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    Wednesday, May 16th, 2012
    james_nicoll
    11:51a
    I cannot believe this is an approved method of playing these instruments.


    Also posted at Dreamwidth, where there are comment count unavailable comment(s); comment here or there.
    rmd
    11:49a
    Fuuuuuck. Boston commercial radio, you will soon be dead to me.
    WFNX, which has been mostly doing a good job of being independent radio in Boston[1] since 1983, is being sold to Clear Channel. I've been listening to them off and on since they started, and they've been my go-to radio station for every boston-area vehicle I've had that included a radio. Even when I was living in Seattle, when I had a way to listen to them streaming (back before radio stations were doing streaming), I was listening to them sometimes.

    [1] modulo the few years they sucked when they had some program director they got from WAAF and were full of angry grungey buttrock snarly dickwaving music around 2001. I stopped listening regularly and then was happily surprised when they started not sucking again.
    james_nicoll
    10:16a
    Wednesday Night 13th Age
    In session two, we had a bar fight that was mainly notable for the lack of interaction between the characters:

    Cota tried to prevent a bit of jackassery from some privileged louts against members of the local street gang from turning into a general brawl. When that did not succeed as well as it might have (he intimidated the aristos but not so much they actually apologized) he was forced to use brute force to quell things.

    Farouk the mage's player was not around so he did not take part.

    Blaze spotted one of the people that battered Blaze when Blaze got burned and took off after him; by a great coincidence, this person is Mari's mentor. Confrontation was inconclusive. Interestingly, Mari's pal was talking to Farouk's close chum Stephan when Blaze spotted him.

    One important point established early on: there's a young girl named Madi who Mari is very fond of (as everyone at the House of Francesca is; she's a sort of mascot/drudge) and nobody has seen her today.


    Session three:
    Read more... )

    Also posted at Dreamwidth, where there are comment count unavailable comment(s); comment here or there.
    james_nicoll
    10:05a
    Wait, Po was adopted?
    Isn't it kind of futile to oppose new military technology the way Po and his chums do in the second Kung Fu Panda movie?

    Also posted at Dreamwidth, where there are comment count unavailable comment(s); comment here or there.
    sartorias
    6:36a
    Flash of History - Europe
    [info]kith_koby sent me this link. As you're watching, see the effect of personal history on the map, and other elements. At least I found it mesmerizing.
    james_nicoll
    9:24a
    Scalzi's Straight White Male: The Lowest Difficulty Setting There Is
    I’ve been thinking of a way to explain to straight white men how life works for them, without invoking the dreaded word “privilege,” to which they react like vampires being fed a garlic tart at high noon. It’s not that the word “privilege” is incorrect, it’s that it’s not their word. When confronted with “privilege,” they fiddle with the word itself, and haul out the dictionaries and find every possible way to talk about the word but not any of the things the word signifies.


    And the obligatory follow-up, A Child’s Treasury of Deletions:


    Yesterday’s post garnered 800 comments before I put it to bed and I ended up deleting a record number of comments out of it, largely from presumably straight white men enraged at the idea their life doesn’t necessarily suck as much as other folks’ and/or because they ate lead paint chips as children and have impulse control issues (plus a couple from other, calmer folks following up on posts I later deleted, so theirs needed to be deleted too). Whatever the reason, I thought it would be fun to post a compendium of Malletings here for your enjoyment

    Also posted at Dreamwidth, where there are comment count unavailable comment(s); comment here or there.
    robin_d_laws
    9:16a
    A WaRPed Character
    page hit counter

    To celebrate-slash-publicize Atlas Games’ release of WaRP, the underlying rules system for the Over the Edge game, under an open license, here’s a character in the WaRP stats. If you sense the presence of the Cut-Ups Method in the concept, you just might be onto something... While the WaRP license doesn’t grant the right to publish material based on the Al Amarja setting, hey, this is a blog entry and I’m a friend of the family, as it were.

