Fanworks dump (not Jack Jeanne)

Mar. 28th, 2026 10:11 pm
alias_sqbr: the symbol pi on a pretty background (Default)
[personal profile] alias_sqbr
Fanworks dump (not Jack Jeanne)

I've been super creatively blocked lately but also haven't made one of these posts in like 18 months. Jack Jeanne gets its own post.

Fanart:
Gundam Witch from Mercury
Lady Eve's Last Con
Murderbot
The King's Avatar
Boruto
Naruto
Star Trek TOS
Welcome to Ghost Mansion
MDZS (The Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation)

Fanfic:
How I Attended an All-Guy's Mixer
Samurai Love Ballad: Party
Read more... )

Spring Drabbles

Mar. 28th, 2026 01:31 pm
kat_lair: (GEN -monet)
[personal profile] kat_lair
***

Life keeps on lifing and work keeps on being a sequence of problems to solve and issues to have opinions on. And I'm not getting the pay extra until next month (backdated) because bureaucracy slow. 

But spring is here. Even my friend in the northern Finland sent a video message of snow melting and swans returning. And in England the magnolias are almost past their prime (less spring, more climate change caused cos it's early af). And that means I want to write light, hopeful, delicate, pretty things. And small things, in the spirit of they are seeds from which some more substantive writing (eyes wip list) grows. 

And so, I've decided that April is for Spring Drabbles (=100 words). So, please help a gal out.

*Prompts welcome!

Theme:
Spring
Fandom:
Any: my AO3 for a list of almost 200 fandoms I've written in, but feel free also to suggest others, I just need to know the canon well enough to produce 100 words in it lol
Pairing/characters:
Any as long as I know them
Original:
Original fic/character prompts also welcome

*no 100% guarantee on drabble return but it is more likely than not given the low threshold I've set myself

***
alias_sqbr: Zuko with a fish on his head (avatar)
[personal profile] alias_sqbr
I helped out with redrawing backgrounds for a couple of scanlations of Jack Jeanne spinoff manga, which was more fun than I expected!

Both are prequels set in the year before the game takes place. They're both high on slashiness but relatively low on trans vibes despite all the cross-dressing.

Parsley This is about two secondary characters (Sugachi and Kaido) and might actually be enjoyable out of context, as the story of a new student at an all boys acting school finding his place once he starts playing female characters.

Pecker Backstory for Neji and Chui, won't make much sense out of context.
calimac: (Haydn)
[personal profile] calimac
So I'm reading all these books of Tolkien scholarship as part of the jury establishing the finalists for an award, and I'm not sure what to do when an otherwise admirable book makes a boneheaded error. Here's a detailed exploration of Tolkien's methodology in making his sub-creation which repeatedly uses Valar and Ainur as synonyms. The Valar are actually a subset of the Ainur, as is perfectly clear from Tolkien's writings on the subject, the most relevant of which this scholar examines in detail, but how closely did he read it? Then there's the book on Tolkien's religious philosophy which defines Methodists as a subset of Anglicans. I don't know what to do with things like this, I really don't.

I thought of that when I got the program leaflet for yesterday's concert of the orchestra in which B. plays viola, and found that it featured works by Ludwig von Beethoven. No such person, though people in Beethoven's time made the same mistake.

Anyway, they made it fairly crisply through the abrupt opening chords of the Coriolan Overture. The Eighth Symphony was extremely hairy, full of sloppy playing and a few big clams, but fun to listen to - more than it was to play, B. says, as m.d. George Yefchak took it very fast. Also on the program, a gentle early string suite by John Rutter and a lively arrangement of that song from K-pop Demon Hunters, much more attractive than the original. Additional pieces for solo piano, string quartet, and bassoon duo made it into something of a variety show rather than an orchestral concert.

OTW Signal, March 2026

Mar. 28th, 2026 12:02 pm
[syndicated profile] otw_news_feed

Posted by an

Every month in OTW Signal, we take a look at stories that connect to the OTW’s mission and projects, including issues related to legal matters, technology, academia, fannish history and preservation issues of fandom, fan culture, and transformative works.

In the News

An article published in February in the Dublin Inquirer highlights the fannish origins of author Diane Duane and how her experiences writing fanfiction influenced her career.

Inspired by a deep love of the (at the time) newly airing Star Trek: The Original Series, Duane began to craft stories featuring her favourite characters. Like many fans discovering a new world for the first time, she turned to storytelling as a way to explore it more deeply. The skills she developed while writing these stories would help her build a decades-long career as an author.

