Cheese Ends 2025-07-02

Jul. 7th, 2025 05:00 am
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Posted by Steven Popkes

We’re going north to our cabin to do some work. It’s time to get out the blog entry early.

And I think it’s time for Cheese Ends.

(Picture from here.)

The Most Ancient Boomerang

Scientists have uncovered an ancient boomerang made from a mammoth tusk. The age is still indeterminate but it appears to be on the order of 40,000 years old.

This is interesting for a couple of reasons. For one, it’s made from mammoth tusk in Poland. This puts it at the very beginning of Homo sapiens invasion of Europe. Given that it’s a mammoth tusk, this means we were able to drop big animals very early on—which is one more piece of evidence that a good deal of the loss of these megafauna is attributable to us.

But it’s a boomerang—a sophisticated piece of hunting weaponry that is most famously used by the aborigines in Australia. Experiments have shown it works smoothly and doesn’t return—similarly to the hunting versions used by the aborigines. This indicates a couple of scenarios: 1) humans in Poland and humans in Australia figured out the same weaponry at nearly the same time. (There’s a depiction of a boomerang in rock art that is 50,000 years old.) 2) The boomerang was invented long before humans invaded Australia (for the first time) and carried there.

Both scenarios are extremely interesting.

Neural Speech Implant

This is a different approach than has been done previously. Before, the attempt was brain->text->speech. The accuracy was first a problem but even when that was licked the latency was a big issue.

This approach attempts to create sounds rather than text. I.e., the human provides enough neural data that can be interpreted as sound and, since the human is attempting speech, what comes out is intelligible. Or, at least, that is the intention.

The impulses that come out go through an AI interpreter (see? A good use for AI!) in order for a sound to be created. Training had to be done between the human and the AI to get anywhere close to a speech output. But progress has been made.

The exciting feature is that it can do this work in near real time. Right now, it’s a proof of concept. But it does tend to verify Niven’s Paradigm: “You don’t get down off an elephant. You get down off a duck.” We don’t always have to do things the hard way.

Mice Regeneration

Mammals don’t regenerate much. I mean salamanders, some fish, spiders, and other species have the ability to regenerate significantly lost components such as legs, tails, and fins, while we have to be satisfied if the cut on our fingers heals with too much of a scar. I mean, imagine if miter saw amputations were just a few weeks therapy? (I had a close call. It’s in the forefront of my mind.)

It turns out that mice and rabbits heal differently when a hole is punched in the membrane of their ear. (Remember, rabbits and rodents are only distantly related. Rabbits are Lagomorpha and rodents are Rodentia. Never the twain shall meet for the last fifty million years.) In rabbits, the hole greatly reduces in size. But in mice, the hole heals as a hole. The idea is that this difference might be a step in the direction of regeneration.

The difference was traced to a specific gene which activated in rabbits and remained idle in mice. This gene triggered the production of retinoic acid, which appears to be important in cell positioning and differentiation in embryos.

Mice given regular injections of retinoic acid regenerated the ear pinna just like the bunnies did.

Watch this space for new developments.

Axions: Now With Quantum Chromodynamics!

There’s a lot of missing mass in the universe. It’s been demonstrated time and time again. Galaxies rotate too quickly. We see gravitational lensing where there is (apparently) nothing there. And the larger structures of the universe seem to lie out there like beads on an invisible string.

Unless there’s something wrong with gravitational theory, (I’m looking at you, Modified Newtonian Dynamics) there’s Something Out There We Can’t See. This is what is called “dark matter.”

We’ve been looking for whatever makes up dark matter for decades now with nothing much to show for it. We were looking at WIMPs—Weakly Interacting Massive Particles—but they wimped out. MOND is still in the works but they have a lot of ‘splainin’ to do.

Now, it’s the axion’s turn.

Axions (named after a laundry detergent) were invented to handle a different problem. The strong nuclear force obeys symmetry rules but there’s nothing there to enforce said rules. We could say the strong force is pure at heart but no one thought that likely. The idea of a new field in the universe to enforce that symmetry was born. Like the boll weevil needs a home, the field needed a particle and the name axion was slapped on it.

The axion is a tiny, tiny thing. Much, much smaller than a neutrino, which is, itself, much, much smaller than a proton. In fact, it’s so small it’s not clear that the word “particle” fits. All particles are also waves and the wavelength is inversely proportional to the particle size. Axions are so small that their wavelengths could range from meters to solar system size.

