sovay: (Mr Palfrey: a prissy bastard)
[personal profile] sovay
In lesser catastrophes than the general planet, I have been noticing over the last eight months that while the majority of my audio transferred successfully from the archival hard drive that was for fourteen years my beloved Bertie Owen, certain artists seem to have gone incompletely and inexplicably missing, generally to be discovered by trying to cue up a track which no longer exists on my computer, which is what happened last night with Neil Hannon. Of the six albums by the Divine Comedy that I used to own along with a handful of random tracks and singles, the sole full-length survivors are Promenade (1994) and Bang Goes the Knighthood (2010), which are neither chronologically nor alphabetically even next to one another. The consolation lining is that at least I didn't lose one of my favorite songs which can be found on the latter, "Assume the Perpendicular." Like much of its composer's catalogue, it's a chamber-pop character sketch, wittily written and performed with a sincere straight face: trying to fix its position on the irony slider is pointless. "Slip on your Barbour jacket, jump in my old MG" sets the class bracket of its band of day-trippers, while the tenor of their conversation is nailed with equal concision by the architectural divisions of "Lavinia loves the lintels, Anna the architraves / Ben's impressed by the buttresses thrust up the chapel nave." Aside from the narrator who thought of that last line and delivers it with cheekily Coward-esque crispness, none of these people sounds like the most exciting company for a heritage day out with their diffident intentions to "make complimentary sounds and talk about nothing in particular." And yet as the song catchily progresses, these pretentious characters find themselves falling into the fun of their excursion, meandering the hedge maze, bouncing on historical beds, swinging around the library's railed ladders, and the music loosens right up along with them, the neat hand-clapped piano joined first by a brisk roll of drums and then a flourish of brass that unreel from a marching tattoo into a loose-jointed jam, until by the time a music-hallish banjo has ricky-tickied in on the action, the self-conscious distance of the original chorus has turned into "wild ecstatic sounds" and everybody including the listener is having a wonderful time tearing around this stately home where playing at aristocracy has given way to goofing off. It all ends in a little twiddle of electronica like a punch line. It doesn't really matter if it's sending up the sightseers who aren't even interested in the cider in Somerset, what it feels like as it winds down from that explosive high of exploration is a genuine invitation that I can play twenty times in a row, even if my closest examples of the Georgian style are not so much country houses as random historical registers and the occasional Revolutionary museum that I pass on the way to my parents or a supermarket.

2025 September Fan Poll

Sep. 2nd, 2025 03:01 pm
lb_lee: A happy little brain with a bandage on it, enclosed within a circle with the words LB Lee. (Default)
[personal profile] lb_lee
Hey everybody, it's that time again: time to vote for which stuff gets the LiberaPay/Patreon money this month!

As always, anyone can vote (please do!), but LiberaPay and Patreon patrons get double weight for their votes.  (Due to Patreon's porn purges, I really encourage you to use LiberaPay, if you get a choice.) If you want to see the blurbs for any of these works, those are here!  (You can also leave your requests there; requesting a story or essay is always free!) If you don't have a DW and so can't do the poll, that's okay; just leave your vote in the comments below; anon comments are turned on.

Which works gets the money, and thus posted this month?  YOU CHOOSE, readers!
Poll #33565 2025 September Fan Poll
Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 12


Did you toss LiberaPay/Patreon money my way last month?

View Answers

Yes (my votes count double)
5 (100.0%)

What writing gets posted this month?

View Answers

Infinity Smashed: Born Lucky
4 (36.4%)

Reverend Alpert: the Traveling Exorcist
2 (18.2%)

Henchwench for Hire (F/F supervillainy)
1 (9.1%)

Rutless (trans omegaverse porno)
1 (9.1%)

Flights of Reality (the Cursed City)
0 (0.0%)

Anatomy of a Dance (essay)
1 (9.1%)

The Boy Whose Heart Is Home (teen hardship)
2 (18.2%)

The Battleaxe and the Blood-Eater (pseudo Greco-Roman gladiators)
0 (0.0%)

LB Economics (essay)
5 (45.5%)

Cultiples #1 Afterword (essay made of AAAAAAH)
1 (9.1%)

Rage Against the Regime (LB autobio)
3 (27.3%)

What art/comic/zine gets posted this month?

