ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
ysabetwordsmith ([personal profile] ysabetwordsmith) wrote2025-08-18 12:14 am

Writing

[personal profile] china_shop has posted "Writing meta: What Middles Are For." It's an excellent essay about story structure.
ysabetwordsmith: (gold star)
ysabetwordsmith ([personal profile] ysabetwordsmith) wrote2025-08-17 11:23 pm

Read "For the Many" by Beepbird

[personal profile] beepbird has written "For the Many," a book about plurality / multiplicity.  It is available at this post with links to download PDF or EPUB formats. 

I know I have a bunch of plural people in my audience, and I write about some plural characters such as Damask in Polychrome Heroics or Bruce-and-Hulk in Love Is For Children (The Avengers), so I'm always watching for good resources on this topic.  Go read the book.  It is very clearly written and includes many practical descriptions of how to achieve healthy multiplicity.  Many of the suggestions are good people skills for living in other communal contexts too.  It's good to read if you have plural friends, so you don't hurt them, because society affords them little or no protection.  If you want to know how to do something, listen to someone who's been doing it a while --  not an "expert" who has never done it.
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ranunculus ([personal profile] ranunculus) wrote2025-08-17 08:47 pm

Update

I've been cleaning up and putting away for a while now.  It isn't just the normal entropy that attacks while one isn't looking, it is all the stuff coming up from Henry St that needs to be sorted, put away or thrown away.  With the new stove coming the spice cabinet needs to be removed from the wall, so all the spices are being sorted and old ones thrown out.  The spices are now sorted but I need to figure out where they will live temporarily, and then build a new cabinet for them. Yes, I want them in a cabinet, not in a drawer. 
Everyone talks about using tools in a shop.  Almost no one ever talks about maintaining the tools. In the last two days I did a deep clean, lubrication and alignment of the table saw.  The saw wasn't used much the last few years and arrived with a thick coat of rust on the cast iron top. Rust is, um, sticky. Nothing slides easily over it. I used steel wool to take the worst of the rust off, then 220 grit sandpaper, a razor scraper to get up lumps of resin and (I think) some spilled oil based stain.  320 grit sandpaper in the orbital sander took the last of the rust and grime off the top.  Having looked up proper table saw care, the next step was to wax the top with Carnuba wax. What a difference!  There are gears underneath the saw that can get pretty gummy with dirt, sawdust and resin but that was minimal.  A stiff scrub brush and a spray with graphite as a lubricant fixed things up.  The final step was to check the blade alignment which looks fine. None of the tuneup was hard, it just took a while, and should make everything MUCH easier to use. If nothing else the wood will positively glide over that waxed top! Next up is re-attaching the fence to the body of the saw, which shouldn't take long.  
One whole cardboard box of misc shop stuff, including lots of orphaned screws, bolts, washers, hand tools got sorted out and mostly put away.  Several chisels got sharpened and hung up.  Clearly I really need more peg board.
Early this morning I moved the mouse traps into the garden and caught two more voles.  

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ysabetwordsmith ([personal profile] ysabetwordsmith) wrote2025-08-17 11:10 pm

How to not build the Torment Nexus

How to not build the Torment Nexus

This week’s question comes to us from Will Hopkins:
When your job and healthcare depends on building the Torment Nexus, but you actually learned the lesson from the popular book Don't Build the Torment Nexus, how do you keep your soul intact and try to put less torment into the world?



I would add: when your survival requires a job, and most jobs involve building some form of Torment Nexus, be aware that your society is in the toilet, circling the drain.  And it's not an accident for people to feel outright trapped in truly heinous jobs.  That's what homeless people are for: so the boss can say, "Quit dragging your feet and build the goddamn Torment Nexus!  Or do you want to be homeless?"

lovelyangel: (Aoi Startled)
lovelyangel ([personal profile] lovelyangel) wrote2025-08-17 07:16 pm
Entry tags:

Link Trio

I had again accumulated a lot of interesting links over the last couple of months. But upon review, I didn’t feel like sharing most of them. There were a number of intelligent political links, but I generally keep politics low profile here. You already know your political preferences, and I don’t need to fling more gasoline. I’ll note that there were several pieces on stupidity. And everyone knows I hate stupidity.

