goodbyebird: Thor: smashing things with her hammer yasss (C ∞ there must always be a Thor)
goodbyebird ([personal profile] goodbyebird) wrote2026-02-13 11:17 am

I feel conspired against.

+ So.

Night one of trying to go straight to bed: slice my finger open on my razor in the cabinet as I reach for my toothbrush. Spend 25 minutes applying tissue paper waiting for the bleeding to stop before sullenly getting dressed and going to find a bandaid.

Night two, as I'm clearing supper away, a cheerful announcement in the mess hall: we have an extra GB of Internet each! ...That we have to use before midnight and it rolls over to the next week. Well. I can't let that go to waste but hey, I just bought a bunch of comics, they'll eat that GB for breakfast.
iPad: What is this wifi you speak of? Haven't heard of it, I'm not connecting to that.
Me: *beleaguered sigh* I can't not use it. *goes on YouTube and stays up way too late*

+ Anyways. I comfort bought a bunch of comics? Because the pre-order code for the Mitski tickets did in fact not arrive and so no concert for me *sullenly kicks rocks*. It looks like I could have paired it with the Gentleman Jack ballet, and I think the Marie Antoinette exhibit is still on at the VA? Was starting to slowly form a plan and now it ain't happening.

Comics though!
- pre-ordered vol2 of Absolute Wonder Woman, it was 50% off and that seems so silly to me.
- Vol 5 & 6 of Poison Ivy. The joy of realizing I was that far behind :DDD I'm two thirds through vol5 and it may be my favorite?
- Voyager: Way Home 5 issue mini concluded, I picked those up. omnomnom more Janeway.
- Nice House by the Sea vol1 for my creepy lil alien guy making poor decisions about his blorbos.
- Daredevil & Echo mini bc sale and pretty art.
- Defenders: Beyond bc it looked like a fun romp (I should re-read Saladin's Exiles tbh)
- Kaya vol1. Been wanting to for a while due to the art I've seen, and once again: sale.

+ Things I'd like to do when I'm home:
Post that Top 10 prematurely cancelled series list I wanted to do for Snowflake.
Festivids recs.
Get [community profile] intw_amc rolling.
Last masterpost from forsquares.
Play Dune Awakening, they've made it much easier to jump back in thank fuck.
Maybe the ABC of comics I saw on BlueSky that looked fun.
Open laptop. Make shiny squares. Possibly shiny vid.
Work on my layout.
Update scrapbook.

+ it's just TWO MORE DAYS you can do it Self! Let's go lesbians etcetera.
oursin: Brush the Wandering Hedgehog by the fire (Default)
oursin ([personal profile] oursin) wrote2026-02-13 09:43 am
mastermahan: (Default)
mastermahan ([personal profile] mastermahan) wrote in [community profile] scans_daily2026-02-13 01:51 am

Cyclops #1



Who wants a solo Cyclops story?

Read more... )
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swan_tower ([personal profile] swan_tower) wrote2026-02-13 09:04 am
Entry tags:

New Worlds: The Multi-Purpose Castle

Castles are a stereotypical feature of the fantasy genre, but for good reason: they're a ubiquitous feature of nearly every non-nomadic society well into the gunpowder era, until artillery finally got powerful enough that "build a better wall" stopped being a useful method of defense.

But castles, like walls, sometimes get simplified and misunderstood. So let's take a look at the many purposes they once served.

(Before we do, though, a note on terminology: strictly speaking, "castle" refers only a category of European fortified residence between the 9th and 16th centuries or thereabouts. I'm using the term far more generically, in a way that would probably make a military historian's teeth hurt. There's a whole spectrum of fortification, from single small buildings to entire cities, whose elements also vary according to time and place and purpose, and probably "fortress" would be a better blanket term for me to use here. But because "castle" is the common word in the genre, I'm going to continue referring to my topic that way. You can assume I mean a fortified building or complex thereof, but not an entire settlement -- though some of my points will apply to the latter, too.)

Most obviously, castles are defensive fortifications. What a wall does for the territory behind it, a castle does for everything within its bounds -- extending, in the more complex examples, to multiple layers of walls and gates that can provide fallback positions as necessary. This means that often (though not always; see below) the land outside is cleared, access is restricted, regular patrols go out if danger is anticipated, and so forth.

