little libraries

2026-05-23 09:00 am
asakiyume: (Em reading)
[personal profile] asakiyume
I came across this great story elsewhere on the interwebs, an 89-year-old guy in Puchong (near Kuala Lumpur), Malaysia, who's set up reading stations in a public park. He also has helped libraries in Thailand and China. (Article here.)

There's also a short video linked in the article, which is great, because you can hear Mr Lee in his own words:

"I think Malaysia should follow China, where every village has one library. That's good."**



I was thinking of Little Free Libraries in this country. I think they're a great idea in places where there's foot traffic, where many different people might stop by and look over the books. I sometimes see them, though, in places where I wonder what traffic they'll get. On winding country roads with rather large houses situated far back from the roads on ample, gracious properties. And at the roadside, a little free library. But who's going to be walking by? I guess maybe the neighbors? But there's just not the same thickness of people.

Also, this guy thinks of himself as lending the books, not giving them away. He doesn't mind if you keep the book a month, six months, a year, and in fact he probably isn't going to be upset if a book doesn't come back, but the *idea* is that it will come back--and that means that the borrower has more connection with the site, and there's a sense of mutual responsibility. Plus the story says that people like to come and chat with him.

There can be more than one pattern! Little Free Libraries have a kind of spy-drop-box vibe. Ships passing in the night, taking books, maybe leaving books. That can be fun too. But I like the actual social interaction involved in what Mr Lee is doing.

Do any of you oversee a Little Free Library or frequent one (or more than one)? What's your experience been?


**Not exactly his words, which are Malaysian-English word order and has some special words I didn't catch, but that's how they're glossed and mainly what he said.
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll


A dozen books new to me: eight fantasy, three science fiction, one historical, at least four of which are series.

Books Received, May 16 — 22

Poll #34638 Books Received, May 16 — 22
Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 40


Which of these look interesting?

View Answers

A Dance of Burning Blades by M. H. Ayinde (April 2026)
8 (20.0%)

Crimson in Quietus by Eugen Bacon (September 2026)
7 (17.5%)

To Ride a Rising Storm by Moniquill Blackgoose (January 2026)
18 (45.0%)

Blade of Two Faces by Blake Blessing (November 2026)
3 (7.5%)

The Silver Hand by Shawn Carpenter (August 2026)
4 (10.0%)

Like the Moon We Rise by Annabelle Cormack (January 2027)
3 (7.5%)

Little Necromancers by Emma Devlin (March 2027)
6 (15.0%)

Eyes of Kings by Chloe Gong (August 2026)
1 (2.5%)

What Haunts the Ice by S. Hati (January 2027)
3 (7.5%)

The Curve of the World by Vonda N. McIntyre (March 2026)
28 (70.0%)

The Unfolding: Mairee by S. Nyland (April 2026)
4 (10.0%)

Project V by Park Seolyeon (April 2026)
7 (17.5%)

Some other option (see comments)
1 (2.5%)

Cats!
23 (57.5%)

MerMay The Twentythird

2026-05-23 05:38 pm
leecetheartist: Photo of me coming at the camera, in my colourful mermaid gear (Default)
[personal profile] leecetheartist posting in [community profile] drawesome
Title: The Shell Game
Rating: G
Fandom: N/A
Characters/Pairings: N/A

The Shell Game. MerMay the 23rd of 2026. Nothing like so ambitious as the last one, a simple sketch with the Platinum Plaisir Aura Fountain Pen which I got as a cheapy. It's nice and and light! I hadn't used it for months but it drew first time.


Pink Mermaid

Pink Mermaid and Pen

Fic Challenge (Prompt Style)

2026-05-23 12:34 am
senmut: Lacroix and Janette together (Forever Knight: Lacroix Janette)
[personal profile] senmut
[community profile] fkficfest is running again this year!

details here with the pool of prompts.

I've played off and on since 2010, it looks like. Here's what I've done over the years.

2010: Trials of Conscience
2011: To Not Be Alone
2015: Family from the Ashes

2016: Encounter in the Hills
2017: Flicker of a Memory
2018: A Night's Work

2021: Difficult Lesson
2021: Crisis Response
2021: What He Is

2022: Any Regrets?
2024: To Say Goodbye

stories nobody has told

2026-05-23 12:21 am
twistedchick: watercolor painting of coffee cup on wood table (Default)
[personal profile] twistedchick
I have just finished rewatching Captain America: The Winter Soldier, for the umpteenth time, but this time I was mapping out where things were toward the end, when enormous ships are falling out of the sky into the Potomac River at a place where it is not really wide enough for one of those ships.

