Best Books of 2025
Jan. 15th, 2026 04:53 pm- M.L. Wang, Blood Over Bright Haven —Highly cathartic! Really earned that ending.
- Kelly Braffet, The Unwilling—I love when unpleasant characters make terrible decisions; bonus if it includes magic. A meditation on agency, and what it means to not have any, and what choices are left to us. Not for everyone but 100% for me.
- Layne Fargo, The Favorites—Equal parts dishy and wrenching
- Edith Wharton, The House of Mirth — Honestly there is nothing as riveting as rich girl problems. Put my name down for the Edith Wharton Completionist Club.
- Ada Palmer, Inventing the Renaissance: The Myth of a Golden Age —Ada makes history sexy using her secret weapon: historiography! Ada’s brain is so weird and so brilliant it should be a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
- Adrian Tchaikovsky, Elder Race—From now on Tchaikovsky is only allowed to write novellas. He gets rambly in his novels but this was a perfect chef’s kiss of a genre-straddler.
- Kate Elliott, The Witch Roads and The Nameless Land—The duology that converted me to Elliott and her brand of sprawling worldbuilding
( superlatives and full book list )
Admin Post: Membership Closed
Jan. 16th, 2026 10:40 amThe GYWO moderators are thrilled to spend the next year writing with 823 writers.
Those who have come by too late, we appreciate your interest, and we hope that while you aren't able to join us officially, you'll make your own writing goals and achieve them. You’re welcome to subscribe to the community to keep a look out for 2027 news, or follow us on gywo.bsky.social or
Have a great year!
‘Semiosis’ in Ukrainian
Jan. 16th, 2026 09:29 am
The novel Semiosis is now available in Ukrainian from Lobster Publishing.
This has to be the most beautiful edition of the book, as you can see in these Instagram reels.
I know just enough of the Cyrillic alphabet to know that СЕМІОЗИС is Semiosis and Сью Берк is Sue Burke.
Meanwhile, my heart breaks for the people of Ukraine. I visited Kyiv in 2006 when it hosted the European Science Fiction Convention, and I was impressed by the elegance of the city and the patriotism of its people. They made sure, back in 2006, that I understood they were not Russian.
Thankful Friday (addendum)
Jan. 16th, 2026 07:24 amToday I am thankful for...
- Finding my damned glasses, which were lurking underneath the pile of sweaters, blankets, and other stuff draped over the arm of the couch nearest my desk.
- Discovering that nova, my fileserver, still has python2.7 on it. The reason I wasn't able to post through it was that neither python2 nor my posting program (ljcharm) was installed.
- Assuming this can be posted, being able to upgrade (Thinkpads) Raven (which I was using for posting) and Panther (which I hadn't realized wasn't upgraded).
Snowflake Challenge #7-8
Jan. 16th, 2026 10:19 amAlso! Tomorrow!
Challenge #7: Three Things I Like About Meeee
1. When I start something, I finish it. This can be bad (sunk cost fallacy), but generally (see below) is a plus.
2. I’m funny. For a while I worried that my humor was too off-the-cuff, and I couldn’t translate it into writing. But that’s not true! I rather enjoy reading my own stuff and LOL-ing at my
3. I say the thing that everyone’s thinking but is afraid to verbalize. When I was younger, I was too blunt, and this honesty was often off-putting. As I matured, I learned to leaven the truth with humor, to manage my tone, to not make it a personal attack, which really, really helps.
Challenge #8: Creative Process
Rather than get into the weeds of my process, which aren’t that interesting, including to me, I’ll just say that, at a macro-level, what most drives my writing process is that when I draft something and determine it’s worth pursuing, I finish it. Once I broke my two-decade plus writing drought, the third piece of fanfic I wrote was a 86K word novel. Did it receive any comments or kudos as I posted it, chapter-by-chapter? Not really. But by god I was going to finish it. Not just finish it, but edit it structurally so that it flowed better. One of the last pieces of fanfic I wrote was an even longer, Nancy Wheeler from ST story which had a very limited audience and required a whole lot of research. Didn’t matter. I *needed* to get closure on it before I could start writing original fiction and apply to graduate school.
This is helping me now that I’ve transferred my creative energy from fanfic to original fiction. Folks, writing a novel is a giant fucking pain in the ass that I do not recommend. And unlike fanfic, I have no guarantees that someone will eventually read it and love it.* Having practice finishing large projects is very helpful (“I know I can do this!”), as is my bull-headed** determination to cross an item off my to-do list.
(For me!) finishing a project is one of the best ways to learn and improve. The sense of satisfaction! The confidence boost! Unparalleled.
* Which eventually happened with both my fanfic novels. Not many people, but I write for niche audiences. :P
** Did I mention that I’m a Taurus and was born in the year of the ox?
Bazinga!
Jan. 16th, 2026 02:00 pmEverybody sing!
Squashed kitties
Shorn kitties
Mangy balls of fur!
Crappy kitties
Creepy...kitties?
STILL BETTER THAN A DOG.
Thanks to Laura T., Gina P., Celeste B., Chris S., Jesse S., and Anony M., for starting our day with a Big Bang.
******
P.S. In case you prefer the "right" version:
*****
And from my other blog, Epbot:
AI and the Corporate Capture of Knowledge
Jan. 16th, 2026 02:44 pmMore than a decade after Aaron Swartz’s death, the United States is still living inside the contradiction that destroyed him.
Swartz believed that knowledge, especially publicly funded knowledge, should be freely accessible. Acting on that, he downloaded thousands of academic articles from the JSTOR archive with the intention of making them publicly available. For this, the federal government charged him with a felony and threatened decades in prison. After two years of prosecutorial pressure, Swartz died by suicide on Jan. 11, 2013.
The still-unresolved questions raised by his case have resurfaced in today’s debates over artificial intelligence, copyright and the ultimate control of knowledge.