There were some nice non-political links, but they were a bit too esoteric, and I didn’t feel like making work for people. I’ve kept links for myself for reference. Maybe I’ll share some later. Dunno.

I’m posting just three links because I liked them a lot.

Should You Buy and Enjoy Books You May Never Read?
Here is a headline where Betteridge’s Law of Headlines is a big fail. When it comes to tsundoku, the answer is always ‘Yes!’

A Font Confession
Only us font geeks will enjoy this one. However, Ironic Sans is a fun site.

There’s No Undo Button For Our Fallen Democracy (kottke.org)
I worry about my kids; their future is dire. For me – I’m an Old – and like others my age, I’m resigned to the fact that this is the world that I will die in. (Yeah, I kept one political link.)
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ysabetwordsmith ([personal profile] ysabetwordsmith) wrote2025-08-17 08:37 pm
Entry tags:

Affordable Housing

Small Changes With Big Impacts in Dallas

On April 23, the Dallas City Council did something worth paying attention to.
They voted unanimously to approve a change to the city’s building code that allows up to eight dwelling units in three-story buildings under a modified version of the International Residential Code (IRC).



Multiplexes and small apartment buildings belong to the "missing middle" of affordable housing.  They mix well with freestanding homes, particularly if you put them on the larger corner lots of a block.  Imagine a block of mostly 2-3 bedroom houses with the corners holding a couple of small apartment buildings or multiplexes and a couple of bigger 4+ bedroom houses that could be for large families, sharehouses, boarding houses, etc.  And some of those single-family homes could also have a garage apartment or a home business on the porch or garage.  Such blocks exist in many of the towns near me, and they are awesome.
ysabetwordsmith: (moment of silence)
ysabetwordsmith ([personal profile] ysabetwordsmith) wrote2025-08-17 08:12 pm

Moment of Silence: Terence Stamp

Famous actor Terence Stamp has passed away. He was best known for his role in two Superman movies ("Kneel before Zod!") but performed in many other roles as well.


Carry on the Work:

Acting -- how to articles from wikiHow

The Creative Writer's Ultimate Guide to Science Fantasy

How to Study Voice Acting: A Step-by-Step Guide


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StarWatcher ([personal profile] starwatcher) wrote2025-08-17 06:45 pm
Entry tags:

First, then second, then surprise!

 
Also -- where the hell does the time go?

Needed to do a bunch of chores this afternoon. Started early because it was thundering, and might rain.

1] Filled the cat-feeders -- one in back yard, one in garage, two in barn.

2] Changed the pump filters in pond. Discovered the pump was partially clogged with strands of feathers or grass. HOW??? That's what the filters are for, dadgummit! So took the pump apart to clean it.

[3] Did a "first-rinse" of filters, left them to soak for later cleaning.

4] The ducks (?) keep knocking the plastic planter-saucer off the second water tub. (For the little birds to perch and drink. Post for "one day.") WHY??? So I got my tools and some wire, made a couple of "hooks" to hang over opposite edges, anchored to the supporting bars below.

[5] Went down the drive to dump bags of milo seed for the birds.

[6] Took the empty bags to the garage. I stuff all the empty bags into another bag until it's full and I take it to the trash. This bag is almost full; I think these bags will be the last until I staple it shut. As I approach (I have gates over garage opening, not a door), I see an elongated dark thing on the top of the crumpled bags. I'm trying to remember what I've thrown away that meets that description, drawing a blank. Then I get closer -- about three feet away -- and it moves, raises its head! It's a snake!

