Black Ships (Graham)

Jan. 15th, 2026 07:24 pm
cahn: (Default)
[personal profile] cahn
This book, via [personal profile] selenak, was just very relevant to my interests and I adored it so much! It's one of those books that I didn't really want to end. It's a retelling of the Aeneid from the point of view of the Sybil, with nods towards making it Bronze-Age historically plausible.

Gull begins her life as the daughter of a slave in Pylos, and is apprenticed to the Pythia, the oracle of the Lady of the Dead, becoming Pythia herself when the current Pythia dies. After Troy (here called Wilusa) is sacked for the second time, the black ships of the Wilusan prince Aeneas and the remnants of his people land in Pylos to try to capture back some of their people who had been slaves (including Gull's mother, though by that time she has died). When they depart, Gull/Pythia goes with them as their Sybil on their sea adventures as the People search for a home...

I just really loved so many things about this, starting with that retellings of epic poems are always my jam. I loved Gull/Pythia and the way in which centering her and her experiences centers the lived experience of the women of Wilusa. I loved the way that Aeneas and the Wilusans are portrayed as refugees, because that's what they are. I loved that the gods, while they do appear on the edges, are mysterious beings that may be real and may be wholly belief; and that they aren't toddler-level petty and vindictive like in the Aeneid. I loved how Pythia and Xandros had that sort of fealty-love thing going with Aeneas, uh, not that this is a hardcore thing I love or anything.

Of course I was very curious about how Dido would be portrayed, even without knowing (as Graham says in her afterword) that Carthage didn't... actually... exist during this time period, so that Aeneas & Dido would have to at the very least be revamped. Mild thematic spoilers. )

One of the things that's really interesting here is the through-line of how the world is getting worse, piracy is getting worse, civilization is crumbling. Gull/Pythia can see that all of this is getting worse during her journeys with the black ships, and has gotten worse since the previous Pythia's days. And yet, as the reader knows, and as Pythia comes to dimly see, the arc of civilization since that time will curve upwards, and Aeneas will be part of that. (And I find this a somewhat comforting thought in some ways...)

I'm rather impressed that this was Graham's first book, which I had no idea about until I finished and went looking for more books by her! Occasionally there may have been a bit of unevenness, but all in all I thought it was extremely strong. Sooooo now I'm gonna reread Judith Tarr's Lord of the Two Lands to get myself in a proper Alexander mood, and then I shall go on to read Graham's Stealing Fire :D

lunchtime

Jan. 15th, 2026 07:03 pm
chazzbanner: (wisdom sign)
[personal profile] chazzbanner
Lunch with catsman:

the sidewalks were much clearer this week
the brew pub was open!
when I got there I found catsman had texted me to say he couldn't come
after my food was served he went texted again to say he'd be there in half an hour!

One of his classes didn't make the cut (not enough students) so we can go back to having lunch at the Thai restaurant in St. Paul - and on Wednesday this time. :-)

I also exchanged texts with j-wat, who asked me how I was feeling. He's coming back on the 30th, and we may meet for coffee early in February. doogie has returned to Minnesota, but j-wat is still in Mexico.

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rua你们一下

Jan. 15th, 2026 11:26 pm
nnozomi: (Default)
[personal profile] nnozomi
I’ve had a dispiriting week—nothing seriously wrong other than the usual perennial personal and global worries, just a variety of little demoralizing things—and so I am posting a bunch of silly bits of things that have been piling up.

Y and I took a walk early in January and found one of the big shrines still full of people for the New Year; we did our own 初詣 elsewhere (up in the north of the city where I used to live there’s a small shrine on a hill with a beautiful, ancient camphor tree), but we stopped at the stalls offering food outside. These included such traditional Japanese snacks as candy apples, fried chicken, and of course takoyaki, as well as corn on the cob and kebab. The corn stall was run by several Chinese ladies, one scolding another “talk Japanese in front of the customers!” and the kebab stall, as far as I could tell, by a genuine Turkish guy. Both were delicious.

Music: chestnut got me to go listen to the Prokofiev Second Piano Concerto (this one is my 偶像 Seong-Jin Cho’s version) and it’s wonderful; I need to spend a lot more time with it. Prokofiev is hit-or-miss for me but this one’s a hit.