This defensive function is more concentrated, though, because a castle is frequently also a depot. If you're going to store anything valuable, you want it behind strong walls, whether that's food stores, military equipment, or money. Or, for that matter, people! Prisoners will have to stay put; nobles or other figures of importance are free to wander, but when trouble threatens, they have somewhere (relatively) safe to retreat. This can become a trap if the enemy lays siege to the place, but when you can't flee, holing up is the next best choice.

That category of valuables also includes records. Fortified sites are built not just for war, but for administration; given how much "government" has historically amounted to "the forcible extraction of resources by an elite minority," it's not surprising that defensive locations have often doubled as the places from which the business of government was carried out. Deeds of property, taxation accounts, military plans, historical annals, maps -- those latter are incredibly valuable resources for anybody wanting to move through or control the area. Someone who knows their castle is about to fall might well try to screw over the victor by burning records, along with any remaining food stores.

It's not all about hiding behind walls, though. As with a border fortification, a castle serves as a point from which military force can sally out. Even though these sites occupy very small footprints, they matter in warfare because if you don't capture them -- or at least box them in with a besieging detachment -- before moving on, they'll be free to attack you from behind, raid your supply train, and otherwise cause you problems. Sometimes that's a risk worth taking! In particular, if you can move fast enough and hit hard enough, you might pass a minor castle to focus your attention on a more significant one, leaving the little places for mopping up later. (Or you won't have to mop up, because the fall of a key site makes everybody else capitulate.)

Castles are also economic centers. Not only do they organize the production and resource extraction of the surrounding area, but the people there generally have more money to spend, and their presence entails a demand for a lot of resources and some specialized services. As a consequence, a kind of financial gravity will draw business and trade toward them. Even when the key resources are somewhere other than the castle itself -- like a water-powered mill along a nearby stream -- they're very likely owned by the guy in the castle, making this still the regional locus for economic activity. If there's a local fair, be it weekly, monthly, or yearly, it may very well be held at the castle or nearby; regardless of location, the castle is likely to authorize and oversee it.

This economic aspect may lead to the creation of a castle town: a settlement (itself possibly walled) outside the walls, close enough for the inhabitants to easily reach the castle. In Japan, the proliferation of castle towns during the Sengoku period was a major driver in the early modern urbanization of the country, and I suspect the same was true in a number of European locales. Eventually you may wind up with that thing I said I wasn't discussing in this essay: an entire fortified settlement, with a castle attached on one side or plonked somewhere in the middle. It's not a good idea to let the buildings get too close to the walls -- remember that you want a clear field in which to see and assault attackers, and you don't want them setting fire to things right by your fortifications -- but the town can contribute to the idea of "defense in depth," where its wall adds another barrier between the enemy and the castle that is heart of their goal.

You'll note that I've said very little about the specific design of these places. That's because there is an ocean of specialized terminology here, and which words you need are going to depend heavily on the specifics of context. How castles get built depends on everything from the money available, to the size and organization of the force expected to attack it, to the weapons being used: nobody is going to build a star fort to defend against guys with bows and arrows, because you'd be expending massive amounts of resources and effort that only become necessary once cannons enter the field. Moats (wet or dry), Gallic walls, hoardings, crenelations, machiolations, arrowslits, cheveaux de frise . . . those are all things to look into once you know more about the general environment of your fictional war.

But back to the castles as a whole. Most of the time, they "fall" only in the sense that they fall into the hands of the attacker. A section of the wall may collapse due to being sapped from below and pounded above, but it's rare for the place to be entirely destroyed . . . in part because that's a lot of work, and in part because of all the uses listed above. Why get rid of an extremely expensive infrastructure investment, when you could take advantage of it instead? Wholesale destruction is most likely to happen when someone has achieved full enough control of the countryside that he's ready to start kneecapping the ability of his underlings to resist that control.

