anneapocalypse: A headshot of Urianger in the Waking Sands. (ffxiv urianger waking sands)

Fandom: Final Fantasy XIV
Rating: Teen & Up Audiences
Archive Warnings: None
Relationships: Lyse Hext & Y'shtola Rhul
Characters: Y'shtola Rhul, Lyse Hext, Iliud
Additional Tags: Canon-Typical Violence, Garlean Attack on the Waking Sands, Gap Filler, Patch 2.0: A Realm Reborn, Patch 3.5: The Far Edge of Fate Spoilers
Series: With Lilies and With Laurel
Length: 4,399 words

Summary:

Y'shtola returns from a solo mission to find the Waking Sands ransacked, and a comrade in distress.

Notes:

Please note that while this fic is set during ARR, it contains spoilers for things revealed in Patch 3.56 (Post-Heavensward).

Many thanks to [personal profile] larissa for beta reading. All remaining mistakes are mine.

This is a work of fiction created for entertainment purposes and is not intended to be instructional with regard to espionage, grief and mourning, operational security, or anything else.

Final Fantasy XIV is owned by Square Enix. This is a non-commercial work of fanfiction.

( Read on AO3 )

...or below! )

oursin: Brush the Wandering Hedgehog by the fire (Default)
Happy birthday, [personal profile] ase!
petra: Barbara Gordon smiling knowingly (Default)
We went to see the steam engine Big Boy No. 4014 at Letchworth State Park, which was fascinating, crowded, and hot. The enormous train whistle echoing through the gorge, which is known as the Grand Canyon of the East, will stick with me.

We got there two and a half hours early, so we settled in to wait. While I waited, I started writing Last Week Tonight: Petrova Truthers. Anyone who is familiar with Project Hail Mary -- particularly the book, but the movie, too -- and John Oliver's voice is invited to come help me with it.

After I got home, I shared the draft-so-far with [personal profile] buggery, who read it aloud via phone and laughed immoderately. That was a great feeling.

My previous effort in John Oliver voice is:

Last Week This Benduday with J'hon Olivah: Clone Soldiers (5516 words) by Petra
Chapters: 1/1
Fandom: Last Week Tonight With John Oliver (TV), Star Wars: The Clone Wars (2008) - All Media Types, Star Wars - All Media Types, Star Wars Prequel Trilogy
Rating: Teen And Up Audiences
Warnings: Creator Chose Not To Use Archive Warnings
Relationships: Obi-Wan Kenobi & Anakin Skywalker & Ahsoka Tano
Characters: John Oliver, Obi-Wan Kenobi, Ahsoka Tano, Anakin Skywalker, Original Clone Character(s)
Additional Tags: In-Universe News Broadcast, John Oliver Pastiche, Jedi Discourse, Galactic Republic (Star Wars), Galactic Republic Politics (Star Wars), Parody of Satire, Turtles all the way down - Freeform, Screenplay/Script Format, Mancrush, Comedy, Dark Comedy
Series: Part 42 of Petra's Favorites Of Their Own Work, Part 1 of Star Wars Prequels in 2020s Media
Summary:

Last Week This Benduday with J'hon Olivah is a Coruscanti late-night talk and news satire program available throughout the Republic via the holonet. The main story from this week's episode discusses the clone soldiers fighting the current war, their origins, and what responsibility the Jedi Order bears for them, including interviews with current and former Jedi.


*

I am pretty sure that, while the Jedi pressure their heroes to do press, Eva Stratt has infinite numbers of better things to do.

What's the over/under on whether Grace does science education outreach via late night satire? John would hit on him so hard and tell him, "It's really, truly okay for you to say 'Fuck.'"

Project Hail Mary spoiler )
rugessnome: a wug, an imaginary bird like creature (wug)
a reading questionnaire nicked from [personal profile] phantomtomato

