musesfool: bucky/natasha (is it in the fire that we collide?)
I posted a story yesterday:

These Facts We've Mistaken for Our Lives (@ AO3)
Winter Soldier; Natasha (past Bucky/Natasha); pg; 2,590 words
They say you can't miss something you've never had, but Natasha knows they're wrong.

This is a post-"Widow Hunt" not-really-a-fix-it, in terms of either Natasha's memory or her relationship with Bucky, but it is a fix-it for the way her agency was removed with that conclusion (hence the "giving ladies back their agency" tag), and mostly it's a cri de coeur because I was - am still - so angry about how that was handled. I can deal with my canon OTP being broken up if there are good reasons (and there could have easily been good reasons), but this was just bullshit.

I started the story fairly shortly after the issue came out and then just got stymied with how it should go - mostly the Sam section, which is why that's so short; Sam wasn't part of this particular decision, but he was part of the group who kept Sharon in the dark about what happened to her while she was brainwashed, and I still have some residual anger about that debacle. That's why Sharon is the one who clues Natasha in. When I originally conceived the story, I thought it would be Logan, but almost as soon as I started actually writing, I realized it HAD to be Sharon, because of the similarities in what happened (forever side-eyeing Brubaker over that) to her.

And once I got through the brief Sam section, it all just kind of happened yesterday. I waffled about putting Rikki and Anya in - I even excised that section briefly - but one of the things I love about Natasha is that she does mentor other young lady heroes, and she totally took Rikki under her wing even as she mostly kept her separated from Bucky, and also since I was angry and writing a fuck you to the canon, I decided Rikki wasn't dead, because fuck you, Marvel, she's not dead.

Anyway, that was cathartic.

cut for a rant about AO3 tags but probably not the rant you're expecting )

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Wednesday reading meme:

What I just finished reading

I read A Cold Day for Murder by Dana Stabenow, which is the first in the Kate Shugak series. It was okay? I didn't love it, I didn't hate it. I probably won't pick up the others in the series unless the library has them as ebooks, though.

I also read Cold Steel, the third book in Kate Elliott's Spiritwalker Trilogy. I like that it jumped right to the action - no more weirdly awkward upfront exposition.

I don't think there are spoilers, but who knows? mostly squee )

So that was satisfying.

I also read - I don't think I mentioned it but it was a couple of weeks ago - The No Recipe Cookbook: A Guide to Culinary Intelligence by Susan Crowther. I forget where I saw it recommended (some food blog or other, no doubt), but I bought it as a gift for L., who doesn't enjoy cooking but would like to try, though I wouldn't have if I'd known it was a vegetarian cookbook. (L. is decidedly not a vegetarian and would also like to learn how to cook meat.)

It was an interesting read - some of the material was useful to me (mostly the ratios she gives instead of recipes), but most of it was stuff I already know, probably because I've been cooking since I was 10 and in addition to learning from my mother, who is to this day super attached to following recipes exactly as written, I learned from my grandmother and Aunt Jean, who did everything by feel. I'm very okay with substitutions as necessary (and as a finicky eater, I find them necessary pretty often), though I often have to look up the amounts, and unless something is THE KEY INGREDIENT, I have no problem swapping it out for what I have on hand.

What I didn't like was that there were times the author shaded into preachiness in a way that really set my back up. Don't tell me I shouldn't drink caffeinated beverages, lady. That's not what I bought your book for. And you're not my doctor. Ahem.

Anyway, if you are still new to cooking or if you don't enjoy it or are caught up in the mindset of MUST FOLLOW RECIPE EXACTLY, this book might be useful for you. If you're a pretty accomplished home cook, maybe not.

What I'm reading now

A Week in Winter by Maeve Binchy. I've never read any of her books, and this one is enjoyable, if slight. It's structured so that it follows each character separately, even though they all intersect during the titular Week in Winter at the Stone House, which is kind of a B&B in the west of Ireland. I mostly am interested in Chicky and Orla's stories, rather than the guests, but I have hope the narrative will come back around to them before it's over.

What I'm reading next

Couldn't tell you. I have a ton of stuff so I'll see what strikes my fancy. I still need to catch up on comics, too.

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musesfool: bodhi rook (honor the heart of faith)
Things! Also, stuff!

= I really enjoyed last night's Arrow despite some obvious plot twists. spoilers )

Also, I'm so glad they're making Slade a regular next season. Even if he does end up a bad guy - or at least an antagonist - he's such a spark for the show. The flashback island scenes are far less boring when he's around being shirtless and snarky. (I am now imagining him sneaking into Matt Bomer's shower to leave messages written in the steam on the mirror. I never had any interest in that as a pairing before despite how weird Slade is about Dick in nearly everything I've seen, but this version of Slade and Dick as played by Bomer? OH YES.

Also, also, after seeing Kerry Washington in this sparkly gown, I've decided she can totally be the Donna in my fantasy Nightwing movie. My fantasy Nightwing movie is AWESOME. Maybe this weekend I will put together a picspam. Ha.)

= Republic of Thieves, the third Gentlemen Bastards book, is actually coming out this October. Or so they say anyway. Though this date actually looks solid, and there is an excerpt from the book at that link. (hat tip to [personal profile] ignipes for the news.) [personal profile] laurificus and I had basically given up on ever seeing this book in print, so I am cautiously excited.

= My NYPL library card finally came and is validated, so now I can borrow books online yay!

= I knew I was forgetting something in yesterday's reading post - last weekend I also read Punisher: War Zone by Greg Rucka (♥) and Marco Checchetto. The story was okay - I didn't love it, mostly because I have no emotional investment in Frank Castle (I guess Jason's iteration of the Red Hood is kind of like the DCU's version of the Punisher? That is what I gathered, anyway.), but I didn't hate it, which I was braced for, despite Rucka probably being my favorite comics writer (at least he doesn't say gross things in public anyway). I acquired it mostly because the art is gorgeous (and there was only one really awful spine-bendy pose for Natasha, and she's fully clothed and zipped up through the whole thing). Her parts and Thor's were the best, though I also enjoyed Peter's indignation at his webbing being used for bad things, and Steve's weariness at what war does to soldiers.

= Speaking of Peter, I normally don't rec things outside of my monthly recs posts, but this is basically THE TINY SPIDER-MAN STORY OF MY HEART:

They Also Serve... by [archiveofourown.org profile] DaisyNinjaGirl. It's tiny - only 490 words - but it made me cry like the movie did. Because it takes the idea of the cranes and it expands it, because YES. I mean, whatever you might think of the Maguire Spidey movies - and I liked the first two just fine (didn't see the third and am just fine with that decision, too) - that scene of him being carried through the train car never fails to give me chills and tears, because THAT is the essence of Spider-man, and that is why I loved the cranes, despite what some might call the manipulative sentimentality of the scene. Sure he's an Avenger or whatever, and I wish there were a way to get him into those movies, but Spider-man is best as a street-level crimefighting kind of guy and he's not beloved by the press (or the cops, at least officially) but regular New Yorkers know that Spidey's their guy, and I LOVE stories that explore that man-on-the-street support for him.