    Jewel Broussard

    Weirdly Normal Person

    Ever since she first saw the cartoon character Tiffany Trilobite on television as a young child and sensed weird depths in her, Kipton, OH native Jewel Broussard has instinctively pursued the random and offbeat. Now twenty-nine years of age, working as a substitute teacher, she has lived her entire life in this small village, never suspecting that the mundane events of her workaday existence play out in exaggerated parallel on the mysterious island nation of Al Amarja. When she spoke up at a village meeting for an increase in the firefighting levy, a new crew of violent, privatized emergency workers, the Broussard Clarions, sprang up on the island. When she caught a fellow teacher stealing money from her school’s prom fund, the dean of D’Aubainne University was arrested and executed by the government.

    A few days ago, a plane ticket to Al Amarja arrived in the mail. Though usually cautious, Jewel has chosen to go to this place she’s never heard of, in hopes of discovering why someone would have sent it to her.

    Mirrored Existence Events of her dull but happy life in Ohio reflect or create dramatic outcomes on the island. What happens when she gets there? 2

    Substitute Teacher Knows a little about everything, but mostly how to earn the cooperation of unruly groups. 3

    Inspiring Speaker Confidence and innate goodness make those who listen to her want to do as she suggests.

    Sweetly naïve (flaw)

    Hit Points 14



    Please leave any comments at the new main site.
    james_nicoll
    9:07a
    Two interesting items from the Planetary Society Blog
    The surface of Mars is a tough place to survive, but researchers at the German Aerospace Center (DLR) found some lichens and cyanobacteria tough enough to handle those conditions.


    and

    After driving off Greeley Haven – where she stood patiently for 19 long weeks – Opportunity is now driving again. Not just turning, not just bumping, but driving. She’s driven away from Greeley Haven, heading a short distance downhill, towards a small patch of wind-blown dust which has caught the rover team’s eye.


    Also posted at Dreamwidth, where there are comment count unavailable comment(s); comment here or there.
    marthawells
    7:20a
    News and Links
    If you missed it yesterday, I had great news: I sold two new YA fantasies to Strange Chemistry Books.

    Last night there was much celebrating involving chocolate cake.

    Also, The Siren Depths is now up for preorder at Barnes and Noble and Amazon US, and they both have the preorder price now.

    ***

    Links I have been meaning to post and got way behind on:

    * N.K. Jemisin: Why There's No Tipjar
    For as long as I’m traditionally published, I’m not planning to do a tipjar. I really appreciate the thought, but thing is — you are contributing by checking out books from the library. The more lends and reservations a library gets for a particular book, the more books that library will purchase. And if it gets checked out a lot, they might prominently display it somewhere, which will (hopefully) earn me more long-term readers.

    You can also fill out a request card for your local public library, and ask that they get books they don't have yet.

    * Black Gate: C.S.E. Cooney’s How to Flirt in Faerieland & Other Wild Rhymes On Sale

    * Sense of Wonder: Interview with Verbena C.W., editor of Liu Cixin in English

    * XOJane: CeCe McDonald, the Girl Who Lived (And Why There is No Justice for Transgender Women of Color)

    * Cynthia Leitich Smith: Video: "Bookloose" by Dowell Middle School (McKinney, Texas) in support of continued funding for their school library. This was really cute.

    * Salon: Whitewashing, a history From "Tiffany's" to "Khan," we look at Hollywood's illustrious tradition of casting white actors in non-white roles by Aasif Mandvi

    * Air & Space Smithsonian: The Weird World of Folk Aviators With his whimsical sculptures, Gregory Bryant celebrates early ideas about winged flight.

