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senmut: Mark Hamill, Carrie Fisher, and Harrison Ford group shot, being sweet (Star Wars: OT3)
[personal profile] senmut
1. List three shipping tropes you love

Friends to lovers, unlikely allies leads to more, and (trite as it is) love at first sight

2. List three shipping tropes you don't love

Hate sex, enemies to lovers with no stops between, harem fic (most of the time)

3. One emotional aspect of a ship that always gets you

when two or more people see an aspect of themselves in the other (good or bad) and that solidifies the connection
the rest )

Book review: Sharp Objects

Oct. 10th, 2025 02:12 pm
rocky41_7: (Default)
[personal profile] rocky41_7 posting in [community profile] booknook
Title: Sharp Objects
Author: Gillian Flynn
Genre: Fiction, murder mystery, crime, thriller

I picked this out of the free book box and October seemed like a good time to buckle down with a gruesome murder mystery, so I started into Sharp Objects by Gillian Flynn (if you recognize her name, it's probably because she also wrote Gone Girl). This book is about a newspaper reporter, Camille, who returns to her tiny, rural Midwest hometown of Wind Gap to investigate a missing girl.

What to say about this one? I'm struggling. It wasn't great, it wasn't terrible. I was engaged enough to finish it, but I also dropped it back in the free book box right after finishing it. I don't feel like I wasted my time, but I also don't feel inspired to read more of Flynn's work.

The book definitely goes hard on portraying women with capital I Issues, as well as the effects of generational trauma, be it from bad parenting, mental health problems, or misogyny. The toxicity of life in a small town is also a strong element, and the claustrophobia the protagonist Camille feels being back there, seeing all these teenage girls who seem doomed to follow the same dour, unhappy paths their predecessors did. The misery that these unhappy girls and women inflict on each other, perhaps in absence of a healthier outlet, also features prominently and heartbreakingly.

Camille herself I didn't care for. She's aggravatingly passive for most of the book and her own emotional distance (as well as perhaps the writing) keep the reader at arms' length from everything that's happening. Hated her love interest too; exactly the kind of arrogant, presumptuous type I can't stand. I kept hoping she'd tell him to fuck off, but regrettably she found him charming.

Flynn's writing style was fine, although I didn't always love her choppy sentences.

The crimes in the book are quite dark, but held up against the smaller instances of violence, physical and emotional, being perpetrated in this small town day after day, the reader is left to wonder how much difference there really is between them. 

Flynn shows well how the toxicity of Wind Gap impacted Camille, but I felt that not enough attention was paid to Amma, and why she alone among the family turned to such glee over violence and cruelty as an outlet for her trauma. This is one colossally fucked-up 13-year-old and I think the narrative would have benefited from more time in her head. 

On the whole: idk. It was fine? Flynn obviously had things to say about life as a girl in a small town, and I think she said a lot of that effectively, but as for the enjoyability of the book? Eh.
[syndicated profile] gallusrostromegalus_feed

recurring-polynya:

Why does the Gotei even have that provision where you can make captain by killing another captain in front of 200 witnesses? Who do you think the most-challenged captain is? It’s gotta be Hitsugaya, right? Do you have to provide the witnesses, or like, if you’re in Squad 10, are there two hours every Tuesday where you have to stand in the courtyard and watch your captain beat up fifteen dudes from Squad 11 who are convinced they can take him? Or maybe the culture of “being a captain sucks so bad that no one actually wants to do it” dissuades takers. Hitsugaya shows up for his challenges with a stack of paperwork taller than he is. “Take it,” he says. “Also, you have to chase down the Bount. Also, you have to transport the King’s Seal and if you lose it, they’ll execute you. Also, there’s a Valley of Screams situation you need to take care of. Also, you have to chase down some guy who was sealed in a tree in the World of the–where are you going? Where are you goooooooiiiinnnnnng???”

Pretty sure the “You can be captain if you can kill a captain in front of 200 witnesses” rule exists because its not actually clear if Yamamoto (or anyone) has the ability to *effectively* fire a shitty captain.

Think about it: Let’s say Captain X sucks. Maybe he used to be better at the job and that’s how he got fired, but now he’s so bad at his job that he’s an active political/organizational/physical hazard to the Gotei-13. He’s gotta go, but what ARE Yamamoto’s options, really?

