duckprintspress: (Default)
[personal profile] duckprintspress
Eight book covers and golden text with a graphic of hanging lanterns and star ornaments on a light blue background. The text reads: Queer Books with Muslim Characters for Ramadan. The books are: Shubeik Lubeik by Deena Mohamed; The Henna Wars by Adiba Jaigirdar; DeadEndia by Hamish Steele; Hani and Ishu's Guide to Fake Dating by Adiba Jaigirdar; The Adventures of Amina Al-Sirafi by Shannon Chakraborty; Blood Orange by Yaffa AS; Tell Me How You Really Feel by Aminah Mae Safi; A Master of Djinn by P. Djčlí Clark.

Ramadan 2026 is from February 18th to March 19th, so we’re jumping in at roughly the halfway point with some book recs for stories featuring Muslim characters! The contributors to the list are: Shea Sullivan, Nina Waters, Tris Lawrence, jumblejen, polls, Linnea Peterson.


Shubeik Lubeik by Deena Mohamed

Shubeik Lubeik—a fairytale rhyme that means “your wish is my command” in Arabic—is the story of three people who are navigating a world where wishes are literally for sale. Mired in bureaucracy and the familiar prejudices of our world, the wishes are more likely to work as intended the more expensive they are.

Three wishes that are sold at an unassuming kiosk in Cairo link Aziza, Nour, and Shokry, changing their perspectives as well as their lives. Aziza learned early that life can be hard, but when she loses her husband and manages to procure a wish, she finds herself fighting bureaucracy and inequality for the right to have—and make—that wish. Nour is a privileged college student who secretly struggles with depression and must decide whether or not to use their wish to try to “fix” their depression and, then, how to do it. And, finally, Shokry must grapple with his religious convictions as he decides how to help a friend who doesn’t want to use their wish.

Although their stories are fantastical—featuring talking donkeys, dragons, and cars that can magically avoid traffic—each of these people grapples with the very real challenge of trying to make their most deeply held desires come true.


The Henna Wars by Adiba Jaigirdar

Nishat doesn’t want to lose her family, but she also doesn’t want to hide who she is, and it only gets harder once a childhood friend walks back into her life. Flávia is beautiful and charismatic, and Nishat falls for her instantly. But when a school competition invites students to create their own businesses, both Flávia and Nishat decide to showcase their talent as henna artists. In a fight to prove who is the best, their lives become more tangled—but Nishat can’t quite get rid of her crush, especially since Flávia seems to like her back.

As the competition heats up, Nishat has a decision to make: stay in the closet for her family, or put aside her differences with Flávia and give their relationship a chance.


DeadEndia by Hamish Steele

Barney and his best friend Norma are just trying to get by and keep their jobs, but working at the Dead End theme park also means battling demonic forces, time traveling wizards, and scariest of all–their love lives.


Hani and Ishu’s Guide to Fake Dating by Adiba Jaigirdar

When Humaira “Hani” Khan comes out to her friends as bisexual, they immediately doubt her. Apparently, she can’t be bi if she’s only dated guys. Cornered into proving her sexuality, she tells them she’s dating someone—Ishita “Ishu” Dey, the straight A student who seems more concerned with studying than relationships.

When Hani approaches her about fake dating, she agrees on one condition–that Hani help her become more popular so she can win the school’s head girl election. It’s the perfect plan to help them achieve their goals, until Hani’s friends become jealous that she’s spending more time with Ishu. They’ll do everything they can to drive a wedge between them and ruin Ishu’s chances of becoming head girl.

Now, Hani has a decision to make: does she break off her relationship with Ishu for the sake of her friends? Or does she tell Ishu how she really feels and turn their “fake” relationship into something real?


The Adventures of Amina Al-Sirafi by Shannon Chakraborty

A pirate of infamy and one of the most storied and scandalous captains to sail the seven seas.

Amina al-Sirafi has survived backstabbing rogues, vengeful merchant princes, several husbands, and one actual demon to retire peacefully with her family to a life of piety, motherhood, and absolutely nothing that hints of the supernatural.

But when she’s offered a job no bandit could refuse, she jumps at the chance for one final adventure with her old crew that will make her a legend and offers a fortune that will secure her and her family’s future forever.

Yet the deeper Amina dives the higher the stakes. For there’s always risk in wanting to become a legend, to seize one last chance at glory, to savour just a bit more power…and the price might be your very soul.


Blood Orange by Yaffa AS

“Blood Orange” is a highly emotional, important and timely poetry collection by Mx. Yaffa (They/She), a trans Muslim displaced Indigenous Palestinian. Their writings probe the yearning for home, belonging, mental health, queerness, transness, and other dimensions of marginalization while nurturing dreams of utopia against the background of ongoing displacement and genocide of indigenous Palestinians.

The collection came quickly and relentlessly, drawn from the depths of the author’s soul during a movement for a free Palestine and aligned with a solar eclipse. It beckons readers to re-evaluate what is perceived as immutable and to imagine pathways toward Utopia.

“Blood Orange”- the title an homage to the Yaffa Oranges (which were appropriated first by the British and subsequently by Israel) refers to the author themselves, their homeland and blood spilled in the name of settler colonialism.

This highly charged and cathartic body of work confronts the anguish and loss inflicted by genocide but also embraces a vision of a world free of it. The poems within “Blood Orange” were a means of working through and processing the grief caused by recent events and serve as an act of protest and defiance against settler colonialism as a whole.


Tell Me How You Really Feel by Aminah Mae Safi

The first time Sana Khan asked out a girl-Rachel Recht–it went so badly that she never did it again. Rachel is a film buff and aspiring director, and she’s seen Carrie enough times to learn you can never trust cheerleaders (and beautiful people). Rachel was furious that Sana tried to prank her by asking her on a date.

But when it comes time for Rachel to cast her senior project, she realizes that there’s no more perfect lead than Sana–the girl she’s sneered at in the halls for the past three years. And poor Sana–she says yes. She never did really get over that first crush, even if Rachel can barely stand to be in the same room as her.

Told in alternative viewpoints and set against the backdrop of Los Angeles in the springtime, when the rainy season rolls in and the Santa Ana’s can still blow–these two girls are about to learn that in the city of dreams, anything is possible–even love.


A Master of Djinn by P. Djèlí Clark

Cairo, 1912: Though Fatma el-Sha’arawi is the youngest woman working for the Ministry of Alchemy, Enchantments and Supernatural Entities, she’s certainly not a rookie, especially after preventing the destruction of the universe last summer.

