July 2026

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Tuesday, July 7th, 2026 03:36 pm
(I was fucking around on my phone for the last few hours, while Kaylee slept on her blanket. The second I got my laptop out, Kaylee came over and started to purr aggressively next to me. You can't be on my lap right now, baby.)

These are probably going to be brief, as my memory isn't that strong six months later.


Searching for Serafim: The Life and Legacy of Serafim "Joe" Fortes by Ruby Smith Díaz
(Local author, read before she gave a talk for Black History Month.)

Short biography and a poem about a Caribbean Black man working as a lifeguard in Vancouver, BC, in the early 20th century. The records of Serafim Fortes are pretty slight, and almost all from the perspective of white people—who treated him as a sort of mascot, and talked about how great he was despite his race—so Smith Díaz is mostly reading against the grain of the historical record, and speculating lot. I normally do not like history books that include this much speculation, however, Smith Díaz is very clear about when and why she's filling in ideas, and I think it works in this context. It introduced me to Marie-Claire Graham's concept of "speculative archiving" as a way of dealing with gaps in the record created by historical violence, which this book is more or less an example of. I appreciated that Smith Díaz did not shy away from or excuse records of Fortes behaving poorly. Very much worth a read as a local history, and as an example of navigating a fragmented and racist archive.


Rainbow heart sticker Everything Is Fine Here by Iryn Tushabe, narrated by Nneka Okoye
(Canada Reads Longlist, which I wish had been on the shortlist.)

A coming of age novel about a young woman in western Uganda, who discovers that her beloved older sister is a lesbian. One's reaction to that premise might be, "Oh no!" but this novel was not a tragedy about queer bashing, though the setting and my knowledge of Ugandan politics made it a tense read.

(I also felt that my ((at this point rather hazy)) knowledge of Ugandan geography, culture and food helped me a lot, including having been in the same places described in the book. There's a lot of cultural detail and non-English terms dropped in without explanation, so remembering what most things were saved me a lot of looking stuff up.)

But most of the novel is about a teenager trying to figure out both the world and herself, in a family with a lot of internal conflict and pressures. There's a few cases of sixteen-year-olds making poor choices, but for the most part the novel offers its characters a lot of grace. It's about discovering the world can be a lot bigger than you're told it is, and offering and receiving second chances. Really loved this one.


Rainbow heart sticker Witch King by Martha Wells, narrated by Eric Mok
(Reread before getting into the new one.)

I'm really glad I reread this, as I initially rushed through it to find out what happened, and as a result didn't remember several key plot points, which turned out to be essential to the second novel. There are a lot of moving parts!

Basically still love everyone in this band, and appreciate getting a novel about decentralising power, rather than building empires.


Rainbow heart sticker Queen Demon by Martha Wells, narrated by Eric Mok
Really enjoyed this one, also, though it ends in a more obvious cliffhanger than the first one, which stands more or less on its own.

Mostly just like the characters and enjoy spending time with them. It's again nice to see people struggling with the work of consensus building, interspersed with battle scenes, lol. I like Kai slowly coming out of his shell in the first timeline, and how much the characters have changed over the centuries between the flashbacks and present day. It really nicely both shows the long-range consequences, and builds up tension as the plots weave towards each other. Bit bummed out by some of the casualties along the way.

I hope we get the next one soon!
Tuesday, July 7th, 2026 05:12 pm
I had no idea until last night that the runaway success of Lock Up Your Daughters at the Mermaid Theatre in 1959 had produced a small boom in Restoration musicals upon the London stage, or at least for two months in 1963 it produced Paul Dehn and James Bernard's Virtue in Danger, a musical translation of John Vanbrugh's 1696 The Relapse which despite a comedically impressive cast including Barrie Ingham, Patricia Routledge, John Moffatt, Patsy Byrne, and Alan Howard fizzled out as a curiosity with an original cast LP. As a musical, it does feel thin on the ground in that most of its songs are glosses on the Vanbrugh, but it does boast a couple of more dramatically substantial, melodically involved items such as the ironically frank "I'm in Love with My Husband," the cynically torchy "Let's Fall Together," and the sweetly bemused "Why Do I Feel What I Feel?" which last is stuck disastrously in my head. It's the catchiest tune in the show and the likeliest to have escaped containment—nothing else in the score rang any bell with me, whereas this one may have made it as far as Standing Room Only—and I don't mind the debt to Rodgers and Hart, but I couldn't stop thinking of Tom Lehrer.
Tuesday, July 7th, 2026 07:58 pm
Following on last month's re-release of The Writer's Little Book of Naming, The Writer's Little Book of Platitudes is back out in the world!