Long Analysis under the cut:

  1. Fire him normally: You think someone in the position of captain is going to acknowledge a pink slip? Hell nah, if the Gotei-13 wants him gone, then someone has to come and kill him.
  2. Send some one to kill him: So many ways for this to go wrong. If the assassin is not successful, that means there’s going to be an angry captain on a rampage in the civillian-dense city. If it IS Sucessful, there’s two more problems: “btw, the boss can totally murder you if he feels like it” is not going to help the recruitment policy. also:
  3. Great! He’s dead! Who’s going to be captain now? There aren’t many spiritually potent people, and barely any captain-class individuals. There might literally not be a suitable replacement- which creates an opportunity for political forces to attempt to jam thier own operatives into the job, which results in more violence etc. Hell, MAYURI didn’t get fired, and he was actively using other shingami as bombs. I don’t think he managed to keep that secret- I think that the main thing keeping him alive is that Yamamoto couldn’t find a suitable replacement

The rule of “You can be captain if you can do it in front of 200 Witnesses” fixes this rather nicely.

  1. Nobody is challenging a captain unless they really, REALLY suck. Nobody likes to admit it, but being a captain is a shitheel job for shitheels- like you said, Hitsugaya could show up with a mountain of paperwork and destroy any romantic notions of political power a challenger might have. Furthermore, it’s VERY clear that the captains have the right to defend themselves- with lethal force. None of the captains are a fight to sneeze at, so you’d only risk death if it was worth it.
  2. The duel provides its own replacement. Yamamoto doesn’t have to go find some new shitheel or fend off a political onslaght- it’s VERY clear who is captain now! Paperwork sorted nicely :)
  3. The replacement WILL have the backing of the division they’re in charge of, and probably a few friends in other divisions, which will improve the function of the division and the Gotei-13 overall. It’s a blink-and-you’ll-miss-it note, but the 200 witnesses have to be shinigami. It’s a clever little rule- each divison has a maximum of 200 shinigami (including the captain), and all the divisions are spread out- the only way to GET the 200 witnesses is to challenge the captain in front of the rest of the division you want to take over. The Most Likely version of this is someone within the division getting rid of thier shit boss, with the backing of thier peers. Or, in the case of Zaraki, the division witnesses the challenger’s power and develops a healthy respect for the new captain.

    …But if the captain is involved in the duel, he’s not a witness, is he? You’re going to need at least one additional witness- probably at least a dozen maybe as many as fifty, to account for people who are out sick or if the division hasn’t gotten around to hiring replacements so they have less than 200 shinigami at the moment. And for that, you’re going to need the approval of other shinigami- even challenging a captain on the grounds of a different division means you probably should have the approval of that captain too.
    I imagine most challengers turn up for the duel with the backing of the whole division, a good portion of the other divisions, and at least one other captain. I headcanon that Unohana is present at every attempt on an 11th captain as the additional witness- as loyalty to her old division, to make sure the new captain is… acceptable, and because She Likes To Watch, if you get my meaning.

    We also know about the rules for becoming captain from TOUSEN, who exposits them because HE was a witness to Zaraki taking over the 11th- I have to wonder WHY. Did Aizen send him? Was there another challenger to Kenpachi Kiganjo that Tousen was backing who was defeated, and then Zaraki showed up in a fit of bad timing? Is there a specific day you’re allowed to challenge th e captain of the 11th, and the other captains take a rotating duty to witness the challenges/keep the event from getting out of hand? Regardless, nobody thought it was odd that Tousen was there, so I think challengers normally have the backing of another captain.
  4. “If your boss sucks, you’re totally allowed to murder him for his job.” is an amazing recruitment tool. Let’s be real, you’d like your job a lot more if you were allowed to become CEO by Mortal Kombat.

As for who is the Most-Challenged captain in the modern era: It’s Zaraki, hands down. He’s actively inviting people to come try to kick his ass (he loves it when someone can actually stand up to him), and in canon, rarely kills his opponents, especially if they’re weaker than him. He prefers to keep them around and build them up- Ikkaku is a notable example, and he was hoping Nnoitra would do the same before Nnoitra forced the issue. With an active invitation, a lower risk of death and- if you fight valiantly enough- the possibility of getting a job anyway, Zaraki is a VERY appealing captain to challenge.