Tickled by a Chinese song (this one, very comforting lyrics-wise) which uses the English term “happy ending” in passing, pronounced “HAPpy enDING” with a strong back-of-the-throat Chinese h sound; the English ability of Chinese singers seems to cover a range from Zhou Shen, among whose many talents is sounding like a native speaker whatever language he’s singing in, to a number of others who apparently consider consonants one hundred percent optional. Still, they’re all doing better than me singing in the shower in Chinese.

Where Japanese says “mofumofu” for petting a fluffy cat or dog, Chinese slang has “rua,” written in roman letters—you see “想rua” for something (or someone) fluffy and adorable.

In Chinese you sometimes hear 哈 (ha) at the end of a sentence, apparently in the sense of “—right?” “—okay?” “—yeah?” (It’s one of the invisible speech particles, i.e. (in non-scripted speech) subtitles sometimes don’t include it even when it’s there; 嘛 and 嘞 are others.) I’m curious if anyone has investigated whether it’s related to its soundalike, the similar English “—huh?”

My morning running course goes past a large boys’ school, and one day I encountered some of their junior high baseball team (in semi-uniform) on the uphill past the entrance, where a teacher/coach was checking off their times. Some of them were not faster than me, which means they were pretty slow. Around the corner on the flat, where the coach couldn’t see them, they slowed down to a walk/trot; I couldn’t resist teasing “don’t let this old lady beat you! 頑張って!” as I went past, and one gave me a big grin and shouted back “Thank you! 頑張ってください!”

Because Client N can’t make up their minds about terminology from one month to the next, I had to spend some time lately changing all the terms translated as “Post Type” to “Pillar Type” and I’m very sorry it wasn’t the other way around, so I could have worked from pillar to post.

Y took me to see an old Gundam movie from his childhood, prudently making me read a plot synopsis first. Gorgeous animation, they knew what they were doing in the 1980s, very strange plot (everyone is motivated by both complex political opinions and high-school-level “I’ve never forgiven him for taking my girl” or “She doesn’t get to have you!” emotions). Very good worldbuilding, both the beautifully realized settings and giving a lot of nameless characters throwaway lines that made them three-dimensional, and also thinking through things like people working at weird angles to each other in zero gravity. Speaking of which I could have done without the damn miniskirts, but that said there were more women as competent pilots, soldiers, and mechanics than I would have expected from the era. Not surprisingly I rather fell for the minor character in glasses who has his own little tiny rebellion.

Photos: Three from a New Year’s Eve visit to a temple: the raw material of mugwort mochi ready for pounding, some thousand-crane strings, and the temple roof with its sky. Also persimmons, ducks, and something pink (a rose? a camellia?). The last one is for maggie, a poster I saw in a subway station of Machida Keita warning the public not to get caught up in fraud.




Be safe and well.

various...

Jan. 14th, 2026 06:43 pm
chazzbanner: (corgi bunnybutt)
[personal profile] chazzbanner
Did you know that there's a film from the 19490s called Dumblin Damnity? Say that fast, and remember to pronounce the n in damnity. :-)

This gem is thanks to the Word in Your Ear podcast automatic transcription. Double Indemnity, of course.

I finally got around to searching through my CDs for Bessie Smith: The Complete Columbia Recordings. I've decided to listen to one disc a day, ten discs in all.

Now I need to find my Louis Armstrong Hot Five and Hot Seven collection.

Something I read recently (hmm) used the word "fonebone" - from Mad Magazine. I decided to google the word and found this article:

The Ultra-Mad Madness of Don Martin

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Incredible String Band

Jan. 13th, 2026 06:40 pm
chazzbanner: (door flower boots)
[personal profile] chazzbanner
The other day I noticed the title of a downloading podcast: in part, it was 'missing folk star found!' I knew I had to listen to it immediately, as I guessed who the 'folk star' was. It was Licorice McKechnie of the Incredible String Band.

I first heard of Licorice being missing on a true crime podcast. From what I remember, there were rumors that she was living in central California. I think her sister said she was contacted once by Licorice, but that was years ago.

Andy Miller of the Backlisted wrote a lovely essay about the ISB

on his Patreon page

I really like The Hangman's Beautiful Daughter album, though whether you would depends on what you think of psychedelic whimsy. In case you want to test your resistance (or the lack thereof), here's a link:

ISB: THBD

Oh!, one thing that isn't mentioned is that the cottage the ISB lived in was on the estate of Baron Glenconner (aka Colin Tennant). Lady Anne Glenconner casually mentions that 'they were the house band' in one of her memoirs. She was Lady in Waiting to Princess Margaret.