They never think about the side effects in disaster movies, do they? For this, they tripled the width of the Potomac at a place where it is a few hundred feet wide, that's all. All that hot metal hitting the water would really annoy the rockfish and the Maryland terrapins. The rockfish might forget but the terrapins will remember.

Let's think of the volume of river water displaced by those enormous ships hitting the river. Where they have them hitting, the waves will wash up over the patios and parking lots into the Watergate, into the Kennedy Center (or what's left of it these days), and into Lower Georgetown's underground parking garages, where it will float a lot of cars. We went through something like this before, back in the 90s, when there was so much rain that it washed cars into the river from above-ground parking lots and floated everything in the underground garages. I'm not sure how the insurance adjusters would account for this flood on their paperwork -- "act of superheroes"?

I'm assuming that the resizing of the river also moved Roosevelt Island half a mile or more downstream, so that it would be there when Bucky pulls Steve out onto the shore (in the only place in that area that has a shore with grass at that angle compared to the water). Upstream, the south side of the river is a rock wall with mansions on top of it for several miles heading upstream -- there used to be several Kennedy places up there -- and on the other side there's a narrow area and then the Washington and Old Dominion Canal, which is a recreation area.

I'm also going to ignore the other fallout, when bits of the Shield building and more pieces of airships drop onto the buildings and streets of Rosslyn, VA, one of the most expensive areas of real estate in the country. Or maybe they'd be drifting a little further apart -- how far apart were those three ships,anyway? That would put one of them over the Mall and another over either Arlington Cemetery or Washington National Airport (I refuse to call it Reagan Airport; he didn't deserve one.)

Anyway, I don't think there's a lot of fanfic that deals with the aftereffects of the actions of superheroes. Just a thought or two for anyone who may need a bit of inspiration...
cornerofmadness: (Do not want)
[personal profile] cornerofmadness
Yeah lane assist, I'd do that IF I could see it. It rained for 335 miles from my door to [personal profile] evil_little_dog's. Some places I couldn't even see. From Cincinnati to Louisville I'm not sure we ever got above 25 mph.

Luckily it was mostly uneventful (lots of accidents none near me) and the Jetta gets surprisingly good gas mileage.

have some recs for fannish 50


Undeserved Mercy Torchwood

Through The Ring Stargate Atlantis

Live! Starsky & Hutch

Musical The Owl House

Soulmate The Owl House

Protocol Torchwood

All Roads Lead To Haven Hazbin Hotel

Childhood The Owl House

Opposite Hazbin Hotel

Gambler's Fallacy Hornblower - C. S. Forester Hornblower

Unwritten 镇魂 | Guardian

Recuperation 9-1-1

Handyman Teen Wolf

Flyer Derby The Owl House

Picnic The Owl House

Play Time Teen Wolf

captivated captive Fire Emblem: If | Fire Emblem: Fates

Horror (Movie) The Owl House

Seasons The Owl House

Cozy Evening Stargate Atlantis

Before The End Torchwood

Human Realm The Owl House

Fairytale The Owl House


The Salvage Yard The Trixie Belden Mysteries - Julie Campbell Tatham & Kathryn KennyThe Three Investigators | Die drei

Bedridden Teen Wolf

Normal-ish Hazbin Hotel

Learning to Compromise Teen Wolf
snickfic: (Oasis walkon)
[personal profile] snickfic
+ Liam and Noel have been going to football matches together, along with various combinations of Liam's kids Gene and Lennon and Noel's kids Anais, Sonny, and Donovan. Liam and Noel's first time hanging out in public since like 2008?? Some great photos and short clips, but this one from last weekend has got to be the best. The full belly laugh, head thrown back! Noel trying ever more insistently to get his attention again because he wasn't finished yet!!

Bonus: Anais thinks her uncle is funny. ;__;

+ Speaking of the kids, here's how the comeback is going from their perspective:
cut for image )

+ The reunion tour documentary has an official release date! And it's going to have JOINT INTERVIEWS, YOU GUYS. Liam and Noel in the same room, answering questions. Can you even fucking imagine. They haven't done one of those since 2005. Noel is going to laugh at all Liam's jokes and Liam is going to be SO SMUG about it. I'm going to see this IN A THEATER and I am going to dieeeeee.

