Out late

Jul. 18th, 2025 02:27 am
silver_chipmunk: (Default)
[personal profile] silver_chipmunk
Got up at 10:00, had breakfast and coffee, and showered and dressed. Then I went over to [personal profile] mashfanficchick's place.

We hung out and did some chores around the place for some hours. Then at about 7:30 we went out shopping by Lyft, to BJ's first, where I called Middle Brother. He is fine.

Then we took another Lyft to Stop and Shop. Somehow we ended up there for a very long time, and when we went back to zer place, ze didn't feel like making dinner so we called in Indian.

Eventually I Ubered home. Now to bed.

No sign of my new computer.

Gratitude List:

1. The FWiB,

2. Air conditioning.

3. Bed soon.

4. Got some stuff I needed.

5. Mango lassi with dinner.

6. Vacation soon.
olivermoss: (Default)
[personal profile] olivermoss


I should have taken a few pictures of Caitlin Starling, I got her at the worst moment. Also, my cell phone could not handle the deep colors and it didn't focus in that one shot?

Oh well. Maybe someday I'll proper book club aesthetics post.

The event was fun! I barely got the book done in time. She talked about her upcoming vampire novel and also what the sequels to a few books would be like if her publisher greenlights them. Part of why I grabbed pics is because when I say 'it's a bar that's a converted house' people often seem confused by that idea. We have a decent number of bars like that here. Book club gets the second floor when we are there. IDK if this is just a Portland thing, but yeah, houses make good bars.

...I could have made like an actually really nice mood board if I'd used my real camera, but bringing that would have been a bit much

In the Netherlands

Jul. 17th, 2025 08:34 pm
queen_ypolita: Woman in a Mucha painting (Mucha by auctrix_icons)
[personal profile] queen_ypolita
I'm having few days off work this week, so yesterday I travelled to London and stayed over in Stratford. I originally had plans but in the end I was so tired and sluggish that I only did some browsing in the Westfield shops. This morning, I took the Elizabeth line and Thameslink trains to get to St Pancras for Eurostar. The Eurostar journey to Rotterdam went well, although we sat around at Lille Europe long enough for them to send an email suggesting we'd arrive around 20 minutes behind the schedule. In the end it was more like 5 minutes, just long enough for me to miss my planned connection to the Hague. On the platform when O got there, I had a choice between slower local train that left earlier and a faster intercity that left 10 minutes later. So I boarded the local train as it was there and had an easy journey.

After checking into my hotel I took a tram down to Schenevening to walk on the beach front for a while, before taking the tram back to the city centre. Tomorrow, my plan is to look at art.

Sunshine Revival challenge #5

Jul. 17th, 2025 04:31 pm
soricel: (Default)
[personal profile] soricel
OK, I've mentioned these books a bit in recent posts, but here's a list of some of the main things I love about Maggie Stiefvater's Raven Cycle books. I feel like I should add a disclaimer or caveat or something, but whatever, here goes:

1.) I have lots of issues with men and masculinity, especially as they're presented in most literature/popular culture. I'm trying to add some nuance to that, and I feel like these books have helped. For one thing, I love how the boys in these books show each other tenderness and affection, often in imperfect but endearing ways. 

2.) I love the way the books explore the class dynamics/tensions between the characters.

3.) Even though these are technically YA books, the adult characters feel like real and interesting human beings, and they actually play some significant roles in the plot beyond just being parents/guardians/teachers/whatever. 

4.) I love the way Stiefvater blends the magical/mythical and the mundane. Ramshackle magical realism.

5.) I have absolutely zero interest in cars, but Stiefvater is obviously *very* into them, and I love the knowledge and passion she brings to her writing about them.

6.) The audiobooks are so, so good. Will Patton brings so much life and pathos and humor and personality to the narration and dialogue. 

7.) These books have about the exact right quality/quantity of romance for my taste.

8.) At times these books seem to take themselves very seriously, but I also feel like some of the main villains bring some pulpiness to the plots that I find pretty fun and refreshing.