The LEAST Challenged captain is Unohana- any stranger thinks that medics are wimps and the job sucks, so it’s not an attractive position to go after. People within the Gotei-13 knows that being a medic is tough as hell and so is everyone who serves in the 4th- and that Unohana is the WORST captain to challenge. Other captains will just kill you. Challenge Unohana and you won’t GET to die.

[syndicated profile] gallusrostromegalus_feed

alivehouse:

alivehouse:

i hate how widely mocked the free the nipple thing is like even among leftists. like yeah i do think its bizarre to frame a bare chest as inherently sexual for half of the population and perfectly fine and neutral for the other half. i think this should be seen as like 101 frankly

how are people still making this post about bras when “bare chest” is literally right there. i am talking about the right for everyone regardless of what their body looks like to be able to go fully topless without experiencing heavy social stigma and/or violence. jesus christ man

Tags by @goddamnshinyrock that I am FULLY endorsing:

#full agree OP#and to go even farther: we as a society need to be WAY more chill about nonsexual semi AND FULL nudity for ANY gender/body configuration#it’s a body! we all have ‘em!#I’m not saying everyone needs to be a full-time nudist (impractical)- just that it would be a positive to have more social situations#where it’s considered unremarkable to be casually nude or semi-nude.#I firmly believe that normalizing the human body outside of a sexual context is a social good.#and 'toplessness is for everyone’ is a great place to start towards that goal.#people not being able to separate 'seeing another person’s body’ from 'sexual situation’ is a huge problem.#(yes I was raised by hippies yes you can tell but they were RIGHT about this.)

Starting at about age 5, I took swim lessons at my local YMCA. Once a week every week in summer, and a bunch the rest of the year, I’d go to the YMCA, change in the women’s locker room, go do swim lessons, change back, and walk home. Those lessons saved my goddamn life- not from drowning, a situation I’ve managed to avoid by studious boat saftey and living in the middle of the continent- but being exposed to an enormous variety of naked adult bodies as a kid.

I was a kid and teen in the late 90’s and early 00’s. I cannot stress how common and even encouraged it was for people to hate their bodies- Especially if you were AFAB. Plastic surgeons advertised on TV, some 80% of the girls in my class starting in third grade had bulimia or anorexia, and dying young and leaving a beautiful corpse was romanticized in popular media.

Going to the YMCA and seeing the naked bodies of all these people made me IMMUNE. Wrinkles? Normal. Fat? Normal. Not being white? SUPER Normal. Being disabled? Yeah, that happens- to everyone, eventually. Scars? Stretch marks? Hair in weird places? Honestly, seeing someone without one or all of those was the odd thing.

While my classmates were starving themselves and worrying they’d be alone in life if they were anything short of a perfect plastic barbie, I had a vision of myself growing up and getting fat and saggy and needing a cane and enjoying every second of it. I was borderline suicidal for other reasons (living with AuDHD with only one of those diagnosed in a world hostile to both), but not having the extra stress of hating my own body because I had a realistic idea of what a body looks like probably stopped me from making an attempt at killing myself.

[ SECRET POST #6853 ]

Oct. 10th, 2025 04:31 pm
case: (Default)
[personal profile] case posting in [community profile] fandomsecrets

⌈ Secret Post #6853 ⌋

Warning: Some secrets are NOT worksafe and may contain SPOILERS.


01.


More! )


Notes:

Secrets Left to Post: 00 pages, 00 secrets from Secret Submission Post #978.
Secrets Not Posted: [ 0 - broken links ], [ 0 - not!secrets ], [ 0 - not!fandom ], [ 0 - too big ], [ 0 - repeat ].
Current Secret Submissions Post: here.
Suggestions, comments, and concerns should go here.

[Review]: Know My Name

Oct. 10th, 2025 04:15 pm
silversea: Asian woman reading (Reading)
[personal profile] silversea posting in [community profile] booknook


Title: Know My Name
Author: Chanel Miller
Genre: Memoir
Content warning: Sexual assault

“I am a victim, I have no qualms with this word, only with the idea that it is all that I am.”

A memoir by Chanel Miller, whom you may know as Emily Doe from her famous victim statement in 2016 after her assailant, Brock Turner, was sentenced to 6 months in jail. In 2019, Miller revealed her identity along with a new book about her sexual assault, the lasting trauma from it, her fight for justice, and her ongoing recovery.