    * Kate Elliott: Guest Post: Decolonizing as an SF Writer By Rochita Loenen-Ruiz
    As I write this, I am thinking of a young writer somewhere in the world who comes from a country just like mine. I write reflecting on the process of decolonization that I am going through as I consider history. This look back may be painful and I may have to face unhappy truths, but still it is important. I need to understand the source of the pain, to accept it, embrace it and find healing so I can reclaim what is mine and become the writer that I want to be.
    Tuesday, May 15th, 2012
    stillsostrange
    11:50p
    A wild child appears!
    Today the stork CPS delivered to us a nine-year-old girl. We spent the rest of the day enrolling her in school, buying some furniture, conducting an inventory of her clothes for the adoption agency*, and beginning the long slog toward bedtime.

    Agent F, as I will refer to her until I get the foster care privacy rules figured out, spent much of the day trying to speak cat. She seems to be picking it up fairly quickly. Siggy--always glad to have more monkeys to dominate--seems to have taken her under her iron paw.

    I already have many OPINIONS about the medications some genius put her on. Luckily, we see her new psychiatrist on Thursday, and perhaps he will join the litany of WTF that has been uttered today.**

    I'm also very glad we only have two weeks of school left, because the hour of 6:00 a.m. and I are not friendly, but will be forced to get to know each other very well for those two weeks.

    I'll probably keep further posts about this under f-lock, but if anyone has any questions about the process, feel free to email or message me. If I'm not dead of exhaustion, I'll try to answer.

    * How many pairs of socks does a nine-year-old need? A lot, apparently.

    ** Two caseworkers, both of us, and three different people at her new school all looked at her list of meds and made emoticon faces, including o.0, O.O, and >:(.

    Current Mood: exhausted
    Wednesday, May 16th, 2012
    incandescens
    2:13a
    familiarity and nostalgia
    Ah well. On the negative side, I didn't get a copy of Diablo 3 today - the local shops had sold out of all unreserved copies by the time I got there in my lunch break. (Though I did manage to get hold of a strategy guide book.) On the somewhat positive side, the fact that the shops had all sold out of copies was symptomatic; from what I hear, the online servers are currently rather overloaded. So I will sit back for a couple of days and wait for the new-game blues to subside a bit.

    In the meantime, I'm rather enjoying reading the strategy guide and recognising all those familiar names and faces, all the weapon types, all the monsters, and so on. A warm wave of nostalgia is washing over me. Awww.

    ---

    Midfield,
    attached to nothing,
    the skylark singing.

    -- Basho, translated by Robert Hass
    Tuesday, May 15th, 2012
    tersa
    2:47p
    Article: Why fiction is good for you
    With a h/t to [info]skellington1, a really interesting article from the Boston Globe, Why fiction is good for you.
      Is fiction good for us? We spend huge chunks of our lives immersed in novels, films, TV shows, and other forms of fiction. Some see this as a positive thing, arguing that made-up stories cultivate our mental and moral development. But others have argued that fiction is mentally and ethically corrosive. It’s an ancient question: Does fiction build the morality of individuals and societies, or does it break it down?

      [...] This research consistently shows that fiction does mold us. The more deeply we are cast under a story’s spell, the more potent its influence. In fact, fiction seems to be more effective at changing beliefs than nonfiction, which is designed to persuade through argument and evidence. Studies show that when we read nonfiction, we read with our shields up. We are critical and skeptical. But when we are absorbed in a story, we drop our intellectual guard. We are moved emotionally, and this seems to make us rubbery and easy to shape.

      [...] The psychologists Mar and Keith Oatley tested the idea that entering fiction’s simulated social worlds enhances our ability to connect with actual human beings. They found that heavy fiction readers outperformed heavy nonfiction readers on tests of empathy, even after they controlled for the possibility that people who already had high empathy might naturally gravitate to fiction. As Oatley puts it, fiction serves the function of “making the world a better place by improving interpersonal understanding.”

     
    coffeeandink
    5:35p
    matociquala
    4:54p
    our prayers are always answered. that miracles can happen.
    I just had one of those labor-saving strokes of genius that I need to share with the world. Which is to say, the easiest method ever in the history of popovers.