9) Despite all of the above, I don't think I'd like these books as much as I did if not for Stiefvater's style. The figurative language, the imagery, the clever turns of phrase, the little bits of humor...it feels like there was so much care put into almost every sentence. And I don't know, at the risk of overstatement and presumptuousness these books also just feel like labors of love and reflections of a pretty singular vision, and I love the moments where it feels like Stiefvater is just feeling herself and having fun with things and getting all maximalist with the world she's created, going right up and to and occasionally beyond the point of "too much," and you're just along for the ride and it's a good ride. In my opinion anyway.

10.) I've never really gotten bitten by the bug of fannishness before, but I really feel so much love for these books and these characters, and I feel like there's so much left to explore, which makes me grateful fanfiction exists!

Born of Hope Promo Post

Jul. 17th, 2025 10:29 am
elwinfortuna: (Aragorn gold glitter)
[personal profile] elwinfortuna posting in [community profile] innumerable_stars
Summary:

Born of Hope is a fan film from the UK, directed and produced by the same team that created The Hunt for Gollum, and was released in 2009. This film covers the circumstances of Gilraen and Arathorn's marriage and the early childhood of Aragorn. It is a canon-accurate story, also including some original characters and events.

Why should I check out this canon?

Are you interested in Aragorn, Gilraen, or the Dúnedain of the North before the events of The Lord of the Rings? Would you be intrigued by the idea of a female Ranger fighting alongside Arathorn? In addition to imbuing the characters of Gilraen, Arathorn, Arador, Dirhael, and Ivorwen with personality and life, this film also introduces us to several interesting original characters such as Elgarain, a friend and fellow Ranger with Arathorn, Dirhaborn, another Ranger who loves her, Halbarad's parents, several others who live in the small village of Taurdal, and a number of Orcs who are clearly having a great deal of fun with their roles. We also get to briefly see Elladan and Elrohir!

This 70-minute film, though it is clearly a fan film, is written and produced with a lot of love and heart. The story is interesting, the acting is very good, and the action feels realistic. I very much recommend it and have watched it several times. Born of Hope won the 2010 London Independent Film Festival award for 'Best Micro-Budget Film.'

Where can I get this?

Born of Hope is available for free on YouTube from Independent Online Cinema.

What fanworks already exist?

There are 10 works so far on AO3 for this fandom, many of them centred around Elgarain and her experiences, some set before the events of the film, and some which are canon-divergence.
sovay: (Sydney Carton)
[personal profile] sovay
Exiled for the second night running on account of the bustedassedness of our air conditioning, I have been self-medicating with college radio, old movies, and pulp novels. WUMB netted me Cordelia's Dad's "Granite Mills" (1998) and WHRB Thanks for Coming's "Friends Forever" (2020). Killer Shark (1950) is pretty much the other way round from its title with its setting of the mid-century shark fishery in the Gulf of California, but its call-it-courage adventure makes a cute B-showcase for Roddy McDowall just aged out of his child stardom, all his scene-stealer's tilts and flickers in place even if he was directed to give his best shot at sounding like an all-American teen. Night Nurse (1931) remains one of my favorite and endlessly watchable pre-Codes: steel-true Stanwyck, Blondell cracking gum and wise, and Ben Lyon as the sweetest bootlegger in the business, the kind of romantic hero who lets the heroine take the lead while he takes her at her word. Nancy Rutledge's Blood on the Cat (1945) does contain a most excellent black cat, tester of gravity, router of dogs, unendangered throughout the novel despite its human body count. The number of monarch caterpillars is now something like sixteen.

Mostly I read

Jul. 16th, 2025 10:23 pm
silver_chipmunk: (Default)
[personal profile] silver_chipmunk
Got up around 10:00 and had breakfast and coffee. I puttered around online, and that's about all I did for awhile.

Eventually I went to the bedroom and played solitaire for awhile, then finally I started reading. I finally finished Cat Among the Pigeons around 6:00.

I called the laundromat to find out what time they were bringing my laundry and they said 8:30.

Then I puttered online some more until 7:00 when I Teamed the FWiB. Sadly, D&D was a no go. So the good part of that is that we were able to talk til 8:30 when, as promised, my laundry showed up.