Or, alternatively, when somebody shows up with cannon and pounds the place into rubble. Functional castles in even the broadest sense of the word finally died out in the twentieth century, when no wall could really withstand artillery and pretty soon we had airplanes to fly over them anyway. But at any technological point prior to that -- and in the absence of magic both capable of circumventing fortifications, and widespread enough for that to be a problem defenders have to worry about -- you're likely to see these kinds of defensive structures, in one form or another.

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(originally posted at Swan Tower: https://is.gd/NzFCtO)
hunningham: Beautiful colourful pears (Default)
Hunningham ([personal profile] hunningham) wrote2026-02-13 08:31 am

Navigating disabilities

Blue badge arrived this morning, and father-in-law and I are both excited. It's going to be easier to find parking spaces when I take Bryan somewhere instead of driving round & round and doing that mental arithmetic for "how far can he walk today?"

We also got a phone-call from the vision support team, and next Thursday someone is coming to demonstrate electronic magnifiers. We have many handhelp magnifiers and Bryan can use them to read large print one word at a time, but it's hard work for him. We're still hoping that some way of reading can be found.

Vision support have recommended applying for attendance allowance, so that's another thing for my list.

Thinking about walking - I have a new-found appreciation for bubble paving. It is so helpful having the road crossing marked, especially when there is a dropped kerb. I feel as if I should drop someone a thank-you note.

Today we are going to Compton Verny to see the exhibition on The Shelter of Stories. We've found that Bryan can still enjoy art exhibitions - I just have to do a lot of narrating.
Smart Bitches, Trashy BooksSmart Bitches, Trashy Books ([syndicated profile] smartbitches_feed) wrote2026-02-13 07:00 am

705. RT Rewind: June 1997 Reviews

Posted by SB Sarah

Smart Podcast Trashy Books Romantic Times RewindAmanda and I are back, deep diving into romance and pop culture history with issue 1997 of Romantic Times Magazine. The cover reads Love, Lust, Laugh, and we’ve got some vintage books to talk about. Then we talk about what books we’re most looking forward to right now, and what we’re currently reading.

In two weeks we will be back with the ads & features, and you know a magazine from the 90s has the most excellent collection of cover art.

And if you like video episodes, this episode is available in video format for everyone on Sunday at our You Tube channel.

Major Trigger Warning in this episode: At 20:24 we have a brief conversation about an author featured in the magazine who was the victim of a family annihilation. Immediately following, the book I discuss contains mentions of child loss, infertility, and infidelity. Skip ahead 2 and a half minutes.

 

Listen to the podcast →
Read the transcript →

Here are the books we discuss in this podcast:

We also mentioned:

If you or someone you know is in danger from domestic or intimate partner violence, The National Domestic Violence Hotline is 1.800.799.7233, or you can text START to 88788.

Music: purple-planet.com

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What did you think of today's episode? Got ideas? Suggestions? You can talk to us on the blog entries for the podcast or talk to us on Facebook if that's where you hang out online. You can email us at sbjpodcast@gmail.com or you can call and leave us a message at our Google voice number: 201-371-3272. Please don't forget to give us a name and where you're calling from so we can work your message into an upcoming podcast.

Thanks for listening!

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hrj: (Default)
hrj ([personal profile] hrj) wrote2026-02-12 10:30 pm
Entry tags:

Drumroll please

I think I now have all the data and documents and forms assembled to do my transition-to-retirement-year tax returns. Today's task was to turn last year's financial spreadsheet into my usual yearly summary, then put the relevant data from it and all the various W2s and 1099s and whatnot into my tax data template (which needed to be updated for several new types of documents and data).

Because of how my brain works best, I'm going to go to the length of printing out paper copies of the forms to noodle on, even though I'll be filing online. And I'll be reading through the pdfs of the instruction booklets and highlighting everything that looks relevant. But on my first skim through, I think this is going to be easier than I feared. The schedule C stuff (writing business) is the same as always. And although the worksheet to calculate how much of my social security income is taxable is convoluted, the instructions walk you through it step by step.

One new wrinkle is that they now have a separate "1040-senior" form, evidently to simplify the instructions for the enhanced standard deduction for seniors (which get convoluted if you're married filing jointly but only one of you is a senior). I'll compare it point by point with the standard 1040 to make sure it doesn't do anything else bizarre.

