snickfic: Susan Sto-Helit with text "There is no justice" (susan sto-helit)
snickfic ([personal profile] snickfic) wrote2026-01-06 12:21 pm

Movies: We Bury the Dead, Red Rooms

Clearing out the last of my movies watched last year.

We Bury the Dead (2026). After an American experimental weapons accident kills every human and animal on Madascar, an American woman (Daisy Ridley) comes to help identify bodies and search for her husband who was on a work retreat there. Also sometimes the dead don't stay dead.

As someone who is pretty over zombie movies, I liked this one quite a bit. First of all, it's Australian, and boy can you feel it. This is not your Hollywood zombie blockbuster or even your Danny Boyle zombie blockbuster. For starters, we spend relatively little time running from or fighting zombies. In fact, these are the most ambiguously threatening zombies I can remember seeing in a long long time, and I liked how much that complicated the story. It's also beautifully shot with great atmosphere and a score that really adds to the mood of the whole thing. And I really appreciated how our understanding of the central couple's married relationship gets more complicated as the film goes on.

That said, spoilers )

This movie feels like it invites comparison to 28 Years Later, if only by accident, given the timing. I know 28 Years Later has a lot of fans, and I didn't hate it, but overall I liked this a lot better for the indie feel, the focus on a female character, and honestly because I liked the cinematography better.

Anyway, it's out in theaters now. If it sounds fun, I recommend it!

--

Red Rooms (2023). A French-Canadian film about two female true crime fans following the trial of a man accused of raping and murdering underage teen girls. This movie is beautifully made, and with really visible care and precision. The director knew what he wanted to make, and he went for it. The result is moody and fucked up without ever feeling exploitative (to me); this is very much about the groupies, not about the man on trial, and we never seen the horrifying footage at the center of the trial.

It's also shippy as hell. Our main gal Kelly-Anne is a wealthy model and computer hacker who professes herself to be "not bad with numbers," who's obsessed with the trial for reasons that are to some extent left to the viewer, while Clementine is a less well-heeled diehard apologist for the man at the center of the trial and is convinced he's innocent. Somehow out of these two, it's Clementine who feels like the more well-adjusted person; it's questionable whether Kelly-Anne has any friends at all, and yet maybe Clementine becomes one. As a friend of mine described it, "Clementine’s more open neediness draws out a reciprocal vulnerability from Kelly-Anne."

High rec from me. If any of this sounds appealing to you, definitely check it out.
rachelmanija: (Books: old)
rachelmanija ([personal profile] rachelmanija) wrote2026-01-06 10:57 am

A Psalm for the Wild-Built, by Becky Chambers



Once upon a time, the moon Panga was industrial and capitalist and miserable. Then robots suddenly and inexplicably gained self-awareness. They chose to stop working, leave human habitation, and go into the wilderness. The humans not only didn't try to stop them, but this event somehow precipitated a huge political change. Half of Panga was left to the wilderness, and humans developed a kinder, ecologically friendly, sustainable way of life. But the robots were never seen again.

That's all backstory. When the book opens, Sibling Dex, a nonbinary monk, is dissatisfied with their life for reasons unclear to themself. They leave the monastery to become a traveling tea monk, which is a sort of counselor: you tell the monk your troubles, and the monk listens and fixes you a cup of tea. Dex's first day on the job is hilariously disastrous, but they get better and better, until they're very good at it... but still inexplicably dissatisfied. So they venture out into the wilderness, where they meet a robot, Mosscap - the first human-robot meeting in hundreds of years.

I had previously failed to get very far into The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet, so I was surprised by how much I enjoyed this novella. It's cozy in a good way, with plenty of atmosphere, a world that isn't quite perfect but is definitely one I'd like to live in, and some interesting philosophical exploration. My favorite part was actually Dex's life as a tea monk before they meet Mosscap - it's very relatable if you've ever been a counselor or therapist, from the horrible first day to the pleasure of familiar clients later on. I would absolutely go to a tea monk.

