20-Icon Batch

Dec. 31st, 2025 06:55 pm
impala_chick: (Default)
[personal profile] impala_chick posting in [community profile] icons
Fandoms: Winter Solstice stock, Dune, The Falcon and the Winter Soldier, Smallville (from Lexmas and 5.17 Void), and Babygirl.


20 icons over here

Writing

Dec. 31st, 2025 08:16 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
When I used to teach creative writing, I would tell the students to make their characters want something right away -- even if it’s only a glass of water. Characters paralyzed by the meaningless of modern life still have to drink water from time to time.


Excellent advice. It gets the story moving and helps readers relate to the main character.
sixbeforelunch: spock in tas holding his arms out, no text (trek - tas spock)
[personal profile] sixbeforelunch
Murder She Wrote - 9
Superman: TAS - 4
Birds of Prey (2020) - 1
Star Trek: Lower Decks - 8
Star Trek: TNG - 8
Star Trek: Insurrection - 5

Read more... )
lil_1337: (Reading - Tori on books)
[personal profile] lil_1337
Review )

oops

Dec. 31st, 2025 05:42 pm
kossai: masculine kossai hold up yellow magic heart (Default)
[personal profile] kossai
need to not add more screenshots to shezow favourite screenshots page , but um ... well that is exactly what keep on happen . fictionheart activate <3

9 vid recs

Dec. 31st, 2025 02:47 pm
sholio: Text: "Age shall not weary her, nor custom stale her infinite squee" (Infinite Squee)
[personal profile] sholio posting in [community profile] recthething
I posted a set of vid recs to my DW: recs for the Avatar shows, Stranger Things, 80s slasher movies, X-Men movies, Torchwood, Babylon 5, Star Wars OT, and Schitt's Creek.

See the recs here!
trobadora: (Clan Immortal)
[personal profile] trobadora
*wraps hands around mug of tea*

I just got back from my midnight walk - like every year when I'm spending New Year's Eve alone (which is most years), I went out half an hour before midnight, walked into the old town, and watched the fireworks. I wore the new coat I got just a few days ago - it's warmer than my existing one, and I wanted it for the very cold days. Which, uh, today actually wasn't, so I ended up pretty toasty. But still, tea! *g*

*belatedly remembers to clink glasses mugs*

Happy new year, everyone!

I hope you had a good slide*, or will have one if it's still in the future for you!


*) That's the idiom here - in advance, you wish people "einen guten Rutsch ins neue Jahr", a good slide into the new year. There are different explanations for it, but there's attested 19th century slang where sliding is used for travelling/going somewhere, so that makes the most sense to me.
full_metal_ox: A gold Chinese Metal Ox zodiac charm. (Default)
[personal profile] full_metal_ox posting in [community profile] fancake
Fandom: Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow
Pairings/Characters: Gen; background F/M (Joe Sullivan/Polly Perkins; past (one-sided?) Female OC/Joe Sullivan), OCs
Rating: Teen And Up Audiences
Length: 12,448; 19 chapters
Content Notes: aftermath of torture, combat injury, period-typical ethnic stereotypes (Asiatic bad guys), genocidal scheming, gory battle trophies, gruesome Mad Science
Creator Links: [fanfiction.net profile] thebookishcat

Theme: Amnesty, Action/Adventure, Old Fandoms, Pre-AO3 Works, Research, Small Fandoms, Underloved Works, Worldbuilding

Summary: The authors(1) didn’t really provide one, so here’s mine: Joe’s old buddy, fighter pilot Captain Rock Masterson, is taken prisoner by air pirates—and darned if Rock isn’t Polly Perkins’ cousin, giving her sound reason to gatecrash the adventure! But little does Pirate King Dantes Blackbeard the Third suspect that his scheme for world conquest is being puppeteered by something even more horrific…

Reccer's Notes: (In which Full Metal Ox betrays an affection for dated media.)Continue. )

Is it Great Literature? Or even necessarily Good Writing? No—but the authors know exactly where in Storyland they’re supposed to be, and I’m the niche audience it’s for; they’ve fried up a tasty sack of potato chips.

Fanwork Links: Sky Captain and the Extinction Agenda, by [fanfiction.net profile] thebookishcat on Fanfiction.net: https://www.fanfiction.net/s/2108561/1/
lb_lee: a whirlpool of black and grey rendered in cross-hatching (ocean)
[personal profile] lb_lee
Anatomy of a Dance
Summary: Group defenses and deeper, more intimate headspace work... or, as Spider Robinson puts it, "work[ing] very hard at hosing all the bullshit out of your head so that it’s clean enough for guests."
Series: Essays (Headspace Discovery and Defense)
Word Count: 4000
Notes: Winner of the December 2025 fan poll! This essay builds on “Headspace Discovery and Defense” and you should definitely read that first (and preferably “Building Headspace: Aphantasia Edition” too). This essay was overwhelmingly written by Rawlin and Rogan.