I brought it in, it was only $25, I think they accidentally undercharged me. But maybe not.

Then I had dinner, and called [personal profile] mashfanficchick about tomorrow.

I played solitaire until pet feeding time, and now here I am.

No sign of my laptop showing up yet.

Gratitude List:

1. The FWiB.

2. Good books.

3. Clean laundry.

4. Only $25.

5. Air conditioning.

6. Fudgesicles.

Books read, early July

Jul. 16th, 2025 02:24 pm
mrissa: (Default)
[personal profile] mrissa
 

A. S. Byatt, Still Life. Reread. I freely acknowledge that "4, 1, 2, 3" is an eccentric reread order for this series. (This is 2. Stay tuned for 3 in the next fortnight's book list.) It's also the one that, in my opinion, stands least well alone, mostly because of the ending. The ending is very cogent about the initial blurred, horrible phases of grief, but what it does not do is move through them to the next phases, to what happens after the first shock--which is an odd balancing for one book but fine for part of a larger story. I also find it fascinating that Byatt exists in this book as an authorial "I" in ways that she does not for the other books. "I wrote this word because of that," she will say, and it seems that if the I is not Antonia, it's someone quite close, it's not anything near to a character and not really much like an in-book narrator. It's just...our neighbor Antonia, who makes choices while writing, as one does, as we all do.

Linda Legarde Grover, Onigamiising: Seasons of an Ojibwe Year. If you have a relative who is a person of goodwill but has been paying absolutely no attention to Native/First Nations culture, this might be a good thing to give them. It's lots of very short (newspaper column or newsletter length) essays about personal memories and cultural memories through the turning of the year, nothing particularly deep and nothing that assumes that you know literally the first thing about Onigamiising (Duluth) or Ojibwe life or anything at all really. Not probably going to be very memorable if you do, but not offensive.

Alix E. Harrow, The Everlasting. Discussed elsewhere.

Reginald Hill, Death Comes for the Fat Man, Midnight Fugue, and The Price of Butcher's Meat. Rereads. And here we're at the end of the series, and as always I wish there was more and am glad there's this much. I don't think I'll need to return to The Price of Butcher's Meat; the email format conceit ("this is a person who doesn't use apostrophes, that means it's informal!" Reg stop) does not improve with time, and the rest of the book isn't really worth it to me. But the others are still quite solid mysteries, hurrah for Dalziel interiority.

Grady Hillhouse, Engineering in Plain Sight: An Illustrated Field Guide to the Constructed Environment. I picked this up because it was already in the house, and because I'm writing a thing about a city planner, and I thought it might spark ideas. It did not: it's very focused on the immediate 21st century American largely urban constructed environment. But what a neat book to be able to give a bright 10yo, or really anyone who can read full text but likes careful pictures of what there is and how it works.

Naomi Mitchison, Among You Taking Notes: The Wartime Diary of Naomi Mitchison. Kindle. I found this to be a heartening read because Mitchison is clearly a person like us, someone who values art and human rights and a number of good things like that, a person who is doing the best she can in an internationally stressful time--and also she's flat-out wrong a number of times in this book. A few times she's morally wrong, several times she's wrong in her predictions...and the Allies still won WWII and Mitchison herself still wrote a great many things worth reading. It is simultaneously a very friendly and domestic diary from someone Getting Through It All and a reminder that perfection is not required for progress.

Malka Older, The Potency of Ungovernable Impulses. More Mossa and Pleiti mystery adventures. The two spend a large chunk of the book in different locations. Don't start with this one, start with the first one, but also: events continue to ramify and unfold, hurrah events.

Deanna Raybourn, Kills Well With Others. The sequel to the previous "older women assassins attempting with not a great deal of success to be retired from killin' folks" book, it has similar appeal. It could be that you're ready to be done after one, which is valid, but if you weren't, this is more of that, and reasonably enjoyable. There's less of the dual timeline narrative here, about which I have mixed feelings: on the one hand it's often good for authors to let go of that kind of device when it has served its purpose, and on the other I liked the contrast. Ah well.

