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About me/my journal:

I've been on Dreamwidth for over 3 years now, and keep putting off making an 'About Me' post. I hate talking about myself, but here goes.

Hi, I'm [personal profile] justanorthernlight , J for short.

I'm a lurker, reader, and vidder. I'm considering giving up 'writer' as part of my identity considering how long it's been since I've written anything.

On my journal you will mostly find my monthly 'Reading Wrap-Up' posts where I talk about what I read that month. Expect sci fi, fantasy, historical fiction, and occasional forays into other genres. Also lots and lots of Star Wars expanded universe content. I'm also trying to read more nonfiction.

Occasionally when I'm mid-project and want to talk about it I will do WIP Wednesdays, or something similar. I have in the past tried liveblogging various books and shows, but I don't stick with it. I do make extremely occasional meta posts.

I don't make all that many fanworks so when I do I tend to link to them from here.

I post occasional real life updates in locked entries.

How many times am I going to use the word 'occasional' in this bio? Ugh.

Fandoms:

Star Wars is my forever and always fandom. I have been reading Expanded Universe novels since I was a tiny child in the '90s, and in online fandom since the early '00s. Because I've been in it so long I don't feel super compelled to keep up with new entries in real time (ex, it's 2022 and I haven't even seen The Mandalorian yet), they will always be there waiting for me.
(Updated Jan 2024: I have seen some Mandalorian but not Ahsoka, I'm currently knee-deep in The High Republic comics/novels, but also behind the curve there).

(Side note, in general I don't even like keeping up with new fandoms in real time, hot takes and speculation kind of exhaust me. Rereading and rewatching old shit FTW!)

Babylon 5 is another forever fandom, although I came to it in the early 2010s.

In general, I love sci fi and fantasy movies, tv shows, literature, etc. A lot of my current fandoms are smaller fantasy books.

I also like historical fiction, Black Sails was my last big non-SFF obsession.

Friending/access policy:

Feel free to subscribe/follow/comment/lurk! I don't always follow back, but I love seeing new people. I'm just a little picky about what comes into my feed.

When it comes to granting access, I'll (probably) show you mine if you show me yours ;) Most of my content is public, so don't feel obligated to grant or request access if you don't want to.

Festivids

Feb. 11th, 2024 04:11 am
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I made a pinch-hit for Festivids: out with a bang (Robin and Marian 1976) (see tags for trigger warnings).

Some misc festivids recs:

By Way of Sorrow a Les Miserables (2012) vid.

All three Andor vids were great

Jackrabbit, a Catherine, Called Birdie (2022) vid. (Disclaimer, I haven't seen the movie, but I did read the book it was based on many years ago and remembered enough of the plot to follow the vid).

And finally, remember during snowflake challenge I was complaining about the lack of space vids set to sea shanties? Well, I haven't seen the source show but I did enjoy the For All Mankind vid Northwest Passage.
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Challenge #11

In your own space, create a fanwork.

I've been really swamped with IRL stuff most of Snowflake Challenge but I really wanted to share a mini-vid I started last year, that I initially wanted to make full-length but eventually decided that less was more in this case.

Music: We Will All Go Together When We Go by Tom Lehrer
Fandom: Star Wars (films)
Length: <1 min

(Ao3 crosspost)


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Snowflake Challenge promotional banner with image of metallic snowflake and ornaments. Text: Snowflake Challenge January 1-31.

Challenge #1

Update your fandom information. Post your answer to today’s challenge in your own space and leave a comment in this post saying you did it. Include a link to your post if you feel comfortable doing so.
My fandom information is basically the same but I made some minor edits to my Intro Post.

Challenge #2

In your own space, set yourself some goals for the coming year. They can be fannish or not, public or private. Leave a comment in this post saying you did it. Include a link to your post if you feel comfortable doing so.
2023 goal review )

2024 goals )
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Snowflake Challenge promotional banner featuring feet in snuggly socks, a mug of hot chocolate, a notebook with 'dreams' written on the cover, and a guitar. Text: Snowflake Challenge January 1-31.

Challenge #3

Create a wish list of fandom things (podfic, graphics, playlists, canon recs translations, research help, vids, sky's the limit!) that you'd like to receive. Post your answer to today’s challenge in your own space and leave a comment in this post saying you did it. Include a link to your post if you feel comfortable doing so.

1.) Vids (or vid recs) from fandoms involving space ships, set to sea shanties. Particularly vids focusing on the ship(s) i. It is taking all of my restraint not to turn this into a manifesto on why someone who isn't me should make a Star Trek vid to this particular cover of the song Day of the Clipper, because I'm not sure that's what this prompt is about.

2.) Sci Fi/Fantasy book recs (would also welcome nonfiction recs).

3.) Murderbot Diaries fanwork recs, particularly fanart. (I got a box set of the first four novellas for christmas and am currently obsessed. The only reason I haven't finished Exit Strategy already is because I got distracted by fic).

4.) Star Wars: The High Republic Phase I fanwork recs.
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Mindfulness In Plain English by Bhante Gunaratana (nonfiction) -
Basically a how-to guide for Buddhist-style vipassana/mindfulness meditation. I picked it up because I took a couple of meditation classes over the summer and was interested in going a bit deeper on my own. I'm not sure Buddhist-style meditation is the one for me but the book had a lot of helpful practical tips for how to go about letting go of conscious thought and emptying the mind, which guided meditation has never made clear to me.

