calimac: (Default)
calimac ([personal profile] calimac) wrote2026-02-05 06:51 am

dissing on sf cons, again

Here's yet another characterization of sf cons as unwelcoming and elitist. I find that a very strange charge. In my youth I was stepped on by all sorts of elites, but I never had any trouble finding sf cons welcoming and joyous.

But I know why this is. It's because I didn't go to sf cons with a chip on my shoulder. I had figured out that literary sf cons are about written sf literature. If you go to a focused special-interest con, you have to focus on what interest you have in that, and put other interests in abeyance for the weekend. I once went to a festival celebrating Peter Jackson's Tolkien movies. I'm famously excoriating on those, but I shut up about that for the weekend and accepted the celebration of what's good about them (and there are good things about them, just not anything having to do with Tolkien). Last month I went to a Clark Ashton Smith conference. I'd never paid more attention to Clark Ashton Smith than the length of time it took to read one or another short story by him, but for that weekend I focused on Clark Ashton Smith - and learned a lot.

And the reason these small specialty conferences are hostile to other interests is because they feel beleaguered. They're a community and they have an interest. There's a lot more comics fans than there are literary sf fans, as the size of comics cons will reveal, and they've got plenty of conventions of their own. Same with movies. If they come in to the small specialty cons, they'll drown out what the con is there for. Decades ago there was a joke in the Mythopoeic Society that Star Wars was the black hole of conversation; that once it came up, it took over the discussion.

I don't expect these cons to change their focus for me. I don't march into a literary sf con and demand to be taken as a comics fan, as the poster did. They're a community; you can join that community if you have any interest in its subject. (Some of the Clark Ashton Smith attendees had barely begun reading his work, and they weren't denigrated by the hoary old specialists, because they were showing interest; they weren't demanding the con be about something else.) Blend into the environment you're in, if you have any interest in it at all. There'll be a chance for a different environment next weekend.

PS: Kayla Allen corrected a small factual error in the post.
kissed: commission ༉‧₊˚. (blue lock [⚽] king)
𝕤𝕖𝓵𝕖𝕟𝕒 ♡ ([personal profile] kissed) wrote2026-02-05 09:50 am

(no subject)

Hello! Since it's been over 3 years since I've kept an active journal here, I decided to do a very overdue friends cut. I've primarily cut dead journals along with journals that:
  • don't really interact with me
  • I don't really interact with
  • just isn't going anywhere as journal friends which is fine, and maybe I did us both a favor if they were hesitant to remove me first
  • I don't even remember giving access to
My reasons are not personal, but practical — I've been wanting to shorten my list for some time. While I'm not trying to cause any offense, I also doubt anyone will feel as such after reading why I potentially cut them and probably acquiesce.

My entries will continue to be access-locked, so please remove me back at your leisure since there'd be no point continuing to subscribe (unless you really want to for whatever reason you may have).

If anyone would like to be added back or I made a mistake, shoot me a comment here and we'll talk. Same deal for any dead journals that come back in the future. Otherwise, I wish everyone well. Thank you for giving me the chance to get to know you, even if it didn't work out in the end. No hard feelings! (シ_ _ )シ
sisterdivinium: mother superion and jillian salvius from warrior nun being close again ;) (doctor superion 2)
sisterdivinium ([personal profile] sisterdivinium) wrote in [community profile] halfamoon2026-02-05 11:30 am
Entry tags:

Day 5: fanart, Warrior Nun - Lilith

Title: Flying solo
Fandom: Warrior Nun
Characters: Lilith
Rating: G
Notes: Done with felt tip pens, Chinese ink and graphite.
Summary: Lilith has no other option. Having left the OCS behind, she trails her own path.