One of the things I really like about how USM has handled Peter's death is that he's celebrated as a hero (and let's face it, this is a universe where J. Jonah Jameson is a better man, with a better arc, than Captain America, so there's not a lot to love about the Ultimate verse outside of Peter and now Miles and their supporting casts), though the validation comes too late for him to appreciate. *sob*

And speaking of, I hear we are going to get more Spider-men at some point? Hopefully when Peter is back in control of his own body? All I want, all I've wanted since I started reading comics regularly, is a monthly Spider-man book featuring Peter Parker that I can enjoy every month; they were almost there with Avenging Spider-man, but then they had to go and ruin even that. So I console myself with other books - and I love Miles and wouldn't trade him for the world and I love seeing Peter mentor him - but in my heart of hearts, I also want a current book about Peter Parker to love.

= And speaking of those other books, there was new Winter Soldier yesterday, which was still more set up and backstory, but did contain a character basically calling Bucky and Fury idiots who have no sense or planning skills, and, well, he's not wrong. Bucky's terrible planning skills endear him to me endlessly. Also, it's how you can tell it's Bucky, because I'm pretty sure the Winter Soldier was rarely so cavalier about things. At least not while his programming was in effect (with his affair with Natasha, and also that one time he went off the grid in NYC, as the exceptions, for obvious reasons).

= Wow this post got long. Here is today's poem to wrap things up:

You Start With Lassoing the Ocean

What follows her is a fist
of cold air. You craved

the ocean & she proved
its most approximate proxy.

In the morning, you dream
of crests and configure

tides: a.m. let roll back
p.m. roll in sand. Let

the moon be exhausted –
let it contribute overtime.

Tell it to put a call in
to Saturn or Jupiter's entourage

to form union. You've got
your hands full – one

girl, one cosmos, and chill
enough to rodeo the sun.

~Purvi Shah

***
musesfool: Natasha Romanoff is a bamf (you will hear thunder & remember me)
Oh my god, every time I read someone characterizing Steve as the obedient soldier who just follows orders, I want to reach through the internet and slap them upside the head and tell them to rewatch the movies. He breaks the law trying to enlist. He's ordered to report to Alamagordo and he goes on tour with the USO instead. He's told that no rescue operation is planned for Bucky et al., so he GOES AWOL to rescue them (admittedly, he then turns himself in to his superior officer when he gets back but that is the clearest example ever of "it's better to beg forgiveness than ask permission"). And then in Avengers, despite being all, "Just follow orders" to Tony and Bruce, he goes off and breaks into the secure weapons lockers and discovers what exactly Phase 2 is. Later, he commandeers a Quinjet to go fight the Chitauri (okay, this is with Fury's tacit permission, but I don't think that mattered to him one way or another at that point). What about this behavior says unquestioning obedience to orders? He follows orders when they track with what he thinks the right thing is, and when they don't, he ignores them in favor of doing what he thinks is right or necessary. Especially if it involves throwing himself out of a plane or getting shot at. (Now I see where Bucky gets his terrible planning skills from.)

Anyway. I haven't finished a story in weeks but yesterday I started two new ones, one of which is a fix-it of sorts for the end of the "Widow Hunt" arc and I realized last night who exactly it is who will help Natasha out when all the men are bumbling around trying to figure out what to say when she asks questions about the memories she's missing. Hopefully I can write it without descending into a screed about how no, the men don't get to make decisions for the ladies getting to know about what traumas were inflicted on them while brainwashed. Ugh. Brubaker, you did so well on so many things, but this paternalistic bullshit of men making decisions for the ladies for their own good without informing said ladies is infuriating.

Speaking of Winter Soldier, I guess it's time for the Wednesday reading meme:

What I just finished reading

Winter Soldier 16, which was mostly set-up, which is why I didn't post about it, but I have hope that this won't suck, and maybe Bucky will get to interact with other people.

The Naming of the Beasts, the fifth (and final?) Felix Castor book. I liked it a lot - better than the fourth one. spoilers )

Discount Armageddon by Seanan McGuire, which is really enjoyable. I like Verity, the protagonist, well enough, though I thought her narrative voice was unfortunately generic. Maybe I'm just tired of novels in first person? At least ones that don't really have a distinctive style (the Felix Castor books, for example, have a nice hardboiled rhythm to the narrative). I do want to know more about Verity's family and her world (even if the NYC in the book didn't really feel like the city I know; on the plus side, NO VAMPIRES. YAY.), though, so I picked up the second book, which I guess came out fairly recently?

Which neatly segues into What I'm reading now

Midnight Blue-Light Special, the sequel to Discount Armageddon, which ups the ante significantly for Verity and her associates. just started it on the train this morning, so I don't have much to say.

I also opened up Cotillion, which is one of the Heyers I haven't read, because [personal profile] skygiants mentioned it recently, and it's one of the ones I picked up when they were all on sale for $2.99 or whatever.

What I'm reading next

Whatever comics come out today, plus the ones I managed to download before the Marvel free #1s thing went belly up (NO PET AVENGERS THOUGH. GRAR. I better get it when they fix this mess.). As for books, I dunno. I have a bunch queued up on the old kindle/iPad, but we'll see what mood I'm in when I'm done with the above.

I'll say this - the one upside to the lack of fic that's of interest to me lately has meant my novel-reading has kicked into high gear. (on the downside, it means I spend more time reading and no time writing. *hands* Everything's a trade-off, I guess.)

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musesfool: terry jeffords & cheddar the corgi (show me how you do that trick)
DO YOU KNOW WHAT TODAY IS? IT IS FINALLY OCTOBER 19TH!

\o/

While this could go the way of West Wing after Sorkin, I am trying to remain optimistic, especially in light of a spoiler I read yesterday: Community s4 spoiler )

*

There were, in fact, comics yesterday:

Ultimate Spider-man #20: spoilers )

Avengers Assemble Annual 1: Meh. It's not that I didn't understand, it's that I found it difficult to care. spoiler ) Also, it wasn't written by DeConnick, so the banter was lacking. Also, also, needs more CAROL.

Winter Soldier #15: I was actually surprised this was out already. spoilers ) If it wasn't obvious, I totally read this book through a Steve/Bucky/Natasha OT3 lens.