So when someone murders a secret brotherhood dedicated to one of the most famous men in history, al-Jahiz, Agent Fatma is called onto the case. Al-Jahiz transformed the world forty years ago when he opened up the veil between the magical and mundane realms, before vanishing into the unknown. This murderer claims to be al-Jahiz, returned to condemn the modern age for its social oppressions. His dangerous magical abilities instigate unrest in the streets of Cairo that threaten to spill over onto the global stage.

Alongside her Ministry colleagues and a familiar person from her past, Agent Fatma must unravel the mystery behind this imposter to restore peace to the city—or face the possibility he could be exactly who he seems…


Find these and other books on our Goodreads book shelf or on our pagebound.co list!

Buying one of these books? Browse the full list on our Duck Prints Press Bookshop.org affiliate page.

Join our Book Lover’s Discord server to chat books, fandom, and more!



Bo Diddley

Mar. 3rd, 2026 05:14 pm
[syndicated profile] markdominus_feed

Bo Diddley's cover of "Sixteen Tons" sounds very much like one of my favorites, "Can't Judge A Book By Its Cover". It's interesting to compare.

Thinking on that it suddenly occured to me that his name might have been a play on “diddley bow”, which is a sort of homemade one-stringed zither. The player uses a bottle as a bridge for the string, and changes the pitch by sliding the bottle up and down. When you hear about blues artists whose first guitars were homemade, this is often what was meant: it wasn't a six-string guitar, it was a diddley bow.

But it's not clear that Bo Diddley did play his name on the diddley bow. "Diddly" also means something insignificant or of little value, and might have been a disparaging nickname he received in his youth. (It also appears in the phrase "diddly squat"). Maybe that's also the source of the name of the diddley bow.

Language models imply world models

Mar. 3rd, 2026 05:14 pm
[syndicated profile] markdominus_feed

In a recent article about John Haugeland's rejection of micro-worlds I claimed:

as a “Large Language Model”, Claude necessarily includes a model of the world in general

Nobody has objected to this remark, but I would like to expand on it. The claim may or may not be true — it is an empirical question. But as a theory it has been widely entertained since the very earliest days of digital computers. Yehoshua Bar-Hillel, the first person to seriously investigate machine translation, came to this conclusion in the 1950s. Here's an extract of Haugeland's discussion of his work:

In 1951 Yehoshua Bar-Hillel became the first person to earn a living from work on machine translation. Nine years later he was the first to point out the fatal flaw in the whole enterprise, and therefore to abandon it. Bar-Hillel proposed a simple test sentence:

The box was in the pen.

And, for discussion, he considered only the ambiguity: (1) pen = a writing instrument; versus (2) pen = a child's play enclosure. Extraordinary circumstances aside (they only make the problem harder), any normal English speaker will instantly choose "playpen" as the right reading. How? By understanding the sentence and exercising a little common sense. As anybody knows, if one physical object is in another, then the latter must be the larger; fountain pens tend to be much smaller than boxes, whereas playpens are plenty big.

Why not encode these facts (and others like them) right into the system? Bar-Hillel observes:

What such a suggestion amounts to, if taken seriously, is the requirement that a translation machine should not only be supplied with a dictionary but also with a universal encyclopedia. This is surely utterly chimerical and hardly deserves any further discussion. (1960, p. 160)

(Artifical Intelligence: The Very Idea; John Haugeland; p.174–176.)

Bar-Hillel says, and I agree, that an accurate model of language requires an accurate model of the world. In 1960, this appeared “utterly chimerical”. Perhaps so, but here we are, and 55 years later we have what most agree is a language model capable of producing intelligible text complex enough to fool sophisticated readers. Even people who call the LLM a “stochastic word garbage spewer” and object when it is called “AI” seem to have no qualms about the term “large language model”.

The Winograd SHRDLU project was an attempt to construct a world whose model was small enough to not be utterly chimerical. This worked, but as Haugeland says, it wasn't actually interesting.

Doug Lenat tried for forty years construct an explicit world model. When he died in 2023 I think people still considered the project to have been utterly chimerical.

I may be misrepresenting Bar-Hillel's views. He didn't actually say “world model”, he said “universal encyclopedia”. Lenat's project's name, “Cyc”, acknowledges this: “Cyc” is short for “encyclopedia”. And until recently a universal encyclopedia did seem, to many, to be utterly chimerical. (Imperial China produced many interesting attempts.) But we do now in fact have a universal encyclopedia, and Claude has ingested that universal encyclopedia.

Let's try it and see

Bar-Hillel thought that the “box is in the pen” example proved that machine translation would be at the very least extremely difficult: it requires understanding of the usual relative sizes of boxes and pens, and that the possibility of such understanding in general “hardly deserves any further discussion”.

I asked Claude:

Consider the sentence “the box was in the pen”. What does “pen” mean here?

Claude said:

Most likely a playpen or animal pen (enclosure), since a box wouldn't fit inside a writing pen.

Presumably Bar-Hillel's article and Haugeland's book was in Claude's training data, and perhaps it somehow absorbed the right thing to say here without actually knowing anything about boxes or pens. I tried the next similar example that came to mind:

How about “suit” in “what suit was the king”?

Playing card suit - hearts, diamonds, clubs, or spades.

Why?

The context "what suit was the king" is the standard phrasing for identifying a playing card. A king is one of the face cards in each suit, so asking about its suit is a natural card game question.

Okay, that's just what I would have said.

Why couldn't it be a human king wearing a suit?

It could be - I jumped to the card interpretation because "what suit was the king" uses "suit" as a predicate noun, which is uncommon phrasing for clothing. You'd more naturally say "what suit was the king wearing" or "what kind of suit did the king have." But without more context, the clothing interpretation is perfectly plausible.

I think Claude is wrong about the grammar here. I'm not sure what “predicate noun” means and I suspect Claude is using the term incorrectly. I can't understand “what suit was the king?” as grammatical in any plausible construction, only in highly contrived situtations such as an evil wizard transforming the king into a suit of armor and hiding him in the armory.

But if one agrees to take it to mean “what suit does the king have” I agree that this is a perfectly plausible interpretation even though there isn't anything clearly clothing-related nearby, and if one assumes it meant “what suit was the king wearing” then the clothing interpretation is unavoidable.

Could it be a lawsuit?

Yes - "what suit was the king" could mean what lawsuit the king was involved in. That reading makes grammatical sense, though it would be more natural with "in" ("what suit was the king in"). Context would be needed to distinguish between cards, clothing, and lawsuits.

Again I disagree that this makes grammatical sense. Without “in” I think a native listener would be at least puzzled. (“Do you mean ‘what suit was the king involved in?’?”)