In “Headspace Discovery and Defense,” we mostly discussed defenses created by individuals. This one is about more advanced work: group defenses and dances.

This kinda stuff can break some people, so please proceed with caution! )

Books read in 2025!

Dec. 31st, 2025 01:49 pm
glacier_kitty: (Default)
[personal profile] glacier_kitty
Here are the 82 (yay!) books I read this year, totaling 27,597 pages read!

January
A book that is considered healing fiction: We'll Prescribe You a Cat by Syou Ishida (Dec 31-Jan 2) (4/5)

A book that features an unlikely friendship: Remarkably Bright Creatures by Shelby Van Pelt (Jan 3-6) (5/5)

A book of interconnected short stories: Norse Mythology by Neil Gaiman (Jan 6-8) (4/5)

A book with two or more books on the cover or "book" in the title: The Bookshop: A History of the American Bookstore by Evan Friss (Jan 9-12) (4/5)

A book that reminds you of your childhood: Hatchet by Gary Paulsen (Jan 9-12) (4/5)

A book with a snake on the cover or in the title: The Dark Archive by Genevieve Cogman (Jan 14-18) (4/5)

A book with a left-handed character: The Left-Handed Booksellers of London by Garth Nix (Jan 18-21) (4/5)

A book set at a luxury resort: Everyone in My Family Has Killed Someone by Benjamin Stevenson (Jan 22-26) (4/5)

A book where nature is the antagonist: Katmai by Wilson Fiske Erskine (Jan 26-28) (3/5)

A book under 250 pages: Brian's Winter by Gary Paulsen (Jan 28-29) (5/5)

A book written by an author who is neurodivergent: Curtain: Poirot's Last Case by Agatha Christie (Jan 29-31) (4/5)

the rest )

The university usually does fireworks on New Year's Eve, but they're postponing it because of the super cold weather and ice fog..good idea lol. As I thought yesterday, Juella texted me and said the bookstore will be closed until Tuesday..also a good idea, though I'm becoming lazy LOL. On Sunday it could get to SIXTY below in low spots east of Fairbanks!! D: That's insane! Fairbanks has one of the biggest temperature inversions on earth. We're in a valley surrounded by hills, where the low air sinks and the warmer air rises up to the hills (you can see where the inversion starts by the plume of smoke from the power plant..it gets flat and stretches across the sky) and there isn't any wind to blow it away..I remember when I lived in the hills the temperature could be 20 degrees warmer than in town! Crazy. Next week it's going to be around -15..heat wave!! Haha

See ya next year :P

31. What are you most looking forward to next year? Reading more good books haha, and I'd really like to take time off and travel somewhere..I haven't gone out of state since May, I think..it's hard when Bill and I are the only ones working the register..hopefully the new manager will help with that..
lebateleur: A picture of the herb sweet woodruff (Default)
[personal profile] lebateleur
Welp, I did not post these as regularly this year as I'd hoped but I can at least round out 2025 with a final, on-time entry. I hope everyone is had/is having/will have a good end to 2025, as appropriate for your part of the world!


What I Finished Reading This Week

Holly, Reindeer, and Colored Lights - Edna Barth
This book is a nostalgic holiday reread for me. It's part frustrating (no, druids did not worship Thor or Odin) and fascinating (as a snapshot of what popular knowledge about niche topics looked like in the pre-Internet age). While the presumed audience and focus is largely continental North American christian culture, these books may very well have been the first place I ever heard about Puerto Rico, or Bolivia, or the Sami, and therefore played a part in interesting me in the world. “In the African Republic of Ghana, groups of Christian families buy cows, sheep, and goats to be slaughtered for the Christmas feast. Among Christians of Abyssinia a favorite Christmas dish is raw meat” reads one paragraph in the nine-page “Christmas Feasting” chapter. As a child, Abyssinia would have seemed like an impossibly far off place, wondrously unlike anything in my daily life. Today, I know that Abyssinia is just Ethiopia and Eritrea and the “raw meat” from that Christmas dish is just kitfo, and I can walk out my front door and order it at over half-a-dozen restaurants in less than 15 minutes. Which is in itself its own kind of wondrous.

Irish Tin Whistle Tutorial vol. 1 – Mary Bergin
Mary Bergin is one of the marquee players of this instrument. As this is just the first volume of three, I can't meaningfully compare her entire method to other tutors on the market, but it is hands down the most thorough introduction to tonguing patterns anywhere--a vital element that's often given short shrift by other instructors.