At the time of Swartz’s prosecution, vast amounts of research were funded by taxpayers, conducted at public institutions and intended to advance public understanding. But access to that research was, and still is, locked behind expensive paywalls. People are unable to read work they helped fund without paying private journals and research websites.
Swartz considered this hoarding of knowledge to be neither accidental nor inevitable. It was the result of legal, economic and political choices. His actions challenged those choices directly. And for that, the government treated him as a criminal.
Today’s AI arms race involves a far more expansive, profit-driven form of information appropriation. The tech giants ingest vast amounts of copyrighted material: books, journalism, academic papers, art, music and personal writing. This data is scraped at industrial scale, often without consent, compensation or transparency, and then used to train large AI models.
AI companies then sell their proprietary systems, built on public and private knowledge, back to the people who funded it. But this time, the government’s response has been markedly different. There are no criminal prosecutions, no threats of decades-long prison sentences. Lawsuits proceed slowly, enforcement remains uncertain and policymakers signal caution, given AI’s perceived economic and strategic importance. Copyright infringement is reframed as an unfortunate but necessary step toward “innovation.”
Recent developments underscore this imbalance. In 2025, Anthropic reached a settlement with publishers over allegations that its AI systems were trained on copyrighted books without authorization. The agreement reportedly valued infringement at roughly $3,000 per book across an estimated 500,000 works, coming at a cost of over $1.5 billion. Plagiarism disputes between artists and accused infringers routinely settle for hundreds of thousands, or even millions, of dollars when prominent works are involved. Scholars estimate Anthropic avoided over $1 trillion in liability costs. For well-capitalized AI firms, such settlements are likely being factored as a predictable cost of doing business.
As AI becomes a larger part of America’s economy, one can see the writing on the wall. Judges will twist themselves into knots to justify an innovative technology premised on literally stealing the works of artists, poets, musicians, all of academia and the internet, and vast expanses of literature. But if Swartz’s actions were criminal, it is worth asking: What standard are we now applying to AI companies?
The question is not simply whether copyright law applies to AI. It is why the law appears to operate so differently depending on who is doing the extracting and for what purpose.
The stakes extend beyond copyright law or past injustices. They concern who controls the infrastructure of knowledge going forward and what that control means for democratic participation, accountability and public trust.
Systems trained on vast bodies of publicly funded research are increasingly becoming the primary way people learn about science, law, medicine and public policy. As search, synthesis and explanation are mediated through AI models, control over training data and infrastructure translates into control over what questions can be asked, what answers are surfaced, and whose expertise is treated as authoritative. If public knowledge is absorbed into proprietary systems that the public cannot inspect, audit or meaningfully challenge, then access to information is no longer governed by democratic norms but by corporate priorities.
Like the early internet, AI is often described as a democratizing force. But also like the internet, AI’s current trajectory suggests something closer to consolidation. Control over data, models and computational infrastructure is concentrated in the hands of a small number of powerful tech companies. They will decide who gets access to knowledge, under what conditions and at what price.
Swartz’s fight was not simply about access, but about whether knowledge should be governed by openness or corporate capture, and who that knowledge is ultimately for. He understood that access to knowledge is a prerequisite for democracy. A society cannot meaningfully debate policy, science or justice if information is locked away behind paywalls or controlled by proprietary algorithms. If we allow AI companies to profit from mass appropriation while claiming immunity, we are choosing a future in which access to knowledge is governed by corporate power rather than democratic values.
How we treat knowledge—who may access it, who may profit from it and who is punished for sharing it—has become a test of our democratic commitments. We should be honest about what those choices say about us.
This essay was written with J. B. Branch, and originally appeared in the San Francisco Chronicle.
mako
Jan. 16th, 2026 07:34 amThanks, WikiMedia!
The shortfin mako is the fastest shark, capable of 74 km/h / 46 mph bursts, and at full growth is only slightly smaller than its close relative, the great white shark. The word is specifically from Kāi Tahu Māori (a South Island dialect) makō, which can also mean shark in general -- in other Maori dialects it's pronounced mangō. The word has cognates in many other Polynseian languages, such as Hawaiian mano, generally always meaning generically any shark.
And that wraps up a theme fortnight of words from Polynesian, which will be the last word-origin theme for a while -- back next week with the usual unsorted mix. And who knows, maybe sometime another theme will show up.
---L.
Their Kingdom Come (Night Eaters, volume 3) by Marjorie Liu & Sana Takeda
Jan. 16th, 2026 09:15 am
Their last cunning scheme set apocalypse in motion. What wonders will follow Billy and Milly's next bold endeavour?
Their Kingdom Come (Night Eaters, volume 3) by Marjorie Liu & Sana Takeda
LBCF: Antiheroes
Jan. 16th, 2026 12:00 pmVidding Year in Review
Jan. 16th, 2026 03:00 pm...Actually, let me publish the fourth one real quick. I vidded it last summer so I'll have it count here. So! Here's the 2025 published vids:
SW ST: Is There Anybody Out There?
Fox Volant: My Loss
Fox Volant: Sister Moon
SW ST: Wide Awake
(The unpublished fifth, Free Me, one is also SW ST, and part of my vid album project like the other two.)
