Alien Clay by Adrian Tchaikovsky

Monday, June 30th, 2025 09:58 pm
chomiji: An image of a classic spiral galaxy (galaxy)
[personal profile] chomiji

The Earth is ruled by the authoritarian Mandate, which like all such governments is constantly alert for threats to its stability. This extends to its scientific research: although the Mandate has explored space and discovered a number of exoplanets (a few of which have some form of life), it still insists that scientific discoveries must support the philosophy of the Mandate, which holds that human beings are the pinnacle of creation and that other life forms must all be in the process of striving to achieve that same state of being.

Ecologist and xeno-ecologist Arton Daghdev chafes against both these mental manacles and the Mandate in general. Some time before the story opens, he becomes part of a cell of would-be revolutionaries. After discovery of his improper views and rebellious actions, he is sentenced to what is meant to be a short life assisting research on the planet Imno 27g, casually known as Kiln for the strange clusters of pottery buildings scattered over its surface.

Life as a prisoner on Kiln within the research enclave is brutal in all the ways any such prison can be, when the prisoners are nothing but human-shaped machinery to accomplish the goals of their jailers. The Mandate's leadership has absolute control over who among their prisoners lives or dies, and if anyone should harbor the intent to escape, the environment outside the base is all too lively. The death rate among the workers is appalling, but new shipments of convicted crooks and malcontents arrive all the time, so it hardly matters.

None of the weird aliens seem to be builders of the sort needed to create the clusters of mysterious structures or indeed intelligent in any way beyond, perhaps, the level of social insects on Earth. Yet somehow the small, dysfunctional cadre of scientists on Kiln must serve up the desired tidbits of discovery to keep their commandant happy with them: evidence that there once were intelligent humanoids on Kiln.

Cut for more, including some spoilers )

I am an emotional person, and I want to like at least some of the characters about whom I'm reading. Daghdev is prickly, snarky, and fatalistic — but then, he has cause. He's also an unreliable narrator who only reveals to the reader what he wants, when he wants. The situation is really excruciating: people with a deep dislike of body horror might want to avoid this book. And there is not, in fact, a happy ending (at least not IMO).

On the other hand, this is very well written. For me, it moved along at a fantastic clip, and when I went back to check some particulars for this write-up, I found myself reading far more than I had intended because the story caught me up again. Some of the scientific ideas reminded me of other works (Sue Burke's Semiosis surfaced in my thoughts a couple of time), and sometimes I was reminded of something more elusive, a source that I can't recall. Does anyone else who has already read this have thoughts on the book's likely ancestors?

From my viewpoint, this was one of the most "science fictional" of this year's finalists. I think it might be my first choice in the vote.

Katydid of Zenith

Monday, June 30th, 2025 07:44 pm
[personal profile] ismo
And we are home! I had every intention of blogging via phone, but I forgot that logging in to Dreamwidth from my phone requires an authentication process that has so far proved to be literally impossible. I'm sure someone has figured this out, but I cannot and apparently many other people online cannot either. We arrived at our house about 6 last night, after riding in planes, trains, and automobiles (well, not railroad trains, but airport trams plus buses). Our longest flight was 9 hours from Munich to Chicago. It was a Lufthansa plane, so somewhat nicer and more comfortable than the one in which we flew from Newark to Munich on the outward voyage. But no airplane remains comfortable after nine hours. I was ready to cry by the time we landed. And ready to kiss the ground in Michigan by the time we landed there. We thought we might try to stay up until maybe 9 o'clock, but by 7:30 I was ready to pass out, and we collapsed oh so gratefully into our own bed and slept until about 2. Then we both woke up, went downstairs to drink some more big glasses of water WITH ICE, and went back to bed at 4 and slept until 8. And we also took a lovely nap later in the morning, when the Sparrowhawk came home from counting money and I was finished with a short conversation with Queenie. This sleep has been the awesome sauce. It is so smooth and chill, like the very best ice cream.

Our goal for today was to do just enough activity to make it possible to sleep some more. To this end, I have processed quite a lot of laundry, and helped the Sparrowhawk with meal prep. He has been to the store to get milk and coffee cream. And a coffee cake that mysteriously appeared after his shopping trip. I think he misses the fleshpots of Egypt, aka the pastries that were served on the boat. We also caught up with the reading for our online book club, and participated in the meeting this evening.