I learned long ago to "startle in place" -- thanks to brothers that thought it was fun to try to spook their sisters. I took a half step back, quietly said, "Oh. My. God," and evaluated the snake. Very slender -- about 1-1/2 fingers' thickness -- and very dark, almost black, mottled pattern. Small head, with no "shovel-shape" as it attached to the neck; definitely not a rattlesnake, and this part of the country doesn't have any other venomous snakes. (Not that a rattlesnake would have changed my actions; I simply would have left faster!) It started to crawl away from me, got into a 5-gallon bucket laying sideways on the plastic bin that the bag was leaning against, turned around and headed out. Pretty long for it's slenderness -- maybe 3-1/2 feet or so.

No idea why it was on those bags; they only carried grain, nothing a snake could eat. But maybe -- probably -- mice have been checking out the empty bags, and the snake smelled that? Its head didn't look big enough to swallow a mouse, even with an unhinged jaw, but if it thinks it can, I'm all for decreasing the mouse population.

I probably don't need to say that I didn't stuff the empty grain bags into the almost-full bag; tossed them on the floor till later, and left the garage.

[7] Got into the house and discovered that 1 hour and 45 minutes had elapsed! What? How? I didn't do that much!!!

*looks over the list* Well... yes I did. Hadn't intended the need to clean the pump, or to devise a way that the ducks can't knock down the planter-saucer. But even so, the list would probably have taken 50 minutes, which just seems wrong. It's so easy to say, "Need to fill the cat-feeders, change the filters, dump bird seed." Seems like all that should take 30 minutes, at most. But there's a lot of walking between house and barn (a couple of times), or house and pond (a couple of times), and house and bird-feeding area. Still, dammit... I wonder if some psychic entity is stealing a minute here and a minute there, without me noticing, to make me take longer.

Well, that's life in rural America. Now I need to divide a batch of chili into lunch-sized portions and freeze them. Then I need to put out new fly-traps -- about 20 minutes? I'll need to time it.

I've made an executive decision -- laundry will wait until tomorrow.

I'd rather be reading fanfic. Sometimes adulting sucks.
 
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ysabetwordsmith ([personal profile] ysabetwordsmith) wrote2025-08-17 07:41 pm

Climate Change

Unprecedented climate shocks are changing the Great Lakes forever

Heat waves and cold spells are now more common on the Great Lakes, according to U-M research, with implications for the region's weather, economy and ecology.
Extreme heat waves and cold spells on the Great Lakes have more than doubled since the late 1990s, coinciding with a major El Niño event. Using advanced ocean-style modeling adapted for the lakes, researchers traced temperature trends back to 1940, revealing alarming potential impacts on billion-dollar fishing industries, fragile ecosystems, and drinking water quality
.
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james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2025-08-17 06:28 pm
jazzy_dave: (bookish)
jazzy_dave ([personal profile] jazzy_dave) wrote2025-08-17 11:06 pm

Book 42 - Lisa Jardine "Worldly Goods"

Lisa Jardine "Worldly Goods: A New History of the Renaissance" (Papermac)



This fascinating book is essentially a look at how important things, and money, were in shaping what we now think of as the world of the Renaissance.

It starts with an analysis of the National Gallery Crivelli annunciation, a "meticulous visual inventory of consumer goods" from across the known world as well as a beautiful work of art - and itself a desirable possession. Renaissance artists were craftsmen for hire, working to order for the rich and powerful - and sitting at table with the tailors, musicians and other salaried members of the household. Others who fell into this category were people who would now perhaps style themselves as lifestyle consultants. You could have a man to advise you on what paintings, antiquities or books to buy to display your wealth and taste. You could even have someone to pre-read the books for you - Sir Philip Sidney had a private reader who annotated a copy of Livy for him with marginal notes referring to modern parallels to the events in the text, and a number of cross-references to modern works on political and military theory.

