umadoshi: (Christmas - string of lights (roxicons))
(As is so often the case, I'm generally up to date on reading my DW circle, but not doing at all well with commenting.)

I guess at this point we're well into the liminal last bit of the year. (I said to [personal profile] scruloose earlier that I still try to hold "Christmas is twelve days, dammit" in my heart, but it's hard, especially when our observance of the the holiday at all is so low-key.) We had masked visits with both sets of parents (mine on Christmas Eve and [personal profile] scruloose's on Boxing Day), and in between, Christmas Day was just the two of us and the cats and the Netflix fireplaces. My mom sent us home with Christmas stockings and some gifts (also very low-key; we still keep nudging for just not doing presents at all), and the latter included a hard copy of the most recent edition of Garner's Modern English Usage, which was a delightful surprise.

We actually had a white Christmas, which has never been a sure thing and is getting rarer and rarer at terrible speeds, but now ice and rain are arriving, to be followed by a cold snap, so I'm really glad we don't need to leave the house anytime soon. (See also: will we lose power? Very possibly! >.< But we're pretty well-equipped to deal with it.)

I'm feeling like I should be looking ahead or setting small goals or trying to find specific things I want to focus on, but so far I'm not really scrounging the brain for it. Anyone want to tell me about how you're approaching it?

(I do think I'll sign up for a GYWO wordcount goal again, despite having written almost literally zero words this year, but at this point I have the grim suspicion that the words may stay gone until a new full-on fannish obsession hits me, and that's so infrequent for me. ;_; I have so many Guardian WIPs and fragments. [And while I'm enjoying seeing all the fannish glee over Heated Rivalry, I don't currently feel fannish about it myself {which, honestly, I'm okay with}.])

Recent media, mostly books: All Is Bright, Llinos Cathryn Thomas' "read over Advent" novella, which was lovely; The Dark is Rising (book), which I'm glad to have finally read; I don't know if/when I might read the books that follow it; Snake-Eater by T. Kingfisher; Widdershins by Jordan L. Hawk; KJ Charles' Masters in this Hall (which I should've checked the series info about first, as it's the third Lilywhite Boys book and I haven't read the second. Oops); and Brigid Kemmerer's A Curse So Dark and Lonely.

[personal profile] scruloose and I finished listening to System Collapse, so we're out of Murderbot books. Yesterday (?) we listened to the four-minute audiobook sample of The Thief, which I might be able to work with? But wow, the voice sounds so much older than Gen to me. (Also, Kobo, four minutes is a reasonable sample length, but it literally cuts off mid-word.)

I watched the season finale of Heated Rivalry pretty promptly on Friday morning, for fear of being spoiled, which meant [personal profile] scruloose, who hadn't seen any of the show previously, pretty much watched it too while feeding the cats and having their own breakfast. (I did give them some background info first.) As noted above: not feeling fannish, but I thought that was really well done overall, and the actors seem like an absolute delight.

And we've watched two movies since starting vacation (Wake Up Dead Man and Sinners), which brings me up to a whopping four [4] movies this year.

Pass It On 6

Dec. 29th, 2025 11:25 am[personal profile] chocolatefrogs posting in [community profile] iconthat
chocolatefrogs: (6 © Fawns)

https://res.cloudinary.com/dc2cefbey/image/upload/v1767036312/ay5yer_h2yxux.jpg


Next picture: Nyota Uhura (Star Trek: The Original Series)
image

Yuletide recs (part 2)

Dec. 29th, 2025 10:38 am[personal profile] snickfic posting in [community profile] yuletide
snickfic: "Nobody can explain a dragon" (Le Guin quotation) (mood fantasy)
More recs at my journal, including:

Possibly in Michigan
The Secret History
The Raven Tower
Impromptu/19th Century RPF
The Dispossessed
The Long Walk -Stephen King
Waking the Moon
Rope
rionaleonhart: kingdom hearts: sora, riku and kairi having a friendly chat. (and they returned home)
Last year, I posted a reflection on my favourite characters of 2024. It was a lot of fun, so I thought I'd do the same thing again!

