vriddy: K-9 Volume 1 Cover (k-9)
To celebrate volume 4 coming out, the official K-9 account over at [twitter.com profile] k_9comic published a manga preview trailer (x.com) with Oboro and Ren's voices.

Ren's voice: Ise Mariya
Oboro's voice: Miyano Mamoru

You may picture me half-dead in a corner. Oboro sounds even creepier than I imagined him, in all the best ways. Ren is *swoons*


In addition, the extras for volume 4 involve a couple of 4-koma strips and therefore it is now officially confirmed that

do I even need a spoiler tag for this? It's not plot-relevant. Not yet. It's relevant to my blood pressureKagari and Fujimaru do live together, and Kagari does borrow Fujimaru's clothes as he pleases.

I'll share proper(ish) translations soon. Just. Need to go curl up in a corner for a while first.

Volume 4 is seriously awesome and packs in so many of my favourite OT4 scenes, including the one that sold me on them, and then so many interactions after that! And it ends on the chapter that introduces the two little guys I was talking about the other day, with that hand-over-mouth panel too. What a beautiful day. My heart can only take so much, though.
jesse_the_k: Scrabble triple-value badge reading "triple nerd score" (word nerd)

Every week for most of the last 30 years, I have volunteered as an English language partner. Since 2024, I’ve treasured my time with two people who’ve learned English as a foreign language. I get to spend time with people who have weirdly requested that I correct their pronunciation and grammar. It’s a pleasantly zen task: listening carefully then offering precise feedback about a language I love. In return, I’ve enjoyed learning their stories from Chile and Taiwan/Germany/hiking world-wide.

how I found people ready to learn )

galadhir: Colonel Young from Stargate SGU against a dark background, face lit by a golden beam of light (Young)

Thank you to [personal profile] dreamersdare for creating and hosting this challenge :)

Series I love, from one to ten in no particular order:

  1. Stargate Universe. The first episode I saw of this was episode #4 when they're desperately trying to find lime for the air scrubbers, and I loved that as a premise for an episode. It felt like much 'harder' (more realistic) sci-fi than any Stargate before it. The beating heart of the show, for me, was the Rush/Young relationship. OMG they had tension - what kind of tension is debatable, but they were locked in, wanting to murder each other and yet unable to run the ship without each other. I understood Rush very easily, but I didn't understand Young at all, and so--very like Rush--I soon became obsessed with trying to work him out. Hey presto, now he's one of my favourite characters ever. I actually liked the ending of this, with everyone in their stasis pods continuing to further possible adventures without us. If they were going to end it, I'm glad it got such a good and worthy final episode.

  2. Star Wars. Three movies out of the original six movies obsessed me. Star Wars: A New Hope - I saw it when I was a teenager and it was newly out. I immediately went out and got my hair cut like Han Solo. This was before I discovered fandom, so my fic writing for this was limited to daydreams. Didn't like the next two as much. Star Wars: The Phantom Menace, I became obsessed with Qui-Gon Jinn and wrote fanfic in which he was something of a Living Force saint - to the point that everyone else found him inexplicable and annoying. Didn't like the next two at all (no Qui-Gon.) Star Wars: The Force Awakens, I became obsessed with General Hux. He was a second generation villain, the child of a man who's speciality was brainwashing children, and he had essentially grown up in a cult. I found that interesting, back in the days when I still believed that Nazis were not a real world problem. Nowadays I would react differently. Didn't like the next two at all. (Make a freaking plan and tell a coherent story, guys! Sheesh.)

  3. The Master and Commander books by Patrick O'Brian. This is what I went on to after Pirates of the Caribbean. OMG! Such ships! Such an amazing grasp on the history of the Age of Sail. And the social mores. The social observation of Jane Austen with a more accessible humour. Watching Patrick O'Brian play with language is just joyous! "Jack, you have debauched my sloth!" I chuckle through the whole thing, totally immersed and loving every person in it, because PoB has such compassion for all his characters and it's a wonderful thing.