A white background with the text "The Writer's Little Book of Platitudes: Tips and Tricks for Taking (and Ignoring) Advice," by Marie Brennan, author of the Memoirs of Lady Trent. In the center is a red circle with a diagonal line through it (the symbol for "no") with the words "thou shalt not" inside.

“Show, don’t tell.” “Murder your darlings.” “Write every day.”

Certain pieces of advice are widespread in the writing community — but what do they really mean? And are they nuggets of universal wisdom, or do they only apply to some writers in some circumstances? Award-winning author Marie Brennan tackles these old saws, dissecting each one to see what purpose it might serve . . . and when you should toss it aside.


And starting next month, there will be a brand-new Writer's Little Book -- stay tuned for news on that . . .

(originally posted at Swan Tower: https://www.swantower.com/2026/07/07/the-writers-little-book-of-platitudes-returns/)
Tuesday, July 7th, 2026 01:47 pm
Title: Of the Pack
Prompt: #4, Spark
Creator: [personal profile] kalira
Medium: Fic
Fandom: Girl Genius
Ship: Agatha/Dimo/Maxim/Oggie
Wordcount: 2.1k
Rating: T
Summary:
The cold and the need to be warm again bring Agatha inspiration, but . . . perhaps a new creation can wait; her jägers have a point - there is something to be said for the tried-and-true methods.


Read on AO3

(With that prompt? I had to do this fandom!)

My prompt table!
Tuesday, July 7th, 2026 04:34 pm
You look up and spy a portrait of the previous Emperor: Rayaya-sanul-nishele-shuye-re-korutak. He is dressed in the same sort of sunburst robes as all of his predecessors, but without it, he would look rather … unremarkable. His skin is more tanned than gold, and his hair is dark brown, especially in contrast to the actual night-black divine horse next to him. The horse looks rather bored, and is called Noras. You're not sure about the wisdom of naming a horse "Hay", but, well, it's not your horse.


The horse in the portrait beneath the center of the "Nokhal's daughters-in-law" text is apparently called Vakhas, like your leader. Or, well, Vashas, in the archaic manner of speaking that they insist on clinging to in their inscriptions here. This Vakhas looks somewhat wary. The Emperor next to her looks annoyed, and past middle age. Apparently his name is Shuyeya-rayaya-nayor-shiviya-luvu-ka-kavutak; or Khuye-rayala-nayor-khivisa-luvuka-kavutak, how you'd say it: The golden Sun's son conquers to the end of the earth.


There's really only one Emperor here who looks cast from the mould of the First Emperor. His name is Tasul-shuyel-suya-shuya-voyase-velotak: The great dawn is the funeral feast of dark night. He has the golden skin and night-black hair, matching the horse next to him – Kiktos, for blackberries – and gazes imperiously at the viewer. Kiktos, for her part, seems to be doing her best to radiate "horse" without any expressions. Like all the other horses here, she is pure black and markingless.