Have I read her memoirs? Yes. She was also a Rosebud guest, I believe.

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Snowflake Challenge: day 6

Jan. 13th, 2026 07:43 am
shewhostaples: View from above of a set of 'scissor' railway points (railway)
[personal profile] shewhostaples
two log cabins with snow on the roofs in a wintery forest the text snowflake challenge january 1 - 31 in white cursive text

Top 10 challenge

I'm onna train, so here are 10 railway stations I like. In no particular order, and for various different reasons.

1. Frankfurt Hbf. This was where my international rail travels began. Standing on the concourse, looking at the departure boards (getting slightly earwormed by Stuttgart and Fulda), realising that I could get pretty much anywhere from here...

2. London St Pancras. It's beautiful. It's not actually a terribly pleasant experience getting a train from here (maybe the East Midlands and South Eastern platforms are better) but from the outside it's a fairy tale castle.

3. Stockholm. Rolling in, bleary eyed, off the sleeper from Malta, through dingy orange lights, and then suddenly you're in this marble palace. (I got chugged in Stockholm station. I don't know what I was doing to look like a Swede with disposable income rather than a discombobulated tourist, but there we go.)

4. London King's Cross. Never mind all that wizard nonsense, it has a fully functional platform zero. Also the toilets are free these days.

5. Liège Guillemins. Just glorious.

6. Ryde Pier Head. When it's operational and when you don't just miss the train because the catamaran was thirty seconds late. But there's still something fun about a station in the sea.

7. Dawlish. Train to beach in under a minute (your mileage may vary, as may mine considering I haven't been there in about a decade).

8. York. Never mind a pub in the station, it has one on the platform. Lovely stained glass, too.

9. Norwich. Light, gracious, makes you glad you've arrived.

10. Luxembourg. Stained glass again - and just time for an ice cream before the train.

traces

Jan. 12th, 2026 06:29 pm
chazzbanner: (Glacier)
[personal profile] chazzbanner
Little House on the Prairie, the television show, ah yes. I didn't watch it.

Of course I read all the books. I just couldn't take Michael Landon as Pa. Pa with his bristly beard and wild hair? And this was supposed to be Walnut Grove, Minnesota, with mountains in the background? Sheesh (if I may say so myself).

ETA: another complaint - Jack should be a bulldog-type, not a shaggy dog! (bulldogs had longer legs in those days, and their head was not so exaggerated)

My home town is about 50 miles from Walnut Grove, nearly straight south. My dad took us there when I was, hmm, possibly in Junior High.

This was long before Walnut Grove had a LIW museum, or a pageant. In fact the only thing to be seen was a depression where the Ingalls' dugout had been. (They lived in a dugout for a time, until they built a house.)

At some point I visited the replica 'Big Woods' cabin with oldest sister - it's near Pepin, Wisconsin, just about half an hour's drive from Ellsworth, where oldest sister lived at the time. It's set on what was the Ingalls property.

I've gone to Rock Elm, Wisconsin for the ice cream social several times. The small cemetery includes a number of Ingalls family members, including Laura's uncle and aunt and some first cousins.

The only site I visited after learning I'm related to these Ingalls is Burr Oak, Iowa, just south of the Minnesota border. Laura never wrote about their stay in Burr Oak; it was a rough time for the family, and her baby brother was born and died there.

DeSmet South Dakota... now, there's a road trip possibility!

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The Rise of the Rat People

Jan. 12th, 2026 09:56 pm
rattfan: (Intro)
[personal profile] rattfan
Here's another weird mob I've read about. I've previously mentioned the "lying flat" trend in China, where young people have rejected the fiercely workaholic mainstream ethos, and instead do what they have to and no more. The mainstream ethos advocates working from "9 am to 9 pm" seven days, so you can see why some folk have rebelled.

But seems you can't have a crazy trend without someone else trying to out-crazy it, and so now we have the Rat People. I can say, having my own members of rattus norvegicus to study, that getting up for breakfast and then going back to bed is absolutely a ratty habit. 

www.businessinsider.com/china-rat-people-broke-burnt-out-social-media-unemployment-2025-4

Mixing writers with politics

Jan. 12th, 2026 08:02 pm
rattfan: Demons (Demons)
[personal profile] rattfan
With this demon icon, I'm referring to a scene in Supernatural where a character explains that you know what you're going to get from a demon. They're a predictable evil. Though I will note, that in all the lore about making a deal with a demon, there's one interesting item that shows up: Hell stays bought. What they promise, you will receive. You just better be really careful about reading the fine print. They must have a lot of lawyers down there.