  4. The Discworld - need I say more? Everyone loves the Discworld books which have a similar combination of humour with sharply observed world building and deeper themes. I have a soft spot for The Light Fantastic, if only because everyone recommends to everyone else that new readers should skip it. I think that if you miss out on Rincewind, Twoflower and the Luggage, your life will be a little bit darker.

  5. The Cadfael books by Ellis Peters. I like a good murder mystery and these are good murder mysteries set in the 12th Century, where the detective is a monk whose main job is to be the herbalist in the Abbey of Shrewsbury. Cadfael soon acquires a foil in the shape of the Sherrif, Hugh Berengar, a sly and cunning young man, and the two investigate all sorts of suspicious happenings with great compassion and humanity. The TV series is nowhere near as good, although okay to watch. Somehow they managed to strip all the charm out of it.

  6. The Marcus Didius Falco books by Lindsey Davis. Another great series of murder mystery novels, this time set in 70ad, with a sleuth who starts as a bit of a hard boiled noir detective in Rome, but who meets the love of his life and softens out to become much more of a real person. Another series with fascinating history, good mysteries and surprisingly likeable people.

  7. The Untamed. This is the rare TV series that I liked more than the book. My first (and still one of the only) Chinese fantasy series. I was blown away by the fact that the storytelling conventions we're used to in Western media are not the same for this, so it was deeply refreshing not to know how it was going to go. There was something I couldn't look away from about all these beautiful, beautifully dressed people yelling at each other in pavilions. Although it took me three watches to figure out who was who, I was entertained the whole time. By then I was hooked enough to become a Jin GuangYao apologist, and that spun me out into writing fanfic. I did try reading the book, but I didn't like the official translation, and my blorbo was barely in it for the first 3 volumes and I was not engaged enough with everything else to carry on reading.

  8. Ted Lasso. OMG, I did not expect to get hooked on a series about football. I hate football, and sports in general. But the comedy and the great big heart of this one sucked me in instantly. I seem to have no defense against the combination of humour and compassion, and I honestly don't want to develop any.

  9. The Expanse. Another rarity - the book series and the TV series are both excellent. Or rather, the TV series is excellent throughout - hard sci-fi, very believable world building, exciting things happening, imperfect characters you learn to love. The book series however becomes excellent starting at book two. Book One reads like the first book, where the author is still working things out, and Horden is a bit of a mary sue in it. He becomes a much more likable character later, when the author isn't trying so desperately to make you love him. It's well worth suffering (a little bit) through the first book to get to the later ones though.

  10. Do I put Murderbot again (because the whole series is great?) Or do I put Babylon 5. Babylon 5, I think, because we cannot one of the best sci-fi series ever. I think I've put my finger on my own taste now, because it was also funny and loving, while still being exciting and full of drama. And Susan Ivanova remains one of the few female characters who hit the same exalted level for me as my male blorbos. She was allowed to be badass, and that meant a lot to me.

Promo

Feb. 8th, 2026 06:01 pm[personal profile] tinny posting in [community profile] icontalking
tinny: Something Else holding up its colorful drawing - "be different" (Default)
Not all polls are up yet, but you can already start voting for the ones that are:


BEST OF 2025 - Voting has started!
smallhobbit: (Book pile)
Continuing with the challenge [personal profile] dreamersdare made, here are more top 10 series.  This time I've gone for crime fiction books, and again in no particular order:

1. Malabar House series by Vaseem Khan
Set mostly in Bombay just after Independence, these are stories about Persis Wadia, the first female Indian detective, who's shunted off to Malabar House to keep her out of the way.  Nevertheless she gets involved in a number of high profile cases and becomes better known.  Vaseem Khan is a British writer, who spent 10 years in Mumbai.  The series is ongoing and I'm currently reading the latest The Edge of Darkness which is set in the Naga Hills in north-east India.  There's lots of details about the time, and gripping stories.  I've also enjoyed the Baby Ganesh series, which sees an ex-detective inspector in Mumbai who is sent a baby elephant by an uncle, and the crimes he solves.