It is now about 3 am in Budapest, and twenty-four hours ago, we were in a taxi speeding through the pre-dawn twilight to the airport. It was then that I, in a dopy and sleep-deprived state of semi-consciousness, managed to gather up assorted bags, but left my phone behind in the taxi! The Sparrowhawk, and Tron, who served as a proxy while we were in flight, spent a lot of energy on phone calls and emails to the cruise company, begging their assistance in reclaiming the phone. The taxi driver disclaimed all knowledge, but Find My Phone showed us the path of the device, noodling idly around Budapest between the docks and the airport. Apparently the delights of central Europe had wooed my phone away from the path of righteousness and it was hanging out at the docks, in a striped pullover and rakish cap, with a cigarette dangling from its lips. At last, motivated by the Sparrowhawk's skillful application of hot and cold compresses in the form of flattery and admonition, the cruise company staff awakened itself and found the taxi and reclaimed my errant device! This is hardly short of miraculous! The Sparrowhawk is my hero! And now to bed again, to rest untroubled by worries about the fate of the prodigal phone.

Bundle of Holding: Broken Tales

Monday, June 30th, 2025 03:44 pm
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll


The English-language rulebook and supplements for Broken Tales, the tabletop fantasy roleplaying game of upside-down fairy tales from Italian game publisher The World Anvil Publishing.

Bundle of Holding: Broken Tales
umadoshi: (lilacs 01)
[personal profile] umadoshi
With Canada Day rudely falling on a Tuesday, [personal profile] scruloose and I both booked today off. I haven't managed a whole lot of manga work yet, but hopefully between today (as soon as I finish this post) and tomorrow I'll get a reasonable amount done. While I'm doing at-my-desk things, [personal profile] scruloose is working on the next step(s) in getting a dedicated hose set up for our individual townhouse.

Last night we finally got around to switching the desk chairs in our offices, cut for the uninterested )

It occurred to me very late in the game that I might do better at spending non-work time at my desk (where, y'know, most of my writing used to happen) if I didn't hate my chair; I've been attributing the fact that I spend 95% of my evenings down in the living room these days to the fact that Sinha's such a lapcat, and that's definitely a huge factor, but...being able to sit comfortably in here would sure help.

Another pleasing tech-related development has to do with my phone keyboard. again, cut for the uninterested )

Speaking of things that feel so much better now, Saturday also involved Ginny chopping my hair off for me. I've been leaving it alone (other than the undercut) since whenever the last time we buzz cut it was, and maybe a month ago I found that it was long enough to easily ponytail. That was pleasantly novel for about a week, even though the front bits weren't long enough to get into the ponytail and quickly started to need clips or something when it got hot. By last weekend, I was very, very done with the whole thing, and this weekend Ginny was able to deal with it. Such a relief.

My younger nibling and their spouse of eight months or so stopped by a few days ago to pick up a few years' worth of my spare comp copies from Seven Seas. Only one box, since I've technically scaled back my freelance workload (and I think there's also a backlog of comps that I should be getting sooner rather than later), but a hefty box that was bulging a bit at the seams, so it's nice to have that all sent off to a new home. It was lovely to see my nibling and meet their spouse, however briefly. (They politely rolled with the "we're going to stand in our driveway and chat while masked and overheat more than a little" element.)

A final thing before calling this a post and getting to work: last weekend [personal profile] scruloose and I gave the Sensation lilac a long-overdue aggressive pruning (and it should probably get the same amount cut out of it in a year). The poor thing was all spindly limbs and mostly-high-up blooms, so hopefully this will help it for next year.But what to do with the mutant hybrid? )

June 2025 books

Monday, June 30th, 2025 04:00 pm
[syndicated profile] fromtheheartofeurope_feed

Posted by fromtheheartofeurope

Non-fiction 7 (YTD 38)
Ireland in the Renaissance, 1540-1660, ed. Thomas Herron and Michael Potterton
Castrovalva, by Andrew Orton
1913: The Year Before the Storm, by Florian Illies
The Ancient Paths, by Graham Robb (did not finish)
The Burgundians: A Vanished Empire, by Bart van Loo
The Road: A Story of Romans and Ways to the Past, by Christopher Hadley
The Gallant Edith Bratt: J.R.R. Tolkien’s Inspiration, by Nancy Bunting and Seamus Hamill-Keays

Non-genre 2 (YTD 21)
Not So Quiet…, by Helen Zenna Smith
The Wren, The Wren, by Anne Enright

SF 7 (YTD 64)
A Restless Truth, by Freya Marske
The Prince of Secrets, by A.J. Lancaster (did not finish)
Would She Be Gone, by Melanie Harding-Shaw
“The Faery Handbag”, by Kelly Link
Under the Pendulum Sun, by Jeannette Ng
The Impossible Contract, by K.A. Doore
The Green Man’s Quarry, by Juliet E. McKenna