    Here is my basic popover recipe:

    2 tablespoons solid fat (butter or animal fat (duck fat, mmm) or solid shortening)
    3 large eggs, at room temperature
    1 cup (250 ml) whole milk, at room temperature
    1 teaspoon salt
    1 1/2 teaspoons sugar
    1 cup (140 g) all purpose or white whole wheat flour
    1 tablespoon vital wheat gluten

    This tactic assumes you own a wand blender and a wide-mouthed quart Mason jar and a microwave. If not, just make the popovers the way you normally would--or if you are missing the wand blender but have a normal blender, you can melt the butter in a different container and use the normal blender.

    About an hour or two before dinner, take your Mason jar. Put the butter/whatever in it. Put it in the microwave and melt it. (If you are making Yorkshire pud and are waiting for the roast to be finished before you add the fat, skip this step for now, and stir the fat in before you bake the popovers.)

    Add the milk, eggs, salt, and sugar to the butter in the Mason jar (or blender)(or just put them in the blender if you are adding the fat later). Do not put the eggs directly into the hot butter before diluting it with the milk. Otherwise you will have scrambled eggs, which are nice, but not popovers.

    Whiz them all up with the wand blender.

    Add the flour and the wheat gluten.

    Whiz that too, until you have a nice smooth batter.

    Let the batter sit on the counter until dinner is nearly ready. If you are roasting something at 400 degrees, you're good; otherwise preheat your oven to 400 (F). (200 C) 

    Liberally grease 9 cups of a 12-cup muffin tin, or if you are making Yorkshire pud, drizzle a little of the fat from the roast into the bottom of the cups. If you have one of the giant-sized six muffin muffin tins, then you will have bigger popovers and they need to bake a little longer.

    Using silicon cups for this results in popovers without stumps or a lot of loft, as they just levitate themselves out of the super-slick cups entirely. They still taste good!

    If you are using fat from the roast you're making, add it now and stir it in.

    Divide the popover batter between the nine greased cups. You can just pour it from the blender or the Mason Jar.

    Stick in oven. Do not peek! If you open the door before they are set, they won't rise properly.

    Bake for 35 minutes or until deep mahogany brown.

    Pull pan from oven. Tilt popovers in cups, or remove them to a rack or basket. Pierce each one with a bamboo skewer. (careful of the steam!) The purpose of these two procedures is to (a) prevent them from getting soggy and (b) prevent them from collapsing.

    Eat.

    However you meant to eat them. Do not plan on leftovers.

    Wash your one. dirty. dish. Oh, and the wand blender, sure. And the muffin tin. But that was inevitable.



    ETA: Nota Bene

    For even more loft in your popovers, preheat the muffin tin with the grease in it in the 400-degree oven for a few minutes before pouring the batter in. This is a bit tricky, though, and can be skipped.


    Current Mood: i'm a fucking genius
    tersa
    11:23a
    I...*hole*
    In reverse order, someone I follow on Twitter mentioned this this morning, and I dove on it so quickly I probably left contrails. Then I shared it with [info]cyranocyrano and we had a mutual drool session.

    Deadlands Noir Kickstarter
      Deadlands: Noir is set in the world of Pinnacle Entertainment’s award-winning Deadlands universe. It includes new Edges, Hindrances, and powers, as well as new rules for handling detective work, the state of the Union and the CSA in the Depression-era, a complete Plot Point campaign, and of course, more monsters and ghouls than you can shake a smoking .45 automatic at.

    I suspect it got posted yesterday and is already 72% funded as of this morning with 29 days to go.

    MINE, MINE, MINE FOR THE TAKING, MINE, BOYS, MINE ME THAT GOLD. /obscure music lyric



    In a copy-pasta from an IM conversation this morning, because I am lazy (and why re-invent the wheel):

    So, my morning involved getting up at 6am to take the new cat into the vets for a wellness check-up at 7am in an effort to be responsible and get to work on time at 8am.

