B5 color theorizing
Jan. 11th, 2026 11:46 am( Spoilers for the whole show )
characters20in20 - Wanda Maximoff (MCU)
Jan. 11th, 2026 03:35 pmPreview
"You break the rules and you become a hero. I do it and I become the enemy. That doesn’t seem fair...."
Done This Week
Jan. 11th, 2026 11:34 amAgain-again!
Motherfucker?!
Starting Monday, I had what I think was a horrible delayed reaction to the multiple meds they put me on for the ear infections. Antibiotics tend to upset the digestive biome, but this was in another class. So I spent the first half of the week in agony.
On Thursday, I got the final shot in the series for HPV. (When I was growing up, it wasn’t a thing yet, and then I was under the impression that I was already too old to get it. When I found out I was still eligible, I started the process.) Now here’s the thing: I spent two hours at the clinic, waiting to get this shot. I had an appointment, to be clear. Nonetheless, they actually closed up the place around me, while I waited in a windowless room, to get this thirty-second jab. They had to usher me out a back door, because the main entrance had been locked up already, and they couldn’t have me pay because there was no longer anyone in the building to do that.
Waking up Friday morning to a sore throat did not improve my opinion of the experience. Did I get exposed to something at the clinic? Is this a reaction to the vaccine? Who can say? All I know is that I no longer have a sore throat--instead, I have a sinus infection.
Or something. At this point, identifying what exactly is wrong with me seems quaint. I have all the illnesses. They are queuing up to have their wicked way with my immune system.
I would really like to get back to posting for the Snowflake Challenge. But right now, my brain cells are limited.
Lewisia: no new pieces written, I’m going to take my yearly break from writing this month, instead of doing it next month when the posts themselves are on break
Day job: 42.5 hours, all of which should have been spent in bed instead
Gardening: garden club post
Reading: The Complete SiP (Strangers in Paradise) Kids (the alternate universe kid version of the cast, cute and silly, this is the sort of AU/beach day cozy interlude that I wish all series did, I love when creators are basically doing fanfic of their OCs alongside us)
Watching: Revolutionary Girl Utena episodes 18 through 23 (progress! joy! ...confusion, because this is a very strange series!)
Listening: One More Saturday Night by The Halluci Nation (formerly known as A Tribe Called Red, which is part of why I lost track of them and missed getting this actual album until now, it’s so damn good?!, hits much the same spot for me as FOUR FISTS with the hiphop and spoken word elements)
Playing: fuck it, Animal Crossing: New Horizons completionist play--I’m coming for you, rare fish!
Clock Mouse: 96 minutes of planning work
Other: helped mum upgrade the software on her insulin pump
The Offline Archive
Jan. 11th, 2026 06:38 pm

In the current iteration of Whatever, the archive here goes back to March 2002, which is a time before all but one of my books (The Rough Guide to Money Online, now out of print and deeply outdated). That is nearly 24 years of writing here on a nearly daily basis, and millions of words, to go along with the millions of words that are in my other books and novels, all but three of which are still in print (the other two out of print books: The Rough Guide to the Universe and The Rough Guide to Sci-Fi Movies, both also out of date). Between this site and the books, there will be no lack of verbiage for people who are interested in me to go by; I will not die a mystery to history.
Nevertheless, there is a substantial part of my writing life which is no longer as easily accessible. Going from most recent to most distant, there are first the out of print books, the rights to which I own and which I might even put online at some point, but haven’t because doing so is a pain in the ass. I’d have to work from either old PDFs or scan everything in, and the effort required versus the value of the text is not there for me. You might find some of these on pirate sites, and inasmuch as I’m not doing anything with them at the moment, you’re welcome to them if you find them there (that said, don’t link to any of them in the comments, please).
Prior to that is the text of Whatever from between September 13, 1998 and March 26, 2002. This was an era where the Whatever was made from hand-rolled HTML rather than typed into dedicated blogging software (first Movable Type, then WordPress). Being hand-rolled meant that it was not easy to just transfer the text over; I would have had to cut and paste a couple thousand entries. Prior to the advent of Whatever there was an even earlier version of the site going back to March of 1998, which is when I secured the Scalzi.com domain and put up a static site, with columns and movie reviews from my newspaper days, new essays I wrote for the site, a couple of book proposals, and some extremely Web 1.0 site design.