General Questions


This week I'm reading: finished Mayhem & Mass, a cozy mystery; started ... She Who Became the Sun and As You Like it and uh... there's also a mystery audiobook I fell asleep during... I think I ostensibly have 11 in progress books right now on Storygraph. Why am I like this!
My favourite book of all time is: ...I have no idea
My current favourite book (read or re-read in the last 3 months): uhm... The Widows of Malabar Hill and Maisie Dobbs both left significant impressions; and I was reminded on reread of how I like/how formative both Fforde's Nursery Crime and the first 4-5 Artemis Fowl (Eoin Colfer) books were for me.
The last book I bought was: ...an armful of Very Cheap! library book sale nonfiction (sub $10 for the armful!), including a few textbooks (analytical chem, cellular biology, ~rhetoric), a few quilt books, something about electrical transmission, and a gardening/cooking squash book... I have an issue with book acquisition...
The first book I bought with my own money: I don't know ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ I suppose that one memorable childhood purchase might be The Westing Game, although there's one or two bits I wish were not embedded in my brain (not traumatic, just Weirdness about eg women's bodies).
Also I was privileged enough that I got to be part of a couple of Scholastic Book Fair historical fiction diary subscriptions that came with crafty kits for a bit... Including an intro to rosewater, and a very basic version of something that I think persists in one (dormant) facet of my taste in jewelry...
The first book I received as a gift: That was probably pre-memory, as I'd bet I got Christmas or birthday books as a wee thing? The most memorable early such is probably the set of Nancy Drew books, Nos. 46-50 (The Invisible Intruder, The Mysterious Mannequin, The Crooked Banister, The Secret of Mirror Bay, and The Double Jinx Mystery) that were probably more or less a 9th birthday present. Crooked Banister is probably particularly memorable to me :)
The last book I received as a gift was: ...well there was the now customary Taste of Home annual (I forget whether it's numbered '25 or '26) at Christmas, from my aunt.
The last book I borrowed from the library: ...another armful, mixed cozies and sff, including The Tombs of Atuan and the sequel to Mayhem and Mass
The book physically closest to me right now: well, there's Murdle: School of Mystery, and The Secret of Red Gate Farm which I mean to reread before probably donating to a little free library or similar...and there's the Rancho Gordo Bean Book...
Do you read bookfic, and if so what is your favourite bookshop fic? um, well, I don't avoid it but I don't consider myself well-informed in the subgenre, and other than one or two incidentally bookshop ...involved fics, I don't particularly remember any.
(one is not necessarily a general rec because it happened to be kinky, and on second thought the other doesn't especially involve Aziraphale's shop... plus, well... *gestures at the authors on my copy of the book* ...and I think I have somewhat more conflicted thoughts about that fic, which is a sequel.)

This or that


Physical book or e-book: either for different purposes? there are advantages (...and disadvantages) to a physical copy for anything I am referencing, but then it's a lot easier to carry an ebook reader...
Used or new: it's not that I dislike new books but I am drawn to the thrift and eco-friendliness of used books, plus anything slightly obscure and out of print is apt to be used... When possible I will get fiction from the library 80-90% of the time, but I like to buy craft and cookbooks, and instructional books, and...
Fiction or non-fiction: I don't know! until recently I felt like I was in a phase of reading closer to 50/50 of each. but fiction does tend to supply more low-demand books? and so effectively it's usually a majority of my reading by number of books. And often by pages, but that may sometimes be less dramatic.
Read at a coffee shop or at the park: ...I'm technically more likely to read at the park, but it can be difficult to achieve a good scenario? I have never really gotten in the habit of hanging out at coffee shops for longer than it takes to finish any food I've bought. (I'm also bad at reading at the library, because of the allure of all their other books!)
Paperback or hardcover: There are cases where I do appreciate hardcover but in a lot of cases I do find advantages to paperback (lighter, for one, and not apt to have an annoyingly flappy slipcover... though if I could persuade myself, in theory I could remove those from my own copies... hmmm) I don't have strong preferences here, basically.
Romance or Crime: I suppose Crime here, although I'm not sure that my mystery reading qualifies as Crime-the-genre much of the time. I have been reading the occasional romance, but mostly queer ones, or occasionally relatively feminist het.

Yes or no


Stream of consciousness? ...sure
Poetry? now and again I'm in the mood.
...despite the fact that it's like, purportedly a more natural meter in English, the way that iambic meter sticks in my head bothers me way more than say, trochee's similar tendency ("any fairly practiced writer with the slightest ear for rhythm could compose for hours together in the easy running meter of the song of Hiawatha." ;) -Charles Dodgson aka Lewis Carroll)
Memoirs? rarely. but sometimes.
Philosophy? ...sometimes. depends on the philosopher as to how often I feel like reading it.
Thrillers? occasionally. not necessarily my usual taste.
Chronicles? ...I don't know what this constitutes as a modern genre, tbh? I suppose that tells you that I don't really consume these. so ...more of a no, I guess? I mean, I did read Chronicles of Narnia as a kid.
Dialogue heavy? ...sure

and! I sorted out how to do this-- for any of your ask meme using-copy/pasting needs:





...and, today I ran what I worked out was probably 1.7 miles, in 25 minutes. (Yes, I'm relatively slow at running.) Saturday (when I will probably try to get to 2 miles despite the "25 minutes" instruction) and then two more weeks left of C25K...
senmut: Plate of food and "let's feast" on it (Food: Feast)
Any food, doesn't have to be your fave of all time, no judgment for "health" factor here. If you want to mention a food you can't get (person died, restaurant closed) that's cool too.

Which means of course, mine is going to be Felini's. They sold what was billed as Greek cuisine. However, the family that owned it were Albanian, and so the cuisine was a little different than what I thought of as Greek... and it was FABULOUS for the differences. Their gyro and soups were to die for. The family was wonderful to every customer, but if you were a regular... well, you were taken care of.

I miss them terribly. Now, if I want a gyro, I will order from the Turkish coffee shop.
sovay: (PJ Harvey: crow)
Jane Yolen has died. Her books were some of the first I read. Even with my library in storage, I can see several of her titles just by turning my head. Her shadow sisters got into my Jewish demons. She ushered me through the corridors of the sea. I had the fortune of sharing some panels with her; I did have the chance to tell her how much of my sense of story she had shaped. Tam Lin and Commander Toad, White Jenna and Merlin, dragons and owls and selkies and golems and cats and always, unsentimentally, words. Which remain, but it still feels like a great light blown out.