Doctor Who 3 (YTD 16)
Ship of Fools, by Dave Stone
Fear Death By Water, by Emily Cook
Doctor Who: Castrovalva, by Christopher H. Bidmead

Comics 2 (YTD 18)
Panter, by Brecht Evens
Spent, by Alison Bechdel

5,500 pages (YTD 40,800)

12/21 (YTD 64/149) by non-male writers (Bunting, Smith, Enright, Marske, Lancaster, Harding-Shaw, Link, Ng, Doore, McKenna, Cook, Bechdel)
1/21 (YTD 22/149) by non-white writers (Ng)
5/21 rereads (The Burgundians, The Gallant Edith Bratt, “The Faery Handbag”, Ship of Fools, Doctor Who: Castrovalva)
224 books currently tagged unread, down 7 from last month, down 83 from June 2024.

Reading now
Beautiful Star, by Yukio Mishima
The Coming Wave: AI, Power and Our Future, by Mustafa Suleyman
The Making of Martin Luther, by Richard Rex
F**k Work, Let’s Play: Do What You Love and Get Paid for It, by John Williams

Coming soon (perhaps)
Fractures, by Robbie Morrison et al
Down, by Lawrence Miles
Spectral Scream, by Hannah Fergesen
Exterminate/Regenerate: The Story of Doctor Who, by by John Higgs
The Revenant Express, by George Mann
Raven Heart, by Murphy Lawless
The Iliad, by Homer, tr. Emily Wilson
The Master, by Louise Cooper
Voyage to Venus, by C.S. Lewis

The Bone Woman: A Forensic Anthropologist’s Search for Truth in the Mass Graves of Rwanda, Bosnia, Croatia, and Kosovo, by Clea Koff
Feet of Clay, by Terry Pratchett
False Value, by Ben Aaronovitch

Three Eight One, by Aliya Whiteley
The Women Could Fly, by Megan Giddings
‘Salem’s Lot, by Stephen King
Prophet Song, by Paul Lynch
Final Cut, by Charles Burns

“Two Hearts”, by Peter S. Beagle
Histoire de Jérusalem, by Vincent Lemire
A Tall Man In A Low Land: Some Time Among the Belgians, by Harry Pearson
The Principle of Moments, by Esmie Jikiemi-Pearson

oursin: Grumpy looking hedgehog (Grumpy hedgehog)
[personal profile] oursin

How is it the end of June already? Where did it go?

And tomorrow I have to travel to Birmingham for a conference.

I am telling myself that I survived the Hot Summer of 76 in an un-airconditioned office where, if one opened a window in came the noise and fumes of a heavily traffic-polluted thoroughfare.

Of course, I was Much Younger in those days.

I see that it is supposed to get somewhat cooler (and wetter) on Weds.

Clarke Award Finalists 2003

Monday, June 30th, 2025 10:28 am
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll
2003: PM Blair embraces hilariously transparent lies to justify the invasion of Iraq, two million Britons reveal the power of public outrage when they protest the Iraq War to no effect, and the Coalition of the Billing (UK included) faces an occupation of Iraq that will no doubt be entirely without unforeseen challenges or consequences.

Poll #33305 Clarke Award Finalists 2003
Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 49


Which 2003 Clarke Award Finalists Have You Read?

View Answers

The Separation by Christopher Priest
7 (14.3%)

Kiln People by David Brin
14 (28.6%)

Light by M. John Harrison
11 (22.4%)

The Scar by China Miéville
20 (40.8%)

The Speed of Dark by Elizabeth Moon
24 (49.0%)

The Years of Rice and Salt by Kim Stanley Robinson
25 (51.0%)



Bold for have read, italic for intend to read,, underline for never heard of it.

Which 2003 Clarke Award Finalists Have You Read?
The Separation by Christopher Priest
Kiln People by David Brin
Light by M. John Harrison
The Scar by China Miéville
The Speed of Dark by Elizabeth Moon
The Years of Rice and Salt by Kim Stanley Robinson

WSFS Business Meeting 2025: the whole thing

Monday, June 30th, 2025 01:36 pm
[syndicated profile] fromtheheartofeurope_feed

Posted by fromtheheartofeurope

I have compiled all of my posts about this year’s WSFS Business Meeting into a single Google Document (embedded below, direct link here). I hope it will be useful. For the moment I am leaving comments on; we’ll see how that works.

Needless to say, it represents only my own views, and where I am one of the co-sponsors of one of the agenda items, I speak only for myself here.