Fearless Defenders #1: I don't really know much about Misty Knight or Valkyrie, except that they are pretty BAMFy ladies, but I can't resist checking out an all-ladies team, and I'm so glad I did. This was amazingly fun and enjoyable. The art's occasionally a little spine-bendy, but nothing that would make me stop reading, and the ladies are already bantery and kickass. If you are looking to jump into something without a lot of backstory and with a lot of ladies, you could do worse than picking this one up, I think.

Has the new X-Men book with Kitty, Rogue, Ororo, Jubilee and Betsy come out yet? Because I might have to break my moratorium on ever buying X-books to get that one when it does.

*

So we're supposedly having a blizzard/nor'easter tomorrow night. Why couldn't it happen on a weeknight so they could close the office? Bah.

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musesfool: Rikki Barnes (so lost sometimes)
I didn't know [personal profile] sab well, but she was one of the very first fannish people I ever met in person, and she was both an amazing writer and an enthusiastic participant and pinch hitter in Remix during its first few years, and she'll be missed. My condolences to her friends. My condolences also to everyone else who has recently lost a fannish friend.

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Since Elementary was a repeat last night, I caught up on Suits. spoilers )

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Young Avengers volume 2 #1

Kieron Gillen did a set of cool introductions to the new team: Young Avengers: Meet the Team (via [personal profile] fairestcat) and some of his musical choices are INSPIRED. I kind of can't stop listening to "I Love It" by Icona Pop. (And also, unrelatedly, "Va Va Voom" by Nicki Minaj because of that "A League of Their Own" vid.)

I also really enjoyed the first issue. spoilers )

And I am still bitter about Eli. WHERE IS HE AND WHY IS HE UNAVAILABLE FOR USE?

In my head, he and Rikki (who is not dead, dammit), are heroing it up as Patriot and Nomad, with occasional assists from Spider-Girl.

And that just made me wonder spoilers for Winter Soldier 14 )

Today, I helped out with envelope stuffing for a major mailing and I think I had every Natalia, Natasha, and Natalie in Brooklyn on my list. It just made me sad and ragey. Sigh.

Also, I gave myself the same paper cut three separate times. Oy.

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I wrote a Teen Wolf story! I'm as shocked as you are:

Transition (@ AO3)
Teen Wolf; Sheriff Stilinski/Melissa McCall; g; 1,555 words
He hadn't thought of his weekly dinners with Melissa as dates. At least, not until now.

Guys, it's really hard to write a story without knowing a character's first name or how he refers to himself. I think I managed okay, but it wouldn't have worked in a longer story.

Aside from this and the possibility of a Scott/Stiles story [personal profile] angelgazing keeps angling for me to write, I doubt there will be any more from me in this fandom. It doesn't really engage my writing brain at all. But who knows? I never expected to write this one, either.

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musesfool: Bucky Barnes as the Winter Soldier (if memory is a lie we tell ourselves)
So I watched a bunch of [community profile] festivids and here are a few that I really liked:

This Night (Batman: Under the Red Hood)
If I were on tumblr, I would tag this #ALL BRUCE'S JASON FEELS #ALL OF THEM because it is a masterpiece of heartbreak about Jason Todd and all Bruce's regrets concerning him.

All the Rowboats (The Godfather I & II)
This is just brilliantly done.

Seven Devils (Kings)
Really sharp look at David, Silas, and Jack.

Greased Lightning (Star Wars)
Of course. The Millennium Falcon. OF COURSE.

Titanium (Wonder Woman 1975)
Because Diana IS titanium. I don't remember the show particularly well, but I feel like this totally captures the awesomeness of Wonder Woman.

Va Va Voom (A League of Their Own)
AWESOME LADIES PLAYING BASEBALL. Joyfully delightful.

*

Wednesday reading meme:

What I'm reading now

I just finished what I was reading! So at this very moment I am in that liminal space between books. It could be anything! I don't know!

What I just finished

I just finished Wonder Boys by Michael Chabon last night. I'm just going to paste in my good reads review here:
Wow, so Grady Tripp. Might as well have named the guy Douchebag McAsshole because ugh. The writing is of course fabulous - evocative and dryly funny - because Michael Chabon knows how to spin a sentence, but jesus, this guy was the worst and I don't mean that in the awesome Britta Perry way. He's like every bad thing anyone ever said about Holden Caulfield only old enough to know better and still trying to coast by on threadbare charm. Maybe if I'd liked any of the other characters (except Miss Sloviak, who was the best thing in the book) I would have rated it higher [nb: I gave it 2 stars, i.e., it was okay], but it's just one ridiculous thing after another happening to a bunch of overgrown boys (and the thinly characterized women who choose for some reason to stick with them) I didn't want to spend time with but felt incapable of escaping. Like Grady, I kept waiting for things to take a turn for the better, but they never did.

Such a disappointment after how much I've loved his other books.

I also just read Winter Soldier 14, which wraps up the Widow Hunt arc and is Ed Brubaker's swansong on the book. spoilers )

I really loved most of what Brubaker did with bringing Bucky back, and for the most part, he did really well in writing Natasha, but given that issue that was nothing but gross torture porn, the bullshit he put Sharon through (which has NEVER been dealt with from her perspective) and now this, I have to wonder what is up with his deal with women.

Oh, and I finished Beautiful Ruins last week. The last chapter annoyed me a little (we don't really need to get that meta, okay? It felt like cleverness for its own sake rather than intrinsic to the book) but I ended up liking this better on the whole than I did while reading, mostly because I liked where Dee and Pat and Pasquale had ended up, and the resolution of Claire's relationship.

What I'm reading next

I haven't decided yet. Too many books!

*

White Collar: spoilers )

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musesfool: bucky/natasha (is it in the fire that we collide?)
Today's Dinosaur Comic made me laugh and laugh. Last week's about the Santa case files were also pretty awesome.

*

I stayed up way too late last night watching that 12-12-12 concert, and as much as I loved it (and cried) when Bruce and Bon Jovi sang together (though I was a little distracted by how tight Bruce's pants were. um.), there was no reason for some of that stuff to go on as long as it did - why so much Roger Waters and so little Eddie Vedder? Roger Daltrey, please put your chest away - you look like you are going to throw out your back! And I worried about Mick Jagger passing out on stage. I also felt bad that the crowd was clearly not into Kanye (where was Jay-Z? Where was LL Cool J?). And I don't know who approved some of those comedy bits, but they should be taken out back and shot. Ugh. Horrifying and awful. But Bruce and Bon Jovi doing Who Says You Can't Go Home made me want to dance around my living room, and both "Land of Hope and Dreams" and "My City of Ruins" made me cry like a baby. (I was sad Gaslight Anthem isn't big enough to be invited, as they're local.)