Star Wars Volume 11: The Scourging of Shu-Torun (Star Wars (2015) #62-67 written by Kieron Gillen, art by Andrea Broccardo & Angel Unzueta) -
This is the climax of the story arc that began back in Volume 7: The Ashes of Jedha (which I read back in 2020/2021, before this volume went out of print in the physical edition for over a year and a half). Leia plots to destroy the Imperial mining facilities on Shu-Torun (and to get revenge on Queen Trios at the same time). To pull it off, she & the guys gathers together a crew of the various misfits they had teamed up with over the course of the previous issues, including a nervous slicer, a shapeshifting opera singer/actor, and the survivors of Saw's partisans led by Benthic Two-Tubes, who are looking for a slightly different kind of revenge of their own.

It's a good volume, I really like Gillen's handling of the canon characters and some of the weirder characters he creates himself (like the cult of the Central Isotpter). It's a pretty Leia-centric story, and without going into too much detail it has her showing a bit of her Anakin side, which we don't get to see much.

The Anthropocene Reviewed: Essays On A Human-Centered Planet by John Green (nonfiction) -

John Green reviews everything from the Lasceaux Cave Paintings, to Diet Dr Pepper, to the act of Googling Strangers on a 5 star scale. It's very heartfelt and I liked them a lot, but I read them very slowly, 2-3 at a time in between other books because he does tend to get a little naval-gaze-y at times.

As a taste, John just made his annual repost of his review of Auld Lang Syne on youtube again. It's one that made me cry.

Star Wars Volume 12: Rebels And Rogues (Star Wars (2015) #68-72 written by Greg Pak, art by Phil Noto) & Star Wars Volume 13: Rogues And Rebels (Star Wars (2015) #73-75 written by Greg Pak, art by Phil Noto, & Star Wars: Empire Ascendant, a multi-author anthology issue) -
In the final arc of the 2015 Star Wars run, General Rieekan sends the gang on a 3-pronged mission to distract the Empire from the Rebellion's attempt to set up their new base on Hoth. Han & Leia are sent to provoke a fight between the Empire and a crime syndicate controlling the world of Lanz Carpo, where an ex-boyfriend of Leia's has also become the head of local law enforcement, Chewie & Threepio set a trap for Imperial Star Destroyers on a tectonically-unstable world that is supposed to be devoid of life, and Luke tries to lure some Imperial probes away from a small rebel cell in the inner rim. Predictably, all three of these missions go wrong.

While I liked the Threepio & Chewie plot, I felt like the other two missed the mark from a characterization standpoint. In particular, Luke's naivete was way overplayed- on his adventure he meets a girl from Jedha who was a very limited Force connection and he becomes convinced that the Force brought him to her for her to ~teach him something~... and never gets the hint when she repeatedly tries to get rid of him and steal his lightsaber. It's just a complete flanderization of his character.

Empire Ascendant is 4 short stories about side-characters a variety of side characters from other comics: Poe's parents Kes & Shara on Hoth, Valence from Han Solo: Imperial Cadet being a bounty hunter, someone I haven't read about from the next Darth Vader run (also by Greg Pak), and the coda with Aphra's friends from the end of her series.

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2023 Reading Goal Progress:
60 of 50 total books, 22 of 7 nonfiction. Finishing the 2015 Star Wars run was my last reading goal of the year, too, so yay that that's done!
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My Year of Rest and Relaxation by Ottessa Moshfegh -
In the year 2000, a recently-orphaned art school grad decides to deal with her complicated grief and other mental health issues by "hibernating," or conning an incompetent psychiatrist into giving her a ridiculous amount of sleep meds and using her inheritance to spend an entire year with no obligations except sleeping as much as possible (which is kind of a mood).

It's weird, ~edgy~, and often gross, and it reminds me intensely of a Chuck Palahniuk novel without the violence (it reminded me so much of Fight Club without the fight-clubbing, the protagonist even remains nameless throughout). I can't decide how I feel about it. There were parts I loved and parts that just kind of left me frowning in disgust.


What If 2: Additional Serious Scientific Answers To Absurd Hypothetical Questions by Randall Munroe (nonfiction) -
Munroe's work is always delightful to me. I actually got this book around Christmas last year but I was saving it for a time I was particularly sad and needed a pick-me-up, and it worked! As the title says, it's an exploration of the science involved in various absurd hypothetical scenario, whether they're possible or not, and the horrible unexpected consequences that would result from doing them.

I especially loved the Billion Story Building chapter, the lava lamp made with actual lava, the "Weird & Worrying" short answer sections, and every time he uses the [citation needed] tag. Examples include: "Cold things and hot things are different [citation needed]," "Sand is interesting [citation needed]," "The Earth's crust contains a bunch of atoms [citation needed]."


The Will of the Empress (The Circle Reforged #1) by Tamora Pierce (audiobook) -
~2(? or possibly 4?) years after the Circle Opens quartet, the four are back in Emelan changed, distant from each other, and making the awkward transition into adulthood no longer tied to Winding Circle Temple. When Sandry is prodded to travel to Namorn to check up on her estates there for the first time since childhood and to visit the royal court of her cousin, Empress Berenene, Duke Vedris asks the other three to accompany her for protection. There's romance, intrigue, and coming of age stuff for everyone.