View Answers

Cult Comix
2 (22.2%)

Death Watch
3 (33.3%)

How it Was, How It Is
0 (0.0%)

2012 hospital sketchbook
0 (0.0%)

2013 Homeless Year sketchbook
1 (11.1%)

2014 AllFam sketchbook
0 (0.0%)

Protection
3 (33.3%)

2015 early Biff sketchbook
3 (33.3%)

Seductive Beast (Mori/Rawlin silliness)
4 (44.4%)

swimmmmminngggg!

Sep. 2nd, 2025 11:12 am
forgotten_aria: (hole)
[personal profile] forgotten_aria
The summer has been going by way to quickly. I think partly because my foot has meant I don't go for random walks and am likely avoiding other activities.

But this weekend was PSR and I got so much swimming and my foot loved swimming I think because it was being flexed not under load in slightly cool water. A friend was training for a triathlon so I ended up swimming almost a mile (slowly) which was fun.

I tried water skiing again and I was a little better, but didn't get up. Maybe in two more years?

I ran three Taskmaster like tasks and had fun doing it. I didn't get too many people because apparently most people don't know what it is, but the people who did do it had fun. There was a really good song that got written too. I already have ideas for next year, including how to avoid what happened this year where we annoyed some people with noise doesn't happen again.

I do finally feel like I got some summer in at least.

Side note: I still don't have my bolt back.

Fic: The Boundless Sky (Gen, 1/1)

Sep. 2nd, 2025 10:45 am
nonelvis: (STAR TREK Burnham)
[personal profile] nonelvis
Title: Once More, This Time to the Left
Fandom: Star Trek: Discovery
Characters/Pairing(s): Michael Burnham, Amanda Grayson, Sarek, Spock, Gabrielle Burnham
Rating: All ages
Word count: 1,961
Spoilers: None
Summary: Growing up as a human on Vulcan is hard. Growing up as a human with wings is even harder.

Author's notes: Written for the Wingfic square on my Keep Fandom Weird bingo card. Hey, it's baby's first wingfic!

Some dialogue taken from "Such Sweet Sorrow," parts 1 & 2. Many thanks to [personal profile] lizbee for the beta.

::xposted to AO3

fic, after the cut )

Sit thee down and put them on

Sep. 1st, 2025 11:35 pm
sovay: (I Claudius)
[personal profile] sovay
I have observed Labor Day by doing basically nothing at all, but [personal profile] selkie introduced me to the sea-flooded Paleolithic of Cosquer Cave with its seals and great auks and the hand-marks of children and the one unknown figure like a seal-headed man speared, which reminded me that some days ago I meant to link the Langton Herring burial with its amulet of a Roman coin and its copper alloy mirror whose bladed crescent pattern made me think at first sight of owls. The clouds tonight are too thick for the aurora and the last of the Perseids, but the light has done its knife-trick of paling suddenly to autumn, as if summer just blew off it like haze. I am sure the heat will be back, the way we have scrambled the seasons: I keep trying to look for the tells to hold on to, like the late green curl of the leaves; the last of the monarchs in milk-jade chrysalis, a record twenty-two this summer if all safely make it to flight. I could go for a small ice age if I could be assured of the megafauna.
lb_lee: A magazine on a table with the title Nubile Maidens and a pretty girl on it. (nubile)
[personal profile] lb_lee
boneyhag on bsky has created a spreadsheet of banned/de-indexed works on itch.io! Some good creators and works on there, (including Muepin's Special Request, which I own), and overwhelmingly queer work (what a shock). I added some stuff to my wishlist! Perhaps you can too!

