kate_nepveu: sleeping cat carved in brown wood (Default)
[personal profile] kate_nepveu

Panel the first! As soon as the con is done I must dive back into work, so I'm trying to be very prompt and quick about panel notes.

Lois, Megan, and Tammy; Miles, Gen, and Alanna
Bethany Powell, Kate Nepveu (moderator), Marissa Lingen, Sophia Babai, Victoria Janssen

Fans of Lois McMaster Bujold often speak of both Megan Whalen Turner and Tamora Pierce in the same breath, saying their writing and characterization feel the same, that these women are writing in the same vein, scratching the same itch for their readers. Why are these writers being grouped together by fans? How are their works in conversation with each other? Are there additional authors and series that belong on the same list?

As usual, my notes are sketchy when I'm moderating and it's easiest for me to remember what I've said. Also I turned into a pumpkin some time ago this evening. Please correct me if I've misremembered something or ask if I've been too cryptic. Or, you know, just chime in!

panel notes

I opened by saying that most of us were a little puzzled by the premise of the panel.

Bethany had been recommended Vorkosigan via the Queen's Thief fandom as, if you like trickster stories...

Marissa thought that, on reflection, all three had a Dorothy Dunnett influence: very chiaroscuro, high highs and low lows, especially in the YA context when Turner and Pierce started. Also all very concerned about the apparatus of the state.

(Sophia, later: all very interested in the connections between the personal and the political.)

Victoria noted that all three have a lot of characters getting through traumas and being really dramatically changed by it, which can be very compelling especially if you're reading in a fandom.

Sophia thought there was more Dunnett-esque stuff in Pierce's Emelan books, in terms of the character Briar and the worldbuilding. Unfortunately two of the Circle Opens books (Magic Steps and Street Magic) are virulently racist, far beyond the kind of bog-standard racism of the Alanna quartet or Turner's treatment of the various thinly veiled historical inspirations in her series.

I asked what else people might caveat their recommendations of these three authors for.

Bethany: a friend really dislikes narrators withholding information and therefore could not with The Thief.

Many people noted the extremely ... difficult to characterize without major spoilers but morally complex and troubling ... nature of Queen of Attolia, the second Turner book.

Marissa: there's a lot of sexual violence in the Vorkosigan series. Also, to shift to Bujold's other major world, the Chalion-verse, takes place in a setting in which the clear Islamic analogue is demonstrably wrong. Me: yeah, it was a bad day when I learned that The Curse of Chalion—which I'd really enjoyed!—was "what if Isabella and Ferdinand were awesome?"

Someone pointed out, possibly also Marissa, that one thing that those works shared with Pierce and Turner were pantheons with pretty personal relationships with the characters.

Somewhere I noted that I hadn't remembered the last book of the Queen's Thief series at all, and I'd just reread it last night. It was interesting that the narrator of that is also a physically disabled young man in an aristocratic society, but in a very different way than Miles.

An audience member asked about the famous Bujold writing advice of thinking of the worst thing you can do to your character and then doing it. Marissa: terrible advice. Often what writers think of as "the worst" are very common things, none of which is really the worst, either specific to that character or in general. (Me: I'm relistening to The Odyssey and every time Odysseus says he's suffered like no-one else ever, I'm like, what about the slaves you've taken from the cities you've sacked?) Should be something like, of the things that it would be interesting to have happen to your character, do the worst of them.

Sophia, I think: Queen of Attolia is about what the character thinks the worst thing would be and then what it actually is.

A number of other authors and works were suggested:

Victoria, I think Marissa, and I all suggested Elizabeth Wein. Victoria suggested The Sunbird, particularly since it does move from Britain-or-equivalent to Africa-or-equivalent. I caveated that the first book of the series is even more incest than one would expect from Arthuriana. I also recommended Code Name Verity for the Lymond protagonist; caveat, it's World War II.

Sophia: some actual Indian writers: Indra Das; Mad Sisters of Esi by Tashan Mehta. Also if you've seen me on a panel before, you've already heard me say it, but The Saint of Bright Doors by Vajra Chandrasekera.