I would have liked Mosscap to be a bit more flawed - it's very lovable and has a lot of interesting things to say, but is pretty much always right. Mosscap is surprised and delighted by humanity, but I'm not sure Dex ever shakes up its worldview in a way it finds true but uncomfortable, which Mosscap repeatedly does to Dex. Maybe in the second novella, A Prayer for the Crown-Shy.

And while I'm on things which are implausibly neat/perfect, this is a puzzling backstory:

1) Robots gain self-awareness and leave.

2) ????

3) PROFIT! Society goes from capitalist hellscape to environmentalist paradise.

Maybe we'll learn more about the ???? later.

But overall, I did quite like the novella. The parts where Dex is a tea monk, with the interactions with their clients and their life in their caravan, are very successfully cozy - an instant comfort read. And I liked the robot society and the religious orders, as well as a lot of the Mosscap/Dex relationship. I'll definitely read the sequel.
lebateleur: A picture of the herb sweet woodruff (Default)
Trismegistus ([personal profile] lebateleur) wrote2026-01-06 12:02 pm
Entry tags:

Monday Media - January 5 (on January 6) Edition

Games: Travel and vacation schedules meant no board game gathering this week.

Miscellaneous: A couple of longform articles:
  • A Ghost Estate and an Empty Grave
  • We Still Live in Fast Food Nation

    Music: First house session of the new year; with only four of us there, a lot of opportunities to call sets, which consisted of a good mix of familiar and new tunes. One of the guys is, unfortunately, a noodler, playing into any and every silence, which makes it very hard to start sets. I will just have to be assertive about playing over him if he's there next week.

    Roleplaying: Newest D&D Homebrew campaign had our "Beach Episode" holiday one shot this past weekend. As ever, it was an absolute blast. I sound like a broken record, but our DM is phenomenal: she gets such a good mix of role play, exploration, and combat into every session, and you'd never know she is--by her own admission--winging things half the time.

    I played a kobold bard and loved it. As with my goblin rogue, I chose this critter because I wasn't convinced it would be fun to play, and as with my goblin rogue, she has become one of my favorite characters. Turns out, I really enjoy playing characters that don't quite get larger humanoids. And bards are just so versatile. It's been...five years since I last played this class, and man it was fun throwing all those spells and buffs into the mix and watching what happens. We'll be back to our main characters in the next session, but since this one shot took place in the same universe I hope we'll have a chance to revisit these ones as well.

    Television: We finished Max Headroom S1. The final episode, Blanks, is my favorite of the season, and I'm always surprised by how long the show takes to introduce them compared to the movie. Having blanked myself from as much 21st century Big Tech as I can, I feel a special affinity with those guys. (And again, damn, this show was prescient: social media-elected leaders, the attention economy, doomscrolling, ransomware--it envisioned them all.) We'll probably get started on S2 tonight.

    I also watched the first three episodes of Heated Rivalry. This is a very horny show. (Which, no complaints there. XD) But I had been anticipating something more along the lines of Our Flag Means Death, where the romantic relationships are one element of a larger general narrative, and not the primary focus of the show. (I was surprised and honestly a bit bummed that the hockey is just window dressing. I'd been expecting an ice hockey story with a romance subplot versus a romance story on an ice hockey stage set.) That said, the production values are good and the actors have excellent chemistry that they--blessedly--maintain even in the show's most explicit scenes...which unfortunately has not always been the case with other such offerings (I'm looking at you, Our Flag Means Death).

    I don't feel particularly participatory about this show (yet?), but I am very much enjoying it and will probably wrap up the final three episodes this week.

    Video Games: Finished my first game of the year, Botanicula, which is a perennial favorite. It's just such a visually beautiful game, with a great soundtrack and really clever puzzles. As ever, I have to space out my playthroughs so I don't just immediately remember how to solve everything the next time I play it. I'm trying to decide if I want to dive straight into Samorost 2 or opt for something a little more serious (e.g., Darklands or Pentiment).