(If you're one of the folks who got burned, linked post also has a submission form adding your work to the spreadsheet.)
lb_lee: A hand wearing a leather fingerless glove, giving the finger to the camera. (ffffff)
[personal profile] lb_lee
Due to Dreamwidth having to block views from all Mississippi users, I'm going to have to fucking take every single story and essay on this damn website and mirror and back it up on healthymultiplicity.com.

Mississippi's requirements are strict:
This act applies only to a digital service provider who provides a digital service that:
(a) Connects users in a manner that allows users to socially interact with other users on the digital service;
(b) Allows a user to create a public, semi-public or private profile for purposes of signing into and using the digital service; and
(c) Allows a user to create or post content that can be viewed by other users of the digital service, including sharing content on:
(i) A message board;
(ii) A chat room; or
(iii) A landing page, video channel or main feed that presents to a user content created and posted by other users.

So this includes Dreamwidth (and all other Livejournal clones), Fanfiction.net, an AOL Instant Messenger chat room, a forum, presumably Patreon and itch.io... but oddly probably not 4chan, since that has no profiles! healthymultiplicity.com is kinda my only option, because the site allows for no social interaction.

I am very sorry for the inconvenience. Having my work accessible to the public is extremely important to me, but man, the past couple months have been pretty rough when it comes to politicians and payment processors getting between me and my willing readers!

Byron!

Sep. 1st, 2025 04:59 pm
drglam: Purple conversation heart; says "DrGlam" (<3)
[personal profile] drglam
We've been spending the day on the third floor deck. He purrs when I pet him,

He suddenly groomed a paw and scratched his ear. I offered him some Forbidden Kibble (he's been on the C/D diet for years, and perpetually wants 'Thippe's kibble, which is kept out of his reach), and he ate some! And a little wet food too.

I brought him back in to the spot he's been preferring, and after about ten minutes, he got up, walked across the apartment, and plopped down on the deck. I brought him one of the boxes he likes, and he climbed in. 

Seasons of Drabbles: Summer

Sep. 1st, 2025 04:50 pm
zdenka: Miriam with a tambourine, text "I will sing." (Default)
[personal profile] zdenka
This round of Seasons of Drabbles has ended! I received three lovely gifts and I wrote three things (my assignment, a pinch hit, and a treat).

My Gifts (one for The Lord of the Rings, one for the Silmarillion, and one about the Jewish angel in The Angel of the Crows):

Read more... )

Things I wrote (The Angel of the Crows, Cloud Cuckoo Land - Anthony Doerr, and Watership Down):

Read more... )

culture consumed (August, 2025)

Sep. 1st, 2025 12:20 pm
hermionesviolin: an image of Alyson Hannigan (who plays Willow Rosenberg) with animated text "you think you know / what you are / what's to come / you haven't even / BEGUN" (Default)
[personal profile] hermionesviolin
live theatre
  • [Shakespeare on the Common] As You Like It w/ Cate & Allie
    After her father’s kingdom is seized by his power-hungry brother, Rosalind and her cousin Celia flee in disguise, seeking refuge in the Forest of Arden. There, they find new freedom and wisdom about love, family, community, and acceptance. Shakespeare’s lush romantic comedy As You Like It celebrates the joys and follies of human nature and the beauty of creating one’s own sanctuary, even in the face of great tyranny.
books
films
  • Lisa Frankenstein (on Peacock) -- which I had heard was not great, but I wanted distraction.  It reminded me some of Heathers.

***

Currently Reading:

[bff book club] Saving Our Own Lives: A Liberatory Practice of Harm Reduction by Shira Hassan (with Foreword by adrienne maree brown & Introduction by Tourmaline) (2022) -- the chapters are generally short, and the book is long, so we'll be reading this low-key forever.