And despite the rather chaotic nature of how my withholding is set up for the various retirement incomes, I think it's still pretty close to the right amount. Once I have this year's returns done, I can probably do a mock return for next year and see what adjustments I should make on the withholding.
hafnia: Animated drawing of a flickering fire with a pair of eyes peeping out of it, from the film Howl's Moving Castle. (Default)
Jenn ([personal profile] hafnia) wrote2026-02-12 09:37 pm

Talking Meme Month - Day 12

(you know the drill, etc, etc. You can ask here! I will probably answer!)

Talk about fiber arts!

I'm skipping day 11 for now, since it turns out I have quite a lot to say :x but! We'll get to it later in the month, I promise.

Fiber arts!

My grandma was a quilter and did a lot of hand-sewing projects; my mom is also a quilter who does hand-sewing stuff.

My grandma taught me how to embroider, and from her and my mom I learned how to sew, which led to things like quilting and costuming as well as basic hand-sewing for clothing repair and alterations. (If you need a pair of pants hemmed, I'm here for you. :) )

In college, I learned how to knit, though as it turns out I'm absolutely terrible at it — tension is good and I don't drop stitches, but I'm just. Seemingly incapable of enjoying the process? Which is funny, really, because I also crochet, and I'm quite good at it and enjoy it a lot.

Not that I've crocheted anything noteworthy in the last couple of years, but, er.

I picked up cross-stitch during lockdowns because it was easy and didn't take a lot of brain. I've since gotten pretty good at it (the one in the background is also one I did).

The next cross-stitch thing I'm planning to do is this one. :)

I have some vague crochet plans for finishing an afghan I started literally years ago, but, well, we'll see?
cornerofmadness: (Default)
cornerofmadness ([personal profile] cornerofmadness) wrote2026-02-12 10:58 pm
Entry tags:

On the mend

The eye barely hurts and the swelling is down enough that I can open my eye. It's blurry still but getting better.

I will NOT be doing [community profile] fandomtrumpshate this year. I missed that the sign up was basically 10 days, no other warning after the first and I was too busy with my pro stuff but you know what I am okay with that. I can bid on people to help out and that is one less fan thing to distract me from stuff I get paid to do. I feel more relief than disappointment.

In the good news department The Owl House lives again in graphic novel form. I'm super excited for this




Here's the fandom meme I've been wanting to do. I got this from [Unknown site tag] who mentioned there are two versions of this meme: one where you post the FIRST line/s of the FIRST posted fic of each month and one where you post the FIRST line/s of ALL the fics you've posted in a year. While I am making this a fannish 50 celebrating ME and my contributions to fandom (which I think we all should do from time to time) But since I will be here til next week trying to do ALL my stories, I shall go with the first story. Enjoy. Read if you're so moved.

January - Why Do Fools Fall in Love Hazbin Hotel, Angel adored the flying pole Husker had installed on his stage.

February Where Fashion Sits Hazbin Hotel, There’s more to her than anyone thinks but, in most ways, being underestimated suits Velvette just fine. (ha this is one of my [community profile] halfamoon stories from last year


March Sisterhood Buffy the Vampire Slayer, The thing about being a Watcher was Dawn never knew what would come next.

April Ephemeral Hazbin Hotel, Angel heard them ‘whispering’.


May Never Hazbin Hotel, “Are you really sure you wanna know, sweets?” Angel drawled to Charlie, as he squirmed in his seat next to Husk on the couch.


June Somebody’s Eyes The Owl House Edalyn folded up the door into its briefcase.


July Tear Up This Town Hazbin Hotel, He should have known it would end like this.


August Hurt So Good Hazbin Hotel, Angel stretched his legs out in front of him on his bar stool. NSFW


September Pushing Up the Ante Hazbin Hotel, This was supposed to be a friendly game of poker, something he’d tossed out there without thinking it through at the last overlord meeting.


October The Porn Star Murders Hazbin Hotel, “Thank you for calling me.” Rosie’s flat tone sent a shiver up Angel’s spine.


November Someone in the Dark Hazbin Hotel, Husk leaned on the bar, pain lancing through his back.


