dianec42: Gilda Radner character Roseann Rosannadanna saying "It's always SOMETHING" (Gilda)
I have been watching Junior Taskmaster which is a hoot. We watched the 2-parter "The Colour of Magic" via Britbox which we missed when it came out, plus the Hogfather miniseries. All highly recommended.

I'm reading The Martian Chronicles by Ray Bradbury and ... wow, it's a product of its time (late 1940s). it's very good, brilliant at times, but I frequently got tired of the Earth Men and had to put it down for a bit. Just before that I read Machine Vendetta by Alastair Reynolds (third book in a trilogy), highly recommend.

I finally joined the local library so I've been reading some fiction I wouldn't normally pick up. Someone had recommended the Louis L'Amour westerns; I picked up a random on (The High Graders) and I didn't really care for it. I finished it, but I don't think I'll go back for more. I read Parable of the Sower by Octavia Butler which was very good, if a bit too on the nose for our current dystopia.
dianec42: Cross stitch face (DecoLady)
"Sand to Splendor" exhibit at Southern Vermont Arts Center. Click each one to embiggen. Sorry I did not get details, just took a few quick snapshots of the shinies.





Also, my haul from the Northshire Bookstore. I'll have you know I showed GREAT RESTRAINT.

dianec42: Mug of tea (Tea)
Reading -

This Is How You Lose the Time War
Short, enjoyable. Beautiful and haunting. Highly recommend.

The Expanse
I'm up to book 5, Nemesis Games, and yes book 4 got better. (Nothing like a major plot device to bring people together!) Book 5 is good. This seems to line up more with what I remember of the plot from the TV series. So I'm dreading some of that. But it will be interesting to see how the plots diverge.

Stitching -

Cruising along on Fabulous Women in History. I've started row 3 (of 3!). I still do not love working on linen, although it looks so good when I stop. I'll do part of the border and 1 more woman, then I need to do some design work to incorporate the edits I'm making. (Sorry, Rosie the Riveter. You're not a real person...)

Then I'm going to take a break and do something relatively simple. Maybe the map of Norway I picked up on our 2018 cruise. (Heck, maybe the map of Alaska from the 2015 cruise, sigh.)
dianec42: Gilda Radner character Roseann Rosannadanna saying "It's always SOMETHING" (Gilda)
Reading:

I finished reading Leviathan Wakes (The Expanse book 1). It was pretty good. I enjoyed the show, but I will say that knowing the characters survive kind of put a damper on some of the scarier predicaments.

Unfortunately I noticed something very similar about this book as I noticed (aged 11) about the first Star Wars movie: Where are all the female characters at?! We have Princess Leia, I mean Naomi, who has to do ALL the heavy lifting: smartest person in the room, our hero's conscience, general badass, oh and she has to double as the love interest because there is LITERALLY NO ONE ELSE FEMALE IN THE ENTIRE SECTOR. Then we have Aunt Beru, I mean Julie, who spends 90% of the movie/book dead. Great. Also Holden is kind of a putz. Also also, it's kind of nifty reading what the characters are experiencing in spaceflight; but the second or third time male body parts get involved, I can't really relate.

Luckily book 2 (Caliban's War) brings in Avasarala and Bobbie, so that was nice. I blasted through book 2 in about a week, which is fast for me these days. I did not get the "Caliban" reference in the title, I had to look it up.

In between those, I read We Are Satellites by Sarah Pinsker. Gosh that was good. Not quite as light and fluffy and escapist, but really satisfying. Near-future SF, tech based main plot device, a good amount of interpersonal and family slice-of-life stuff without bogging the plot down. Plus the obligatory blue-haired rebellious teenager. What's not to love?

I am currently attempting to read The Circle by Dave Eggers. Amazon recommended one of the sequels to me so I thought I should start with book 1. Unfortunately, it's a near-future techno-dystopia... written in 2013. Both the tech and the dystopia have been somewhat overtaken by events. The characters and plot (is there a plot?) are all over the place, and a lot of the dramatic tension seems to hinge on some weird interpersonal stuff that I don't quite understand. I hate to start a book and not finish it - that always feels like failure. I think this may only be the third novel I've given up on. But life is too short to read bad books.


Watching:

We finished up season 4 of Stranger Things (Netflix) and it was good. It spent a bit more time on sappy feel-good moments with the friends than I might have, but not so much that it bogged down. And you can never have too much Kate Bush.

We watched Marvel's Moon Knight (Disney Plus). That was odd, but enjoyable.

We also watched the new Doctor Strange movie (Disney Plus). It was fun but didn't make a lot of sense.
dianec42: Cartoon in the style of South Park, bored-looking woman in living room (SouthPark1)
I read "The Consuming Fire" by John Scalzi, book 2 in a series. Light fluffy escapism, lots of gratuitous swearing and sex scenes. Interesting plot development and some good twists I didn't see coming. Highly recommended. I will order book 3 as soon as I get through some more of the books I've already got.

Next I read "Sea of Tranquility" by Emily St John Mandel (author of Station Eleven). It was AMAZING. Beautiful, haunting, atmospheric. Just enough stuff left unexplained. I love this book. You should go read it right now. Go on, I'll wait.