    これで以上です。
  • muccamukk: Woman with 1960s hair and make up looks at camera over the rim of her large coffee mug. (Misc: Mugging)
    Muccamukk ([personal profile] muccamukk) wrote2026-01-06 10:04 am

    just putting this out there

    (Which is def not me procrastinating on homework on the second day of a new term.)

    If you use a rich text editor to post to DW so that it does all the coding for you, and you don't have to worry about it, it has the potential to make your posts very difficult to read without clicking through to see the journal in your style. A lot of the rich text editors override the page layouts and styles selected by the user (ie, in this case, me, who is not very tech savvy, so apologies if the terminology is wrong, please correct me in comments!).

    To show you what it looks like... please click through, rather than expanding the cut tag )

    It could also be an issue if you force your font to a particular typeface or size, which overrides people who set their journal style with a typeface/size that they need for accessibility reasons (e.g. low vision or dyslexia).

    I'm not trying to call anyone out! (The styles are made up examples.) I don't want to discourage using rich text editors, which make posting so easy for people. I just think that everyone is maybe not aware that this is how their posts look on people's reading page.

    I've never used a rich text editor, so I have no idea how to tell it just to post text without modifying the colour/size/typeface, but maybe someone in comments can let me know?

    There's probably also a way to make my browser strip out people's customisations, though times I've tried that it's ended up with some pretty odd results, so I gave up on it.
    yourlibrarian: DeanGetsaGrip-roseyarts (SPN-DeanGetsaGrip-roseyarts)
    yourlibrarian ([personal profile] yourlibrarian) wrote in [community profile] tv_talk2026-01-06 10:55 am

    TV Tuesday: Hiding in Plain Sight?

    Laptop-TV combo with DVDs on top and smartphone on the desk



    End of year is a time for 2025 lists. The Guardian came out with Top 50 TV Shows & Hidden Gems of 2025. Can a gem be that hidden if it’s on a list of top shows? What makes something a “hidden gem” to you?
    tinny: Something Else holding up its colorful drawing - "be different" (Default)
    tinny ([personal profile] tinny) wrote in [community profile] tv_talk2026-01-06 10:15 am

    Heated Rivalry comm

    There's a new comm for Heated Rivalry:


    [community profile] gamechangerhr
    A community dedicated to the Game Changer Book series and the Heated Rivalry TV series


    and they have a friending meme, too: https://gamechangerhr.dreamwidth.org/855.html
    vriddy: Dabi wiping off a bloody tear (bloody tears)
    Vriddy ([personal profile] vriddy) wrote2026-01-06 07:55 am

    Kaijuu No. 8 fic update: Warm as life (Kafka/Reno/Narumi, Reno/Iharu, Kafka/Hoshina) - WIP 4/7

    Warm as life | Kaijuu No. 8 | Kafka/Reno/Narumi, Reno/Iharu, Kafka/Hoshina | 7.3k words (WIP, 4/7) | rated M

    Summary: The new threat posed by No. 9 weighs heavily on everyone. Under these circumstances, emotions run high and what starts as a way of relieving stress can easily bloom into unexpected feelings. Some people find that easier to admit than others.

    Read it on Dreamwidth or AO3.
    chestnut_pod: A close-up photograph of my auburn hair in a French braid (Default)
    chestnut_pod ([personal profile] chestnut_pod) wrote2026-01-05 04:54 pm
    muccamukk: Bucky tightening Captain America's stays. (Marvel: For Beauty's Sake)
    Muccamukk ([personal profile] muccamukk) wrote2026-01-05 04:57 pm

    Three Random Thoughts Make a Post

    • I was just thinking, "IDK who would even buy the English language side of LJ at this point!" (Especially with sanctions on Russia. Who could buy it?) Then I remembered hungry hungry data miners looking for things to feed into LLMs/Gen AI, and sighed. I guess they've probably scraped all the public posts anyway, but might be interested in paying for the locked content?