    Instead, despite it being the first appointment of the day, I had to wait for 10 minutes or so to be taken back, another 15 or so for the vet, discovered the new cat has fleas, got her treated with Frontline, had to order a second dose to give to Toast when I got home, then encountered an accounting oddity that required the accounts receivable lady come to the front and dig through records to explain why they showed I owed them money when my back account said I'd paid my last bill in full. Which turned out to be because someone at the vets had accidentally misapplied someone else's check payment to my account back before I euthanized Arnold so when I paid that off, it included that false credit. Then they fixed the error so it then showed in my account as owing them money. :P

    I got to work at 8:20.

    On the upside, between the time I left for the vet's at 6:40am and getting home at 8, I discovered USPS had delivered what I think is my new Kinect. So--winning?



    There was SWTOR last night and we got through a Heroic-4 with only three PCs, I was introduced to the beauties of 'crowd control' powers, and I need to buy a new wireless network card for the desktop because I'm tired of it spontaneously losing connectivity while I'm playing SWTOR and it may be because the card is 6-7 years old. :P
     
    james_nicoll
    1:29p
    Asked in email, repeated with permission

    ... is there something about CJ Cherryh that precludes her from
    nominations in these "grand master of SF" type awards? This isn't
    the first time I've seen award lists discussed on your LJ where
    names like COnnie WIllis and Elizabeth Moon pop up, and yet, no
    hide nor hair of Cherryh. This seems quite odd to me... just
    because I don't particularly like her writing /myself/ doesn't mean
    she doesn't (a) have a huge following, (b) a very long and salutory
    publishing history, and (c) a dedication to what people might
    characterize as reasonably solid science-fiction-ey SF.

    Joan Vinge is another name that pops to mind, although I tend to
    think of her as "less SF and more fantasy in SF clothing" than
    Cherryh... perhaps unwarrantedly.

    Also posted at Dreamwidth, where there are comment count unavailable comment(s); comment here or there.
    heavenscalyx
    1:21p
    Wonder City Interlude #8 (pt 11)
    His Faded Idol

    11.

    Erszebet and Zoltan arrived earlier than usual, both anxious to know what was happening. As they coolly made their way into the halls of the convention center, Erszebet's gaze was almost immediately assaulted by a middle-aged man in a miniscule leopard-skin loincloth pacing the halls in a manner he clearly thought resembled a stalking big cat.

    "What is wrong with his skin?" she asked Zoltan behind her hand. "Is it jaundice? Some alien disease?"

    "No, my dear," he said, pat-patting her shoulder, "that is the rather orange result of a chemical suntan. And that is the finest example of an out-of-date para you will ever see: Ran-Zor the Lord of the Jungle."

    Erszebet studied him, from the thinning and graying hair that straggled down his back, to the signs of a sedentary occupation in the thinness of his arms and legs, to the bunion on his foot. She glanced at Zoltan, trying to ascertain whether he was having her on. "He does not look like a lord of the jungle," she concluded dubiously.

    Zoltan shrugged. "He claims to be an English lord who was left to fare for himself in the jungle by the tragic deaths of his parents, who were notable explorers, though I certainly never heard of them. I think he was raised by pangolins or something." He gestured toward the man for the benefit of one of the werewolf guards, and a half dozen werewolves closed in on the lord of the jungle. "He always claims to be Mystikai, and so crashes our events. I think he likes being manhandled, personally." He swept Erszebet past the impending fracas.

    They encountered Harald soon enough. The elderly man was pink in the face with excitement. "I expect you have heard the news!" he exclaimed, shaking Zoltan's hand vigorously.

    "Full-bore Cotyngham withdrawal?" Zoltan said, grinning. "Indeed we have!"

    Harald bowed low over Erszebet's hand and gave her a wink. "Perhaps we have not been so boring after all," he said.

    "Not at all, sir!" Erszebet said, taking his arm and squeezing it warmly. "This has all been very educational."

    "Oh, dear," Harald said to Zoltan. "I am truly old, my friend, when a pretty young lady tells me that I am part of an educational experience."