I saw a sailor once
shed his skin
as quickly as a crab
sloughs its shell.
He danced alone,
easy in his bones,
amid the coral memories
of his sunken ship.
When he opened his mouth,
little colored fish
swam in and out,
avoiding his brittle teeth,
his stripped and shining jaw.
They were quick and bright
as laughter,
running their zigzag course
through the silent syncopation
of the sea.


—Jane Yolen, "Metamorphosis" (1982)
sovay: (Sovay: David Owen)
I have partly triumphed over bureaucracy! The parking ticket which it made no temporal sense for the car to have incurred was dispelled by a perfectly friendly clerk, exasperated with his computer and overheated in his office whose fan seemed just as overworked. Other forms of bureaucracy remain to contend with, but nonetheless.

Hollywood Hotel (1937) is otherwise such a prefabricated meta-movie musical that neither [personal profile] spatch nor I expected it to bust out with the three-minute jam of "Sing, Sing, Sing (With a Swing)" that directly encouraged the legendary 1938 Carnegie Hall concert, but it justifies the entire film especially when it's chased by the integrated magic of the Benny Goodman Quartet on "I've Got a Heartful of Music." I pulled myself upright on the couch at the speed of Pavlov at the instantly recognizable Gene Krupa. The proto-Singin' in the Rain (1952) shenanigans of the plot also offer a chance to see the normally prim and mustached Allyn Joslyn as a clean-shaven, fast-talking publicity heel, in which capacity he is a sarcastic delight, but the total experience really shoots one of its feet off when it sets up a very funny and totally deserved parody of Gone with the Wind and then tops it with blackface. Just watch Lionel Hampton instead.

It makes me happy to hear about the musical version of Pride, not least that the original miners and the lesbians and gays who supported them approve.

My mother wasn't joking about Mamdani repealing bedtime.
yehaw: centered moon with birds flying by over a cloudy mauve sky (Default)
( You're about to view content that a community administrator has advised should be viewed with discretion. )
oursin: Painting by Carrington of performing seals in a circus balancing coloured balls (Performing seals)

Off to the Royal Academy to see the Michaelina Wautier exhibition before it finishes.

A female artist who was pretty much erased; painted in genres not usually associated with lady painters; and we note the probable significance of having a male artist (brother) in the family, in fact it looks as though several paintings were collaborations between them.

Worth seeing, even if her paintings do not have the drama of her contemporary Artemisia Gentileschi.... (No decapitations.)

Observed while we were out a poster for this forthcoming exhibition: Hepworth in Colour at the Courtauld, so I think that is going on the agenda.

Also considering the Escher exhibition, adjacent in Somerset House though I'm not sure one would want to combine the two?

glitteryv: (Default)
Every Thursday, we have a community post, just like this one, where you can drop a rec or five in the comments.

This works great if you only have one rec and don't want to make a whole post for it, or if you don't have a DW account, or if you're shy. ;)

(But don't forget: you can deffo make posts of your own seven days a week. ;D!)

So what cool fanart/fics/fanvids/fancrafts/other kinds of fanworks/podfics have we discovered this week? Drop it in the comments below. Anon comment is enabled.

BTW, AI fanworks are not eligible for reccing at recthething. If you aware that a fanwork is AI-generated, please do not rec it here.
oursin: Brush the Wandering Hedgehog by the fire (Default)
Happy birthday, [personal profile] angevin and [personal profile] spaceoperadiva!
sovay: (PJ Harvey: crow)
I spent far too much of my day engaged in the further pursuit of bureaucracy. Ironically I feel that I may be coming out of the tunnel vision of the last few years when I was focused almost exclusively on not dying because I seem to be seized with chronic low-grade grief. I was able to present [personal profile] spatch with his CD of Harpo Speaks! The Riverside Symphony Concert (1964/2026) which I had ordered for him the second I knew of its existence. Yesterday I did actually run screaming into the afternoon and took a couple of pictures to prove it.

Thankfully, summer's here. )

WERS played the Last Dinner Party's "Big Dog" (2026) and I have been playing it ever since. I haven't heard someone wail like that into a chorus since '90's PJ Harvey.
vriddy: Hawks waving and leaving (bye bye)

Community Thursday challenge: every Thursday, try to make an effort to engage with a community on Dreamwidth, whether that's posting, commenting, promoting, etc.


Over the last week...

Commented on [community profile] common_nature (birbs!)

Signal boost:

  • Via [site community profile] dw_community_promo - Folks are looking to start doing The Artist's Way together over at [community profile] theartistsway, hop over and comment if you'd be interested in joining! Expected start on June 28th.
senmut: Superman (Chris Reeve) with "You've got to give more than you take" words (DC: Superman Give)
Brought to you by me doing both front and back yard (I try to split days on them) all today to beat the rain:

If you are responsible, directly, for the upkeep of a yard, do you do it your self or have a service?

I used to have a service. Then they started either coming too often or SAYING THEY CAME and trying to bill extra. And then I had a pair of older ladies supplementing retirement. But then when one of them moved, I got myself an electric lawnmower and I've been doing it since.
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