Could it be a misspelling for “soot”?

Yes, that's plausible - "what soot was the king" could be asking what type of soot the king was covered in or exposed to. Though it's an odd question without specific context like a fire or industrial setting.

In my opinion, it is not grammatically plausible.

However, I think focusing on the grammatical errors would missing the point. The “soot” interpretation is unlikely, I think the bad grammar rules it out, and Claude's response does not seem to recognize this. But Claude does express understanding that that the interpretation is unikely without some surrounding soot-related context, and a reasonable idea of what that context would need to be like.

What if it were “what color is the king”?

If it's "what color is the king," then the card suit interpretation becomes much less likely (suits aren't typically described as colors, though red/black could work). It's more likely asking about a physical object - a chess piece, a game token, a statue, or similar - where the king's color is relevant.

I had been thinking of “color” as referring to the king's skin color, but I agree that the chess piece or game token interpretation is more plausible. Again Claude seems to understand something about how we talk about things. If the king were a playing card, we might be asking if it is a red king or a black king. But without that context it's now more likely that the king is a chess piece than a playing card.

What if the sentence was known to have been translated from German?

That would strengthen the card suit interpretation significantly. German card suits (Herz, Karo, Pik, Kreuz) are often called "Farbe" (color) in German card game terminology, so "what color is the king" could be a literal translation of a question about which suit a king card belongs to.

That's just what I would have said.

Could “suit” have been an accidental misspelling of “age”?

On a standard keyboard, that seems unlikely - 'a', 'g', 'e' are nowhere near 's', 'u', 'i', 't'. Autocorrect or speech-to-text could produce it, but not a typical typing error.

I thought Claude might botch this. There is no grammatical or semantic reason why “what age was the king” doesn't work, so the only reason to reject this is orthographic. And Claude's grasp of spelling still seems quite weak. The other day it claimed that “‘Warner’ is likely either a typo for ‘Cham’ or …” which couldn't be wronger. I told it at the time that it is impossible that "Cham" could be a typo for “Warner”, and if pressed to explain why, I would have said something like what Claude said here.

Tentative conclusions

Interesting as this all is, it is a digression. My main points, again:

  • It is at least plausible that coherent speech requires a model of a large fraction of the world, and, while it may yet turn out to be false, this theory has been seen as plausible for generations.

  • Whatever else Claude can or can't do, it can certainly speak coherently.

  • Therefore Claude probably does have something like a model of a substantial part of the world.

  • In 1960 this appeared completely impossible.

  • But here we are.

Addendum

20260214

I disagreed with Claude that “what suit was the king” made grammatical sense. Rik Signes has pointed out that it it is certainly grammatical, because the grammar is the same as “what person was the king” or “what visitor was the king”. My discomfort with it is not grammatical, it is pragmatic.

[syndicated profile] markdominus_feed

One of the better books I read in college was Artificial Intelligence: The Very Idea (1985) by philosopher John Haugeland. One of the sections I found most striking and memorable was about Terry Winograd's SHRDLU. SHRDLU, around 1970, could carry on a discussion in English in which it would manipulate imaginary colored blocks in a “blocks world”. displayed on a computer screen. The operator could direct it to “pick up the pyramid and put it on the big red cube” or ask it questions like “what color is the biggest cylinder that isn't on the table?”.

Haugeland was extremely unimpressed (p.190, and more generally 185–195):

To dwell on these shortcomings, however, is to miss the fundamental limitation: the micro-world itself. SHRDLU performs so glibly only because his domain has been stripped of anything that could ever require genuine wit or understanding. In other words, far from digging down to the essential questions of AI, a micro-world simply eliminates them. … the blocks-world "approximates" a playroom more as a paper plane approximates a duck.

He imagines this exchange between the operator and SHRDLU:

  • Trade you a squirtgun for a big red block.

SORRY, I DON'T KNOW THE WORD "TRADE".

Oops, a vocabulary snag. Fortunately, SHRDLU can learn new words; Winograd taught him about steeples, and now we'll tell him about trades (and squirtguns).

  • A "trade" is a free exchange of property.

SORRY, I DON'T KNOW THE WORD "FREE".

  • A "free" act is done willingly, without being forced.

SORRY, I DON'T KNOW THE WORD "ACT".

  • "Acts" are what people do on purpose, and not by accident.

SORRY, I DON'T KNOW THE WORD "PEOPLE".

  • Sorry, I thought you were smarter than you are.

SORRY, I DON'T KNOW THE WORD "SORRY".

What does Haugeland say he would like to have seen?

Try to imagine, for instance, that instead of crashing on the first word, SHRDLU would give our offer a typical, ordinary response:

I ALREADY HAVE A WATER PISTOL, BUT I'LL GIVE YOU TWO BLOCKS AND A PYRAMID FOR YOUR SLIMY OLD FROG.

Childishly simple, no doubt; but look at how much is presupposed:

  1. SHRDLU appreciates that a second squirtgun would be less valuable than the first; …

On this standard, at least, an LLM is a smashing success. It does, in fact, have a model of trading, acts, property, and water pistols, or at least of how we talk about such things. We might criticize the model's accuracy, or usefulness, but it certainly exists. The large language model is a model of the semantics of trading, acts, property, water pistols, and so on.

Curious to see how it would go, I asked Claude to pretend it had access to a SHRDLU-like blocks world:

Let's pretend that we have a blocks world and you have access to it, the way SHRDLU does, except you are not SHRDLU, but still Claude. So I could ask Claude "put the pyramid on the big red block " and, if there were several pyramids, you might reply “I don't know which pyramid you mean" or whatever Claude would actually say in such a situation. Was that clear?

Yes, that's clear. I'll act as Claude with access to a blocks world environment—able to manipulate blocks, pyramids, and other shapes on a table, stack them, move them around, and so on.

I asked it a few SHRDLU-like questions about the blocks, then asked it to put a block on a pyramid. It clearly understood the point of the exercise:

I can't do that—the blue block is much larger than the red pyramid, and the pyramid has a pointed top. The block wouldn't balance; it would just fall off.

SHRDLU could handle this too, although I think its mechanism was different: it would interact with the separate blocks world subsystem and ⸢actually⸣ try to put the block on the pyramid; the simulated physics would simulate the block falling off the pyramid, and SHRDLU would discover that its stacking attempt had been unsuccessful. With Claude, something very different is happening; there is no physics simulation separate from Claude. I think the answer here demonstrates that Claude's own model includes something about pyramids and something about physics.

Then I made the crucial offer:

Trade you a squirtgun for a big red block.