None of this material is on the site proper anymore, but it’s still around after a fashion. One, I have a digital archive of it, duplicated in several places to ward off accidental deletion, and also it’s on the Internet Archive site (along with more recent iterations of this site), because I am not adverse to having the site archived in this way, and also because I personally find it convenient — if there’s something from this era I want to look at, it’s easier for me to look for it via the Internet Archive than my own archives. Among other things, the Internet Archive has maintained the architecture of the old site as well as the content of it. The Internet Archive is robust and useful but only gives the illusion of permanence; it could go away at any point. This is why I also have my own digital archive.
(The Internet Archive is also currently the only easy way to find anything I ever wrote on the former Twitter, as I permanently deleted my presence there, including all my tweets. I did, of course, download my own archive of tweets and have multiply saved it.)
Prior to this is my professional work up until I started being a full-time novelist: Work I did for AOL and other web sites, including columns at AMC, MediaOne and my own videogame review site, GameDad, and before then the columns, features and movie reviews I did for the Fresno Bee between September 1991 and March 1996. Again, I have my own digital archives of what I wrote, and the Internet Archive can help you resurrect at least some of this material if you know how to look for it. But much of it no longer available online, due to link rot, revamped web sites, or, in the case of the AOL stuff, originally having been in a walled garden that no longer exists in any event.
For a long time I suspected that the stuff I wrote for the Fresno Bee would never be available online unless I put it there myself, but as it turns out, there’s a site, Newspapers.com, which will allow you to access at least scanned (and sometimes OCR’d) versions of my reviews and columns. I found out about this, weirdly enough, because some of my Fresno Bee movie reviews started being quoted at Rotten Tomatoes. Not the full reviews, just quotes, alas. I may get a subscription to this site just to download all my movie reviews at some point. That will be a project.
We have dug down far enough that now we come to the material that is, truly, not available in any way, shape or form online: Writing from high school and college, which includes but is not limited to, music reviews and columns for the Chicago Maroon, my college newspaper, and my first attempts at short stories from high school. The picture at the head of this essay is of the actual physical archive of much of this stuff. It does not include the big-ass book I have that compiles all the copies of the Chicago Maroon for the 1989-90 academic year, when I was the editor-in-chief of the paper; that’s on a shelf on the other side of the room. Yes, if there’s ever a fire in my office, all of this writing is likely to go up in smoke.
I may at some point scan some or all of this stuff, but I’m pretty confident that almost none of it, save for what I had already put up in the previous iteration of the site, is going to be seen by the public at large. Why? Well, one, at the ages of 14 to 21, I wasn’t that good of a writer. Indeed, there is a real and serious upgrade in my writing skills that happened in 1998, because between ’96 and ’98, I spent a lot of my time being an editor, and much of that time was telling other people how to tweak their writing to make it better. It meant when I looked at my own writing previous to that point, I was very much “who told this jackass he could write” about it. The word to use for my writing in high school in particular is “precocious,” which is to say, showing talent but not a lot of discipline or control.
Two, and again particularly in my high school writing, some of it I’m ashamed of. In more than one of my short stories from the high school era, I made being gay a punchline, not because I was virulently homophobic at the time, but because I was a kid and uncritically absorbed the general 1980s societal attitudes concerning gay and lesbian folks. That explanation doesn’t excuse it, and I’m not interested in pretending otherwise. Also, being an ignorant kid in the 80s would not mitigate actual pain and harm posting those stories would have on people here in 2026. So they will stay on their shelf and not online.
I’ll note that wisdom and empathy did not suddenly alight upon my shoulder upon high school graduation. There’s plenty of my writing in the 90s — when I was a full grown adult — that is absolutely cringe on reflection. I’d sorted most of my homophobia by my exit from college, but hashing out my tendency to fall back on casual sexism for a laugh took well into the 21st Century to deal with. I can and do still slip into what I might call “avuncular pontificating” mode, and especially in the early days of Whatever this mode was indistinguishable from generic mansplaining. I try to do better, and I’ve been trying to do better for a while now. We are all permanently works in progress.
But that does mean that, unlike when I was younger and thought everything of mine should be read, I now understand why people curate their work, and let lots of it slip out of view. There is work from every stage of my writing life I am proud of and happy to show people. There’s a lot more I’m fine with letting it be, or, at best, it being of interest to a biographer, should one be foolhardy enough to emerge. There is a reason why, in the Site Disclaimer for Whatever, I mention that when you come across something that sounds like me being an ass, check the date and see if there’s not a more recent piece that reflects my current position on the subject. Also, this is why, if someone presents me with something I wrote a a decade or two (or three!) ago, I am perfectly happy to say, when necessary, that younger me was a jackass on many things and this happens to be one of them.
While I’m on the topic, and this is a thing which I think these days is actually important given the current state of technology, this is why you can’t just feed everything I’ve ever written into a Large Language Model and have it shit out a reasonable facsimile of me. Leaving aside any other issue with the current model of “AI” being an unthinking statistical matching machine, I am a moving target. I am not the same writer at 56 that I was at 16, 26, 36 or even 46. Is there a consistent thread between those versions of me? Absolutely; you can read something I wrote as a teenager and see the writer I am now in those words. But the differences at every age add up. You can’t statistically average the circumstances and choices I made across 40 years into something that reads like me, either as I am today or how I was at any previous stage.
And yes, you could ask an “AI” to control for these things, and it will, but it’s still not going to do a great job. I am me because of the lifetime of experiences I have had, but that’s not all of what makes me who I am in any present moment, What in my experiences contribute to that are not all equally weighted, or of equal consideration when I write… or when I’m thinking about what to write next. An LLM won’t and can’t understand that, which is why an attempt to use one to write like me (or any other author) is an exercise in the Uncanny Valley all the way down. Recently someone tried to convince me an LLM could write like me by cutting and pasting to me something he had it write “in my style.” It was only vaguely like how I would write, and also, I was mildly concerned that this person thought this was actually how I wrote.
All of which is to say that there is a lot of writing from me, and mostly what it does is give you an insight into who I was at the time it was written. Some of it good! Some of it is not. Some of it you can find, and some you cannot. And while I very much want you all to buy every single novel in my backlist, Tor and I both thank you for your efforts on that score, otherwise I’m perfectly okay with you focusing on what I’m writing now rather than what I wrote way back when. I’m related to that guy, and we’re very close. But we’re not exactly the same person anymore.
— JS
2025 Cap-Iron Man Holiday Exchange and Community Gifts Creators Reveals & Masterpost
Jan. 11th, 2026 01:06 pm
This year, 76 wonderful works were created for our annual event!
Thank you all very much for participating, whether it was by writing, arting, submitting the prompts for the Community Gifts, cheerleading the creators, beta reading, leaving comments on works or guessing the creators! We hope you had lots of fun.
Here, finally, is the masterlist revealing the creators of each work created for the Cap-IM Holiday Exchange and Community Gifts event! Please remember to mind the tags and warnings for individual works, and leave kudos and comments on those you've enjoyed!
Drumroll please!
★ Afterglow by KandiSheek for xWinterDreamsx (MCU, 1308 words)
★ Against All Arrangement by CapsicleRogers for wylanllupin (MCU, 28753 words)
Steve on the other hand has loved Tony for years, but has no way or to truly prove it to Tony, who resists every attempt. But Steve is patient and careful, hoping not to live out the rest of his marriage heartbroken, but he has no idea how to prove that his feelings are genuine. Through illness, danger, and resisting themselves, will Steve finally convince Tony of the truth? Will Tony be able to admit that he's been falling for Steve all along?
★ AI and the Wolf by DepressingGreenie for Cap Iron Man Community (Marvel-ambiguous fandom, 500 words)
★ alone and flowered with frost by picturecat for EllyAvon (616, 5412 words)
It's like a bad poem, Tony thinks. Or maybe a good one, what would he know. The sound of birdsong over the howl of frozen wind is certainly remarkable.
★ Amour de soi (propre) by captainstars for LadyGigi (616, 3738 words)
★ ART FOR [Amour de soi (propre)] by captainstars for Cap Iron Man Community, LadyGigi (616, art)
★ as alive as you need me to be by Kiyaar for jetskii (616, 2302 words)
★ Bare Metal and Bones by Naivelittleprincess for Cap Iron Man Community (MCU, 3109 words)
Anthony's spine hit the hard edge of the sill. The Captain loomed over him as he uttered his next words very carefully. Deliberately. Like he was promising him a terrible gift.
"Much like a pirate."
★ Bat Snuggles by Fluffypanda for Cap Iron Man Community (MCU, 300 words)
★ Blast it! by zappedbysnow for mountweazel_aka_fohatic_in_a_balaclava (1872, 410 words and art)
★ Call the Bots by DepressingGreenie for Cap Iron Man Community (MCU, 200 words)
★ The Captain's Bad Language by DepressingGreenie for Cap Iron Man Community (Avengers: Earth’s Mightiest Heroes, 400 words)
★ Caution: Too Hot!!! by DepressingGreenie for Cap Iron Man Community (MCU, 200 words)
★ Come fly with me by cococris for picturecat (616, 3246 words)
★ Come Home For Christmas by DepressingGreenie for Cap Iron Man Community (MCU, 800 words)
★ Drama in the Group Chat by DepressingGreenie for Cap Iron Man Community (MCU, 400 words)
★ Five Years Late (for Christmas) by CapsicleRogers for SoldiersShield (Marvel's Avengers, 11036 words)
★ Floofy Cuddles by icrowler for DepressingGreenie (Avengers Assemble, Art)
★ Forgive not forget by captainstars for Cap Iron Man Community, soliloquent (616, art)
★ A Gold Haze by starvels for captainstars (616, 6079 words)
★ For the good of the Kingdom by SomeSortofItalianRoast for Cap Iron Man Community, wylanllupin (MCU, 3669 words)
★ The Hangover by EllyAvon for iron_and_cum (sex_and_cum) (616, 6887 words)
★ Home for the Holidays by bererjs for gryvon (MCU, art)
★ Home to Roost by BladeoftheNebula for Cap Iron Man Community (MCU, 3040 words)
If he had to, he'd swear it to anyone - the first time was not his fault.
Every time after, however? He was absolutely pleading the fifth.
★ I can't be too late (to say that I was so wrong) by SomeSortofItalianRoast for Cap Iron Man Community (MCU, 655 words)
★ I heard the risk is drowning (but I'm gonna take it) by wylanllupin for Reioka (MCU, 14814 words)
It sounds lovely, of course it does. That's why there are so many books, films and songs about it, still doesn't mean Tony can — or should, for all that matters — have something like that. He doesn't deserve it, no matter what Steve says. "Yeah, sure… whatever."
He thought the argument was over, but then Steve proposes an idea. "I bet I can prove to you that having a relationship is better than having new flings every day."
And that just sounds ridiculous.
or; In Tony's line of work, relationships are wishful thinking. He's fine with a fling here and there, but somehow his co-worker, leader, and somewhat friend, Steve Rogers seems to disapprove of Tony's lifestyle. He proposes an idea; them dating for ten days, to prove Tony how much better a committed relationship is compared to flings and that he deserves this love. Thinking it is a joke, he agrees, but having Steve as his Alpha is more than he ever dreamed of... but it's not real. At least not for Steve, right?
★ I see the stars (and they remind me of you) by cosm1cx for Damewhore (Avengers Assemble, 7883 words)
This is the tale of their perfect-as-it-could be first day.
★ if you really hold me tight by ishipallthings for SomeSortofItalianRoast (MCU, 2670 words)
To make matters worse (or better), they’re not the only ones stranded here by the unexpected storm. Which is why they’ve ended up in a room with only one bed—for the both of them.
★ i was thirsty, and you wet my lips by Thahire for Cap Iron Man Community (MCU, 2429 words)
And it’s not like he minds the dull pressure in his gut. The opposite, even. He experimentally tenses his stomach muscles and jerks when a shiver zaps through him and jostles his full bladder. It takes him a moment to find his bearings after the feeling passes, pulse rushing in his ears.
After some deliberation, he shakes his head. "I’m fine. I’ll wait."
★ i’ve killed everything but my shame by soliloquent for Cap Iron Man Community (616, 2300 words)
Steve snorts. “You didn’t even care enough to give a speech. You’re only brave behind closed doors, crying over my body like a coward.”
That’s when Tony’s strength gives out, exhaustion leaking into his joints now that the adrenaline has nowhere left to go. He sinks to his knees.
★ i've lost all control by xWinterDreamsx for Cap Iron Man Community (616, 2266 words)
Steve missed that perfect mouth.
★ In a Love Affair with Iconic Style by Reioka for wingheads (MCU, 16730 words)
★ Invictus by captainstars for Cap Iron Man Community (MCU, 1902 words)
Tony forced his fists to unclench, because when had that happened? Albeit, having the guy you’d been in love with for a decade offer to heal you with his state-protected semen was due a little anxiety.
★ Involuntary Cowboy Christmas by WyrmsBlood for icrowler (MCU, 6615 words)
Expecting nothing but grief and misery, Tony's misfortune might just turn around when he meets resident ranch hand, Steve Rogers.
★ Island Boys by Neverever for Thahire (616, 4523 words)
★ It's Not The End (I'll See Your Face Again) by termtom for BladeoftheNebula (MCU, 1588 words)
★ The Lab Fort by DepressingGreenie for Cap Iron Man Community (MCU, 300 words)
★ A Lesson in Subtlety by lomku for Cap-IM Community, wylanllupin (MCU, 1215 words)
★ Lost (and Found) in the Tower by DepressingGreenie for Cap Iron Man Community (MCU, 200 words)
★ Make it more than a shot in the dark for cococris (616, 13322 words)
Jan looked at him consideringly. “Maybe not.”
★ Man Without A Soul by soliloquent for ishipallthings (MCU, 9687 words)
He falls in love with Tony Stark anyway.
★ Marrying Royalty by DepressingGreenie for Cap Iron Man Community (MCU, 400 words)
★ My love, I'm in love with you by xWinterDreamsx for Cap Iron Man Community (MCU, 1586 words)
★ No Need For Isolation by Becci_chan for zappedbysnow (MCU,2499 words)
★ Only this once, I have you by Alice216 for KandiSheek (616, 6225 words)
★ Open Your Eyes by dirigibleplumbing for annthonystark (616, 10759 words)
★ Partner Material by gryvon for Becci_chan (MCU, 1219 words)
★ Perfect by zeerat for bererjs (MCU, 2922 words)
★ The Prince and the Painter by OscarTheSlouch for Fluffypanda (MCU, 25544 words)
or
”What will it be, Steven Rogers?" asked the man in green. "True love? Absolute power? What is your heart’s desire?”
Right now, Steve's heart desired this commercial transaction to end. He wanted to sell the guy his paperweight and get him out of the shop. The man was obviously crazy, and Steve definitely hadn’t told him his name, so how did he know it?
“Don’t trouble yourself with the details,” the man said breezily, as if Steve had spoken aloud. “What about riches, Steven? Mortals always like riches. Do you desire riches?”
“Well, sure, I guess, but I’d settle for sixty plus tax.”
★ Put A Ring(ed tail) On It by Fluffypanda for CrayonsurPapier (MCU, 2565 words)
★ Returning to Study by DepressingGreenie for Cap Iron Man Community (MCU, 1600 words)
★ right where you left me by Thahire for Cap Iron Man Community (616, 2238 words)
Turns out, neither can Tony.
★ Set a Timer by Julien_Mayfair for Cap Iron Man Community (Marvel comics, 1943 words)
★ A Single Thin Straight Line by jetskii for citsiurtlanu (616, 30077 words)
★ Situation Repeat by DepressingGreenie for Cap Iron Man Community (Marvel's Avengers, 300 words)
★ Sodom by resurrectedhippo for starvels (616, 6072 words)
AUTH: CO, SITE HB-1019
Preparer Initials: M.H.
Co-Signer Initials: N.F.
SPECIAL REVIEW: COVERT ACTION IN SUR KARA
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY MISSION #AB5291-R1-E1
Staff Report concerning Off-World Intelligence Activities
Notable Captives: Tony Stark (Iron Man) and Steve Rogers (Captain America)
★ Star Spangled **** by DepressingGreenie for Cap Iron Man Community (Avengers Assemble, 400 words)
★ Start Your Engines by SoldiersShield for soliloquent (MCU, 3597 words)
★ straw by wingheads for cosm1cx (616, art)
★ the sunlight flaring in your body by Thahire for Cap Iron Man Community (MCU, 2905 words)
★ Take Us Back by citsiurtlanu for dirigibleplumbing (616, 11822 words)
★ Taken by the Sasquatch by BladeoftheNebula for WyrmsBlood (MCU, 6104 words)
He gets more than he ever could've bargained for 😏
★ That big, ugly building by Julien_Mayfair for termtom (MCU, 2102 words)
★ A Timely Rescue Late One Christmas Eve by DarthBloodOrange (DepressingGreenie) for zeerat (1872, art)
★ To be Held by Something Reluctant to Let Go by Thahire for CapsicleRogers (MCU, 6574 words)
In the wake of Tony’s looming betrothal and an attempt on his life, Knight Steve and King Tony must finally confront their feelings for each other before it’s too late.