But people will screw you up in all the ways that come to mind, and more. One of the recent insanities I've been tracking is the story of a writers' festival in Adelaide, an event where the chosen writers get to talk to their adoring - or not so much - public, spruik their books and answer questions. When politics enters the picture, the agenda can go off the tracks, because writers don't know any more about politics than anyone else, in general.

So here, a writer was invited. Her politics were well known. Then it was decided by the board of that festival that she should be disinvited, details why in the link. There was much howling and rending of garments. Personally, I think they could have just stuck her in her own tent or space, and then anyone who wanted could go hear/talk to her or ignore her. From what I can see, those writers who have cancelled have done so not because they agree with her, but because they agree you shouldn't silence someone with whom you disagree.

www.afr.com/life-and-luxury/arts-and-culture/exodus-from-adelaide-writers-week-after-pro-palestine-author-dumped-20260109-p5nsvw


D and Son

Jan. 11th, 2026 07:31 pm
chazzbanner: (lotus egyptian)
[personal profile] chazzbanner
I've read all of Dickens' novels. Last year I decided I'd reread them in order - but I've changed my plans. I'll read the ones I want to read!

So I've started Dombey and Son, for the first time since the 20th century. :-). I've read it twice, and through the second reading count it as my second favorite. (My favorite is Bleak House, as readers here might guess.) (Considering I go on about the tv adaptations!)

I have it in mass market paperback, which means I need to use my computer glasses to read it. I'm 200 pages in, with a mere 770 to go! :-)

I see there's a BBC tv version, which I may rent later. I'm not going to look at the Wikipedia character list! The one thing I did was google "Mr. Carker" as it struck me at first seeing the name that this guy is a baddy. (He is.)

As for the plot, well I know who the young ones are who end up together, and I know the general point of things. But, it being Dickens, there is much, much more.

I'm tempted to buy the audiobook, but I think I won't. I did buy the audiobook of Trollope's The Way We Live Now, read by Timothy West. (I suppose I found its size daunting.)

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cahn: (Default)
[personal profile] cahn
So I'm going to talk about one of my major fandoms (that I don't usually talk about here), shiny things, because I can! (I started this post more than a month ago and it is high time to actually finish and post it.) In particular, I want to talk about diamond simulants and lab diamonds (although there's also very recently been some cool stuff about lab sapphires too). The funny thing is, I've never been a super fan of diamonds in general. I mean, I'm not going to say no to them! they are very shiny, and they have some cool dispersion (splits light into component colors, like a prism, so you get little rainbow flashes if it's cut well), and I love that they're super hard and come in octahedral crystals, but I have always been a colored stones kind of kid. But! In the last ten years there have been a ton of developments in this fandom relating to diamond simulants and lab diamonds, which I think is very neat.

First I want to define what I'm talking about.
Natural diamonds / earth-mined diamonds are diamonds that occur naturally in the Earth's crust and are mined from the ground.
Diamond simulants are not diamonds, but other substances that look enough like diamonds that they are used in jewelry that might otherwise use diamonds. I'll talk about cubic zirconia and moissanite as diamond simulants later on.
Synthetic diamonds / lab diamonds are chemically identical (*) to natural diamonds but are made in a lab.

Apologies if you happen to love diamonds, but I find the whole natural diamond thing kind of obnoxious in several ways. )

Brief discussion of cubic zirconia, and the rise of moissanite )

The rise of lab diamonds )

Lab ruby/sapphire: Some recent cool news on the lab sapphire front )

Photos )