2. Maigret by Georges Simenon
There are about 75 Maigret novels.  I started listening to them as audiobooks, bought a few hard copies, and am currently working my way through all the books available in our county library. The series starts in 1931 and while Maigret is based in Paris, he's fairly often in different parts of France, or visiting countries nearby.  I enjoy the atmosphere and the strong sense of time and place, as well as the variety of crimes Maigret is faced with.

3. Bradecote & Catchpoll series by Sarah Hawkswood
Set in the 1140s and based in Worcester and the surrounding area, so a similar time period to Cadfael,  Hugh Bradecote is the Under-sheriff and therefore a representative of the authorities in solving crimes, and he works with the vastly experience Catchpoll who is the Sheriff's Sergeant and Walkelin, the serjeanting apprentice.  I like the main characters, who are very human and seek to do their best for those around them, in what can be very difficult times.  The next book Act of Betrayal is out in September.

4. Jackman & Evans series by Joy Ellis
I listen to these on audiobooks.  DI Rowan Jackman is a modern day detective in the Fenland of Lincolnshire (Joy Ellis' home territory) and is assisted by his sergeant, Sally Evans.  There's a team of recurring characters and some interesting crimes, darker than some of what I read.  Black Notice is the latest, which came at towards the end of last year.

5. Inspector MacDonald series by E C R Lorac
I've only read the books which have been republished in British Library Crime Classics, but have enjoyed those.  The series begins in the early 1930s and runs through to the 1950s.  I like MacDonald, who is competent and thoughtful.  Most of the books are set in England, with a number in the Lake District.  Once more the description of place is excellent - I'm not inclined to read through long descriptions, but these are written so that the reader feels themselves there, rather than simply admiring the view from a distance.  They also give an incidental view of life as lived by most people at the time.

6. The Su Yin series by Ovidia Yu
Originally called the Crown Colony series, but with the passing of time this has become inappropriate.  The first story is set in Singapore in 1936, when Singapore was under British rule, and the series moves through the Japanese occupation, and has now reached the late 1940s, with the strong demands for independence from the returning British.  Su Yin isn't in the police force, but frequently (other than during the war years) works with Inspector Le Froy.  The next book The Tembusu Tree Mystery is out in June.

7. The Dinner Lady Detectives by Hannah Hendy
Two late middle-aged school dinner ladies become unexpected amateur detectives in a series of cozy-ish mysteries.  Lighter fare than most of the above, but I have a soft spot for the two, who are married to each other.  Entertaining with plots relevant to the small town they live in.  Implausible, but it all makes sense.  A Curiously Convenient Device is out next month.

8. Follet Valley Mysteries by Ian Moore
These stories are not to be taken seriously, but are great fun.  The murders happen in bizarre ways, and the main protagonist and foil is Richard Ainsworth, an English proprietor of a French guest house, who has pet hens who he has named after classic film stars. The latest in this series of books set in rural France is Death and Boules.

And lastly, two classics:

9. Sherlock Holmes by Arthur Conan Doyle
The original stories.  Some are better than others, but the characters of Holmes and Watson are enduring.

10. Miss Marple by Agatha Christie
An overlooked older lady with a very sharp mind and a real knowledge of how people think and behave.

Finally, an honourable mention to Discworld by Terry Pratchett.  Here, I shall simply quote the Librarian, "Ook!"

seleneheart: (adam motorcycle)
Our Missing Hearts by Celeste Ng



Blurb:
From the number one bestselling author of Little Fires Everywhere, a deeply suspenseful and heartrending novel about the unbreakable love between a mother and child in a society consumed by fear Twelve-year-old Bird Gardner lives a quiet existence with his loving but broken father, a former linguist who now shelves books in Harvard University's library. Bird knows to not ask too many questions, stand out too much, or stray too far. For a decade, their lives have been governed by laws written to preserve "American culture" in the wake of years of economic instability and violence. To keep the peace and restore prosperity, the authorities are now allowed to relocate children of dissidents, especially those of Asian origin, and libraries have been forced to remove books seen as unpatriotic-including the work of Bird's mother, Margaret, a Chinese American poet who left the family when he was nine years old. Bird has grown up disavowing his mother and her poems; he doesn't know her work or what happened to her, and he knows he shouldn't wonder. But when he receives a mysterious letter containing only a cryptic drawing, he is drawn into a quest to find her. His journey will take him back to the many folktales she poured into his head as a child, through the ranks of an underground network of librarians, into the lives of the children who have been taken, and finally to New York City, where a new act of defiance may be the beginning of much-needed change. Our Missing Hearts is an old story made new, of the ways supposedly civilized communities can ignore the most searing injustice. It's a story about the power-and limitations-of art to create change, the lessons and legacies we pass on to our children, and how any of us can survive a broken world with our hearts intact.