    • I'm vicariously delighted by everyone being so bouncy and excited about the hockey blorbos. I aggressively don't like men's ice hockey (except for that one fic), so will pass, but it's fun to see the enthusiasm all over my reading list. I wish you all a very merry time of it. ❤️

    • I seem to have found the other half of that one ship in D.K. Broster's "Mr. Rowl". He shows up 48% mark. (Though I can see the point about Mr. Howard Hunter, especially given that farewell). I find the comment, a girl to whom his attention had subsequently been drawn—indifferent though he was to the sex to be VERY INTERESTING for at least two reasons.
    goodbyebird: Interview With The Vampire: Armand, "Y'all, he could not prevent it." Totally serious sad face. (IWTV so sad)
    goodbyebird ([personal profile] goodbyebird) wrote2026-01-06 12:53 am
    Entry tags:

    Do more text, dumdum.

    [personal profile] senmut's post at [community profile] cultivativity about considering why you make what you make and what you enjoy about it, made me think of icons and text. The more icons I made, the less text they had, because I'm straight up terrible at text. Best outcome to hope for is it doesn't actively make the icon look like crap. But text is fun though! I'd really really like to make a return to being a bit more of a smartass in my iconning. And get some more quotes in there! Maybe that'll be my iconning resolution for the year?

    As a reminder to myself: icons slathered with text )
    superborb: (Default)
    superborb ([personal profile] superborb) wrote2026-01-05 04:06 pm
    Entry tags:

    NYE 2025

    It was soooo helpful to be able to look back at notes from last time, so here are my NYE party notes for 2025! Now that I have recovered a bit from the sleep deprivation of being in a noisy house with a toddler...

    Read more... )

    Overall, I thought the food was pretty successful! Even though I was very sleep deprived, having the schedule did keep everything on task. I guess the real concerns for next time are trying to time hot food better (not really sure if that's possible with this style of food), and maybe I should consider more complicated dishes? I think it would've been easy to do a red braised pork, since that reheats well. I always want to have lots of little snacks before because that was My Job for ages, but it might be too much and detract from the meal...
    rachelmanija: (Books: old)
    rachelmanija ([personal profile] rachelmanija) wrote2026-01-05 12:38 pm

    The Book of Guilt, by Catherine Chidgey



    This is a difficult book to review as almost all of the plot is technically spoilery, but you can also figure out a lot of it from about page three. I'll synopsize the first two chapters here. We follow two storylines, both set in an alternate England where Hitler was assassinated in 1943 and England made peace with Germany.

    In one storyline, a young girl named Nancy lives an isolated life with her parents. In the other, which gets much more page time, three identical young boys are raised by three "mothers," in a home in extremely weird circumstances. They rarely see the outside world, they're often sick and take medicine, their dreams are meticulously recorded by the "mothers," and all their schooling comes from a set of weird encyclopedias that supposedly contain all the knowledge in the world, which are also the only books they have access to. There used to be 40 boys, but when they recover from their mysterious illness, they get to go to Margate, a wonderful vacationland, forever.

    I'm sure you can figure out the general outline of what's going on with the boys, at least, just from this. What's up with the girl doesn't become clear for a while.


    Spoilers through about the 40% mark )



    Spoilers for the entire book )



    This book was critically acclaimed - it was a Kirkus best book of 2025 - but I thought it had major flaws, which unfortunately I can only describe by spoiling the entire book. It's not at all an original idea, and I do think we're supposed to be ahead of the characters, but maybe not that much ahead. It also contained a trope which I hate very much and its thesis contradicted itself, but how, again, is under the end cut. It's a very serious book about very serious real life stuff, but that part really didn't work for me because of spoilers.


    Lots of people loved it though. It would probably make an interesting paired reading with a certain very acclaimed spoilery book (Read more... )), which I have not read as I have been spoiled for the entire story and it doesn't really sound like something I'd enjoy no matter how great it is. But I suspect that it's the better version of this book.