You wonder what the current Emperor, Rayala-vakhala-kivir-tasu-yuruse-kavutak (it's the present; you refuse to use the archaic forms), looks like. The previous Emperor, Rayala-sanul-nikhele-khuyere-korutak, doesn't seem to have been anything special or remarkable, and recently got himself killed in a naval battle with Rlyat. The current Emperor is thus his brother or son or something, but you don't spy a portrait of him, with or without a horse.
Tags:
Tuesday, July 7th, 2026 04:27 am
Rewatching John Carpenter's Starman (1984) in full for the first time in decades reminded me of the odd, small cycle in American science fiction of its decade with their almost folkloric exploration of passing for human—learning what it is to be human, which is never required to mean replicating it perfectly. Jeff Bridges as the Starman retains his slight, birdlike glitches of movement and artifically accurate cadences to the last. His eidetic mimicry of television fills in for the cultural tics and expectations he has not yet worked out the rules of, but whose pattern he can reproduce well enough for normal social weirdness. It took me well into adulthood to understand the humor of the scene in Splash (1984) in which Madison is initially upset by a shootout in an episode of Bonanza because that extra-diegetic awareness of acting which a slightly nonplussed Allen explains to her was exactly how I learned to separate my own emotional reactions from fictional images that similarly disturbed me. The Brother from Another Planet (1984) and The Hidden (1987) would be the other titles that come to mind; I may be overlooking others, but the superficial appearance of Earth-humanity is a necessary criterion. Of course they are immigration stories, too, or so many of our heroes wouldn't have an inimical government on their tails. Madison and the Brother even make their respective landfalls at Ellis Island. I would love to be able to interpret this strain as a rebuttal to the paranoia of so much of the previous generation's science fiction where the federal government, fueled by the Cold War and the Red and Lavender Scares, was fully justified in blowing the aliens away, but I might need a larger sample set. I can at least track that the nonhuman characters under discussion are just trying to get on with their own lives, whose cosmically personal stakes are love or freedom or knowledge. "I make maps," the Starman explains himself. They feel more like Zenna Henderson's People stories than even something like The Man Who Fell to Earth (1976). I saw three of them as a small child. It was a useful additional reinforcement of the different ways to be a person.
Tuesday, July 7th, 2026 12:24 am
Hi and welcome to [community profile] comment_fic, y'all. I'm [personal profile] creepy_shetan, and I'll be your host for this week as well. ^_^

Today's theme is interjections. All prompts must contain at least one interjection. What are interjections? Merriam-Webster puts it this way: "An interjection is a word or phrase that is grammatically independent from the words around it, and mainly expresses feeling rather than meaning." Let's also include Webster's broader definition: "something that is interjected or that interrupts." Anything from "alas" to "zoinks" expresses feelings, and that's what we want for our characters today. The Wikipedia article has all kinds of examples if you're drawing a blank, btw.

Feel free to add specifics to your prompts, like whether you'd prefer a gen fill over something shippy, or if you have a squick or trigger you hope to avoid. Original fiction, fanfiction, and fanfic crossovers are always welcome. ~_^

Just a few rules:
No more than five prompts in a row.
No more than three prompts in the same fandom.
Use the character's full names and the fandom's full name
No spoilers in prompts for a month after airing, or use the spoiler cut option found here. Unfortunately, DW doesn’t have a cut tag, so use your best judgment when it comes to spoilers.
If your fill contains spoilers, warn and leave plenty of space, or use the above-mentioned spoiler cut.

Prompts should be formatted as follows: [Use the character's full names and fandom's full name]
Fandom, Character +/ Character, Prompt

Some examples to get things started...
+ The Pitt, any combo of female characters, Not it! / Oh. Oh, no...
+ any fandom that doesn't normally have courtroom scenes, any +/ any, Objection!
+ author's choice, any +/ any, Quick! In here!

We are on AO3! If you fill a prompt and post it to AO3, please add it to the Bite Sized Bits of Fic from 2026 collection. See further notes on this option here.

Not feeling any of today’s prompts? You can use LJ’s advanced search options to limit keyword results to only comments in this community. Fret not, DW members; we are working on a way to search through old entries for prompts for you! As of right now, the best way to search for a lonely prompt on DW is to search the community’s archive, which can be found [[HERE]].

While the use of LJ's advanced search and DW’s archive are options, bookmarking the links of prompts you like might work better for searching in the future.