Conspicuous consumption was an essential aspect of prestige and authority, often backed up by borrowing on a massive scale. Christopher Columbus' proposal to seek a shorter route to the Indies - and therefore bypass the mark-ups which the spice traders put on their goods - was attractive to Ferdinand and Isabella because they were deeply in debt after a series of costly military campaigns. (For the weddings of two of their children in 1495, Isabella had to redeem her crown of gold and diamonds which had been pledged to raise money for the war against Granada.) And fortunes were made for entire families of bankers because they had received trading concessions in return for loans to popes or kings - the Medici wealth was based on monopolistic access to alum, vital for dyeing cloth. You could also make a fortune by having access to the right piece of information - for example, if you knew that two great houses were planning a wedding, you could stock up on fine fabrics while they were relatively cheap.

I think that since this book was published in 1996, its thesis has become much more widely accepted. But even so, Jardine finds some eye-catching links between things - consumption and discovery - and broad historical changes. The rebuilding of St Peter's Church in Rome, involving some of the greatest artists of the day including Michelangelo and Raphael, was so expensive that Pope Leo X issued a particularly grandiose indulgence, granting remission not just from sins already committed, but "purchasers and their relatives were forgiven every conceivable sin they had committed, or might commit, and exempted from all suffering in Purgatory, advancing immediately to Heaven". The indulgences were sold particularly hard in Germany, because the papacy had agreed that half the proceeds would go to paying off the debts of the Archbishop of Mainz. It was after the issue of this particular indulgence that Martin Luther nailed his theses to the church door at Wittenberg.

This is definitely a macro-history, ranging across the European continent from Scotland to the Ottoman Empire and in time across a couple of centuries. I am not sure that there was a coherent argument running all the way through it - it's more of a bag of delights, studded with interesting facts that you feel Jardine couldn't bring herself to leave out. I particularly liked the story of a map which deliberately placed the Molucca islands in the wrong place to back up Spain's territorial claim to them - and the related treaty stated that "during the time of this contract, {the Moluccas} shall be regarded as situated in such place" as shown on the map. Even that was only a bargaining chip - as soon as the claim was established the Spanish relinquished them in exchange for cash - "far more valuable to Charles, beset, in established Hapsburg fashion, by enormous debts to his bankers, than monopoly trading rights on the far side of the world".

Illustrated with monochrome and colour plates, which adds to the appeal of the book, I would heartily recommend this as a good read.
thewayne: (Default)
The Wayne ([personal profile] thewayne) wrote2025-08-17 04:22 pm
Entry tags:

Zod kneels before the Phantom Zone one final time. RIP Terence Stamp, 87.

Terence Stamp was a notable actor who made his mark in many, many films. The first two Superman movies with Christopher Reeves, Star Wars Episode 1, Priscilla Queen of the Desert, His Dark Materials. Other work included a Federico Fellini film of an Edgar Allen Poe story, various voice work, Modesty Blaise, Young Guns, Bowfinger, Wanted, the Tom Cruise film Valkyrie, The Adjustment Bureau, Miss Peregrin's Home For Peculiar Children, and more. His final film was Last Night In Soho (2021).

THREE volumes of memoirs, a novel, and a cookbook were also amongst his accomplishments. His voiceover work included Elder Scrolls IV, Halo 3, documentary voiceover work, and music video appearances. He shared a house with Michael Caine before they both made it big! His brother, Chris, was a rock music producer and manager and was largely responsible for bring The Who to prominence! That's more of an interesting footnote since Terence probably didn't directly have an effect on that event. OR DID HE?

Among his awards and nominations were a Golden Globe Award, a Cannes Film Festival Award, and a Silver Bear (German) as well as nominations for an Academy Award and two BAFTA Awards.

He was a busy man.

https://gizmodo.com/superman-and-star-wars-actor-terence-stamp-dies-at-age-87-2000644162
thewayne: (Default)
The Wayne ([personal profile] thewayne) wrote2025-08-17 04:01 pm
Entry tags:

Toothpaste made from keratin will help rebuild enamel!

Some very interesting news from King's College, London. They've developed a new toothpaste based on keratin, rather than fluoride, extracted from sheep's wool, and found that it restores teeth and builds better protection. The restoration process builds a scaffold-like structure on the teeth that attracts calcium and phosphate ions, building a calcium-like compound on the teeth, restoring protection.