2025 WSFS Business meeting posts:
Mark Protection Committee Report
Investigation Committee on the 2023 Hugo Awards report
Software Committee
Hugo Administration Process Committee report
Business Meeting Study Group
C1, C2, C3, C4
C5
D1, D2, D3
D4
D5, D6
D7, D8
D9, D10, D11, D12
E1, E2
E3, E4, E5
E6
E7
E8
E9
F1, F2
F3, F4, F5, F6
F7, F8
F9, F10
F11
F12
F13
F14, F15
F16, F17, F18, F19
F20
F21
F22

June 2025 in review

Monday, June 30th, 2025 09:06 am
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll


I survived another dance season. Go me.

21 works reviewed. 11 by women (52%), 9 by men (43%),1 by non-binary authors (5%), 0 by authors whose gender is unknown (0%), and 8 by POC (38%).

More details at the other end of the link.

Coming In

Monday, June 30th, 2025 07:45 am
smokingboot: (D Calligraphy)
[personal profile] smokingboot
Yesterday a dark butterfly fluttered into our front room, bimbled around a bit above us, went out again. I made a story in my head: 30th June, date of Mark's death! It has taken him 10 years to return as a butterfly! Alas, my dates were wrong, today is the 30th. So much for my dreaming :-D

Also yesterday, Russ found a bird in our kitchen, confused or something. It flew out unscathed.

Why is everything coming in? I don't mind at all provided the beasties aren't harmed, but I've no idea why our interiors are suddenly so alluring.

Ugh, I am stupid tired. I should go back to bed.

I carried on trying to paint when I got back (God, how long is it going to take us to get over that trip? I feel for R and all that driving. Next time, plane and rental car.) One attempt was so terrible I actually had to snap the canvas in half. Of the four paintings I did on holiday, two are too embarrassing to show anyone and two please me despite their obvious issues. Painting is good for me provided I don't get frustrated at my lack. I feel so at home with writing, there is a kind of guilt at focusing on any other form of self expression, and I do love it, define myself by it almost. But those are very good reasons for working with something free from expectations/demands. So I'll put the two bearables here, in case the canvases get destroyed or I accidentally on purpose dump them in the bin.

This first was nothing more than a moment's feeling, as the wind blew through Saint Emilion, over the houses and through the streets, caught up in my head with the swifts/swallows/house martins flying.




The second was meant to be a snake among fruit and flowers. It became a sea monster because I can't Art. These have a specific meaning in my dream lexicon, based on Irish/Scottish/sea-faring folklore. To see them at all presaged storms and wild weather or by contraries becalming, but to have one see or approach your ship was considered extremely unlucky. This last may be one of the most self-evident pieces of nautical lore ever recorded.




My brother likes it, maybe because at least one of us has a touch of the sea monster about them anyway.

There now, am I awake yet? No, no, not yet.

I don't change, I don't even notice the scene

Sunday, June 29th, 2025 09:52 pm
sovay: (Sydney Carton)
[personal profile] sovay
As I hollered after the inapposite license plate of the SUV that had blown through the crosswalk without even thinking about stopping while we were in it, "Psalm 23? With that driving?" I am informed by [personal profile] spatch that the driver who actually had stopped for us like a normal person let out one of those whoaaa sounds as at a game of the dozens, which was extremely good recompense for almost being run over by an SUV whose Lord may have been a shepherd, but obviously not a crossing guard.

(The rest of this weekend has been different temperatures of garbage; I take my victories where I can. We were in West Medford to eat tamales on the bleachers of Playstead Park.)

Survived another dance season

Sunday, June 29th, 2025 10:43 pm
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll
Final show: a 5.5 hour bhangra show that was only 6.5 hours long.

Among my final achievements this season, discovering as I hoisted the last of many garbage bags into the dumpster that the bag was leaking coffee. My last achievement was ducking to the men's to wash my hands, discovering someone had plugged the sinks and turned on the taps, and stopping the flood in time.
lebateleur: Ukiyo-e image of Japanese woman reading (TWIB)
[personal profile] lebateleur
...with June's falling on this weekend. It was grand. There were four of us at final count; we sat down to read at 11:30 and didn't stop until 6:15 pm. The only time anyone spoke was when one of us got up to get more tea and asked if anyone else wanted any, too. I love that I can do this, and that I know multiple people who are also happy to spend their weekends doing this. (And it's even better now because having those other people with me means that when I sit down to read a book, I actually read the book, instead of pushing through a page or two and then picking up my phone "for just a minute" and doomscrolling updates about things I have no ability to affect for hours on end.)

I finished Kara Cooney's When Women Ruled the World, which was an incredibly frustrating book and Maggie O'Farrel's Hamnet, which was an incredibly good one (but which left me as melancholy as if I had doomscrolled the news for hours on end).