As a friendly reminder about our schedule, Lonely Prompts and sharing completed fills are encouraged on Sundays, while new themes and prompts are posted on Tuesdays and Thursdays. Saturdays are a Free for All day. We'll share our posts on DW and LJ for everyone's convenience. Keep an eye out for notifications!

If you have a Dreamwidth account and would feel more comfortable participating there, please feel free to do so… and spread the word! [community profile] comment_fic


tag=interjections
Tuesday, July 7th, 2026 01:26 pm
Title: The First Day of the Rest of Our Lives
Fandom: Star Twinkle Pretty Cure
Ship: Hagoromo Lala/Hoshina Hikaru
Prompt: 98. Spark
Notes: happy birthday, Lala, enjoy otona precure at home. I genuinely do not understand how this turned into such a mammoth one-shot.
Warnings: artificial intelligence discussion (canon typical to a certain extent), eugenics, a singular mention of incest, sexual references, mentioned artificial insemination
Rating: T
Length: 15,850
Synopsis: Lala never fit in on Saman and that doesn't change after she becomes Cure Milky. As years go by, she observes the way that Saman has and has not changed around her as she grows increasingly resistant to the cultural norms she once considered so normal and even aspirational. More and more, Mother AI insists that its time for her to be matchmade but Lala's heart is with another as she waits in fervour for the day she can reunite with Hikaru whilst Lolo accepts his personal rite without any qualms, bringing yet more changes as he welcomes a wife and later, a daughter.

Ao3 // Dreamwidth // Tumblr

Monday, July 6th, 2026 11:23 pm
Here are the entries for this challenge:

List of entries )

Please Note: Because we only have 3 entries this week, there is only a First Place and Runner Up to vote for!

In order to vote, please reply to this post using the form provided. All comments are screened, and entries are listed in the order they were submitted. For your vote to qualify, you must fill out your entire voting card (both spots) in order to be counted. Winner votes are worth 2 points, Runner Up votes are worth 1 point. Meeting the bonus goal on an entry gets an extra point for that submission.

When voting, please copy/paste the ENTRY NUMBER and the FIC TITLE from the list above into the spot you're voting for (this prevents accidentally mis-numbering a vote and casting it for the wrong entry). It should look like this:

First Place: 61. Fic Title Here
Runner Up: 88. Another Fic Title

Please note that you cannot vote for your own entry, and that votes cannot be made anonymously. You do not have to be a member of the community in order to vote, nor have submitted an entry for this week; everyone is welcome to participate in the voting. IP addresses are logged to prevent duplicate voting.



Voting closes Wednesday, July 8 at 9:00PM EST.
Monday, July 6th, 2026 07:00 pm
Creator: [personal profile] andersenmom
Title: Pre Muster Conversation
Rating: G
Type: Fic
Size/length/word count etc.: 504
Prompt: 057: Red
Fandom/Ship: The Kingdom; Yang Dongsik | Louis, Jung Seungbo | Dann
Notes/Warnings: None
Summary: Seungbo talks to Dongsik before going into the military.

Find the table with the list of fics here
Monday, July 6th, 2026 03:44 pm
Reconciliation Theatre: Women of the Fur Trade.
I caught this recently and loved it. Wonderful local cast, fast paced and funny. I think it'll be in Victoria in the fall, if people aren't around for the list of tiny smol towns it's hitting this month.

Keep Android Open: Your phone is about to stop being yours.
Starting September 2026, a silent update, nonconsensually pushed by Google, will block every Android app whose developer hasn't registered with Google, signed their contract, paid up, and handed over government ID. Every app and every device, worldwide, with no opt-out.

tulipathy on BlueSky: Thread About GenAI in Heated Rivalry fanfic [ETA: Need to be logged in to read, very brief summary in comments].
I'd been hearing rumblings about this for a while, but I guess it's broken open now. How depressing for the fans.
Monday, July 6th, 2026 02:50 pm
I will be at Readercon! Observe my schedule.

Reading: Sonya Taaffe
Friday 12 pm
Sonya Taaffe

Current forecast: new and uncollected poetry.

