amiserablepileofwords: Two overlapping pink hearts (Sapphtember)
A Miserable Pile Of Words ([personal profile] amiserablepileofwords) wrote in [community profile] eggbug_writes2025-09-03 07:13 pm

Eternal Sapphtember #338

Girls who need a minute

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ranunculus ([personal profile] ranunculus) wrote2025-09-03 09:55 am

Update

The garden is still pouring out produce.  I've canned most of the things I really need and now it is just a matter of giving it away.
Cleaned up quite a lot of horse manure yesterday so the compost pile is about full.  It is composting away at about 120F, which is a nice rate but might not be quite hot enough to kill seeds.  Sigh. Must clean out second side so it can take over the new compost duties. 
Looked all over town for parts for the dust collection system and utterly failed to find any.  The closest I got was a nice toilet flange, which, for $5 I brought home and will probably use.  I then went back to the Grizzly tool site and found the accessory pages, which had exactly what I needed.  They are on the way.
Ebay locked me out of their site just after I put up the Starlink setup.  Then they demanded personal info to re-establish my login.  I declined.  Told the AI bot that I would give them the answers that I had set up for my account and nothing more. Maybe in two or three months the policies will change. 
Every now and then I get scam calls that want to help me with my credit. I'm very enthusiastic, but they first have to round up a good chainsaw crew for the Ranch and give me contact info and the time they will arrive.  Usually they hang up after a couple of minutes of this. I should probably slip in a couple of words about them trying to ruin my credit score... ;)
It is time to grab a combination lock and go down to the cow corrals.  I'm expecting non-local campers tonight, someone I know who is coming through on their way to an endurance ride. 

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Alison ([personal profile] landofnowhere) wrote2025-09-03 08:23 pm

wednesday books in the domestic sphere

(It may look like I'm posting this earlier than usual, but nope, I'm just in a different time zone!)

The Will of the Many, James Islington. This worked well as a book to read over the course of a long plane trip, except maybe for the bit where by the time I got to the complicated ending I had lost brain cells from lack of sleep and was rushing to finish before the plane landed. This book is so tropey: in the not!Roman Empire, a lost heir is sent to boarding school to investigate a mystery and climb to the top of the class rankings, which ultimately involves a deadly game of Capture the Flag. It's the first book in a planned trilogy, I will probably keep reading.

The Barbarous Babes: Being the Memoirs of Molly, Edith Ayrton (Zangwill). My Discord friend Vicki, who scans and digitizes old books to get them into Project Gutenberg, obligingly agreed to do some Edith Ayrton Zangwills! She sent me a preliminary OCR'd version with many typos; the text is currently being proofread by Distributed Proofreaders, after which it will appear on Gutenberg! This is not my favorite of Edith's books, but I still enjoyed it. It's in the tradition of early 20th century writers, particularly those involved with the suffrage movement, pushing back against the Victorian sentimentalization of childhood. It starts with a description of imaginative play games with a lot of pretend violence and torture, sometimes with near-disastrous results. Past the first couple chapters it doesn't so much live up to its title, but continues with tales of various family members misbehaving in adventurous ways. Not sentimental, but does have real family feeling and a charming ten-year-old narrator.

A Nursery in the Nineties, Eleanor Farjeon. This memoir got less excitingly plotty and more impressionistic once the author appeared on the scene, but was still enjoyable, and an interesting pairing with the book above, since it also focused on the protagonist and her brother's (less violent) imaginative play games. I put it down wondering what the next steps would be in Eleanor Farjeon's story, which led me to the next book.

Edward Thomas : the last four years, Eleanor Farjeon. This is the other memoir-ish thing that Farjeon wrote. It skips forward over a decade, and focuses on Eleanor's close friendship with the writer and poet Edward Thomas, who I hadn't previously heard of apart from having read his poem Adlestrop. I was more interested in Eleanor (who didn't talk enough about herself) than Edward, though I was charmed by this poem by Edward. Eleanor was in love with Edward, who was married with three children, and the love triangle resolved itself in an unusual way: Edward volunteered for WWI, where he was killed, and Eleanor and Helen remained fast friends for the end of her life.