Cameron Reed, What We Are Seeking. Discussed elsewhere.

Tom Sancton, Sweet Land of Liberty: America in the Mind of the French Left, 1848-1871. This is not just about what people thought of the US at the time but also how they used images and references to it in their own internal propaganda, which is kind of cool. A lot of it was not particularly deep thought, and that is of itself interesting--in what ways do people react to large dramatic events for which they have limited context (but no small amount of possible personal use). If you like this sort of thing this is the sort of thing you'll like. A few eccentric views of, for example, Susan B. Anthony, or the Buchanan presidency, but within the scope of what one would expect for a few lines from someone whose main expertise is not those things.

Leonie Swann, Big Bad Wool. This is the sequel to Three Bags Full, and it is another sheep-centered mystery novel that stays in semi-realistic sheep perspective (except in the places where it goes into goat perspective this time! there are goats!). If you had fun with the first one, this will also be fun; if not, probably start with the first one, because it does have references to prior events. I really appreciate the sheep having sheep-centered theories, it's a good exercise in perspective.

Nghi Vo, A Mouthful of Dust. Discussed elsewhere.

Faith Wallis, ed., Medieval Medicine: A Reader. This is a compendium of translated documents from the period, with very small amounts of commentary between for context. If you want to know how to examine a patient's urine or what humors linen enhances, this is the book for you. Also if you want a window into how people thought of bodies and health over this long and diverse period. I think it's probably going to be more useful to have as a reference than to read straight through, but I did in fact read the whole thing this once (which I hope will help with my sense of what to check back on when using it as a reference).

Martha Wells, Queen Demon. Discussed elsewhere.

Wednesday reading

Jul. 16th, 2025 05:45 pm
queen_ypolita: Books stacked to form a spiral (Bookspiral by celticfire)
[personal profile] queen_ypolita
Finished since the last reading post
Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe, which was a sweet quick read, although towards the end it seemed to resolve repression and denial very easily.

Silchester Revealed: The Iron Age and Roman Town of Calleva by Professor Michael Fulford, which I bought when the museum was doing the lecture series in the spring and which covered the same current understanding of the town development based on the excavations since the 1970s in a slightly different format from the lectures.

A Heart So White (Corazón tan blanco) by Javier Marías in Margaret Jull Costa's English translation, about family secrets and secrets in relationships.

Currently reading
A Dangerous Kingdom of Love by Neil Blackmore, Seeing (Ensaio sobre a Lucidez) by José Saramago, in Margaret Jull Costa's English translation, and Crypt by Alice Roberts.

Reading next
No idea.

Sunshine Revival challenge #4

Jul. 16th, 2025 11:37 am
soricel: (Default)
[personal profile] soricel
A few days late! Oops...

A bit of a looser interpretation of the prompt, but, ten things that I've discovered help me calm down and feel better when I'm worked up/anxious/super in my head.

1.) Sit down, few deep breaths, put my hands on the top of my head. Say, "This is my head." Move on to my forehead, eyes, nose, etc., working my way all the way down my body. Touch each part of my body in a way that feels good. Tell myself "This is my __." I really like doing this, and sometimes I get kind of emotional when I do. :)

2.) Sit down, take a few deep breaths. Look at what's directly in front of me. Like, spend a good few moments just looking at it. Then slowly turn my gaze to something else. Keep doing that for a while.

3.) Dance. Find music that matches my mood and let my body move however it wants. Don't over-think it, but slowly try making movements that I feel somewhat unaccustomed to. See what happens. Sometimes I laugh a little at myself, but more often I'm like, ooh, that's interesting.

4.) Put on some music (or not) and color in one of those grown-up coloring books. 

5.) Write in my paper journal. Honestly sometimes this backfires and turns into rumination and spiraling, but sometimes it's a nice way to vent. I write in pencil, messily, in a cheap notebook or on the backs of old papers, and erase/rip it up after a while. It's not for posterity, just for getting stuff out.

6.) Talk to my partner or a friend/family member. This sounds super obvious and basic, but it's honestly taken me a long time to figure out how helpful it is for me to try articulating some messy thought/feeling in language that another person can understand. Often it makes the thought/feeling seem much smaller than it does when it's just in my head, or even when I try writing about it.