As with 2024, I'm going to take a quick look at the preexisting favourites who've particularly occupied my mind this year, and then I'm going to comb through my 'first impressions' tag and give my favourite character from each canon I first posted about in 2025. (If no favourite character comes to mind, I'll skip the canon.) I might also cover a couple of canons I've tried out this year but haven't yet posted about.


My favourite characters of 2025. )


Dexter is a surprising omission here! I watched a lot of that show earlier in the year, but I just don't have an answer to the 'who's your favourite character?' question. I like Deb, but not passionately enough to say with confidence that she's my favourite; I find Dexter interesting, but I can't say for certain whether I like him. I tend to be a very character-focused fan, so it's always a little surprising to me when I get into something without latching strongly on to any of the characters.

8 recs in 7 fandoms

Dec. 29th, 2025 06:26 pm[personal profile] mrs_redboots posting in [community profile] yuletide
mrs_redboots: (Default)
If you go to my journal you will find recs for stories in the following fandoms:

Puck of Pook's Hill/Callendar Series
Sussex Set
Swallows and Amazons (two stories)
Cadfael Chronicles
Chalet School
The Secret Garden 
and Dragonriders of Pern

There may yet be more to come.... 


canyonwalker: wiseguy (Default)
Today it's back to work after a week-plus off. My last regular workday was Friday the 19th. Now it's the 29th. I was off for 9 days. Well, 8¾ if you count the bit of work I did last Monday. 😅

Coming back to work after a hiatus like this is a bit disorienting. One full week isn't long by European time-off standards, where taking a whole month at a time to travel or just relax is common, but it's still enough to get out of the habit of working. Today it's like, "Oh, I've got to sit down at my desk at 8am? And work? All day? And tomorrow, too?" 😭

And it's not like I even did much with my time off. I didn't even get the memo I had the week off until the week before. By then it was too late to plan anything.... Not that we would have planned much, anyway, with Hawk's recovery from surgery. And things went from "not great" to way worse early in the week, so even if we had planned to go somewhere, we'd have been rushing back home. So I spent most of the week off sitting at home. It was like working from home, just minus the work. 😞

This week's a slow one at work. Many of my colleagues are off until Friday (the day after New Year's) or next Monday. Many of our customers are out, too. My company's holiday break of Dec 22-26 was a bit weird because most companies that are giving holiday breaks this year are scheduling them Dec 24 - Jan 2. The short of it is, there's not a lot of meetings or calls this week. I might take a day off on the 31st just so I don't feel guilty sitting here doing nothing.

Pithy Realization

Dec. 29th, 2025 12:08 pm[personal profile] jesse_the_k
jesse_the_k: One section pulled out from peeled orange (shared sweetness)

Since we met in 1977, MyGuy has always eaten the spongy white stuff which dwells between an orange and its skin (whether he picks it off the whole peeled orange or nibbles it away from the cut-open peel).

Yesterday I tried it. It's delicious! Michigan State University claims it also has as much vitamin C as the fruit.

What else am I missing?

kareila: Wall-E & Eve return to Earth (wall-e)
Not much to report from the last 2+ weeks, just the usual December madness. The Messiah was sung. Everyone had a nice holiday. I did far too much crochet and knitting. My dad continues to ignore me. Whatever.

I got bogged down on Day 10 of Advent of Code and never completed it or looked at the problems for the final two days, but maybe I'll find time this week.

I don't think that I'm going to finish the most recent Dungeon Crawler Carl book before the end of the year, but I'm down to only 6 library books checked out, and half of them are non-fiction. Next year I want to focus more on my TBR, which is up to 850. If I could get it down to 800 (while presumably continuing to add to it) that would be a big success.

Denver and New England both won their NFL divisions - yay!

On New Year's Eve we're planning a Freaky Friday D&D session where we randomly switch up characters. Should be hilarious.

My resolutions for 2025 were to get the old house sold, see Connor graduate from high school, and stay healthy. I guess two out of three ain't bad. Robby is finally getting to the end of his fix-it list, and I have pretty much forbidden him to add anything else to it until we get a licensed inspector to check things over and see what he points out.

Worried no more

Dec. 29th, 2025 08:54 am[personal profile] susandennis
susandennis: (Default)
My brother arrives a week from tomorrow!! He's here for 6 days and I was a little worried that we might not have enough to do. I don't have any sports channels and he's no longer eating. But, then I organized my list of todo's.