*

Got beta comments back on yuletide so now it's yuletide round 2: the revisioning! I still feel like if the archive had gone live today, I would be okay, but obviously I want to make it a better story and there's time and I feel like just getting a draft done was the huge task and now it's just cleaning up and tinkering.

*

Comics:

Avengers Assemble 10: THE DANGERS IS STRONG IN THIS ONE. Man, I would just read a whole book every month of Carol and Steve being superheroes and bantering together (and having makeouts, but that goes without saying, right?). but this also had some great SCIENCE BROS stuff in it, too.

Winter Soldier 13: spoilers )

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musesfool: ultimate spider-man (what a good boy)
I got my period last night and ended up not sleeping until after 4, so I'm glad that I didn't have to work today. And according to the org website, I don't think I have to work tomorrow, but as you recall, yesterday they pulled that certainty out from under me, so I guess I'm just going to say that it's tentative right now. (I expect the trouble is that they can't find a location to put all of us because the office still has no power, and also, I imagine that without power, the servers aren't running so there's no real way to do work anyway.) Since they say power should be back on in lower Manhattan by Sunday (possibly by Saturday), I'm sure we'll be back at it on Monday, but I'm not going to quibble. The idea of having to commute while everything's all snarled up is unappealing at best.

Since I was up so late anyway, I ended up writing about 1200 words of Steve/Peter, and while most of them will have to be cut or rewritten, I did sketch out the rest of the story so at least now I know what needs to happen. I have mentioned this before, but my story outlines are usually like:

1. Characters who should make out.
2. ???
3. PROFIT MAKEOUTS

So if you are like me when it comes to difficulties with plotting yet the desire to write casefic, [personal profile] sage is doing a workshop on it, and her first post is here.

So in order to refamiliarize myself with Peter's voice, I just rewatched The Amazing Spider-man, or, to be honest, just sobbed my way through it again, stopping on occasion to clean my glasses. YOU DON'T UNDERSTAND MY PETER PARKER FEELS OKAY? IF YOU DON'T LIKE HIM, I WILL THROW DOWN. I should probably get myself an Andrew Garfield-Peter icon.

I also came up with another story that I thought was viable, though now I think it might have to get folded into the story where Steve saves Bucky from being the Winter Soldier with LOVE.

Also, I might try to write a Natasha-centric idea I had last night, though it's kind of a stretch for me, and also, it might possibly mean I need to actually read DareDevil. Um. I did acquire a whole run of it (the one that was recommended to me by [livejournal.com profile] spectralbovine - I believe it's Bendis and Maleev?) but I discovered when I did the data recovery thing on the old external hard drive, it saved all the comics as individual JPGs with numerical file names. So the data is there, but it is not actually usable. Sigh. (Luckily, I had a while ago backed up my comics folder onto my laptop, when I was traveling with it, so I still have a bunch of stuff, including all of Blue Beetle, Gotham Central, No Man's Land, USM, and Captain America vol 5. But that is all the stuff I've already read. And none of Journey Into Mystery, which is a shame because that was so good.)

Speaking of comics!

Captain Marvel #6
spoilers ) I think this review on tumblr does the best job at summing up the first arc of this book. The pacing and plotting are a little weak, but by god, it is a story about women by women, and it feels true to that in the sense that all the women feel like people, even the ones who only show up for a few lines, and it feels concerned with the things that women face in the world. So consider this a rec, even though I am still getting used to the new art style.

Ultimate Spider-man 16.1
Here is the ultimateverse in a nutshell: J. Jonah Jameson has a great arc over the course of USM, and he shines in this issue. Captain America is a grade-A (which doesn't, I remind you, stand for France) douchebro (he is not in this particular issue, but he was in #16). I think they're trying to walk back some of Millar's worst stuff, especially in regard to Ultimate!Cap, or maybe just give him some actual personal growth after everything that happened, but that ship has long since sailed and sunk. Anyway, this issue was full of plot holes but J. Jonah made it worth it.

Winter Soldier #12
spoilers )
musesfool: Carol Danvers as Captain Marvel (not alone in the dark)
I am shocked - shocked! - to find out that gambling is going on here! I mean, that the NFL caved and settled with the locked out refs after Monday night's debacle. (There is a lot more to unpack here, about how suddenly the conservatives are pro-labor when it comes to football but those striking teachers are greedy assholes, because football trumps education; about how Goodell has other problems that can't be ignored now that the dog and pony show of the replacement refs is over; about how paying the refs is chump change to the NFL but those defined benefit plans for union employees in other industries are in deep, deep financial trouble, but I am not going to do any of that. I'm just going to comment glibly and move on.)

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If I could vid, there would be an Iron Man vid to "Little Deuce Coupe." I'm just saying. The song's only 1:40 long. Someone should get on that.

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I finished Midnight Riot aka Rivers of London yesterday evening and I really liked it. Smart, funny, engaging, fast-paced. All of those things, yeah. Good sense of place, too. I got the sense that Aaronovitch has spent a lot of time living in London, if he doesn't live there now. spoilers ) Now, the second book!

Speaking of sequels, the next Percy Jackson book comes out on Tuesday. I am excite! Maybe I'll give the first two books a reread this weekend.

And then the week after, The FitzOsbornes at War finally comes out here! ♥

(Also, if anyone has an electronic copy of Quintana of Charyn they could share, it'd be most appreciated. *cough* I have preordered it, so it's not like I'm not going to pay for it when it comes out here. I just don't want to have to wait until MARCH if I don't have to.)

Also, returning this weekend, Young Justice! spoilers for the images released for Saturday's episode ) I didn't actually watch the trailer, just looked at the stills, so I'm not particularly spoiled for the plot, but. I am excited!

Which is as good a segue as any into this week's comics, I suppose.

+ Captain Marvel spoilers )

+ Journey Into Mystery spoilers ) Now I just have to remember to get the next issue of Thor so I can find out what happens next.

+ Winter Soldier spoilers )

I think that's everything? For now, anyway.

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musesfool: bucky/natasha (is it in the fire that we collide?)
I had to be in at 8 am this morning, so I had to get up at 6:30 instead of 7:30, so OF COURSE I had the dream where my alarm didn't go off and then there was a blizzard and the subways were shut down and I had to share a cab with a bunch of strangers (actually much less worse in the dream than in the reality from two weeks ago) and couldn't get a signal on my phone to let my boss know I was going to be late and miss the meeting. Ugh ugh ugh. At least I mostly slept through the night this time?

But I was telling a co-worker about it and she told me the most hilarious story - she had a friend who was in medical school who had been ill and was taking a makeup exam. She opened the exam booklet and did not know any of the material covered. We've all had that dream but this was actually happening to this poor woman. And then the proctor said, "Oops! Wait a minute, I gave you the wrong exam. Here's the correct one." !!!