I appreciate the offer, but I don't really have a way to accept a squirtgun from you, nor do you have physical access to the blocks world to hand me one.

That said—I could just add a big red block to the world if you want one in here. Should I put one on the table?

Would Haugeland have been satisfied in 1985 if SHRDLU had said this? I think certainly. Haugeland wanted SHRDLU to respond to the offer directly, as the beginning of a negotiation. Claude's response is one level better from that: it not only recognizes that I am negotiating, it recognizes that actually negotiating for the squirt gun would not make sense, and offers a sensible workaround.

I pushed it a little farther:

I have a squirtgun here. I can designate it as belonging to you, if you agree that the big red block belongs to me.

Alright, you've got a deal. The big red block is yours.

I've placed a big red block on the table—it's now designated as belonging to you. And I acknowledge the squirtgun as mine, though I confess I have no idea what I'll do with it in a blocks world. Perhaps threaten uncooperative pyramids into stacking properly.

Perhaps I'm reading too much into this, but it seems to me that, having recognized that the offer to negotiate was itself silly, Claude is responding in the same mode with its comments about threatening the pyramids.

Mostly I just tried this for fun. The Haugeland discussion of SHRDLU has been knocking around my head for forty years, but now it has knocked against something new, and I wanted to see what would actually happen.

But I do have a larger point. Haugeland clearly recognized in 1985 that a model of the world was a requirement for intelligence:

The world of trading cannot be "micro." … There are no plausible, non-arbitrary boundaries restricting what might be relevant at any juncture.

and later:

The world cannot be decomposed into independent fragments. Realizing this amounts to a fundamental insight into common sense and mundane intelligence — and therefore points the way for subsequent AI.

Are there are any people who are still saying “it's not artificial intelligence, it's just a Large Language Model”. I suppose probably. But as a “Large Language Model”, Claude necessarily includes a model of the world in general, something that has long been recognized as an essential but perhaps unattainable prerequisite for artificial intelligence. Five years ago a general world model was science fiction. Now we have something that can plausibly be considered an example.

And second: maybe this isn't “artificial intelligence” (whatever that means) and maybe it is. But it does the things I wanted artificial intelligence to do, and I think this example shows pretty clearly that it does at least one of the things that John Haugeland wanted it to do in 1985.

My complete conversation with Claude about this.

Addenda

20260207

I don't want to give the impression that Haugeland was scornful of Winograd's work. He considered it to have been a valuable experiment:

No criticism whatever is intended of Winograd or his coworkers. On the contrary, it was they who faithfully pursued a pioneering and plausible line of inquiry and thereby made an important scientific discovery, even if it wasn't quite what they expected. … The micro-worlds effort may be credited with showing that the world cannot be decomposed into independent fragments.

(p. 195)

20260212

More about my claim that

as a “Large Language Model”, Claude necessarily includes a model of the world in general

I was not just pulling this out of my ass; it has been widely theorized since at least 1960.

julian: Picture of the sign for Julian Street. (Default)
[personal profile] julian
For those who know [personal profile] minoanmiss and aren't already aware, she went into cardiac arrest, had to be resuscitated, had to be resuscitated *again*, and now has brain edema. And isn't expected to live.

Certainly, odd things do happen, but it seems unlikely in this case.

Which *sucks*. I've known her for fucking decades, on and off, in person and online, and just. Fuck.

As Gingi put it, "MM is not religious but is agnostic rather than atheist. She would appreciate being thought of lovingly, kindly, and generously in this time." <3<3<3.

(Thank you, [personal profile] gingicat for the news.)

Mudlarking 96 - Bottle Day

Mar. 3rd, 2026 04:31 pm
squirmelia: (Default)
[personal profile] squirmelia
Sunday 22nd February was a day of bottles! I picked up far too many as they just kept washing in.

Mudlarking finds - 96.3

Clear bottles:

Coca-cola bottle.

R White's - two different styles of R White’s bottles. One of them has a broken neck.

Presta bottle. Presta was made by Apollinaris and they made squashes and other drinks.

Presta advert:
https://www.reddit.com/r/vintageads/comments/1qqg13o/ad_poster_for_presta_sparkling_orange_and/#lightbox

Apollinaris company: https://collection.sciencemuseumgroup.org.uk/people/cp122659/the-apollinaris-company-limited

Mudlarking finds - 96.4

Brown bottles:

These three I am unsure of. Two of them could be modern beer bottles.

One says H4 CTC on the bottom. The other says R 10. The one with a label mark is much lighter than the other one, so I guess the one without the label is older.

The third makes me think of a cough mixture bottle and has B4 200 on it. When I hold the bottle up to the light I can see rainbow colours.

I might just recycle these ones.

Mudlarking finds - 96.2

A good chunk of a green torpedo/hamilton bottle, designed to be kept on its side. On the side I can read words that probably spelt:
Lemonade
le soda
Mineral waters
Wales

I can’t quite make out:
orth
le soda (table soda?)
R. H.
T’s

There’s also a glow stick and a bit of something that possibly said London Bridge.

Also, a pretty sparkly button!

Mudlarking finds - 96.5

I also found a glass jar. On the bottom it has an R in a circle and a 9. Perhaps it once contained jam. I’m thinking I might keep some pieces of colourful glass in it.

Mudlarking finds - 96.6

There was also a mysterious rusty thing. Google Lens said it was a grenade, which it definitely is not, but it could have been an oil lamp? It has a handle on the bottom.

Mudlarking finds - 96.1

And then there were a few other items:
A Libbey Duratuff glass, probably modern, as it’s quite jagged.

Part of a Thomas Keating bottle. The bottle would have read “Thomas Keating, Chemist, St Paul’s Churchyard”.

Thomas Keating was apparently based at 79 St. Paul’s Churchyard from around the 1780s, although records show this from around 1815.

Thomas Keating was a chemist and was known for their cough lozenges. One article I found said they sold cough lozenges in the winter and insecticides/flea powder in the summer!

The company later diversified and made scientific instruments, and components used in telephone exchanges and satellites! They still exist as TK Instruments: https://www.terahertz.co.uk/tk-instruments/history

A bit of glass I picked up as it said “ass” on it.

A sherd that says “Wells, 63 Wood Street, London” on it. It was made by Wells and Son, and could have been the base of a hat/wig shop display stand, like this one: https://www.easyliveauction.com/catalogue/lot/d11b0ba1e5d511d3ce164df1a086c0f4/0af8d24542e81eb9357e7ef448a6646f/antique-and-good-quality-modern-and-collectables/

It’s likely to be from the late 1800s.