Court intrigue fantasy is one of my guilty pleasure genres, and I enjoyed how balanced the plot was between the four main characters, even if the overarching plot is more focused on Sandry. Each of the four gets their chance to shine. Also, we get some canonical LGBTQ+ content as Daja gets a girlfriend (and Lark and Rosethorn are retrospectively revealed to be more than roommates living in a cottage raising children together... I think I read somewhere that Pierce wanted them explicitly together from the outset but the publisher quashed it up to this point). This book also came out around the time YA was emerging as it's own genre, and it's much longer and deals with more mature themes than the earlier books.


The Poisoner's Handbook: Murder and the Birth of Forensic Medicine in Jazz Age New York by Deborah Blum (nonfiction) -
I picked this up while at Barnes & Nobles while looking for something else, it's very interesting and focuses on the work of Charles Norris and Alexander Gettler to create a functional (and de-politicized) medical examiners' office and toxicology laboratory in New York City. It touches on the Tammany Hall political machine of the late 1910s through the 1930s, Prohibition & bootlegging, the rise of industrial chemistry and it complete lack of safety regulations, as well as actual murders. I found it very interesting. 


Melting Stones (The Circle Reforged #2) by Tamora Pierce (audiobook) -
Set concurrently with The Will of the Empress, while Briar is away in Namorn Evvy and Rosethorn travel to the Battle Islands to figure out why a bunch of their plants are dying. Turns out it's a volcano about to blow. This was more of a return to the style of the original quartet of books- Evvy explores her rock magic while dealing with interpersonal issues with other kids. It's more middle grade than YA.

I didn't like it very much, it's a first person narration and Evvy's voice actress has a pretty whiny voice, the magical parts are very repetitive, and I disliked how the interpersonal issues were handled. It's established that during the two year time skip between Street Magic and these two books Briar, Evvy, and Rosethorn got caught up in a war in a foreign country and all have PTSD from the experience (the final book in this series, Battle Magic, goes back and covers those events). Evvy is about 14 (I think, the ages flew by in the audiobook), and at one point yells at a younger kid for breaking one of her prized possessions after being told not to touch it and everyone acts like Evvy is a complete monster for being upset, to an extent that I did not understand at all. It was like a bad fanfic where the author's only goal is to punish a character they hate.


How To Keep House While Drowning: A Gentle Approach to Cleaning and Organizing by KC Davis (nonfiction) -
The nicest thing I can say about this book is that it's target audience has a very different set of mental health issues that get in the way of cleaning than I do. It's very TikTok-y (the author got her start on TikTok), and it seems to be directed at SAHMs with very young children who feel ashamed/guilty their house doesn't look like a Pinterest board. I'm sure it's helpful for someone, but that someone is not me.

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2023 Reading Goal Progress:
55(!) of 50 total books 🎉🎊🎆✨, 20(!) of 7 nonfiction. I've hit my reading goal for the first time in many years! I only have 1 reading-related 2023 goal left.

Currently Reading:
Nonfiction: I'm almost done with Mindfulness in Plain English, Fiction: Translation State by Ann Leckie, Audiobook: Battle Magic (Circle Reforged #3) by Tamora Pierce. Also I'm still picking away at Dune but it's kind of a slog.
 
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Trying to figure out fiddly worldbuilding details without full access to a canon is a challenge.

What title does a secular female mage use? )
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I've been rereading Tamora Pierce's Emelan books (and catching up on the few I didn't get to the first time around), and I'm feeling fannish enough to start plotting fic and digging into the worldbuilding for it and a certain plot point from WotE has suddenly stopped making sense.

Tris learning academic magic post-Will of the Empress )


This may or may not turn into an actual fic, I often get very involved in plotting/backstory/worldbuilding and then abandon the project within a chapter or two of the actual writing, but I'm enjoying the process for the first time in a while.

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Why We Sleep: Unlocking the Power of Sleep and Dreams by Matthew Walker (nonfiction) -
The author is a neuroscientist working in cutting-edge sleep research. I already knew quite a bit about the basics of sleep mechanics and the dire consequences of sleep deprivation due to trying to understand my own sleep disorder, but this book went into significantly more detail than I'd seen previously and talked about some of the most recent discoveries in the nitty-gritty details of sleep mechanics. I especially liked how he explained chronotypes (the genetic basis for the difference between "early birds" and "night owls"), and the changes in the circadian rhythm people go through as they age.

What I was less of a fan of was his weird dismissiveness towards sleep quality problems in children/teens having causes other than social/behavioral (i.e. caffeine and smartphones). He even flat-out said that while he didn't have any proof he thought most ADHD diagnoses were misdiagnosed sleep deprivation and that, although there is currently only correlational evidence between poor sleep and autism, he thought it was poor sleep causing autism behavior/symptoms, with no possibility given to the causality being the other way around. (This is frustrating to me because I developed a sleep disorder when I was a child before smartphones were even invented and I wasn't allowed to have caffeine until I was a teenager, and while the book did talk about biological causes in poor quality sleep in the elderly it was all "caffeine and smartphones" for the youth).


