chanter1944: a lilac tree in bloom (Wisconsin spring: lilac season)
Chanter ([personal profile] chanter1944) wrote2025-05-23 09:09 pm

WisCon 2025 is here!

It's fully online this year, but it's still on. I've already been on one panel, dealing with acespec identities and representation, and I've got another Sunday. I'll be attending at least a couple more between now and then. But seriously, I *need* this four-day weekend. I took today off deliberately, given it's WisCon weekend, and con or not, that was absolutely the right call. Good gosh.

I intend to be up and out early tomorrow, the better to get to the farmers market and back again before the 10 AM panels happen. Wish me luck? :P

[personal profile] jesse_the_k, are you in on WisCon this year?
bjornwilde: (Default)
bjornwilde ([personal profile] bjornwilde) wrote in [community profile] ways_back_room2025-05-22 07:38 am
Entry tags:

Thursday DE

How social is your character?
ericcoleman: (Default)
ericcoleman ([personal profile] ericcoleman) wrote in [community profile] filk2025-05-20 05:58 pm

This week on FilkCast

The Chromatics, Karen Willson, Chris Conway, Joe Bethancourt, Judith Hayman, Boogie Knights, Julia Ecklar, Katt McConnell, Moss Bliss, Vanessa Cardui, Diana Gallagher, Gernsback Continuum, Gravity's Rainbow, Gwen Knighton

Available on iTunes, Google Play and most other places you can get podcasts. We can be heard Wednesday at 6am and 9pm Central on scifi.radio.

filkcast.com
bjornwilde: (Default)
bjornwilde ([personal profile] bjornwilde) wrote in [community profile] ways_back_room2025-05-20 07:09 am
Entry tags:

Tuesday DE

Hell of a week huh?

So, inspired by yesterday, is there an event in your character's past they'd like to erase?
splash_of_blue: (Black Widow - Hawks have all the fun)
Bethan ([personal profile] splash_of_blue) wrote in [community profile] ways_back_room2025-05-19 04:05 pm
Entry tags:

Monday DE: (Just Like) Starting Over

Mrgh. Mondays. Should be illegal.

ANYWAY.

If your pup could redo any one incident in their entire lives, what would it be?
chanter1944: an image of a green dragon (green dragon)
Chanter ([personal profile] chanter1944) wrote2025-05-17 12:13 am
Entry tags:

well, shell it

Anyone got any advice for the gal who's just gone to fill a [community profile] threesentenceficathon prompt and found that the comment has most likely, unless I'm fouling up the original prompt entirely, been deleted? I *thought* the original prompt was 'most glorious night', but all I can find to match that exact phrase is a comment that says the thing's been deleted. Damn. I'd feel like I'd be both usurping the original prompter and committing an act of... er... gratuitous self love if I were to post the same phrase as an anonymous comment, the better to fill it, but I've got the whole shelling prompt fill written out already.
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bjornwilde ([personal profile] bjornwilde) wrote in [community profile] ways_back_room2025-05-15 08:59 am
Entry tags:

(no subject)

Hey, I remembered my day this time...

So is your pup a flat bread or a dumpling kind of person?
camwyn: Me in a bomber jacket and jeans standing next to a green two-man North Andover Flight Academy helicopter. (Default)
camwyn ([personal profile] camwyn) wrote2025-05-15 09:01 am

(no subject)

Today was cold, wet, rainy, and foggy. My pants are still damp from the knees down from riding my bike to the ferry and then from the ferry to the office.

However, up until about three minutes ago I had little to no perception of tinnitus, and what I am hearing now is very minor compared to the usual, so hey, that's a win for Ferry Rides And Whatever Is Necessary To Take Them.
skygiants: the aunts from Pushing Daisies reading and sipping wine on a couch (wine and books)
skygiants ([personal profile] skygiants) wrote2025-05-15 08:15 am
Entry tags:

(no subject)

While on the topic of Genre Mystery I also want to write up Nev Marsh's Murder in Old Bombay, a book marketed and titled as mystery-qua-mystery that I do not think really succeeds as either a mystery or a romance. However! It absolutely nails it as a kind of genre that we don't have as much anymore as a genre but that I really unironically love: picaresque adventure through a richly-realized historical milieu in which our protagonist happens by chance to stumble into, across, around, and through various significant events.