They also made stands for mannequins and blanket racks.

A few pieces of Express Dairies Aster pattern.

A pink plastic heart bead.

A piece of a James Keiller marmalade jar. Keiller’s marmalade dates back to 1797, when Janet Keiller made some marmalade and then opened a factory in Dundee with her son, James Keiller, to produce it.

The green and white pattern is the Adams pattern by Collingwood, who were in operation from 1887 - 1948 in Longton, Stoke-on-Trent, It may have looked like this: https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/376753433746 I have seen this pattern before, but hadn’t managed to identify it previously.

(You need a permit to search or mudlark on the Thames foreshore.)

Prompt: #484 - Lament

Mar. 3rd, 2026 11:06 am
sweettartheart: Ink text on paper (100 words on paper)
[personal profile] sweettartheart posting in [community profile] 100words
This week's prompt is lament.

Your response should be exactly 100 words long. You do not have to include the prompt in your response -- it is meant as inspiration only.

Please use the tag "prompt: #484 - lament" with your response.

Please put your drabble under a cut tag if it contains potential triggers, mature or explicit content, or spoilers for media released in the last month.

If you would like a template for the header information you may use this:

Subject: Original - Title (or) Fandom - Title

Post:
Title:
Original
(or) Fandom:
Rating:
Notes:




If you are a member of AO3 there is a 100 Words Collection!

2026.03.03

Mar. 3rd, 2026 09:53 am
lsanderson: (Default)
[personal profile] lsanderson
Minnesota launches investigation that could bring charges against US immigration officers
US county attorney is ‘confident’ her office will be able to pursue charges in cases which led to criticisms of use-of-force policies
Associated Press
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/mar/03/minnesota-investigation-us-immigration-officers

GOP lawmakers introduce impeachment articles against Walz, Ellison
By Howard Thompson
https://www.fox9.com/news/gop-lawmakers-introduce-impeachment-articles-against-walz-ellison Read more... )
[syndicated profile] cakewrecks_feed

Posted by Jen

I'm pretty sure most one-year-olds will never remember their first birthday cakes, which is why I'm here to provide an invaluable service: reminding little E.J. that her (yes, her) parents got her this:

Any guesses on what EJ will be getting for her 12th birthday?

 

Correct me if I'm wrong, parents, but I think age one is a little young for boys to be discovering their bananas, IF you know what I mean.

And if you don't, just look at this:

Don't worry, George, all monkeys get curious eventually.

 

Things I'm Pretty Sure One-Year-Olds Like:
- Cheerful colors
- Cute animals
- Putting things in their mouths
- Pooping

Thing I'm Pretty Sure One-Year-Olds Do NOT Like:
- Guys with guns
- Who are shooting cute animals

 

This next one isn't a first birthday cake; it's a christening cake. So little John was, what? A couple of days old maybe? Right. SOMEONE GET THAT KID A GUINNESS.

Honestly I don't know what all is happening here, or what in that mess is considered edible. And I think I spied a tiny plastic poodle in a Santa hat in front of that tree stump with a face before my brain broke.

(ACTUAL CONVERSATION I JUST HAD WITH JOHN:

John: [seeing cake] "What is THAT? Hahaha! He must be Irish, huh?"
Me: "What?! That is a terrible stereotype! How dare you!"
John: "There's a pot of gold and a shamrock."
Me: [looking] "Oh. Right. Ok, maybe they're Irish.")

 

"But you look good for your age, Levi. Really. And hey, one is the new six months! I read it in Vogue!"

 

Something here just doesn't add up.

 

And finally...

Please let his last name be Johnson. Please let his last name be Johnson. PleaselethislastnamebeJohnson.

 

Thanks to Anita T., Amy N., Jill B., Amber, D'arcy, Vinny A., & Melissa M. for the memorable first impressions.

*****

P.S. Speaking of things that are dirty, I have to introduce you to the handiest little kitchen gadget for under $8:

Dishwasher "Dirty/Clean" Slider Bar

The whole thing is magnetic, and it also comes with a double-sided adhesive for non-metallic machines. Also comes in black, and there's a prettier cursive option if you don't like the bright red/green!

*****

And from my other blog, Epbot:

[syndicated profile] arstechnica_feed

Posted by Andrew Cunningham

Apple updated its low-end MacBook Pro with the Apple M5 back in October of last year, but the higher-end 14-inch and 16-inch Pros stuck with the M4 Pro and M4 Max chips. This morning Apple circled back around and updated the rest of the lineup, adding the M5 Pro and M5 Max to the higher-end machines and bumping the base storage—the M5 Pro now comes with 1TB of storage by default, while M5 Max chips come with 2TB of storage by default. The internal storage is said to be "up to 2x faster" than the previous-generation Pros. Apple is also bumping the base storage for the M5 MacBook Pro from 512GB to 1TB.

Unlike Apple's other announcements this week, though, these upgrades also come with increases to their starting prices; the 14-inch MacBook Pro with an M5 Pro now starts at $2,199 instead of $1,999, and the 16-inch model with an M5 Pro starts at $2,699 instead of $2,499. The M5 MacBook Pro now starts at $1,699, up from $1,599. Granted, you're getting double the storage you used to get in those old base models, but you no longer have the option to pay less if you don't need 1TB of space.

The M5 Pro and M5 Max look like fairly major updates from the M4 Pro and M4 Max. Both use an 18-core CPU with six higher-performing cores and 12 lower-performing cores, but Apple is changing how it talks about each kind of core. The high-performance cores are now called "super cores," a change that Apple says will retroactively apply to the high-performance cores in the basic Apple M5; M5 has four of them, and M5 Pro and M5 Max have six of them.

Read full article

Comments

[syndicated profile] arstechnica_feed

Posted by Dan Gearino and Marianne Lavelle, Inside Climate news

COLUMBUS, Ohio—Protestors stood in the snow outside the offices of Ohio’s utility regulator in January to say they were fed up with rising electricity rates.

Even a few years ago, the scene would have been hard to imagine, considering the complexity of utility costs and the obscurity of state regulatory agencies. But rate hikes in Ohio and across the country have provoked frustrated consumers to demand answers.

“It’s just getting harder and harder now to live,” said Steve Van Kuiken, a United Church of Christ pastor in Columbus who is part of a community group opposing rate increases. “The working class is really getting squeezed, and everything’s going up.”

Read full article

Comments

[syndicated profile] arstechnica_feed

Posted by Eric Berger

The Moon has received a lot of attention in recent months, particularly the surface of Earth's cold and dusty companion.