( 2025 vid review )
Pimp: Fem Slash Big Bang on Tumblr
Jan. 16th, 2026 08:32 amI considered signing up, since the due date is September that gives me plenty of time, but between now and then there will be another round of
Hangul and Buddhism
Jan. 16th, 2026 12:56 pmWe've seen numerous blockbuster videos from Julesy, but this one is the most explosive ever:
"This might be the most hated film in Korea" (11:55)
Julesy lays it all out in her usual magisterial manner, so I won't repeat what she already has said so clearly in the video, but will just add three items that are relevant to support her case:
1. Aside from King Sejong and his revered Hangul, one of the other most treasured historical relics in Korea is the Haeinsa 해인사 ("Temple of Reflections on a Smooth Sea"), which houses the 81,258 woodblock printing plates of the Korean Buddhist canon. This is the most complete, best preserved, and most reliable Chinese Buddhist canon. The monks who constructed and maintained the repository were architectural and technical geniuses who built a wooden monument that was designed to ensure the conservation of the woodblocks from mold, mildew, moisture, as well as extreme cold and excessive heat. When I visited the temple, I was astonished by all of the ingenious measures the monks took to adjust the ventilation of air through the storage areas. I simply marveled at the perfection of the edifice. In recent decades, contemporary engineers did tests utilizing modern storage facilities and techniques to temporarily house some of the blocks, and it was clear that they did not conserve them as well as the many centuries old depository at Haeinsa.
If the Korean people idolize Hangul, they adore Haeinsa.
2. The foundational phonological science that enabled the creation of Hangul — whoever is credited with the invention — was Indo-Buddhist. See:
Victor H. Mair and Tsu-lin Mei. “The Sanskrit Origins of Recent Style Chinese Prosody.” Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies, 51.2 (1991): 375-470 — on the historical development of tonal patterns in traditional Chinese poetry
"Chinese transcriptions of Indic terms in Buddhist translations of the 2nd c. AD" (4/20/20)
Hill, Nathan, Nattier, Jan, Granger, Kelsey, & Kollmeier, Florian. (2020). Chinese transcriptions of Indic terms in the translations of Ān Shìgāo 安世高 and Lokakṣema 支婁迦讖 [Data set]. Zenodo. http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3757095
Nathan Hill,“An Indological transcription of Middle Chinese,” Cahiers de Linguistique Asie Orientale, 52 (2023), 40-50.
W. South Coblin. A handbook of Eastern Han sound glosses. Hong Kong: Chinese University Press, 1983.
Axel Schuessler. “The Qièyùn System ‘Divisions’ as the Result of Vowel Warping.” The Chinese Rime Tables. In David P. Branner, ed. (Amsterdam: John Benjamins, 2006)), pp. 83–96.
Shuheng Zhang and Victor H. Mair, "Between the Eyes and the Ears: Ethnic Perspective on the Development of Philological Traditions, First Millennium AD", Sino-Platonic Papers, 300 (April, 2020), 1-49.
Victor H. Mair, "Buddhism and the Rise of the Written Vernacular in East Asia: The Making of National Languages", Journal of Asian Studies, 53.3 (August, 1994), 707-751 — for me personally, the most important linguistic impact of Buddhism was its legitimization of the written vernacular in China
3. The Confucianist Choson (or Joseon) 조선 Dynasty (1392-1897) was so anti-Buddhist that in essence they outlawed tea, which was closely identified with Buddhism. That's why still today, a hundred years after the collapse of the Choson, true tea ("wisdom [prajñā प्रज्ञा] tea") is making a slow comeback against ersatz tea.
"Taiwanese Twosome: tea and Sino-Korean" (6/25/25)
Victor H. Mair and Erling Hoh, The True History of Tea (London: Thames and Hudson, 2009), especially Appendix C on the linguistics of "tea".
BTW, the most stinging / important sentence Julesy says in her video presentation is the very last one.
—–
P.S.: You probably can't see the swastika In the top left corner of the title frame of the video because it is covered up by Julesy's little circular portrait, but it has nothing to do with Nazism. Rather it signifies Buddhism. For example, if you wonder around street and alleys of Japanese villages and towns, you will see little Buddhist shrines featuring the swastika. In Chinese it is called 卍字, pronounced wànzì in Mandarin, manji in Cantonese, manji in Japanese, manja (만자) in Korean and vạn tự or chữ vạn in Vietnamese. In Balti/Tibetan language it is called yung drung. (source)
In fact, the swastika long predates Buddhism in what is now called "China". See:
Mair, Victor H. 2012. "The Earliest Identifiable Written Chinese Character.” In Archaeology and Language: Indo-European Studies Presented to James P. Mallory, ed. Martin E. Huld, Karlene Jones-Bley, and Dean Miller. JIES Monograph Series No. 60. Washington, D.C.: Institute for the Study of Man. Pp. 265–279.
P.P.S.: I pondered long and hard whether I should title this post as "Buddhism and Hangul" or "Hangul and Buddhism", and whether that made a difference.
Selected readings
- "Korean oralization of Literary Sinitic" (4/23/24) — as explained by Si Nae Park
- "Hangul as alphasyllabary" (5/14/25)
- "Hangul: Joseon subservience to Ming China" (5/14/22)
- Coblin, W. South (2006). A Handbook of ʼPhags-pa Chinese. ABC Dictionary Series. Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press. ISBN 978-0-8248-3000-7 — 'Phags-pa played a role in the creation of Hangul
- "Happy Hangul Day!" (10/9/23)
- "The pragmatic and innovative Choe Sejin — 15th-16th c. Korean phonetician, translator, and interpreter" (4/21/22)
- "Hangul Day" (10/9/05) — a very nice article by Bill Poser
- "Hangul Day" (10/9/15) — catchy theme song; noteworthy comments
- "Ch'oe Manli, anti-Hangul Confucian scholar" (5/26/25)
- "Devangari" (10/26/20) — a very common mispronunciation, should be "Devanagari"
- "ʼPhags-pa script" — WP
- "Middle Sinitic in Indological Transcription" (10/28/23)
HR vids and edits - recs
Jan. 17th, 2026 01:44 amFirst, two funny edits by hoechloin (tumblr) with soundtracks and embellishments that make me laugh out loud - Shane freaking out and being his dorky self:
shane-hollander-freaking-out-for-1-minute
shane-hollander-freaking-out-for-90-seconds-part-2
Fanvids:
an angsty one to Casual by Chappell Roan by Leocities (play it with closed captions to get the most out of the great editing to the lyrics)
and a happier one to Long Time Running by The Tragically Hip by peakyboyos
US politics
Jan. 16th, 2026 06:51 am(Still buried under health + family + work + school stuff as well, sorry - if I'm not responding or late to respond, that's why.)
fic rec Friday
Jan. 16th, 2026 07:30 amWhat does David have in common with Ilya Rozanov? Good vodka, ice hockey, and apparently, loving Shane Hollander.