As It Was and World Without End by Helen Thomas. After this, I was interested to look up how Helen wrote about her marriage with Edward, and these two short memoirs were much breezier reads. Helen Thomas was less of an intellectual than Eleanor Farjeon, but her writing is more emotionally evocative. She met Edward when they were in their late teens, and had an unconventional relationship until she got pregnant and everyone insisted that they should get married. They then proceeded to do something the Edwardian version of the cottagecore life, though this is not particularly romanticized -- Edward being a struggling freelance writer supporting a family the houses they could afford in the country were not particularly nice, and they moved a lot (also, they could afford a servant, which made the country life more pleasant). Helen's commentary on the socially progressive circles that she mingled with but ultimately found shallow were also interesting.
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Every Day Above Ground ([personal profile] mallorys_camera) wrote2025-09-03 12:21 pm
Entry tags:

The Come-to-Kali-the-Destroyer Moment

Finished the first draft of Chapter 1 and stashed it in the usual online places so it won't disappear if my computer decides to self-destruct or if human civilization vanishes & sentient cockroaches need a Rosetta Stone.

Chapter 2 should be relatively easy to write since it will mostly be the Amazing Adventures of Grazia & Neal, lifted with a bit of embellishment from my copious diaries.

So, I am actually thinking more about Chapter 3, in which Neal has to save Grazia in some way.

Plus, one of the (unexpected) things that came out in Chapter 1 is that Grazia is religious in a weird way—this is a prime example of how characters sometimes run away with their own story arcs—so Chapter 3 will have to include Grazia's Come-to-Jesus or Come-to-Bodhisattva or Come-to-Kali-the-Destroyer moment, and optimally, it will involve some colorful locale far from Ulster County, New York, because the fourth part of the novel will be a third-person description of the three women, Grazia, Daria, & Flavia, scattering Neal's ashes in various colorful locations, and it would be good to foreshadow those locations.

Chapters 4, 5, & 6 will be first-person Daria's POV and will have to contain an analagous Neal-rescues-the-gurl scene—hey! this is chick lit, where politically correct empowerment plays second fiddle to romantic fantasy—as well as some colorful locale.

Chapters 7, 8, & 9 will be first-person Flavia POV—where in addition to above, we have to stage a Mimi suicide attempt. This will come about when Flavia evicts Mimi from Neal's cabin.

Chapters 10, 11, & 12 will be the road trip & I have no ideas what to write for that beyond a vague impulse to set part of it at Wall Drugs in South Dakota. Which would just be so wrong on so many levels.

###

Anyway.

I won't be writing any fiction today because today I must Remunerate.

I finally realized there is absolutely no way I can go back and forth between economic analyses and light fiction writing on the same day. The brain is bicameral for a reason!!!

So, I'm gonna try out an every-other-day schedule.
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mozaikmage ([personal profile] mozaikmage) wrote2025-09-03 12:29 pm

Anime and comics about GIRLS! WHO! CLIMB!

As some of you may know, I’ve been getting into rock climbing lately. I’m still not very good at it due to my crippling fear of heights and complete lack of upper body strength, but I’m getting better!

So, what better time to watch Iwa-kakeru: Sport Climbing Girls?

Honestly, I did not watch this show when it aired despite some of my friends talking about it mostly because the vacuum-sealed tank top aesthetic did not appeal to me. And the numerous cleavage shots also did not appeal to me. And then I completely forgot about it for the next five years. But now! I remembered it exists!

And so I watched the first episode and I was not impressed.

We open with a cute little cameo of real-life professional Japanese climber Akiyo Noguchi, who is genuinely super cool and whose youtube video on finger stretches is extremely useful. She does her attempt at the problem and then up next is... Konomi, the protagonist of the show.