+ Of course twitter asked Liam about this, and his response was:
People asking me what the documentary's like it's a ROMANTIC COMEDY with a bit of ROCK N ROLL

He later said that the romance would be between "us and the fans," but we know the truth. :')

+ And finally, have this old clip I found of Liam at a gig singing I waited for a thousand years for you to come / and take me from behind.
leecetheartist: Photo of me coming at the camera, in my colourful mermaid gear (Default)
[personal profile] leecetheartist posting in [community profile] drawesome
Title: Poetic Mermaid
Artist: [personal profile] leecetheartist
Rating: G
Fandom: N/A
Characters/Pairings: N/A

So yesterday was pretty busy for me, from digging in some tubestock on the verge, taking some chairs to the skip for mum, having my sister-in-law visit. Then in the evening setting up a schedule for my smart telescope and putting it on the roof, also GMing my, coincidentally, GURPS merfolk player characters through the adventure with the giant shark, the sunken ship, and the mysterious deaths. (But not at Styles)
Before all of this I espied a nice photo of a poet acquaintance [personal profile] sovay on Dreamwidth looking particularly like a sprite of the sea, so I asked her if it was okay to MerMay her. She agreed, I found out what colours she likes, and before my GURPS game started got her fin sorted.
GMing duties over for the evening, I returned to finish the drawing. It was finished before midnight, so I sent the model a preview, and went to bed before I got a reply. Which is why you will hopefully get two drawings today, as this is a catch up post. It was drawn on the 22nd though.
I used the Kakimori nib again, as I used multiple inks in keeping with the lovely poet's likes. She's said she likes the colours, so score there!
You can check out her website if you like, appropriately, her poems are immersive and will wrap around you like the songs of beautiful prescient birds from forests of spirit memories.
#MerMay #DipPen #FountainPenInk #NoAI #DrawingWithoutANet #TraditionalArt #GURPS #Poetry #FantasyArt
Thank you to her and photographer Rob for letting me play.

Green and blue tailed mermaid with long hair

Green and bronze sheen closeup

Close up of the shimmer in the hair

Close up of the sheen and shimmer

A bunch of inks and a pen

(no subject)

2026-05-22 07:40 pm
mistressofmuses: A smiling white dandelion seedhead says "blow me," after which the seeds are scattered. (blow me)
[personal profile] mistressofmuses
Insurance did indeed decline to cover my dermatology appointment, saying I did not have a valid referral (since the nurse signed it instead of the doctor.) I had called my insurance company and asked if that would be okay, and was told yes. That's the second time I've tried to be ~responsible~ and call in advance to ask if something would be covered, and the second time I've been told yes, it would not be an issue, and the second time that was not true.

Since we're heading into a holiday weekend, I'll call them on Tuesday, but I am not particularly hopeful that it will help. I called about the previous "you needed a referral" issue, was told that it should be easy to resubmit with the info that this was my PCP, was told they were doing that... and it changed nothing.

So I'm pretty well fucked, even if both biopsies come back as clear. If one or both don't... welp, guess I can wait for the melanoma to kill me, because I'm already basically a full paycheck in the hole by the time I pay for the shit they're already not covering, not even counting the few hundred I've had to shell out in the copays. No, I'll figure out what I need to do to get the melanomas removed if need be, I'm sure, but fucking hell.

Right now I'm just very pissed off, and really am struggling to do any of the mildly responsible but low-stakes things that I was planning on. I don't want to reply to comments. I don't want to write book reviews. But I don't want to just sit here and keep being pissed off and anxious about it, either. >:/

I know I can't do anything about it until Tuesday, so I sort of want to just forget about it for a couple days, but I also know I won't.

Book review: Pink Slime

2026-05-22 06:21 pm
rocky41_7: (Default)
[personal profile] rocky41_7 posting in [community profile] booknook
Title: Pink Slime
Author: Fernanda Trias
Translator: Heather Cleary
Genre: Literary fiction

Last night I finished book #18 from the “Women in Translation” rec list, which was Pink Slime by Fernanda Trias, translated from Spanish by Heather Cleary. Pink Slime is a dreamy nightmare of a novel set in the aftershocks of an ecological disaster as one woman struggles to hold onto her life.