    Content Notes (spoilery): Read more... )
    muccamukk: The edge of an intricate pink snowflake. (Snowflake)
    Muccamukk ([personal profile] muccamukk) wrote2026-01-05 12:22 pm

    Snowflake Speed Run (Challenges 1-3)

    PSA: LiveJournal may be about to geolock to Russia. If you have shit there that you like, and want to see again without visiting Russia, now's a good time to save it. (ETA: Not sure if the terminology is entirely correct, but the sentiment is.) Here's a long bluesky thread about it by [staff profile] denise, which includes ways to export LJ to DW and/or to your drive. IDK how people are saving LJ scrapbook.

    I'd say pass it along, but I think it's pretty widely broadcast by now. Pass it along to spaces where one can find LJ people are who aren't on DW?

    Anyway, on with the show.

    Two log cabins with snow on the roofs in a wintery forest. Text: Snowflake Challenge January 1 - 31


    Challenge #1: The Icebreaker Challenge: Introduce yourself. Tell us why you're doing the challenge, and what you hope to gain from it.

    Hi! I'm Muccamukk or Mucca. You may know me from Age of Sail, Stargate, Babylon 5, Marvel Comics, Band of Brothers or Top Gun fandoms, plus an extremely random selection of others across twenty plus years in online fandom spaces. I used to write fic and comment quite a bit, though I've been less active the last few years.

    My pinned post and profile seem to be in good order, and I do still post link lists, book reviews and music from time to time.

    I helped mod Snowflake for a few years there, and am taking this year off (mostly), so I'm looking forward to slightly lower-stakes participation, and maybe digging up some old memories/meeting new friends.

    If you want to play an ice breaker game, check out my 2025 Media Tracker and ask me for a hot take on any albums, movies or shows on there (I think I've reviewed all the books up to December, which I'll cover in the next few weeks, but other media not as much).


    Challenge #2: Pets of Fandom: Loosely defined! Post about your pets, pets from your canon, anything you want!

    Somehow, the only pet I can now think of is Darwin from seaQuest: DSV, who isn't strictly speaking a pet. The talking robot dolphin was a lot of fun, though.

    Instead: here's a list of fic I've written that include significant pets (canonical or otherwise), because writing pets is really fun, given they're often (very cute) chaos goblins designed to throw plans awry. (Presented in order written):

    Unstinting
    Fandom: Marvel 616 (Captain America)
    Summary: Sam Wilson, downtime.
    Pet Content: Sam Wilson's canonical cat, Figaro.
    Read on DW | Read on AO3

    Found Sleeping
    Fandom: Band of Brothers
    Summary: After Replacements, Bill and Johnny look for Bull.
    Pet Content: Original mama cat and kitten characters.
    Read on DW | Read on AO3

    To Say Nothing of the Tiger
    Fandom: Hornblower (TV)
    Summary: Admiral Pellew wants a favour. Horatio wants to do anything to help. William just wants to spend time with Horatio.
    Pet Content: Admiral Pellew's [historically] canonical tiger.
    Read on DW | Read on AO3

    A Dog's Eye View
    Fandom: Band of Brothers
    Summary: How Trigger sees the events of "Crossroads."
    Pet Content: The dog that Tab probably stole found in Holland.
    Read on DW | Read on AO3

    Also, here's a picture of my cat, who is a fandom pet insofar as she's named after Kaylee from Firefly.Read more... )


    Challenge #3: Write a love letter to fandom. It might be to fandom in general, to a particular fandom, favourite character, anything at all.

    I have a vague memory of a History of Psychology class some twenty years ago, where the professor was talking about the uncertainty of knowing if the world you perceived with your sense and senses was even remotely similar to the world anyone else perceived. He described philosophy (which is more or less what psychology was for most of history) as being like creating an image of the world, and holding it cupped in your hands, then opening your hands to show it to other people, and inquiring if that matched their image of the world, a process which bagged a number of questions for future philosophers to attempt to unpack. (Some of all of these details may be incorrectly recalled, with apologies to Professor C.)