★ Together (At Long Last) by DepressingGreenie for Cap Iron Man Community (MCU, 500 words)
★ A Tsummy Situation by Neverever for Cap Iron Man Community (Marvel Tsums, Marvel Adventures: Avengers, 1330 words)
★ The Underlings' Gift by DepressingGreenie for Cap Iron Man Community (MCU, 1100 words)
★ Vibranium-Capped Boots? by DepressingGreenie for Cap Iron Man Community (Avengers Assemble, 500 words)
★ We're All Born Naked, The Rest is Made Masterpieces by iron_and_cum (sex_and_cum) for Alice216 (616, 51097 words)
It is 1987. Steve Rogers is two years unfrozen into a political landscape that looks nothing like it was when he plunged into oblivion's beyond. There's a man in the White House who speaks in the tongue of certain death, he lives in a mansion on Fifth Avenue he once used to pass with his belly empty, and the easel gifted to him months ago sits unboxed, unused.
He used to think it was all... not fixable, but manageable. That people could live and exist and just be in peace if they all tried to mend what’s been broken these past few millennia or more – like that's not a tall order itself – or that at the very least, they could build a world where everyone striving towards better would be bolstered and those who wanted worse would be left behind in the dust.
And that’s the dream, isn’t it? That’s the dream. Dreaming is good. Steve dreams every night. He dreams of joy. He dreams of happiness and simpler things.
But, this is not a dream.
This is the life.
And life is not so simple.
All it takes is one voice - and one man's song - to change everything.
★ what remains by soliloquent for Cap Iron Man Community (MCU, 1754 words)
★ what tomorrow could bring (today doesn't really know) by SomeSortofItalianRoast for Neverever (MCU, 3559 words)
★ (what unmakes) a good man by mountweazel_aka_fohatic_in_a_balaclava for OscarTheSlouch (MCU, 10347 words)
★ wish/suck by annthonystark for resurrectedhippo (616, 1421 words)
He needs this to be over.
★ Wolves and Dogs by sexy_sinful_writer for Cap Iron Man Community (616, 2390 words)
aka
Capwolf keeps Tony as a pet
★ [Art] X of Ruin by LadyGigi for Kiyaar (616, art)
Were your guesses right? Are you surprised at something? You can post your reactions in our Cap-IM Discord server here!
And finally, if you participated in the event, feel free to post your work wherever you want now! We will be reblogging every tumblr post tagged with #capimexchange in one of the first five tags.
Thank you for a great event to start 2025 on!
🖤 annthonystark, Kiyaar, Neverever, and starvels
Your 2025 Holiday Exchange and Community Gifts mods
the step in my groove, yeah
Jan. 11th, 2026 12:40 pmNow I'm trying to decide if I want to make a loaf of bread to go with the soup. I originally bought a small loaf with my groceries on Friday, but then ate it as cheesy garlic bread for a couple of meals. *hands* The heart wants what it wants, and in this case, my heart wanted cheesy garlic bread.
Since the slow cooker is working, I can't use the KitchenAid (it is blocked in by the InstantPot), so I want a no knead kind of bread, but also one that is only going to take 2-3 hours, nothing that needs an overnight rise. I think I might end up making the old, reliable peasant bread (halved to only make 1 loaf). It's easy and fast (for bread), and doesn't require a stand mixer.
Hmm...
*
Weekly proof of life: media, if nothing else
Jan. 11th, 2026 12:35 pm(And since I've mentioned a couple of YA books recently where their flavor of YA really didn't work for me, I should say that The Lovely and the Lost is also very clearly YA but in a way I could work with just fine as a reader, despite being very much not the target audience.)
On the nonfiction side, I read The Crone Zone: How to Get Older with Style, Nerve, and a Little Bit of Magic (Nina Bargiel), which was...mostly odd, honestly. It's from the same publisher (and I guess the same...product line?) as Goblin Mode: How to Get Cozy, Embrace Imperfection, and Thrive in the Muck, which I read last year, and the presentation and vibe were really (I mean really) similar in a way that might've made more sense to me if they were also by the same author, but they're not. The Crone Zone's subtitle does accurately reflect its contents, so I feel weird saying "it's such a weird blend of exactly what it says it is", but...yeah. Not my thing.