The blurb above is not what is on the back of the book. What I thought I was getting was a YA type thing where a child receives a mysterious letter and goes on a quest to find his mother.

I started reading this book three days after Liam Ramos was kidnapped or as the book so politely puts it, "Taken." It was a bit of a hard read under the circumstances, but very thought-provoking. Just a warning for anyone protecting their mental health from these kinds of stories right now.

My one quibble is there was nothing to indicate dialog making me have to read a little closer to figure out what was being said.

Fake break up (misunderstanding)

Feb. 8th, 2026 09:37 am[personal profile] melagan posting in [community profile] stargate_search
melagan: John and Rodney blue background (Default)
I remember a lot about this fic, but not the author or title.

Earthside- John thinks Rodney breaks up/will break up with him because Rodney says "I love..." during sex and John doesn't say it back.

John winds up in a bar drinking and bemoaning his tragic breakup. He's hit on by a couple of cute girls, but he's too broken-hearted to do anything but think about Rodney.

Rodney comes in, drags John out of the bar, and clears up John's wacky idea that Rodney broke up with him.

eta

Found by [personal profile] runpunkrun

It's Proof by DevilDoll

Just one thing: 8 February 2026

Feb. 8th, 2026 07:03 am[personal profile] jazzyjj posting in [community profile] awesomeers
It's challenge time!

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!

maplefiasco:

Comic from 1980 of tween girl with a bedroom covered in Han Solo posters. The caption is her father saying, 'we better get used to it... she's going to be this way for the next three years.'ALT

joke’s on you old man, I’ve been this way for 30 years. (x)

Maybe she was consoled by some zines with new stories and Han art, many of which you can see on Fanlore’s Han Solo page.

Sunday 08/02/2026

Feb. 8th, 2026 10:49 am[personal profile] lhune posting in [community profile] 3_good_things_a_day
lhune: (3L)
1) More lovely sunshine ♥

2) Which gave me the energy to give my kitchen a quick but more decent cleaning, floors included, with the balcony door open.

3) Dinner at my parents’s place which means wood burner or or swinging bench in the garden, depending on the weather

2026 60 question meme

Feb. 7th, 2026 11:09 pm[personal profile] pattrose
pattrose: My dog. (Dakota)
Name three healthy habits you have started within the last year that have changed your life for the better.

1. I now eat a peach yogurt in the morning, every day, instead of not eating anything. I love peach yogurt. And honestly, I'm sure I feel better because of this. Plus, I'm not so hungry by lunch time.

2. I'm doing Chair Aerobics every night for 30 minutes. I've lost a little weight, and I feel better. Because of my heart and Pulmonary Hypertension, I'm unable to do much that is strenuous. I'm thrilled I'm able to do this each night. Woot! I can't walk for long, because I'm on oxygen and it doesn't like me walking for too long. I'm limited, but I make the best of it.

3. Using less salt. I'm not cutting it out altogether, but I have taken less in for the last two months. I feel pretty darn good. The cardiologist likes my numbers right now, so he's very happy with me and my heart. LOL, I've still got a lot of weight to lose, but I'll get there.


I'm thrilled that I actually have three to list. Woot!!!!!!
pattrose: Ben and Dief (Due South 3)
8. How often do you read fiction?