    This is how I feel about art in general, and fandom specifically: that need to articulate how one understands the world, and see if anyone else feels the same. And, yes, that does often involve a lot of pornography, but the point of transformative works as a form of philosophical communication remains.

    I see a story out in the wide world, and it sparks something in me: resonates with a life experience, and emotion, something I want and don't have, an aspirational or cautionary way of moving through life, a new idea, something that just really pisses me off. The story speaks to me about how I perceive the world, and I wonder if that's true for anyone else, too.

    So I take that story, and say to a friend and peer, "Hey, did you see that? Did it inspire/intrigue/inflame you too?" And someone else comes back and says, "Yes, but also..." or "Yes, and this too..." or "No, because..."

    (or they don't, ask me about being in a fandom of one...)

    And that communication can take the form of edits, or discord conversations, or meta posts, or pic spams, or setting the story to music, or rewriting it into a new story, or making a picture, or... or... or.... (In some ways, those reaction fic, that just retell a scene in a show or movie from the PoV of the author's blorbo, are the most immediate form of this.)

    As a form of philosophy, it's imperfect, and often shallow, and inherently biased, but holding my fannish heart between two cupped hands and showing it to others has gone a long way to formulating how I interact with the world, and often made me feel less alone.

    And for that, I'm grateful.
    lebateleur: A picture of the herb sweet woodruff (Default)
    Trismegistus ([personal profile] lebateleur) wrote2026-01-05 12:22 pm

    Fandom Snowflake Challenge #3 - Love Letter to Fandom

    Write a love letter to fandom. It might be to fandom in general, to a particular fandom, favourite character, anything at all.

    A love letter to one of my favorite indie games. )

    TL;DR - I love this game and I think you should play it.

    two log cabins with snow on the roofs in a wintery forest the text snowflake challenge january 1 - 31 in white cursive text

    これで以上です。
    lebateleur: A picture of the herb sweet woodruff (Default)
    Trismegistus ([personal profile] lebateleur) wrote2026-01-05 09:07 am
    Entry tags:

    Fandom Year In Review: 2025

    Your main fandom last year?
    Irish traditional music, which decidedly does not have a presence on Dreamwidth and which by far occupied the majority of my time (to the exclusion even of reading). I made a ton of progress on flute during the months when humidity levels made playing possible and started regularly playing in two sessions (one pub, one house). As of year's end I had 59 tunes I can play in my sleep, 119 I can play at standard (but not session warp) speed, and 75 that I am working on getting solidly under my fingers.

    Your favorite movie watched last year?
    I watched only ten movies in 2025, one of which (Hundreds of Beavers) I watched twice, and only five of which (Bolt, Evangelion 1.0 You Are (Not) Alone, Evangelion 2.0 You Can (Not) Advance, Hundreds of Beavers, and Thunderbolts*) I hadn't seen before. Of those, Hundreds of Beavers and Thunderbolts* were the clear favorites. Thunderbolts* was the only movie I saw in a theater.

    Your favorite book read last year?
    In fiction, Disha Bose's I Will Blossom Anyway, and in nonfiction, Ronald Hutton's Pagan Britain. My full 2025 Reading Roundup is here.

    Your favorite TV show of the year?
    Dragon Prince: Book 7 - Dark was my favorite fictional show, and The American Revolution my favorite nonfiction show.

    Your favorite video game of the year?
    Turns out 2025 was not a banner video game year for me, due to a combination of microsoft nuking my computer (and with it my progress on half a dozen games), work craziness that left me too tired for gaming, and the GC having primacy on the consoles. That said, I replayed Thank Goodness Your Here!, a game that just gets better with each run through.

    Your favorite song, album, or artist to listen to this year?
    Song: RTÉ's live recording of Cran playing Na Ceannabháin Bhána
    Album: Hand of Kalliach's Corryvreckan. This is a metal album.
    Artist: Cran, who are pretty much what I want Irish traditional music to sound like.