Books that GR thinks I am Currently Reading but which are kind of on hiatus:

Polywise: A Deeper Dive into Navigating Open Relationships by Jessica Fern, with David Cooley (2023)

[August 31 OOYL book club] The Other Olympians: Fascism, Queerness, and the Making of Modern Sports by Michael Waters (2024) -- a Lambda Literary finalist for LGBTQ+ Nonfiction

Reading Next:

  • September book club books I expect to read:

    [Sept OOYL book club]  One of the Boys by Victoria Zeller (2025)
    (Frankie at OOYL said: "One of the Boys is our second fiction venture, just in time for football season. Most of the trans sports books I’ve read have transmasc protagonists and women’s sports teams, so I love this book about a trans girl trying to figure out if she still wants to play football with the boys after her transition.")
    Bethany at TFR recently read and really liked this.
    Her live-read thread ends "Okay yeah y'all were right, that was one of the best books of the year. Goddamn. Talk about slam dunk YA."
    And her post of her review on Patreon adds: "Probably my second favorite book of the year so far behind Autumnal Conductor."

  • September book club books I will maybe read:

    [September 24? DEI book club -- Hispanic Heritage Month]

    I made a book suggestion thread for Latine books for September, and A.D. pretty immediately suggested 6 books -- none of which I had previously heard of (except the first one, which I had already read).  I pulled links and ~summaries from Bookshop, but only 1 person has voted so far, so unclear what we'll read. I don't feel strongly about much of any of them.
    • The Lesbiana's Guide to Catholic School by Sonora Reyes (YA novel, queer Mexican American teen girl protagonist; 2023, 416 pages)
    • Candelaria by Melissa Lozada-Oliva (novel about 3 generations of women, set partly in the Boston area; 2023, 320 pages)
    • The Great Divide by Cristina Henriquez (novel about the construction of the Panama Canal; 2025, 336 pages)
    • A Haunting in Hialeah Gardens by Raul Palma ("genre-bending" novel; 2024, 288 pages)
    • Worm: A Cuban American Odyssey by Edel Rodriguez (graphic novel memoir about the author's childhood in Cuba under Castro and his family leaving as part of the Mariel boatlift in 1980; 2023, 304 pages)
    • Violeta by Isabel Allende (novel following a woman who lives from 1920-2020, in Chile?; 2023, 368 pages)

    [September 29 online ~local sff book club] Dreadful by Caitlin Rozakis (2024) -- I'm on the mailing list for this book club and have attended occasionally. I happen to currently be free for this month's meeting, and the book sounds potentially interesting.

  • September book club books I do not expect to read:

    [Sept 2 Read the Rainbow library book group] Blackouts by Justin Torres (2023)

    The move from second Thursday to first Tuesday meant less time to read this, and I wasn't super grabbed by the idea of the book, and church "Biblical Weirdos" Zoom got pushed out a week so the last session was gonna overlap with this, so I don't think I'll attend the book club meeting and also don't think I'll read the book.

    This sure is a book.  The GR blurb:

    From the bestselling author of We the AnimalsBlackouts mines lost histories--personal and collective.

    Out in the desert in a place called the Palace, a young man tends to a dying soul, someone he once knew briefly, but who has haunted the edges of his life. Juan Gay--playful raconteur, child lost and found and lost, guardian of the institutionalized--has a project to pass along to this new narrator. It is inspired by a true artifact of a book, Sex Variants: A Study in Homosexual Patterns, which contains stories collected in the early twentieth century from queer subjects by a queer researcher, Jan Gay, whose groundbreaking work was then co-opted by a committee, her name buried. As Juan waits for his end, he and the narrator trade stories--moments of joy and oblivion--and resurrect lost loves, lives, mothers, fathers, minor heroes. The past is with us, beside us, ahead of us; what are we to create from its gaps and erasures?

    Inspired by Kiss of the Spider Woman, Pedro Páramo, Voodoo Macbeth, the book at its own center and the woman who created it, oral histories, and many more texts, images, and influences, Justin Torres's Blackouts is a work of fiction that sees through the inventions of history and narrative. An extraordinary work of creative imagination, it insists that we look long and steady at the world we have inherited and the world we have made--a world full of ghostly shadows and flashing moments of truth.

    (Lol, Pedro Páramo was a book I low-key vetoed for DEI book club.)