This is an excellent memoir, starting from the day Miller was assaulted and the morning she woke up without any memories of the assault to the world's responses to her victim statement that went viral and the changes in the judiciary system. Like in the victim statement, Miller did not shy away from sharing vulnerable moments, such as her depression isolating her from family and friends, but also gradually learning how to heal through friends, therapy, and new hobbies.

Review )
umadoshi: (autumn - jack o'lanterns 01)
[personal profile] umadoshi
It's a Friday off and I got some manga work done, so here's a bit of book-logging:

Her Halloween Treat (Tiffany Reisz) is a straightforward, enjoyable romance that has almost nothing at all to do with Hallowe'en. It takes place when the female lead is home for her brother's wedding, and his partner has always wanted a Hallowe'en wedding, so they're having a themed costume Hallowe'en wedding. It's also the female lead's birthday, but they checked with her and she's fine with it, so there's no drama there. Nothing of what I've just written is at all spoilery for the main plot or emotional arcs or anything.

The Drowning House (Cherie Priest) is almost not a ghost story at all--the supernatural elements are something else--but ghosts flicker around its edges. I enjoyed it, although there's a piece of the story that I feel the epilogue was intended to shine a light on and...it didn't do that. (Alternatively, that wasn't the author's intention, but if so, I feel like it should have at least nodded to that specific thing? Or something?)

Specifically [ROT13], gur rcvybthr vf n tyvzcfr onpx ng gur '50f jura gur gjvaf ner cynaavat gb xvyy jung'f-uvf-snpr, naq vg qbrfa'g fnl nalguvat nobhg jul Zef. Phycrccre (arneyl) frag ure fvfgre gb ure qrngu, be vs fur npghnyyl zrnag gb qb gung, naq qbrfa'g tvir nal uvag gung gung'f tbvat gb unccra, vagragvbanyyl be bgurejvfr. Vg'f whfg na vagrenpgvba orgjrra n cnve bs fvfgref jub qba'g ernyyl trg nybat nf gurl cercner gb qb gur guvat gurl'ir qrpvqrq arrqf qbvat.

It's one thing that I'm not really a horror reader but read the occasional horror novel anyway, and quite another that I'm deeply squeamish about eyes (and just about everything to do with eyes) and yet after someone recced it, I bought The Eyes Are the Best Part (Monika Kim) a while ago when it popped up on sale...and then proceeded to actually read it this week. This book is very clear from the cover alone that it involves cannibalistic eyeball consumption in loving detail. It is not the book's fault that I am 1000% not the intended audience and yet read the whole thing in one sitting anyway when really I should've just read the rec (whenever that was) and not bought the ebook, sale or no sale, never mind read it. (But I don't begrudge the actual sale, however much an on-sale ebook purchase actually helps an author.)

Now I'm taking a bit of a break from trying to read ~seasonally~ and am a few chapters into KJ Charles' All of Us Murderers.

I've also finally finished Daniel Sherrell's Warmth: Coming of Age at the End of Our World, which is...fine? I forget if I've actually mentioned that this book is a letter to a future child Sherrell may or may not ever have (a question he's wrestling with the ethics of), talking about the climate catastrophe and his work as a climate activist and how he tries to fortify himself and find meaning in the face of it all and what he hopes to learn/pass on to any child he may one day have.
[syndicated profile] gallusrostromegalus_feed

newtsoftheworldunite:

eleilinnrallin:

This is a reminder for those who handmake Christmas presents that now is not too early to start. It may in fact be a good time to start if you have a lot to make/your craft takes a long time. You should maybe start it now, whether that’s brainstorming or actually doing the crafts!

Translating this into tumblr’s preferred public service announcement format for this kind of alert:

"time to move the turkey to the fridge" meme updated to show a pile of crocheted granny squares in place of the frozen turkey and captioned "I don't know who needs to hear this but it's time to move the craft projects to the work table"ALT
cyberghostface: (Joker)
[personal profile] cyberghostface posting in [community profile] scans_daily

Saw this in the news…Megan Pierce has received the Guinness World Record for the world’s largest Joker collection; over 2000 items. Crazy to think there’s this much Joker stuff out there.