    Favorite podcast of the year?
    While not exactly a podcast, I watched the heck out of Ronald Hutton's Gresham College lectures on Youtube.

    Your best new fandom discovery of the year?
    Learning that what I thought was my copy of Cran's debut CD, The Crooked Stair, was actually an unauthorized compilation album released by an unscrupulous label that replaced multiple tracks from Crooked Stair with tunes by a completely different group. I then managed to finally get a copy of the actual Crooked Stair, finally listened to the whole, real, album, and discovered that the missing tunes from the compilation include banger versions of several of my favorites--among them The Hills of Coore, Fiollaigean, and Lexy McAskill. It's been on heavy rotation ever since.

    Your biggest fandom disappointment?
    I'm so bummed Azhanharad didn't have more page time in Katherine Addison's Tomb of Dragons. I just love this character, and he was criminally underused.

    Your TV book boyfriend of the year?
    Sturmhond from Leigh Bardugo's Shadow and Bone series is a delight.

    Your TV girlfriend of the year?
    Harley Cameron's Mercedes Monae ventriloquist puppet promos on AEW were fire.

    Your biggest squee moment of the year?
    Having an email exchange with one of the ITM players I absolutely idiolize, who improbably seemed as excited to be talking to me as I was to him.

    Fandom resolutions for 2026?
    To write and post some fic. I lost several hundred thousand words of in-progress fanfic when microsoft nuked my computer last year, which pretty much destroyed my motivation to write over the following 12 months.

    Your biggest fannish anticipations for the new year?
    I...don't really have any this year. Let's see what the next 12 months bring!

    My complete(ish) 2025 Multimedia List is here.

    これで以上です。
    selenak: (VanGogh - Lefaym)
    selenak ([personal profile] selenak) wrote2026-01-05 04:42 pm
    Entry tags:

    January Meme: Favourite Hiking Spots around Munich

    Well, it depends of course both on your physical fitness, time at had and whether you define "around Munich" as "within the city itself and its immediate surrounding era" , or whether an hour away from the city in the direction of the Alps also counts. I shall therefore start with the easy ones and go f or a grand climax of a mountain tour. ;)

    Within the city of Munich, nice to walk even if your knee or foot should still trouble you:

    1) Nymphenburger Park. The park surrounding Nymphenburg Palace. In addition to being a nice park, it has four tiny little mini cottage-palaces within, all Rokoko, and they're open in later spring, summer and early autumn. (The central palace itself isn't half bad, either, but that wasn't asked.) There's both a reasonably good coffee shop and an actual restaurant for the hungry and exhausted. One can reach the park via streetcar.


    2) Der Englische Garten / The English Garden . Largest park in Munich, and I do mean large. Offers something both for easy strollers and people wanting to exhaust themselves. One of the modern attractions, the surfing wave of one of the rivers, is currently gone and the cause of much acrimony between the city administration and the surfers. Another attraction reliably shocking or enticing a certain brand of tourist is the fact that in summer time, a lot of Bavarians come here topless to sun themselves on the lawn. Architecture-wise, there is a nice "Chinese Tower" around one of the most popular beer gardens exists, and a Japanese Tea House, but mostly, like a park should be, it's trees, trees, trees, and large lawns. One can take both short and loooooong walks, depending on the time. Because of the size of the park, there are several entrance points close to subway stations available.

    3) Olympiapark : what it says on the label. Originally created for the 1972 Olympic Games. Still very very popular to walk or jog through. The arena within it is very popular for concerts (I saw both Paul McCartney and Bruce Springsteen there.) Offers, among other things, a nice view over the city and to the Alps from one point. One of the starting points for hiking can be reached via subway.