What I'm Currently Reading: Chuck Wendig's Wanderers, which I chose at random from my ebooks and probably would not have started had I actually known anything about it. It's a 2019 novel that starts with a mysterious phenomenon where people just start...walking...somewhere, but also spotlights (*checks notes*) a world-changing disease, AI, and right-wing violence tearing at the seams of the US, all of which are being amply provided by reality. It's also pretty hefty, length-wise. And yet I keep reading.
I've also begun reading Braiding Sweetgrass: Indigenous Wisdom, Scientific Knowledge, and the Teachings of Plants (Robin Wall Kimmerer), as the starting point for my 2026 goal* of "aim to read at least one chapter of nonfiction each week" (swiped from a friend else-net). (Another goal is to aim to read a volume of manga each week, and that one hasn't been started in on yet, but we'll see how strict I feel like being about "each week".)
*I have a full bingo card of goals! I will probably share it at some point! But not this minute.
What I Plan to Read Next: K.B. Spangler's newest Rachel Peng novel, Inside Threat is out/about to come out! (It was supposed to come out this week, but Amazon dropped it early, so she's also released it on her website.)
Plus: What I've Been Watching:
Yuletide 2025
Jan. 11th, 2026 01:18 pmMore A Comment Than A Question (2285 words) by ryfkah
Fandom: The Day Before the Revolution - Ursula K. Le Guin, The Dispossessed - Ursula K. Le Guin
Characters: Laia Asieo Odo, Sadik (The Dispossessed)
Odo!
“I’m Laia.” If the voice wanted her father, she thought, crossly, it could go and get him; why was it bothering her?
Oh. The voice sounded startled. You’re too small. I got it wrong. Then, hopefully: Do you have any thoughts yet about anarchism and the necessity of constant revolution?
I was caught right in the maelstrom of the day 1 de-anonning - as in, had opened the tab with the author's name on it and then went back to the laptop every few minutes for an hour to look at the recipe in the next tab - and learned later that I had been an unwitting part of a greater scheme of deception! But honestly I was thrilled at the news Becca was writing me regardless, she is the best and this story is wonderful: does such a good job at catching on to the themes of the original, and does this via a funny little time travel scenario that fits brilliantly into the original. I highly recommend it.
I wrote the following stories:
Flowering (4850 words) by raven
Fandom: The Chronicles of Chrestomanci - Diana Wynne Jones
Relationships: Cat Chant & Christopher Chant
Characters: Cat Chant, Christopher Chant, Millie Chant
Additional Tags: Coming of Age, Queer Themes
Summary:
“Keep the home fires burning, Cat, will you,” Chrestomanci says lazily, and Millie blows Cat a kiss before the portal shuts.
My assigned story, and a couple of people can attest how much I hated it, hated writing it, and how much I wanted to burn it to the ground. I'm in a phase right now where writing fiction is just beyond my ken. It's too hard and it makes my soul ache. But I had been on a podcast, Eight Days of Diana Wynne Jones, on an episode about The Lives of Christopher Chant, so I thought I was feeling Chrestomanci sufficiently much to write it. I was not and I could not. But then I missed the deadline for no-fault default, and felt masochistic enough to continue somehow. I eventually resolved to orphan the story once yuletide was over - I have not done this. Quite a lot of people liked it and I'm grateful to them for saying so! But I learned my lesson here about giving up when I'm ahead.
promises made to be broken, made to last (1988 words) by raven
Fandom: Shetland (TV)
Relationships: Ruth Calder/Alison McIntosh
Characters: Ruth Calder, Alison McIntosh
Additional Tags: New Year's Eve, Romance, Alternate Universe - Witchcraft
Summary:
Ruth's not much of a witch, not really. Kneeling beside a corpse on the year’s turn is something any woman can do.
Here's one that was different! I've seen some of this show, I've been to the islands, but hadn't been particularly inspired to write for it. But then
ashes, ashes (2099 words) by raven
Fandom: The Incandescent - Emily Tesh
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Relationships: Sapphire “Saffy” Walden/Laura Kenning
Characters: Sapphire “Saffy” Walden, Laura Kenning
Additional Tags: Aftermath, Recovery, Yuletide Treat
Summary:
It was time to go, and Laura said, “Saffy, you could come with me”—and Saffy said maybe, and it meant something but neither of them knew yet what.
I don't know that I have much to say about this one! I wrote it a few months ago, before the creative void, so it was nice to have a story in the archive that I definitely liked that wasn't written in a mad hurry. The recipient didn't show up, but we can't have everything.