The Day in Spikedluv (Thursday, Jan 15)
Jan. 16th, 2026 07:28 amI visited mom and hit the post office and filled my gas tank on the way home, did a load of laundry, hand-washed dishes, ran a load in the dishwasher, went for several walks with Pip and the dogs, cut up chicken for the dogs' meals, scooped kitty litter, and showered. We had spaghetti for supper.
I watched a lot of tv today and did zero reading! I watched the first two eps of Best Medicine, last week’s ep of 9-1-1 to get caught up, and a couple eps of Zoo Tampa.
Temps started out at 37.0(F). It was still sprinkling in the morning and had probably been doing so all night. Almost at the exact moment I pulled into the driveway at ~9:30am, the rain started to turn to snow. It’s weird how you can see it thicken as it hits the windshield until it’s white. I don’t think the temp went up much while I was out, because it had to be going down for the rain to turn to snow. When I left the house a little after 11am it had dropped to 29.7 and kept dropping the rest of the day.
I made the mistake of looking at the forecast for the next two weeks and, day-um!, it is going to get cold again. High’s in the teens and 20s, lows in the single digits. DNW!
Mom Update:
Mom was not feeling well when I visited her. ( more back here )
About me
Jan. 16th, 2035 06:30 amAge: I am 39.
Birthday: April 29th, 1986.
Astrological Sign: Sun: Taurus, Moon: Capricorn, Rising: Libra, Sidreal: Sun: Aries, Moon: Sagitarius, Rising: Virgo, Chinese: Fire Tiger.
Spiritual Beliefs: Okay, so I grew up learning about Jehovah's Witnesses. This is something my birth mother tried to ingrain in me but I was always drawn to the occult, witchery and other religions. I learned about other religions while steadily learning about the JW God. At first I stuck with the JW God, but by 28, I ended up renouncing God and accepting the universe as the creator. I believe the christian God exists, but he's the sun and also the universe. He is also a she. I also believe in taoism, shinto, wicca, catholicism and several other things as well. Even Hindi.
Ethnicity: Black Biracial with a hint of Hispanic.
Ancestry: On my father's side I'm Nigerian and Hispanic. On my mother's side I'm French, Breton, Welsh, Scottish, Italian, German, Irish, Norwegion and English.
Gender: Transman.
Pronouns: he/him.
Living Arrangement/Family: I am currently living in a nursing home, that is for the forseeable future until I'm on my feet. I intend on getting my own home within the next year, if not sooner.
Education: 8th grade unfortunately. I'm in tutoring now to take the g.e.d.
Job: N/A. I'm a student though.
Romantic/Sexual Orientation: Demipansexual. I don't want to date cismen except one man, who I trust and it's gonna be a moment before we're finally together.
Relationship Status: Single. I'm looking incase someone I love and I don't end up together.
Hobbies: Writing, Watching TV and Films, Watching video games online, playing video games, watching youtube videos of animals, reading books, coloring.
Interests: veganism and vegeterianism, dream intrepretation, tarot reading, astrology, coloring, painting, drawing, animals and pets, tv and films, video games, music, writing, reading, youtube, tiktok, shinto, taosim, wicca, catholicism, exorcisms, psychology, photography, pregnancy, children.
Health: My physical health isn't the best as I'm dealing with a bit of heart problems but they're not so bad, I also deal with weak legs, short breathiness and frequent colds.
Mental Health Wise: I'm doing better than usual. I deal with schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder, A.D.H.D, Anxiety, and Depression.
Other Things About Me: I am an INFJ. I can read you like a book, and even if you think you're hiding well, you're not. I'll read you, tell my family what they can't trust about you and you'll always be found out. lol
Things I like:
TV shows: Supernatural, Riverdale, Reba, Golden Girls, Beat Bobby Flay, Guy's Grocery Games, Diners, Drive Inns and Dives, Wildcard Kitchen, Buffy The Vampire Slayer, Angel The Series, The Vampire Diaries, Being Human, Bobby's Triple Threat, Mighty Morphin Power Rangers, Ed, Edd, and Eddy, Adventure Time, Regular Show, Teen Titans and Teen Titans Go, George Lopez, Friends, Aqua teen Hunger Force, Sailormoon, Naruto, Death Note, Big O, Furi Kuri, Mr. Robot,
Movies: Labyrinth, Legend, Dirty Dancing, Carrie, Maximum Overdrive, Silver Bullet, Lucas, Pretty in Pink, Sixteen Candles, Manequinn, Hotel New Hampshire, Flowers in the attic, Double Impact, Sudden Death, Lionheart, Universal Soldier, Cyborg, Terminator, the Little Mermaid, Beauty and The Beast, Rapunzel, Princess and the Frog, Anatasia, Bob's Burger's - The Movie, Zootopia, The Lord Of The Rings Trilogy, Finding Nemo, The Matrix Trilogy Girl - Interrupted, Fight Club, 23, Mulan (animated Disney movie from the late 1990s), The Truman Show, The Crow, Twister, The Craft, Dracula - Dead And Loving It, Speed, The Basketball Diaries, Demolition Man, Interview With The Vampire, Bram Stoker's Dracula, Sister Act (both parts), Hocus Pocus, Back To The Future (all three parts), Teen Witch, Beetlejuice, Bill And Ted's Excellent Adventure, Flashdance, Footloose, Rose Red, Cell (Stephen King), IT original and newer version,
Music: The Birthday Massacre, Enigma, Three Days Grace, Shinedown, 2Pac, Eminem, Beyonce, Jay-Z, Creed, Staind, Goo Goo Dolls, L'Arc'En'Ciel, Hyde, Utada Hikaru, Hoobastank, 311, sublime, Eve6, Tonic, the Wallflowers, No Doubt, Smashing Pumpkins, Alanis Morrisette, Duncan Shiek, Delirium, A Perfect Circle, Bauhaus, Billy Idol, David Bowie, Depeche Mode, Duran Duran, Foo Fighters, Garbage, Incubus, Joan Jett & The Blackhearts, Joy Division, Lady Gaga, Linkin Park, Michael Jackson, New Order, Nine Inch Nails, P!nk, Queen, Rihanna, Rob Zombie, Siouxsie And The Banshees, Switchblade Symphony, Tears For Fears, The Killers, The Weeknd, Tool, Trent Reznor, Gackt, D'espairs Ray, Dir En Grey, Guns and Roses, Poison, Boston, Winger, Elvis Presley, Etta James, Lighthouse, Fuel,
Books/Authors: J.K Rowling, Stephen King, Edgar Allan Poe (I haven't read thoroughly in years....)