But, if they exist, they are bosons which means they can group together to form a condensate that resembles a single massive particle. This is one hypothesis regarding their role in dark matter. It’s not a bunch of weak particles out there making up the missing mass. It’s a huge collection of condensates.

Maybe. After all, there is at present absolutely no physical evidence that axions (or their corresponding field) actually exists. Just an inference from a gap in the model. This is something those who favor MOND gleefully like to point out.

Earth Sized Planets Found Not Where We Want Them and Here

Stars come in all sizes. But we would like them to be like our own sun. Big stars burn out quickly and, if big enough, end their lives in spectacular supernovae. Tiny stars burn nearly forever but have problems. Medium stars, like ours, last for billions of years and don’t try to kill their planets. At least, not often.

The most numerous stars we’ve found are Red Dwarfs. These are the most common kind of star. They’re called “red” because they put out a bit redder in their spectra. They’re tiny—less than 10% the mass of our sun. But, because of that, they sip hydrogen like fine wine and last for trillions of years.

This makes them interesting candidates for life.

Except, there are problems. Red dwarfs flare often. Really big flares. Flares that might scorch the atmosphere of one of their planets. And the planets in the Goldilocks Zone, where there is the possibility of liquid water, have to be very, very close to the star. So close that they get scorched. In addition, typically their so close they are tidally locked with one side perpetually facing their star. (The Moon is tidally locked so we only see the near side.)

So, not only do they get scorched regularly, one side gets all the heat while the other side gets zip. There is evidence life isn’t possible under these circumstances.

So, it is with a heavy heart, that Earth sized planets are much more prevalent around red dwarfs.

We can find rocky planets like us around red dwarfs. But they’re probably dead.

Yay.

GOP Crushes Solar Energy

There are a lot of reasons to despise the new budget bill. I consider the second B in the BBB is “butt ugly.” But that’s just me.

Regardless, one of the things in the bill is rescinding the energy subsidy for solar installations. There has been some suggestion that there is actually a tax on solar in the bill but I haven’t found that part so it’s speculation as far as I’m concerned.

I don’t understand the calculus here. The issues with fossil fuels are numerous and well known: CO2 caused global warming, mercury from coal, pollution in the air and water from burning all this stuff. Even if you believe global warming is a Chinese hoax—a very damned effective one, if so—the rest is pretty much settle fact. The sun spills over everyone. We don’t need to drill for oil, make pipelines, or spill it all over.

There are engineering issues with cutting away from fossil fuels—well, none, as far as I’m concerned, regarding coal. Shut that one down. But those are engineering issues. Work on them long enough and they will be solved. The rhetoric about energy takes on a cult like fervor. As if it is our duty as Americans to burn as much oil as we possibly can in service to the shortened lifespans of future generations.

The rhetoric calculus is idiotic. But the political calculus is inescapable. Exxon and its ilk do want us beholden to them. They like having us by the hanging bits.

I don’t like giving money to Exxon, either at the pump, in the monthly bill, or in my taxes.

So, now we have a dog in this race. Thirteen years ago we put solar on the house and it has paid for itself three times over. We’re looking into more—hopefully, to have it in place to take advantage of subsidies while they’re still here. But we’ll manage it if we can’t.

The reason is energy independence. Right now, we have to rely on the good nature of fossil fuel companies for some percentage of our yearly energy costs. That’s expensive and will get more expensive—if you don’t think so, I have some land in Florida to sell you. Waterfront property, twelve hours every day.

Eventually, we’re not going to be in debt to the fossil fuel companies for running our house. Transportation is next.

Oh, and want to see how NIH cuts are hurting important research worldwide? See here.

Used to be American exceptionalism was about accomplishments. Now, it’s just talk.

 

Daily Happiness

Jul. 6th, 2025 08:20 pm
torachan: tavros from homestuck dressed as pupa pan (pupa pan)
[personal profile] torachan
1. We walked down to our favorite deli this morning to pick up sandwiches for lunch. The UV index was pretty high today so even though we tried to stick to the shade as much as possible, it was still exhausting being out in that level of sun, but the temperature was nice and there was a good breeze every now and then and it was a very nice walk overall.

2. Back to work tomorrow. :( Thinking of maybe making it a WFH day, though. So far the only meeting-like things I have are two web interviews, so that can be done from home, and I've got a lot of desk work and email to catch up on from the three-day weekend. So if no one comes up with anything urgent that needs me in person I think I'll stay home.