I read fiction almost every day. I can't sleep at night until I've read some fan fiction if nothing else. I read all the time. Am I supposed to say what I'm reading? Because I just got done reading a new Due South fanfic, and it's wonderful. I'm going to post the link in case you want to read it too. It's written by Grey853 on AO3. It's a WIP, but each part is very long and very good. Plus, she always finishes her WIPs. Unlike some of us. LOL https://archiveofourown.org/works/78962371 It's 40,000 words and will be a 12 part series, on top of her Alphabet Series. This is the link for the entire series. Its my fave of all of her stories. Woot! https://archiveofourown.org/series/4320295
mistressofmuses: Image of nebulae in the colors of the bi pride flag: pink, purple, and blue (Default)


Finally, the perfect week to use this fantastic sticker. This is one Alex got for me. "It is what it is, and it's pretty terrible" indeed.

This week was pretty much solely dedicated to recovering. Or... it would have been, if I hadn't had to go to such lengths to get so much nonsense paperwork signed. Those frustrations pretty much overshadowed everything else, and made it harder to really do anything else, including things like sleep. It's been dealt with as much as possible at this point. I was annoyed at how far behind I felt on everything. As much as the stress kept me from sleeping well, I feel like I did sleep a lot. Healing seemed to be moving the right direction, and food all sat reasonably well. Pain stayed manageable. Started trying to walk more, as advised.

Goals for the week:

  • I did finally get the medical paperwork signed (thank you so much to the nurse I saw)
  • I did start reading We're Here, a queer-themed anthology
  • I started to work on my January reviews
  • I visited Taylor on Saturday
  • I finished the leave application
  • We went and got crickets

Tracked habits:

  • Work - 0/7
  • Household Maintenance - 7/7
  • Physical Activity - 3/7
  • Wrote 500/1000+ Words - 0/7 (the bit I colored in on the tracker was an oops)
  • Non-fiction Writing - 1/7 - over 500 words
  • Meta Work - 1/7
  • Personal Writing - 1/7
  • Other Creative Things - 1/7
  • Reading - 7/7 - I mostly read We're Here, and Taylor and I started Gideon the Ninth
  • Attention to Media - Sunday watched news and protest coverage; Monday more protest coverage and I watched music videos for a while; Tuesday more protests, then some video game reviews/essays; Wednesday, Thursday, Friday had random youtube in the background; Saturday I watched Sinners with my mom and Taylor, and later more news coverage.
  • Video Games - 0/7
  • Social Interaction - 5/7

Total words written: 517 on a review

but_can_i_be_trusted: From the 'Art Gallery' pantomime; my first self-made .gif icon! (Surprise)
Title: 'Great Desire'
Fandom: Original Poetry
Rating: G
Notes: Crossposted to [community profile] emotion100 and [community profile] drabble_zone

Great Desire )

Website Updates

Feb. 7th, 2026 06:09 pm[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
Thanks to [personal profile] fuzzyred, the series Peculiar Obligations now has its own landing page.  This series features Quakers and organized crime, particularly with pirate allies.

Early Humans

Feb. 7th, 2026 02:51 pm[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
These 773,000-year-old fossils may reveal our shared human ancestor

Exceptionally well-dated fossils from Morocco capture a moment nearly 800,000 years ago, right at a major turning point in Earth’s magnetic history.

Fossils from a Moroccan cave have been dated with remarkable accuracy to about 773,000 years ago, thanks to a magnetic signature locked into the surrounding sediments. The hominin remains show a blend of ancient and more modern features, placing them near a pivotal branching point in human evolution. These individuals likely represent an African population close to the last common ancestor of Homo sapiens, Neandertals, and Denisovans
.

Birdfeeding

Feb. 7th, 2026 02:46 pm[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
Today is sunny and cold.  Much of the snow has melted.

I fed the birds.  I've seen a few sparrows.

I put out water for the birds.

EDIT 2/7/26 -- I did a bit of work around the patio.

I refilled the hopper feeder.

I've seen a female cardinal.

EDIT 2/7/26 -- I did more work around the patio.

There were two cardinals in the forest garden, but it was hard to tell colors at dusk.

I am done for the night.
 

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