Over here, at my journal!
microbie: (Default)
microbie ([personal profile] microbie) wrote2026-02-05 08:58 am

post script

Forgot to mention that Discourse Blog gave me three one-month gift subscriptions--let me know if you'd like one.
valoise: (Default)
valoise ([personal profile] valoise) wrote2026-02-05 08:40 am

Books read in January

I think poetry often works better for me if it's read aloud. This was especially true with What by John Cooper Clarke. Short but enjoyable.

I picked up Just Kids by Patti Smith to give as a gift and decided to read it first. She details her early life in NYC when both she and Robert Maplethorpe where young artists trying to find their artistic voice. Their relationship, sometimes lovers and lifelong friends, is touching. I loved this and plan to look for more of her books.

My February food blog observes Black History Month, so last month I read the 1848 book Hotel Keepers, Head Waiters, and Housekeepers Guide by Tunis G. Campbell. A fascinating man, he was not only skilled in hotel management, but worked in many ways to help fellow African Americans both before and after the US Civil War.

My Real Children by Jo Walton is something I've been meaning to read for quite a while. A young woman's decision splits her life into two timelines. Walton is a wonderful writer and this book focuses on women and the choices they make throughout their lives.

My son, knowing that I've been reading Michael Palin's published diaries, gave me So, Anyway... by John Cleese for Christmas. Cleese details his life, from school and university to his partnership with Graham Chapman in his burgeoning career as a comedy writer, ending at the point where they join up with the other Pythons to create their tv show. A very funny, self-deprecating book.
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2026-02-05 08:52 am

Golden Sunlands by Christopher Rowley



Federal Ranger Cracka Buckshore's efforts to keep irate parents from lynching handsome Fodo Bathin are complicated when Cracka, Fodo, and everyone else on the planet are kidnapped and taken to an artificial universe.

Golden Sunlands by Christopher Rowley
osprey_archer: (books)
osprey_archer ([personal profile] osprey_archer) wrote2026-02-05 08:38 am
Entry tags:

Revisiting my 2018 Reading List

Last time I posted one of these reading lists, [personal profile] asakiyume noted that I’d already read, like, half the books, and I decided that it might be the path of wisdom in the future to try to post these lists BEFORE I started reading the books on them. So! Behold! The authors I intend to revisit from my 2018 reading list!

Juliana Horatia Ewing - the university library has Mrs. Overtheway’s Remembrances (memories of early nineteenth-century England), The Story of a Short Life (unclear, but I think a child soldier dies valiantly?), and Lob Lie-by-the-fire ; Jackanapes ; Daddy Darwin's dovecot (three short stories, possibly fantasy). Any preferences?

Ngaio Marsh

Jerry Pinkney

Rosemary Sutcliff - We Lived at Drumfyvie, on the basis of [personal profile] regshoe’s review

Frances Hodgson Burnett - The Head of the House of Coombe

Roald Dahl - I’ve read the most famous ones (Matilda, James and the Giant Peach, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory), plus his memoirs Boy and Going Solo. But I’ve barely skimmed the surface otherwise. Recs?

Caroline Dale Snedeker

M. T. Anderson - Nicked. Recced by multiple people!

D. E. Stevenson - Mrs. Tim Flies Home. The last of the Mrs. Tim quartet.

E. M. Delafield - technically The Provincial Lady in America is next, but I’d have to get it through ILL, whereas the library has The Provincial Lady in Wartime. Will probably get Wartime unless someone feels strongly the books must be read in order and/or the America is wonderful and I simply mustn’t risk missing it.

Elizabeth Enright - Spiderweb for Two. Wrapping up the Melendys!

Rick Bragg - I really liked his food memoir The Best Cook in the World: Tales from My Momma’s Table, so I meant to try some of his other books, but… I have not. Any suggestions?

Daphne Du Maurier

Edward Eager - Playing Possum (the last of his little-known picture books)

Deborah Ellis - One More Mountain, the newest Breadwinner novel, published in 2022

Fyodor Dosteovsky - The Brothers Karamazov. Thoughts which translation I should get?

