| | Subject: | The (Much Belated) State of Clank and Chains | | Time: | 09:05 pm |
|
| Hugs: Big hugs to everyone who sent snowflake cookies! And to sillypowers and gblvr for the non-snowflake gifties! You guys rock!
Cards: I'm enjoying all the holiday cards coming in! I don't put up a tree so having festive (and sometimes porny) cards around really brightens the holidays! All my fannish ones went out last week—will post the artwork by the lovely veridian_dair after the holidays!
Actual Fannish Content: The folks over at severus_sighs did artist and author interviews last month and you can find mine, over here!
Fests: I haven't had a chance to read many, er...*checks* Er, actually nope, none, no fics...Any Snarry Holidays recs? | comments: Leave a comment  |
| I need to take another reading break and finish writing something if I want to post it before the end of the year. Which I really, really do. But reading is so much easier! :/ Well, anyway, reading has prevailed over writing this week. Ah, well. :) I've got a few of the longer smutty_claus stories bookmarked, but here are some one-shots I've loved so far.
Throwdown by Anon (Harry/Tonks, NC-17: Tonks-lives!AU, 5K) Voldemort had been a piece of cake compared to fighting a pretty girl.
PAIRING WIN! I was just talking to a friend about how we slashers love to keep canonically dead women dead and resurrect the men (which I do all the time myself, so no judgement there), but it's lovely to see the reverse for a change. Tonks survived the war, and several years later, she's Harry's physical combat instructor in Auror training. Winning set-up before I even tell you another word, right? :D They are each wonderfully characterised, and I especially love Harry's narrative voice as he tries to talk himself out of a raging crush on this 30-something family friend, mother of his godson, training superior, and overall super hot, fit, awesomesauce woman.
Ride the Drafts in Empty Bedrooms by Anon (Snape/Narcissa, NC-17, canon character death, implied infidelity, 3K) Severus is well aware that some of his housemates tend to turn to the liquid comfort of Firewhisky and gin after being so totally rejected; it is now his turn to turn to the sweet assurances of liquid luck.
This is one of the only Snape het ships I can handle, and when it's done well, I really like it. I mean, HI, Unbreakable Vow, anyone? a;lksjf. This short fic does a nice job of switching between a school-age timeline and an HBP-era timeline, and I really like how the author characterises both Snape and Narcissa and develops the chemistry between them. I also really like the style of writing here; I can't really explain what's different about it, but it has a nice, fresh feel, with some well-placed parenthetical asides and streamed-in dialogue and oh, IDEK what I'm talking about. It works, though. :)
A Little Sideways by Anon (Cedric/Luna, NC-17: Cedric-lives!AU, 9K) Cedric was never as dead as everyone thought. All he needed was one person to see him.
This one had me at the summary. :) It's a lovely, romantic tale about a boy who died and might have become a ghost (or might have come back, except no one can see him but Muggles), and a girl he used to know a little bit who spots him one day and slowly brings him back to life. Sort of. It's a universe only a character like Luna could make work, and the way it unfolds is nothing short of beautiful. I also decided it's part-meta on minor characters like these in general in fic: all it takes is for someone to 'see' them. ;)
Upon the Midnight Clear by Anon (Draco/Hermione, NC-17, 4K) Years after the war, things have changed. Hermione meets Draco at a Christmas party and goes home with him to make a little music.
This might be a horrible, back-handed sort of compliment to give, but it took me a few tries to get into this one. First of all, unless you're one of maybe two authors I can name off the top of my head who excel ridiculously at it, I probably won't be on board for your first-person narration right off the bat. Second, I, ah, had some trouble with Hermione in the first few paragraphs. BUT! But! I was intrigued enough to keep reading, and by the time Draco enters the scene, I was completely hooked. A bitter, broken-hearted Hermione is actually pretty kick-ass by the time she loops her arm into Draco's at a Christmas party and starts chatting him up just to make a philandering Ron jealous. I was rooting for her the whole way. Draco, meanwhile, is quiet, charming, and there is a passage about his relationship with his son that melted me into a puddle of goo. It's a great set-up and has a lovely follow-through. If you're wary of first-person the way I am, I recommend plunging in and letting yourself sink into the POV. It's really nicely done. | comments: 2 comments or Leave a comment  |
| | Subject: | Hang dang-donglers on the bathtub! Trim the occupant with floof! | | Time: | 07:14 pm |
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| I was just totally busted singing Seussian nonsense to myself in the kitchen. I didn't think Dominus was going to come home before he went bowling. Am not thoroughly mortified.
I was singing Trim Up The Tree by way of self-medication against the rather awful scene I've been writing today. If a story rides on the strength of its villain, then I can't fear for TF on that count. Because Hughes is thouroughly creeping me out. He's a mad, bad bastard, he is. *Shivers* It's surreal to be writing him while listening to OFHM. (Other Folks' Holiday Music) "Do you see what IIIII seee?" "God, I hope nobody sees what you see, Thomas. One of you who sees that way is quite enough, thanks!"
Today's temperature has been hovering around 12 F. That's without factoring in the windchill, by the way. The Faithful are Not Best Pleased, and are convinced, to a whisker, that somehow it's All My Fault. Mithril has begun to come and inform me about the dereliction of my door duties on a fairly regular basis, alternating between scolding me for Doing It Wrong, and sucking up in case I might be convinced to open the door properly, so it's warm.