3. Tuxie is so handsome!

Books read in 2025

Jul. 6th, 2025 09:28 pm
rolanni: (lit'rary moon)
[personal profile] rolanni

38  Faking it (Dempsey Family #2), Jennifer Crusie, narrated by Aasne Vigesaa (re-re-re-&c-read, 1st time audio
37  Copper Script, K.J. Charles (e)
36  The Masqueraders, Georgette Heyer, narrated by Eleanor Yates (re-re-re-&c-read; 1st time audio)
35  Everyone Here Spoke Sign Language: Hereditary Deafness on Martha's Vineyard, Nora Ellen Groce (e)
34  Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day, Winifred Watson, narrated by Frances McDormand (re-re-re-&c-read; 1st time audio)
33  The Wings upon Her Back, Samantha Mills (e)
32  Death on the Green (Dublin Driver #2), Catie Murphy (e)
31  The Elusive Earl (Bad Heir Days #3), Grace Burrowes (e)
30  The Mysterious Marquess (Bad Heir Days #2), Grace Burrowes (e)
29  Who Will Remember (Sebastian St. Cyr #20), C.S. Harris (e)
28  The Teller of Small Fortunes, Julie Leong (e)
27  Check and Mate, Ali Hazelwood (e)
26  The Dangerous Duke (Bad Heir Days #1), Grace Burrowes (e)
25  Night's Master (Flat Earth #1) (re-read), Tanith Lee (e)
24  The Honey Pot Plot (Rocky Start #3), Jennifer Crusie and Bob Mayer (e)
23  Very Nice Funerals (Rocky Start #2), Jennifer Crusie and Bob Mayer (e)
22  The Orb of Cairado, Katherine Addison (e)
21  The Tomb of Dragons, (The Cemeteries of Amalo Trilogy, Book 3), Katherine Addison (e)
20  A Gentleman of Sinister Schemes (Lord Julian #8), Grace Burrowes (e)
19  The Thirteen Clocks (re-re-re-&c read), James Thurber (e)
18  A Gentleman Under the Mistletoe (Lord Julian #7), Grace Burrowes (e)
17  All Conditions Red (Murderbot Diaries #1) (re-re-re-&c read) (audio 1st time)
16  Destiny's Way (Doomed Earth #2), Jack Campbell (e)
15  The Sign of the Dragon, Mary Soon Lee
14  A Gentleman of Unreliable Honor (Lord Julian #6), Grace Burrowes (e)
13  Market Forces in Gretna Green (#7 Midlife Recorder), Linzi Day (e)
12  Shakespeare: The Man Who Pays the Rent, Judi Dench with Brendan O'Hea (e)
11  Code Yellow in Gretna Green (#6 Midlife Recorder), Linzi Day (e)
10  Seeing Red in Gretna Green (#5 Midlife Recorder), Linzi Day (e)
9    House Party in Gretna Green (#4 Midlife Recorder), Linzi Day (e)*
8    Ties that Bond in Gretna Green (#3 Midlife Recorder), Linzi Day (e)
7    Painting the Blues in Gretna Green (#2 Midlife Recorder), Linzi Day (e)
6    Midlife in Gretna Green (#1 Midlife Recorder), Linzi Day (e)
5    The Goblin Emperor, Katherine Addison (Author), Kyle McCarley (Narrator) re-re-re&c-read (audio)
4    The House in the Cerulean Sea,  TJ Klune (e)
3    A Gentleman in Search of a Wife (Lord Julian #5) Grace Burrowes (e)
2    A Gentleman in Pursuit of the Truth (Lord Julian #4) Grace Burrowes (e)
1    A Gentleman in Challenging Circumstances (Lord Julian #3) Grace Burrowes (e)

_____
*Note: The list has been corrected. I did not realize that the Gretna Green novella was part of the main path, rather than a pleasant discursion, and my numbering was off. All fixed now.


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Posted by Sean Gaffney

By Shigeru Sagazaki and Tetsuhiro Nabeshima. Released in Japan as “Katainaka no Ossan, Kensei ni Naru: Tada no Inaka no Kenjutsu Shihan Datta noni, Taisei Shita Deshitachi ga Ore o Hōttekurenai Ken” by SQEX Novels. Released in North America by J-Novel Club. Translated by Hikoki.