December Forget Our Memories, Forget Our Possibilities Hazbin Hotel, Dear Husk,
I’m sorry for everything.



Now back to watching my mystery still wishing that John Bacchus would disappear. Today he brings misogyny, islamaphobia and racism. Whee. (the saving grace is Gently takes it out of him every time he does this and I've been told he gets better. Hope that is soon)
s
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semperfiona ([personal profile] semperfiona) wrote in [community profile] halfamoon2026-02-12 10:17 pm
Entry tags:

Day 12: Her Sanctuary - The Untamed - Qin Su

Title: [Podfic] the taste of power on her lips
Fandom: The Untamed
Pairing: Qin Su/Wen Qing
Rating: Explicit
Archive Warning: Rape/Non-con
Summary: Qin Su showed her the formal garden, the guest quarters, and the small infirmary — adequate, though of course nothing like Wen Qing's clinic at home — with its garden of medicinal herbs outside. Qin Su gave Wen Qing a considering look as they walked amidst the familiar plants. "You will also want to see our rarer plants, of course."

This was not strictly a requirement of her inspection, but Wen Qing, intrigued, agreed that she would.
jonw: Red die (random)
jonw ([personal profile] jonw) wrote2026-02-12 07:49 pm
Entry tags:

This is solid advice.

I was listening to TWiT (This Week in Tech) earlier this week. One of the guests said something like “can you imagine if life was like the ads? Everyone talking to their computers. Hey computer do this. Everyone taking over each other…”

IMG-2276.jpg

She has a solid point. People wandering around the mall making speaker phone calls or sitting on the bus watching videos with no headphones definitely irritates me.

I do sometimes dictate text messages if it’s more convenient. But I have the decency to use earphones or phone to my head for loud stuff.

lucymonster: (bookcuppa)
lucymonster ([personal profile] lucymonster) wrote2026-02-13 02:40 pm
Entry tags:

Two books make a post

These have nothing in common besides both being books that I have recently read; but I feel like discussing them, so here they are, crammed incongruously next to each other.

Didn't Nobody Give a Shit What Happened to Carlotta by James Hannaham: A Black trans woman emerges from multi-decade imprisonment to find her old neighbourhood gentrified, her family both unrecognising and unrecognisable, and everyone on the street glued to their strange little flashy devices. This novel follows her in minute detail through the first few days of her release, on a Fourth of July weekend, as she revels in her new freedom, makes magnificently bad choices about what to do with it, and struggles to come to terms with both the brutal trauma she experienced while incarcerated in a men's prison and the heavy disadvantages she now faces as a parolee. It's written in an experimental prose style that moves freely (usually mid-sentence) between grammatically standard third person and first person AAVE dialect.

Listen, I have a fairly low tolerance for literary gimmicks, but I LOVED this. It was like a prose-level expression of Carlotta's irrepressible personality - she wasn't going to let even an imaginary narrator tell her story for her! Her voice just wouldn't stop bursting past the strictures of narrative convention! Punctuation itself couldn't slow her down!

My War Criminal: Personal Encounters with an Architect of Genocide by Jessica Stern: This is a sort of biography/character study/personal memoir about Radovan Karadžić. Perhaps you're looking at the title, as I did, thinking: "Surely there's a tasteful explanation for that possessive pronoun! Surely a German Jewish academic approaching this topic with full retrospective knowledge of the horrors of the Bosnian genocide is not going to be writing fondly about a war criminal she interviewed, as if he's some fuckboy who she knows full well is bad news but can't quite stop hoping to tame!" Alas. Reader, alas.

The book is not only tasteless but also badly written. It's muddled in scope; you start each chapter not knowing if you're going to get sensible historical background, a rambling tangent about Karadžić's cousin's ageing mother, or a breathless "dear diary" recounting of one of Karadžić and Stern's interview sessions. It's like a packet of Bertie Bott's Every Flavour Beans, but with war crimes! The chapters themselves are written simply and with a popular audience in mind, insofar as an English language book about a Balkan genocidaire is ever going to be popular. But every chapter comes with half-as-long-again endnotes to reaffirm Stern's academic credentials, including page-length elaborations on points that should invariably either have been included in the body text or excluded altogether.