Duane found herself writing Trek “fan-fiction” – although, she says, she didn’t know that’s what it was called then.

Taking a sip of her cabernet sauvignon, she remembers her first effort as a crossover between Trek and musical sitcom The Monkees.

“I don’t know why I’m even admitting this in a public place, but it’s true,” she says, laughing.

Duane’s writing credits include novels and screenwriting work for well-known series from the Marvel, DC Comics and Disney franchises in addition to her original work. She remains engaged with the Star Trek fandom, enjoying the franchise’s recent series, Strange New Worlds.


Not all coverage is good coverage: When media threatens fandom takes a look at how sudden mainstream visibility can disrupt long‑standing fandom etiquette and trust built within fandom communities.

Using a recent article featured in Dexerto and the subsequent online backlash as an example, the author argues that when large media outlets introduce fanworks to broader, uninvolved audiences it can disrupt a community based on shared norms, and mutual understanding.

Fandom spaces used to be private, and fandom etiquette previously outlined a set of rules for fans. Now, media exposure turns these online communities mainstream, posing problems for authors when fan works are often created quietly and out of admiration for the source material — not a desire for attention.

The author stresses that ethical reporting on fandom requires recognizing fandom as a legitimate cultural practice that is shaped by decades of participatory storytelling, shared values, and communal identity.

OTW Tips

If you like keeping up with OTW news, our News by Email service has a new subscription option! It now has the ability to email you whenever volunteer recruitment opens. These emails are available only in English. Sign up to stay connected with the latest from the OTW! If you are already subscribed to our News by Email service and would like to change your subscription (to add this option or change it in some other way), contact Communications. They will be able to help you adjust your current subscription type.


We want your suggestions for the next OTW Signal post! If you know of an essay, video, article, podcast, or news story you think we should know about, send us a link. We are looking for content in all languages! Submitting a link doesn’t guarantee that it will be included in an OTW post, and inclusion of a link doesn’t mean that it is endorsed by the OTW.

Events of note: March

Mar. 28th, 2026 12:20 pm
rmc28: Rachel in hockey gear on the frozen fen at Upware, near Cambridge (Default)
[personal profile] rmc28

(some of these have had their own posts; some probably should; do ask me to expand in comments if you want more details!)

four busy weeks )

April has two uni Nationals weekends in Sheffield (one each with Womens Blues and Huskies), a hockey camp in Hull, three other hockey games, hopefully some more theatre trips, and a movie date next week with Tony.

The Friday Five on a Saturday

Mar. 28th, 2026 11:47 am
nanila: me (Default)
[personal profile] nanila
  1. What is a common ear worm that you get?

    My children rickroll me pretty regularly, so That Song gets stuck in my head.

  2. How long do they last?

    Not very long. My brain is usually too preoccupied with other sources of worry and stress to spend long on an earworm.

  3. What do you do to get rid of them?

    I don't know if this will sound contradictory, but on the rare occasions when an earworm sticks, I find that playing the actual song gets rid of it.

  4. What is the worst ear worm you've ever had?

    There's this Robyn song that I dislike intensely, and it popped in and out of my head for a week. I don't like the song so was very reluctant to employ my usual remedy.

  5. Do you get some guilty pleasure in passing the ear worm along?

    Not unless it's reciprocally rickrolling my children.

multifandom icons.

Mar. 28th, 2026 01:37 pm
wickedgame: (Scott & Kip | Heated Rivalry | Purple)
[personal profile] wickedgame posting in [community profile] icons
Fandoms: 9-1-1, Bridgerton, Elite, Fallout, Heated Rivalry, Kuhnya, Made in Heaven, Mako Mermaids, Mr. Robot, Roswell New Mexico, The Last Kingdom, The Tudors, Vikings, Yellowstone, Young Royals

  
the rest HERE[community profile] mundodefieras 
 

America’s Raw-Cheddar Chaos

Mar. 28th, 2026 07:00 am
[syndicated profile] theatlantic_health_feed

Posted by Nicholas Florko

Raw Farm does not sell your typical cheddar. A one-pound block of the aged, GMO-free cheese retails for $16. (Naturally, it’s for sale at Erewhon, the high-end grocery chain.) Some people are willing to pay that kind of premium because the cheese is made exclusively from unpasteurized milk. So is almost everything else that’s sold by Raw Farm, a 400-acre dairy farm in Fresno, California, that is commonly cited as the country’s biggest purveyor of raw milk and cheese. When Robert F. Kennedy Jr. ran for president in 2024, his running mate, Nicole Shanahan, visited Raw Farm and filmed herself on a tour of the milking operations. Raw Farm has carved a very successful niche out of the unfounded belief that raw milk and cheese are more nutritious than the regular stuff.