Video under the cut… )
 

unTeamly

Oct. 10th, 2025 04:09 pm
[personal profile] cosmolinguist

Literally two days' worth of my last three work days has been taken up with Teams meetings.

I counted it up, when my last one for the day finally finished a little after 4, it was literally one hour short of two full days.

Several of these meetings I had to chair, many others I had to meaningfully contribute to; there was at most one where I got to be room meat.

I am so tired.

I'm allegedly working for another hour but am hoping that I can hide from work for that long.

A batch of miscellanea

Oct. 10th, 2025 04:36 pm
oursin: Brush the Wandering Hedgehog by the fire (Default)
[personal profile] oursin

Are we entirely surprised: A woman’s place was not in the home: New book challenges assumptions about women’s work in early modern history:

Far from being the unpaid homemakers and housewives of traditional historical record, women contributed to all the most important areas of the economy, such as agriculture, commerce, and care.
More than half of the work done by women in the period between the 16th and 18th centuries took place outside of the home, and around half of all housework and three-quarters of care work was conducted professionally for other households.

***

I posted this in a comment over at [community profile] agonyaunt apropos of the woman who thinks her husband is too laid back (she sounds too tightly wound): ‘Rawdogging’ marathons: has gen Z discovered the secret to reclaiming our focus?:

Specifically, it means sitting still and staring into space for an extended period. Most importantly, without your phone.... It sounds as if the TikTok generation has somehow invented meditation. That’s one criticism levelled at rawdogging, but young people are battling monumental levels of distraction these days: while older generations had to learn to tolerate boredom, they must learn to cultivate it.

Further on modern meditation practices, this suggests that they've become horribly detached from their place in a wider context of spiritual and societal practice: 'When meditation becomes primarily about managing your own internal state'.

Back in the day late 70s/beginning of the 80s I encountered a person or two for whom meditation was just that, a dive into an escape from all the pressing troubles of their existing life (rather than dealing with those).

***

Rather different from the early modern images of witchcraft and witches that the popular mind tries to impose on The Middle Ages: Medieval witch stories, and a literary grandmother for the Wife of Bath.

***

Country diary: The unlikely success of wildlife in lead country: 'Bonsall, Derbyshire: It was, in fact, the poison in the ground that prevented this patch from becoming cattle country – then nature took care of itself'

***

This is fascinating: Remembering Quintard Taylor: Historian of the Black West and beyond

***

Poisoning Crimes and the ‘Mushroom Murderer’: Patterns and Precedents (Cassie Watson is one of the authors)

The fact that poisoning may not initially be suspected is yet another unique feature of this method of killing, and so proof of a criminal offence has often rested upon circumstantial evidence. The nineteenth-century development of forensic toxicology brought more cases to light and led to more convictions, but reliable toxicological and pathological evidence concerning the cause of illness and death is not the first but the second stage in a successful prosecution. There must be some formal suspicion raised first, to lead to a medico-legal investigation. Criminals might try to evade prosecution through claims of accidental poisoning, or may not be detected at all if symptoms are misattributed to other conditions.

(no subject)

Oct. 10th, 2025 11:10 am
conuly: (Default)
[personal profile] conuly posting in [community profile] agonyaunt
DEAR ABBY: I have been married to my husband for six years, together for eight. My husband has a kind, tender heart and knows how to bring me down to earth when I'm stressed. I love him very much, but I am becoming less attracted to him because of his lack of ambition. I'm a "chase your dreams," "work super hard and get what you want" kind of gal, so it's hard for me to sympathize with his lazy, careless lack of ambition.

If my husband has free time, he's either napping, playing video games or watching a movie. Never does he choose to do anything productive like learn something new, work out or start a side hustle. (And God knows we could use all the income we can get.) How can I share how I feel about this with him without causing a blowout fight or hurting his feelings? -- DISAPPOINTED IN IDAHO


Read more... )

open thread – October 10, 2025

Oct. 10th, 2025 03:00 pm
[syndicated profile] aam_feed

Posted by Ask a Manager

It’s the Friday open thread!

The comment section on this post is open for discussion with other readers on any work-related questions that you want to talk about (that includes school). If you want an answer from me, emailing me is still your best bet*, but this is a chance to take your questions to other readers.

* If you submitted a question to me recently, please do not repost it here, as it may be in my queue to answer.

The post open thread – October 10, 2025 appeared first on Ask a Manager.

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