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[AMNESTY: Multiple Challenges] Original Fiction: 'Interrogation'
Feb. 9th, 2026 03:56 pmFandom: Original Fiction
Rating: PG (Warnings for implied future torture)
Notes: Crossposted to
( Interrogation )
[AMNESTY: Challenge #48: Finale] Original Poetry: 'Finale'
Feb. 9th, 2026 03:39 pmI fed the birds. I've seen a large flock of sparrows.
I put out water for the birds.
EDIT 2/9/26 -- I did a bit of work around the patio.
EDIT 2/9/26 -- I did more work around the patio.
I am done for the night.
ALTThis Meta Monday we’re taking a look at the meta essay Birds of Gay by Julian shipyrds. It’s written about the femslash pairing Barbara Gordon/Dinah Lance, aka Babs/Dinah, from the DCU, after the author read the Birds of Prey comics in 2023.
The author discusses the relationship from the perspective of a latecomer to the fandom, saying there’s a challenge in finding contemporary fan responses for the comic and the author wanting to talk about the ship’s “nightmare relationship”.
The essay goes on to discuss topics such as disability, identity, and Barbara Gordon’s refusal to let herself be known, how the ship is deeply codependent and there’s an information imbalance, as well as digital decay, queer archives, and the ephemeral nature of comics, and other topics like this, too, is yuri.
It’s featured in the third volume of Yaoi Zine, which was themed “Yuri Zine.”
Don’t forget to check out our Fanlore page where you can read excerpts from the essay.
—–
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"Books That Bite Back"
Some books are easy reading,
while others really are not.
There are the vindaloo cookbooks
and the guides to growing hot peppers.
There are the essays about ethics
and the history books written by losers.
There are the comparative religion texts
and the papers on quantum mechanics.
Just like food that commands respect,
there are books that bite back.
+ 2025 Recommended Reading List by Locus. Really appreciate the addition of a translated novels category.
+ How RPGs Became A Haven For Women In South Korea.
+ What Was Luke's Plan in 'Return of the Jedi'? The ever escalating amount of hostages XD
+ We need to talk about Fournier-Beaudry and Cizeron.
Fournier-Beaudry and Cizeron are both talented skaters from the Ice Academy of Montreal, who teamed up in 2024. They are both very striking, with beautiful skating quality that makes them captivating to new and old fans alike. But there's a darker side to the beginning of their partnership that has escaped the notice of a lot of casual fans.
+ Green's Dictionary of Slang is now available online for free. Allows lookups of word definitions and etymologies for free, and, for a subscription fee, it offers citations and more extensive search options.
+ Trans athletes may not have fitness advantage in women’s sport, landmark study finds.
Trans women in the studies were found to have significantly greater amounts of body fat than cis men, but levels comparable to those of cis women.
However, while trans women appeared to have more muscle mass, there were no observable differences in upper or lower body strength, the study found.
+ Saving this for later: Wonder Man by Abigail Nussbaum (so very likely to be good).
+ Very informative step by step recap of Bad Bunny's Half Time concert.
Comment with Just One Thing you've accomplished in the last 24 hours or so. It doesn't have to be a hard thing, or even a thing that you think is particularly awesome. Just a thing that you did.
Feel free to share more than one thing if you're feeling particularly accomplished!
Extra credit: find someone in the comments and give them props for what they achieved!
Nothing is too big, too small, too strange or too cryptic. And in case you'd rather do this in private, anonymous comments are screened. I will only unscreen if you ask me to.
Go!
For those of you who don’t know, Opal Whiteley came to national attention in 1920 when the Atlantic Monthly published her childhood diary, in which young Opal wrote lyrical descriptions of nature and her animal friends, who have Lars Porsenna (the crow) and Brave Horatius (the dog). Some people were and remain bowled over by the beauty of her nature writing. Other people accused Opal of making up the diary wholesale. Would any kid really name a crow Lars Porsenna? It’s just too too precious.
I believe that the diary was real, though. Opal was an extremely bright child, and extremely bright children sometimes do things that strike people who don’t know them as completely unbelievable. She also suffered from a very unfortunate accident of timing, in that she fit perfectly a cultural archetype that was just coming under attack when she published her diary. A child of Nature, growing up in poverty but learning from the trees and the flowers and a few good, solid books (traditionally the Bible and Shakespeare, but in Opal’s case a book of historical figures).