The Gentle Art of Swedish Death Cleaning: How to Free Yourself and Your Family from a Lifetime of Clutter by Margareta Magnusson (nonfiction) -
This book is part manifesto on aggressive decluttering/downsizing & minimalism and part memoir of the author's experiences cleaning up after other family members have passed away. I loved it so much I read it twice back-to-back (it's just over 100 pages long, so not that hard to do). It is really comforting and heartfelt, and the only minimalism manifesto I've come across that didn't leave me feeling excessively shamed.

My grandma passed away at the end of August, and I read this while we were in the process of emptying out her apartment. I also have half a bedroom, an entire garage, and several boxes at my sister's house full of stuff left over from my Dad and Nana's passing back in 2021, and this book has given me some real comfort and encouragement in making progress on dealing with it. 10/10, do recommend.


The Death of the Necromancer by Martha Wells (audiobook) -
Gaslamp fantasy in which an anti-villain gentleman-criminal, in the course of attempting to frame a corrupt nobleman for a capital crime in revenge for framing his adopted father for necromancy, stumbles across and ends up investigation a series of thefts and murders that seem to involve real necromancy. There's heists and tragic, mysterious pasts and Sherlock Holmes homages galore, and I loved just about every minute of it.

It's currently only available in audiobook, but it looks like it's being reprinted in physical in February and I desperately want to reread it.


An Absolutely Remarkable Thing by Hank Green -
64 giant, motionless robots appear mysteriously in the middle of the night (NYC time, of course) in the 64 most populous cities on Earth, and a 23-year-old art school grad accidentally propels herself into overnight internet fame by being the first to find & post about them online. As the world tries to discover out the robots origin and purpose, she become the face of a political movement in support of the robots, and the center of the Twitter-war against those that fear the mysterious robots and their mysterious purpose. Also there's a viral dream puzzle that is basically an MMO puzzle game, but in everyone's brains.

When I first started reading this I was annoyed by how terminally-online it felt, but as the story went on it became clear that the online-ness was more of the point than the alien robots actually were. It's really about internet fame, Twitter addiction, and the good and the bad of social media (and a little bit traditional media, too). It's a lot of what I expect from Hank Green, optimistic about humanity but aware of the issues we have, and a little bit more obsessed with Twitter than Twitter deserves. (I'm not sure the centrality of Twitter to the story is going to age well). I'm probably going to pick up the sequel at some point, I liked this one more the further I got into it.

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2023 Reading Goal Progress: 49 of 50 total books, 17 of 7 nonfiction.

Currently Reading: I'm almost done with My Year of Rest and Relaxation by Ottessa Moshfegh and about 150 pages into Dune by Frank Herbert for fiction.  Listening to The Will of the Empress (The Circle Reforged #1) by Tamora Pierce for an audiobook, and reading What If 2 by Randall Munroe for nonfiction (which is as delightful as always).
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Consider Phlebas (Culture Series #1) by Iain M Banks (reread/audiobook) -
I originally read Consider Phlebas in print around 2014 or so, and revisiting it definitely reminded me why the prevailing advice is to skip it when getting into the Culture series for the first time. The plot is slow, meandering, dark, and gory, and most of the characters (including the protagonist) are utterly unlikable. Also, if I had one shot with a time machine I would use it specifically to prevent myself from reading that one particularly gross side-chapter for the first time so it never had a chance to enter my brain (if you've read it, you know the one I'm talking about).

Still, I really like the worldbuilding of the series, and it was interesting to go back to the beginning and refresh my memory of certain things. As an audiobook it was pretty good, but I had a hard time understanding a couple of the character accents (it's one narrator doing different voices, and a couple were difficult to understand), but fortunately I remembered enough from my first read-through to keep up with the plot.


Shatterglass (The Circle Opens #4) by Tamora Pierce (reread) -
Another reread, the 4th and final book of the Circle Opens quartet. All four books follow the same formula: one of the four mages from the Circle of Magic quartet finds themself in a new city where the acquire a mage-student that needs teaching and get involved in solving some kind of crime. This time it's Tris's turn.

cw for gendered violence, my TL:DR opinion is that the book was trying to engage in complex grownup concepts in a middle grade novel and it just didn't quite have the depth to work. )


The Song of Achilles by Madeline Miller -
As the title indicates, this is a retelling of the Iliad from Patroclus's perspective, with an emphasis on a secret (and more illicit than is historically accurate) romance between Achilles and Patroclus. It was interesting, but it fell a bit flat for me, particularly in its attempts to retcon away certain aspects of canonical sexual violence (particularly surrounding Briseis) in an attempt to make Patroclus (and to a lesser extent Achilles) align more closely with modern morals than any of the other characters (and also to make Achilles & Patroclus 100% gay, rather than bi/pan). It just didn't quite work for me.