Anyway, I did make it to work in time and the meeting went off without a hitch and we get to do it all again tomorrow. I have already had two venti iced lattes, and I might be on my way out for a third, though.

Oy.

***

I haven't been writing much recently but I have been reading.

Comics:

Winter Soldier 10: spoilers )

Journey Into Mystery 643(?): spoilers )

speaking of comics - my dad called me yesterday to let me know that - does anyone care about spoilers for Avengers v. X-Men? I don't, but I'm not reading it - anyway, he called to let me know that spoiler ) But mostly I was amused that he felt this was worth a phone call.

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Books:

Last week, I read the first two Dressmakers books by Loretta Chase (Silk Is for Seduction and Scandal Wears Satin) and I enjoyed them both a lot. What I liked most was the acknowledgement of how privileged Clevedon and Longmore are, and how Marcelline totally calls Clevedon on it, and eventually he acknowledges the truth of what she's said. I mean, it's not perfect - he's still a duke etc. - but just the acknowledgement of it by that type of character in these types of novels seemed like a big thing to me. And I enjoyed the books as frothy romances, as well.

And then last night I finished Froi of the Exiles. HOLY SHIT THAT ENDING. BRING ME THE NEXT BOOK NOW PLEASE.

I had been unsure about how I was going to feel about this book, given the thing Froi does (well, technically, attempts to do) in Finnikin of the Rock, but Marchetta made it a plot point. Boy howdy, did she, spoilers )

Please tell me I don't actually have to wait until March of 2013 to read the next book. That just ain't right.

***
musesfool: bucky/natasha, naked (you're the only one who understands)
I slept for nearly nine hours last night, and I am still as tired and bleary-eyed as on Monday, when I'd only slept four, and I so don't want to do any work. Ugh.

*

on [personal profile] bethbethbeth's recommendation, I recently read The Company We Keep by Robert and Dayna Baer, a memoir of their time in the CIA. The first half is really interesting, dealing with CIA training and actual spycraft; the second half basically made me side-eye them - especially him - the whole time, especially the part about their foreign adoption (and also, the fact that he has two daughters and the son, and guess which kid is apparently the only one he cares about, since he's the only one who gets a name and a part in the story?). So read it for the first half and then roll your eyes through the second, I guess, or stop when they leave the CIA.

I also read Blood Spirits by Sherwood Smith, the sequel to Coronets and Steel. I liked it, though not as much as the first book, which has that whole Prisoner of Zenda plot going for it. I had some trouble remembering how people were related for the first part of the book, and also, spoilers )

And then apparently yesterday, all of the comics I actually pay for were released, so let's do that rundown:

Avenging Spider-man 11 made me sob, but that is a given, I think, since he was teamed up with Aunt May in this issue, which basically covers a trip to the cemetery to see Uncle Ben. I thought it handled the idea of reassessing how you got where you are while still looking forward pretty well, but you know, I am easy for Peter and May Parker and their strength and resilience. I didn't love the art, but eh.

Journey Into Mystery 642 - this was kind of heartbreaking - apparently no matter what Loki does, it all goes to shit, even when his intentions are noble. The best part is how much Thor loves him (see this tumblr post about their relationship, which basically encapsulates my kid!Loki feels and also why Thor is awesome. Spoilers, obv.)

I know they're wrapping up kid!Loki's time as the protag of this book (soon it will be Sif!) and kid!Loki will be hanging out with Billy Kaplan? (Or something? Nerds of the Nine Realms unite?) and I really hope they don't just drop him or re-age him to adulthood and villain status, because I really like what they're doing with him. Because a trickster should straddle the line between good and evil, playing them off against each other for his own benefit and/or amusement, and there's as much creation in trickster mythology as there is destruction, because you don't get one without the other, and Loki as straight up villain is just boring.

Captain Marvel 3 - this is where my irritation with serialized storytelling is at its peak, because goddammit, GIVE ME THE REST OF THE STORY. I don't feel like the cliffhanger was particularly effective and I don't feel like there was enough story here to be considered a full issue. I liked the part where spoiler )

Otoh, the serialization aspect worked for me with Winter Soldier 9 because spoilers, no I really mean it )

So that was pretty freaking awesome.

And you've all heard about the SHIELD tv show Joss is producing for ABC, right? Given the corporate synergy there, hopefully it won't get cancelled after five episodes. I still would have preferred a Heroes for Hire show, but maybe this will be about Maria Hill being a BAMF.

But maybe you don't know - I didn't, until [personal profile] devildoll just told me - that Avengers is being re-released over this Labor Day weekend in the US, and that there is a specific reminder to stay through the credits so... footage from IM3? Another short? I guess we'll find out! I'll be out on the island this weekend so I don't know that I'll have a chance to go again, but maybe I can talk the kids into it. Hmm...

*
musesfool: Bucky Barnes as the Winter Soldier (if memory is a lie we tell ourselves)
Setbacks today for my father, so he's probably not coming home until Monday. I am still trying to decide if I should leave on Sunday afternoon as I originally planned or stay and take Monday off as well. I have to say, it normally doesn't affect me at all that I don't drive, but being stuck here without the ability to even just go to the grocery store without a car is really kind of horrible. I do not ever want to have to live here.

*

In fannish news, I'm moderately upset about the news Ed Brubaker leaving Winter Soldier:

Jason Latour Takes Command of the "Winter Soldier"

Ed Brubaker's "Winter Soldier" Farewell

*

I just watched the Giants lose and I feel like these replacement officials are going to be awful.

I also feel like I should write or answer comments or do something productive, but I think I'm just going to go watch The Mummy and wallow.

Someone should write the Steve/Bucky Mummy AU where Steve is Evie and Bucky is Rick. I'm just saying.

*
musesfool: Bucky Barnes as the Winter Soldier (if memory is a lie we tell ourselves)
Fruit is so confusing. The plums and nectarines I've bought this summer have been so good, and yet the peaches have been godawful. What's up with that?

*

Yesterday, I read Year Zero by Rick Reid. It's about how aliens have been illegally downloading and copying Earth music since the 70s, and now because they owe more in copyright infringement fines than there is money in the universe, they've come to earth to try to sort things out.

It's clever and cute and I laughed a few times, but I wish it had been more about music than it was. Or more something. And also, the narrator has some serious white/straight/middle-class/male blinders on, which made me cringe more than I'd have liked. I think my favorite thing is the various character playlists at the end.

Last night, I read Winter Soldier #8 but it was mostly setup and Bucky being angsty, so probably more enjoyable if you have a lot of Bucky and/or Bucky/Natasha feels, which I do, so I said, "Oh, Bucky" a few times.

I started reading A Superman for All Seasons on the train this morning, and 1. I kind of dislike the art a lot, or at least how Clark is drawn (he's potato-faced! Superman should not have a big potato head with tiny features!) and 2. the Kindle app comics reading thing is kind of a pain.

*

On the writing front, 14,000 words in, I have finally achieved makeouts. Whew. That was kind of exhausting. Now they won't stop talking. Sigh. But at least they're kissing while they're talking.

*

And finally, have some links:

- an interview with Anthony Russo, one of the directors of Captain America: The Winter Soldier (thanks to [personal profile] siria for the link). Doesn't really tell us anything we don't know already, but I thought this was interesting:

One reason why people coming from the television world work particularly well at Marvel is connected to one thing you were saying earlier: Marvel is a big company and they've made a lot of movies and these movies are connected to each other. That's not typical for a feature film. A lot of people who work in feature films, that whole concept is a little foreign, in the sense that you have to be thinking about predecessors in a very specific way. They aren't just prequels, there's a whole mythology that has preceded you. Television people are used to that because there's seasons and seasons of a show and this history is very important.

Also, they are supposedly having lunch with Ed Brubaker soon, which will hopefully mean he will consult on the script.

- An interesting interview with Ursula LeGuin (via [personal profile] cofax7)

- How Pearl Jam influenced the Gaslight Anthem's Handwritten, or, a brief interview with Brian Fallon:

The old songs still mean something to me, but they're not who I am now. The only option for me was to open up a notebook and start over. It was either do that or be the culmination of my influences for the rest of my life. With lyrics, my feeling was that it's too much work if I was going to keep going, "You gotta throw a little Van Morrison in there and a little Neil Young in there. You gotta put a little Sam Cooke in there." What was that communicating? That I liked those bands a lot? Our influences have music that already exists in the world. We don't need to be them. I'm not talking trash about our records. I think they're great. But they're not who I am anymore.

If you want longevity as a band these days, Pearl Jam's not a bad model to look at.

*

Lunch now, I think.

*
musesfool: bucky/natasha (is it in the fire that we collide?)
Links and stuff:

An interview with Michael Dante DiMartino and Bryan Konietzko about the season finale of Korra (link via [personal profile] cofax7). This contains spoilers for the penultimate episode (i.e., the one that aired last weekend) but nothing really for the finale itself. Also, season 2 will have 14 episodes.

Jim Parsons and Rihanna have been cast in Dreamworks' adaptation of The True Meaning of Smekday. (link via [personal profile] soupytwist) I AM EXCITE! If you haven't read The True Meaning of Smekday, you should. Go on. I'll wait. (here is my post about it) Because it is just that awesome. ♥TIP & J.LO♥

¶ There was a new Winter Soldier yesterday. Not a whole lot happened, but goddamn, the art is pretty (I guess technically those panels are spoilery). Also, it seems like they are making Bucky more and more handsome (and sometimes he kind of resembles Sebastian Stan, or I could just be projecting). spoilers ) OH, BUCKY... I draw a million sparkly hearts around you. And Natasha. And how awesome you are together.

Sometimes, I wonder if people who haven't read the comics think Bucky/Natasha is a total crack ship or something, instead of one of the best canon het ships I've ever had the pleasure of shipping. Though I guess they've probably picked up by osmosis that it's a thing that happens in the comics.

¶ Last night, I finished reading God's War by Kameron Hurley, which I thought was really good. It's like a mashup of noir, SF, horror, and war stories, featuring Nyx, our hardboiled badass lady bounty hunter protagonist, and the small team of desperate people she surrounds herself with (all of whom have secrets of their own) as she gets in over her head in some political machinations when she's just trying to make a living.

Nyx doesn't care if you like her - she doesn't much like herself most of the time - but she does care if you can pay her. She lives on a brutal world that's barely hospitable to human life and which has been torn apart by a holy war for as long as anyone can remember. Boys are a precious commodity sent to the front to fight, meaning women do everything else (and fight in the war, too), at least in Nasheen, where Nyx is from; there's magic and genesplicing and people can sell body parts and have new ones attached via magic. The planet has two suns and people routinely get scraped for melanomas. There's a lot of body horror and quite a bit of violence and gore, and oh god, the bugs. For once, I'm really glad I'm not much of a visual reader, because otherwise, I don't think I'd ever sleep from thinking about the bugs in this book. It's also one of the few futuristic worlds I've ever encountered where the culture is mostly based on Arabic/Semitic cultures. It also touches on themes of race, religion and gender in interesting ways.

The writing is decent - there's a weird pacing issue at the start that involves some setup and then a time jump that could have been handled better, I think - and there were some typographical errors in the kindle version I had, but overall I found it really compelling. Even when I wasn't sure if I liked any of the characters (it turns out I do), I still wanted to know what was going on and was annoyed every time I reached my subway stop and had to put the book away. I started the second book on this morning's commute, so we'll see how that goes.

*
musesfool: close up of the Chrysler Building (home)
Ugh, I am so tired. Work is hectic and this month I once again got my period on a 24 day cycle (i.e., today) instead of the usual 29-32 days. Bleh. So, in brief:

= RIP Ray Bradbury. I haven't read as much of his stuff as I probably should, but I did read "All Summer in a Day" at an impressionable age and I've never forgotten it. Which maybe explains some things about some of the story tropes I like best.

= Sometimes I think Ryan North has seen inside my head.

= I just finished Monstrous Regiment by Terry Pratchett and I enjoyed it immensely.

= Not only was Winter Soldier #6 awesome (♥BUCKY♥ ♥BUCKY/NATASHA♥), but I think it helped me figure out how to write the sequel to the barista!Bucky AU. Though spoiler )

= dear Avengers fandom,

Please look at a map of NYC when you write.

Stark Tower is where the MetLife building (or, to those of us who are old, the Pan Am Building) is in reality. This means it is right above Grand Central Station. It is on the east side of Manhattan, in midtown, occupying space at 200 Park Avenue between 44th & 45th Streets.

The SHIELD building at the end of Captain America is in Times Square. Also in the 40s, but on the west side.

Here are some maps.

Or be very vague. vague totally works.

I'm not saying I won't enjoy your story if you get this stuff wrong, but I will enjoy it less.

helpfully,

me

*

Ugh. I have to get up early for the board meeting tomorrow, so I think I'm gonna crash out now.

*
musesfool: Bucky Barnes in black and white (if i should fall behind)
I finished A River in the Sky the other day (Friday? I think?), which was the Amelia Peabody I hadn't read, and I enjoyed it, though I don't think it held up well as a story? I don't think there was a lot of there, there, but it did give me Ramses being off on his own (joined, eventually, by David), and I have to admit that what I want most now is the story of Ramses' war years. *hands*

Speaking of which, I have started Code Name Verity, as recommended by a couple of people, and so far I really like it. And! This morning when I turned on my iPad, Deadline Blackout, the third book in the Newsflesh trilogy, downloaded. I AM EXCITE.

Plus, I've been rereading Captain America and I have a bunch of Black Widow stuff to read, and oh, I read last week's Winter Soldier, which mostly gives me a lot of "Oh, Bucky" feels, which is pretty much all I ask for. (I am always amused when someone refers to him as Steve's boy.)

Speaking of Bucky, the other day, I was reading a story about Steve and his angst about everything he's lost, and it was pretty well written except for one HUGE GLARING OVERSIGHT. Like, he spent a lot of time mourning Peggy and Howard, but there was not even ONE MENTION of Bucky. And I was just like, "Really? Seriously?" And I clicked out of the story.

Leaving all shipping concerns aside, I just don't understand how in a story about all the things Steve has lost, someone could completely neglect to mention the loss of his best friend, which is something that doesn't happen all that long before he hits the ice, and something he didn't have a whole lot of time to mourn/get over, and oh yeah, something he blames himself for (Peggy's advice notwithstanding).

minor spoiler for Avengers ) I feel like leaving it out of fic that is from Steve's POV - and that is explicitly about everything he's lost - is just poor characterization.

Another thing I've noticed - though a lot less since I don't read a lot that is Tony-centric - is the almost complete absence of Maria Stark. Tony didn't spring fully grown from Howard's forehead, but you'd think so just going by how often anyone mentions her.

*

Let us not even discuss the debacle that was last night's Rangers game. Sigh.

*
musesfool: Bucky Barnes as the Winter Soldier (if memory is a lie we tell ourselves)
[personal profile] angelgazing pointed this poem out to me and I was like, "YES. AWESOME." I can't even pick out a favorite line because there are so many.

Monet Refuses the Operation

Doctor, you say there are no haloes
around the streetlights in Paris
and what I see is an aberration
caused by old age, an affliction.
I tell you it has taken me all my life
to arrive at the vision of gas lamps as angels,
to soften and blur and finally banish
the edges you regret I don't see,
to learn that the line I called the horizon
does not exist and sky and water,
so long apart, are the same state of being.
Fifty-four years before I could see
Rouen cathedral is built
of parallel shafts of sun,
and now you want to restore
my youthful errors: fixed
notions of top and bottom,
the illusion of three-dimensional space,
wisteria separate
from the bridge it covers.
What can I say to convince you
the Houses of Parliament dissolves
night after night to become
the fluid dream of the Thames?
I will not return to a universe
of objects that don't know each other,
as if islands were not the lost children
of one great continent. The world
is flux, and light becomes what it touches,
becomes water, lilies on water,
above and below water,
becomes lilac and mauve and yellow
and white and cerulean lamps,
small fists passing sunlight
so quickly to one another
that it would take long, streaming hair
inside my brush to catch it.
To paint the speed of light!
Our weighted shapes, these verticals,
burn to mix with air
and change our bones, skin, clothes
to gases. Doctor,
if only you could see
how heaven pulls earth into its arms
and how infinitely the heart expands
to claim this world, blue vapor without end.

~Lisel Mueller

***

Last night, I dreamt I was watching an ALL NEW, ALL MUSICAL episode of The Middleman. When I woke up, I was so sad it wasn't real.

Which reminds me - you know that bit in the pilot where Wendy and MM have this exchange:

Wendy: Did you mean what you said? That if there's one thing you hate more than scientists trying to take over the world, it's scientists who twist innocent primates with computer-enhanced mind control to live out their sick and perverted fantasies of criminal power?
The Middleman: Why would I lie about that?
Wendy: It's just a very specific thing to hate.
The Middleman: Self-knowledge is the gateway to freedom.

I totally want the crossover with Winter Soldier where MM teams up with Bucky and Natasha to fight mind controlled gun wielding gorillas. You KNOW it would be awesome. And it would explain MM's very specific hate! You should totally write that for me.

Speaking of Winter Soldier, #4 came out yesterday. spoilers I guess )

What I really want is an issue where Bucky and Natasha laze around in bed having sex and banter. You think Brubaker's got something like that cooking for an upcoming issue?

Also, I don't think I like the new reader from comixology - it does that thing where it zooms in on each panel in the order you're meant to read them rather than just letting you see the whole page and studying it as you wish. Like, I get that I am bad at parsing the art, but I don't need a program to tell me the order to read the panels.

As an aside, it looks like all of Jaime Reyes' original Blue Beetle run is now available digitally. If you haven't read it, I would highly, highly recommend it.

I didn't watch the livestream of the Avengers premiere last night, but I enjoyed all the cast pics etc. that appeared on tumblr. I am going to have to either stay off tumblr or t.s. avengers soon to avoid being spoiled. Sigh. My life, so hard.

***

Rangers v. Senators tonight! I am excited! I need them to go deep into the playoffs to distract from the unending cavalcade of calamity that is the Mets.

***
musesfool: Bucky Barnes in black and white (if i should fall behind)
Work was busy today and looks like tomorrow and Friday will be as well, but in between that, I was able to sneak looks at tumblr, and while I enjoyed all the new Avengers gifs, apparently today was ALL BUCKY FEELS ALL THE TIME on my dash. Possibly the sheer mass of Bucky feels today is what broke tumblr. I am just saying.

Since tumblr is currently down, you can't see it now, but this graphic of Steve and Bucky reaching for each other as Bucky falls kind of broke me. [personal profile] trelkez's vid Sorrow finished the job, leaving me a teary, broken wreck.

On the plus side, he doesn't stay dead! Winter Soldier #3 came out today, and while it was mostly set up, it did have a couple nice Bucky/Natasha moments. And I finally uploaded a couple Black Widow icons! Which I am not using on this post because it is still ALL BUCKY FEELS ALL THE TIME up in here.

And I booked my ticket for my trip to see [personal profile] devildoll, so we can see Avengers together as many times as possible in 3.5 days. And each time I will whisper a little wish to the universe that we get a Winter Soldier movie, because that would make me so happy. But yes, if you hear ridiculously loud squeeing from somewhere in the midwest during that weekend, that will probably be us.

In non-Avengers related news, I'd pre-ordered Song of Achilles by Madeline Miller, and it came out this week, so I interrupted the book I was reading to start reading this, because it's the story of Achilles and Patroclus from Patroclus' POV, which is something I am very interested in. I like it so far, and I just got to the part where Achilles basically asks Patroclus to go steady and I kind of cooed at my iPad and then clutched it to my chest because they are such precious darlings and I just want them to be happy. And I was telling [personal profile] devildoll about it and I was like, "I'll let you know if you should read it when I finish," and then I was like, "Well, there's no way the ending could be worse than the original story, right?"

I swear, I don't go looking for tragical BFF OTPs. They just kind of happen to me.

ANYWAY.

Here is the poem my Natasha icon keywords come from, because yes:

You Will Hear Thunder

You will hear thunder and remember me,
And think: she wanted storms. The rim
Of the sky will be the colour of hard crimson,
And your heart, as it was then, will be on fire.

That day in Moscow, it will all come true,
when, for the last time, I take my leave,
And hasten to the heights that I have longed for,
Leaving my shadow still to be with you.

~Anna Akhmatova
Trans?

***

I guess with tumblr down, I might actually get some writing done.

***
musesfool: nightwing/red hood (that's when i reach for my revolver)
Yesterday on my train ride home, I finished Galore by Michael Crummey, which is about six (I think?) generations of fishermen in a hardscrabble Newfoundland town; it covers the Devine & Sellers families from the Napoleonic Wars through WWI. I would categorize it as magic realism - it begins when a whale beached on the shore is cut open and a still-living man is found amid everything else inside the whale's gut.

The writing is really lovely, though you have to deal with the fact that Crummey chooses not to use quotation marks around his dialogue - that, along with the generational focus and family feuds in a very specific place gave the whole thing a real Faulknerian feel to me (King-me Sellers reminded me a lot of Thomas Sutpen, actually, and the fact that his grandson is named Absalom only made the connection stronger in my mind), which for me is an upside, but which may be a downside for you.

I thought the book was strongest in its first section, because Devine's Widow and Mary Tryphena and Callum and Lizzie and King-me and Father Phelan are the strongest characters in the book, and when the story moves past them to the next generation, it loses a lot of immediacy and power, at least for me. The only other character who really pops off the page like that afterward is Bride, and she also fades away during Eli and Tryphie's stories.

I would give this book 2.5 stars for really lovely writing and an amazing evocation of a particular place but I never really engaged emotionally with the characters once that first set was gone, so I can't really rate it higher.

Then last night was for reading comics. Winter Soldier #2 came out yesterday, so I read that. It contained one of the best sentences ever written in the English language. I suppose it is technically a spoiler, though it is worth being spoiled for for the HILARITY. spoilers ) Anyway, I enjoyed it very much and hope they keep it up.

So I went from that excellence to catching up on Red Hood and the Outlaws. Which. WHY? WHY IS IT SO TERRIBLE? The art is SO PRETTY (ZOMG JASON. SO PRETTY and SO NAKED. I also can't get over how much Rocafort makes him look like Bruce. It is a little scary, really.) but ugh, it's like getting smacked in the face with BADNESS every time they focus on Kory. (There are other issues as well, but that is the one that looms over everything, to me.) spoilers ) though I'm confused because of the ridiculous compressed timeline.

Mostly because I also caught up on Nightwing and hey, Dick Grayson grew up in the circus! I bet you didn't know that! (FUCK YOU, HE'S AN ACROBAT!) and spoilers )

Reading this mostly made me want the Spider-man/Nightwing teamup more than ever, because I feel like that is the best of all possible crossover team-ups for sheer punnery and also eating pizza while hanging upside down from gargoyles. Though I would also accept Peter Parker/Jaime Reyes because nerdy bug men who make many pop culture references for the win! (I clearly have a type. I don't know why this surprises anyone.) (Otoh, I think my crossover OTP has to still be Wonder Woman/Captain America, because OMG YES. Though Zinda Blake/Steve Rogers is ALSO an acceptable xover OTP, and any combination of Jason, Dick, and Bucky is bound to be a good time. I also want the movie/comics crossover where Darcy gets rescued by Nightwing and everybody's like, "That guy doesn't exist!" and then the next time she sees him, Natasha's with her, and well, you know Dick/badass redheads=OTP, and Natasha would just be SO UNIMPRESSED. SOMEONE WRITE THIS FOR ME NOW!)

I suppose I will eventually catch up on other Batman stuff to see what's up with Damian.

Did you see they cast Katie Cassidy as someone who is probably Dinah Lance in that Green Arrow show on the CW? I mentally cast Yvonne Strahovski as Dinah, but I guess Katie Cassidy's not a bad choice.

***

Last night, I dreamt that I was working with Peter Burke and Neal Caffrey to infiltrate Tony Soprano's family and we were trying to get Dr. Melfi to break doctor-patient confidentiality, and also sneak into a family party. Sadly, I never got to say, "So, what, no fucking ziti now?" which shows a sad lack of initiative on the part of my brain.

***
musesfool: Bucky Barnes as the Winter Soldier (if memory is a lie we tell ourselves)
holy crap, i have had a lot of wine. I met [livejournal.com profile] fleurdeleo at our favorite recently reopened restaurant and there was dinner and wine and nutella crepes for dessert and so I'm a little tipsy and a lot sleepy. Last night, I went to bed at 9:30 because of that low-grade fever and I basically slept through until my alarm, which was amazing - 10 hours of sleep on a work night! - but which kind of tells me I must have needed it, because I didn't get the usual headache from sleeping more than 8 hours. I don't know. I just know it was a good night's sleep. I missed White Collar, though. I guess I'll watch it eventually. It's not really something I worry about being spoiled for.

Also, you know what came out today? Winter Soldier #1. ♥BUCKY♥ ♥NATASHA♥ ♥BUCKY/NATASHA♥! I love their relationship SO MUCH. (though I still want him and Steve to have CLANDESTINE MAKEOUTS. Why is there not more Steve/Bucky/Natasha? WHY?) I love how impressed with her he always is. I actually paid money for it and I enjoyed it, though goddamn I hate serialized storytelling. GIVE ME THE WHOLE STORY AT ONCE, YOU FUCKERS. LET ME READ IT AT MY OWN PACE. AHEM.

Mostly I am just all ♥BUCKY♥ because, well, BUCKY. Getting his own book. And unlike when Jason got his own book, it's actually not enraging. I really do need a Natasha icon, because she is a BAMF.

***

Also, I have been searching around for an LJ layout that I find acceptable, because I couldn't take that super fugly Minimalism Georgia one even with the comment pages coded to look like the old ones. I like the layout I chose this morning, but there must be some way to make both the sidebar and the entry area slightly wider. Anyone know the CSS to do that and can share?

***

Now I just need to stay awake long enough to sober up, and then I can go to bed. (If I go to bed now, I will just wake up in a couple of hours, unable to sleep.)

***

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i did it all for the robins

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