    "We are all educational for my dear cousin, I fear," Zoltan said.

    "You are," Erszebet assured them cheerfully. "That does not make you less charming."

    "Flatterer," Harald said, but he winked at her again.

    "So who is here?" Zoltan asked.

    "All the Ancients," Harald said. "They all arrived early and have locked themselves away to debate. I expect we shall have a long evening of waiting."

    "There is no convenient smoke to turn white when they make a decision," Erszebet said.

    Zoltan and Harald laughed. "No," Harald said, "but I expect we shall know almost instantly."

    It was, in fact, a long evening of waiting. Erszebet left the menfolk to their own devices soon after, and went in search of her various acquaintances. After an hour of sliding through the dense crowd of Family, paras, vermin, and others, she heard her name called.

    "Erszebet!" Alicia called again, bouncing up and down and waving to her over the heads of several individuals in color-coded armor.

    She gratefully made her way toward her friend and found Catherine there as well. "Whatever are you doing in this little hallway?" she asked, accepting the glass of wine that Catherine snagged off a passing waiter's tray in the main hall.

    "The meeting room is just down there," Alicia bellowed genteelly over the roar that filled the convention center halls.

    "The meeting room!" Catherine shouted, waggling her thick black eyebrows meaningfully.

    "And Jeanne-Marie is in there, acting as a messenger-clerk for her grandmother!" Alicia said directly into Erszebet's ear, guiding her away from the majority of the press. "We're hoping to get news the next time she's sent out."

    "We are inveterate noseyparkers," Catherine said, fanning herself.

    "How exciting!" Erszebet said, drinking her wine. "I had thought my cousin got the news first and we would be here before all else, but it seems not to be."

    "Oh, I expect your cousin was the one who sent out the news to our families," Catherine said with a knowing look. "He has resources in this town."

    "Were the two of you as exhausted as I was?" Erszebet asked.

    "Oh, yeah," Alicia said. "I have a couple of my regular donors with me, though, so that was easy enough."

    "Lucky," Catherine said. "I had to drop by one of the approved hunting grounds. Did your cousin provide for you, Erszi?"

    "Yes," Erszebet said. "Though it was... um, strange."

    "This whole city is a weirdness magnet," Alicia said. "I'll be glad to get home."

    "To San Francisco?" Catherine said, grinning. "That haven of normalcy and WASPy Puritanical values?"

    "Shh!" Erszebet said, cutting off whatever Alicia was about to say. "Here comes Jeanne-Marie!"

    Jeanne-Marie was trying to combine dignity with speed, striding down the hall in a very plain grey pantsuit and practical shoes. Her face was flushed and she was perspiring lightly. She paled a bit when she saw the trio lying in wait. "I cannot say anything!" she said before they could start in on her. "It is a heated discussion, in more ways than one, and my grandmother will brook no delay. Also," she said, pausing to give them a regretful grimace, "much of what's being said is not for my ears." With a wave, she hurried away.

    The trio looked at each other, and Catherine relieved the curiosity of the younger women by saying, "Telepathy. By the time you get to their age, all this empathy we wrangle has sort of... transcended."

    "I didn't know that," Alicia said, rather awed.

    "Neither did I," Erszebet said. She and Alicia exchanged glances, both leaking discomfort that probably reflected thoughts of what their grandmothers and great-aunts -- and possibly mothers and aunts -- were saying about them when they couldn't hear.

    The trio drifted away, since they were going to get no scoop from their friend, and over the next couple of hours, they drifted apart into other conversations.

    Finally, the tolling of a massive bell shook the halls into wide-eyed silence.

    Just as people were beginning to ask where the bell was, a second sounding of the bell rattled everyone's ribcage and teeth and bones.

    The loudspeaker system came on and Zoltan's cheerful voice rang out: "Will everyone please convene in the auditoriums? The main auditorium is reserved for Family, but the subsidiary auditoriums all have screens and live broadcasts."

