thisbluespirit: (btvs)
[personal profile] thisbluespirit
Before I had the cold (which is not entirely over, but is much better now) I had a few things I was going to put into a post. They are now extremely random, mostly belated, and not equal, so apologies for a motley post, but I did want to note:


1. [personal profile] beccadg is having a lot of health issues and has a GoFundMe.


2. I saw two posts about Small Prophets, one talking about the influence of all the stopmotion children's animation in it, and another person saying that whatever you'd call the exact inverse of English folk horror, that's what Mackenzie Crook's work is. All of which smashed together in my head to make me go: OMG, he made Bagpuss for adults! (I mean, it's not, but also it is. And Bagpuss is also some sort of exact inverse of 70s folk horror, too. Artisanal children's TV in terms of being literally crafted by hand and its simple but beautiful storytelling structure.)


3. Before I got too ill to do such radical things as watch TV on my PC again, I managed to actually watch ep1 of Miami Medical (with Jeremy Northam and Lana Parrilla), and discovered that when you watch a full ep instead of just Lana clips, what's up with Jeremy Northam's accent is much clearer, in that it was never meant to be a US accent, just that his character had been working in Maryland for 10 years and the "I'm from Maryland, as you can tell by the accent" was actually ironic. Someone calls him "Mr Tea and Biscuits" in the next scene. (Most of the eps are there. Hopefully I shall be able to watch them sometime and all will become clearer than the random Lana snippets.)


4. [personal profile] sovay pointed me to uploaded episodes of The Expert on YouTube, including 2 from 1971 that I had managed to miss featured... James Maxwell! \o/ I was even too ill to manage watching this on my tablet for ages, too.

In true JM form he was very nervy and awkward and also unfortunately too gentle and unmanly to survive a small push in the 1970s. Alas. He is such a delicate 6"3 baritone flower, lol. He fell over in the beginning of part 2 and next thing I knew they were doing an autopsy on him and now I'm too worried about where this is going to watch the rest (yet). (The channel also seems to have a lot of rare stuff - this is a never released on DVD or repeated item, so they must have a collection of their own, presumably.)


5. Bookending this, Michael Keating, better known to me as Vila from Blake's 7 died when I was too numbed from the cold to really comment on it - and then yesterday, the news broke about Anthony Head, too, and I was very sad to hear both & both by all accounts, lovely people too. Michael had apparently had dementia for some years and after B7 worked mainly in theatre, and also got very into rambling, but he didn't need to do more TV to leave an impact: Vila was iconic, someone he made a very likeable and relatable figure in the midst of all the rebels vs. Federation struggles. I'm watching Sesskasays react to B7 for the first time and, in these early stages, Vila is her favourite. Mine too. I love all the characters, and adored Jacqeline as Servalan, but Vila is my favourite. He's the 'small man' archetype out of a fantasy story, living in a snarky fascist space universe. How could he not be?

I was late to the party with Buffy (although I remember watching the Gold Blend ads as a child!) but as a newbie librarian, I borrowed the VHS tapes from our library, and Giles was of course immediately my favourite, and then Anthony Head was always marvellous in everything. I hadn't dreamed we weren't going to get a few more years yet of unexpected bonus ASH in random TV or radio. He was in DW (audio and visual), Jonathan Creek's pilot, Cabin Pressure, but 3 things other than Giles I'll remember him for, particularly:- his first TV appearance in Enemy at the Door, where he played the Martels' son Clive, trapped on the island after a misguided raid by the British army goes wrong; an outstanding performance in s1 of Spooks, where he played Tom Quinn's mentor, jaded and screwed up, in a tragic crash-and-burn guest turn (N.B. warning for all the things, this is Spooks); and at the other end of the scale, being absolutely marvellous and hilarious every episode of 5 series of Bleak Expectations as the villainous Mr Gently Benevolent, whether exercising his trademark evil laugh, reincarnated as a pigeon, reformed, unreformed, or cheeseboarding Pip (with a break for tea and biscuits). It got me through a rough summer in 2013. Washing up badly is not the same as washing up evilly.

bring me sunshine

Jun. 4th, 2026 09:42 am
pensnest: prettily iced Christmas cookies on a red background (Christmas cookies)
[personal profile] pensnest
I discovered Overnight Oats last Saturday morning (Waterstones café, Blueberry, delicious), and have since started making my own. This morning's is based on my home-developed keffir (semi-skimmed dairy) with blueberries and raspberries, plus a few broken walnuts, and it is excellent!

*

Have today and yesterday been baking again, although perhaps a Tiffin, which never goes near the oven, does not count. I found a recipe for two-ingredient peanut butter cookies (the other is icing sugar) and made a half quantity. Not unexpectedly they taste of sweet peanut butter, but they seem to cohere reasonably and if you like peanut butter, they're quite good. And very easy. But getting them to rehearsal intact may be quite the challenge.

*

A Muntjac has been getting into the garden. I darkly suspect it of being able to teleport, because it—or they—will run, when challenged, to the ivy hedge at the far end of the garden and then... disappear. I have many new plants in the garden, most of them food, and I do not wish them to be eaten by rogue deer. But we cannot find the hole in the fence!

*

It has been raining! Every day for several, in fits and starts. Right now the sky is bright, but an hour from now it may be pouring again. At rehearsal last night we were singing Til I Hear You Sing and as the voices crescendoed, suddenly the rain came down *hard*. Very dramatic.