    Still within Munich, but incorporating the suburbs:

    4) Isarauen/ Isar shore. From where I live in Munich, cutting through the Englischer Garten to the Isar shore means you can then turn left or right and in either case can do some really nice and lengthy hiking. If you go left, you eventually end up in Freimann near the arena where our football (soccer to Americans) club Bayern München plays, i.e. a place of much ire and admiration, depending how you feel about that club; due to the arena, there is of course a subway connection, so what I do is walk along the Isar to the arena and then go home by tube. Conversely, if you go right, you first walk in the general direction of the city centre and can see our Bavarian parliament building on the other side of the river, then in the middle of the river the Deutsches Museum (one of Germany's foremost science museums), then if you walk on you're leaving the centre behind and head towards the belt area. Most of the way is an appealing mixture of (mostly) trees and architecture. Though if Itake a really long hike, I take the Isar shore road from the opposite direction, i.e. I take the subway to Thalkirchen, where the Munich zoo is, and walk back from there in the direction of the centre. Hardcore hikers and bikers can go even further by S-Bahn and walk or drive back from Wolfratshausen.

    Both Isar walks are something for when you have half a day or longer to spare.


    Far Over The Misty Mountains:

    5) One of my absolute favouriite hiking spots from all time is reached via train from Munich. One takes the train to Schliersee (that's about an hour), then hikes from Schliersee to the Gindelalm, from the Gindelalm to the Neureuth Alm, and from there it's possible to go down to either Tegernsee (town) or Gmund (also located at the Tegernsee lake). They both have a train station and you can take the train back to Munich, which again takes an hour. Now you don't need to be a hardcore Alpine sportswoman or -man to do this - it's not that difficult a way, upwards and downwards - but it does take at least two hours, usually more, to reach the first Alm. So this is only an option if you have the entire day to spare.

    The other days
    vriddy: White cat reading a book (reading cat)
    Vriddy ([personal profile] vriddy) wrote2026-01-05 10:31 am
    Entry tags:

    First DNF of the year, and reading meme

    My first book of the year is a DNF. There's a part of me that wants to see this as a bad omen for whatever arcane reason, but overall if I must put more weight into this than it deserves, then I'm more inclined to see this as a good omen about letting go of the things that don't serve me. I'm terrible at DNFing books. My compromise is usually "read 100 pages and if you still can't get into it by then, DNF is fair game." Unfortunately this book was only 131 pages long and every time I thought "I must be closer now!" I very much wasn't.

    When I can tell a book isn't working for me, I go into analysis mode )

    I've seen a reading meme float on my reading page:

    * Grab the nearest book.
    * Turn to page 126
    * The 6th full sentence is your life in 2026.

    I don't want to do it for the other book I started, which is actually closest to me, because I'm not that far in yet and it would spoil me! But I suppose my DNFed book is also there, so... Although I don't really like to talk that much about the things I don't like, I feel like the author is probably doing okay in circles far away from mine. The library waitlist for that book is unbelievable.

    So, Orbital by Samantha Harvey! Even if we weren't meant to be this time, what do you predict for my 2026?

    You are looking now straight into the heart of the Milky Way, whose pull is so strong and compelling that it feels some nights that the orbit will detach from the earth and venture there, into that deep, dense mass of stars.

    Hm.... Don't let the abyss seduce you and swallow you up, no matter how pretty it might look at times? Sure! I can keep that up.

    Actually I forgot I had Charlie Jane Anders' "Never Say You Can't Survive" hidden under a few notebooks near me, too. I've been doing a slow reread, a couple of paragraphs here and there, highlighting and tagging bits I want to be able to return to easily later. Maybe that'll give me the how?

    "Or you might yourself remembering a broken shoelace from a pair of shoes you owned a dozen years ago."

    which is within a section titled, "Big emotions come from tiny things"

    Joy in the mundane? Sure, I'm extremely up for that, too :D

    I'm a bit antsy about not having finished any book yet, but this is fine. I wrote a fair bit, and also read not-books. Over the last couple of years, I stopped tracking my reading publicly, only jotting down notes in my BuJo instead, maybe an occasional rec here and there, and that's worked wonders to help me read more. I'm still considering creating a goodreads account so I can review at least indie and smaller authors, but I haven't fully committed to a decision yet. Especially when the current system is working out so well for me.