We then go back to Konomi’s first year of high school and how she discovers competitive climbing. She was wandering randomly through her school grounds and stumbled on a climbing wall, and is then challenged by Jun, the prodigy first year member of the club who won’t let her join if she’s not serious. Climbing immediately appeals to her because, as a formerly almost-pro puzzle gamer, it’s like solving puzzles in real life! The next day the club upperclassmen help the two of them have a sport-climbing competition, and Konomi just barely loses to Jun, but Jun is impressed enough to let her stay. Which is good for the club because they have a competition the next day!

Fundamentally, I believe it is not a well-constructed first episode, and this is why:

The characters are not introduced to each other and the audience in a memorable way, and the sport is not introduced to the audience and the viewpoint character in a memorable way.

From this first episode, I feel like only Konomi and Jun got any kind of personality, while the upperclassmen are just Upperclassmen (Generic.) Which I’d understand if they were trying to introduce a dozen people at once, but there’s only four people on the team! You can introduce four characters in 22 minutes!

As for Konomi and Jun, Jun is very clearly a girl iteration of The Kageyama Archetype but is also, like, unreasonably harsh. You have three people on the team right now! You can’t really afford to turn newbies away!

What threw me off the most was how immediately good at climbing Konomi was. I’ve seen a lot of types of climbing newbies at the gym since I started, and even the people more naturally advantaged than me (tall, athletic, strategic thinkers) can’t just hop on the wall and move perfectly on their very first day climbing. Even if we accept the premise that Konomi is amazing at route-finding because of her puzzle game expertise, it’s hard for me to buy that she can move her body the way her mind wants it to move right off the bat, even if she did ballet as a kid. Unless she went really, really hard at ballet as a kid, and quit relatively recently... but if she’d been playing video games for all of middle school, there’s no way she wouldn’t have lost some of her strength and mobility.

As a casual go-to-the-bouldering-gym-a-few-times-a-week climber, the lack of explanation of how sport climbing worked was really confusing. I don’t have any experience with that type of lead climbing, and it confused me how Konomi didn’t need anyone to tell her how to clip into the bolts or when to switch over. Why didn’t she ask any questions? Did the harness feel weird to her? What about chalk?!

The speed at which Konomi just starts kicking ass at climbing felt very unrealistic.

The climbing showdown between Konomi and Jun had a sequence of still images with voiceover on top of them that felt very low-budget for a first episode of a new anime. Also. The cleavage shots. I did not care for them. It is not against the rules of climbing for teenagers to wear T-shirts.

There’s a surprising amount of manga about bouldering out there! Rock climbing is fairly popular in Japan. I haven’t read most of it, but I did take a look at the first chapter of Strawberry Canyon and it reminded me of Chihayafuru but with rocks. The Berry Canyon gym sounds a lot more professional and intense than the gym I go to. I would probably be struggling on the Grade 5 wall in there, even if I can flash V3s at my gym now. Seems cute! Still undecided on if I want to spend money to read the whole thing.

But the webcomic I’ve been reading since I started going to the climbing gym is actually a manhwa on webtoon called Deadpoint by MAYORAC, and it rules!

Hoji is okay at rock climbing, but her real special skill is the ability to see other people’s “talent ceiling” – the highest they can go in their field before they fail, an ability she developed after her mother died in a tragic accident. When she unexpectedly befriends climbing prodigy Aseong Chae, the two of them start training together to discover if it might actually be possible to overcome all limitations.

I just love the art- absolutely gorgeous bright colors, dynamic poses, smooth shapes and sleek lines. And the main character gets to wear T-shirts! Hoji’s design is so cute. She is so babey.

I like that she’s competing at a high level but still struggling to send the high-level problems, which makes the comp problems feel legitimately difficult. I also like that her relationship with Aseong Chae is a little toxic and messed up. Adds flavor!