    [Sept 10 climate change book club] What If We Get It Right?: Visions of Climate Futures by Ayana Elizabeth Johnson (2024) -- I expect to go to this book club meeting, but haven't had the time/energy/interest to read the book.

  • notable quotables

    Sep. 1st, 2025 01:10 am
    ursamajor: droppin' the ball (d&amp;#39;oh)
    [personal profile] ursamajor
    [personal profile] hyounpark has recently started watching the 2022 revival of Quantum Leap, and tonight's episode? Revisited the World Series quake. As somebody who lived through that? ROFL, pedantry ahoy!

    Me: "Hi Candlestick! ... wait, happy hour during Game 3 of the Bay Bridge Series? GET UNDER A SOLID DOORWAY NOW."
    Me: "WHAT THE HELL YOU WOULD NOT HAVE BEEN ABLE TO SEE THE FERRY BUILDING FROM THERE IN 1989, NOT EVEN WITH THE FREEWAY COLLAPSE."
    Me: "You can't get across the Bay in the time you have! The bridge is down, BART is down, that utility tunnel is at least FIVE MILES LONG, and even when you come up on the Oakland side you still have to get through the entire-ass Port of Oakland. And you're playing a white family, highly unlikely they would have lived in West Oakland at the time, so now you have at least another two miles of running to get anywhere where the apartments look like that and you could plausibly have none or very few Black neighbors, and OH WAIT YOU'D HAVE TO CROSS THE CYPRESS STRUCTURE TO DO THAT, which also fell down in the quake! Your 90 minutes are up, tick tick BOOM."
    [personal profile] hyounpark: "Watching this ep with you is WAY more entertaining than watching it by myself would have been!"
    Me: "And this didn't even account for going back to their new apartment in SF at least two miles in the wrong direction, RUNNING UPHILL, to look for the kid!"

    *

    The Strategist interviewed Sally Jessy Raphael a few weeks ago on some of her favorite things, and I feel seen.

    "Let me explain. The first thing people say when they see me is, “Oh my God, you’re so short.” This is terrible. I am slightly under five feet. This means that if I go to buy grown-up clothes in the store, everything is too long. Everything. Every skirt, every pair of jeans, it doesn’t matter what I pay or where I shop. So, I have pinking shears. Everything I own, I pink with the pinking shears. It doesn’t make sense for me to go to Kohl’s and buy $9 jeans and then send them to be hemmed for $30. In New York, that’s what it costs to hem. So I gave up on having anybody hem them. And I’m having trouble threading my sewing machine. So pinking shears do everything."


    I mean, not that I own a pair of pinking shears, but I'm always on the lookout for jeans that are short enough for me off the rack. Usually, they end up being some form of slim-to-straight fit cropped style, but the best pair of jeans I ever had was a flared sort of baby bellbottom style that I got at a clothing swap like 15 years ago. They didn't last terribly long (got holes on the inner thighs within a couple of years), but I loved the hell out of those jeans - they were button-fly (look, I bought my first pair of jeans with my allowance from the Gap in the early 90s and that's what I imprinted on), they had embroidered cuffs, they flared out below MY knee height just enough to balance my curvy hips better than any pair of then-trendy skinnies ever did, and I wore them at least twice a week while I owned them except in summer.

    They were my holy grail of jeans, and I've been looking for anything like them ever since. I've tried on jeans from probably every American mass-market brand in the interim, but no. At this point, I own two pairs of Levi's Wedgie Straights because they are not "cropped" and come in a 26" inseam (so the knees hit where they're supposed to), and are suitable for the times when I just need plain old jeans that don't stand out. They are reliable. But they don't feel like ~me~ the same way these old jeans did.

    I know the real answer is that I just need to buy a sewing machine and learn how to make my own jeans, but. Sigh.
    siderea: (Default)
    [personal profile] siderea
    Canonical link: https://siderea.dreamwidth.org/1882100.html



    0.

    With all the eager discussion of the possibility of Trump dying in office, I am in the delicate and unfortunate position of not actually being in favor of it.