Star Wars: Doctor Aphra Volume 7: A Rogue's End (Doctor Aphra #37-40, Annual #3, and material from Star Wars: Empire Ascendant #1 written by Simon Spurrier, art by Caspar Wijngaard & Elsa Charretier) -
The quality of Star Wars comics (and other media, to be fair) really varies from author to author. Kieron Gillen, who created Aphra and wrote the first several volumes of this series is currently my second favorite SW comics author after Charles Soule, but since Spurrier took over around volume 3 this series has been solidly meh, the plot has been repetitive, and this finale is... anticlimactic.

broad strokes spoilers for the entire series & grumbling )

Anyways, finishing this series was one of my New Year's Resolutions, so yay that that is done. There is a currently ongoing sequel series (set post-ESB I believe) written by Alyssa Wong that I'm slightly interested in trying, but I have not read anything by Alyssa Wong before so no idea if it's any better


Star Wars: Doctor Aphra by Sarah Kuhn (Audiobook Original) -
This is a full-cast audiobook adaptation (basically an audio play) of the Darth Vader 2015 comics series by Kieron Gillen, narrated from Aphra's POV. Overall I enjoyed it (as I enjoyed the original comics). Some of the voice actors for canon characters were kind of meh (Boba Fett's American accent was a bit of a surprise, lol), but I liked the more detailed dive into Aphra's college days and her relationship with Sana. I didn't like the resolution of the framing device, but other than that it was solid.

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2023 Reading Goal Progress:
44 of 50 total books, 14 of 7 nonfiction.

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Snagged from [personal profile] colls  (and several other people).

A is for Argument: Who is the last person you argued with and what was it about?
I don't argue often... I had a minor disagreement with my mom a couple of weeks ago because I couldn't give her a ride at the day/time she wanted.

B is for Breakfast: Do you eat breakfast? What do you usually have?
Yes, for the past few years it's been a toasted and buttered everything bagel, a banana, and coffee.

C is for Car: Do you have one? What kind? If not, how do you usually travel?
I inherited my dad's car when he died. It's a Jeep, nice and reliable.

Read more... )
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How To Behave Badly In Elizabethan England: A Guide For Knaves, Fools, Harlots, Cuckolds, Drunkards, Liars, Thieves, and Braggarts by Ruth Goodman -
A detailed exploration of Elizabethan manners/cultural/social norms and how to break them. This is the second book that I've read by Goodman and I really enjoy the way she lays out her sources and the conclusions she draws from them.


Star Wars: Doctor Aphra Volume 6: Unspeakable Rebel Superweapon (Doctor Aphra #32-36 written by Simon Spurrier, art by Wilton Santos, Caspar Wijngaard, Andrea Broccardo, & Cris Bolson) -
Despite volume 5 ending on a cliffhanger, this one picks up 2+ months later with that plotline (and with it the non-stop torture porn) neatly resolved off screen. Aphra is now back to her evil archeologist ways and a heist job leads to her becoming re-embroiled in a Rebel plot against the Empire that also reunites her with her ex-girlfriend, Tolvan, who defected from the Empire to the Rebellion after Aphra made her believe she'd killed Aphra herself.

I liked this arc significantly more than the last few, but Simon Spurrier really needs to figure out a better way to make his point than endlessly long villain monologues.


Cold Fire (The Circle Opens #3) by Tamora Pierce (reread) -
Following the same formula as Magic Steps and Street Magic, Daja travels to a fantasy version of Amsterdam where she discovers an untrained mage she must take on as a student (a set of twins, actually), and gets involved in solving a string of crimes (this time it's arson). The series as a whole is pretty formulaic, but Cold Fire was my favorite mystery plot of the four, I found the villain extremely creepy.


The Gift of Fear: Survival Signals That Protect Us From Violence by Gavin De Becker -
This is one of those books I've seen recommended around for years and years. I can't give it a concise summary but I think it lives up to the hype.
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2023 Reading Goal Progress: 39 of 50 total books, 14 of 7 nonfiction.


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This is very late due to a combination of health junk, family visiting from out of state, and school issues, but here goes:

Magic Steps & Street Magic (The Circle Opens #1 & #2) by Tamora Pierce (audiobooks, rereads) -
Several years after the original Circle of Magic quartet, the kids -now fully accredited mages- depart from Winding Circle into the broader world. Along the way, each acquires their own apprentice and gets involved in some kind of murder/crime mystery.

In Magic Steps Sandry discovers a young dance mage and helps her great-Uncle unravel the murders of several members of an amoral merchant family in Summersea. In Street Magic Briar travels to the distant city of Chammour, finds a stone mage whose life on the streets is not so different from Briar's own past, and gets involved in a gang war financed by a powerful but bored noblewoman.

I read both of these many years ago in print, looking back it's interesting to see that this is the point where many of Pierce's plots turn from adventure to mystery/crime drama. A lot of the in-universe slang tested out in Magic Steps shows up again in the Beka Cooper books in the Tortall universe, which are all also crime mysteries.

They recast some of the voice actors from the original quartet (most notably Briar, definitely preferred the original), and Bruce Coville did the main narration for Street Magic. It's too bad there are no audiobooks for Cold Fire and Shatterglass, the remaining two books in the quartet, and no real plans to get them made.


The Grief of Stones (Cemeteries of Amalo #2) by Katherine Addison -
Sequel to The Witness For The Dead and also set in the same universe as The Goblin Emperor. This is another mystery plot wherin Thara, an elf with a magical ability to communicate in a limited way with the recently deceased, is asked to determine whether a death was a murder, and in the process stumbles upon an even bigger set of crimes that are not quite within his remit to investigate.

I found it pretty enjoyable, but I feel that it, like The Witness For The Dead, handled worldbuilding in a much shallower way than TGE did. The setting is a fantasy world undergoing its steampunk-y Industrial Revolution but there is very little discussion of it. The exposition might have flowed better in TGE because the POV character Maia was a newcomer trying to keep up with new surroundings and ideas while Thara is much more entrenched in his environment, but as a reader the comparative lack of detail is kind of annoying.