100 Years of Lud-in-the-Mist
Friday 2 pm
Casella Brookins, Graham Sleight, Greer Gilman, Lila Garrott (m), Sonya Taaffe, The joey Zone

Lud-in-the-Mist was published 100 years ago, the last of three novels Hope Mirrlees would write. Reprinted without authorization in 1970 in the Ballantine fantasy series, Lud-in-the-Mist influenced many contemporary writers, such as Michael Swanwick and Elizabeth Hand. What power does this novel still hold today, and how did a once-forgotten work come to be so well-remembered?

Classical Reception in Contemporary SFF
Friday 4 pm
Alexander Jablokov, Lila Garrott, Sonja Ryst (m), Sonya Taaffe, Tom Doyle

Greco-Roman and especially classical Roman culture are alive and well in recent and current SFF, from the seemingly ubiquitous Imperium to the pastiche of Pliny the Younger that opens Kai Ashante Wilson's The Sorcerer of the Wildeeps. Why do we keep reaching not only for the classics but for the classical? And why does it all feel so current?

Why "Morally Gray" Characters Get All the Love
Friday 7 pm
Elizabeth Bear, Melissa Caruso (m), P. Djèlí Clark, Sonya Taaffe, Sunny Moraine

Why is everyone so in love with "morally gray" characters now? Are we seeking to understand the complexity of the human soul, escape hero/villain stereotyping, or is it something else? Are morally gray characters really more interesting to write and read, or has moral clarity simply gone out of vogue? Is a morally gray character just a villain with a redemption arc?

The Bog Body Motif in Trans SFF
Saturday 1 pm
Ann LeBlanc, dave ring (m), Sonya Taaffe

Izzy Wasserstein's poem, "Come Back Wrong" (Strange Horizons, May 5, 2025), examines medical transition, drawing parallels with the transformation of sacrificial bodies tossed into acidic bog soils and left there for centuries to tan to leather. The bog body motif seems to pop up again and again in queer and especially trans SFF stories, songs, and games. Why? What is so appealing about the bog body as a metaphor, and what does the repeated use of this imagery indicate about the times we live in?

SFF and Queer Cultural Memory
Saturday 6 pm
David Gerrold, Ian Muneshwar (m), Sonya Taaffe, Susan Stinson, Victor Manibo

Much has been written about the losses to queer cultural memory wrought by both repression and AIDS. From Nazi burnings of research to yesteryear's censorship and today's book and social media bans, repressive movements have long tried to prevent queer narratives from emerging. What role has SFF played in preserving queer cultural knowledge? How have queer writers and readers changed SFF, and how has SFF changed us in return?

The Odyssey in 2026
Sunday 11 am
Charles Allison (m), 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?

Reckoning at 10
Sunday 12 pm
Corey Farrenkopf, Marissa Lingen, Michael J. DeLuca (m), Sonya Taaffe

Reckoning launched its first issue at Readercon 27, back in 2016. Join Reckoning contributors and staff in celebrating ten years of creative writing on environmental justice with readings of work from the new issue and highlights from the past.

After an unbroken run from 2004–19, I have been out of the Readercon loop since its virtual edition in 2021 thanks to a combination of pandemic and personal medical disaster. Am I returning in good health? Hell, no, but I am returning. Who may I expect to see there?
Monday, July 6th, 2026 11:11 am
Creator: [personal profile] andersenmom
Title: Burn it Down
Rating: G
Type: Fic
Size/length/word count etc.: 674
Prompt: 058: Ash
Fandom/Ship: Enhypen; Sunghoon, Sunoo
Notes/Warnings: Sequel to New Inmate
Summary Sunghoon watched as the institution burns.

Find the table with the list of fics here
Monday, July 6th, 2026 12:10 pm
10 multifandom icons for [community profile] icons10in20

preview:

CLICK HERE

Monday, July 6th, 2026 10:58 am
Title: Irreplaceable
Fandom: Inspector George Gently
Rating: Teen and up
Pairing: George Gently/John Bacchus
Notes: John has resigned. George goes to see him.

Irreplaceable )