sabotabby: (doom doom doom)
sabotabby ([personal profile] sabotabby) wrote2025-07-18 09:00 am
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podcast friday

 It can be no other than Wizards & Spaceships' "Against Hopepunk ft. Nick Mamatas." I complain a lot here about a certain type of book that is very popular right now in SFFH spaces, and has been basically for the past decade (albeit the earlier attempts were more interesting than the publishers' attempts to chase that wave) and yeah. It is not the biggest problem in the world, that the dominant trends in the genres I like do not align to my particular tastes. But. It's still something I enjoy talking about and reading about and listening to podcasts about, and there is no one more qualified than Nick Mamatas, the most cynical bastard in genre fiction (complimentary), to talk about it.

This is less a condemnation of individual authors and their work (in fact, it is not that at all!) but an exploration of why the economic models of the publishing and music industry work the way they do. It's a wide-ranging and I daresay fascinating discussion and Nick is extremely funny. Also there's a lot about 80s post-punk in there if that's your thing (it's mine).
sabotabby: (books!)
sabotabby ([personal profile] sabotabby) wrote2025-07-16 08:41 am
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Reading Wednesday

Hi did you miss these?

Just finished: The Tainted Cup by Robert Jackson Bennett. I ended up enjoying the shit out of this. Murder mystery/political palace intrigue set in a world where eldritch abominations threaten to break through the seawall and destroy entire cities every wet season, and magic is done through bioengineering. The brilliant Sherlock Holmes analogue is a mysterious and terrifying elderly woman and the Watson analogue is a dyslexic disaster bisexual kid who's been altered so that he remembers everything he experiences. It's very fun.

Currently reading: Bread and Stone by Allan Weiss. Look at me I'm reading CanLit! It's about the Winnipeg General Strike, though, so it's not off-brand for me. In the first section, William, a failure of a farm boy, goes off to the Great War against his family's wishes. It's immaculately researched; you get every detail of small town Alberta and the culture shock of moving to the big city of...1914 Calgary. William's father is a coal miner who describes in passionate terms the solidarity that comes from joining a union, but doesn't want his son to go down into the mines himself, so Williams seeks it first in the church, and then amongst his unit. I've gotten to the bit where he's finally being shipped out for France. Quite good so far.
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sabotabby ([personal profile] sabotabby) wrote2025-07-14 07:50 am

Whale photos (and one puffin)

You are not prepared.

DSC_1742

many )
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sabotabby ([personal profile] sabotabby) wrote2025-07-13 06:49 am
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Photos (mostly whales)

If you're playing along, try to ID the whales. Also some forest pictures and some dead fish that wash up en masse this time of year.

whales! )
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sabotabby ([personal profile] sabotabby) wrote2025-07-11 07:17 am
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Massive photodump


I finally processed these. They're all from St. John's and Ferryland.

cut for photos )