Pasteurization exists for a reason: It is a time-tested way to make sure that dairy products don’t contain bacteria that can make you sick. And now Raw Farm has found itself in the middle of an E. coli outbreak. The FDA is pointing to Raw Farm’s cheddar cheese as the reason nine people—including multiple children under the age of 5—have fallen ill. Three of the individuals have been hospitalized, and one has developed a serious kidney condition. Regulators have asked Raw Farm to recall the product. Yet the company has refused to do so. Grocery stores are still carrying the cheddar.

A maxim of food safety is that when the government says your product is making people sick, you stop selling it. Sometimes companies are in a “state of shock and disbelief,” Frank Yiannas, a former deputy FDA commissioner who was previously the vice president of food safety at Walmart, told me. “They can’t imagine that it’s truly their product.” In the history of the modern FDA, essentially every company implicated in a foodborne outbreak has agreed to a recall—until now. Democrats in Congress have even tried to place pressure on Raw Farm to pull the product off shelves, but the company is not backing down.

[Read: The real appeal of raw milk]

In this cheddar chaos, Raw Farm has painted itself as the victim. When I spoke with Aaron McAfee, the company’s president, he was quick to note that he takes safety very seriously. Raw Farm has voluntarily recalled its products at the FDA’s urging more than a dozen times. In 2024, Raw Farm immediately pulled its cheddar cheese after it was linked to E. coli. (The company subsequently wrote on its website that the recall was “UNFOUNDED.”) This time, however, the request “just felt wrong,” McAfee told me. He insists that the government’s case is based on “circumstantial evidence” and that his company isn’t at fault. None of Raw Farm’s cheddar has actually tested positive for E. coli.

Food-safety investigations are messy. Regulators need to move quickly to prevent more people from getting sick. Companies are often asked to voluntarily initiate a recall before the government can actually prove that a product is unsafe. At times, the FDA does shift its focus to other foods: In 2008, the agency warned consumers not to eat tomatoes suspected to be contaminated with Salmonella, but it later identified serrano peppers as the likely cause of the illnesses.

Still, food-safety experts I spoke with were emphatic that the FDA is probably correct about Raw Farm’s cheddar. Despite the lack of a positive test that the cheese is contaminated, the agency has two facts to rely on: The E. coli strains from all of the patients are closely related, suggesting that they came from the same product. Second, of the eight people who investigators have been able to interview, seven confirmed that they consumed Raw Farm’s dairy products. “The statistical likelihood of that just being pure chance is almost zero,” Yiannas said.

The agency does have the legal power to force Raw Farm’s cheese off the market through a legal maneuver known as a mandatory recall. Such a move has little precedent. In 2018, the FDA forced a mandatory recall of a brand’s kratom supplement, which had been contaminated with Salmonella. But the FDA would likely be in a tougher situation this time around. The kratom seller didn’t fight the mandatory recall, but Raw Farm would. McAfee told me that he had asked the FDA to pursue a mandatory recall because it would give him the opportunity to appeal. “I was not granted due process,” he said. (Companies can request an “informal hearing” to discuss the order.)

Exactly why the FDA hasn’t moved forward with a mandatory recall is unclear. (I asked a spokesperson at the Department of Health and Human Services, which oversees the FDA. The spokesperson referred me to only what the FDA has already said publicly about the case.) The agency could still be gathering the necessary evidence to justify such a step. Or perhaps Kennedy doesn’t want to declare a mandatory recall: He said shortly before his nomination as HHS secretary that the FDA’s alleged “war” on raw milk must end. McAfee claimed that Kennedy is a Raw Farm customer but that he has “not heard anything from D.C.”

[Read: America’s real ‘secretary of war’]

Even if the FDA eventually pushes Raw Farm to pull its products off the shelves—whether voluntarily or through force—that may not be the end of this saga. The reality is that we might never know with 100 percent certainty what caused those nine people to get sick. And doubt about the dangers of unpasteurized products is a reason they are so popular in the first place. The business of raw milk is based on convincing people that the milk is worth consuming despite objections from the FDA that it has no proven benefits over conventional pasteurized products and that it comes with an outsize risk of making you sick. If people found the FDA credible, a company like Raw Farm wouldn’t exist.