Jacqueline Woodson

Eliza Orne White - I, the Autobiography of a Cat. I am including White on this list solely because the archive has this book, and how am I supposed to resist a title like that?

Zilpha Keatley Snyder

C. S. Lewis

Elizabeth Gaskell - Mary Barton or Ruth, probably.

Dorothy Gilman

E. Nesbit - The Wouldbegoods

Thanhha Lai - When Clouds Touch Us, the sequel to Inside Out and Back Again. Always nervous about sequels but going to give this a try.

Vera Brittain - Testament of Youth. Another book I’ve meant to read for AGES.
shinsengumi: yakuza: daigo (machine gun kiss)
king of feℓçade ([personal profile] shinsengumi) wrote2026-02-05 08:28 am
Entry tags:

(no subject)

It's old-style fandom time again. Please enjoy this short/ep-length FST about the 18-year-old repressed version of Daigo I write in a private RP game.

Behind the cut, this entry contains smut and homophobic language.

long line leading somewhere: a daigo (sigilscape) ep )
mamuzzy: (zeerabbit)
mamuzzy ([personal profile] mamuzzy) wrote2026-02-05 02:12 pm
Entry tags:

[MR. KLEIN] This can't be happening with me... right?

|| MR. KLEIN || 1976 || Original Movie || Crime, Mystery, Drama, WW2, Holocaust || 

This movie was truly surreal, and I had to read movie critics about it, to make it sense, but after that... WOW. Also makes me wants to buy a bunch of Kafka novels, because if his novels are all like this, I would probably enjoy them. 

The story is about Robert Klein, a french art collector taking advantage of Jews desperately trying to sell artworks to raise cash in order to flee from France. But then one day a Jewish newspaper arrives at his door: someone subscribed him to the paper, and it turns out there is another Robert Klein in Paris, a Jew who is already sought by the police. To prevent his social image to be ruined, Robert Klein wants to find this other Robert Klein to make his name clear... 

In his own time this movie was controversial, especially in France, because it pointed out how people were compliant to hand over the Jews to the local authorities, averting their eyes to their suffering, and even taking advantage of them. Which is usually very common pattern in countries that were under Nazi occupation. If you weren't a jew, you were safe. If you didn't associate yourself with Jews, you were safe. If it's not happening with you, it's not your problem. People don't like to be reminded of such shame of their own history. 

Related literature and movies for myself to not forget:
E. T. A. Hoffmann: Die Elixiere des Teufels
Franz Kafka:
 Der Prozeß
Franz Kafka: Die Verwandlung
Franz Kafka:
 Das Schloss

And I think this makes me want to watch my own country's media take regarding the Holocaust and touching the non-jew civilian compliance topics. Collecting some here, so I will remember. 

Utószezon (1966)
Társasutazás (1985)
Budapesti Tavasz (1955)
Nussbaum 95736 (2017)
Jób Lázadása (1983)
A Létezés Eufóriája (2017)
Sorstalanság (2005)
1945 (2017)
Nagyi Project (2017)
Saul fia (2015)

rynling: (Default)
Rynling R&D ([personal profile] rynling) wrote2026-02-05 08:00 am

I'm jealous of NYC's hot mayor

Mamdani Shuts Down NYC’s Disastrous AI Chatbot
https://futurism.com/artificial-intelligence/ai-chatbot-mamdani

In a press conference held last week, Mamdani made it a point to single out New York City’s large language model as a target for destruction. “The previous administration had an AI chatbot that was functionally unusable,” Mamdani said. “It was costing the administration around half a million dollars. That, in and of itself, is not something that can bridge the budget a gap, but it’s an indication of the ways in which money has been spent while refusing to account for the actual costs of what these programs are.”

Indeed, the bot is now dead.


Good for him. Amazing how so many of these stupid problems are so easy to fix.
lauradi7dw: (abolish ICE)
lauradi7dw ([personal profile] lauradi7dw) wrote2026-02-05 07:53 am

wash your hands. wear a mask.