(*) There are little things that can be different, so generally speaking lab diamonds can be distinguished from natural diamonds by a laboratory, but basically they're both made of carbon and look identical, especially if you have the same "grades" in one as another.
(**) When I refer to "carat" in the context of diamond simulants in particular, I will always be referring to "size of an ideal-cut diamond," which is about 6.5mm in diameter for a round diamond. Simulants will have different weights than a carat, of course, but generally the industry refers to a "1 ct moissanite" as something that mimics a 1 ct diamond, even though the corresponding cubic zirconia will actually be heavier than a carat and the corresponding moissanite will be lighter! Of course, "carat" when referring to colored stones just directly means the weight of that stone.
(+) www.diamondcz.co.uk came along in 2004, importing well-cut cz from China, and took well-cut cz from a relatively expensive niche market to super cheap!
(***) And even less (<~$300/ct last I looked) if you're willing to deal with Chinese companies directly -- it turns out there are whole subreddits devoted to both moissanite and lab diamonds that have instructions on this.
(****) Also emerald and garnet! Lab emerald in particular is a very big thing, very popular these days among people who buy lab gems, though emerald is not as much my thing so I don't know as much about it. Lab garnet can also be doped to get a lot of different colors, which is fun. Emeralds can't be made by the super cheap processes so they've taken a couple of decades longer to get cheap enough to be popular, but nowadays you can easily get them cheaply.

GQ: Ralph

Jan. 10th, 2026 06:44 pm
chazzbanner: (owl haystacks)
[personal profile] chazzbanner


My first sighting of Ralph Fiennes: Quiz Show.

There was a nice Yahoo group called fiennes-fans; we always referred to him as OWO, for "our wonderful one." :-)

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Snowflake Challenge: day 5

Jan. 10th, 2026 07:51 pm
shewhostaples: (Default)
[personal profile] shewhostaples
Snowflake Challenge: A warmly light quaint street of shops at night with heavy snow falling.

In your own space, create a list of at least three things you'd love to receive, a wishlist of sorts.

Hmm, well, nobody can give me leisure time or sleep, so I can't guarantee that I'll be able to follow up on any of the following in a timely fashion, but:

1. I got a mini ice cream maker for Christmas, so I'd love some ice cream or sorbet recipes.

2. Travel tips for Lyon or Montpellier, which we'll be visiting next month.

3. Not recs as such, because they don't need to be tailored to me, but tell me about a book or a fic you've enjoyed recently.

4. Art for any of my fics.

Passion (Morgan)

Jan. 9th, 2026 07:42 pm
cahn: (Default)
[personal profile] cahn
Via [personal profile] selenak <3 This book is a novelistic look primarily at the women (specifically the wives and lovers) associated with the most famous Romantic poets (Byron, Shelley, Keats). It is well-written and compelling, extremely relevant to my interests, and also part #12345 or so of an ongoing series of "Reasons why I, especially as a woman, am glad I did not live hundreds of years ago" (which... I guess... is probably a good thing for me to keep in mind, these days...) and, as sort of a corollary to that, an implicit stirring polemic in favor of no-fault divorce and antibiotics. (Neither of which existed at the time, of course, but gosh, no-fault divorce and antibiotics would have made SO many people's lives so much better in this book!) Also against bloodletting :PP

Our best-beloved high school Brit Lit teacher, Dr. M, told us all kinds of stories about these people. He was, I think, a proponent of the "teach the kids literature and literary history through sensationalistic gossip" mode that I found in salon many years later -- and it works! Even decades after Dr. M's class, I came in knowing enough that the names and many of the love-affairs (especially the most sensationalistic ones) were familiar, though of course I didn't know very many details. Even (especially?) Byron; though we never read any Byron in class, he was certainly a very sensational figure. (I think Dr. M's plan was that we would go off and read Byron on our own -- the same way that he announced, when we did the Canterbury Tales, that he was forbidden to teach us "The Miller's Tale" because of it being too R-rated, and we all promptly hared off and read it outside of class -- although I found Byron enough not to my taste that I never read very much of him even with that.)

What I was struck by most about this book was just how trapped the women are by... everything, by societal expectations, societal disapproval, family situations, the constant spectre of sickness and death; all the women were more-or-less (sometimes less) sympathetic but were placed in situations where they were either miserable or making other people miserable or both. (I can't quite say that about the men -- there were a couple of men that were not very sympathetic -- but at the same time you could see them all being trapped too.) But I didn't get the impression that the author was trying to make a point about that in particular, or at least not any more than any other point; I think this was just how it was.