Fluoride only slows the wear and tear on the teeth, it doesn't do anything to rebuild it.

The best thing is that this toothpaste could be on the market in 2-3 years!

https://gizmodo.com/toothpaste-made-from-hair-works-better-than-fluoride-scientists-say-2000643763
jazzy_dave: (books n tea)
jazzy_dave ([personal profile] jazzy_dave) wrote2025-08-17 10:52 pm

Book 41 - Simon Reynolds "Retromania"

Simon Reynolds "Retromania: Pop Culture's Addiction to Its Own Past" (Faber & Faber)



Fittingly, there's a lot in "Retromania" that will strike many readers as pretty familiar. Reynolds engages in some righteous boomer-hating, asking if we'll ever be free of sixties-era musicians and their needless, endless nostalgia tours. He also goes neo-Luddite for a while, bitching about newer technologies' reduced fidelity and disregard for the album format. Though Reynolds presents his arguments well, you can get this stuff elsewhere. "Retromania" really gets interesting – perhaps even vital – when Reynolds posits that artifacts and music of the past function as a species of cultural capital and examines how rock scenes look to both their own pasts and society's collective future for inspiration. In doing so, he neatly turns some well-worn rock narratives on their heads. He's not afraid of the obscure, either, examining the role that vintage clothing and record shops played in the development of both the punk and hippie subcultures and delving deep into the history of Northern Soul, a scene I'd only heard about in passing. The problem – as Reynolds sees it – is that the technological and stylistic obsolescence that drove this economy is, thanks to YouTube, MP3s and torrents, now itself a thing of the past. Are new things, or even fresh takes on old things, a possibility in a world where the entirety of the past is available to all of us?

Reynolds doesn't really have an answer, of course, and I think he might have done well to include a clearer definition of what constitutes "newness." It doesn't seem that Reynolds is himself a musician, so much of his discussion, like so much rock criticism, seems to be a discussion of musical style rather than content. His arguments seem to chase each other around the text, too, perhaps even contradicting each other, but that is part of the book's appeal: the past, as Reynolds sees it, can either trap musicians in a permanent yesterday or provide inspiration for forward-thinking projects.

In the last chapters of the book, he examines how some retrophiliac acts like Broadcast and Boards of Canada have used the twentieth century's own ideas of the future to create hauntingly personal music that takes advantage of modern technology's ability to preserve large chunks of the recent past more or less indiscriminately. He also seems to argue that pop culture, and perhaps people in general, have lost faith in the future: while we get excited about techno gadgetry, most of us no longer believe that the future will be better, or substantially different, than the present. Still, when he examines the astonishing quantity of bravely experimental electronic music that followed the launching of Sputnik in the late fifties and the nineties' explosively creative, ruthlessly futuristic rave scene, he seems to conclude that a link exists between creativity and the belief that our tomorrows will be better than our yesterdays.

I can't say that I always found the author's case entirely convincing – indeed, I found myself arguing with him throughout the book – but he's provided some genuinely fresh ideas about pop music's relationship to its past and future that people who take their music collections as seriously as their mortgage payments won't want to miss, and from me , an addicted music collector this book is highly recommended
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ysabetwordsmith ([personal profile] ysabetwordsmith) wrote2025-08-17 03:21 pm

Birdfeeding

Today is partly sunny and sweltering.

I fed the birds.  I've seen a mixed flock of sparrows and house finches.

I put out water for the birds.

EDIT 8/17/25 -- I did a bit of work around the patio.

EDIT 8/17/25 -- I did more work around the patio.

EDIT 8/17/25 -- I watered the patio plants and the old picnic table garden.

I picked 4 goldenberries.

I've seen a male cardinal.

EDIT 8/17/25 -- I watered the new picnic table garden.

I picked 2 red cherry tomatoes.





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ysabetwordsmith ([personal profile] ysabetwordsmith) wrote2025-08-17 01:38 pm

Robotics

China firm plans world’s first pregnancy humanoid robot using artificial womb

The innovation uses artificial amniotic fluid and nutrient delivery via hose, replicating natural gestation, now to be integrated into humanoid robots.