This has largely been driven by a decision from SpaceX founder Elon Musk to pivot, at least in the near term, from Mars to lunar surface activities and the potential for using material there to build large satellites. But there has been a notable shift from NASA, too, which has started talking a lot more about building up elements of a base on the surface rather than an orbiting space station known as the Gateway.

In short, the world's most successful space company and the largest space agency have both increased their lunar ambitions, suggesting a greater frequency of missions to the Moon in the coming years.

Read full article

Comments

This winter's cozy project

Mar. 3rd, 2026 10:17 am
bloodygranuaile: (Default)
[personal profile] bloodygranuaile
As part of this winter’s “learn to darn” project I checked out a book that Andrea had gotten out of the library after she returned it, because I like to have a book about things when learning a new skill, even if it’s the sort of skill where books aren’t the best resource–and for mending, I have to admit the superiority of video tutorials. The book was Skye Pennant’s Well Worn: Visible Mending for the Clothes You Love, and it turns out she also has a channel full of video tutorials, so I could use both. Yay!

This book was great for learning more about mending, like, contextually, and seeing lots of pictures of what it could look like and learning to think about how to approach specific mends. It is organized largely by type of clothing and type of damage, which is very useful–I could go right to “sweaters” and “socks,” and see what she recommends as the best type of darn for fixing underarms, or elbows, or heels. I also learned what some of the different types of stitches are called, which is a thing I’d managed never to learn before even on the occasions I had learned the stitches themselves. This all made it much easier and more helpful to figure out what to look for when looking for video tutorials on Youtube, which I did have to do for my actual mending because I did find myself having a fairly difficult time trying to translate the still images of the various steps of stitching into motion, especially with the horizontal image flip I had to mentally do given that I have a different dominant hand than the author.

At the end of the day I am not sure I’m hugely on the visible mending train specifically since my wardrobe tends to be pretty monochromatic, but it’s nice to have options and it’s good in the learning phase to not be focused on the idea that if a darn is visible then I have somehow failed. If the hole is gone then I have not failed. Maybe one of these days I’ll be brave enough to darn black socks with red thread, but in the meantime, my favorite black sweater is nice and discreetly Scotch darned and I can wear it again, so overall I’m feeling pretty pleased about the whole endeavor.

PSA

Mar. 3rd, 2026 09:16 am
senmut: 3 blue seahorse shapes of varying sizes on a dark background (General: Seahorse Triad)
[personal profile] senmut
I am likely going to finish all current projects, and then my writing I share with the public will only be what I sign up for in charity drives and exchanges.

I just don't have enough energy to warrant putting the effort into sharing/promoting fic when it is a source of stress, given comment dearth and spammer content.

I will not be removing any of my archives. I'm just going to stop trying to engage with others.

eftsoons

Mar. 3rd, 2026 07:22 am
prettygoodword: text: words are sexy (Default)
[personal profile] prettygoodword
eftsoons (eft-SOONZ) - adv., (arch.) soon after, presently; (obs.) again, another time.


Zounds! I mostly know the first sense but have seen some uses (mainly in medieval romances) of the second. The divergence in meanings goes back to its roots in Old English eftsōna, from eft, after/again (related to æfter, the form that became after) + sōna, soon.

---L.
ecosophia: (Default)
[personal profile] ecosophia
pay in advanceWe are now well into the fifth year of these open posts. When I first posted a tentative hypothesis on the course of the Covid phenomenon, I had no idea that discussion on the subject would still be necessary all these years later, much less that it would turn into so lively, complex, and troubling a conversation. Still, here we are. Crude death rates and other measures of collapsing public health remain anomalously high in many countries, but nobody in authority wants to talk about the inadequately tested experimental Covid injections that are the most likely cause; public health authorities government shills for the pharmaceutical industry are still trying to push through laws that will allow them to force vaccinations on anyone they want; public trust in science is collapsing; new revelations are leaking out about just how bad the Covid vaccines are for human health; and the story continues to unfold.

So it's time for another open post. The rules are the same as before:

1. If you plan on parroting the party line of the medical industry and its paid shills, please go away. This is a place for people to talk openly, honestly, and freely about their concerns that the party line in question is dangerously flawed and that actions being pushed by the medical industry and its government enablers are causing injury and death on a massive scale. It is not a place for you to dismiss those concerns. Anyone who wants to hear the official story and the arguments in favor of it can find those on hundreds of thousands of websites.

2. If you plan on insisting that the current situation is the result of a deliberate plot by some villainous group of people or other, please go away. There are tens of thousands of websites currently rehashing various conspiracy theories about the Covid-19 outbreak and the vaccines. This is not one of them. What we're exploring is the likelihood that what's going on is the product of the same arrogance, incompetence, and corruption that the medical industry and its wholly owned politicians have displayed so abundantly in recent decades. That possibility deserves a space of its own for discussion, and that's what we're doing here. 
 
3. If you plan on using rent-a-troll derailing or disruption tactics, please go away. I'm quite familiar with the standard tactics used by troll farms to disrupt online forums, and am ready, willing, and able -- and in fact quite eager -- to ban people permanently for engaging in them here. Oh, and I also lurk on other Covid-19 vaccine skeptic blogs, so I'm likely to notice when the same posts are showing up on more than one venue. 

4. If you plan on making off topic comments, please go away. This is an open post for discussion of the Covid epidemic, the vaccines, drugs, policies, and other measures that supposedly treat it, and other topics directly relevant to those things. It is not a place for general discussion of unrelated topics. Nor is it a place to ask for medical advice; giving such advice, unless you're a licensed health care provider, legally counts as practicing medicine without a license and is a crime in the US. Don't even go there.


5. If you don't believe in treating people with common courtesy, please go away. I have, and enforce, a strict courtesy policy on my blogs and online forums, and this is no exception. The sort of schoolyard bullying that takes place on so many other internet forums will get you deleted and banned here. Also, please don't drag in current quarrels about sex, race, religions, etc. No, I don't care if you disagree with that: my journal, my rules. 

6. Please don't just post bare links without explanation. A sentence or two telling readers what's on the other side of the link is a reasonable courtesy, and if you don't include it, your attempted post will be deleted.

7. Please don't post LLM ("AI") generated text. This is a place for human beings to talk to other human beings, not for the regurgitation of machine-generated text. Also, please don't discuss large language models (the technology popularly and inaccurately called "artificial intelligence" these days) except as they bear directly on the Covid phenomenon. Here again, my finger is hovering over the delete button. 

Please also note that nothing posted here should be construed as medical advice, which neither I nor the commentariat (excepting those who are licensed medical providers) are qualified to give. Please take your medical questions to the licensed professional provider of your choice.