A few notes about some of the women POV characters:

Augusta Byron (Leigh) - I knew enough to draw in a breath when her half-brother George was mentioned, even before the reveal of her last name :P Anyway, she is awesome, my favorite -- a truly nice character but never boring, and you can see why she and Byron got along so well; their bantering conversations in the book are really some of my favorite bits. Definitely one of the characters where I was Put Out that her life was as miserable as it was :P Lord Byron himself was charming and dark and you could both see why everyone fell in love with him and also that it must have been awful to have been his wife or lover (though in Augusta's case, mostly because of the societal issues).

Mary (Godwin/Wollstonecraft) Shelley - Intellectual and intense, the Mary POV sections were perhaps the most compelling for me, and also could be frustrating, in the way that when you empathize with a character, you don't want the character to do the stupid things that you know you would do (or maybe actually did as a young person) in her place :P I felt like she had a lot of extremely understandable strong feelings! And often you could see how the strong feelings were acting against her best interests! Percy Bysshe Shelley, on the other hand, was... well... there's an xkcd about guys like him :P I also really enjoyed her scenes with Byron, of all people -- very platonic, no attraction, and that's actually very refreshing, to me as well as to the characters.

Caroline Lamb - these were my least favorite sections. I remembered from Dr. M that she had some struggles with mental illness, and Morgan makes her manic behavior quite as sympathetic as possible -- but it still wasn't all that fun to read for me. William Lamb was less of a presence in the book but seemed, well, passive and patriarchical but mostly pretty reasonable, especially in comparison to Byron and Shelley. Not that this is saying a whole lot!

Annabella Millbank (Byron) - Byron's long-suffering wife. Annabella is clearly -- in fact textually -- even less of a reliable narrator than the others. I found the style of her sections really interesting -- they're distant and mannered and very distinct from the other characters' POV, and really point up how she fabricates her own story that may or may not (often does not) match up to reality, but certainly matches up to her own interests. And at the same time Byron was just terrible to her! But one can see how she is almost optimally ill-suited to him! [personal profile] selenak told me about how she was absolutely horrible to their daughter, Ada Lovelace, and that is certainly consistent with the way her character is delineated here.

Fanny Brawne - I think part of why Fanny was here was just as a contrast to the other characters. (Keats doesn't interact particularly strongly with Byron and Shelley.) She seems to be the only one, out of all of them, whose issues don't arise out of an intensely conflicted adolescence, whether it was because of her circumstances (Mary -- I haven't mentioned her father, William Godwin, but he was a piece of work in the novel, one of those guys who can totally twist everything to "rationally" argue how it benefits him; the type is familiar) or because of her personality (Caroline). She is the only one where it seems like she actually maybe had fun. (Well, Augusta may have had fun in her childhood -- but the way the chapters are laid out, the awful parts of her life get a lot more documentation.) Of course one knows it all has to go wrong, because Keats and Brawne, but after reading about everyone else it's almost a relief to just be dealing with death instead of death plus a whole ton of dysfunction. (Of course, there are hints that if he had lived, perhaps this love story too would also have devolved into dysfunction. But maybe it wouldn't have. For ever wilt thou love, and she be fair!)

But, in conclusion: no-fault divorce for Harriet Shelley and Annabella Byron, please and thank you, and hey, I'll take it for Mary Shelley too, and alllllll the antibiotics and NO bloodletting for not just Keats and Byron but also all the babies and small children who died in this book >:(

Also, I did a little reading about the next generation and they all seem rather interesting too; I want the sequel :PP

wot a trip / JE pair

Jan. 9th, 2026 07:06 pm
chazzbanner: (painted tower)
[personal profile] chazzbanner
The melt and freeze has been so massive this week that I can't take recycling/trash out to the dumpsters. The ice is thick and slick around the dumpsters, I can't keep my footing on it.

This afternoon I drove to Hopkins to pick up something at the tailor's. It takes me about 15 minutes to drive there on Excelsior. Today, however, I was stopped at a railway crossing while a freight train passed through. That took 10 ten minutes!

On the way home, my way through the alley was blocked by a car stuck with spinning front tires. I know exactly how it happened. The guy made a sharp turn into a parking spot, and the car got stuck before a little oomph could get it up a tiny slope of ice.

Luckily someone else came along after parking his car, and gave a push. You can imagine how I was sitting in agony behind the wheel, wondering if I would have to back up the alley (a good block to the street).

The streets are good, but parking lots and curbsides - ugh!

Now... something other than the weather. I occasionally see posts from a Bronte group on FB. There was general agreement that a 1973 BBC version of Jane Eyre has the best relationship between Rochester and Jane - one that showed their shared humor. Rochester was played by Michael Jayston, one of my favorites!