A History of the United States in Five Crashes: Stock Market Meltdowns That Defined A Nation by Scott Nations (nonfiction) -
A very fascinating look into the causes of the stock market crashes of 1907, 1929, 1987, 2008, and 2010. The author does a really good job of making the narratives captivating easy to follow, even if I didn't quite grasp some of the technical details. The running theme is that often times new financial contraptions that work in the small-scale and under "normal" stock market conditions begin to proliferate, but when an external catalyst of some sort puts stress on the whole system the new contraption exposes itself as the weak link.

The section on the absolute absurdity that went into the 2008 financial crisis was particularly good. Long-ish quote from it, cut for length )

Star Wars: Doctor Aphra Volume 5: Worst Among Equals (Doctor Aphra Annual #2 & Issues #26-#31) written by Simon Spurrier, art by Caspar Wijngaard, Emilio Laiso, & Andrea Broccardo -
It has been almost exactly two years since I've read any of this series. That is partially because it went out of print in physical edition for a while and partially because I'm not a huge fan of the direction Simon Spurrier has taken the story compared to the previous writer, Kieron Gillen. The past few volumes have felt like nonstop torture-porn, and this one was no exception.

Dr. Cornelius Evazan (the guy who picked a fight with Luke in the cantina scene in A New Hope) has implanted bombs in both Aphra and the droid serial killer Triple Zero that will go off if they move more than 20 meters apart or if one of them dies, as well as hacked Triple Zero's optical sensor so he can watch them torment one another (an eventually broadcast their mutual misery to other people) similar to what Triple Zero did to Aphra back in Volume 3.

All the while, Evazan keeps up a monologue on the ~beauty~ of evil (again, very similar themes and speech patterns to Triple Zero's monologues while also voyeur-ing on Aphra for the sake of emotionally torturing her back in Vol. 3) while Aphra and Triple Zero try to remove the bombs and avoid both the Imperials and the local authorities without getting blown up in the process. The ending had some mildly interesting character development, but that did not make up for the fact that I hated a solid 2/3rds of it. I really love Aphra as a character, but at this point I'm only sticking out the next couple of volumes in the hope that the Alyssa Wong run is less torture-porn-y.

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2023 Reading Goal Progress:
35 of 50 total books, 12 of 7 nonfiction.

Currently Reading: For nonfiction in the time it took me to write this up I finished How to Behave Badly In Elizabethan England by Ruth Goodman, which was delightful, and I started The Gift of Fear by Gavin De Becker. For fiction I'm about 1/4 of the way through Translation State by Ann Leckie, which I am enjoying a lot.
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Supernavigators: Exploring the Wonders of How Animals Find Their Way by David Barrie (nonfiction) -
As the title suggests, this was all about how animals (including humans) navigate, and the experiments conducted to figure out how they do it. It was interesting, but a little dry at times and basically every chapter ended with some variation of "but more research is needed."

A Lady For a Duke by Alexis Hall (library) -
This popped up in my library's LGBTQ+ Historical Romance section, and the premise & sample chapters (Regency romance with a trans lead, childhood friends, secret identities, etc) really intrigued me. After being presumed dead at the Battle of Waterloo, the heroine Viola takes the opportunity to transition and start a new life. Two years later, that new life brings her back into contact with her childhood best friend and war comrade, the Duke of Gracewood, who is suffering from PTSD and still deep in mourning over her supposed death. Regency romance shenanigans ensue.

Unfortunately, the plot really slowed down in the middle, and then the climax took a sharp left turn into violence and sexual harassment that did not match the tone of the previous 400+ pages at all. Had it been that kind of book from the start I wouldn't have minded so much, but the abrupt shift really squicked me out.

Cultish: The Language of Fanaticism by Amanda Montell (nonfiction, library) -
Another self-explanatory title, this book examined the way words are used to lure people in and keep them in cults. It covered some interesting topics, but it was a lot shallower than I hoped it would be. For example, the chapter that said it was about speaking in tongues -which I was looking forward to since the church/cult I grew up in was very into speaking in tongues- was instead almost entirely about the author's own brief (and ultimately uneventful) brush with Scientology. It did have a decently deep dive into both MLM and "cult fitness" group tactics, but overall it was disappointing.

Sandry's Book, Tris's Book, Daja's Book, & Briar's Book (Circle of Magic #1-4) by Tamora Pierce (library audiobooks, rereads) -
Middle-grade fantasy about a quartet of craft mages discovering their power and becoming best friends. I have read these many times in print (like the Tortall books, they're childhood nostalgia comfort rereads for me), but this is my first time listening to the audiobook versions. They're full-cast versions, with Tamora Pierce herself doing the rest of the narration. Apparently Bruce Coville is the co-founder of the audiobook company that did the production, and he also did the voice of Niko (although his voice isn't at all how I imagined Niko in the past). The voice actors for Briar and Rosethorn were excellent, and Briar's Book hits very differently post-Covid.

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2023 Reading Goal Progress: 30 of 50 total books (over halfway!), 11 of 7 nonfiction.