Afterwards we popped over to Near BBQ and introduced one of the SSRers to one of the employees, a Geek BBQ alum whom we hadn't seen in ages and with whom it was great to catch up. Then we walked SSRer A to the metro, with a short interlude to kill 30+ lanternfly nymphs on the way.Read more... )

All in all, a pretty good weekend.

これで以上です。
taz_39: (Default)
[personal profile] taz_39
**DISCLAIMER** The views and opinions expressed in this post are my own, and do not reflect the views or opinions of my employer.
DO NOT RESHARE ANY PART OF THIS POST WITHOUT EXPRESS PERMISSION. Thank you.**

This post covers the weekend.


---    ---    ---    ---    ---    ---

FRIDAY

I was up somewhat early to do laundry, then buckled down to figure out what insane travel logistics will allow me to attend the BATB opening night show and party.

Besides, I'd had other plans for the layoff which included


     - Visiting a brass shop west of Chicago, which I'd planned months ago
     - Now including the BATB party in downtown Chicago
     - Flying to PA the day after the party to visit with family
     - Driving from Philly airport to my hometown, a 2.5-hour drive + renting a car for the entire visit
     - Sharing a hotel room with one sister to help her save costs while in PA
     - Driving 2.5 hours back to the airport and flying to Orlando


I had already booked some of this travel, but had only booked the Chicago hotel through the 8th originally. The party is on the 10th so I had to figure out whether/how to change my hotel bookings, and also change my flight to PA from the 8th to the 11th. To compound all of this, I won't have access to a car for the entire time in Chicago, will have to rent a car for the entire time in PA, and will be bringing both my large tour suitcase and bass trombone (both of which will need to be checked for every flight.) Ultimately it's three flights, three hotels, a rental car, and a mysterious number of Ubers and train rides.

All this is to say that it took me several hours to figure out the logistics of this insane plan, because it was not so simple as booking any old hotel room; I also needed to make sure hotels were walkable to/from train stations with large heavy luggage, OR that they were within reasonable Ubering distance of things, plus figuring out how to reach the brass shop which is out in the 'burbs.


Here's what I ultimately came up with:
  • July 4 through 7: Flying to ORD. I booked a hotel in Alsip because it's close to the brass shop I want to visit. Spending one day visiting the brass shop, and for the rest of the time I'll be lying low to save money (hotel was booked using points so it's not costing me anything.) Figure I'll practice bass trombone, go for walks, possibly pick up a transcription job if I think I can finish it before the party.
  • July 8: Checking out of Alsip hotel and somehow getting myself and my luggage/trombone to a downtown hotel so I can be close to the Cadillac Theater. This will involve at least one Uber and maybe a train as well, carrying all of my crap. I booked the hotel through Disney and was able to get a decent discount.
  • July 8 and 9: Enjoying downtown Chicago! Hopefully I'll get to do at least one Foodie Find. If nothing else it'll just be nice to walk around and experience this great city for a day and a half.
  • July 10: Opening night performance of BATB, followed by the opening night party :)
  • July 11: Early morning train or Uber to ORD (1 hour.) Flying to Philly, picking up a rental car and driving 2.5 hours to my hometown in Central PA. Checking into hotel with my sister. I used points for the cost of this hotel as well, and the rental car through Disney was 30% off which is an absolute lifesaver.
  • July 12: My nephew's birthday party! Most of our family will be there. OHMYGOSH I need to buy a present!!
  • July 13 through 15: Visiting with family, helping out where needed, managing misc family dramas that will be coming out when we're all together. Might have to practice bass trombone on one of these days.
  • July 16: Driving back to Philly, returning the rental car, flying to Orlando, and being laid off through August 3rd or so. My Aunt may come to visit during this time as well!
It's going to be a bit crazy, but I'd like to think every part of this is worth it. Even with all of the discounts I've scrounged up it's very expensive...but this is the only chance. Life is too short and money's not everything.

While I was working all of that out, Jameson was boarding the Magic to start overseeing his first band!
Here is the ship as he was getting ready to board!

509632477_17937785208022578_1351276389131208691_n.jpg

And here is the view from his room!
77273841602__0354230D-C3C3-4D85-8F28-C9647C3D5358.jpeg

He got emotional after boarding, and I don't blame him. I have watched him work for years to earn this job, and to be recognized for his skills and experience and all that he has poured into Disney as a company. I watched him get rejected over and over again, and get back up each time even though it hurt. He's been AMAZING. And finally he gets to see that all of that effort was not for nothing. So proud of him right now!!!