The Finnish Olympic women's hockey team has 14 members with Norovirus. I don't know if anybody is testing for anything in advance of travel, or doing any kind of disease prevention. We live in a pro-disease world.

The good news is that measles cases are slightly down in SC because previously reluctant parents suddenly decided to get kids vaccinated.
linky: Kyoka holds food in front of Lachesis. (Gotchard: KyokaLachesis - Pastel Eat)
Linky ([personal profile] linky) wrote in [community profile] halfamoon2026-02-05 07:36 am
Entry tags:

Day 5: Fic - Kamen Rider Gotchard - Kyoka/Lachesis

Title: Sharing A Meal
Fandom: Kamen Rider Gotchard
Pairing/Characters: Kyoka/Lachesis
Rating: G
Word count: 535
Content Notes: Domestic Fluff, Post-Canon, Canon Divergence
Author's note: Also written for the "cooking together & 400 words" prompts for Fresh Femslash Salad Bar!
Summary: Lachesis and Kyoka cook together.
Also on Ao3, or read below the cut:

Read more... )
cmk418: (leia)
cmk418 ([personal profile] cmk418) wrote in [community profile] halfamoon2026-02-05 06:12 am
Entry tags:

Day 5 Theme - The Outlaw

Today's theme is The Outlaw.

Here are some ideas to get you started: Is she a criminal or is she someone who challenges the norms? How does she fight for justice? Do her actions put herself or those she loves in danger? Does she feel that she needs to atone for any of her actions?

Just go wherever the Muse takes you. If this prompt doesn't speak to you, feel free to share something that does. You can post in a separate entry or as a comment to this post.

Want to get a jump start on tomorrow's theme? Check out the prompt list in the pinned post at the top of the page. Please don't post until that day
oursin: George Beresford photograph of the young Rebecca West in a large hat, overwritten 'Neither a doormat nor a prostitute' (Neither a doormat nor a prostitute)
oursin ([personal profile] oursin) wrote2026-02-05 10:21 am

Online attending conference

(This may get updated over the course of the day)

After struggling to get Zoom link downloaded and operating etc, managed to get into first session I wanted to attend, Foundling Hospital in early C20th, good grief, practices had not changed much in a century had they? Recipe for trauma in mothers, children, and the foster mothers who actually bonded with the children until they were taken away to be eddicated according to their station in life.

Then switched to a different panel and was IRKED by a lit person talking about the Women's Cooperative Guild Maternity: Letters from Working Women (1915) which they had only just encountered ahem ahem - was republished by I think Virago? Pandora? in 1970s - and women's history has done quite a bit on the WCG since then so JEEZ I was peeved at her assumption that the working women were not agents but the whole thing was being run by the upper/middle class activists who were most visibly involved. And wanted to query whether working women thought it was very useful to have posh laydeez able to put their cases re maternity, child welfare and so on in corridors of power, rather than deferentially curtseying??? (I should like to go back in time and ask my dear Stella Browne about that.)

Also on wymmynz voices not, or at least hard to trace, in the archives, I fancy this person does not know a) Marie Stopes' volume Mother England (1929), extracts of letters she had from women about motherhood and b) based on 1000s of letters surviving and available to researchers. I could, indeed, point to other resources, fume, mutter.

Update Well, there were some later papers I dropped in on and enjoyed (and was able to offer comment/questions on; but I was obliged to point out certain errors in a description of Joanna Russ's The Female Man (really I think if you are going to cite a work you should check details....) (and I suppose Mitchison's work was just outside the remit of what they were talking about, so I was very self-restrained and failed to go on about Naomi.)

oursin: Brush the Wandering Hedgehog by the fire (Default)
oursin ([personal profile] oursin) wrote2026-02-05 10:16 am

(no subject)

Happy birthday, [personal profile] coffeeandink!