Currently Reading: A History of the United States in Five Crashes: Stock Market Meltdowns that Defined A Nation by Scott Nations for nonfiction, The Grief of Stones (Cemeteries of Amalo #2) by Katherine Addison for fiction, and Magic Steps (The Circle Opens #1) by Tamora Pierce for audiobook.

I keep forgetting that I avoid ebooks because reading on a backlit screen before bed messes with my sleep quality, and even audiobooks have me checking the screen way too often. So, somewhat less of that from now on lol. I do want to listen to the Circle Reforged series, which I never got around to when it came out because they were audiobook originals at a time when they were significantly less accessible. My library app doesn't have The Circle Opens 3 & 4 in audiobook format, though .
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My brilliant plan of clipping in my editing program and rerendering the clips hit a huge snag a couple of weeks ago in that the rendering process caused the file sizes to balloon to be 4gb+ per episode, when the original episodes were under 300mb apiece. Must be why nobody else does it that way. Sigh.

I've switched back to AviDemux, which I had tried before but didn't really like the workflow. I still don't like the workflow so my pace has slowed to a crawl.

I'm also just not feeling either B5 or Star Wars at the moment (my High Republic hyperfocus also broke earlier this month), and I've flipped back into fantasy lit fandoms, which aren't very viddable. I'm  My classes also started up again about 3 weeks ago, so less time for vidding in general. Class is so far going well, though, so that's a bright spot.
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Castles of the World by Gianni Guadalupi and Gabriele Reina (nonfiction) -
This is a big coffee-table style book with lots of photographs. Guadalupi provides a short history of each castle, while Reina describes its architectural influences and any notable artifacts it houses or used to house. It's pretty interesting, took me several years to get around to reading because at the time I picked it up I was looking for something with a little more depth on each castle, but it was enjoyable for what it was.

Star Wars: The High Republic: Mission to Disaster by Justina Ireland -
Another middle-grade adventure story, this one more-or-less a direct sequel to A Test of Courage. Avon Starros gets kidnapped by the Nihil, and Vernestra & Imri are called in to find her. The trail leads them to Dalna where they are reunited with Honesty Weft, who knows more about the Nihil activity in the area than the proper authorities are willing to say.

It's interesting that this story basically ignores the events of Out of the Shadows (where Vernestra & Imri were main POV characters), but OotS didn't ignore the setup from AToC. The ending also felt a little incomplete, particularly because Vernestra, Imri, and Avon don't appear to make any appearances in the remaining High Republic books/comics.

Star Wars: The High Republic: Showdown at the Fair by George Mann -
Another kids picture book, this time a loose adaptation of The Rising Storm, focusing on Wookiee Padawan Burryaga's POV of the big battle. It's cute, there's not much more to say about it.

The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up: The Japanese Art of Decluttering and Organizing by Marie Kondo (nonfiction) -
I missed the KonMari craze when it first went around, and there is a certain degree of irony in reading this after Marie Kondo admitted that she doesn't really follow her own method anymore (especially since the first couple of chapters really hammer that if you do the method correctly you will never slip back into clutter, ever). I found some of the advice useful (particularly about working by category, starting with the least emotionally charged categories, and getting rid of paper), but a lot of it felt like proof that minimalism is a game for neurotic rich people with too much time on their hands.

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2023 Reading Goal Progress: 23 of 50 total books, 9 of 7 nonfiction (goal #1 completed!).

Currently Reading: Supernavigators: Exploring the Wonders of How Animals Find Their Way by David Barrie for nonfiction and Star Wars: The High Republic: The Fallen Star by Claudia Gray for fiction.

Up next: I have 2 novels and 3 comic volumes of The High Republic left, so I'm just going to try to finish it off. I love binge-reading series. I'm resuming classes this month so I expect my reading pace to slow down by quite a bit. For nonfiction, I just stumbled across Cultish: The Language of Fanaticism by Amanda Montell on my library app and it looks very interesting.

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Making these posts on a monthly basis made significantly more sense when I was only reading around 4 books per month, but here we are.

Star Wars: The High Republic: Out of the Shadows by Justina Ireland -
The Nihil seem to be responsible for mysterious disappearances in a sector of space that should be empty. While trying to sound the alarm about these happenings with the Republic, recently-orphaned teenage freighter captain Sylvestri Yarrow is drawn into a web of politics, corporate infighting, and uncomfortable family secrets. In order to help, Vernestra and Imri from A Test of Courage are tasked by the Jedi Council to join in the investigation, while each tries to manage their own unusual Force talents.

Overall this was an enjoyable story. It had a lot more of the typical YA tropes than Into the Dark had and certain parts of the story felt a little rushed/underdeveloped, but I liked that it got back to the weird hyperspace stuff introduced in Light of the Jedi. Also, the F/F couple was allowed to do things like display physical affection and use the term "girlfriend", which has been sorely lacking in the Star Wars YA novels to date (see my complaints about Ahsoka and Queen's Shadow for more on that).


Star Wars: The High Republic Adventures Volume 2 ("Attack on the Republic Fair" , Issues #6-8, 2021 Annual, by multiple artists and authors) -
This volume is a collection of somewhat disconnected adventures. It starts with the 2021 Free Comic Book Day story which is a coda to Race to Crashpoint Tower, then issues #6 & #7 involve Lula's friend Farzala having a solo adventure in Hutt space during The Rising Storm (feat. Affie & Leox from Into the Dark).