One day, Cat Physics will overturn the scientific world, you know. It's just a matter of time... and then learning to write, really. It'll happen any day now, you mark my words. | comments: Leave a comment  |
| | Subject: | Fests and Whatnot | | Time: | 09:40 am |
|
| What season is it? It's fic/art exchange season!
Okay, not that I've really had a chance to read much of anything yet since I'm hip deep in final exam grading (and finishing my yuletide fic, a process which is swiftly approaching the OMG BEARS! phase *g*), but I did want to draw your attention to the two other fests I'm currently participating in:
1. snapelyholidays. I haven't received my story yet, but for those of you who, like me, love Snape in all pairings, this year's assortment will make you think it's your birthday! Along with the always welcome Snape/Harry and Snape/Lupin and Snape/Hermione, we've already had Snape paired with Lily and McGonagall and Regulus and Sirius and Dumbledore and Lucius and Neville and Filch and Moody and Slughorn and Shacklebolt. Wheee!
2. And then there's Good Omens. The go_exchange is one of my "must-do" fests each year, even though I'm only on the periphery of that fandom, and one of the reasons is because of stories like the one I received this year: a long, wonderfully written, future history that's only dystopian to the extent that a canonical Apocalypse is dystopian, which...oh. Hmm. No, okay, go back to where I said "wonderfully written" and then add original and clever. "World Without End"...go read!
Oh, and just as an addendum: I will be running hp_beholder (the fic/art exchange designed to get some loving for the most unloved of HP characters) for the third time. Sign-ups will commence at the end of January/start of February (to give everybody a chance to recover from the holiday fic blitz). And just so you know, I'm giving each new participant this year a car! (*is a lying liar who lies*)
This entry was originally posted at http://bethbethbeth.dreamwidth.org/520410.html. | read comments at Dreamwidth. | How to use OpenID | comments: Leave a comment  |
| Title: Since There's No Place To Go, IV Challenges: dance snape100, "Oh the weather outside is frightful…." lupin100 Word Count: 100 Note: this the end of the de-aged Snape plot that began months ago. He's now an adult with most of his memories, and has reunited with Remus Lupin. They just need to find a place to be alone….
"Admit it." Severus raised himself on one elbow. The only light in the room was the pale, luminous gray of a fresh snowfall from the window. "You missed me."
"I did." Remus ran a hand through his lover's shining hair.
"You were jealous of poor Smithers, taking me to the dance." Severus, skin smooth and young and unscarred, leaned down for a kiss. "Don't deny it. I saw the way you looked at us."
"I felt like a monster. You were so young. I wanted to give you a chance to grow up."
Severus chuckled. "No worry on that account." | comments: Leave a comment  |
|
| Finished |
Book Title |
Author |
Genre |
Pages |
Stars |
| Dec 16 |
Isis |
Douglas Clegg |
Horror |
113 |
*** |
| Dec 13 |
Things That Never Were |
Michael Rossi |
Cryptojournalism |
262 |
***** |
| Oct 19 |
Escape From Hell! |
Hal Duncan |
Horror |
143 |
**** |
| Oct 18 |
Thirteenth Child |
Patricia C. Wrede |
Fantasy |
344 |
*** |
| Oct 7 |
The Red Tree |
Caitlin Kiernan |
Horror |
380 |
*** |
| Sept 24 |
Summers at Castle Auburn |
Sharon Shinn |
Fantasy |
342 |
*** |
| Aug 20 |
St. Lucy's Home For Girls Raised By Wolves |
Karen Russell |
Anthology |
abandoned @72 |
* |
| Aug 25 |
Rosemary and Rue |
Seanan McGuire |
Urban Fantasy |
346 |
*** |
| August 19 |
Mall of Cthulhu |
Seamus Cooper |
Horror/comedy |
235 |
*** |
| August 13 |
Empire |
David Dunwoody |
Horror |
277 |
0 |
| August 5 |
The Sociopath Next Door |
Martha Stout, Ph.D. |
Nonfiction |
218 |
**** |
| July 22 |
Target in the Finder |
Ayano Yamane |
Yaoi manga |
200 |
** |
| July 21 |
The Wicked Gentlemen |
Ginn Hale |
Fantasy |
217 |
***** |
| July 17 |
Mockingbird |
Sean Stewart |
Fantasy |
256 |
*** |
| July 10 |
Little Brother |
Cory Doctorow |
Suspense |
384 |
***** |
| July 8 |
Crimson Spell 1 |
Ayano Yamane |
Manga, Yaoi |
** |
**** |
| July 8 |
Crimson Spell 2 |
Ayano Yamane |
Manga,Yaoi |
** |
**** |
| July 8 |
Ravens in the Library |
Various |
Fantasy anthology |
369 |
*** |
| June 30 |
City of Ember |
Jeanne DuPrau |
Fantasy |
295 |
* |
| June 12 |
Graceling |
Kristen Cashore |
Fantasy |
471 |
** |
| June 8 |
Pride and Prejudice and Zombies |
Austen/Grahame-Smith |
Horror/farce |
Abandoned @ 185 |
0 |
| June 2 |
A Madness of Angels |
Kate Griffin |
Urban Fantasy |
458 |
*****+ |
| May 7 |
The Magicians and Mrs. Quent |
Galen Beckett |
Fantasy / suspense |
498 |
***** |
| Apr 28 |
Jane-Emily / The Witch's Children |
Patricia Clapp |
Supernatural |
273 |
** |
| Apr 20 |
Too Many Curses |
A. Lee Martinez |
Fantasy/humour, YA |
316 |
**** |
| Mar 30 |
The Witch's Familiar |
Raven Grimassi |
New Age nonfic |
155 |
* |
| Mar 03 |
Watchmen |
Alan Moore |
Fantasy/Horror graphic novel |
12 issues |
** |
| Jan 09 |
Jigs and Reels |
Joanne Harris |
Short story anthology |
273
| *** |
| Feb 15 |
A Guide to Folktales in Fragile Dialects |
Cat Valente |
Faerie Tale Poetry anthology |
163 |
*** |
| Jan 09 |
Territory |
Emma Bull |
Historical Fantasy |
Audio |
*** |
| Dec 30 |
Butcher Bird |
Richard Kadrey |
Urban Fantasy |
257 |
**** |
| comments: Leave a comment  |
| | Subject: | One step closer. | | Time: | 12:29 pm |
|
| I had my last evaluation interview today, wherein the SACVAP volunteer coordinator went over my case studies with me. At the end of which, she gave me my ER escort paperwork, we shook hands, and I added my name to the January on-call list in three places. I don't have the piece of paper yet, but I think I'm prepared to call it official --
I am now a Sexual Assault and Crive Victim's Advocate for the State of New York.