But I kept reading because it is - and clearly intentionally, albeit in a clumsy way - a useful case study in how charismatic leaders can win people over even in the face of conclusive proof against them. Knowledge, experience, a high level of education, none of these things are foolproof protection from the primal human emotions that populists and authoritarians excel at exploiting. This is an upsettingly relevant reminder at a time when affluent Western democracies around the world are facing an ever-rising tide of far right extremism. It's easy from the outside to cringe at Stern's descriptions of how much she came to crave Karadžić's approval, but if I decided to repeat her experiment, lock myself in a small room with an indicted war criminal and allow him to tell me his story on his own terms without interruption or challenge, then perhaps I, too, in all my self-ascribed wisdom and virtue, would emerge having learnt the pleasures of genocide apologism. It's not a nice thought.

Stern's final conclusions are incoherent: that Karadžić is a grandiose Serbian nationalist who intentionally inflamed ethnic tensions to win political power, but also, that the impersonal force of those inflamed ethnic tensions was somehow what drove him off the deep end to start with? Also, she did not kiss him goodbye. It's important we all know that she did not kiss him goodbye at the end of their last interview session. To quote my kids at the dinner table: yuck.
soc_puppet: A calendar page for January 2024 with emojis on various dates (Mood Theme in a Year)
Socchan ([personal profile] soc_puppet) wrote in [community profile] moodthemeinayear2026-02-12 08:27 pm
Entry tags:

First Break

This is it, everyone; we've made it to our first break!

Anyone following the Minimum Track officially has enough graphics for a complete mood theme, plus three to really round out your image diversity 👌 That means that, if you have a paid account, you can start uploading your mood theme and use it right now if you want!

And speaking of paid accounts, anyone who has made 18 mood graphics so far is eligible for Dreamwidth Points! Do take some time to think about whether you want to cash those in now, or, if you're planning to make more mood graphics this year, if you'd prefer to wait a little bit. In terms of points savings, cashing in at 6 months or 12 months are the only options that offer any savings, but even then that's only a difference of 5 and 10 points respectively.

Anyone who's aiming to make a site supported mood theme, I'm so sorry, I'm still not ready for you 😢🤦‍♀️ It looks like premium paid time can only be purchased in 6 month increments anyway, so I'll need to update the "How to get Dreamwidth Points for making a custom mood theme" post regardless, but I'll do everything in my power to be ready by July—which, for anyone following the Maximum Track, will put you past the minimum 72 images for six months' worth of paid time.


I think that's it for the moment; however you spend the next week—be it relaxing, catching up on moods you missed or redoing moods you're not entirely happy with, trying to get ahead, or something else entirely—you have a fun time, and if you're continuing on, I'll see you here for Part 2!
torachan: my glitch character (glitch)
Travis ([personal profile] torachan) wrote2026-02-12 06:36 pm
Entry tags:

Daily Happiness

1. They finally fixed the broken restroom at work! The store does not have enough restrooms. There is one set of gendered multi-stall employee restrooms upstairs, but the men's has only one stall. Downstairs there are multi-stall restrooms by the food court (two stalls in the men's) and two single toilet gender neutral ones on the other side of the store. The single toilet ones are closest to me now that my desk moved, as I just have to pop downstairs and it's right there, but due to some issues with the door/door frame, one of them has been closed since early December, and it has been so awful, especially during the holiday season. But now the door is finally fixed and both are open, so the days I've been at the store this week, there hasn't been a single time where I've had to wait for a toilet. Huzzah!

2. I made an appointment for my tattoo touch-up, now that it's fully healed. Since I'll be out of town half the week next week, I just asked for something the week after, and got set up for two weeks from today.

3. I usually take my lunch to work, but didn't have anything quick and easy to take today, so I planned to buy something, and remembered that they just introduced a roast beef salad, so I got that. It was really good! The dressing said it was truffle wasabi but neither flavor was very strong. I don't care about truffle at all, but I do like wasabi, and could have stood for it to be a bit tangier but I liked it. In addition to the beef and greens, it also had asparagus, baby corn, and tomatoes.