7.) Go for a walk. Observe things outside.

8.) Do some tiny chore I've been neglecting.

9.) Avoid doing things I know are going to exacerbate the feeling: drinking caffeine/having sugar, reading/listening to/watching content that I know gets me in my head. 

10.) I've never done formal IFS therapy, and only know a little bit about it, but I've found it to be really helpful to imagine that it isn't *me* (whatever that means) that's feeling the thing, it's a *part* of me, if that makes sense. It's fun thinking of these parts as like little characters in my head. And if I can visualize them and imagine talking with them, it usually helps me get some distance from the feeling and generate a more compassionate feeling about it.

The Hunt for Gollum Promo Post

Jul. 16th, 2025 08:34 am
elwinfortuna: (Aragorn gold glitter)
[personal profile] elwinfortuna posting in [community profile] innumerable_stars
Summary

The Hunt for Gollum is a fan film from the UK, directed and produced by the same team that created Born of Hope, and released in 2009. This 40 minute film covers events from the LOTR appendices about Aragorn's search for and capture of Gollum. Please note this has nothing whatsoever to do with the forthcoming film(s) from Peter Jackson entitled The Lord of the Rings: The Hunt for Gollum.

Why Should I Check Out This Canon?

It fleshes out an aspect of the story we only really hear about in passing, adds some fun additional original characters that would be enjoyable to hear more about, and gives a new perspective on Aragorn.

Where Can I Get This?

It's available on YouTube here: The Hunt for Gollum. Please note that this is a version uploaded in 2019 with improved audio and a slightly different edit to the original.

What Fanworks Already Exist?

None yet! You could be the first! Although there are a few fanworks depicting this event based on the LOTR books or movies, there is nothing dealing with events as portrayed in this short film.

Sort of nothing day

Jul. 15th, 2025 10:26 pm
silver_chipmunk: (Default)
[personal profile] silver_chipmunk
I got up a bit before 10:00 and had breakfast and coffee. I did a Shipt order, and then puttered online for awhile, and eventually I called [personal profile] mashfanficchick to find out if ze was doing anything of interest, which ze wasn't.

However, we got on the subject of laundry, which I need before I go on my trip to the cottage, and I'm not allowed to pick up anything heavy because of my eye surgery. So we discussed having my laundromat pick up and deliver my laundry, which they do.

So after I got off the phone with zer, I called the laundromat to make sure they did do pick up and delivery, which they do.

So I got my laundry together and called them and arranged the pickup and they came at around 4:00, They wouldn't come inside though which meant I had to get the laundry outside without picking it up. I dragged it to the door, and a helpful neighbor helped me get it out.

Then I put on some clothing and and went out to the bank to get cash since I will need that tomorrow to pay them (they don't do plastic)

That was easy enough, though for some reason the bank atm gave me everything in $5s. I came home and lay down for awhile, then got up at 6:00ish when the Kid texted me to ask me to do something political, which I did.

Then I puttered online some more til 7:00 when I Teamed the FWiB. We talked til a bit before 8:00 when I got off for my Al-anon meeting.

The meeting was very good, M and S were both there, as were some other people who dropped in.

After the meeting I had dinner, and then went to the bedroom. [personal profile] mashfanficchick called me, and we talked awhile, we may get together tomorrow, or may not.

My computer is still to be delivered sometime between now and Friday, I hope it actually is.

That's all I did today,

Gratitude List:

1. The FWiB,

2. My meetings and the people at them.

3. My clear vision.

4. The Kid.

5. [personal profile] mashfanficchick

6. My nice neighbor.

(no subject)

Jul. 15th, 2025 01:23 pm
olivermoss: (Default)
[personal profile] olivermoss
* Oh, right, Caitlin Starling is going to be at our horror book club meeting. I really, really need to get The Death of Jane Lawrence read. No wonder I had her on my 'get these authors read' shortlist.