    Don't get me wrong. I, too, would enjoy to seeing something very bad happen to Trump. What I'd best like is him getting his just deserts – ideally being arrested, indicted, tried, found guilty, sentenced, having appealed, the appeal failing, appealing again, having that appeal fail, petitioning the POTUS for clemency and it not being granted, him being duly executed by the state as the traitor to the Republic and the Constitution he was proven to be. I'm not generally a big fan of capital punishment, but I am in fact willing to make exceptions; he seems to think he's an exception to a lot of things, and here I would agree with him.

    But that's not going to happen, not in this time-line, and it's probably for the best that it doesn't.

    Perhaps he will simply keel over dead, and I confess I will take at least a little bitter satisfaction in it.

    And it's certainly not that I don't wish us all to be spared even another moment of this Trump presidency. Of course I do.

    Alas, as much as I hate to crush the pleasant fantasy of us being redeemed by the deus ex machina of artheriosclerosis finally doing its job and carrying off our oppressor: Vance is worse. Much, much worse.




    1.

    It's perhaps understandable that you would not realize this.... Read more [6,770 Words] )

    This post brought to you by the 219 readers who funded my writing it – thank you all so much! You can see who they are at my Patreon page. If you're not one of them, and would be willing to chip in so I can write more things like this, please do so there.

    Please leave comments on the Comment Catcher comment, instead of the main body of the post – unless you are commenting to get a copy of the post sent to you in email through the notification system, then go ahead and comment on it directly. Thanks!
    sovay: (Rotwang)
    [personal profile] sovay
    The weekend continued sleepless af with a double whammy of financial stress and I got nothing done that I had wanted, but [personal profile] spatch took a picture of me when I got back in from my walk that I liked, which these days is vanishing. I am not confident a normal amount of summer actually happened.

    Computer Salad

    Aug. 31st, 2025 06:41 pm
    l33tminion: (Default)
    [personal profile] l33tminion
    Last weekend, went back to Cleveland with Julie to pick up Erica and meet some of my extended family for a family reunion. Was pretty great. Melissa was there, but Elliott and Simon were absent, since Simon's been traveling a bit rough lately and he was due to start a new preschool soon after.

    On Wednesday, Erica started fourth grade, the two intro days followed by a four-day weekend.

    On Saturday, I did a bunch of activities with Erica, including going to the Farmers Market and doing some cooking. We went on the tour of the Taza chocolate factory, which has been on my activity to-do list for a while, since that's very close to our house. I made cucumber salad, for which for some reason my mind kept trying to substitute a more nonsensical phrase.

    Today, I baked ginger-lemon scones from the Flour cookbook with Erica, which she picked out as a cooking project. Turned out well.

    We had an appointment this weekend to get our seasonal vaccines, but it was abruptly cancelled. I'm hoping that things will get sorted out. But the CDC seems to be in an insane state right now, and the government's vaccine policy seems to be at root straight-up in favor of more people getting sick.

    (I'm reading A Wind in the Door to Eria and it's uh interesting timing in the context of Sec. Brain-Worm's comments about "mitochondrial challenges".)
    lb_lee: A colored pencil drawing of Raige's freckled hand holding a hot pink paperback entitled the Princess and Her Monster (book)
    [personal profile] lb_lee
    While digging through sci-fi library magazine archives, I found an old 2000 magazine that had the very charming short story, "Princess Angelina and the Dragon," by Renee Carter Hall. Since finding copies of that magazine is pretty hard for most people, I emailed the author about it, and she benevolently chose to upload it online for everyone to enjoy! Ain't that nice of her?

    I know I got some dragon-smoochers as readers, so please enjoy this cute fractured fairy tale story of dragon smoochery!

    Comic: Blushing and Scent, 2024

    Aug. 31st, 2025 05:05 pm
    lb_lee: a purple horned female symbol interlocked with a female symbol mixed with a question mark (xenogals)
    [personal profile] lb_lee
    This was the winner of the LiberaPay/Patreon poll this month! Enjoy your fluffy comics!

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