    Erszebet found herself jostled up against Isolde in the press to get into the main auditorium. Isolde linked arms with her. "I've gotta have someone to talk to in this mess," she told Erszebet. "The suspense is killing me."

    "This is very exciting!" Erszebet said. "Do you think your grandmother...?"

    "I try not to think anything about my grandmother," Isolde said. "She always surprises me, no matter what."

    They settled into seats in the balcony, giving way to their elders. Erszebet spotted Alicia across the auditorium, but could not locate Catherine or Jeanne-Marie.

    It took at least half an hour to settle everyone in the main auditorium. Erszebet was vibrating with the excitement that everyone was radiating.

    At last, Zoltan appeared on stage, immaculate in his perfectly tailored black tuxedo and starched white shirt. There was a scattered round of applause that he waved into silence.

    "My friends and Family," he said into the microphone he was holding, "it is my distinct honor to be able to present you with our Circle of Ancients."

    Silently, the oldest women in North America filed onto the stage, all wearing the most beautiful black gowns Erszebet had ever seen, some remarkably anachronistic yet still gorgeous. They arrayed themselves in a semicircle around Zoltan.

    After a dramatic pause, Zoltan said, "And now, the moment we have all been waiting for: the name of the new Grand Matriarch of North America." He drew an envelope from his pocket, tore open the end, and drew a folded sheet of paper from it. He looked at the paper, and Erszebet, even from her balcony seat, could see his eyes widen, though he was too polished and well-controlled to show any other response.

    There was an impatient rustle through the audience. The Circle of Ancients, however, might have been carved from stone.

    "I will read you what is on this paper," Zoltan said, his voice wavering just a little. He cleared his throat. "'It is the consensus of the Ancients that in light of the remarkable changes the past two centuries has brought to this land, the original territorial lines of the Dominion of North America may be over-ambitious, if we extrapolate for even simply the century to come. As a result, we have redrawn the territorial lines.'"

    An explosion of noise throughout the auditorium caused Zoltan to lower the paper and wait. He glanced once over his shoulder, though Erszebet could not make out who he was looking at.

    "This never happens," Erszebet muttered to Isolde. "My aunt has never said that there has been redrawing of the lines in anything like recent memory -- only wars to take existing Family territories."

    "It's still a new land," Isolde said, eyes locked on the stage. "Evolving traditions and all."

    A wave of impatient severity rippled over the room, silencing it almost immediately.

    "Oh, Grandmother," Isolde said with a grim little smile.

    Zoltan looked to the paper again. "'Be assured, beloved Family, that we have carefully negotiated these lines, agreed to the required alliance conditions, and signed the necessary contracts.'" He folded the paper and tucked it into his pocket. "It is my honor and pleasure to present to you the Grand Matriarchs of the East and the West, respectively: Dame Geneviève de León and Doña Consuela Maria Mercedes del Santiago Zalazar!"

    The two women stepped forward to either side of Zoltan. Dame Geneviève gravely bowed to the applause while Doña Consuela waved and smiled enthusiastically.

    Erszebet applauded till her hands hurt, and only when the applause began to die away did she notice that Isolde's applause was somewhat more restrained. "Are you all right?" she asked.

    Isolde gave her a pained smile. "Well, you know what 'required alliance conditions' usually are, right?"

    Erszebet frowned. "I expect those would be marriages."

    Isolde nodded and gripped the seat back in front of her. "First marriages, of course, because secondary or tertiary spouses would not have nearly enough clout. And I'm the oldest unmarried woman in my family."

    "Oh," Erszebet said. "Oh, Isolde." She laid her hand on Isolde's.

    Isolde laced her fingers with Erszebet's and squeezed. They both looked back at the stage and over the jubilant auditorium in silence.

    ---

    Author's Note:

    No one expects the Spanish Disposition!