No, it is not on YouTube, exactly, but there's a playlist of "Clips and Fan Videos." I like what I've seen so far! Here's a link:

Mr. R and Jane E

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semi-regular Thursday

Jan. 8th, 2026 07:47 pm
chazzbanner: (painted tower)
[personal profile] chazzbanner
Today was my first lunch with catsman in over a month, and when we got to the brew pub it wasn't open! I've since checked their web site, and as far as I can tell this wasn't a planned closure.

They should have at least three people opening the place at 11:30, so it's odd that all three, mysteriously, were late to work.

We ended up going to a Thai place across the way.

Notes:

While on the bus to downtown Minneapolis repeat Minneapolis today I found myself softly whistling "tin soldiers and Nixon coming." I wonder why.

On the other hand, randomly:

While having coffee I googled "what bankers were ruined by Edward III?" Answer: Bardi and Peruzzi. Loans for the 100 Years War.. Edward III was a deadbeat, down went two Florentine banks.

Not to be confused with the Pazzi conspiracy or Ponzi schemes.

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Snowflake Challenge: day 4

Jan. 8th, 2026 08:30 pm
shewhostaples: View from above of a set of 'scissor' railway points (railway)
[personal profile] shewhostaples
two log cabins with snow on the roofs in a wintery forest the text snowflake challenge january 1 - 31 in white cursive text

Rec The Contents Of Your Last Page

Any website that you like, be it fanfiction, art, social media, or something a bit more eccentric!


I think my actual last page was APOD, which my feed reader seems to be showing a few days behind the times. And that's a pleasing thing to recommend, on the slim chance that someone hasn't encountered it before: it's interesting and beautiful.

For something that's probably more obscure, though I hadn't visited for a while, Hidden Europe is equally fascinating. The magazines got me through lockdown - deckchair travel in my back garden - and now the articles are going online one by one. People, places, train travel.

as an antidote

Jan. 7th, 2026 08:27 pm
chazzbanner: (pre-raph hands)
[personal profile] chazzbanner
Today:

flipped mattress
washed sheets and towels
returned a library book and picked up one that was on hold
and the usual routine

Tonight (on advice) I watched a funny movie, one I've mentioned before but hadn't watched recently: The Wrong Box.

So many laughs, so many reaL laugh out loud moments, from tontine members getting bumped in the intro, to the band conductor's reaction to multiple hearses, to a fistfight in the churchyard.

Do you know that in the credit there is a 'first undertaker' and a 'third undertaker' but no 'second undertaker?' How can this be--!

Funny how a London setting was clearly Bath's Royal Crescent. :-)

-

(no subject)

Jan. 6th, 2026 09:14 pm
cahn: (Default)
[personal profile] cahn
So, we had a winter break!

We had our family Christmas on Christmas Eve, going to D's church's Christmas Eve service, making and opening presents, etc. We got to the airport at 5am Christmas day to go visit my family and were promptly informed (we had gotten no communication from Southwest beforehand) that the airport had flooded and all flights were grounded. Not totally unexpected, as there had been a lot of rain, but kind of annoying. After some back and forth during which we went home and fell back into bed, then were informed that our flight was leaving after all two hours earlier than they'd said and we were about to miss it, then rebooked for later (which at least allowed me to leave Yuletide gift comments), then finally got out that afternoon, then were able to catch an earlier connection than we were booked for. Yay! Keeping track of local news after that, I learned that the airport flooded again an hour after our rebooked flight left (and I think it didn't open back up again until the next day), so we got out just in time. It's been flooding off and on since then, when it rains again, and we were lucky enough that our flight back was not on one of the rainy days. I think no more rain for a while, now.

Anyway. Had lots of family time! An incomplete list: )

did this (and that)

Jan. 6th, 2026 08:56 pm
chazzbanner: (red car)
[personal profile] chazzbanner
Today I

did my budget
called my retinal specialist to have my record faxed to a new provider
washed clothes.

Yesterday I spent quite some time digging through things in my file cabinet, and opening a very dusty briefcase, looking for some things I'd written that, well -- ha. I did find them eventually, and put them back in the file cabinet. :-)

I'm also wondering the name of one of the children... fictional children. Hmm. I should find that in a notebook somewhere.

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