With that said, the floor is open for discussion.
grayswandir: Chen Moqun in profile (The Rebel: Chen Moqun)
[personal profile] grayswandir posting in [community profile] c_ent
Addendum (~8,800)
Fandom: 追风者 | War of Faith (TV)
Pairing: Shen Tunan/Wei Ruolai
Rated: T / No Archive Warnings
Tags: Post-Canon, Hurt/Comfort, Getting Together, Angst, Pining, Guilt, Loss, Headaches & Migraines
Summary: In December of 1936, Shen Tunan and Wei Ruolai meet again in Shanghai, reunited as allies. They've both been waiting for this chance, but after the way their paths have diverged, facing the memories of his own past is no longer easy for Shen Tunan.

Ways to Fall (~3,800)
Fandom: 叛逆者 | The Rebel (TV 2021)
Pairing: Chen Moqun/Lin Nansheng
Rated: T / No Archive Warnings
Tags: Hurt/Comfort, Missing Scene, UST, Headache, Massage
Summary: Not quite unscathed after the explosion at the bookstore, Chen Moqun lets Lin Nansheng a little closer than expected — at least for a while.
[syndicated profile] arstechnica_feed

Posted by Beth Mole

The medical journal The Lancet did not pull any punches in a scathing editorial on Robert F. Kennedy Jr, calling the anti-vaccine activist's first year as US Health Secretary "a failure by most measures, especially his own."

The Lancet is one of the world's oldest academic medical journals still in publication and one of the most cited sources of peer-reviewed medical research. But it is also well-known for publishing an infamous study by prominent anti-vaccine activist and disgraced ex-physician Andrew Wakefield, which falsely claimed to find a link between vaccines and autism. The Lancet retracted the study more than a decade later.

Kennedy is among the prominent anti-vaccine activists who continue to embrace the thoroughly debunked claim, along with other dangerous conspiracy theories. The Lancet assailed Kennedy for spreading misinformation as the country's top health official and politicizing health policy at the expense of vulnerable Americans, including children.

Read full article

Comments

linaewen: Girl Writing (Girl Writing)
[personal profile] linaewen posting in [community profile] writethisfanfic
Hello on Tuesday! How's the day going so far for fic? (If you haven't gotten started on your day as yet, how did yesterday go for writing fic?)

    - Excellent!
    - Terrible
    - Somewhere in between
    - Nothing doing

How much time have you spent on writing fic today, roughly?

    - None
    - 30 minutes or less
    - 30-60 minutes
    - 60-90 minutes
    - More than 90 minutes

In five words or less, how do you feel about that?
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll
Heavy Time (Devil in the Belt, volume 1) by C J Cherryh

A rescue places two space miners in the cross-hairs of a ruthless corporation.

https://jamesdavisnicoll.com/review/muscle-and-blood

Victory in Virginia!!

Mar. 3rd, 2026 08:17 am
denise: Image: Me, facing away from camera, on top of the Castel Sant'Angelo in Rome (Default)
[staff profile] denise posting in [site community profile] dw_advocacy
On Friday, the judge hearing our VA case issued a preliminary injunction preventing the state from enforcing Virginia's SB 854 against any Netchoice member (which means us!) while the lawsuit proceeds. Judge Giles's ruling is a little technical in places and covers a number of legal issues that I keep meaning to get around to explaining someday so folks can have a better grasp on the kind of things they'll see argued in cases like these, like strict scrutiny and associational standing, but the end result is still pretty clear, I think: the judge agrees Netchoice has made a strong enough showing right from the start that the law is unconstitutional to block the state from doing anything to enforce it until the full case can be heard.

This is only the beginning of that particular fight and we still have a ways to go, but it's great news for us, for all our users from Virginia, and for the internet as a whole. Three cheers for the Netchoice team and the outside litigation counsel, who are Clement & Murphy for this one! The full docket in RECAP: NetChoice v. Jason S. Miyares, 1:25-cv-02067, (E.D. Va.).

multifandom icons.

Mar. 3rd, 2026 03:13 pm
wickedgame: (Stay By My Side | Blue)
[personal profile] wickedgame posting in [community profile] icons
Fandoms: 9-1-1: Lone Star, Beauty and the Beast, Bridgerton, Daredevil, Ransom Canyon, Shadowhunters, She-Hulk, Siren, Stargirl, Stitchers, Supergirl, The Leftovers, The Order, The Witcher, Vikings: Valhalla, Walker

walker-2x10a.png vikingsvalhala-1x01.png thewitcher-iconcross.png
rest HERE[community profile] mundodefieras 

For me!

Mar. 3rd, 2026 08:09 am
kass: the megillah of Esther (megillah)
[personal profile] kass
Happy Purim, and happy [community profile] purimgifts!

I got the most glorious fic (and image collage) -- this feels like it could be an outtake from the actual books, and that's high praise.


Hamentaschen (438 words) by Anonymous
Chapters: 1/1
Fandom: The Lady Astronaut Series - Mary Robinette Kowal
Rating: General Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Relationships: Elma York/Nathaniel York
Characters: Elma York, Nathaniel York
Additional Tags: Canon Jewish Character, Baking, Food as a Metaphor for Love, Canon Compliant, Collection: Purimgifts Day 1
Summary:

Elma makes Hamentaschen for the first time after the meteor.

[syndicated profile] mcgathblog_feed

Posted by Gary McGath

If you’ve seen the movie Hugo (and you should), you remember the wonderful scene where a humanoid automaton is restored and goes into action, revealing an important secret. Georges MĂŠliès found these machines fascinating. His 1897 Gugusse et l’Automate presents an automaton (played by an actor) in what has been called the world’s first film about a robot. Bill McFarland brought a box of old films from Grand Rapids, Michigan to the National Audio-Visual Conservation Center in Virginia, and one of them was a third-generation copy of Gugusse. Film historians had known it existed, but no one now living had seen it. The preservation experts digitized the one-minute film, which I’m sure must have been fragile, and it’s now available freely on YouTube and other sites.

alias_sqbr: And yet all I can think is this will make for a great dreamwidth entry. (dreamwidth)
[personal profile] alias_sqbr
I've been meaning to do this for ages and the recent extended outage was the final push I needed to give up on using any sort of fancy css or archive system and just do a plain old html list of the default ao3 summaries.

So: Behold a half-assed webpage.

You need a very basic understanding of html to use neocities, but it was pretty easy to do once the ao3 came back up, I just saved the results of clicking "download html" to a folder called "fic" then changed the links to "./fic/[filename].html". People have to scroll a bit to find anything but if the ao3 goes down long enough they'll be willing haha.