*

I see I am showing off my punctuation today.
usuallyhats: River Song in her cell, looking up from her diary (river)
[personal profile] usuallyhats
To Ride a Rising Storm - Moniquill Blackgoose
The Bright Ages: A New History of Medieval Europe - Matthew Gabriele, David M Perry
Counterweight - Djuna trans Anton Hur
The Coral Bones - EJ Swift
The Wolf and His King - Finn Longman
Mythica - Emily Hauser
Notes from a Regicide - Isaac Fellman

The End of This Day's Business - Una McCormack
Helm - Sarah Hall
Step Aside, Pops - Kate Beaton
Scarlet Morning - ND Stevenson
Harmattan Season - Tochi Onyebuchi
Rare Birds - LB Hazelthorn
Peri Peri Paprika - Leanne Su
The Impossible Fortune - Richard Osman
The Sheltering Flame - Ruthanna Emrys
Walking a Wounded Land - Andrew Knighton
When There Are Wolves Again - EJ Swift
The Works of Vermin - Hiron Ennes

Digital Social Reading: Sharing Fiction in the Twenty-First Century - Federico Pianzola
Slow Gods - Claire North
The Original - Nell Stephens
The Two Doctors Górski - Isaac Fellman
Emilie and the Hollow World - Martha Wells
The Siege of Burning Grass - Premee Mohamed
The Iron Garden Sutra - AD Sui
She is Here - Nicola Griffith
We Will Rise Again - ed Karen Lord, Annalee Newitz and Malka Older
Thief of Night - Holly Black
Tomb of Brass - Tansy Rayner Roberts
Critical Role: The Chronicles of Exandria - The Mighty Nein Part Two
The Somewhat Wicked Witch of Brigandale - CM Waggoner
The Kingdom of Almonds - Ariel Kaplan
What We Are Seeking - Cameron Reed
The Subtle Art of Folding Space - John Chu

The Last Dragoners of Bowbazar - Indra Das
Space Crone - Ursula K Le Guin
City of Others - Jared Poon
The Desert Talon - Karin Lowachee
The Power Fantasy: The Superpowers
Colourfields: Writing About Writing About Science Fiction - Paul Kincaid
Automatic Noodle - Annalee Newitz
They Bloom At Night - Trang Thanh Tran
Seasons of Glass and Iron - Amal El Mohtar
In the Serpent's Wake - Rachel Hartman
The Summer War - Naomi Novik
Luminous - Silvia Park
Among Ghosts - Rachel Hartman

I opened up my draft of this post and discovered there wasn't anything there since February, oh DEAR. So this is mostly just a list of things I have read! I really loved these ones in particular: Notes from a Regicide, When There Are Wolves Again, The Works of Vermin and Slow Gods. I also really liked What We Are Seeking and Luminous. Also yes, I am counting Una McCormack's latest Garak book of Garak in this list, even though it was published on AO3, because I do what I want, Thor.

(Will I manage to post this before the end of June (it's the 27th May right now) or will there be another paragraph of /o\ below this?) (update, SUCCESS)

To Ride a Rising Storm - Moniquill Blackgoose (four stars), The Wolf and His King - Finn Longman (three stars)To Ride a Rising Storm
Basically nothing happens in this book until right at the end, it's all worldbuilding explanations and people having conversations about society, politics and their interpersonal relationships. Luckily I do find the world very interesting, and Blackgoose's prose style is very engaging, so I still had a good time, though I could have done with slightly less chemistry-with-AU-element-names.

The Wolf and His King
Retelling of Bisclavret that started strong for me but gradually fell apart as it went on, for a few reasons:
  • The king's immediate instinctive connection with and yearning for Bisclavret worked really well, but it never really went anywhere? They have a few interactions before Bisclavret disappears, but there wasn't enough feeling on Bisclavret's side for me to really feel the connection that they apparently have, not to mention
    spoilerswe don't even get the payoff of the king realising that the wolf is Bisclavret, he has to be told.

  • The setting and the characters felt a bit neither fish nor fowl: there are moments of specificity that take them out of the purely archetypal, but not enough for them to really come alive. The latter half of the book sees the king working at diplomacy and trying to avoid becoming entangled in war, but there isn't enough detail for any of it to feel real.
  • The handling of Bisclavret's treacherous wife gestured at the possibility that she had a motivation beyond just being A Baddie, but never really went anywhere with it, or really addressed the fact that actually, no, it's not OK that Bisclavret married her without telling her he intermittently turns into a wolf! It's the one area where the werewolfism-as-disability metaphor, which mostly worked really well, fell down for me: it is in fact ok to object to your husband turning into a wolf that might want to kill you, and to try to get out of that situation.

I did mostly enjoy reading this book, and really liked what it did with points of view, but overall it didn't work for me like I wanted to. (I do want to read the lai when I am reunited with my copy, though.)


Didn't finish:
Little Thieves - Margaret OwenLittle Thieves - Margaret Owen
First casualty of my attempts to read the Hugo shortlist! This is a very solid YA novel, but it's the first in the trilogy of which the third is the one actually nominated, and I realised I just wasn't quite invested enough to keep going. Once again I was like "maybe THIS YA will work for me", and once again, through no fault of the book itself... not quite.

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