Read more... )
silveradept: Domo-kun, wearing glass and a blue suit with a white shirt and red tie, sitting at a table. (Domokun Anchor)
Silver Adept ([personal profile] silveradept) wrote2025-08-17 12:05 pm

Another Two Weeks of Stuff Happening - Early August 02025

A quick update to start: One of the banks backing PayPal purchases in several currencies has decided to stop processing or accepting Steam transactions, making PayPal unavailable in regions that use those currencies. The slug says that PayPal doesn't support the transactions, but the article is quick to point out that it's actually one of the banks that has withdrawn their support for Steam transactions using PayPal. So we continue to get reminded that if the system of money decides that you're not allowed on their platform, it doesn't matter what the jurisdiction or the law says is allowed or not, you're banned from being able to do anything that involves the banking systems. People in places where cannabis is currently legal have already figured this out, because they continue to be denied access to financial transaction systems, and sex workers and their clients have figured this out, because they're regularly targeted for these kinds of purges and exclusions, but gamers are starting to understand how much their freedom to purchase and play works depends not on the laws or the interpretations of the laws, but on the control exerted by payment processors over the platforms they want to buy and play on.

Valve Corporation said that MasterCard was definitely pressuring them to delist and deplatform adult content, through the intermediaries of the banks and processors, after Mastercard claimed it made no such demands of the platforms. And I'm sure they also didn't say they'd been looking for the excuse once the group that was trying to get their attention did it.And they'd probably deny that they've been at this sex-negative prudery and denying access to their networks for legal, non-obscene content for at least two decades at this point.

A neat thing: a complete run of Computer Entertainer, one of the first video game magazines in the U.S., has been digitized and made available in Creative Commons, by the Video Game History Foundation. Hooray for accessible history!

Also because if you don't have history available to you, you start thinking that the methods of the past are superior to the methods of the present, when what you want is to draw forth the good things of the past into the present. The "90s parenting" being described here is entirely possible in the current decade, without any need for retro objects or such to bring back nostalgia along with what you want to actually do. Such nostalgia often makes people blame things improperly for creating the current world, or to start thinking that simply removing those objects will be enough to bring back the perfect world.

The only way not to build the Torment Nexus is not to build the Torment Nexus, and we have many reasons why we need to stay in the job that's going to build the Torment Nexus. Take care of your souls, and perhaps consider that if you're building the Torment Nexus, you don't have to do it at high speed or efficiency while you look for something that isn't on Team Torment Nexus. (What's also well-noted there is that there are a lot of people on Team Torment Nexus who have rationalized their participation, or who think this really is the way to go,.)

As we move into yet another year of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic, what's been learned and what best practices are good to continue. Including vaccination, even though, as we'll see in the later parts of the post, the anti-vaccination squad are currently running the health house.

A primer on the history of what the phrase "land grant university" means. More often than not, it's "land seized from Native nations, then sold, and the proceeds used to fund the construction and operation of the university" instead of something like "the state legislature granted land for the university from their own stores and funds."

The civility of the women's game (of football) has some fans of the men's game feeling like they're being fed their vegetables with no chance of dessert. We hear that kind of thing in the States as well, even with a top-ranked women's team. Am reminded of statistics I was quoted that suggest most men believe a crowd of about 17% women is 50% women, and a 33% woman crowd feels more like 90% to them. Because they're focused far too much on the thing they don't believe belongs there that they over-represent it in their heads.

And the rest inside )

Last out, something good in the technology: the engineers behind the Jupiter camera called Juno have been heating and then cooling the components to fix various radiation-related damage that has been seen on images, and the fixes bring the camera back to within specifications, albeit temporarily each time.

And the increasingly misnamed Sacramento Music Archive, and the progress being made on digitization, archiving, and sharing of concert recordings made by one person and/or the collections that have been given to them, many of which are for groups that never made it big, and some of which are previously-unknown performances, demos, or material for very big entities indeed.