I ordered a box set of the first 3 Expanse books. I was somewhat alarmed to see among the reviews on the box "The science fictional equivalent of A Song of Ice and Fire" - I thought "hoo boy, I sure hope not!" considering how far I got into THAT box set. Luckily this is much more readable. I am already about halfway through Leviathan Wakes. I've seen the TV series and so far the plots line up pretty well. There's a lot more detail and some stuff I either missed or forgot when watching. It's really good. Apparently there are 10 books and some standalone novellas. That should keep me busy for a while.

Watching: We binged all of the currently available episodes of Stranger Things season 4, and it did get better.

Started watching Obi-Wan Kenobi and it is doing absolutely nothing for me.

Still cranking through old seasons of QI in reverse order, we're back to Stephen Fry days.

Watched a few episodes of "Travel Man" - some minor celeb I've never heard of goes on 2-day trips with other random celebs some of whom I've heard of, all filmed before the pandemic of course - and it's good fun.

Edited to add: Stuart has agreed that the Obi-Wan series is stupid and is a waste of our time. HUZZAH.
dianec42: Head shot of a human female warrior in World of Warcraft video game (WoW generic)
Prefacing the reading and watching with "I don't know if it's the piece or if it's me, but..."

I finished the third Lady Astronaut book. The ending was reasonably satisfying. The first 10% I was very grumpy that she switched narrators from the first 2 books, to a character who I don't even like that much. The middle 80% I was basically waiting for something, ANYTHING, good to happen to these people. A lot of the events were just a little too on-the-nose with real life to be at all enjoyable. Oh well. I persevered! I'm glad I've read it, but I'm now in the mood for something lighter.

We've started watching season 4 of Stranger Things. 3 episodes in, it's not really doing much for me. There's nothing really novel going on, and the bits where The Kids Are In High School Now And Are Trying To Fit In are fucking excruciating. If Stuart wants to keep watching it I'll play along, but I'm finding it rather grim and joyless.

On the joyful and not-grim side of the aisle...

Stitching! Having finished Peeking Cats, my main criteria for what to do next were "smaller" and "absolutely no backstitch". Also, fuck fractionals on Aida.

I've started the third piece in a set, "Art Nouveau Seasons" by Sheila Hudson from the Christmas 2003 issue of Cross Stitcher magazine (UK). I've already done Winter and Summer and am now doing Spring. It's daffodils, and although I don't really care for yellow at all, I thought I'd get it out of the way so I can reward myself with Autumn which is grapes and thus has Many Purples in it. It's very soothing to be working on something blocky and less fiddly. I am not pleased with all of her color choices, as some of them are so close together as to be nearly indistinguishable, but the results are so pretty it's hard to argue. As a bonus, this gave me something simple to record some footage of. (It's surprisingly hard to video yourself cross stitching. Who knew?)

I'm sad that I didn't save more of Sheila Hudson's patterns. She passed away some years ago and I don't think her works have ever been collected and published. I have this set and a really nifty repeating-motif Oriental dragon in magenta and gold shades that I might do someday.

Sorry I'm so bad about posting photos here. I'll see what I can do.
dianec42: Joshua tree against a blue sky (Default)
Hat-tip to [personal profile] a_cubed for reminding me to post more of these. :)

I will fill in more details as time permits. This has been sitting for a few days so I want to get something posted. :)

Fiction - Standalone:
Termination Shock (Stephenson)
This was great. Lots of action, good intersecting plot lines, thoroughly human and believable characters. Highly detailed and plausible near-future world. There were a couple of plot setups that seemed a bit forced, but maybe only to someone who has read far too much Stephenson. Highly recommended, although you should probably read it now rather than wait. It feels like it will be horribly dated in a few years' time.

Fiction - Series:
The Lady Astronaut series (Mary Robinette Kowal)
I'm in the middle of book 3 (The Relentless Moon). I want to love these books but they're kind of a slog. I can't even complain that she's laying it on thick with the patriarchy and the white supremacy as this is literally the 1950s and 1960s with some alternative-history events. The first 2 books ended on uplifting notes, and I'm still reading, so I guess I have high hopes for this one as well.

The Collapsing Empire (John Scalzi)
Light and fluffy. Loads of fun. Yes, I have the second book lined up to read next.

Nonfiction:
Believe Me (Eddie Izzard)
Memoir. Uplifting. Highly recommended.


TV - Series:
Killing Eve (BBC America)
This stopped making sense a couple of seasons ago, but I love the characters so much that I don't care. Some stupid plot twists but some interesting ones. I'm not thrilled with the ending but oh well.

Life on Mars (Britbox via Amazon Prime)
Just finished this up. Season 2 kind of sagged in the middle. Stick with it, the ending is worth it. Recommended.

Resident Alien (some network)
This is really stupid but a lot of fun.

QI (Britbox via Amazon Prime)
We are working our way backwards through all the seasons. We're back on Series O which seems to be Sandi Toskvig's first season. Loads of fun.

Video games:
Playing a bunch of World of Warcraft again.
Also want to shout out to the dozen or so puzzle games I'm playing on the web:
Wordle
Byrdle (choral-music themed Wordle knockoff)
Nerdle (like Wordle but make it math)
Yordle (League of Legends themed)

and of course my old standbys
Kenken - Like sudoku but with actual math http://www.kenkenpuzzle.com/game
Free cross sums http://www.freexsums.com/
Set and Quiddler https://www.setgame.com/set/puzzle https://www.setgame.com/quiddler/puzzle

Fun fact - I won a Set t-shirt from their website in (I believe) 1994.

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