Go me! | comments: 3 comments or Leave a comment  |
| I have already covered all the cases where the use of comma in English differs from that in Portuguese. Well, there are some cases where everything is different, like the way you English speakers write dates. It's so different that there's no way to compare or mix up.
Because we're approaching the holidays, I'm going to discontinue the posts on punctuation until next year, when I plan to discuss semicolons, dashes, ellipses, and so on.
Thanks for all your comments! I've been learning a lot. I wish I could have concentrated the discussion in one journal, instead of splitting it among four journals, but alas, it's hard to please everyone. (Some people don't like being redirected to other journals.)
[ETA: No, I'm not leaving! I'm just discontinuing this specific thread for now.] | comments: 4 comments or Leave a comment  |
| | Subject: | What's Church Latin for "That is not dead which can eternal lie"? | | Time: | 07:06 pm |
|
| O little town of Bethlehem, How still we see thee lie. Above thy deep and dreamless cluegirl The silent stars go by. O Little Town Of Bethlehem from the Christmas Song Generator.
... Until they are aligned Juuuuuust right, at which point I shall sing the Lost Chord, and raise the Deeply Drowned from out the fathomless reaches of space and time and water to bring hugs and sweet dreams and pretty sparkly candles and cuddly jackets unto the world. And also ponies.
Yesh.
There shall be many ponies... | comments: Leave a comment  |
| | Subject: | Thoughtbytes | | Time: | 12:05 pm |
|
| * I generally make the presumption that, unless indipendently verified, everything I read on the internet is fiction. Every personality construct to whom Live Journal lets me speak has just as much chance of being a 12 year old girl from Peoria, as being what and who they say they are. (If they type with an "Irish" accent, I bump the odds for Peoria significantly higher, by the way.) If I send money to someone's rescue cause for a friend of a friend whom I've never met, I'm aware that I might possibly be sending money to some 12 year old in Peoria, and in that regard, I consider that I'm paying for a good story. It's just like buying a lottery ticket -- I'm not buying 12 million dollars, and I know it. What I'm buying is the ticket to dream of SPENDING that 12 million dollars, or whatever of it Uncle Sam lets me keep. So when I send money to someone's 'a person I know got booted to the kerb and is living in her car' fund, I'm buying a ticket to imagine doing a little good for someone who needs the help, not pulling a superhero dive to pluck someone off the train tracks. It's all illusion, except for what I can prove by experience, or can find someone I trust to vouch for, but it's an illusion I'm willing to venerate at least as much as the illusion that Daniel Radcliffe is a wizard, Chris Pine is a space captain, and John Barrowman is omnisexual and immortal. I realize there's a chance (a very good chance) they're not who they say they are, but pretending is fun.
* That said, I know there are a lot of people who feel deeply betrayed when they learn that someone on the internet was not who they claimed to be. I have seen sockpuppet wanks the like of which could make Cod weep in his watery heaven, and this is over an offhanded 'I wanted to make you feel better' sort of deception, wherein no money was involved. There are people out there who make deep emotional investments in the friendships they make online, and when something like the Than-Fiction finally blows its cover, the aftershocks tend to be as deeply wounding to them as the initial sense of betrayal was. They question everyone they 'know', they doubt everything they've heard about anyone they haven't seen face to face, and generally the sense that 'you're all just a lying pack of cards' can steal over the place.
* I've been thinking about this lately, because earlier this year, I did use my internet 'fame' to raise money for a cause. And a lot of people kicked money into that cause, not knowing for sure if the person I was claiming to help was real, or entirely made up. (Now the truth is, a lot of the people who kicked into that fund knew the beneficiary personally, and knew what she was going through, or know me personally, and trust my word as good, but that's friendship, not pure altruism, and while just as worthy, it's different.) When people use their online personae to steal from and decieve people, it takes a swat at any of us who HAVE shilled money to help our friends in need. It injects a sore spot of suspicion into people who needed that moment of altruism to be sound, and good, but instead now find that it's foolish, and weak. It betrays the spirit of altruism on a fundamental level that just spreads through a community like a cancer of doubt. It is for THAT, I am angry. Not because I was fooled myself -- as I said above, I come to the internet expecting illusion. It's because of the poison that's flowing in the water now, with no way to leach it out. All we can do is wait for the stink to pass.