Nothing is as it once was: society has been upended by the “red wind” that kills anyone caught in it; the narrator is divorced from the husband she first met in childhood; and she has left her job in journalism to work as a caretaker for a disabled young boy.

This is a reflective book; there is very little plot. It drifts between the narrator’s present, her memories of the past, and in some cases, a future-tense look at the next few minutes. She observes the ways the government tries to cover for the damage the red wind continues to do, and the way society continues to fracture. She continues to visit her ex-husband in the hospital, although his condition never changes. She continues to fight with her mother.

In some ways, Pink Slime is a story about someone trying to hold onto a life that is already gone. The narrator clings to the past, for obvious reasons—it was better than her present. And yet, nothing new can be made until she releases that hold.

The thing that will stick with me most about this book is the birds. In the narrator’s world, the birds have gone. Where, no one knows. It is a topic of frequent discussion among the townsfolk. Will the birds come back? It reminds of a line from a Florence + The Machine Song: “What if one day there’s no such thing as snow?” Ecological disaster brings with it a poignant grief. How do you explain birds to a child who’s never seen them but in picture books? What is lost for each of us when an animal or plant or phenomenon is destroyed?

I enjoyed the morose, grief-stricken mood of the book, but it does feel directionless at times in a way that’s not wholly captivating. I can’t say what I take away from it on the whole. I would be curious to read more from this author.


Recent Reading: Pink Slime

2026-05-22 06:20 pm
rocky41_7: (Default)
[personal profile] rocky41_7 posting in [community profile] books

Last night I finished book #18 from the “Women in Translation” rec list, which was Pink Slime by Fernanda Trias, translated from Spanish by Heather Cleary. Pink Slime is a dreamy nightmare of a novel set in the aftershocks of an ecological disaster as one woman struggles to hold onto her life.

Nothing is as it once was: society has been upended by the “red wind” that kills anyone caught in it; the narrator is divorced from the husband she first met in childhood; and she has left her job in journalism to work as a caretaker for a disabled young boy.

This is a reflective book; there is very little plot. It drifts between the narrator’s present, her memories of the past, and in some cases, a future-tense look at the next few minutes. She observes the ways the government tries to cover for the damage the red wind continues to do, and the way society continues to fracture. She continues to visit her ex-husband in the hospital, although his condition never changes. She continues to fight with her mother.

In some ways, Pink Slime is a story about someone trying to hold onto a life that is already gone. The narrator clings to the past, for obvious reasons—it was better than her present. And yet, nothing new can be made until she releases that hold.

The thing that will stick with me most about this book is the birds. In the narrator’s world, the birds have gone. Where, no one knows. It is a topic of frequent discussion among the townsfolk. Will the birds come back? It reminds of a line from a Florence + The Machine Song: “What if one day there’s no such thing as snow?” Ecological disaster brings with it a poignant grief. How do you explain birds to a child who’s never seen them but in picture books? What is lost for each of us when an animal or plant or phenomenon is destroyed?

I enjoyed the morose, grief-stricken mood of the book, but it does feel directionless at times in a way that’s not wholly captivating. I can’t say what I take away from it on the whole. I would be curious to read more from this author.


Another evening ripping DVDs.

2026-05-22 08:54 pm
hannah: (Martini - fooish_icons)
[personal profile] hannah
My irregular hobby of checking for apartment clear-out sales netted me a lot of spices today, some of which I'll make use of and some of which I'll have to figure out how to dispose of - I've got a pepper grinder, I don't need pre-ground black pepper taking up any shelf space. I also don't think I need to hang onto any béchamel sauce packets, either. I can make good use of tomato paste and arborio rice and reasonable use of canned corn and spice-infused honey, but béchamel sauce packets are beyond me.

Also some hot chocolate packets, which I'm definitely saving for later. Much later. After the next equinox later.

Heading out to grab everything also included a pit stop at the library, and it's a wonderful feeling to take over a dozen items out at a time. A very budget-friendly, accessible way to feel incredibly wealthy.

meme time!

2026-05-22 07:05 pm
senmut: Dejah Thoris holding a sword pointed down, arms crossed in front of her face (Barsoom: Dejah Thoris with Sword)
[personal profile] senmut
Comment with the name of a woman character (in any show, movie, book, comic, etc that you think I'm familiar with) and I'll tell you one thing I love about her. In return, you can do the same in your journal (if you like!).

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