Last time I wrote a review of this, the anime was just starting, and as I write this one, the anime has just ended. Most people agree that it was stolid, unremarkable, did not really do anything wrong but was nothing to write home about except the fight scenes were very well done. Folks also agree that the Japanese voice of Beryl really nailed the part, that sort of world-weary “I am forty years old, sigh” quality that he has a lot of the time. I thought the voice was excellent, and it also helps as I read this seventh volume in the series, where Beryl’s soul-searching monologues are at an all-time high. And while it’s just a coincidence, the fact that folks who finished the anime and decided to buy this new book get a volume that is almost a direct sequel to the end of the anime is very nice.

Beryl has been asked to help provide security for the wedding of Princess Salacia to Prince Glenn of Sphenedyardvania, a wedding that, of course, takes place in that country, which also recently resurrected the dead, including Mewi’s sister, and is in the middle of a holy war. So, extra protection is recommended. After stopping off in Flumvelk to rest and so that Beryl can get seduced (spoiler: he does not get seduced), they arrive there to find everything seemingly going well… until the wedding is invaded by undead, and the city outside is invaded by horrible chimera. Fortunately, Beryl and Allucia have help, including a mysterious masked woman, as well as… the enemies from the last book?

As always, it can be very hard to take Beryl’s aw shucks attitude in large doses, and there’s an extra helping of that in this book. I am hoping that it’s because he’s actually trying to figure out how to live going forward beyond “be best at sword”. He loves being a dad, and I think would be happy for Mewi to have a mother, he has no real concept of what a wife would be like. This is most obvious in the scenes with Shueste, who does everything short of lying naked on his bed and saying “take me now, big boy”. He clearly GETS it, but the idea of another woman liking him, be it student, noble, or anyone, makes him deeply uncomfortable. Which is a decent ongoing dilemma for a harem series to have, but dragging it out too long loses readers, who won’t always be happy with 100 pages of cool fights. I’m honestly rooting for Shueste, but I suspect first girl Allucia still has the advantage right now. We’ll see how shopping for swords goes next time.

If you enjoyed the anime, you know what you’re getting with Beryl. So as long as you’re not the sort who asks if there is snu-snu, this should make you perfectly happy.

Smart Cookies

Jul. 6th, 2025 03:06 pm
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Posted by Jill Zeller

First, a word about semantics. And modifiers. My initial title for this blog modified ‘Inventors’ with ‘Female’. Then as I thought more about the necessity of having to add ‘female’ as a modifier to certain nouns generally biased toward males, i.e., female doctors, female pilots, female engineers, I decided against it. Aren’t we past this yet?

No, and here is an explanation of why I say this.

Rear Admiral Grace Murray Hopper earned her masters in mathematics at Yale University in 1930 and her P.h.D in physics at that same university in 1934. She struggled to get into the Navy during WWII, and once safely there, she devoted her capacious brain to computational efforts, the result of which was UNIVAC and the development of COBOL, one of the most widely used computer “languages” in the world.

Along the way she acquired a husband and then lost him to divorce, never remarrying. Such is the life of many inventors.

Hedwig Eva Maria Kiesler maintained a life-long hobby of inventing things. The story popularly told, by herself, and others, was that she occupied her loneliness in a suffocating marriage by discovering design and science. When she decided she’d had enough of her Nazi-linked Austrian husband, she persuaded him to allow her to wear all her jewels to a party, then disappeared, re-surfacing in Paris to be discovered by Louis B. Mayer.

One of her many famous lovers, Howard Hughes, supported her tinkering and credited her with the aerodynamic improvements to his airplane wings. And, most famously, during WW11, Hedy Kiesler Markey, collaborating with a composer and pianist, designed plans for a frequency-hopping device to prevent jamming in torpedoes, a mechanism now credited with being the platform for Bluetooth, GPS and WiFi.

Her love-life, while more chaotic than Grace’s (6 marriages, 3 children) was no less of a disappointment, but perhaps more of a distraction.. Maybe because she found something more interesting to do.

For the final inventor in this selection of very smart ladies, I save the smartest for last.

Ruth Graves Wakefield was a Massachusetts girl, was educated at the Framingham State Normal School Department of Household Arts where she was a dietician and food lecturer. In a savvy move, she bought, with her husband, a historic inn named the Toll House, where for more than a century travelers ate and rested while their horses were changed out, and paying the toll for the road between Boston and New Bedford. Like the fictional Mildred Pierce, Ruth was book cook and chef, providing popular lobster dinners and desserts.

Her specialty was Butter Drop Do cookies, a greatly desired and rich dessert. But a happy accident benefitted generations of Americans one day.