3. Chloe in the blankets again! (The previous picture I posted of her with her head sticking out from the blanket is now my most popular post on bluesky with like 1.7K likes. I normally get like ten lol. I think my previous most popular photos were a couple hundred?)

hannah: (Robert Downey Jr. - riot__libertine)
hannah ([personal profile] hannah) wrote2026-02-12 08:42 pm

Different places to call home.

Earlier this week, I learned there's a squirrel nesting on the roof of a nearby empty house. A squirrel on a sidewalk less than a block from a park isn't unusual; a squirrel running away from the park is worth noticing. It ran along the concrete until it got to a tree, and about halfway up the trunk I saw it had some nesting materials in its mouth. Sticks, dried grass, nothing that could be mistaken for food. It went all the way up the trunk, well past where there'd be room to nest inside the tree, and jumped into the thin, empty branches, running along and over and finally making one last jump from the tree onto a row house that's been on the market for more than a few months at this point. Long enough a squirrel would feel safe nesting somewhere on the roof.

Yesterday, I got to feed a few urban pigeons after a couple of grizzled old-school construction workers were generous with the birdseed they'd brought with them that morning; none of the pigeons flew onto my hands, but a particularity bold one kept grabbing at my fingers, possibly to pull my hand closer so it'd be first in the pecking order.

Today, I saw a raven; it was close enough to see every tail feather, and make out the distinctive spade shape. Also to see how utterly gigantic they are compared to a lot of other birds. It was carrying some kind of food item in its beak, but I couldn't make out what it was, just that it'd been opportunistic and scavenged it from a garbage bin.

You've got to keep your eyes open for these things.
Not a Blog ([syndicated profile] grrm_feed) wrote2026-02-13 01:54 am

The Dreaming Spires

Posted by grrm

It was Matthew Arnold who first dubbed Oxford as “the city of dreaming spires.”

It really is a magical place.  A place with strong ties to fantasy.   To Philip Pullman, Alan Garner, William Morris, Diana Wynne Jones, Neil Gaiman, and of course the Inklings, among them C.S. Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien.   A grand company.  Understandably, I was honored when I was invited to return there in November, to address the Oxford Union, and sign a few books.

I spoke on November 4, to a full house.

It was a daunting assignment, given the speakers who had gone before me over the years.   Writers, actors, politicians, poets, comedians, scholars,  celebrities of all sorts.   Some gave long serious speeches on the issues of the day, others focused on literature, war and peace, love and sex… everything was fair game. For me,  I knew it was my writing… A SONG OF ICE AND FIRE in particular… that had inspired the Union to invite me.   So I decided to talk about my life, and my beginnings as a writer.

It was a lovely evening.   I understand why Tolkien… and all the rest… loved Oxford so much.    My hosts were warm, bright, so hospitable, students and scholars both.

Alas, my hopes of enjoying g a pint or two at the Eagle and Child, where JRRT and the Inklings drank and talked and argued, were dashed.  The pub is still closed for renovations.   Maybe next time.   (Oxford did boast a truly outstanding  Indian restaurant, where I had the best Indian food I’d ever tasted).

Maybe the Bird and Baby will be open the next time I make it to Oxford.   I do want to come back one day.   Those dreaming spires cast a spell.

 

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flemmings ([personal profile] flemmings) wrote2026-02-12 08:36 pm
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(no subject)

The recycle got picked up. At 5:30 of course, but at least it was same day.  And because it's seven weeks post-solstice it was still light out so I could see the guys had left my bin lying on its side, blocking  the sidewalk. So I went out and rescued it and dragged it back up the path, and a nice guy walking his dog asked if I needed a hand. I thanked him and said I was OK, but if he hadn't had a curious energetic pup to handle I might have taken him up on his offer, and let him heave the thing back onto the snowbank.

I miss the city guys who always pushed the bins back to the edge of the yard.

However it seems-- fingers crossed-- that my bar fridge has come back to life. I treat it very gently just in case, but not having to tackle the stairs pre-meds is a great relief.

And Monday is a holiday, so I must get a shop in before then.