PXL_20251229_165301086

I think we'll be busy enough. Plus I still have a week to add to the list. Plus he can watch me eat. That should make up for no sports channels. hahahaha

And, yep, my latest thing is writing on my fridge with erasable markers.

changing house guests

Dec. 29th, 2025 05:43 pm[personal profile] kareina
kareina: (Default)
 Started the day with a quick 25 minutes pilates session, then I had time to start a bread dough and baste the next sleeve of Keldor copper trim tunic to the silk lining, cut the lining, and sew the decorative line along the edge of the cuff before the others got up.

sleeves
 
We had a lovely final morning hanging out with Hjalmar and Sofie, then we loaded their stuff into the car, and Keldor drove up to the bus station to meet Charlotte, and we took a walk to enjoy a little fresh air, stopping at the Saluhall to admire the nice local crafts for sale, and see all the interesting locally produced food (Sofi bought a good quality chocolate) before arriving at the buss top. Charlotte's bus soon arrived, and we four chatted a bit till Hjalmar and Sofie's bus arrived and we sent them on their way. It is always a joy to see them!
 
Then home and baked a pizza. Now they are curled up on the couch watching youtube videos on making stuff, and I have updated the event [web page to include a list of registered people](https://www.reengarda.se/anm%C3%A4ldalistan), now that the (soon to be) King has registered.

edited to add:

In other news, there is a nice article in the local newspaper today about the family who bought the tower house., so now I know their names (Noak and Anna-Maria Larsson and their kids Elna, 8 and Ruben, 4 år) and see that they have Instagram.
spikedluv: (winter: mittens by raynedanser)
I did a load of laundry (bed sheets, so also stripped and re-made the bed), hand-washed dishes, vacuumed the bedroom rug (I used to think the old vacuum did okay on the bedroom rug, but it was even doing poorly there because the new vacuum just glides over it and I don’t have to go over a spot more than once to suck up the dog hair; such a treat!), cut up chicken for the dogs' meals, and changed kitty litter (thankfully I’m done with the crap litter and back to the usual). I turned the last little bit of chuck roast into soup.

I finished Boyfriend Material and read some fanfic. I watched the Bills game. NGL, getting that two-point conversion would’ve been exciting as heck, but I wish they’d gone for the safe (safer) play. It’s no fun watching your team lose. *pouts*

Today I tried the Cinnamon Plum tea. It was pretty good, and not too cinnamon-y. But I also didn’t let it steep as long (as I did with the Cinnamon Orange) for the first cup, which might have helped.

Bad news: I felt myself starting to get stuffy today. I hope that whatever I catch from Pip is mild.

Temps started out at 1.8(F) (BRR!) and reached 32 (according to Pip; I missed it). There was actually a little bit of sun in the morning, but it didn’t last, sadly. Freezing rain started during the evening and we're supposed to get more overnight. (Spoiler alert: we did get more overnight. o_O)


Mom Update:

Mom sounded good when I spoke to her. I can’t wait until I can see her again. I want to see for myself that she’s looking as good as she’s sounding. My brother visited her in the morning and Sister A in the afternoon, so she did have some company, which is good.

changing house guests

Dec. 29th, 2025 05:28 pm[personal profile] kareina
kareina: (Default)
 In addition to being SCA, Hjalmar is also a member of a Karoliner reenactment group (late 1600’s, early 1700’s, during Sweden’s “stormakt” time). Therefore, last year he taught himself knitting to make appropriate socks to wear with his knee breeches. Keldor saw that, and suggested he make me a pair, in dark blue, to go with my brown linen knee trousers.
 
Much to my delight, when Sofi and Hjalmar arrived yesterday he took out his knitting, some beautiful dark blue wool socks, which were worked from the knee down, he had passed the heels, and was closing in towards the toes. So he tried them on me several times over the course of the evening last night and today, adjusting them to perfectly fit my feet. This evening he finished them, and I am in love with these beautiful, comfortable socks!

socks!