Despite Aseong also being a black-haired sports prodigy, she’s not quite a Kageyama because she’s taking a break from the sport entirely, and is serving more as a coach-mentor type to Hoji than as a rival/deuteragonist. Her true motivations in helping Hoji are still unclear and possibly sinister— she’s really concerned with learning about the “talent ceilings” of her and Hoji’s biggest rivals in the South Korean youth climbing scene, and she’s still thinking about the final hold in that Olympics problem that made her fall. Something’s up, and hopefully, we’ll find out what that is soon enough.


languagehat.com ([syndicated profile] languagehat_feed) wrote2025-09-03 03:06 pm

Lord at the Obelisks.

Posted by languagehat

Back in June I posted to Facebook as follows:

OK, I need to know what to make of what appears to be a meaningless sentence in Paige Williams’ article on Green-Wood Cemetery at the New Yorker [archived]. Here’s the context:

A hundred and eighty-seven years after its founding, Green-Wood resembles a sculpture garden. There are more than two hundred and fifty thousand monuments and more than five hundred mausolea. Owls, horses, baseballs, clasped hands, winged hourglasses, and empty beds are among the iconography that I have seen incised on the funerary surfaces. The angels (and they are many) weep and sag, but they also look heavenward. Lambs mean children. Broken flower stems and shorn columns symbolize early death. There are sarcophagi and plinths and cenotaphs. Lord at the obelisks.

Can anybody make sense of “Lord at the obelisks”? I thought it might be a typo (“Lord” for “Look”? — but that would be a lousy sentence even if intelligible), but it’s in the online version as well, which has been up for at least a week and a half.

(Don’t ask me why I posted it there rather than here; the past is a foreign country.) I got a bunch of replies but no clarification; I wrote the magazine but never heard back. Today I got this comment from B.J. Wills:

“Lord at the” is a Southernism. “Lord at the obelisks” means wow, *so many* obelisks.

I responded: “Huh! Well, that would certainly explain it, but googling isn’t showing me any other examples. Maybe if I had access to a spoken corpus…” So I thought I’d bring the whole mess here and ask if anyone knows anything about this alleged Southernism.

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brithistorian ([personal profile] brithistorian) wrote2025-09-03 10:56 am
Entry tags:

QOTD: On the 1950s

"Much of the Fifties existed in order to edit out of history the freedoms of wartime: a renewed McCarthyite puritanism drove homosexuality further underground with the inevitable psychic consequences. By the mid-to-late Sixties, there were all sorts of exposé! books, but not then: just a few coded, discreet novels (like James Barr's Quatrefoil), which would usually end in suicide or death."

Jon Savage (quoted in Loaded, by Dylan Jones)

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hamsterwoman ([personal profile] hamsterwoman) wrote2025-09-03 08:29 am

TMNZ s6e5-6, Worldcon part 3: Friday Aug 15 panels

There are too many moving parts in RL to write up at the moment (I need to write about my post-Covid weekend, the new air fryer, L's car shopping in progress, and the Return to Office extravaganza), but I haven't had a chance to write up any of that yet. So instead you get Taskmaster NZ and the first of the Worldcon days that was getting too long for LJ so I ended up breaking it up into two.

*

TMNZ s6e05 -- this was a less fun episode for me: I thought the tasks were not all that interesting, nobody did anything I really loved, and Jeremy's scoring continued to annoy me with nothing to distract me from it really. I mean, it was still a baseline level of fun, but was the episode this season I enjoyed the least so far. Spoilers from here )

TMNZ s6e06 -- I'm digging Pax's jacket, which is like the upholstery of your grandma's armchair, and also Bree's crossed swords necklace. And Jackie's wig du jour. Spoilers )

*

Continuing on with the Worldcon account:

Friday, Aug 15: panels )

By this point it was 8:30 p.m. and time to head over to the Terra Ignota fan fathering, but I'll leave that for the next post (right now I'm thinking that + the Saturday panels could be one post, and the Hugo Awards and my thoughts on the stats a different one, but we'll see; maybe Sunday will fit in there also...)

A couple of photos -- mostly just Hugo bases this time )
Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal ([syndicated profile] smbc_comics_feed) wrote2025-09-03 11:20 am

Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal - Dogs

Posted by Zach Weinersmith



Click here to go see the bonus panel!