A supposedly easy method for folding fitted sheets that they do fold appropriately and aesthetically pleasing-ly.

(Materials via [personal profile] adrian_turtle, [personal profile] azurelunatic, [personal profile] boxofdelights, [personal profile] cmcmck, [personal profile] conuly, [personal profile] cosmolinguist, [personal profile] elf, [personal profile] finch, [personal profile] firecat, [personal profile] jadelennox, [personal profile] jenett, [personal profile] jjhunter, [personal profile] kaberett, [personal profile] lilysea, [personal profile] oursin, [personal profile] rydra_wong, [personal profile] snowynight, [personal profile] sonia, [personal profile] the_future_modernes, [personal profile] thewayne, [personal profile] umadoshi, [personal profile] vass, the [community profile] meta_warehouse community, [community profile] little_details, and anyone else I've neglected to mention or who I suspect would rather not be on the list. If you want to know where I get the neat stuff, my reading list has most of it.)
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2025-08-17 12:26 pm

2025 Hugo, Lodestar, and Astounding Awards Winners

The 2025 Hugo, Lodestar, and Astounding Awards Winners are as follows

Best Novel: The Tainted Cup, Robert Jackson Bennett

Best Novella: The Tusks of Extinction, Ray Nayler

Best Novelette:"The Four Sisters Overlooking the Sea”, Naomi Kritzer

Best Short Story: “Stitched to Skin Like Family Is”, Nghi Vo

Best Series: Between Earth and Sky, Rebecca Roanhorse

Best Graphic Story or Comic: Star Trek: Lower Decks: Warp Your Own Way, written by Ryan North, art by Chris Fenoglio

Best Related Work: Speculative Whiteness: Science Fiction and the Alt-Right, Jordan S. Carroll

Best Dramatic Presentation, Long Form: Dune: Part Two, screenplay by Denis Villeneuve & Jon Spaihts, directed by Denis Villeneuve

Best Dramatic Presentation, Short Form: Star Trek: Lower Decks: “The New Next Generation”, created and written by Mike McMahan, based on Star Trek created by Gene Roddenberry, directed by Megan Lloyd

Best Game or Interactive Work: Caves of Qud, co-creators Brian Bucklew & Jason Grinblat; contributors Nick DeCapua, Corey Frang, Craig Hamilton, Autumn McDonell, Bastia Rosen, Caelyn Sandel, Samuel Wilson (Freehold Games); sound design A Shell in the Pit

Best Editor, Short Form:Neil Clarke

Best Editor, Long Form: Diana M. Pho

Best Professional Artist: Alyssa Winans

Best Semiprozine: Uncanny, publishers and editors-in-chief Lynne M. Thomas & Michael Damian Thomas; managing editor Monte Lin; poetry editor Betsy Aoki, podcast producers Erika Ensign & Steven Schapansky

Best Fanzine: Black Nerd Problems, editors William Evans & Omar Holmon

Best Fancast: Eight Days of Diana Wynne Jones, presented by Emily Tesh & Rebecca Fraimow

Best Fan Writer: Abigail Nussbaum

Best Fan Artist: Sara Felix

Best Poem: “A War of Words”, Marie Brennan

Lodestar Award for Best Young Adult Book: Sheine Lende, Darcie Little Badger

Astounding Award for Best New Writer: Moniquill Blackgoose
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james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2025-08-17 12:19 pm
mtbc: maze K (white-green)
Mark T. B. Carroll ([personal profile] mtbc) wrote2025-08-17 03:46 pm
Entry tags:

A decent, pleasant anime movie

I finally got around to watching the Japanese anime The Colors Within (2024). It's a gentle, sweet drama about teenagers finding each other.

I watch various rubbish so this is a low bar, and it's not the first movie I've liked that scores unremarkably on IMDb, but I'd say it's actually the best movie that I've seen for a while. It's not puzzling or challenging or anything, it's just nicely done and it made me happy.