Games: Sims 2, Sims 3, Final Fantasy 7-8-9-10-13-15 and Tactics, Fatal Frame 1 thru 5, Sudokien 3, Silent Hill 1 thru 6, Onimusha Series, Resident Evil Series, Until Dawn, Legend of Zelda (any)
Other places you can find me online:
→ Instagram: Username is "khaoskitten". The profile is private, for the reason I am paranoid about being found by people I don't want to be found by... I hope this makes sense. If you like, you can add me, though, I will likely add you back when I know who you are.
→ Bluesky: when I remember it, I'll put it here.
→ Discord: caspian5405
Goodreads: I need to get an account. D:
podcast friday
Jan. 16th, 2026 07:11 amSGA: Rodney's Bad Day by boochicken
Jan. 17th, 2026 12:12 amCharacters/Pairings: John Sheppard/Rodney McKay, Ronon Dex, Teyla Emmagan, Elizabeth Weir, Carson Beckett, Radek Zelenka
Rating: Explicit eventually
Length: ~33,000
Content Notes: no AO3 warnings, mentions of blood
Creator Links: boochicken on LJ
Themes: Crack treated seriously, Friends to lovers, First time, Vampires, Action/adventure
Summary: none
Reccer's Notes: Rodney gets turned into a vampire by rogue technology on a mission. This is crack taken seriously as there's no fantasy element, and for the initial part Rodney himself is adamant that vampires don't exist. The story takes this premise and plays it out in a canon setting, with Rodney having to develop coping methods for the downsides - like bursting into flame in sunlight (his super sunblock helps a bit), and accessing a supply of blood. Apart from the blood drinking and risk of immolation (and not having a pulse) he's very much his usual self, and, as ever, even manages to save the day despite these problems. It's a delightful story with lots of plot and action, and a friends to lovers romance with John. Gripping, and very well written!
Fanwork Links: Rodney's Bad Day (4 parts)
Each part on Wayback: part 1, part 2, part 3, part 4
(no subject)
Jan. 16th, 2026 08:56 pmOn the Beach by Nevil Shute - which has its flaws as a book (it's certainly not scientifically rigorous and the prose is often clumsy), but I was emotionally overcome by the ending. I think even more so because it's such a slow burner, so much about incredibly ordinary people with no real effect on the world living out their last days. You don't get the point of view of politicians or geniuses or movers and shakers, and the one guy from CSIRO you only get his point of view toward the end when he's thinking about how he'll spend his remaining days. Just normal people living in denial, or numbing themselves with alcohol, or deciding to do things they never got to before, or finding ways to fill out their days and trying not to think of all the things they'll never get to do.
( Read more... )
Character names from Freeman Wills Crofts
Jan. 16th, 2026 11:44 amMessrs Bumpus (a business consisting of multiple Bumpuses)
Wilfred Leatherhead
Rupert Brangstrode
Abel Garstone
Mr. Blott
Mr. Clotworthy
Dr. Runciman Jellicoe
Markham Crewe
Reading Adventures
Jan. 16th, 2026 11:41 amStuck in the Middle with Oystercatchers and You
Jan. 16th, 2026 09:01 am
I feel like I’m always saying this, but: it was a weird start to the year. This year, I actually gave myself permission to *not* celebrate New Year’s, that is, I didn’t have to start a new program or a new calendar system, make a fresh start or be a new me. It was a relief. This week the pear trees on our street started blooming and I remembered this post. Tomorrow I’ll look for cormorants, and try to remember to celebrate the unsettled, unsettling beauty of the middle.
*
We often celebrate the beginnings of things, and the ends of things, but what about the middles? The middle can be a gray place, either boring or too eventful in all the wrong ways. That’s what this part of the year feels like to me– I’m missing the cozy days of early winter, where candles are a welcome novelty, when the early dark gives you reason to curl up with a book for an evening. Now, the days are a little longer, but not long enough for me to really enjoy the extra hours of daylight, only enough so that I feel like I’m struggling to keep up.
There’s a little bit of what could be hope out there—a handful of pear trees have started to push out white blossoms—but looming right behind them is an atmospheric river coming to grab the flowers by the fistful and smash them into the street. We’re just hovering here between the winter solstice and the spring equinox, and sometimes it feels like this is the year the balance just won’t tip toward the light. No wonder Punxsutawney Phil has trouble predicting how soon spring will come, when, like the rest of us, the groundhog is stuck in the middle of winter. (The groundhog’s forecasts, NOAA reports, have been right about 40 percent of the time during the last 10 years.)
Of course, the in-between time could also be the beginning of something else. In Ireland, St. Brigid’s Day on February 1—which started as the Celtic festival of Imbolc—marked the beginning of spring and the lambing season. I wonder how differently I’d feel if I considered this moment in the calendar to be spring—would it feel more welcome in its unsettledness?