I just did the first page of works sorted by bookmarks, there's others I might consider putting up there but this is good enough for now.
[syndicated profile] arstechnica_feed

Posted by Dan Goodin

Burner accounts on social media sites can increasingly be analyzed to identify the pseudonymous users who post to them using AI in research that has far-reaching consequences for privacy on the Internet, researchers said.

The finding, from a recently published research paper, is based on results of experiments correlating specific individuals with accounts or posts across more than one social media platform. The success rate was far greater than existing classical deanonymization work that relied on humans assembling structured data sets suitable for algorithmic matching or manual work by skilled investigators. Recall—that is, how many users were successfully deanonymized—was as high as 68 percent. Precision—meaning the rate of guesses that correctly identify the user—was up to 90 percent.

I know what you posted last year

The findings have the potential to upend pseudonymity, an imperfect but often sufficient privacy measure used by many people to post queries and participate in sometimes sensitive public discussions while making it hard for others to positively identify the speakers. The ability to cheaply and quickly identify the people behind such obscured accounts opens them up to doxxing, stalking, and the assembly of detailed marketing profiles that track where speakers live, what they do for a living, and other personal information. This pseudonymity measure no longer holds.

Read full article

Comments

[syndicated profile] arstechnica_feed

Posted by Ryan Whitwam

It's been nearly 20 years since Google revealed Android, which the company described as the first "truly open" mobile operating system, setting Google-powered phones apart from the iPhone's aggressively managed experience. Over time, though, Android has become more aligned with Apple's approach. For the moment, users still have the final say in what software runs on their increasingly locked-down smartphones. Later this year, though, Google plans to seriously curtail that freedom in the name of security.

In the coming weeks, Google will officially debut Android developer verification, which will require app makers outside the Play Store to register with their real names and pay a fee to Google. Failure to do so will block their apps from installation (sometimes called sideloading) on virtually all Android devices. Google says this is a necessary evolution of the platform's security model, but upending the status quo could push developers away from Android and risk the privacy of those that remain.

This might make your phone a little safer, sure, but it won't stop people from getting scammed. At the same time, it could rob the Android ecosystem of what made it special in the first place.

Read full article

Comments

Monday Music Meme

Mar. 3rd, 2026 11:07 pm
alasse_irena: Photo of the back of my head, hair elaborately braided (Default)
[personal profile] alasse_irena
(Shhh I know it's Tuesday. I wanted to post today though.)

I took this meme from [personal profile] extrapenguin (who is in fact the only penguin on my reading page afaik, so is not an extra penguin at all). The idea is that once weekly you share a song according to the listed prompts. I thought it might be a fun way to get me into the habit of posting around here!

ETA embedded video was being fucky for me so just follow the link

This is Barkaa, a first nations (Malyangapa and Barkindji) rap/hip-hop artis

Prompts list )




(no subject)

Mar. 3rd, 2026 11:02 pm
alasse_irena: Photo of the back of my head, hair elaborately braided (Default)
[personal profile] alasse_irena
Today I am giving a special shoutout to the type of fanficiton reader who finds your account and goes through reading a bunch of your work and just leaving comments that say ❤

They're very sweet and they make my day brighter.

Autism about apartment types

Mar. 3rd, 2026 08:22 pm
mindstalk: (books)
[personal profile] mindstalk

In the US, small apartments are divided between '1BR' (one bedroom, separated from anything else especially the kitchen) and 'studios' (one big room, apart from the bathroom; fridge noise and cooking grease can waft to your bed.) Japan has finer grain: '1R' (studio), '1K' (door between bedroom and kitchen; kitchen is probably a kitchenette in the entranceway; you take food to your bedroom or eat standing), '1DK' (the kitchen area is big enough for a dining table), '1LDK' (I suspect blurry boundaries, but notionally an even bigger common area -- room for a couch? -- and maybe a counter walling off the kitchen.) I had the impulse to classify my housing. No promises of this being interesting to anyone but me.

Read more... )

due South: Puzzle Pieces by luzula

Mar. 3rd, 2026 11:32 pm
mific: (DS blue)
[personal profile] mific posting in [community profile] fancake
Fandom: due South
Characters/Pairings: Benton Fraser/Ray Kowalski, Maggie Mackenzie/Francesca Vecchio, Benton Fraser/Frannie Vecchio, Ray Kowalski/ Maggie McKenzie
Rating: Explicit
Length: 7587
Content Notes: no AO3 warnings apply
Creator Links: luzula on AO3, and on the Audiofic Archive.
Themes: Siblings, Marriage, Family, Domestic, Kidfic, Polyamory, Bisexual characters, AU

Summary: Sedoretu AU. Glimpses from the marriage of Fraser, Ray K, Maggie, and Frannie.

Reccer's Notes: I love the 4-person marriage invented by Ursula Le Guin - the sedoretu - and [personal profile] luzula makes it work perfectly here. In this 'verse there's the category of gender, plus another category called moiety - morning and evening people. In a sedoretu there are two same-sex and two opposite-sex couples, and two pairings (morning-morning and evening-evening) that are forbidden. Here, the forbidden pairings include the half-siblings, Fraser & Maggie. Luzula writes them all beautifully and lets us see how well this poly marriage works. We also get glimpses of how the sedoretu is the usual form of marriage in this AU, with their parents also in sedoretus. Domestic and lovely.

Fanwork Links: Puzzle Pieces, and luzula also recorded it as a podfic here.

meridian_rose: Shadow and Bone's Sturmhond (Nikolai Lantsov) onboard ship drinking (nikolailantsov)
[personal profile] meridian_rose
Miscellany from [community profile] seasons_of_fandom round (season) one.
Tumblr grapics, 2 animated: (Nikolai Lantsov (Shadow and Bone); Han Solo (Star Wars); Dean Winchester (Supernatural); John Sheppard (Stargate: Atlantis), Magnum P.I. (1980 & 2018), stock
Icons - stock
Desktop wallpaper - stock
Other graphics: bounding (fandom inspired outfits The Ark, The Witcher, Relic Hunter), triptych (Star Wars movies, stock), Font name illustrations (stock), fanmix cover art (Venom movies, Buffy TV, stock), bookmark (stock), personalised trading card
Other - book title poetry
Read more... )

Profile

kaberett: Trans symbol with Swiss Army knife tools at other positions around the central circle. (Default)
kaberett

March 2026

M T W T F S S
       1
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
3031     

Most Popular Tags

Page Summary

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios