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  1. The Captive Reader, , more info

    Library Loot: January 15 to 21
    Library Loot is a weekly event co-hosted by Claire from The Captive Reader and Sharlene from Real Life Reading that encourages bloggers to share the books they’ve checked out from the library. If you’d like to participate, just write up your post-feel free to steal the button-and link it using the Mr. Linky any time during the week. And of course check out what other participants are getting from their …
    By Claire (The Captive Reader), 310 words
  2. Bonkers about Perfume, , more info

    2024: My Bumper Bookish Year
    Two of the many tsundokus fighting for my future attentionIn 2009 I read five books all year; in 2024 I read 55! The difference being of course that back then I was working, and almost all my reading was confined to briefs on the next work project, and going over my interview write ups. It has taken me several years in fact to finally accept that I am "retired" - …
    By Vanessa, 80 words
  3. I Will Dare, , more info

    Judgements, Traumas, Strokes & Sticky Buns
    Dear Darling Ones, I’ve been thinking a lot about trauma lately. This might come as a total surprise as I’m such a magnanimous, even-keeled, generous spirit, but I can be pretty judgmental. Thankfully, I’ve matured enough to (mostly) go ahead and shut the fuck up about most of my judgements. Because, who and I to judge, and most of the things I like to judge are none of my damn …
    By Jodi Chromey, 744 words
  4. The Passing Tramp, , more info

    Return within Thirty Days: The Birthday Present (2008), by Barbara Vine
    Ruth Rendell published 14 Barbara Vine novels over nearly three decades between 1986 and 2014. As perhaps can be expected with a highly prolific writer--in addition to the 14 Vines she published 52 novels under her own name, as well as seemingly countless pieces of short fiction--the Vines afforded diminishing yields of poisoned fruit over time. Rendell banged out the first three Vine novels--A Dark Adapted Eye, A Fatal Inversion …
    By The Passing Tramp, 1,453 words
  5. Book and Sword – pontifex minimus, , more info

    Online Course: Ancient Siege
    Can’t get enough of bookandswordblog? This spring I will be teaching two short courses for the University of Victoria’s Continuing Education program. One of them is online on Tuesday 4 February from 6 to 8 pm Victoria, BC time. The price is CAD $35.70 (about USD $24). You can find more here. Ancient sieges were once familiar and alien. Armies struggled to take settlements, soldiers sweated in the grime beneath …
    By Sean, 292 words
  6. Rare Historical Photos, , more info

    The 2000s LAN Party Scene in Photos: When Gaming Was All About Local Connections
    At the dawn of the new millennium, web-based technology was undergoing a transformative phase. Google, though well-known, was just one of many search engines vying for attention and far from the tech giant it would later become. Dial-up internet, complete with its unmistakable connection tone, remained a fixture in countless American households. Meanwhile, file-sharing platforms […]
    By RHP, 70 words
  7. @Kevuhnn, , more info

    Building Forts
    While Drew played around in the snow.. Rey was focused on building a fort. That is, until Drew came by and knocked it over . The post Building Forts appeared first on @Kevuhnn.
    By Kevin Wild, 35 words
  8. Sauropod Vertebra Picture of the Week | SV-POW!, , more info

    My Constant Reader, and staying close to the work
    A middle caudal vertebra of a diplodocid, presumably Tornieria africana, on display at the Museum fur Naturkunde Berlin, in left lateral view. Quick backstory: this post at Adam Mastroianni’s Experimental History led me to this post at Nothing Human, and poking around there led me to another good’un: “Shallow feedback hollows you out”. That post really hit for me, and it made me think about SV-POW! Especially this bit: Suppose …
    By Matt Wedel, 833 words
  9. Jim Nielsen’s Blog, , more info

    Tools As Ways of Being
    I took notes from Sean Voisen’s call for more hybrid tools. He speaks for a moment on generative AI and its inclusion into existing tools, but reading between the lines the insight I found was how our tools can trigger empathy for people and disciplines: One of the greatest goals we can have for [making] tools…is that in expanding all of our respective capabilities, we do not replace our human …
    227 words
  10. Perfume Posse, , more info

    Musc by Mona di Orio
    Perfume PosseMusc by Mona di Orio Hey Posse, yes we received the devastating news recently that the Mona do Orio brand has died a sad and lonely death. WAAAHH! I’m partly to blame. It’s been a long while since I bought a bottle from them. They… Continue Reading → Perfume PosseMusc by Mona di Orio
    By Portia, 60 words
  11. Multo (Ghost), , more info

    Tales of an Antiquary
    Tales of an Antiquary: chiefly illustrative of the manners, traditions, and remarkable localities of ancient London by Richard Thomson 1828 A view of Fleet Street and the church of St. Dunstan-in-the-West, circa the 1840s. I’m starting the new year with a new literary excavation project! Tales of an Antiquary (1828) purports to be the memoirs of an antiquarian named Sylvanus Beauclerk, who takes his readers on a literary tour of …
    By Nina Zumel, 592 words
  12. LRB Blog, , more info

    Table of contents
    Table of contents from London Review of Books Vol. 47 No. 1 (Friday 10 January 2025)
    19 words
  13. Listen Faster, , more info

    January 13, 2025
    Medicine Hat practices this week, in anticipation of Saturday's show. We're learning a new one which I posted about previously, and it's pulling us back together. Maybe we'll record it? Maybe we'll write more?
    37 words
  14. Jeff Rapsis / Silent Film Music, , more info

    Off to Cleveland to accompany 'The Lost World' at Case Western Reserve's 50th annual sci-fi marathon; then 'Way Down East' in Wilton, N.H.
    Original poster art for 'The Lost World' (1925).This weekend takes me to the fair city of Cleveland, Ohio, where I'll accompany 'The Lost World' (1925) at this year's annual Sci-Fi Marathon at Case Western Reserve University.It's the 50th annual edition of the Case Western Film Society's marathon, at which diehard movie buffs spend a mid-winter weekend watching sci-fi films of all types 30 to 36 hours non-stop. And next month, …
    By Jeff Rapsis, 1,539 words
  15. Little Cotton Rabbits, , more info

    January frosts & home comforts
    The days between Christmas and New Years Day are an annual gift I give myself, a peaceful pause in the march of days when no ‘to-do lists’ are allowed to intrude. Instead there is just a gentle drifting, a pottering and flitting between things that feel right at the time. We walk with Toby every day out in the quietly dormant countryside, and then it’s back home to warm up …
    By Julie (little cotton rabbits), 425 words