I’m not sure. Part of me still wants to hibernate until the days are warm and the world seems less threatening. One study suggested the possibility that an extinct human species that lived in high-altitude caves in what’s now Spain did just that to deal with their extreme environment. Researchers now are looking at ways to induce torpor-like states to help with healing—doctors already lower some patients’ temperatures and metabolisms during some surgeries—and to protect future space travelers on long journeys.
As I’m thinking about the logistics that would be involved in starting my own hibernation experiment, it starts to rain, and so I reconsider walking to school to pick up one of the kids. I look up more facts about hibernation instead, and then facts about birds that hibernate (only the common poorwill is known to do it for long stretches, although many species go into short-term periods of torpor). I look up oystercatchers—called Giolla Bríd, the messenger birds of Brigid–and then the skies clear, and when my son comes out he is swinging his closed umbrella. “I have so many papers,” he says. “So many.”
When he gets home he lies down on the quilt my grandmother made that has a blue house in the center surrounded by birds, and flowers, and birds carrying flowers. I take out the papers, and in this middle time, I would like to lie down and cover myself in papers, but instead I look through them, one by one, deciding which ones I need to keep.
Brigid was once being chased by a group of men and when she came to the beach, there was nowhere else to run. The story goes like this: she lay down on the sand and asked for help. The oystercatchers that were lining the shore picked up pieces of kelp in their beaks and covered Brigid in layers and layers of kelp. When the men came, they couldn’t find her.

Brigid was the patron saint of fertility, of midwives, of poets and sailors and scholars and fugitives. Legend has it that she changed bathwater into beer. Some say that she performed Ireland’s first abortion. The combination of things under her purview makes me wonder, and not wonder, why the men were chasing her. I wonder how she knew when it was safe to get up. This is why I do not hide myself in papers, because I would stay there until the oystercatchers came to help.
Oystercatchers in Ireland are black and white with bright red beaks. The Irish Independent reported that they used to arrive to Ireland’s shores and estuaries by the thousands in winter, but now they’re harder to find. Here on the Pacific coast, black oystercatchers are relatively common and whistle loud enough to be heard over the sound of the waves.
Tonight, at 5:30, it is still light enough to walk along the bluffs in between storms. I see no oystercatchers, no gulls, no pelicans that have been cruising in formation all week long, their wingtips just skimming the water. The gnarled eucalyptus that perches on the edge of the cliff usually stinks like oily fish and the digestive tracts of hundreds of cormorants, but tonight the tree is empty and scentless. The waves are ripping through the kelp beds. Tomorrow at low tide, the tangled stalks will pile on the beach, and whatever lies beneath will take weeks to re-emerge.
I turn back, and a lone cormorant flies out toward sea and wheels around awkwardly. Cormorants: plain and prehistoric-looking, excellent at diving but clumsy in flight, dull black except in the moments when the light hits in just the right way. They have been considered omens of both bad luck and good, they are messenger birds of no one.
This particular cormorant careens toward the far side of the tree, and then I see them—dozens of cormorants on the tree’s bare, sea-facing branches that take the brunt of the wind. There is not enough light to make them gleam, there is not enough light to cast a shadow, but there is light enough to see. The cormorants huddle together in the balance between winter and spring, these small patron saints of middles, and I celebrate by watching them until they become a part of the dark.
*
Image of Eurasian oystercatchers by Bjørn Christian Tørrissen/Wikimedia Commons
Image of wave, kelp, and birds by Mike Pennington/Wikimedia Commons
The post Stuck in the Middle with Oystercatchers and You appeared first on The Last Word On Nothing.
We're growing a forest
Jan. 16th, 2026 04:32 pmphotos.google.com/share/AF1QipNJMTB35YXYd0cKRpLOD0OtPN6WUzEd8Ov0uu1UkDIiZ0y1-L2kv8ciEMTNH4wNxg/photo/AF1QipNI23zPDa_7UzMfXipq7t23OmD9_NCJzlRYPrEh
I've done another gardening session with the Swamp volunteers. There's very little in the way of live weeds in my Spot now, so I went to the 'social' session that happens once a month! This time of year, it's watering the young native seedlings [native to this specific area] which have been planted in open ground beside the Swamp, to become a proper forest in a year or so. This will be done fortnightly, not monthly, from now on until the rains come again. It just happened to be the task for what they call the Busy Bees. Sometimes they do other tasks. A dedicated team does the watering on the off fortnight Sunday. The water is brought up by vehicle in a large tank and decanted into watering cans, carried two per person if they have reasonable strength, over the planting area until everyone is watered.
I was supposed to go gaming tonight, but [again!] somebody cancelled and it had to be put off. This is a relatively new social trend, I find, that of the last minute cancelling. It became very prevalent last year. I suppose I should be grateful that I found out several hours in advance, rather than minutes. When I'm on my way out the door and somebody does it right then, that does piss me off. I think a functioning adult should be able to work out if they want to go to something and if they can fit it in to their schedule, then TURN UP if they have responded in the affirmative, always allowing for sudden death or disablement/illness. Theirs or someone else's.
But hey, that's just me. And I never wanted to be the adult in the room!
Bag of thoughts
Jan. 16th, 2026 08:58 am2. I'm posting a lot right now both here and on AO3, but I assume it will all go very quiet again once I return to working on the novel(la)s?? Takes longer to form insights and also no finished projects to share heh.
3. I am thinking about those original projects again, which is good!! Unfortunately my mind is looking for wider, very high-level themes unifying the drafts of every original novella/novel I ever finished and oh my god I found it and I need to stop thinking about it or I will never write again. Feels like strolling down main street in my underwear even just mentally.
