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  1. Kate Macdonald, , more info

    Did Not Finish
    A ‘Why am I reading this?’ post, because this is why I haven’t posted many reviews lately: I keep giving up on books I have nothing much to say about. Benjamin Myers, Cuddy Winner of prizes, lauded indie publisher’s saviour, the subject is a favourite (early medieval English religion and history), and wow was I … Continue reading Did Not Finish →
    By Kate, 65 words
  2. Clothes In Books, , more info

    Twelve Horses and the Hangman’s Noose by Gladys Mitchell
    Twelve Horses and the Hangman’s Noose by Gladys Mitchell published 1956 This Gladys Mitchell book is very unusual indeed – because in terms of plot you could imagine a number of crime authors having written it. The major point of most Mitchell books is that no-one else in or out of their right minds would have tried to build a book round her imaginings. And certainly some readers (me: I …
    By Clothes In Books, 627 words
  3. Everyday Commentary, , more info

    Bringing Down the Beast—Ending the FSA
    Editor’s Note: Since I started providing legal advice to AKTI, I have loosened my no politics rule a bit to provide insights and commentary on legal issues related to knives. This is one of those articles. As with everything I write both for AKTI and here, this is all my opinion. It is not legal advice, which requires knowledge of specific facts. If you need a lawyer for a criminal …
    By Anthony Sculimbrene, 1,743 words
  4. Jane's London, , more info

    Mapping the Tube 1863-2023 – A chronology of Harry Beck's (and others') London Underground maps at The Map House, 54 Beauchamp Place
    One for fellow map nerds and London Transport fans. There is an excellent exhibition at The Map House showing the evolution of the tube map, the like of which I am not sure has been seen before. In the gallery room at the rear of the shop there is an arrangement of framed pocket maps that clearly shows how the tube map has been adapted as new routes and stations …
    By Jane, 261 words
  5. Thinkige Kru 2, , more info

    2024-11-22 22:43
    The pinnacle of that view of freedom, of course, is avant-garde jazz, which I find by and large a dead loss. It operates on the assumption that if you remove all constraints from people, they will behave in some especially inspired manner. This doesn’t seem to me to be true in any sense at all — not socially, and certainly not artistically. The point is that the typical jazz or …
    By SIMON REYNOLDS, 127 words
  6. Olu Online | Blog, , more info

    Weeknotes #24
    wassup? i've been gone cos i accidentally accrued extra time on beeminder, the website/app i use to cajole myself into regularly writing weeknotes. today is the final day before I owe them $5 so write i must. usually i have been sitting down to write these and been full of beans and pep and thoughts! the last time I did, I think shortly before my talk, i thought "nope!!!!" before …
    By hidden (oluonline), 413 words
  7. Tale of Painters » Classic Blog, , more info

    Review: Warhammer Underworlds Grandfather’s Gardeners & Jaws of Ixil
    Two new warbands are set to be released for the new edition of Warhammer Underworlds. In this review and unboxing, we take a closer look at the Grandfather's Gardeners, a Mastery warband of Nurgle Daemons, as well as the Strike warband Jaws of Ixil from the reptilian Seraphon. Join us as we explore the new warband box format, its contents, and what might have been left out. The post Review: …
    By Stahly, 93 words
  8. The History of Parliament, , more info

    Unrest in the West: The Perkin Warbeck Conspiracy
    On this day, 1499, Perkin Warbeck, a pretender to the English throne, was hung for treason, bringing an end to one of the most significant threats to Henry VII’s reign. Dr Hannes Kleineke, editor of our House of Commons 1461-1504 section, recounts the story of the Warbeck Conspiracy. Some three years after Lambert Simnel had taken up his post as Henry VII’s kitchen boy, another claimant to Henry VII’s crown …
    By hkleinek, 1,728 words
  9. the lost byway, , more info

    The Black Path talk at Wanstead Tap
    Photo via The Amorous Humphrey Plugg on Twitter https://x.com/SumsionMichael Fantastic night at brilliant Wanstead Tap in collaboration with the essential Newham Bookshop to talk about my new publication with Three Imposters – The Black Path. Hopefully be announce my next publication with Three Imposters in the New Year. A video of the full talk is available on my Patreon page (exclusive to Radical Ramblers) and to YouTube Members. I’m running …
    By JohnR, 144 words
  10. Jestress's Forgotten Books and Stories, , more info

    A Native American Feast
    A Native American Feast by Lucille Recht Penner, 1994. This nonfiction children’s book explains the traditional foods of different Native American tribes and how they were prepared. (Throughout the book, they are referred to both as “Native Americans” and “Indians”, but mostly, the book uses the term “Native Americans.” The focus is on Native American tribes in the area that is now the United States, but the book includes information …
    By TracyC, 1,199 words
  11. Monevator, , more info

    Weekend reading: Bitcoin’s $100,000 question
    What caught my eye this week. While the world potentially inched closer to World War 3 this week, Bitcoin fans had a more exciting horizon in mind. One where their love-hate digital asset finally boasted a six-figure price tag. Some $133m spent in election lobbying says Donald Trump will be a crypto-friendly president. Bitcoin was already having one of its bursts of enthusiasm, but Trump’s reelection was a lift-off moment: …
    By The Investor, 2,201 words
  12. Boak & Bailey's Beer Blog, , more info

    News, nuggets and longreads 23 November 2024: The Enchanted
    Every Saturday we round up the best writing about beer and pubs from the past week. This time we’ve got festivals, malt, Kölsch and more. First, some news: AB-InBev is closing the Elysian brewing facility in Seattle. Now, we don’t generally jump on every item of news from the US (it’s not our beat) but, as Jeff Alworth explains, this is significant as a sign of a wider shift in …
    By Ray, 1,302 words
  13. RealClimate, , more info

    Twenty years of blogging in hindsight
    It’s 20 years since we started blogging on climate here on RealClimate (December 10, 2004). We wanted to counter disinformation about climate change that was spreading through various campaigns. In those days it was an unusual move that prompted a welcome from Nature. One thing that I didn’t anticipate then was the vast global scale that fake news and conspiracy theories later would attain. Neither did I foresee how they …
    By rasmus, 887 words
  14. Soul Sides, , more info

    THE SNAPBACK, ISSUE 1
    I created Soul Sides 20 years ago because I wanted an outlet to write about my favorite records. The blog era feels bygone — and I clearly stopped regularly updating the site years ago — but the impulse to talk about records has never faded. It’s why I’ve created podcasts and newsletters but to mark the...
    By O-Dub, 60 words
  15. Huey | Home, , more info

    Migrating from Omnivore to Wallabag
    Self-hosted setup using docker-compose and importing of articles from OmnivoreThe read-it-later app which I had been using, Omnivore, recently announced that it was being acquired by EvenLabs and would shut down on 30 November 2024.1 Although Omnivore is technically open source (which was one of the reasons I selected it), the project is not mature. It does not actually support self-hosted installations at the moment and the mobile apps will …
    By Huey, 638 words