Irish Legends for Children – Yvonne Carroll & Lucy Su
This book contains six retellings of Irish legends, including The Children of Lir, two from the Ulster Cycle, and three from the Fenian Cycle. The retellings are nicely done and a good way to introduce the stories to younger readers, and the illustrations very attractive. Carroll gives the names in Irish with proper diacritics and doesn't bother with a pronunciation guide, a refreshing or frustrating choice, depending on the reader.

Guarded Time 2 - Stephanie Hansen
This book opens in media res but doesn't follow up with much explanation for dozens of characters, concepts, and situations--not even an information dump, let alone subtler explication woven into the story. And while this is the second volume in its series, it's the seventh in the "suggested reading order" of Hansen's previous books, and given that multiple chapters in Guarded Time begin with epigraphs from those books, anyone who really wants to know whats going on probably would need to read those as well. Hansen clearly loves her characters and plot, but potential readers should probably start at the top of that list.

Ruby and the Stone Age Diet – Martin Millar
I opened 2025 by reading Millar's second novel and closed it by reading this one, his third. It's a much trickier novel than its predecessor: like most of Millar's works it seems straightforward, even superficial, until you start to realize how deadly clever it is. Almost too clever in places; Millar's satire can deadpan I suspect it's flown over the head of many an oblivious reader. He's also starting to experiment this with themes and elements that will pop up again in his later works, and while they don't always work as well here, it's very cool to see them in their embryonic forms. This is definitely worth reading, and I will definitely read it again.

The Tailor of Gloucester – Beatrix Potter
Probably my favorite of Potter’s books. The illustrations are just stunning.

The Best Christmas Pageant Ever – Barbara Robinson
An annual reread. There are many people in the world right now who I think need to read this book...alas, they wouldn't get the point even if they did.

Nimona – ND Stevenson
Being a graphic novel in which Severus Snape teams up with a Murder Pixie Dream Girl to fight the system. As I was in a "fuck the system" mood all week, this suited me perfectly. It is one of those books that somehow transcends the sum of its parts, and I'm glad I finally read it. As a bonus, the omake at the end make it a seasonal read too.

Celtic Knotwork Handbook – Sheila Sturrock
I don't recommend starting with Sturrock's method when learning to draw Celtic knotwork, as it's prone to generating knots with inconsistent cord widths and interlacing that violates design conventions in historic examples. That said, it is useful for plotting groups of connected panels with negative space between them. And it absolutely shines when drafting zoomorphic patterns; in fact, it's the best method for doing so that I've found anywhere.


What I Am Currently Reading

The Stations of the Sun – Ronald Hutton
The first chapters start ahead of the Christmas season, so I'm a bit behind, but that's fine.

The Bright Sword – Lev Grossman
This is looking to become one of my annual winter reads.

Hymn to Dionysus – Natasha Pulley
Three chapters in I'm liking it quite a bit.


What I’m Reading Next

This week I acquired Peter Heller's The Dog Stars Ronald Hutton's , Coinneach MacLeod's The Scottish Cookbook, Mike Parker Pearson's Stonehenge: A Brief History, and Malene Sølvsten's Mannaz.

これで以上です。

Poem: "Once the Avalanche Has Begun"

Dec. 31st, 2025 04:03 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Shaeth is drunk (one god)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
This poem came out of the March 4, 2025 Poetry Fishbowl. It was inspired by prompts from [personal profile] mama_kestrel and [personal profile] rix_scaedu. It also fills the "Old Forrest" square in my 3-1-25 card for the Tolkien Bingo Fest. This poem has been sponsored by a pool with [personal profile] fuzzyred. It belongs to the series One God's Story of Mid-Life Crisis.

Read more... )

(no subject)

Dec. 31st, 2025 01:25 pm
greghousesgf: (pic#17098464)
[personal profile] greghousesgf
I did a bunch of grocery shopping. I was considering going to another neighborhood to do some more fun shopping but it's cold and raining and I don't have a car so I think I'm gonna do that another day and just wait till tonight and then go out for dinner and go to the Irish pub for live music and that stuff. Anyway maybe I'll be lucky and it'll stop raining.

Fanart recs from Doodle 4 Doodle

Dec. 31st, 2025 09:03 pm
chacusha: A hand drawing a colorful burst on a notebook. (stock4)
[personal profile] chacusha posting in [community profile] recthething
19 recs for art pieces drawn for [community profile] doodle4doodle at my journal

Fandoms include:
The Complete Tales of Peter Rabbit and Friends by Beatrix Potter
Critical Role: Exandria
Final Fantasy X
Hollow Knight / Silksong:
Legend of Zelda (Breath of the Wild / Tears of the Kingdom; Link's Awakening)
Original work
Sailor Moon
Sherlock Holmes
Soulcalibur
Spy x Family
Stargate Atlantis
W.I.T.C.H.

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