4. You! Do you write fic? Are you suffering reception anxiety after posting?? Try This One Neat Trick: read or watch something obscure, then create a new AO3 fandom tag for it and write! Obviously, I'd like to connect with readers, but there's also something liberating to posting something that has a single digit audience at best. Possibly literally, as in max one digit on one hand XD
5. A friend gifted me a really cute 2026 late last year. It's about the size of my palm. I knew I wasn't gonna use it for my actual TODOs because incredibly, my Bullet Journal system is still working super well for me, and as cute as it is it would be a downgrade. I thought I'd use it for something writing-related, since writing is happy-inducing and so is this little planner thing but... I can't figure out what, still T_T I thought I might jot down notes on what projects I do or times or word counts, but that feels like a chore and not joy-sparky. I'm already tracking the few writing stats I'm actually interested in. And now we're mid-January and every day is a missed page opportunity and I still don't know what to use it for orz Suggestions welcome! Even if not writing related at this point. I guess maybe I could do a gratitude journal...? I like to do that randomly in my paper journal though, rather than on command daily. Hmmmm.
6. If you like Wind Breaker and are looking for icons, there's been quite a few posted over on
February 2026 Book Voting
Jan. 16th, 2026 05:49 pm📖 Holy Sh*t: A Brief History of Swearing by Marissa Mohr, 324 pages, "Whether they express anger or exhilaration, are meant to insult or to commend, swear words perform a crucial role in language. But swearing is also a uniquely well-suited lens through which to look at history, offering a record of what people care about on the deepest levels of a culture -- what's divine, what's terrifying, and what's taboo."
📖 Entangled Life: How Fungi Make Our Worlds, Change Our Minds and Shape Our Futures by Merlin Sheldrake, 368 pages, "Merlin Sheldrake's revelatory introduction to this world will show us how fungi, and our relationships with them, are more astonishing than we could have imagined. Bringing to light science's latest discoveries and ingeniously parsing the varieties and behaviors of the fungi themselves, he points us toward the fundamental questions about the nature of intelligence and identity this massively diverse, little understood kingdom provokes."
📖 Index, A History of the: A Bookish Adventure from Medieval Manuscripts to the Digital Age by Dennis Duncan, 343 pages, "Most of us give little thought to the back of the book--it's just where you go to look things up. But as Dennis Duncan reveals in this delightful and witty history, hiding in plain sight is an unlikely realm of ambition and obsession, sparring and politicking, pleasure and play. … Revealing its vast role in our evolving literary and intellectual culture, Duncan shows that, for all our anxieties about the Age of Search, we are all index-rakers at heart-and we have been for eight hundred years."
Which book should we read in February 2026?
Holy Sh*t: A Brief History of Swearing
4 (26.7%)
Entangled Life: How Fungi Make Our Worlds, Change Our Minds and Shape Our Futures
6 (40.0%)
Index, A History of the: A Bookish Adventure from Medieval Manuscripts to the Digital Age
5 (33.3%)
Poem: "People of Every Ethnic Persuasion"
Jan. 16th, 2026 01:03 am( Read more... )
Prophecy
Jan. 16th, 2026 08:40 amCan't wait....
But they have also said that these first few weeks- where we are now- will be hard going- which is just what they're proving to be....
Choices (12)
Jan. 16th, 2026 08:36 amCecil, Baron Rondegate, occasional took pleasure in strumming on the keys: but would not do this on Zipsie’s fine Broadwood, no, that was far beyond his touch. Had obtained a far more modest instrument that he kept in the smoking-room, where he could attempt to sound out, perchance, the melodies of Clo Marshall’s songs – lord, 'twas some while since he had made an excursion to the Beaufoyle Arms Song and Supper Rooms!
Coming in one afternoon, at an hour when he hoped he might avoid tea-table company, he met Mrs Knowles on the stairs on her way out, made civil – for she was not only an excellent musical friend for Zipsie, her husband was a chap that one would very much wish to know better and be on good terms with. Known for quite the soundest advice in financial matters – had saved a deal of his acquaintance from bad investments – very well-connected –
Mrs Knowles smiled at him and said, Lady Rondegate was looking exceeding well, but hoped she was not over-doing – those boisterous sisters of hers were very good-hearted creatures but –
Cecil grinned. Their exuberance can be a little wearing! And this performance for Lady Abertyldd’s birthday makes demands –
Mrs Knowles gave a genteel snort. I apprehend that young Oliver still lingers in Heggleton – was he in Town he might take some of the burden of rehearsals from her –
Why, his grandfather writes that he comes around to showing very responsible over learning about their business, and matters to do with the election.
Her mouth quirked. That is something! – for although Ollie was no longer embroiled with that dangerous fast set had still been something of an idle wastrel about Town – but I must be upon my ways.
Cecil bowed over her hand as they made their farewells. He proceeded to the music-room, that was where he supposed Zipsie would have been entertaining Mrs Knowles.
There was, indeed, evidence of tea and the crumbs of cake!
Zipsie was sat at the pianoforte, picking out a tune – good lord, it was Clo Marshall’s 'Oo does 'e think 'e is?
She turned and smiled. Do you ring for tea, should you care for some – or something stronger, mayhap?
A very small brandy and soda would come very agreeable, he conceded, and went to ring.
When this had come, along with a bowl of smoked nuts, and he had refreshed himself, she swung around on the piano-stool and said that he had found her out in trying to work out one of those very pleasing tunes she had heard him playing when she passed the smoking-room t’other day.
Why, he responded, raising his eyebrows somewhat, 'tis one of Clo Marshall’s songs –
Oh, I have heard so much about those, from Ollie and Folly, but they say very unsuited to ladies’ ears – she snorted in a most unladylike fashion – mayhap the words are vulgar? but the tunes are very clever, I am not at all give to wonder that they are whistled everywhere.
She grinned. La, one is told that the errand-boys in Vienna went about whistling the tunes from Mozart’s operas! There is a deal of nonsense about low taste –
He looked at his wife. There was really something most out of the common about Zipsie. That had ever found conventionality somewhat constraining – one saw that being married and freed from the edicts on the conduct proper to a young lady that had not yet attained that state was most congenial to her –
Why, the words may be somewhat vulgar – in the cant of the lower orders, Cockney – but not in the least coarse – very amuzing – Miss Marshall has a great talent for presenting 'em – fine voice –
Zipsie sighed. I daresay 'twould not be proper to go attend one of her performances?
He considered upon this. My dear, I can see ways that it might be contrived, but as things are at present, fancy 'twould be a little imprudent.
O, entirely, she sighed. That was one of the reasons for Mrs Knowles’ call – to give me the sound advice on the management of my condition that she had had from her mother – has not everybody cried up the late Lady Ferraby to me as the entire paragon in such matters?
The clock chimed.
Fie, I should go dress for dinner! – do you dine at home the e’en?
Indeed I do.
He rang for another small brandy and soda before going to change himself, musing upon whether they should give a dinner-party afore Town was completely deserted – might one invite the Grigsons? Lady Lucretia was in mourning for her brother, that was, it was give out, no great loss, but a quiet dinner party would surely be permissible? The Knowles – unless they were going out of Town to one or other of their family connexion – had he not heard that the Demingtons still lingered? – mayhap the Samuels –
It was a very reassuring sight to observe with what great appetite Zipsie ate her vittles at dinner! He remarked upon this, at which she grinned. Law, do I not feel sick, I am quite ravenous, 'tis one or t’other all day. Either nibbling a little dry toast, or devouring a beefsteak. Mrs Knowles tells me that matters are wont to regularize in due course, that I am glad to hear.
That minded him that she had said that there was another reason for Mrs Knowles’ call – I hope, my dear, that is she soliciting you to perform at her musical soirées, you will not be overdoing –
O, she did mention that, mayhap, when Society finally returns to Town, and I will be feeling more the thing, that would be on the cards, but what she was concerned about was Thea –
Thea?
This matter of Miss Billston’s songs of Sappho, that are indeed quite exquisite, and that are entirely suited to Thea’s voice, but Mrs Knowles came about to apologize for being pressing on the matter, and hopes has not embarrassed Thea, knowing how very strict Lord Pockinford’s views are, and Sappho not only being a pagan poetess, but noted for her passionate devotion to women.
Cecil blinked.
Alas, she says, here we were, brought up in the Raxdell House Phalanstery, acquired rather broader notions concerning who might rightly love who – observed fine examples of female devotion –
What?
Zipsie looked at him. Why, there are Miss McKeown and Miss Lewis, have been the dearest of friends this entire age – Lady Jane Knighton’s fine affection to Miss Addington – the Ladies of Attervale and of Yeomans – and she told me, there was quite the deepest devotion 'twixt the late Lady Ferraby and Dowager Lady Bexbury.
Is it not give out they were related?
O, beyond any mere feeling for kindred! But, alas, there is Lord Pockinford, that speaks out against sisterhoods, that seem a very sensible solution for ladies that do not marry, and would one fears feel the same about ladies that find mutual society, help, and comfort with one another rather than a husband.
Cecil stared at his wife. This was quite the revelation, both about these happy female couples, and Zipsie’s entirely commonsensical feelings about 'em.
He gulped. I have observed, he said at length, that there may be similar devotions between men….
'Tis indeed rumoured, said Zipsie, but does one mention it one is cautioned not to speak thus, because of the injustices of the law.
She fell silent, frowning. After some minutes, she said, I have observed that you and Mr Davison sort exceeding well together – come about on excellent terms – fine manly friendship?
Cecil looked across the table at her and then down at his hands. He swallowed. Indeed I come into a more than usual, one may only call it fondness for him, and he to me. But – he also greatly likes you – and we would not for the world do anything you liked not, Zipsie –
She paused again, arranging the orange peel on her plate into patterns. After a considerable while she cleared her throat and began, sure I have found marriage a great deal more agreeable than I anticipated, and you far exceed my expectations in a husband! Very much was, o, this is a thing I am obliged to do. But –
She blushed. I was talking once to Aunty Dodo, when I was somewhat younger, and said it must be a fine thing to marry a musician – I had something of a girlish admiration then for Uncle Casimir – and she sighed, and said, music can be a demanding mistress and then put her hand to her mouth and begged me not to disclose what she had said to Mama. But while I may not be a composer to compare with Uncle Casimir, nonetheless, I am, I find, a musician.
And there was a conversation I had lately with Mrs Lucas, that happened to remark that she kept a space in her life for poetry – there she is, the fondest of wives and mothers, doatingest of grandmothers, &C – said that as she went about her day kept by her ivory tablets to jot down lines or thoughts she had, for such time as she might give her mind to composition.
So while I do not think I will ever become one of those ladies that goes dally with gentlemen that are not my lawful wedded husband, there is something that is a passion – that I fancy might at times preoccupy me in ways that some husbands might resent, for whom one is supposed to forsake all others, and I daresay that would include the muses.
Also, she said with a grin, there is Mr Davison has that very snug fellowship at Oxford, 'tis not the like of setting up some Miss in a villa in St John’s Wood like Lord Iffling and decking her with jewellery. She giggled at his expression. La, Lady Lucretia disclosed to me certain family matters over the teacups one day.
Zipsie, said Cecil, you are quite magnificent and a paragon amongst womankind. And, he thought with an inward grin, as well as a fine musician, the grand-daughter of Sir Oliver Brumpage, he had noted that when she was about the household books!
Zipsie wrinkled her nose and said, she fancied she was what they deemed an odd specimen.
He opened to her the project of going to Wepperell Larches – bachelor party including Sallington and Julius Roberts – giving it out that I have some notion to making a Persian garden –
She raised her eyebrows. Then said that 'twould certainly look somewhat less particular. And minded that they, too, were bred in the Raxdell House Phalanstery.