* To all of you who, in your altruism and generousity, donated to my Spider Rescue fund earlier this year, especially those of you who are now watching the Than-Fiction devolve over on Fandom Wank, I can't offer you any kind of proof that what you did was helpful, real, and immeasurably valid in a person's life (several people, because it was an amazing experience for me, as well, and I only handled the money and the cards.) I can't offer you anything in this medium which couldn't be argued away by a concerted effort. I really wish I could, but I respect your individual intelligences too much for that. So instead of trying to find some kind of lasting or concrete cred that despite being slightly larger than life, I am exactly who I've always claimed to be***, I will just thank you for having had faith enough, back then, to be helpful. And to hope that you don't find yourself regretting the help you gave now, because inasmuch as the word of an internet stranger can mean anything, I promise you your help DID make a difference.
* I know a lot of these thoughtbytes today have orbited the same hub. That's not a normal approach for this type of essay, but it's been on my mind for a few days, and I just needed to spin some words on it from my little corner of Baker Street. We now return you to your regularly scheduled randomness.
* General Foods makes their International Coffees line... it's something of a guilty pleasure for me. I mean I'm not a HUGE fan, since the fake milk and preservative aftertaste is kind of an inescapable thing, but sometimes when I don't want to brew up a pot, or go out for a shot, I do enjoy a cup of instant indulgence. In general, they're sweeter than I like, but they come out with some seasonal ones that I am really enjoying. Like today: Peppermint mocha. My Achilles' heel of coffee drinks, I do believe. The only one more dangerous is a good, spicy Mayan mocha, but only the Ultraviolet Cafe's ever managed to make it hot enough to really be good.
* So I took some time last night to read through the prompts for [ Error: Irreparable invalid markup ('<lj-comm=hp_kinkfest>') in entry. Owner must fix manually. Raw contents below.] * I generally make the presumption that, unless indipendently verified, everything I read on the internet is fiction. Every personality construct to whom Live Journal lets me speak has just as much chance of being a 12 year old girl from Peoria, as being what and who they say they are. (If they type with an "Irish" accent, I bump the odds for Peoria significantly higher, by the way.) If I send money to someone's rescue cause for a friend of a friend whom I've never met, I'm aware that I might possibly be sending money to some 12 year old in Peoria, and in that regard, I consider that I'm paying for a good story. It's just like buying a lottery ticket -- I'm not buying 12 million dollars, and I know it. What I'm buying is the ticket to dream of SPENDING that 12 million dollars, or whatever of it Uncle Sam lets me keep. So when I send money to someone's 'a person I know got booted to the kerb and is living in her car' fund, I'm buying a ticket to imagine doing a little good for someone who needs the help, not pulling a superhero dive to pluck someone off the train tracks. It's all illusion, except for what I can prove by experience, or can find someone I trust to vouch for, but it's an illusion I'm willing to venerate at least as much as the illusion that Daniel Radcliffe is a wizard, Chris Pine is a space captain, and John Barrowman is omnisexual and immortal. I realize there's a chance (a very good chance) they're not who they say they are, but pretending is fun.
* That said, I know there are a lot of people who feel deeply betrayed when they learn that someone on the internet was not who they claimed to be. I have seen sockpuppet wanks the like of which could make Cod weep in his watery heaven, and this is over an offhanded 'I wanted to make you feel better' sort of deception, wherein no money was involved. There are people out there who make deep emotional investments in the friendships they make online, and when something like the Than-Fiction finally blows its cover, the aftershocks tend to be as deeply wounding to them as the initial sense of betrayal was. They question everyone they 'know', they doubt everything they've heard about anyone they haven't seen face to face, and generally the sense that 'you're all just a lying pack of cards' can steal over the place.
* I've been thinking about this lately, because earlier this year, I did use my internet 'fame' to raise money for a cause. And a lot of people kicked money into that cause, not knowing for sure if the person I was claiming to help was real, or entirely made up. (Now the truth is, a lot of the people who kicked into that fund knew the beneficiary personally, and knew what she was going through, or know me personally, and trust my word as good, but that's friendship, not pure altruism, and while just as worthy, it's different.) When people use their online personae to steal from and decieve people, it takes a swat at any of us who HAVE shilled money to help our friends in need. It injects a sore spot of suspicion into people who needed that moment of altruism to be sound, and good, but instead now find that it's foolish, and weak. It betrays the spirit of altruism on a fundamental level that just spreads through a community like a cancer of doubt. It is for THAT, I am angry. Not because I was fooled myself -- as I said above, I come to the internet expecting illusion. It's because of the poison that's flowing in the water now, with no way to leach it out. All we can do is wait for the stink to pass.
* To all of you who, in your altruism and generousity, donated to my Spider Rescue fund earlier this year, especially those of you who are now watching the Than-Fiction devolve over on Fandom Wank, I can't offer you any kind of proof that what you did was helpful, real, and immeasurably valid in a person's life (several people, because it was an amazing experience for me, as well, and I only handled the money and the cards.) I can't offer you anything in this medium which couldn't be argued away by a concerted effort. I really wish I could, but I respect your individual intelligences too much for that. So instead of trying to find some kind of lasting or concrete cred that despite being slightly larger than life, I am exactly who I've always claimed to be***, I will just thank you for having had faith enough, back then, to be helpful. And to hope that you don't find yourself regretting the help you gave now, because inasmuch as the word of an internet stranger can mean anything, I promise you your help DID make a difference.
* I know a lot of these thoughtbytes today have orbited the same hub. That's not a normal approach for this type of essay, but it's been on my mind for a few days, and I just needed to spin some words on it from my little corner of Baker Street. We now return you to your regularly scheduled randomness.
* General Foods makes their International Coffees line... it's something of a guilty pleasure for me. I mean I'm not a HUGE fan, since the fake milk and preservative aftertaste is kind of an inescapable thing, but sometimes when I don't want to brew up a pot, or go out for a shot, I do enjoy a cup of instant indulgence. In general, they're sweeter than I like, but they come out with some seasonal ones that I am really enjoying. Like today: Peppermint mocha. My Achilles' heel of coffee drinks, I do believe. The only one more dangerous is a good, spicy Mayan mocha, but only the Ultraviolet Cafe's ever managed to make it hot enough to really be good.
* So I took some time last night to read through <a href="http://community.livejournal.com/hp_kinkfest/2928.html">the prompts</a> for <lj-comm=HP_Kinkfest>. Phoar! I won't be doing any claiming, but I'm bloody well downloading that list for future reference when I get stuck for ideas! (Mmmm... figging!)
* So we heard from the Exorcists about my desktop. The problem was unreplicatable. Hence, Vajra will be sent home with only a few very expensive dribbles of dried holy water on her case, and a stern talking-to. *SIGH!* Why, electronics? WHY? Ah well. <a href="http://www.nightwatchmanchronicles.com/Newspaper/NW1Feb08.htm">At least it's not just me.</a> I do wonder, though, whether any of the other Electrical People could make people bleed via mere proximithy...
* Sirocco ransacked my violets today. I'd moved them out of the bathroom, into the kitchen, in the hopes of better care. But the trouble is that Herself is still managing to get up on top of the kitchen cabinets to lurk, and so her jumping down led to massive violet-plant wipeout. She even broke a marble urn I was using as a watercatch for one of them. That cat is my own force of nature, apparently. She also managed to knock my computer off the table the other day, so it landed directly on my thumb drive, and bent it nearly 45 degrees. I bent it back to straight, and it seemed at the time as though everything was intact, but I decided it was better not to risk it. I went and got a replacement -- twice the storage... and it's <a href="http://www3.pny.com/4GB-Micro-Swivel-Attach---GREEN-P2852C430.aspx">the size of a piece of gum.</a> I'm kinda enraptured with it, really. Might start wearing it as an earring.
* Or, y'know, not.
* Next step for the house, is to apply plumber's wrap to the heating pipes in the basement, and cut down the transfer-loss from the furnace to the radiators. I had done a lot of the pipes the first year we moved in, but when we had the flood, the contractors ripped a lot of that out in order to get at the pipes they needed to replace. And when I say 'ripped', of course, I do mean that. There was very little of what they removed that could be put back onto the pipes. Most of it went into Jock, the cat's scratching-monster, in fact. So we've ordered the wrap, which should get here sometime soon after Solstice. Then we just need the get 'er done!
* And in that same spirit... once the Solstice party this Saturday's over, we'll be back in the shoe room, stripping it to the studs. Whee! We've finally given up all hope of being able to repair that room as-was, and have decided to just strip it bare, get at the plumbing and wiring we need to access, and then totally rebuild the damned thing. I'm kinda looking forward to it, actually. We're re-using the built-in bookcases that never did much good in that tiny, closet-sized space, in the library (once we find a home for that damned roll top desk, that is...) and we're going to save the decorative molding, in case any of it can be reused once we're done, but that weird little mid-hall bulge of a room is going to become our new Mudroom. We'll add an exterior door where its window is, move the radiator to the right side wall, and build a cabinet around it (with a cut-tin face and marble top, of course,) and build in a coat/hat/boot bench along the back wall. Then, once we get the driveway and parking pad, and porte cochere in place the entrance will be directly connected to where the cars are. Guests will still come in through the front door and entry parlour, but the family entrance, and all the day to day detritus that goes along with it, will be out of sight behind a nice pocket door.
* I tend to think that, now we've committed to going all the damned way with this project, it'll manage to roll rather better along than it had been. I choose to believe it so. Lo, my forcible optimism; it is mightier than the strength of ten men's mathematics.
* I am becoming aware of yet another of Mandala House's ghosts these days. I know him by the smell of his cigarettes, and I suspect that he resents my plans for the mud room. (I think it was on his watch that the bookcases were built in there, and the atrocious panelling was added.) He's going to have to cope with his bad self though, because Mandala House herself rather digs the idea of her Foyer being a proper greeting for the elegant lady she truly is, and is a bit giddy at the idea of getting all our grotty old boots and hats out of sight. Cigarette Smell isn't doing anything worse than a little grumbling at present, and I don't get any real meanness from him, but he's still not best pleased. I don't think he likes cats, either. Now I think about it, I wonder if he's not part of Godric's sprahying problem... Hmm... *Breaks out white sage*
* And now, I'm gettin outta this place! I been here too long. Gonna climb the walls. No, I need's me a new viewport, is all. Me and Argentyne are gonna go pirate some signal, and bang out some prose together on somebody else's turf. Ciao, all!
*** Barring clearly marked posts in which I pretend to be fictitional characters, including, but not limited to, Cthulhu, Nyarlathotep, Severus Snape, Harry Potte, et al, my cats, my house, or my internal organs. These should present to actual confusion to the savvy reader, I promise. | comments: Leave a comment  |
| Here's the reply I received from LJ:
Thank you for taking the time to contact us with your concerns. We understand that gender is not binary, and intend to respect that understanding for our users.
At this time, the code you reference is not live on the site, and will not become so in the future. We know that you, and many other users, have serious concerns about any requirement to specify gender, so we'd like to take a moment to explain events and our position further.
The intention of this code was to change the sign-up process to include a field for the selection of gender; that the code would completely disable the "Unspecified" option at the same time was deemed unacceptable. While the code in question had gone to our beta (testing) server, it had not gone to our production server, and will not do so due to this problem. Furthermore, we'd like to clarify that code posted to the changelog community is not always final, as such code must then go through the beta testing process and can often be changed before actual implementation.
Additionally, some erroneous information has been spread regarding the potential public display of the gender field. We would like to clarify that gender is not currently publicly displayed on the profile, nor anywhere else on the site, and there are no plans to change this behavior.
Regards, LiveJournal Community Care Team | comments: Leave a comment  |
| | Tags: | lj problems, lj purge | | Subject: | Gender is not a binary option, LJ! | | Time: | 09:06 am | | Current Mood: | annoyed |
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| Argh. LJ's changelog reveals that LJ is planning to make gender a mandatory field at account creation and remove the Unspecified option for the gender field. You can read more about the subject here. As I deeply dislike this plan, I changed my gender option to Unspecified here and left a polite comment here expressing my displeasure. | comments: Leave a comment  |
| | Subject: | Golau arall yw tywyllwch, I arddangos gwir brydferthwch | | Time: | 05:05 pm |
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| (No, don't ask me to pronounce it. I have more respect for the language than to try.)
I have a snake in my bathtub, soaking her skin off while her sister considers the nicities of snake metabolism, and hunger.
I have cats which I have not yet drowned in the aforementioned bathtub (through no lack of provokation on their part, I assure you.)
I have no more feliway spray left.
I do, however, have new, sparkly bookses.
I have leftovers from a celebratory lunch of which aquila_dominus and I partook today, which we shall be revisiting for dinner, most likely.
I have a sore ear, and tonsil to match on the left side.
I have a party approaching this saturday, for which I have neither cooked, nor cleaned a single thing.
I have an exercize machine leering at me from the other room, and a slice of cheesecake (shared,) to justify before I settle for the night.
And all of this falls to the wayside in the face of today's ACTUAL triumph:
I HAVE CLAPBOARD ON MY HOUSE!!!!!
It isn't painted, and the caulk may well take another week to cure in these temperatures, BUT IT'S UP! And despite the fact that the shoe room looks like a warzone from the inside, it no longer feels like Dis Pater's left nutsack in there! In fact, ironically enough, it's actually just a touch warmer inside the closed off room than elsewhere in the house. Which means we did the insulation, at least, right.
*High5's the Effin WORLD!*
And now? Octopi hijacking coconut shells. Because it's cute, is why! | comments: 1 comment or Leave a comment  |
| 3. Use a comma when two independent clauses are joined by a coordinating conjunction: for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so.
• She says she loves him, yet she continues to treat him like crap.
So far, it’s just like in Portuguese.
You can omit the comma if the clauses are both short.
• He smokes and she drinks.
I’m not sure, but I don’t think this would be correct in Portuguese. When we have two different subjects, the comma is always necessary. However, what the English Grammar rule says is that you can omit the comma. It’s optional.
However, there is another exception: If the subject does not appear in front of the second verb, do not use a comma.
• She used to study in Boston but now lives in São Paulo.
Well, this is impossible in Portuguese. And although I desperately feel the need for a comma before “but”, I’d respect this English Grammar rule, if I hadn’t found another rule that said:
Use commas to set off phrases that express contrast:
• The puppies were cute, but very messy. • They agreed to release one hostage, but not the other.
I found these examples on the internet. The rule is not very clear to me, because “but” (and "yet") typically introduces phrases that express contrast. So... when is it okay to omit the comma?
And then I found dozens of examples of good authors, both American and British, who use a comma before a coordinating conjunction even when the subject does not appear in front of the second verb. I’m going to post just a few examples.
( cut for length )
What’s happening here? Am I missing something? Are they using commas to indicate a significant pause (or a contrast?) even when the more specific rule says not to use it? Am I allowed to do the same thing? I hope so. | comments: 4 comments or Leave a comment  |
| Er, no, there weren't supposed to be two parts to the Long-ish Weekend Recs of yesterday, because then you all get overwhelmed and angsty and start wringing your hands about how you don't have time to read long stories, and then you just start scrolling by my recs and flipping me a rude salute on your way past. I hear you. But people need to stop posting Awesomesauce Stuff I Like, okay. :/ I promise to go away for... at least a few days after this. :D
Darkstar by Anon at hd_holidays (Harry/Draco, NC-17: some warnings on fic that are all very, very mild, IMO, 23K) After the Ministry of Magic decides that Harry's Auror position is a liability, they offer him an alternative: become part of an international covert operations initiative. Joining the project means Harry must forsake everything he cherishes and learn things he never wanted to know about himself.
Here is something about me you might not know: I adore the Jason Bourne series like crazy. CRAZY. This? Is HP meets Bourne. a;lskjdfl;sj. The action-adventure superspy plot of it had me totally riveted, and the universe the author develops is way cool and very well done. In one of the opening scenes, we see Harry's death reported in the Prophet. From there, he disappears underground in an unnamed city to take up his new training, back to basics, with an international special ops force that doesn't want Harry Potter, Expelliarmus expert with a conscience that can only get in the way; they want to create Harry Potter, gun-toting hit wizard who won't think twice about taking out the Minister for Magic if given the order. Hell yeah! Meanwhile, Draco has already been with this agency, Darkstar, for some time, and listen, every time he's onscreen the entire story pretty much ignites into giant flames of oh God, I don't even know -- sexual energy, assassin energy, authority energy, everything. Harry is amazing, the supporting cast is wonderful, but Draco not only completely steals the show, he gets it on its back, makes it beg, and then shoots it in the head.
... so to speak. :D I do have some minor quibbles with this story, such as a glut of exposition at the beginning that I wanted to slice out with a sharp scalpel, and a few lingering questions about the universe as a whole and how it works. But overall it is so insanely cool and well characterised and erotic as hell and so very, very memorable, that I find I can't dwell too much on a few little things. Persevere past the opening sequences and it becomes very awesome, very quickly. :)
Theft of Assets, Destruction of Property by helenish (Neville/Draco, NC-17, 23K) Surely it is a mistake to allow a single youthful indiscretion to cloud an already promising career.
Grah, I've been meaning to rec this since I first read it about six weeks ago now. Many of you have probably already seen it by now; if not, I highly recommend setting aside some time for it. It's like nothing I've ever read before. It was conceived several years ago, the author says, and only finished this fall, but it definitely reads like pre-closed-canon fic. Both Neville and Draco are a little bit different than one might expect, but still entirely themselves. Well, perhaps I should amend that: for the fic to work, Draco is necessarily a bit lighter than I usually see him, but there are also reasons for that. In the end, it worked for me just fine. Neville is wonderful, and the world Helen creates surrounding Auror training as a mirror of graduate school, in a way, with Neville having to study his head off just to keep up, was a fascinating take on the training.
This is part forced marriage fic, part hurt/comfort, and part meta, to me -- on what, though, I'm still unsure. There is commentary on the possibilities involved in arranged marriages, I think, on the social currency attached to virginity, and definitely commentary on domesticity and gender roles. Helen beautifully captures a strained relationship in which one partner works outside the home and the other feels lonely, isolated, and unable (or unworthy) of his/her own work, and does it all from the vantage point of an m/m relationship. It's refreshing and nicely subversive, I thought, although I also found it a bit unnerving at times, because, does it only reproduce heteronormative gender roles? IDK, maybe I'm overthinking it. It's a fascinating study of all these issues, though, as well as just a beautifully told love story. It's hard to pin it down, but I love how it transcends genres. It's a story that will stick in your head for a long, long time.
All right, long!fic, begone with you! I'll focus on one-shots for the rest of the week. Maybe. ;) | comments: Leave a comment  |
| | Subject: | Happy things, for a change. Also... dare I say it... some fannish stuff? | | Time: | 09:32 pm | | Current Mood: | happy |
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| Thanks to everyone who responded to my last few posts. You are all so fabulous and I'm unbelievably fortunate to have you.
I had a very productive weekend, despite a small crimp in my plans last night. I got the entire house cleaned, some laundry done, the Christmas tree and decorations up, and ten dozen Pfeffernusse made. Also, a pot of 7 bean soup for lunches next week. Josh went over to a friend's to spend the night, and I was going to get some porn written, but just as I got back from dropping him off and opening a bottle of champagne, I got a call: Josh was barfing his guts out, poor boo. So I put the champagne back in the fridge, went and picked him up, then downloaded Merlin and watched it, instead.
I am really smitten with Merlin. I've been watching and reading, and I may just have to write in this fandom. Maybe. We'll see. I haven't got any ideas, yet, but I feel like the possibility is there, at least. Yay, Merlin!
I did get a little bit of something written this afternoon, though; it's a story I've been working on forever, just a little bit at a time, for a lovely someone on my flist. Here is an excerpt: it's a Prince of Tennis fic, D1, tentatively titled "Key Money".
( Practice usually takes it out of him but today's takes the cake )
I never watch TV, but we watched our tapes of Charlie Brown Christmas and Rudolph, and when they went off, Extreme Makeover was starting. I left the TV on, and have been crying on and off the whole time it's been on. Wow. | comments: 1 comment or Leave a comment  |
| | Subject: | I saw three cats come sneaking in... | | Time: | 05:43 pm |
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| So our moggies have been particularly decorative recently.
Sirocco rocks the bow-head look...

But she also rocks the Kilroy look.

You must understand -- Sirocco loves this blankie. She chases it about the living room, and wedges it into various corners before burrowing under it to snooze and purr thunderously. Like this:
 A kitty and her binky. A love story...