(I said this to [personal profile] genarti, and she said, 'that kind of book absolutely does still exist,' and okay, true, yes, it does, but it doesn't exist as Genre! it gets published as Literary Fiction and does not proliferate in mass-market paperback and mass-market paperback is where I want to be looking for it.)

Murder in Old Bombay is set in 1892 and focuses on Number One Sherlock Holmes Fan Captain Jim Agnihotri, an Anglo-Indian Orphan of Mysterious Parentage who while convalescing in hospital becomes obsessed with the unsolved murders of two local Parsi women -- a new bride and her teenaged sister-in-law -- who fell dramatically out of a clock tower to their deaths.

Having left the British Army, and finding himself somewhat at loose ends, Captain Jim goes to write an article about the murder and soon finds himself engaged as private detective to the grieving family. In the course of trying to solve the mystery, he falls in love with the whole family -- including and especially but not exclusively the Spirited Young Socialite Daughter -- and also wanders all around India bumping into various Battles, Political Intrigues and High-Tension Situations.

Why do I say the mystery does not work? Well, this is the author's first book, and you can sort of tell in the way the actual clues to the mystery become assembled: a lot of, 'oh, I picked up this piece of paper! conveniently it tells me exactly what I need to know!' and 'I went to the this location and the first person I saw happened to be the person I was looking for, and we fell immediately into conversation and he told me everything!' You know, you can see the strings.

Why do I say the romance does not work? Well, it's the most by-the-numbers relationship in the book ... Diana has exactly all the virtues that you'd expect of a Spirited Young Parsi Socialite from 1892 written in 2020, and lacks all of the vices that you'd expect likewise. Jim thinks she's the bees' knees, but alas! he is a poor army captain of mysterious parentage and class and community divide them. Every time they even come close to actually talking about their different beliefs and prejudices the book immediately pulls back and goes Look! she's so Spirited! It's fine.

However, the portrait of place and time is so rich and fun -- Nev Marsh talks a bit in the afterword about how much the central family and community in question draws on her own family history, and she is clearly having a wonderful time doing it. The setting feels confident in a way that plot doesn't quite, and the setting is unusual and interesting enough to find in an English-language mystery that this goes a long way for me. And, structurally, although the twists involving the Mystery were rarely satisfying to me, I loved it every time historical events came crashing into the plot and forced Captain Jim to stop worrying about the mystery for a few chapters and have some Historical Adventure instead. My favorite portion of the book is the middle part, which he spends collecting a small orphanage's worth of lost children and then is so sad when it turns out most of them do have living parents and he has to give them back. I'm also sad that you had to give the orphans back, Captain Jim.
thebattycakes: (some beach)
thebattycakes ([personal profile] thebattycakes) wrote in [community profile] ways_back_room2025-05-14 11:33 am
Entry tags:

Wednesday DE: deep blue

Hello Milliways, it's Wednesday.

Today's DE:

Sort of riffing off of the last DE, how does your pup feel about water? As in big bodies of the stuff, pools, rivers, oceans, etc.
ericcoleman: (Default)
ericcoleman ([personal profile] ericcoleman) wrote in [community profile] filk2025-05-13 05:50 pm

This week on FilkCast

Orion's Belt, Emory Churness, On The Mark, Kathy Mar, Kristoph And Margaret, John McDaid, Cynthia McQuillan & Phillip Wayne, Wyld Dandelyon, Pair O'Dice, Daniel Kelly, Bill Maraschiello, Jordin Kare, Sunnie Larsen, Charming Disaster, Mikey Mason

Available on iTunes, Google Play and most other places you can get podcasts. We can be heard Wednesday at 6am and 9pm Central on scifi.radio.

filkcast.com
chanter1944: a lilac tree in bloom (Wisconsin spring: lilac season)
Chanter ([personal profile] chanter1944) wrote2025-05-11 09:46 pm

spring in Wisconsin

Means opening the windows and airing the place out, and relishing in the fact that it's finally warm enough and nice enough to do so! It also means changing the flannel sheets for cotton ones, potting plant seedlings, and sweeping the balcony. Said balcony's outside window ledge now sports a row of five plants, my overwintered Short's aster, dill, winter thyme (yes, I know, puns ahoy), pineapple sage, and a yellow daylily cutting from my childhood home. We'll see how everything goes.