In other news, Keldor has finally started insetting the reindeer antlers we got from Torun this autumn into the moose antlers we have been using as a hatrack. Soon it will be a much better hat rack!


hatrack

It just needs the epoxy and first layer of spackel covering the seam to harden so he can do the final smoothing over of the join.
susandennis: (Default)
When I lived near Pittsburgh, I got to go to the opening of the new Three Rivers Stadium (baseball). It was a big huge fucking deal to get to go and I was thrilled. I heard this summer that they are talking about replacing the stadium that replaced Three Rivers. Ha!

This weekend I learned that they are retiring NYC Metro cards. I am a subway token girl. The tokens were a little smaller than dimes and clung to the bottom of your purse, especially when you were in a hurry. I was long gone from NYC by the time they retired tokens and now they are retiring the token replacements.

If ya live long enough...

It is still pretty dark and also foggy. Perfect for swimming but not in ice cold water. I wonder if we will be able to volleyball tomorrow. I'll go down to the pool/gym later today to find out. And probably do some time on those horrible machines. Oh! I just got a note from Erica (the fitness director) saying this morning the pool is 79 degrees which is, technically, within (bottom) the range for lap swimming but not for my lap swimming.

I do think I'm going over to the second hand shop this morning and see if I can score a purple or green sweater to unravel for hair. I know the goods will be better and more varietal at Goodwill BUT also there is a whole lot more stuff to tempt me at Goodwill so best to stick to Value Village.

But they don't open til 10 so I guess I'll get dressed first.

20251228_185108-COLLAGE

Pass It On 6

Dec. 29th, 2025 10:18 pm[personal profile] spiderbraids posting in [community profile] iconthat
spiderbraids: (Default)
image host
https://images2.imgbox.com/80/d8/kYMPMEnI_o.png

Next: Scotty from Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home
Scotty_Hello_Computer

ramrod

Dec. 29th, 2025 09:13 am[personal profile] prettygoodword
prettygoodword: text: words are sexy (Default)
ramrod (RAM-rod) - n., a rod for ramming home the charge in a muzzle-loading firearm; a ranch or trail foreman, responsible for getting the work done; a demanding overseer, a disciplinarian. v., to force with or as with a ramrod. adj., marked by rigidity, severity, or stiffness.


That last includes the colorful idiom of ramrodding a bill through the legislature, which produces an interesting image when you apply the original context. The original ramrods were, indeed, rods, thus the name.

---L.

a hero and a scholar

Dec. 29th, 2025 03:10 pm[personal profile] pensnest
pensnest: Scarlet gift box with gold ribbon (Christmas box)
The children came round yesterday for Lasagne and a long post-prandial natter, which was very nice. Meanwhile, I have been reading more Yuletide fics, so here are some more recs.


The Truth that Once Was Spoken - Les Miserables/Chalion (Lois Bujold)
I love the Five Gods—it's the most appealing fictional religion I have ever read—but I would never have expected to find that world paired so perfectly with Les Miserables. It works remarkably well, and I was absolutely absorbed as I read. I am familiar with both canons (less so with Les Mis, but I suspect you would understand it if you know only one, or even neither. One of my favourites this year.


Hoar and Hound Brother Cadfael—Ellis Peters
Not a major mystery, rather a minor rescue mission, but Cadfael's voice is caught so perfectly, and the descriptions are wonderful.


The Parthenos in All Her Glory Saga of the Exiles - Julian May
It has been many years since I read the Saga of the Exiles, and I have forgotten a lot of the details, but this was written in a style that felt exactly right. Main character Felice is somewhat more likeable and somewhat less batshit than she becomes in canon, but it all plays out in a very believable way.


It would never have occurred to me that there might be a six-word canon, but there is: For Sale: Baby Shoes, Never Worn. And it is possible to write rather good fic for it, because there are in fact three such fics. This one is my favourite:
Never Worn
But the others are also well worth your time.


By Special Licence Georgette Heyer's Cotillion
This is one of my favourite Heyer stories. I adore Freddy, and I'm charmed to see Lord Legerwood faced with the evidence that his son is now a capable adult. Legerwood is also one of my favourites, and this fic captures him perfectly.