* My bookclubbing has been very disorganized

* I watched the start of a Lady of the Library video. I don't want much of her content, but one on book reccs interested me, because reccs are such a bugbear for me. At the start she talked about her local book clubs fall for online reccs and says she shows up only for snacks and social contact, but wouldn't waste her precious time ever reading the books. I was surprised to see her proclaim that so proudly. People like this have been a problem at my bookclubs. They show up for social contact and free food, but not only have they not read the book, but they had no intention or interest. Not reading the book because the month got away from you, fine. But... literally no interest and there to leech? Know why we've got such nice spaces and other things for the clubs? Local bookstores are covering the costs . And people are like 'oh, y'all have the nice steampunky bar at Kennedy School that was made out of the old boiler room and cake and people to bother to refill my social meter' Like, fuck off, y'all're literally crowding us out of some spaces, and driving off the people we want to interact with.

Also, hot take but as much as I think booktok trends are typically terrible, I like reading what people are reading if it's making reading social. Unless I have an objection to the book, I don't care if it's a bit crappy. I mean, it's not an issue with my book clubs and honestly I think for me it's a great way to ~break free of the algorithm~ and get better reccs, but even if it wasn't, like if you want to be part of a thing be willing to at least have a little buy in to what's going on. If you don't want to expend even a drop of emotional energy or time, maybe at least fucking pretend to not be that person?

* Guild Wars 2 News: Tyria Pride once again smashed fundraising records for Rainbow Railroad. Love to see it. Also, in 2024 I spend half a year farming legendaries for it and my donation was the majority of the most hype prizes and also did a big dono. This year, I didn't/couldn't do either. So, it was nice to see it thriving even without me.

* Breaking Guild Wars 2 News: The new expac was announced today and... the website didn't go live in time and when it did it was half in English and half in French. Also, the morning patch notes spoiled stuff before the announcement. It wouldn't be ANet if they didn't have a bunch of tech issues with announcements.

Costume Bracket: Round 4, Post 6

Jul. 15th, 2025 06:27 pm
purplecat: The Tardis against a sunset (or possibly sunrise) (Doctor Who)
[personal profile] purplecat
Two Doctor Who companion outfits for your delectation and delight! Outfits selected by a mixture of ones I, personally, like; lists on the internet; and a certain random element.


Outfits below the Cut )

Vote for your favourite of these costumes. Use whatever criteria you please - most practical, most outrageously spacey, most of its decade!

Voting will remain open for at least a week, possibly longer!

Costume Bracket Masterlist

Images are a mixture of my own screencaps, screencaps from Lost in Time Graphics, PCJ's Whoniverse Gallery, and random Google searches.

Update

Jul. 15th, 2025 09:39 am
moon_custafer: neon cat mask (Default)
[personal profile] moon_custafer
I’ve a job interview for Thursday, might lead to something, you never know.

Andrew’s been feeling a little better lately—we got a referral to a pain clinic a while back and some adjustment of his meds. It seems to be helping, and he’s been getting out for walks pretty frequently, at least till yesterday when the air-quality outside dropped. Apologies to everyone Stateside who’s also had to deal with the wildfire smoke.

I’ve begun volunteering with the local community theatre. We had the first production meeting for Bus Stop, and now I have to put together costumes for two diner waitresses and a seedy college professor. The head of costuming is doing the other five characters. She costumed the last production of the show thirty years ago, and says the gingham skirts she made for the waitresses might still be around somewhere, but I sort of hope we don’t find them, as I think those blue or green uniforms with the white collars would be more period-appropriate.

We watched A Matter of Life and Death (1946) last night—Andrew had never seen it before, and I’d never seen the whole thing all the way through. Andrew commented that it was the most solidly real surrealism he’d ever seen. Thinking of maybe watching Wristcutters: A Love Story (2006) later. It’s also got an afterlife setting, as well as a score by Gogol Bordello; Shea Whigham (playing a character based on the lead singer of Gogol Bordello); and Tom Waits. Fanvid here (contains spoilers)

Watched Under the Volcano (1984), still processing it.
elwinfortuna: Rainbow Fëanorian star, surrounded by text: "through sorrow to find joy." (through sorrow to find joy)
[personal profile] elwinfortuna posting in [community profile] innumerable_stars
(written by [personal profile] elwinfortuna)

Summary: This is a short play written as an alliterative poem, where two characters, Tidwald and Torhthelm (who call each other Tida and Totta), retrieve the body of their lord, Beorhtnoth, from the battlefield. The work was inspired by the Old English poem The Battle of Maldon and focuses on the aftermath of the battle.