Ruth used Baker’s bittersweet chocolate in her cookies, because it melted into a chewy mouthy confection. In her rush to get a batch of cookies ready for expected diners, she discovered that she had run out of Baker’s; however she happened to have several Nestle semi-sweet chocolate bars, which she hurriedly chopped into the dough.

To her chagrin the chocolate bits didn’t melt into the cookie during the bake, but in spite of this these cookies flew off the shelves.

Ruth named her culinary invention Toll House Crunch Cookies. The popularity of these cookies grew after Betty Crocker introduced them to the broader world on her radio show, “Famous Foods from Famous Eating Places”. After that it was easy for Ruth to approach Andrew Nestle—the sales of Nestle semi-sweet chocolate bars sky-rocketed after the recipe was published. As part of Ruth’s deal with Nestle, Ruth received a lifetime supply of Nestle chocolate, and the Toll House Chocolate Chip Cookie recipe was printed on every bag of the new product, Nestle Chocolate Chips, invented for just this purpose.

The rest, as we women say, is history.

Sunday

Jul. 6th, 2025 09:23 am
rolanni: (Default)
[personal profile] rolanni
Electron-lite day here at the Cat Farm.

Feel free to talk among yourselves. Snacks are in the cabinet over the sink; drinks in the fridge.
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Posted by Sean Gaffney

By Fuyumi Ono and Akihiro Yamada. Released in Japan as “Tsuki no Kage, Kage no Umi” by X Bunko White Heart. Released in North America by Seven Seas Entertainment. Translated by Kim Morrissy. Adapted by Monica Sullivan.

There’s isekai, and then there’s ISEKAI. This is one of the OG isekai, back before it was a genre, and around the same time as the other majorly influential OG isekai, Fushigi Yuugi. Almost twenty years ago, Tokyopop published the first half of the series, but it then got cancelled due to poor sales, as happened a lot back then. Now it’s back, with a new translation and a spiffy looking cover. And after reading this first volume, I cannot help but feel a sneering contempt for those modern wannabe isekai. Oh, the poor guy who gets truck-kun’d into another world, and all he has its a cool sword, a bunch of catgirls, and a guild that lets him explore all the dungeons he wants for money. Or he’s summoned to be the savior of the world… well, actually, that is SORT OF how Twelve Kingdoms starts. But things go very bad very quickly. This book is dark as hell.

Youko Nakajima has been having bad dreams. Dreams of being trapped in darkness, unable to move, while hungry killer beasts are running towards her. They are making life difficult for her at her private all-girls’ school,. where she tries to keep up good grades, be a nice girl that’s easy to get along with, and ignore the bullying of other girls lower on the totem pole. Then one day, while in the teacher’s office where they’re getting annoyed about her red hair – again – suddenly a man shows up, says she needs to come with him, and tries to drag her off. Then she’s attacked by the same animals that were in her dream, who burst through the window and injure the faculty. Then she’s being told to kill then with a sword that is handed to her. Then she is possessed by a creature that can manipulate her body so she can swing the sword. Then… she’s flown to another world.

For those who saw the anime when it came out in 2002 and wonder where the other two Japanese kids are, they’re not here. (OK, Sugimoto is here to get bullied, but she doesn’t get isekai’d). Youko is all alone – indeed, very much all alone, as she quickly loses the handsome guy insisting that she come with him to fulfill her destiny and ends up in a hostile country. The book is very well written, with evocative descriptions and Youko’s descent from terror into confusion into anger into just giving up is incredibly well done. That said… in Japan, the next volume came out one month later, and I’m going to assume that things get better for her in that. That does leave this volume, which is just unrelenting. She’s torn from Japan and told she can never return. She’s imprisoned, and told she’ll likely be executed. She meets one or two nice people… who immediately turn out to be not-so-nice. By the end of the book she can’t accept that anyone being nice to her isn’t secretly evil, and is on the verge of starvation, exhaustion, and death because she’s also having to battle countless youma every single night. This is a MISERABLE isekai for her.

That said, this is a 30+-year-old series, so I know things get better for her. Eventually. Till then, this is gorgeous trauma.

Daily Happiness

Jul. 5th, 2025 07:55 pm
torachan: tavros from homestuck dressed as pupa pan (pupa pan)
[personal profile] torachan
1. We had such a nice time at Disneyland this morning. Too sunny but otherwise lovely weather and so few crowds!

2. We stopped at the farmers market on the way home and got some stuff from our usual vendors (the fruit leather guy definitely knows me now) but there was also a new vendor, a vegan Jewish deli that had all sorts of interesting stuff. Carla got a jar of some sort of pickle relish and I got some pastries including a stone fruit "cheese" danish (idk what the cheese was but everything was vegan so it wasn't actually dairy) that was super good and a pistachio cardamom apricot hamantaschen, which I haven't tried yet but that flavor combo is a favorite so I have high hopes.

3. I love that feeling on the middle day of a three day weekend when you realize that you don't have work tomorrow. That keeps happening throughout the day and it's a pleasant surprise every time. Definitely looking forward to one more day of rest.

4. Jasper's definitely got the relaxing down.

2025 Disneyland Trip #48 (7/5/25)

Jul. 5th, 2025 04:24 pm
torachan: (Default)
[personal profile] torachan
We were expecting it to be crowded today because of the holiday weekend but it was actually one of the least crowded days we've ever experienced at the parks.

Read more... )

All my friends know the low rider

Jul. 5th, 2025 09:55 am
rolanni: (Default)
[personal profile] rolanni

Saturday. Sunny. Predicted to be much warmer than yesterday, so the windows are, sadly, closed, and we're on station air.

Breakfast was half a blueberry muffin and cottage cheese. Lunch is as yet undecided. I have pork chops that I need to bake, so I could do that at lunchtime, rather than this morning, and freeze two, instead of three. That might actually be the way to go. Turkey burger chili can happen tomorrow, when the 'beans are calling for really hot, and I will definitely be hibernating in the coolth.

Other chores on the day include answering emails, taking the clean dishes out of the dishwasher, swapping out the cat fountains, one's duty to the cats, taking a walk, doing back exercises, and, well, writing.

Since my best writing time is between lunch and coon cat happy hour (and, if I'm honest, after coon cat happy hour til, oh, 10-ish, but I really don't think I'd better go Fully Nocturnal; things are weird enough around here), the Current Plan is to clear chores/appointments in the morning, and after lunch, to write, even if the chores aren't done. There will, after all, always be chores.

Speaking of chores, I Have Viewed How-Tos on YouTube and am confident that I can keep the shower and surrounding bathroom up to spec without killing myself, so *that's* good. God She knows that I have vacuum cleaners. And dust cloths. The only thing that's still a Puzzle are the basement stairs. I think I can handle the cordless vac on the terrain, but there was something amiss with the cordless vac, pre-BaltiCon, which I will have to investigate, now that I'm home.

. . . and John Fogerty has just informed the Listening Audience of Classic Vinyl that "Down on the Corner," was inspired by Winnie the Pooh, whom he imagined busking on a city corner with his band, Winnie and the Pooh Bears. Strange man, John Fogerty.

I do believe that's All The News.

What music are you listening to this morning?

Today's blog post brought to you by War, "Low Rider."


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Posted by Sean Gaffney

By Harunori Biyori and Hitaki Yuu. Released in Japan as “Otome Game no Heroine de Saikyō Survival” by TO Books. Released in North America by J-Novel Club. Translated by Camilla L.

Apparently, according to the afterword, having a volume that LOOKS like it’s going to be a typical otome game “nobles at the academy” book and then not having it be that at all is a habit with this author. In my last review I mentioned that I would like some academy hijinks and a few less stat screens, and I absolutely did not get my wish. In fact, there was apparently more academy content in the webnovel version that was cut out, in order that we could add more fights. Because, rest assured, this series still knows what its readers really wants, and that’s – no, not stat screens – pages and pages of Alia fighting and brutally murdering many, many, many bad guys. They can be traitorous knights, zombie villagers, or vampire demons, and none of that matters. If they are threatening Elena, they are going to die. That said, there really are an awful lot of them, and worst of all, they seem to have a plan…

We are now finally at the start of the game. Elena is there, with Alia as her aide and bodyguard. Clara is there, destroying her life and health in order to try to figure out a way to be with the man she loves (surviving has become secondary). Karla is there, and she’s still trying to live her best life, which is to say having a double-murder with Alia in the smoking remains of the world. Elvan is there, and boy, he’s a wet rag, isn’t he? And Alicia is there, which might be surprising, given Alia *is* Alicia. But another Alicia is there, and even though she’s not quite the right one, she’s still doing her best to get with all those otome game hotties. And if that means that she ends up destroying the actual game plot, oh well! As for the kingdom itself, well, political assassinations, kidnapping, and upheaval. You know how it is.

There is not quite a “the bad guys win” ending at the end of this volume, but the good guys certainly are having a tough time. I have to admit that I was a bit disappointed that the fake Alicia was not one of the hundred or so people that Alia slaughters in this book, because my god, not only is she annoying, but she’s unintentionally doing what the kingdom’s enemies are trying to do deliberately – weaken the crown prince and make him a wussy puppet they can control. Elena has been emboldened by her encounters with Alia, and cares deeply about the kingdom, so all those who want to manipulate everything for their own ends think she’s a horrible potential ruler. As such, they send assassins, they send kidnappers, and even the demons are in on the fun. Half this book may just be Alia cutting folks, but there’s a good reason for it.

So Elena and Alia are not dead, but they’re not in a great place right now! This remains a fun series, though folks who want standard otome game villainess stuff might look elsewhere. Alia has murdered the typical story in its sleep.

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Posted by Sara Stamey

Your virtual Thailand vacation continues as Thor and I visit The Hillside Retreat Elephant Sanctuary next to the Khao Sok wilderness park.

NOTE: Due to health issues, Thor and I haven’t been able to do much travel the past few years, so here’s our Thailand trip from 2020. We were lucky to squeak through the pandemic flight closures that February of 2020 as we returned from our three-week trip. Now crazy times just keep getting crazier. So escape for a few minutes from our new American dystopia to a country as beautiful and colorful as a dream! I’ll interrupt the reruns with occasional book reviews or Geezer Adventures…. (This blog series began 3/15/2025.)

After our nature walk around Our Jungle House eco-lodge, Thor and I boarded a van for a short drive along the Khao Sok park border to visit the elephant sanctuary recommended as the most ethical of nearby tourist attractions. Along the way, we enjoyed the lush jungle scenery and the sight of elephants walking along the road with their trainers, mahouts, following behind on scooters. (Unfortunately, I wasn’t able to get a photo.) The elephants obviously knew where they were going.

The dramatic, rocky upthrusts of limestone karsts punctuate the lush greenery.

We were warned that some of the other elephant “experiences” were exploiting and overworking the elephants by giving tourists rides on their backs. The Hillside Retreat offers a nurturing home for retired or injured/rehabilitated Asian elephants. Many of the elephants have worked in logging or other fields not employing elephants as much now, and their owners/trainers, or mahouts, cannot afford the high cost of feeding them.

After a bit of education, our first task at the sanctuary was cutting up fruit to feed to our assigned elephant.

I’m posting my complete blog entries on my own author website at www.sarastamey.com, where you can finish this episode and enjoy all the accompanying photos. Please continue reading by clicking on the link below, then you can return here (use “go back” arrow above) to comment, ask questions, or join a conversation. We love your responses!

https://sarastamey.com/the-rambling-writer-visits-thailand-part-13-elephant-sanctuary/

*****

You will find The Rambling Writer’s blog posts here every Saturday. Sara’s latest novel from Book View Café is Pause, a First Place winner of the Chanticleer Somerset Award and an International Pulpwood Queens Book Club selection. “A must-read novel about friendship, love, and killer hot flashes.” (Mindy Klasky). It’s also a love letter to the breathtaking wilderness of Sara’s native Pacific Northwest. Sign up for her quarterly email newsletter at www.sarastamey.com

 

Daily Happiness

Jul. 4th, 2025 09:10 pm
torachan: ryu from kimi ni todoke eating ramen (ramen)
[personal profile] torachan
1. I had a pretty relaxing day today. Aside from walking up to the store this morning for pie crust and salad stuff, I did not go anywhere and just chilled at home.

2. I got some of the rhubarb I chopped up and froze a few weeks ago out of the freezer and made another pie. There's still four bags (I didn't divide it that way on purpose but it turns out two bags is exactly enough for one pie).

3. Ollie is such a cutie pie.

Weekly Reading

Jul. 4th, 2025 06:07 pm
torachan: (Default)
[personal profile] torachan
Currently Reading
Murder at the Patel Motel
39%. This is not actually a book, so much as an audio drama. It's an Audible Original and comes free with membership, so I decided to try it out. Turns out the author and voice of the main character is the guy who played Jack's assistant on 30 Rock. I loved him in that! And I'm liking this "book" a lot so far.

Just Happy to Be Here
11%. YA about a South Asian trans girl's experience at a mostly white all girls' high school. It's all right so far.

