred years to come about, and also caused Europeans to be more susceptible to "autoimmune disorders like rheumatoid arthritis, celiac, and (in [Palmer's] case) Crohn's disease."[^4] - She refers to Florence in the Renaissance as a "wretched hive of scum and villainy."[^5] - She uses the board game Siena as an illustration of how government worked in Renaissance Florence.[^6]

I particularly love this paragraph about the chronology of the Renaissance, and how it's exceedingly different depending on who you ask:

All agree that the Renaissance was the period of change that got us from medieval to modern, but people give it a different start date, because they start at the point that they see something definitively un-medieval. If we leave the History Lab a moment and visit my friends across the yard in the English Department, they consider Shakespeare (1564-1616) the core of Renaissance, while Petrarch's contemporary Chaucer (1340s-1400) is, for them, the pinnacle of medieval. When I cross the walk to visit the Italian lit scholars, they say Dante (1265-1321), despite being dead before Chaucer's birth, is definitely Renaissance, and often that Machiavelli is the start of modern, even though he died before Shakespeare's parents were born.

Reading this book makes me both sad and glad, in varying degrees at different times, that I never got my PhD and entered academia, depending on whether I feel at that particular moment that by having done so I would have been placing myself in cooperation or competition with Palmer. But leaving that aside, I'm exceedingly glad to be living in a time that I get to read this book, and I'm eagerly looking forward to getting to read more of Palmer's books.


[^1] Apparently a lot of other people had also heard of it, because I only got it about a week ago.

[^2] Although much more fun to read than Cantor.

[^3] I almost said "easily the best history book I've read recently," but I'm also currently reading Geoffrey Parker's Global Crisis: War, Climate Change & Catastrophe in the Seventeenth Century, which gives Palmer some serious competition. But since I feel compelled to write a pre-completion reaction to Palmer's book and not to Parker's. . .

[^4] p. 116. All the MAGAts who keep yammering on about herd immunity with regard to COVID need to know that, but they probably wouldn't listen anyway.

[^5] p. 136.

[^6] pp. 65-8.

james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll


Only the brave, the arrogant, the naïve, or the desperate Men trespass in Arafel's Ealdwood. Into which category does the latest visitor fall?

The Dreamstone (Ealdwood, volume 1) by C J Cherryh

July 2025 Patreon Boost

Jul. 1st, 2025 08:58 am
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll


Jealous of all the people who support Aurora-finalist James Nicoll Reviews? Want to join them? Here are your options:

July 2025 Patreon Boost

June 2025

S M T W T F S
1 234 5 67
891011 1213 14
15 16 17181920 21
2223 2425 26 2728
29 30     

Most Popular Tags

OSZAR »