After World War I this whole “child of nature” idea came to be seen as an offshoot of a sickeningly naive vision of human nature that had been exploded by the war. And then here comes Opal Whiteley, presenting to the world this diary supposedly written when she was five and six, which completely embodies this discredited vision. Well, it’s much easier to say “She’s a fraud!” than to wonder “Is there something in the child of nature idea after all?”
Unfortunately, as I recalled as I began to read the picture book, although I find Opal as a person very interesting, I can’t stand her diary. I think it’s a real diary, truly written by Opal as a child, but even in the immensely abridged form of a picture book, it does strike me as too too precious. “One way the road does go to the house of the girl who has no seeing” - good gravy, Opal, just say she’s blind. You named a mouse Felix Mendelssohn! I know you know the word blind!
But of course Barbara Cooney’s illustrations are lovely as always. I particularly liked the picture of the mouse Felix Mendelssohn asleep on a pincushion under a little square of flannel. Just the right level of precious.
Hurray! I've finished the first (content) edit on my narrowboat novel, The Boat of Small Mysteries, which means that it's definitely been moved into the category of 'book that will get published this year. Probably this month, tbh.'
Just got to go through it a couple times more to pick up anything I missed this time, make it some cover-art and remember how to compile it into a proper novel. (This may take me some time as I've had seven years to forget how it's done.)
It's a short novel at 53K, but that's not bad going from something I planned out as a 30K novella. I always write long, but at least I now am never surprised by it.
I miss sitting down with the concept for a novel and having a long first draft to lose myself into ahead of me, but mentally I can't do that while I have two other on-going novels, especially with the Soul Thief still a first draft itself. I think maybe when the structural edits are completed, that may free up the mental slot for "Big First Draft." I started the prep work on that, spending some time thinking about why I wrote it and what I want to leave readers with before actually starting the edits, this time. Like, who is the actual audience, also.
( Rambles on who to share one's writing with... )
Anyway, reaching a big milestone you've been working toward for years is kind of incredible actually. I'm awed. I'm happy. If nothing else, I've proven to myself that I can stick with it. I've learnt a ton. I've made connections with people, both on the reader side and on the writer side. Met all of you here! And I'm so excited to learn even more in the coming 5-to-10 years, which is the time period I'd given myself for that original milestone, haha. ONWARD!! :D
Finally, something I love to talk about: I'm going to make a list.
1. My absolute favorite is Shrimp. I love it in anything or by itself.
2. Homemade Alfredo Sauce. It's really good with shrimp in it, too.
3. Almost any type of fruit. I love Mango and peach the most.
4. Almost any type of vegetable. I like all cooked, but love some veggies raw.
5. My favorite meats. Almost all of them. I experiment with meat all the time. I
love to cook and to entertain.
6. I love desserts. I could live on desserts alone. I don't bake like I used to
because I eat it all. So does hubby.
7. I haven't mentioned the fact that I use cream cheese in almost everything
I cook and bake. My friends and family tell me I'm addicted to it. They
Might be right. 😁
8. Don't want to forget drinks. I crave Mango nectar. I drink sweet tea, water
And flavored water.
9. I almost forgot, to talk about salads. I prefer spinach salad but I eat all .
Different types.
Well, that's almost everything. I didn't leave out too much.
Buffalo Seed Company Order
Science
Birdfeeding
Website Updates
Early Humans
Birdfeeding
Philosophical Questions: Pregnancy
Artificial Intelligence
Birdfeeding
Website Updates
"An Inkling of Things to Come" is now complete!
Follow Friday 2-6-26: London
Economics
Food
Birdfeeding
Community Thursdays
Wildlife
Birdfeeding
Cuddle Party
Safety has 43 comments. Food has 44 comments. Wildlife has 36 comments. Food has 64 comments. Robotics has 135 comments.
Last week's Poetry Fishbowl went well. I am still writing.
The 2026 Rose and Bay Awards are now open for excellence in crowdfunding. It's time to vote for your favorite projects!
The award period for eligible activities spans January 1-December 31, 2025.
The nomination period spans January 1-January 31, 2026.
The voting period spans February 1-February 28, 2026.
These are the handlers for the 2026 award season:
Art:gs_silva Nominate art! Vote for art! (4)
Fiction:fuzzyred Nominate fiction! Vote for fiction! (3)
Poetry:gs_silva Nominate poetry! Vote for poetry! (4)
Webcomic:curiosity Nominate webcomics! Vote for webcomics! (5)
Other Project:curiosity Nominate other projects! Vote for other projects! (4)
Patron:fuzzyred Nominate patrons! Vote for patrons! (5)
"An Inkling of Things to Come" is now complete. Shiv and his classmates finish their first worldbuilding session.