Cyrene brings Teh Cute.

Mithril brings Teh Ebil.

Hilfy and Godric have decided to have nothing whatsoever to do with the festivities this year, we have been informed. The Management remains unconvinced, and plans to keep the happysnap close to hand. | comments: 1 comment or Leave a comment  |
| | Subject: | Mointless Peme time! | | Time: | 03:14 pm |
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| 1. Elaborate on your default icon. It's the Yule Mother-- the Goddess who will give birth to the Sun God on the Winter Solstice night.
2. What's your current relationship status? Married in sin. (What a great way to describe it, Bela!)
3. Ever have a near-death experience? Yes.
4. Name an obvious quality you have. I'm stacked. That's kind of hard to miss.
5. What's the name of the song that's stuck in your head right now? Satisfaction -- the Rolling Stones. I have No Idea why.
6. Name a celebrity you would marry. I already have my husband, thanks. Poligamy just gets folks arrested around here. Now shagging rights, or dating? There's a list of those -- two for me, actually, given my proclivities, -- but marrying? I have a hard time imagining me living with anybody but Dominus.
7. Who will cut and paste this first? Prolly nobody.
8. Has anyone ever said you look like a celebrity? There's an apple farmer at our local farmer's market who addresses Dominus and I as "Hello, Celebrities! How are you today?" I guess that counts, eh?
9. Do you wear a watch? What kind? Wear? Nope. I can't afford a watch that's THAT well shielded. I carry a pocket watch though -- it's my birfday present, and even IT needs to be tweaked so that it doesn't lose time through the day. (I am just a timeless individual, you know.)
10. Do you have anything pierced? Yep!
11. Do you have any tattoos? Three. A dragonfly on my sacrum, a feather pen on the inside of my right wrist, and my knotwork cats as an armband around my left bicep.
12. Do you like pain? Situationally, I can see the attraction, but at that point, it's stimulation, really, more than pain. True Pain, though, as in, broken bone, monthly cramps, belly ache, migraine pain -- of course not. That kind of pain is MEANT to be loathed, and therefore avoided.
13. Do you like to shop? I can enjoy it when the mood takes me, but I have a strong aversion to holiday crowds, and a tendency to fall into WalMart Psychosis when surrounded by too many shopping meatsacks. It's not safe sometimes, for me to be shopping at the same time other people are...
14. What was the last thing you paid for with cash? Take away lunch last weekend.
15. What was the last thing you paid for with your credit/debit card? Hmm... with MY debit card? Groceries, I think.
16. Who was the last person you spoke to on the phone? The mum. She needed to castigate me for having destroyed her watch from three thousand miles away. By just thinking about it.
17. What is on your desktop background? An artist's fantasy landscape rendering of the ruins of a seaside, clifftop city.
18. What is the background on your cell phone? Blackness. Thick... dark... and pendulous.
19. Do you like redheads? Long as I don't have to render their pubes in colour, I like em just fine.
20. Do you know any twins? One set of which I am aware. Although I know one of another set, the fact that I don't know his brother means I guess I know one and a half sets of twins.
21. Do you have any weird relatives? I AM the weird relative. Ergo, to me, all my relatives are weird.
22. What was the last movie you watched? King Arthur, cut to incomprehensibility on AMC.
23. What was the last book you read? Just rolling up on the end of Michael Rossi's Things That Never Were now, so I'm gonna count that as it. And by the way? I SO reccomend this book to anybody who's a fan of weird stuff, cryptohistory, and conspiracy theory-gone-mad. It's cracktastic in the best of ways. | comments: Leave a comment  |
| The plot thickens... This post may be polemical.
I told you I was going to comment on a few differences between the English and the Portuguese punctuation rules, but the following rule is the same for both languages:
2. Use commas after introductory clauses, phrases, or words that come before the main clause.
( cut for length )
Now, this is all and well. As I said, it works the same way in Portuguese. But!
Traditionally, formal written English requires writers to use a comma after introductory elements, that is, after clauses or phrases that are at the beginning of a sentence. However, the trend among contemporary writers — even well-educated, professional writers — is to punctuate more lightly, using fewer marks of punctuation. Readers too seem to prefer this contemporary style, feeling that the traditional punctuation practices create text that looks over-punctuated and "heavy."
It’s not that I didn’t notice the trend. I did. But this trend goes against my “instict” as a writer. We don't have a similar trend in Brazil. If the phrase has fewer than three words, I'm okay with omitting the comma. But with a longer phrase? It’s too... violent for me. You may think I’m exaggerating, but your native language is a part of you. Some authors whose first language is not English but who write in English decide to keep their "foreign accent", and some of them are successful.
Besides, I don’t write only for English speaking readers. I know that I have readers whose first language is Dutch, French, German, Italian, Spanish, and who knows which other languages!
There is more than one question involved here:
1) The contemporary writers are not following this specific Grammar rule. Is that a correct assumption? If it’s a correct assumption, is it a good or a bad thing? Some people may like it, other people may not.
2) An author whose first language is not English but who writes in English cannot become a native writer of English. Should s/he even try?
There is no simple, unique answer to these questions. For me, it’s a difficult decision. For now, I’m following the English Grammar rules, and not the contemporary trend. But this may change in the future. | comments: 11 comments or Leave a comment  |
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