    Comment | Read Comments (comment count unavailable) | Link
    kristine_smith
    12:00p
    My tweets
    james_nicoll
    11:42a
    Stanley Schmidt wins 2012 Robert A. Heinlein Award


    The winners to date are:
    
    
    Year Awarded        Winner(s)
    2012                Stanley Schmidt
    2011                Connie Willis
    2009                Joe Haldeman
                        John Varley
    2008                Ben Bova
                        Spider Robinson
    2007                Elizabeth Moon
                        Anne McCaffrey
    2006                Greg Bear
                        Jack Williamson
    2005                Jerry Pournelle
                        Larry Niven
    2004                Arthur C. Clarke
    2003                Michael Flynn
                        Virginia Heinlein
    


    And because someone will demand it:
    T    M    F    F/T
    15  11    4    .27  
    


    Also posted at Dreamwidth, where there are comment count unavailable comment(s); comment here or there.
    ursulav
    3:40p
    mizkit
    3:56p
    Your excuses are invalid.

    Dear Self:

    Lance Armstrong’s wonderful pep talk in Dodgeball ought to be enough to get anybody’s lazy ass out of bed and off to a workout (or whatever), but since that seems to be failing, let me emphasize heavily that your excuses are invalid.

    Love,
    Me

    (x-posted from the essential kit)

    james_nicoll
    10:09a
    Jay Kay Klein (1931-2012)
    Jay Kay Klein, who spent his final days in hospice care with terminal oesophegeal cancer, died May 13 reports John Hertz. Jay Kay was 80 years old.

    Also posted at Dreamwidth, where there are comment count unavailable comment(s); comment here or there.
    james_nicoll
    10:06a
    jeriendhal wants me to review this


    Also posted at Dreamwidth, where there are comment count unavailable comment(s); comment here or there.
    marthawells
    8:26a
    Great News - sold two new YA novels!
    I have great news to announce: I sold 2 YA novels to Strange Chemistry! http://strangechemistrybooks.com/2012/05/15/announcing-martha-wells/

    The first book is Emilie and the Hollow World, to be published in August 2013, with a sequel to follow in Spring 2014. It’s a steampunkish fantasy adventure, set in a secondary world.

    YAY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    I started writing Emilie in July 2009 when my husband was facing a lay off and The Cloud Roads had been on submission for about a year and still hadn’t sold. I finished it around December 2009, and it started out on its submission adventure around the summer of 2010, so it’s had a long road too. And I’m so so happy that it found a home with Strange Chemistry!

    And I want to thank my agent Jennifer Jackson (Arcaedia) for believing in me and my crazy books.

    In short, WOOHOO!!!!!
    silkiemom 12:28a
    Kate went on the band tour with Al as a chaperone (but not her group's chaperone) last Friday and Saturday. They had fun, but she was exhausted. She had signed up to be a roadie, who loaded and unloaded vehicles. She played her trombone with her symphonic band (mostly 8th graders and a few 7th graders who moved up), played Josh's baritone with the concert band (7th graders, plus a few symphonic band kids to fill in the gaps) and sang in the choir (trying to fill it up for performances). She did all the things! Overachieving Cat!

    When the director was asking for helpers from her symphonic band, she asked Kate, the first seat trombone player to play the baritone, and she asked the second seat trombone player to play trombone in the concert band. He was psyched, because usually Kate took the extra trombone slot and he didn't get to do it. The baritones looked confused. "Hey, what about us?" Although I suspect that Kate's stronger on baritone than they are, even though it's not her primary instrument.

    They went to Six Flags, stayed overnight in a hotel, performed at the festival (all three groups got a Gold rating, which meant that they were in the top 10% of groups), went to Pier 39 and did a Duck Boat tour. Al said that I missed out on listening to 30 band kids singing and motioning YMCA along with music as they cruised the streets of San Francisco. I only missed it because he didn't record it. Bah.

    Yay, tour is over! Now I just have to survive the rest of the year!

    Current Mood: pleased
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