Marissa: Ellen Kushner. Caroline Stevermer. (I would not have thought of Stevermer, who I adore, in this context, but everyone should read When the King Comes Home anyway.)

? Bethany: The Poet Empress by Shen Tao, dark and messed up (my paraphrase even more than usual!)

Sophia: She Who Became the Sun, Shelley Parker-Chan

audience: T. Kingfisher? me: Pierce yes, very interested in craft and competence. not sure about the others.

audience: withholding narrators?

Sophia: We Have Always Lived in the Castle, Shirley Jackson. Gone Girl, Gillian Flynn.

Me: a little bit The Incandescent by Emily Tesh but it's third person so it doesn't seem the same as The Thief. Some Desperate Glory is wonderfully unreliable in a totally different way.

someone, possibly from the audience: The Raven Tower, Ann Leckie (also interesting gods). also the Imperial Radch trilogy (me: more than once, we only know the narrator's crying because someone asks her about it! why should she tell us such a thing?)

someone recommends The Captive Prince trilogy by C.S. Pascat. (Caveats: slavery; racism.)

Bethany: The Wings Upon Her Back by Samantha Mills.

Marissa: Dunnett starter rec, standalone historical King Hereafter, which is Macbeth without Shakespeare.

(Also an audience member, possibly the one who'd put the panel suggestion in? had a very kind compliment about the discussion.)

And that was time.

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Media Roundup: Lots of Thoughts

Jul. 9th, 2026 02:19 pm
forestofglory: Cup of tea on a pile of books (books)
[personal profile] forestofglory
It hasn’t been that long since the last media roundup and I haven't read that much but I had lots of thoughts that I wanted to share, so have a post:

Hirayasumi, vol 3+4 by Keigo Shinzō— This continues to be very charming. I’m loving all the little details.The cityscapes here feel so warm and lived in! I'm not sure if it's a slice of life manga thing, a manga thing or just an artifact of my limited selection but I've been really enjoying the land/cityscapes in the slice of life manga I've been reading recently
Content note: fatphobia/diet culture

Silver Spoon, vol 14-15 by Hiromu Arakawa— I’m working on a rec list of slice of life manga and I was reminded that I’ve never read the last two volumes of this series. I'd always meant to reread the rest of the series but that felt like too much of a project. So I ended up just reading these last two volumes – it wasn’t that hard to pick up, there’s helpful story summary in the front of each volume.

This is a charming story about a city kid who goes to an ag high school to get away from everything. I love all the details and about farming, food equipment and rural life. I thought it wrapped up nicely!

Batman: Wayne Family Adventures, Vol. 1 by C.R.C. Payne, StarBite, et al— I’ve been meaning to read this for a long time, and it was mentioned in the comments of my superhero comics rec list, so I finally got around to it. I ended up getting it on paper because the endless scroll webtoon format isn’t great for my hands.

It’s like a cute slice of life comic about the batfam. It’s got a very fic vibe, things are chill and everyone more or less gets along. Which sounds like exactly what I want in a batfam comic but for this first volume at least, felt a little flat actually. I wanted a bit more conflict or angst or something. I’m generally pretty happy with low conflict personal stakes stuff, but I guess these versions of the character feel a little shallow. Each story is so short, like five pages, its just hard to get much depth in that length.

(I’ll probably read some more of this because it is cute and free online. Maybe if I space out the episodes more it will not only not bother my hands as much but feel less bland.

X-men: The Animated Series season 1— Since I'm more open to Superhero media these days, R suggested we watch this animated series from the 90’s. It’s fun! I like that it's got a big team, though it does mean most characters don’t get much screentime. I also like that they are pretty much just fighting for mutant civil rights. There’s a lot less for me to suspend my moral disbelief about here than in most superhero stories I’ve encountered recently.

Things

Jul. 9th, 2026 01:45 pm
vass: Small turtle with green leaf in its mouth (Default)
[personal profile] vass
Books

Finished listening to the audiobook of Monkey King (abridged, Monkey-centric, version of Journey to the West translated by Julia Lovell, narrated by Kevin Shen.) It was very fun.

Tech
Dug out the soldering iron etc that I bought years ago with the annual intention of learning electronics this year. Now to check whether they work and haven't become damaged over two moves and mumble years of storage.

Shall We Try Typing?

Jul. 8th, 2026 05:51 pm
hrj: (Default)
[personal profile] hrj
I had my first physical therapy appointment today, though I've been doing some exercises 3x per day since last Thursday (cast-off day). She took measurements of various angles of range-of-motion and set up a more tailored set of exercises. Turns out there's an app for that: has a list of the exercises with demonstration videos and timers. I like that.

I got praise for my exercise technique (including having done a lot of finger work even before the cast came off). Typing as therapy is approved. I got clarification on the timeline for weight-bearing. (Timeline started at the operation, so I'm already up to 2-3 lbs occasionally.) The brace is only for extra protection when I feel I need it, plus at night. (I think they assume I flail around more in my sleep than I actually do.) I have a compression glove for general wear, which will help with mobility as swelling is part of what I need to overcome.

I have follow-up appointments weekly for the rest of the month to assess progress and adjust exercises. Yesterday I went to the gym for treadmill time, which I plan to make a daily thing.

The typing is slow and slightly painful, but my key-accuracy is much better than my first attempt several days ago. And last night I pulled out my almost-finished socks and did the cast-off (which I've been joking about for some time).
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[personal profile] renay posting in [community profile] ladybusiness
We're halfway through 2026! Read more... )

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Jul. 4th, 2026 10:00 am
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[personal profile] ursula
A couple of recent newsletter posts:


  • This one has a link to my Romancing the Vote offering, an annotated copy of North Continent Ribbon, and a couple of photos of model ships made during the Napoleonic Wars.
  • This one starts with some notes about why newsletters cost money and ends with information about how to criticize a proposed rule that would give US political appointees total control over science funding.
kate_nepveu: sleeping cat carved in brown wood (Default)
[personal profile] kate_nepveu

* waves feebly *

Here's my Readercon schedule, which I'll also put behind the cut:

Readercon schedule

Friday, July 10, 2026
18:00
Lois, Megan, and Tammy; Miles, Gen, and Alanna
Salon A-B, Duration: 60 mins
Bethany Powell, Kate Nepveu (moderator), Marissa Lingen, Sophia Babai, Victoria Janssen

Fans of Lois McMaster Bujold often speak of both Megan Whalen Turner and Tamora Pierce in the same breath, saying their writing and characterization feel the same, that these women are writing in the same vein, scratching the same itch for their readers. Why are these writers being grouped together by fans? How are their works in conversation with each other? Are there additional authors and series that belong on the same list?

Saturday, July 11, 2026
12:00
Building a Seven Stories Mountain
Create - Collaborate, Duration: 60 mins
Graham Sleight, Kate Nepveu, Katherine Karch, R.W.W. Greene (moderator), Rich Horton

Powerful, literary aliens, flattered by our interest in worlds not our own, show up in Earth orbit and demand we choose seven spec-fic books that represent honestly the pros and cons of humans as a species. Lies, omissions, and puffery will be met with extermination. What list of essential (existential!) reading will this panel generate, and what will that list say about how we see ourselves?

Saturday, July 11, 2026
19:00
Miles to Go: The Vorkosigan Saga at 40
Salon A-B, Duration: 60 mins
Ian Strock, Kate Nepveu (moderator), Katherine Crighton, Meredith Schwartz

This year marks the 40th anniversary of Lois McMaster Bujold's Vorkosigan Saga! Miles Vorkosigan and his parents Cordelia and Aral have fascinated readers for four decades of compulsively readable books that offer lessons on biology, engineering, manners, shenanigans, and the argument that societies are shaped (and reshaped) by reproductive rights and control. What have we learned from the Vorkosigans, and what are we still learning? What dreams from the Saga are still on our horizon?

Sunday, July 12, 2026
11:00
The Odyssey in 2026
Salon A-B, Duration: 60 mins
Charles Allison (moderator), Kate Nepveu, Kenneth Schneyer, Sonya Taaffe

Homer's Odyssey is having a moment: a new major translation by Daniel Mendelsohn (following other major ones by Emily Wilson and Peter Green), a recent movie starring Ralph Fiennes and Juliette Binoche (The Return), a musical adaptation that is a social media sensation (Epic), and a forthcoming blockbuster movie written and directed by Christopher Nolan. What aspects are these translations and adaptations highlighting compared to past versions, and what elements are ripe for more attention?

Sunday, July 12, 2026
14:00
Things Everyone Likes But You
Salon E, Duration: 60 mins
Casella Brookins, John Kessel, Kate Nepveu (moderator), Katherine Karch, Tracy Majka

We all love talking about books we love, but you know what else is fun? Complaining about books everyone else loves. This curmudgeonly panel will discuss some of the most popular, beloved works that they just can't stand.

I also booklogged! Twice!

* whooshes away to do more of the many things what need doing *

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Media Roundup: Lots of Short Things

Jul. 3rd, 2026 11:05 am
forestofglory: E. H. Shepard drawing of Christopher Robin reading a book to Pooh (Default)
[personal profile] forestofglory
Another Media Roundup, less than a week after the last one? More likely than you think! As the title of this post says I have a bunch of short and quick reads to talk about.

The Faraway Forest: Wally’s Route by Debbie Fong—This is an early reader graphic novel about a raccoon mail carrier. It's very sweet and has fun colorful art. It's not very long so there's not much else to say about it.

Batman/Superman: World's Finest issues 1-12 by Mark Waid, Dan Mora, et al. —I was trying to explain to R the other day that comics have their own brand of weirdness, but I couldn't articulate what set it apart just vibes. Anyways this has the comic weirdness vibes. There's parallel worlds, time travel, ancient Chinese villains (and heroes), rooms full doorways, ect. I generally like this kind of weirdness though, so this was fun to read.

It's set “some years ago” when Dick is still Robin. (I briefly tried to figure out how it fits into continuity, then I remembered that continuity does make any sense) I like the way Dick is written here. He's a little goofy and a little snarky – it feels right for him at that age. Kara/Supergirl is also here and a lot of fun!

Supergirl: Being Super by Mariko Tamaki, and Joëlle Jones—I liked This Place Kills Me a lot and wanted to check out the author's other works. I read a few things she wrote a while back but she's written a lot more since then! This was pretty good. I guess teen girls are Tamaki’s thing because teen girls and their friendship was also central to this book.
Content Notes are Spoilers death of a teen as a major plot point


A True Wonder: The Comic Book Hero Who Changed Everything by Kirsten W. Larson and Katy Wu—This non-fiction comic about the history of Wonder Woman is the size and shape of a picture book and aimed at young readers. As such it's not very detailed or nuanced but it is quite charming. I do find the straightforward “progress” narrative a little bit frustrating though.

How to Draw Comics the Marvel Way by Stan Lee and John Buscema—This book from 1978 was referenced in some of the non-fiction about comics I read, and I was curious. It turned out to be a quick read with lots of pictures written in a very breezy style. One of the things I’ve been unsure about in discussion about comics history is references to “superhero comic style” – I had only a vague idea what that meant. This book has given me a much clearer idea. Also wow the sexism built into that style leaps off the page here! Men are angular and muscular, while women are soft and curvy. Still helpful for my quest to better understand comics history.

Perspective! for Comic Book Artists: How to Achieve a Professional Look in your Artwork by David ChelseaI— More non-fiction about comics. How to books aren’t always the best for learning how to be a more nuanced reader unfortunately. This is very technical, and what I really wanted was some discussion out how perspective can be used in comics and how that’s different from other visual arts. Oh well, I shouldn’t really complain that this book was exactly what it said it would be.

Things

Jul. 4th, 2026 02:52 am
vass: Small turtle with green leaf in its mouth (Default)
[personal profile] vass
Books
Short fiction: read Malka Older's 'Narrative Disorder' (2017) and Samantha Mills' '10 Visions of the Future; or, Self-Care for the End of Days' (2025).

Apart from that, I've been reading audiobooks lately:

Read Rick Morton's My Year of Living Vulnerably, about CPTSD and the meaning of love, and had emotions.

Read Casey Johnston's A Physical Education, about her journey from a very unhappy relationship with her body/food/exercise to something much happier, via weightlifting.

I expected a lot of information I already had, of the "Women! Scared lifting weights will make you 'too bulky'? It won't, and here's why..." kind. It did contain that, but also more interesting (to me) reflections on the politics and class aspects of lifting, and physical coordination in compound lifts (I was already on board with the importance of squats and deadlifts, but this particular angle on them, of one's body communicating with itself, was one I hadn't encountered before, and I'm intrigued.)

Read Randolph Stow's 1980 novel The girl green as elderflower. The only Stow I'd read before this was his Midnite.

The girl green as elderflower is odd (approving). It's haunting. It draws heavily both on Stow's own experiences of having both malaria and a mental breakdown in Papua New Guinea, and on the mediaeval folklore of Suffolk (as recorded by Ralph of Coggeshall et al.) It's very funny in parts. It's deeply about trauma, spoken and unspoken, and the shape of the unspoken trauma is definitely related to his sexuality.

It's also deeply about the weird thing that is the relationship/connection/thing many people of British (acknowledging the complexity of using that term, but I really don't know what word to use) descent, born in former British colonies, have with the lands our settler ancestors came from.

Started reading Monkey King, Julia Lovell's modern, lively, and very heavily abridged translation of Journey to the West, narrated by Kevin Shen, who does all the voices.

I've never read Journey to the West before, and this is a very fun introduction.

Weather
Wetter and colder. I'm not in one of the parts of the state that's currently under flood warnings, so that's something to be grateful for.

Games
Mainly playing little puzzle games on my phone. Sliding blocks, word games, sudoku etc.

Misc
Got out some rope and an online guide and spent half an hour or so trying to brush up on my knots.

Went to Naarm/Melb to visit a friend for her birthday.

News
*wince*

Tech
On a whim dug out my old iPhone from eleven years ago and charged it up and turned it on.

Not having any internet access, it thought it was still 2015. My own little time capsule.

It was very plus ça change etc. I had been reading about trauma, reading the news, playing little puzzle games, and trying to brush up on my knots...

Cats
Dorian's been trying to perform an intervention on me re screen time. It's not going well, but I appreciate the care.

Romancing the Vote 2026 Auction

Jul. 2nd, 2026 12:48 pm
hrj: (Default)
[personal profile] hrj
There's another Romancing the Vote fundraising auction in support of voting accessibility going on right now. I donated three items: two knitted items which are getting some nice bids, and my usual lesbian history research donation, which I've offered to previous times. So far, the research donation only has the minimum bid offered which frankly is a steal for what the winning bidder will get. Here's the description that I wrote up for the item.

# # #

Heather Rose Jones, the proprietor of the Lesbian Historic Motif Project blog and podcast (and author of historic fiction) will provide focused research or consultation about the historic and social context of women-loving-women in your chosen setting. This could take any of several forms.

1) A research essay of at least 5000 words providing information on attitudes, practices, and evidence relating to romantic or sexual relations between women in your chosen setting, plus bibliography for further research. (For an abbreviated sample, see this essay on the English Regency: https://alpennia.com/blog/guide-sapphic-regency-lesbian-historic-motif-podcast-episode-342)

2) Critique and feedback from a historian's perspective on a work (anything from outline to finished draft) with respect to the representation of f/f romantic or sexual relationships in that work. (Not setting a word limit on what I'm critiquing, but be realistic.)

3) A zoom chat to discuss your interests and research needs, with follow-up notes and bibliography.

4) Any other format mutually agreed on.

I focus on pre-20th century history, primarily Europe/North America and the Mediterranean. The extent of what can be provided is affected by the available historic data. Caveat: I’m currently dealing with a broken arm, which interferes with extensive typing, so I would start work in August at the earliest.

# # #

The first time I offered this, the winning bidder asked for the English Regency and I ended up writing a 20,000 word essay plus extensive bibliography. You can find this item on the auction website at the following URL. If you aren't already signed up for the romancing the vote auctions, then you'll need to make an account.

And, of course, there are lots of other really cool items in the auction!

https://www.32auctions.com/organizations/74830/auctions/200913/auction_items/7034230

Cast Off, Brace On

Jul. 2nd, 2026 12:35 pm
hrj: (Default)
[personal profile] hrj
As scheduled, the pretty green fiberglass cast came off today and now I wear a removable wrist brace that looks very much like one you'd get for a minor sprain. I'm supposed to wear the brace all the time except when washing up or when doing my physical therapy. Needless to say, one of the first things I did was a nice long hot shower that involves a lot of scrubbing away dead skin on the affected arm. One thing they don't necessarily warn you about in advance is that you build up a lot of un-shed skin under the cast or on body parts you aren't interacting with regularly. It felt like I was shedding more skin than usual from the fingers on my affected hand. The skin would get dry and crusty and so I had to soak in substantial amounts of hand lotion which then would help me rub off some of the shedding. But today's shower involved a lot of just gentle rubbing of the skin to get caught up on the process.

So now I have a set of stretching exercises to do three times a day and a physical therapy appointment for next week which I assume will involve additional work. There's another follow up appointment with orthopedics at the end of July to check up on progress. The physical therapy instructions include a rough timeline on how much weight I'm allowed to manipulate with my affected arm. Basically, nothing more than a coffee cup for the first four weeks then I can add a couple more pounds for the next couple weeks and more after that. Non-weight-bearing manipulations are OK to whatever extent I feel comfortable.

I asked about bicycling and we had a bit of a failure to communicate because initially they thought I was talking about a stationary exercise bike and said it was OK as long as I wasn't leaning on the affected wrist. But then when we were talking about locations of appointments and I made a reference to bicycling to the appointment I got a "whoa wait a minute" reaction and we clarified that I thought we were talking about my recumbent tricycle whereas they didn't want me to do anything that might involve collision risk or the like. Oh well. So now that I have the cast off and I don't feel quite so off balance, I think I'll substitute going off to the gym and putting in treadmill time every day just because I feel like I need the exercise. Yay for audiobook time!
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[personal profile] forestofglory
In which I have many opinions about comics and then rec some of them!

You can check it out here!
forestofglory: A green pony with a braided mane and tail and tree cutie mark (Lady Business)
[personal profile] forestofglory posting in [community profile] ladybusiness
I have been on a reading journey that has taken me to the land of superhero comics. It started during a stressful time when I ended up reading a ton of fic about the Batfam (Batman and his various allies/sidekicks/semi-adopted semi-feral children), and accidentally got really into the fandom. (Reading a lot of stories that focused on found family but didn’t have romance was extremely soothing.) It was my original intent to just read fic and not bother with any of the source material. But I have slowly gotten sucked in.

Read more... )

Sidetracks - June 29, 2026

Jun. 29th, 2026 06:37 pm
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[personal profile] helloladies posting in [community profile] ladybusiness
Sidetracks is a collaborative project featuring various essays, videos, reviews, or other Internet content that we want to share. All past and current links for the Sidetracks project can be found in our Sidetracks tag. You can also support Sidetracks and our other work on Patreon.


Read more... )

Why aren't I reading more books?

Jun. 27th, 2026 04:38 pm
hrj: (Default)
[personal profile] hrj
You would think, what with the broken arm thing, that I would have all this free time to spend reading. But that doesn't account for the logistics of *how* I read and how the broken arm interacts with that.

Let's look at my three basic reading format: print, e-book, and audio. My primary context for listening to audiobooks is while bicycling. Obviously, I'm not bicycling currently. I do sometimes listen to audiobooks around the house while gardening or doing house work, but those activities are also curtailed at the moment.

What about print? Well as it happens it's a little bit hard to hold a book and turn pages with only one functional hand. I've gotten a little bit of hardcopy reading done by using a stand to hold the book but it's very awkward and not at all relaxing.

That leaves us with e-books, and the usual issue with e-books is that my brain only has a certain budget of screen time before it gets tired. I'm using screen time for LHMP work and for vegging in front of the TV when I just get too tired for anything else. (Being broken is simply tiring.)

So all in all, although I have plenty of time for reading due to not being able to do other activities, I'm blocked from my normal reading contexts. On the bright side, the cast is supposed to come off on Thursday, after which we'll see how quickly I can get back to normal.

Media Roundup: Library Mini Challenge

Jun. 27th, 2026 11:15 am
forestofglory: Cup of tea on a pile of books (books)
[personal profile] forestofglory
I was feeling very stressed out by my library pile last week so I set myself a goal of reading 4 books form it this week (stretch goal seven). I in fact read 8 library books! Go me! (Of course I got excited and put in to many holds and now I have 8 things to pick up on Monday so it doesn't exactly feel like progress -- maybe I can finish one or two more things before then)

The Truth season 4 has been airing for a bit but I have only manged to watch half of the first episode -- maybe if I get my library pile more under control I set myself a goal of getting caught up -- or at least actually watching some of it.

Anyways here are some thoughts on my recent reading

Yokohama Kaidashi Kikou: Deluxe Edition, Vol. 1 by Hitoshi Ashinano, trans Daniel Komen—Post apocalyptic slice of life manga about a robot who runs a coffee shop in a small town. It’s not explained what happened but there are lots of panels of falling apart roads and other ruins. I know several people who love this, but I merely liked it, which feels a little disappointing. It’s sweet and chill, but honestly I found the lack of explanations a bit distracting.

Nezha 2—I watched this with my group watch Discord (we’ve been trying to do movie night again for a while and it finally worked out) This movie is so pretty! I see why people were raving about the animation. Also lots of cool fights! And I really enjoy the way this movie cares about family relationships and includes a lot of touching parent+child moments.
Content notes are spoilerishChild death, mass murder, material death


A Comics Studies Reader ed. Jeet Heer and Kent Worcester—A collection of non-fiction writing about comics. I think this is the first work of prose written for adults that I’ve read this year. I kinda skiped around and skimmed a lot. I’m interested in learning more about comics theory but alot of this was too theoretical or I didn’t really have enough context to understand it. Still there were some interesting tidbits and now I know a little bit more. I’m struggling to find non-fiction about comics that’s what I want to read– probably doesn’t help that I’m not sure exactly what I want to read

Purgatory Funeral Cakes Volume 1 by Sanho—Slice of life manhwa about a bakery that makes funeral cakes. The bakery is kind of a frame for people to come and tell stories about dead loved ones. The art is lovely but the whole thing is very melancholy. I did like the edition of red ink in a format that’s usually black and white

Hirayasumi vol 1+2 by Keigo Shinzō—Slice of life Manga about two cousins living together in a small house (a hiraya) in Tokyo. The younger cousin is an 18 year old woman who just moved to Tokyo for art school and the older cousin is a 29 year old man who works a kinda deadend job at fishpond. It's a pond stocked with fish that people can come fish at in the middle of the city which seems like a cool thing to exist. Anyways he inherited the house from an old woman he befriended who didn't have any relatives. It’s very charming, I find both of the cousins relatable in different ways.

Raging Clouds by Yudori—Another Eisner Award nominee, I didn't know what to expect from this at all. It’s historical fiction set in the Netherlands in the 16th-century. I was surprised by how big it was in print, but it turned out to be a fairly fast read because there aren’t many panels on a page. The art is gorgeous! The story is angry and intense and hopeful all at once. I ended up really liking it!
Content Notes: martial rape, explicit sexual content, slavery, animal cruelty, period typically sexism and racism

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