The weather has been frigid here, but is slightly less cold than it was. Seen at the birdfeeders this week: a large flock of sparrows, one female and three male cardinals, and a starling.
My kids made me watch it over and over again. I'm probably the only person in the country that didn't like the film. It was right up there with Weekend at Bernies. Hated that too. I usually like comedies but these two didn't make me laugh much. I want more out of a comedy evidently. 😁
Has everyone seen it and enjoyed it?
This horse is having a good look at that stuff hanging on the fence. I tried for a vaguely Valentine's Day theme, plus the nice shiny, silver insulation from a box that M brought back Alaska Salmon in.

This Arab gelding was showing off as he trotted over the Tic-Tack-Toe.

Lots of people found that the jousting was harder than it looked.

On Saturday we only had four riders (Sunday there were 10). I got Firefly out. She was both very interactive and calm. Sunday I wanted to turn her loose in the arena while I cleaned up. When I went to get her I wanted to ride through the corrals. I started to climb on a fence panel to mount (my knees just won't bounce enough to vault on anymore). Several months ago she had fussed and moved away from the mounting block. At that point I picked up a whip and simply showed it to her. That was enough for her to be very polite when I mount - from her left side. Today's effort was on her right. Horses don't transfer skills from side to side very well. Firefly thought she would just step away. The third time she stepped away I gave her a single, open palm slap on the side she was moving toward. The head went up and she offered to run away from my cruel beating. Then stood nice and quiet and calm while I got on. Today, for the first time, I opened the latch on the two gates from horseback. It wasn't elegant, but it did teach her that the noise was ok, and that the gate would open if she stood in the right place. While I cleaned up the arena, she got to run around in the nice soft sand, and roll. At least sand doesn't stick like the mud in the corral does! When I was done she walked up to me and we went off to a nice patch of green grass for her to graze as a treat. What a greedy thing she is. She stuffed grass in her mouth as fast as she could bite it off for at least 10 minutes, chewing extremely hastily, before slowing down.
Tomorrow is another walk up to the Dogbane patches, this time with some of the local basket weavers. I'm excited about this.
♥ I got my fox diamond painting back out, so that's a project that could proceed but hasn't. I might put it away to work on next winter and start the spring dragon one now instead. Until I actually put diamonds on the canvas I suppose it doesn't matter, except that perhaps my motivation would be affected by the design.
♥ I found a book at the library with a blue cover that I was willing to read (thanks Liu Cixin for having an anthology with a blue cover and a great forward) so that's another library bingo square checked off.
♥ The theme at
♥ I posted my
♥ A Chinese vlogger mentioned leaving hot water in the pot so it was easy to heat and drink throughout the day, and that has transformed my winter water consumption.
♥ An English vlogger mentioned 75fluent.com, which I signed up for and immediately decided not to do, since I'm already doing more than all of the daily goals except "study a textbook," but that inspired me to get out my elementary school Yuwen textbooks and start from the beginning.
This week I would like to:
+write something for
+write something for Fluffbruary
+photograph some Legos for
+record another hour for the HTLAL output challenge (2/50)
+finish Yuwen Grade 1
I accidentally joined a weekend 5k challenge on the Garmin app. (I mean, I joined it on purpose, but I thought it was walking 5k over the course of the weekend, and it turned out to be running 5k all at once. Or, as Aaron says, "I did a marathon once: one mile every day for a month.")
Also when I posted something about goals last weekend I definitely mentioned kicksledding, although I can't remember if it was a goal or just a random comment, but let me tell you about kicksledding in New England, about which I know almost nothing. I know it's harder than I expected to actually get a kicksled here, because apparently the US isn't snowy enough to readily distribute kicksleds to every corner of the country.
(In the movie "The Day After Tomorrow," what was the line above which they wrote off the population? I thought it was an actual latitude line, but the internet tells me it was just "everything north of Washington DC." Seems like that's enough of the country to have kicksleds, to me.)
Anyway, Canada makes them, but because of tariffs won't ship them to the US. Alaska will ship them but you have to meet the plane at the airport. Minnesota will ship a kit to your door, which is how I ended up building my own kicksled from a kit in our living room.
( taking adventure selfies )
( how equpiment affects the experience )
( survival strategies and books )
( things that can kill you in Colorado )
Anyway, spoiler, I didn't die, and also it was really fun. I should make a goals post so I can note the 100% increase in kicksledding this year.