Issue #8 seems to be a bit of a bridge to the next arc of the story. The main characters are reunited on Starlight Beacon, but then the Nihil attack a Jedi temple near Maz's castle on Takodana (cue cliffhanger). The 2021 Annual is a collection of even shorter adventures with established characters including Loden Greatstorm, a glimpse at Vernestra's time as Stellan's padawan, and Porter Engle outsmarting some Nihil.

I really liked Farzala's adventure and the mini-stories from the Annual issue. I'm a little disappointed that Volume 3 does not seem to have been published anywhere in the US (it might have been published in the UK, but I can't find any copies for sale for international shipping), and I can't find the individual issues to finish the arc (#9-13).


The Radium Girls: The Dark Story of America's Shining Women by Kate Moore (nonfiction) -
The story of factory workers who fell "mysteriously" ill after working with luminous, radioactive paint during and after World War One, and their medical and legal battles against the companies that employed them. This was compelling, if often depressing, and and interesting peek into the evolution of workers rights and health & safety regulations in the US.


Star Wars: The High Republic: Tempest Runner by Cavan Scott (full-cast audiobook original) -
During a battle with the Jedi, Tempest Runner Lourna Dee fakes her death but is captured and imprisoned by the Republic under a false identity. In between navigating life on the prison ship and contemplating escape, she flashes back to her childhood and the events that led to her joining the Nihil and becoming a Tempest Runner.

This is a "full cast audiobook original" that feels a lot more like an old-style radio drama than a traditional audiobook. The story is conveyed entirely through dialogue and sound effects, with no narration or internal monologue. In Light of the Jedi and The Rising Storm, Lourna is described as subtle, icy, and extremely self-controlled, while here she screams, monologues, and hulk-smashes things wherever she goes. I get that it's hard to portray a quiet protagonist in audio-only media, but the change in characterization is kind of irksome. Also, all action scenes and injuries are portrayed by characters screaming/moaning/heavy breathing their way through their dialogue in a way that I did not enjoy listening to. On the other hand, the plot was relatively interesting and I liked how it made Lourna's backstory interesting without trying to make her particularly sympathetic.

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I love it when the weather goes from 80F and sunny to snowing in less than 48 hours, it does wonders for my sinus headaches (/sarcasm).

I keep meaning to write up a big quarter-year check in post on my New Year's resolutions/general life goals, but I don't have the patience to write and and very few people probably have the patience to read it, so I'm here to announce I have met my 2023 nonfiction reading goal!

7 nonfiction books may not sound like a lot but it was my goal last year and I couldn't manage it, so I'm very pleased to have accomplished it by mid-April.

(I also finally visited the House on the Rock last month, very weird and very cool place. I intend to go back again, there is so much to see and take in!)

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Star Wars: The High Republic: The Edge of Balance Volume 1 story by Shima Shinya & Justina Ireland, art by Mizuki Sakakibara -
In the aftermath of the Great Hyperspace Disaster, displaced civilians relocate to a new settlement on the planet Banchii, watched over by a small Jedi temple. The story follows Jedi Knight Lily Tora-Asi as she struggles to find balance within herself while protecting the settlers from a mysterious Drengir attack.

This one was fun, it has Manga-style artwork (although it still reads left-to-right like most western books) and I really liked the way the artwork got across Lily’s internal conflicts, and the character designs for the Wookie Master Arkoff and Togruta youngling Viv'nia were really cute and memorable.

Star Wars: The High Republic Volume 1: There is No Fear (issues #1-5) & Volume 2: The Heart of Drengir (issues #6-10) written by Cavan Scott, art by various artists -
Rereads, I read them last year, and I still really enjoyed them on the reread (I was trying to refresh my memory on the parts where the storyline intersects with the Trail of Shadows miniseries, but I had to pause reading that one too because it intersects with and massively spoils (I assume) the final adult novel The Fallen Star). This time through I was better able to appreciate the side-character cameo appearances (Orla from Into the Dark has a particularly large part in Volume 2, and I didn't make the connection that she was the same character when I read ItD a couple of months ago).

(Only semi-related, but I started listening to the preview of the Tempest Runner audiobook and apparently Drengir is supposed to be pronounced dren-GEAR, with a hard "g," significant emphasis on the second syllable, and vowel sounds like in "ear," instead of the last syllable being more like the ending of "ginger" or "danger." The more you know.)

The Psychology of Money: Timeless Lessons on Wealth, Greed, and Happiness by Morgan Housel (Nonfiction) -
This is a collection of 19 short stories about the decisions people make around money. Some of the have very obvious points (spending money is the quickest way to have less money, and having a fancy watch or car isn't going to buy peoples' respect), others are more interesting, like how market bubbles happen when investors with different time horizons don't realize they're playing different games. It was a lot more focused on the stock market than I expected it to be from the title, but overall it was an interesting read.

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2023 Reading Goal Progress: 15 of 50 total books, 6 of 7 nonfiction.

Currently Reading: The Radium Girls by Kate Moore for nonfiction, for fiction I'm about 3/4 of the way through Star Wars: The High Republic: Out of the Shadows.

Up next: Star Wars: The High Republic: Tempest Runner, which is an audiobook original. I didn't intend to start the year so laser-focused on Star Wars, but I think I'm going to finish out Phase I of The High Republic while my attention is still holding strong.

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