Gosh, isn't it great
Jan. 12th, 2026 07:57 pmI guess that's one more advantage of being fictional!
( Read more... )
I am rapidly concluding that the B5 books are CURSED
Jan. 10th, 2026 10:17 pmThe original process was this:
I'd known about the existence of the B5 script books vaguely for a while, but hadn't really thought of buying them before. In October, when I came back from traveling, I googled it and found a massive site called "B5 Books" that had authorized editions of all the B5-related books available, which was a lot of them, not just the script books but tons of other stuff as well.
They had closed yesterday.
But wait! They were staying open through the weekend (like 2 more days) because they'd had technical issues. So I splurged and ordered an absolute ton of books (about 2/3 of the total script books out there, mainly focused on episodes I especially wanted to read about). I would have preferred to order just one to find out a) what the books were like, and b) what their customer service was like, but ... closing in 2 days! So I gave them my credit card info for a quantity of books that I don't want to think too closely about.
A month went by.
I got a shipping notice and a tracking number, and and then a box arrived .... with 2 books in it.
I contacted customer service (a bit nervously, in the hopes they'd still actually answer). To their credit, they were very quick to respond; evidently there was a second tracking email I hadn't received for some reason, for the box with most of the rest of the books in it. (They sent me a free digital book to make up for the emotional distress, too - they were really nice.)
This was back in December, and I was leaving on the 13th, Saturday, so I periodically checked the tracking info for the box. It showed up in Fairbanks over the previous weekend, and showed that it was supposed to deliver on Monday.
Monday came and went. About mid-week, the tracking info showed that it had traveled out of Fairbanks again. (Why??) I had visions of the box going all the way back to the sender for some reason. Meanwhile, I had planned to spend the last couple of days before I left diving into my new books, but as the week ticked down and it continued to tease me ... I guess not. Finally, on Friday, I got an actual "out for delivery" notice, and then a notice that a "pick up at post office" slip had been left. Also, Friday was our last day of actual mail delivery (we'd put a hold on it until after Christmas that started on Saturday and went for 2 weeks, i.e. about the amount of time that the post office will hold a box - you know, this box with $100s of books in it). I was headed to the airport Saturday afternoon, but I figured it should be possible to stop by the post office on the way.
I picked up the mail.
No slip.
I thought, okay, maybe I picked up an early batch (yesterday's? our mailbox is on the highway and both the mail delivery and our collection of it is kind of haphazard) so when Orion got home a few hours later, I asked if there had been a slip in the mailbox.
Nope!
So now my package is on hold at the post office, I GUESS, with no ability to redeliver and our mail delivery not starting until after the approximate return to sender date. We hunted all around the mailbox just in case it had been dropped. No slip.
I ended up printing out the tracking number and taking that to the post office on our way to the airport, and that DID work and they DID have the box and I got it, YAY. (Orion said that the slip spontaneously showed up in the mailbox when he was headed home after dropping me off, so WHO KNOWS what was up with that.)
Anyway, all of that ended up working out in the end, and I enjoyed the books so much that I went on Amazon to see if I could find used copies of the ones I didn't have. I ordered a few more, and I just checked the shipping info and discovered that one of them - from a 3rd party Amazon seller - was sent via Fedex and supposedly delivered on Thursday afternoon, i.e. 2 days ago.
Guess what I don't seem to have!
Orion says that Fedex often leaves deliveries in random places around the yard - he's found them on piles of construction supplies, left at the door of the shop instead of the house, etc. Inauspiciously, it snowed a few inches last night, so everything is covered with fresh snow. Also, it was dark. Still, we took flashlights and went and hunted high and low in all the places that a package might be, ranging from likely (covered with snow beside the door) to unlikely but possible (at the doors of the various outbuildings like the greenhouse, on top of random vehicles in the yard) to the highly unlikely (at our road sign, in our mailbox). Not a single sign of it! I don't know if it was delivered to some other house, mistakenly marked as delivered when it's actually fallen under the delivery truck seat, or if a very soggy B5 book is going to turn up four months later when the snow melts, but seriously, WHAT EVEN. I've never had a book go missing like this in all the time I've been ordering used books off Amazon!
Anyway, further updates from the B5 script books are coming soon, and maybe I'll have this particular book eventually, or maybe not.