Sister Outsider
No progress.

Riding the Rails
48%.

Recently Finished
How Jesus Became God: The Exaltation of a Jewish Preacher from Galilee
I felt like this took ages to finish, but it was a good read. Very interesting stuff.

A Terrible Nasty Business
I really want more books in this series.

Sou Iu Ie no Ko no Hanashi vol. 1
New series from Shimura Takako following three characters who were raised in the same new religion (the religion in the story is not any real one, just based on others), marking them as different from the majority of the population, which is not actively religious. I like pretty much everything by Shimura Takako, so I'm curious to see where this goes.

Tsumetakute Yawaraka vol. 5

Hatsukoi no Tsugi vol. 2

Friday Afternoon

Jul. 4th, 2025 05:46 pm
rolanni: (Default)
[personal profile] rolanni

Odd day. Wrote +/-1850 words after throwing out the words I wrote yesterday, which, yes, sounds like a waste, but in fact was not because if I hadn't written those words, I wouldn't have known they were the wrong ones, and forced the boys in the basement to Do Better. What I need to do now is piecing so I can see the Big Picture, so to speak. I'm not unhappy with what I've done so far, and very glad I had a whole day to bear down.  Today's labors brings the total WIP to +/-47,760 words.

I'm pretty tired from all that bearing down, so no more new words today, and honestly? I may leave the piecing til tomorrow, too.

In Writing Adjacent News, I've applied for a place as an author in the Bangor Book Fair, in December. I have very little chance of being accepted, but, yanno, none if I don't fill out the form.

I see that the credit union is replacing my credit card with a Whole Nother credit card (not just a renewal of the existing card), come August, which means I need to move the things I have on auto-pay somewhere else. What fun. Also, it looks like I need to find if I have any so-called "rewards" on the existing card and, if so, clean them out, as the new card will not have rewards, but it will have a very respectable 9.9% interest rate.

I also have some mail to answer, but I keep losing the list until I'm too tired to write a coherent letter. Maybe if I put it under my tea mug, I'll see it first thing tomorrow. It's a plan.

I had a turkey burger and baked beans for lunch, and I have discovered that turkey burgers are limp and hard to manage, and also don't taste that great. I still have three of the dern things, but I figure they can be broken into pieces, since they want to do that anyway, mixed in with other things and thereby made to taste better. I mean, I do know that you can't have chicken and mushroom dumplings every day, but I had expected a little better from the turkey burgers.

It's been a cool(er) and breezy, so I have the windows in my office open, and I've been enjoying the company of all four cats most of the day.

. . . and that's the report from the Confusion Factory.

Hope everyone's had a nice Friday and/or holiday.

Friday Census and Proof of Life:


2025 Disneyland Trip #47 (7/3/25)

Jul. 4th, 2025 02:30 pm
torachan: karkat from homestuck looking bored (karkat bored)
[personal profile] torachan
This was another last minute decision. With the lower level keyholders blocked out for summer there's almost always same-day availability, so might as well take advantage of it.

Read more... )

Coop 116: Speechless

Jul. 4th, 2025 04:17 pm
[syndicated profile] forthright_blog_feed

Posted by FORTHRIGHT

Claimer: I do hereby claim all rights and responsibility for the characters in a certain boy’s adventures because the Amaranthine Saga & Songs are mine. Please continue to indulge the lot of us, especially the beautiful one.

116
Speechless

Coop knew how this worked, but he stood there, completely tongue-tied, staring up into the face of the most beautiful person he’d ever seen.

“Is your voice only for skies?” That was Torloo.

Mutt—the name so didn’t fit—slowly shook his head. “When I’m like this, people tend to… stare.”

He meant Coop.

Coop was staring.

Stopping wasn’t possible.

Like all wolves, Mutt was a big guy. He slowly lowered himself into a crouch. Long fringes of black hair framed his upturned face, and his eyes were the same—warm ivory, wry and wary.

Words failed, so Coop… whined.


Posted: July 4, 2025
Prompt: Whine, suggested by ming
Words: 100


Summary: Cole Pfeiffer-Cooper, who prefers to be called Coop, became part of a pack way before the world found out about the Amaranthine. An Amaranthine Saga & Songs serial. Cozy Fantasy. Slice-of-Life. Family. Pack. Begins here. You can suggest a prompt here. To scroll through archived chapters, use the Coop & the Elderbough Trackers tag.

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