And this is the story that was written for me!
Defending Honour
Arthur Dent... is not very good at Girls. Ford, on the other hand, has a gift. But there's something a bit...off about Ford, when Arthur really pays attention. Deftly done, and it made me grin.

Pass It On 6

Dec. 29th, 2025 09:55 am[personal profile] innitmarvelous_og posting in [community profile] iconthat
innitmarvelous_og: (Default)


LINK: https://i.imgur.com/tXPkvQB.jpg

Next: The Avengers (2012)
Tony&BruceBannerAV1-1

(no subject)

Dec. 29th, 2025 08:11 am[personal profile] skygiants
skygiants: Sokka from Avatar: the Last Airbender peers through an eyeglass (*peers*)
The Queen's Embroiderer: A True Story of Paris, Lovers, Swindlers, and the First Stock Market Crisis did quite a good job of giving me historical context around the lives of artisans and upwardly mobile bourgeois in 17th and early 18th century France and only a mediocre job IMO of convincing me of its central argument, but I was reading it for the former and not the latter so I can't say I was disappointed per se ...

As the author, historian Joan DeJean, introduces her narrative, she was browsing the National Archives when she came across two documents: the first, appointing Jean Magoulet as official embroiderer to Queen Marie-Thérèse of France; the second, decreeing that Magoulet's daughter Marie Louise should be put in prison and deported to New Orleans on charges of prostitution. DeJean immediately dropped what she was doing to Get To The Bottom Of This and went on a deep dive into the entire Magoulet family as well as the family of Louis Chevrot, the young man whose involvement with Marie-Louise resulted in the charges above.

In order to write this family saga, Joan DeJean has pulled out every relevant family document -- marriage licenses, birth certificates, guardianship statements, criminal charges, recorded purchases, etc. etc. -- and she does a clear and interesting job of explaining what we can learn from them, what these kinds of documents normally look like and what their context is, what the specific features of these family documents imply, and letting you follow her logic with your own brain. I appreciate this very much! I had no idea, for example, that it was standard in 17th-century France for the court to appoint a guardian for any child who lost a parent, even if they still had the other parent living, to ensure that their financial interests were protected, something that came up often in this narrative where a lot of kids were losing parents in situations where their financial interests were not particularly protected. It's a really good example of historical detective work, how you can draw a picture of a family through time through the bureaucratic litter they leave behind, and I appreciated it very much.

On the other hand, Joan DeJean also occasionally slips into writing like this --

In the course of their attempts both to get rich quick and to save their skin when they got into bad straits, the Queen's Embroiderers became imposters, tricksters, con artists nonpareil. They lied about everything and to everyone: to the police, to notaries, to their in-laws. They lied about their ages and those of their children, about their professional accomplishments and their net worth. They caroused; they philandered; they made a mockery of the laws of church and state. The only truly authentic thing about them was their extraordinary talent and their ability to weave gold and silver thread into the kind of garments that seemed the stuff of dreams. In their lives and on an almost daily basis, haute couture crossed paths with high crime.

Savage beauty indeed.


-- which made me laugh out loud every time it happened. So, bug, feature? who could say ....

Anyway, Joan DeJean makes a pretty good argument for most of the family gossip she pulls out about the Magoulets and the Chevrots, but the center of her argument about the Great Tragic Romance between Marie-Louise Magoulet and Louis Chevrot rests on a really elaborate switcheroo that I simply do not buy. In drawing out her family saga, DeJean has become obsessed with the fact that there seem to have been two Marie-Louise Magoulets, one being more than a decade older than the other, and, crucially, also more than a decade older than Louis Chevrot; I guess this is technically spoilers for a three hundred year old scandal )

But a.) context about material culture and craftsmanship is what I was here for and context is what I got, in spades, and b.) if you're going to invent a historical conspiracy theory, make it as niche as possible, is what I say, so despite the fact that I don't BELIEVE DeJean I still spiritually support her. Has she perhaps connected a few more dots than actually exist? Perhaps. But I still certainly got my money's worth [none; library] out of the book!

Crafts - December 2025

Dec. 29th, 2025 11:57 am[personal profile] smallhobbit
smallhobbit: (Christmas tree 2025)
As shown in my Christmas post, I continued with cross stitch cards - this is the last one:

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