Hovertext:
You can also do the pi dogs, but then you lose business from the tau people.


Today's News:
melagan: Coffee cup with Atlantis in the rising steam (Default)
melagan ([personal profile] melagan) wrote2025-09-03 11:07 am

A jaunt to town

Yay, I finally accomplished a task I've put off for a year. A trip to drop off a few items at the local Goodwill. The hold up has been carrying stuff down three flights of stairs. As it turned out, it wasn't as bad as I'd expected it to be. A very nice young man unloaded everything for me when I got there (one of the perks to dropping stuff off at Goodwill).

Now I have closet space!

Other accomplishment of note. I finally managed to write a story for [community profile] whatif_au bi-monthly prompt. It's always a goal, just one I have a hard time making. It just happened to fit the prompt for [community profile] sga_saturday too which was a bonus.



Heaven and Hell (2294 words) by melagan
Chapters: 1/1
Fandom: Stargate Atlantis
Rating: General Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Relationships: Rodney McKay/John Sheppard
Characters: Rodney McKay, John Sheppard
Additional Tags: Alternate Universe, Heaven & Hell, Angel/Demon Relationship, Pre-Slash, Friendship, Fluff
Summary:

Rodney is a demon stuck in Hell. The last thing he expects is to see an angel slouching in the doorway.



Now if I could just figure out what to write for [community profile] trope_of_the_month's coffee shop prompt.

The only coffee shop AU I've ever written is:
Moon Base Four

*sigh* Hardly your typical Coffee Shop AU. I don't know if I can or want to do 'typical'. It doesn't seem to be my style. :)
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maggie33 ([personal profile] maggie33) wrote2025-09-03 04:25 pm
Entry tags:

Trailers and drama watching

It’s September already, so cool it with this oppressive heat, weather, I’m beginning you. My right elbow is a bit better, but I still can’t really surf the net for too long, and yesterday it was hard to be outside for someone with menopausal problems and heart problems. So I spent the day mainly watching Thursday Murder Club on Netflix (it was cute and funny), and GL dramas.

I rewatched Korean GL She Makes My Heart Flutter, because I read that Soo Not Soo studio are currently working on a spin-off to that drama, probably about Seol and Sarang. I hope it will get made, I would love to see more about these characters.

If you would maybe like to watch or rewatch She Makes My Heart Flutter, here is the whole drama in one convenient, an hour long vid:



I also watched a new episode of Harmony Secret and a bit more of Affair.

I will end this post with five trailers. All these are dramas I would love to watch. When, I don’t know, because I don’t even want to look at my loooong to-watch list. 😉

Behind the cut there are embedded trailers for two Thai dramas and three Korean dramas:

That Summer - a new GMMTV BL drama with Winny and Santang about the romance between a prince with amnesia and a commoner.

Mandate - Thai BL about an age gap pairing and a secret romance in the world of politics, with a lot of angst and drama. The trailer has English subs so here is hoping they will make this drama available for international audiences somewhere.

The Murky Stream - a dark and angsty sageuk taking place in Joseon era, about a corrupt kingdom and revenge, with Rowoon (who looks almost completely unrecognizable here) and Park Seo Ham (one of the leads from Semantic Error).

You and Everything Else - a kdrama about a complicated and intense friendship. And if it wasn’t a mainstream kdrama I would say that this trailer hints at there being something more than friendship between two main characters played by Kim Go Eun and Park Ji Hyun. The two actresses have great chemistry, obvious even in these 2 minutes. But alas, it is a mainstream kdrama, so I’m sure nothing GL will happen here.

The Story of Bihyung: Enchanted Master of the Goblin - as a line in the trailers says “legendary Goblins and Gumiho appear in 21st century Seoul”. And it is a BL drama. It’s about an aspiring actor who gets entangled with a Goblin king and two other supernatural creatures. It looks hilarious and very entertaining.


Watch the trailers here.