The rest of my day was incredibly boring. The weather is better but I just do not feel motivated to walk around here with no end goal in mind. I read a little bit, researched things to do in Chicago, snacked, and rested until close to showtime.

View from the pit:

thumbnail_IMG_1175.jpg

While we were performing through the first act, Jameson started sending me pictures.
He was having dinner at Lumiere's, a Beauty and the Beast-themed restaurant on the Magic!!

thumbnail_77276278571__FD183BF4-9D20-48F5-8D86-0CBB55EB000E.jpg

Some of the chandeliers contained an enchanted rose!
thumbnail_77276312127__CECB9F7E-50A1-494F-BEC4-BFF92AE7983A.jpg

General view of the space. You can see the characters from the movie in the background/on the walls.
thumbnail_77276372406__BF8CF791-5246-46F3-ABA4-2421A3B0B1DA.jpg

I was so touched and wonderstruck that we were simultaneously having this Disney/Beauty and the Beast career moment, thousands of miles apart. Life is wild and wonderful.

After the show, Koz (a VERY notable Disney producer/composer and Alan Menken's right hand man who is overseeing music on this show) came down to the pit and congratulated us, saying that we sounded "fantastic" and that he'd see us again in a few months when the tour has gotten underway.

I was ELATED! First of all, to have someone of his standing with Disney give a musical compliment is a big deal to me! And secondly, with those words he was signing off on us/what we are doing musically on this show. THIS was what I needed to hear...the final piece of my personal insecurity puzzle. Getting past tech rehearsals, and essentially getting Disney's approval and endorsement for our playing. YES!!!

The upcoming Chicago layoff had also been a point of insecurity for me because that's a time when, if they wanted to find alternative musicians, they could. But my company housing and travel for the next three cities has been confirmed, and they wouldn't be booking that stuff if they planned to ditch me.

I got to go home tonight finally feeling that this is MY gig.
I can stay. I am wanted.
It's such a relief, after months of tension in my heart.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

SATURDAY

Got up fairly late. Tired!

Typed up this post and chatted with Jameson. His ship had just docked at Disney's Castaway Cay.

thumbnail_IMG_1184.jpg

He'll oversee rehearsals today so won't get to explore, but might get a chance tomorrow.

Meanwhile today was our first two-show day!
I was just kind of chilling before the show when my friend Jacob messaged. I'd gotten him house seats (well he paid for them but I reserved them) and he wanted to thank me by taking me to a nearby Italian bakery. Yay cannoli!

I got ready a little early and walked to the bakery to meet Jacob. We each got a cannoli (weeeell I imposed on his generosity and got two, a chocolate and a regular), and he very generously gave me a gift card for Whole Paycheck! My goodness! I want to repay him, but on this tour we're pretty limited as far as sneak peeks and haven't had access to the merch yet either. I'll owe him one :p

We chatted, mostly about theater things because Jacob seems to know everything there is to know about theater industry stuff! For example I found out that Disney has built a permanent office here in Schenectady for one of their directors(?) after Frozen was in the city for a very long period of time. He even showed me the office later as we were walking to pick up his tickets! I'll have to take a closer look when the lobby isn't crammed with patrons.

The cannoli was excellent, by the way :)

thumbnail_IMG_1188.jpg

The matinee went generally well, I made some weird note mistakes but as my boss on the circus used to say, "You'll miss every note in your book at least once." I can attest that that is very true. Jacob said he had a great time, and added, "When this is packaged on a season with a few non-equity tours, no competition, this is the pick of the season." Awesome!!

After the show we stuck around a bit to receive compliments from some audience members, then we shoved our instrument cases into the road cases to see how they'd fit. For the moment we seem to have LOADS of room, but looks can be deceiving. Still, now we know where to put our stuff when the show moves.

thumbnail_IMG_1195.jpg

Between shows I ate dinner and rested. The evening show was crazy-packed, with the line for the box office double-looped and stretching in both directions down the arcade/lobby!! Not to mention the queues for the photo ops and the merch stand, all of these lines overlapping and bumping into each other making it hard to get through. And there were SO MANY little girls dressed as Belle! And some adults too. It took me a solid 3-5 minutes to fight my way to the stage door.

This tour...is really going to be unlike any I've ever been on. I need to prepare myself for this.

Turns out I had several friends in the audience including Brittany (audio friend from TOOTSIE) and Jackie Anne (a circus friend and her family.) The show went well/normally, and the audience was so incredibly into it :) After the show my friends all came to the pit wall to say hi. I prioritized Jackie Anne since she had kids and Brittany said she'd wait for me at the stage door. Jackie's daughter was dressed as Belle so I made sure to compliment her dress. We might go get lunch together sometime this week.

For the second time this weekend the band was asked to autograph programs! This is a very new thing...normally musicians are ignored or assumed to be a part of crew. But both at the pit wall after the show, and again at the stage door yesterday and today, kids came up with programs and pens in hand, asking for the musicians and with the page open to the orchestra credits. They are actually specifically looking for us. On other tours this would happen maybe 2-3 times for an entire run. Band and theater kids. If this is gonna be a regular thing...I'm shy about the attention, but it is wonderful to think that young people might be inspired by the live music!! I remember watching pit musicians and feeling jealous of them :p and I was never brave enough to ask for autographs. Anyway, now that it's happened twice it felt worth mentioning.

I found Brittany at the stage door and we caught up a bit, it was great to see her! We only had a brief chat before I had to get to bed and she had to get back on the road. I crashed at the hotel, tired but happy.

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SUNDAY

Woke up with puffy lips, but that is normal as one adjusts to a full playing schedule :)

Had a nice breakfast and was able to relax and chat with Jameson before the matinee. The ship is in Nassau now.

The first show was fine, I want to do better but have got to be patient with myself. Between shows nothing exciting happened, just dinner and chatting with Jameson. Second show I DID do better and was pleased. Not perfect, just better all around. Patience will be rewarded.

After the show DAR (our MD) had a little champagne toast for us, and gave a little speech about how wonderful we've been to work with...but of course HE'S been wonderful to work with as well! I am SO GLAD he's on this tour, he's awesome human being and an excellent, no-nonsense, bada$$ conductor. Overall I think we've got a great group of people here and hopefully that continues for a long time. 

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Monday:
A day off! I was going to go for a walk in the woods but it's supposed to be 90°F (32°C) again, so instead I might try to find foam for packing my bass trombone. I'm very worried that I'm going to have to fly with it three times in July :( Not sure what I'll do with the rest of the day.

Tuesday: If it cools down I'll do that walk in the woods, then we have one show in the evening.

Two weeks' worth of reading

Sunday, June 29th, 2025 03:16 pm
umadoshi: (books 01)
[personal profile] umadoshi
A weekend post never happened last weekend, but here's what I'm been reading over the last couple of weeks. (Watching has been basically unchanged: we're up to date on Murderbot and continuing to slowly work through Leverage season 4.)

I finished reading Tchaikovsky's Service Model, which I thought was...fine? It was interesting enough, but if it had been my first exposure to his work it wouldn't have made me rush out and try more right away.

I read and liked Margaret Owen's Little Thieves in April, and Jenny Hamilton on Bluesky was recently talking about the trilogy as a whole (and this reminds me that now I can go read her "How to Break a Heart: Subverting the Hero’s Breakup Trope"), so when I decided a week or so ago to finally burn through all of my Kobo points and clear at least a bit of my wishlist, I included the second book, Painted Devils, which I enjoyed enough to want to read the third (Holy Terrors) right away. I try not to buy many ebooks at full price, though, given how many more I buy overall than I'm ever going to manage to read, and thankfully my library not only has it but had it available right away.

Consider that a recommendation, but beyond it I'm just going to quote the non-spoilery part of Jenny's essay that describes the series (and the essay then details how things stood at the end of book 2, so consider that the spoiler warning):
This year brought us Margaret Owen’s Holy Terrors. It’s the third in a trilogy about an angry, selfish girl named Vanja who made it through a lifetime of neglect and abuse with a crop of emotional and physical scars, a talent for picking pockets, the favor of the gods (sometimes), and a healthy hostility for rich people. Against both their better judgment, she falls in love with prefect Emeric Conrad, whom she variously describes as a “human civics primer,” an “accounting ledger made flesh,” and an “intolerable filing cabinet.”

(Here the author of this piece has been compelled to delete a ten thousand–word manifesto about the greatness of the Little Thieves series. If you like the TV show Leverage, or you enjoy digging your teeth into solid character development, or you just hate rich people, you should read it. The first book is Little Thieves. Thank me later.)

For a dramatic change of pace, I'm now reading Everything for Everyone: An Oral History of the New York Commune, 2052–2072 by M.E. O'Brien and Eman Abdelhadi (also a with-points acquisition), which I keep wanting to file under non-fiction, although the title will clearly tell you that it's speculative fiction. (IIRC I learned about it from [personal profile] skygiants' post.) Its fictional interviews build a distressingly plausible picture of global collapse through this decade and the couple to come, but also offer glimpses into how we could come out on the other side, if we're willing to largely raze and rebuild ~human society~ in a way that actually takes care of people. (The book came out in...2022?...so it in no way accounts for the most recent and current forms of the political hellscape.)

On the non-fiction side, I read Laurie Colwin's Home Cooking: A Writer in the Kitchen, a book of essays and corresponding recipes that I'd previously read maybe ten years ago. Colwin died in 1992 (I think I've got that right), and this book (and the follow-up, More Home Cooking) is a food-writing classic for good reason, although also very much of its place and time--very American, very '80s.

(The rest of my using-all-my-Kobo-points haul: The Hands of the Emperor, We Are All Completely Fine, Princess Floralinda and the Forty-Flight Tower, All Under Heaven: Recipes from the 35 Cuisines of China, and Warmth: Coming of Age at the End of Our World. Did this put a visible dent in my Kobo wishlist [which is a relatively curated list of books I keep an eye on for preorder purposes and sighting sales]? Yes. Has the dent since been filled in? Also yes.)

Culinary

Sunday, June 29th, 2025 06:58 pm
oursin: Frontispiece from C17th household manual (Accomplisht Lady)
[personal profile] oursin

Last week's bread held out pretty well.

Friday night supper: ven pongal (South Indian khichchari).

Saturday breakfast rolls: the ones loosely based on James Beard's mother's raisin bread, 50:50% strong white/einkorn flour, perhaps a little lacking in the mace department.

Today's lunch: (this ran into several difficulties including oven problems and a pyrex plate going smash on the floor, but got there in the end) salmon fillets baked in foil with butter, salt, pepper and dill, served with baby Jersey Royal Potatoes boiled and tossed in butter, garlic-roasted tenderstem broccoli, and white-braised green beans with sliced baby red pepper.

The best known books set in each country: Syria

Sunday, June 29th, 2025 04:35 pm
[syndicated profile] fromtheheartofeurope_feed

Posted by fromtheheartofeurope

See here for methodology. Books are disqualified if less than 50% of them is set in Syria.

These numbers are crunched by hand, not by AI.

TitleAuthorGoodreads
raters
LibraryThing
owners
As Long as the Lemon Trees GrowZoulfa Katouh91,116890
Sea PrayerKhaled Hosseini 59,241818
L’Arabe du futur 2Riad Sattouf11,251430
Come, Tell Me How You LiveAgatha Christie Mallowan4,918965
Death Is Hard WorkKhaled Khalifa4,548291

Only five this time. As with Niger a few weeks ago, I had to disqualify a lot of books (sixteen in this case) which are (at least in part) about Syria, but not actually set there, most of which dealt with the experience of Syria refugees trying to make their way to and in other countries during the recent war. My rule is that if I have had to disqualify a large number of books before I reach the fifth that is actually set in the country, I leave it there. Normally I would list the top eight books.

I’m glad to see a novel by a Syrian woman actually topping the chart this week, though it does way better on Goodreads. You may be surprised to see Agatha Christie making an appearance; this is a non-fiction account of her experiences observing her husband’s archaeological digging, and it is the top book set in Syria on LibraryThing, though much further behind on Goodreads.

I ruled out the first volume of the graphic novel series L’Arabe du future, which is set in several different countries. However the second volume does seem to be mainly set in Syria, so it’s on the list. Both are on my list of BDs to buy.

The top book on Goodreads with ‘Syria’ tags was Zeitoun, by Dave Eggers, and the top on LibraryThing was The Golem and the Jinni, by Helene Wecker, both of which are about the experience of Syrian immigrants in the USA; one non-fiction, the other fantasy. There were a few other non-fiction books looking at the region as a whole. I won’t list them all.

Coming next: Mali, Burkina Faso, Sri Lanka and (edge case, but it’s listed as a separate country in most lists) Taiwan.

Asia: India | China | Indonesia | Pakistan | Bangladesh (revised) | Russia | Japan | Philippines (revised) | Vietnam | Iran | Türkiye | Thailand | Myanmar | South Korea | Iraq | Afghanistan | Yemen | Uzbekistan | Malaysia | Saudi Arabia | Nepal | North Korea
Americas: USA | Brazil (revised) | Mexico | Colombia | Argentina | Canada | Peru | Venezuela
Africa: Nigeria | Ethiopia (revised) | Egypt | DR Congo | Tanzania | South Africa | Kenya | Sudan | Uganda | Algeria | Morocco | Angola | Mozambique | Ghana | Madagascar | Côte d’Ivoire | Cameroon | Niger
Europe: Russia | Türkiye | Germany | France | UK | Italy | Spain | Poland | Ukraine
Oceania: Australia

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