Why should I check out this canon?
If you’re interested in themes like the futility and sadness of war, dealing with picking up the pieces after death, the strife between practical reality and imagination, dark shadows lurking just out of sight, and the conflict of pagan beliefs versus Christianity in 10th Century Britain, then this poem play is for you! It’s also in parts beautiful, sad, funny, and thoughtful. I particularly enjoy the differences between the two characters: young Totta, with his head full of poetry about glory and death, as contrasted with Tida’s no-nonsense practical mind.

Where can I get this?
This canon is a little difficult to buy, though it has been published, both together with The Battle of Maldon and also as part of a short anthology called Tree and Leaf. It is, however, available here for download in pdf format at Reader’s Library. There is a recording of Tolkien reading the play available as a audiobook from Amazon as well.

What fanworks already exist?
There are 11 works on AO3 so far! They include stories crossing over with Middle-earth, stories about riddles, and stories inspired by the themes of the poem.
sovay: (Claude Rains)
[personal profile] sovay
Because I am more familiar with the operas than the film scores of Erich Wolfgang Korngold and tend to avoid even famous movies with Ronald Reagan in them, it took until tonight for me to hear the main theme for Kings Row (1942), at which point the entire career of John Williams flashed before my eyes. Other parts of the score sound more recognizably, symphonically of their era, but that fanfare is a blast from the future it directly shaped: the standard set by Korngold's tone-poem, leitmotiv-driven approach to film composing, principal photography as the libretto to an opera. I love finding these taproots, even when they were lying around in plain sight.

I don't think that what I feel for the sea is nostalgia, but I am intrigued by this study indicating that generally people do: "Searching for Ithaca: The geography and psychological benefits of nostalgic places" (2025). I am surprised that more people are not apparently bonded to deserts or mountains or woodlands. Holidays by the sea can't explain all of it. I used to spend a lot of my life in trees.

I napped for a couple of hours this afternoon, but my brain could return any time now. The rest of my week is not conducive to doing nothing. The rest of the world is not conducive to losing time.

Watched a movie

Jul. 14th, 2025 10:11 pm
silver_chipmunk: (Default)
[personal profile] silver_chipmunk
On the computer on Netflix, that's really all I did today.

Got up a little after 11:00 and had breakfast and coffee. I puttered around online for awhile. I was expecting the delivery of my new computer today, but annoyingly Best Buy is now saying between today and the 18th. It had better get here soon, the physical collapse of this one is accelerating.

Anyway, eventually I decided that I should watch The Old Guard 2, which I'd been meaning to do since I heard about it. It's on Netflix, so I signed in. It's not, in my opinion, as good as the first one, but I enjoyed it.

Finished that a little after 4:00, and went into the bedroom to play solitaire.

Came back out around 6:00, puttered online. At 7:00 I Skyped the FWiB, and we talked for a nice time, though we had some technical difficulties.

After we finished talking I had diner, and went back into the bedroom again. I ordered an Old Guard graphic novel, the one that's short stories, from Thriftbooks. They have it on back order though.

That's really all I did today except a little emailing. I emailed Flamingo to double check if I had registered for SHarecon. I was sure I had, but disturbingly, I can't remember doing so. But I was right, I had, so that's OK.

I also emailed John and Denise about some cottage business, and Denise called and we had a rather nice conversation.

I called [personal profile] mashfanficchick but ze wasn't doing anything.

Last night after I posted here, the Kid called, and we talked. She has another job interview on Thursday.

And that's pretty much everything.

Gratitude List:

1. The FWiB.

2. The Kid.

3. John and Denise.

4. Fun movies.

5. Thriftbooks.

6. My eyesight is so much better!
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