During my conversation with McAfee, it was easy to see why people might believe him more than they would a nameless bureaucrat. He talked about trusting his cheese so much that he feeds it to his daughter, and he cited FDA regulations like a trained lawyer. When we spoke, he was quick to emphasize all of the tests his company had done to ensure that the cheese was safe, and he referenced the company’s food-safety plan, which spans five binders.

People experiment with all kinds of products because they trust unproven anecdotes over government warnings. But the fact that a company is willing to risk more people falling sick from E. coli because of a belief that the FDA can’t be trusted should be a much bigger wake-up call for the agency. By McAfee’s telling, Raw Farm is the subject of a “witch hunt.” The FDA has the power to regulate the food supply with an iron fist, but its job has historically been much easier because companies have faith that the agency is doing what it can to stop an outbreak. That is no longer a guarantee.

dewline: (canadian media)
[personal profile] dewline
Some things for consideration and concern.

There are people in the wider US intel communities with more time than sense. Warning delivered by Andrew Coyne via The Globe and Mail:

https://archive.is/20260327185628/https://www.theglobeandmail.com/opinion/article-maga-plan-canada-dismemberment-darc-trump/

And the DARC essay itself, entitled "Our Canadian Problem":

https://archive.is/irCkw

To the DARC author in question, Canada's continuing autonomy and desire to preserve same is "anti-Americanism". A lot of you who keep in touch with me here are Americans who know far better than "John Waterman" of DARC and their fellow-travellers, thankfully.

Yes, both countries are standing on lands under Indigenous nations' stewardship, and they too rightly have informed opinions of their own on such arguments...

Split the diffrence

Mar. 27th, 2026 09:21 pm
[personal profile] cosmolinguist

In today's team meeting when we were talking about the upcoming week, my boss (gently!) made fun of me for not realizing that next Friday is a bank holiday -- the other day when I was talking to someone about a thing that had to be rearranged from another day next week, they suggested Friday so I told my manager she could do Friday and he had to tell me Friday's the bank holiday.

To add to the making fun of me, I said it was extra bad of me to not know this because it's D's and my anniversary. That made my manager properly laugh, heh.

Then he asked "How many years?" and I just made an "oh god..." kind of noise, which sounds suitably middle-aged like who's even counting any more. But really all it means is that the long run-up of being good friends makes it feel like we've been together longer than the technical answer (seven years now). I will always treasure the memory of when we'd been dating only like three months, getting a train home at night, a young woman who needed help gravitated toward the table we were sitting at and we got chatting. She asked where my accent was from and I told her and we talked about that, she looked at D and asked him if he'd ever gone with me, and he said "not yet!" (which was true, it'd be another four years before he did!). She'd clearly been assuming that we'd been a couple for ages, and I don't blame her at all because I do think we gave off that vibe. So then she asked how long we'd been together. And I was delighted by D's casual answer, "a few years," splitting the difference between the technical reality of three months or so, and the vibe of people who'd been close for more than a decade.

I tried to channel that spirit to answer my manager's question, split the difference, especially when he added "estimate!" I think I said "fifteen?", dragged out to have about fifteen e's in it, and as many question marks at the end.

More Prince of Tennis posting

Mar. 28th, 2026 08:07 pm
thawrecka: (Default)
[personal profile] thawrecka
In addition to marathon-ing the anime, I also speed ran the manga. I reread the entirety of the original Prince of Tennis manga this week, and I want you to know that nobody should do this to themselves. It is bad, and I feel bad. I will not be reading the sequel.

The beginning of the manga is about tennis. The end of the manga is about superpowers and pseudo mysticism and being willing to die on the tennis court. It is very very stupid.

(It's all on the Jump app 😂)

Anyway, thoughts on the anime inc. changes, more thoughts on the manga, etc.

  • Well it turns out the reason I remembered nothing about the Midoriyama matches is because they were pretty boring, but the jousei shonan matches that replaced that in the anime go on longer and are even more boring.

  • I forgot that thing where Ryoma's dad called kids toys to play with, what a douchebag.

  • I hate Rikkai ahahaha. Sanada beating people just makes him a douchebag.

  • The manga is funnier and more ridiculous than I remembered. The bowling episode comes straight from the manga!

  • I like Kaidoh's match with young Rokkaku guy in the manga, but I actually like Ryoma's match with him in the anime even more, it's fun and they seem to be having fun. That's probably the only adaptation change the anime makes that I actually like, though.

  • Fuji has his eyes open so much more in the manga. Also, I like temporarily blinded Fuji in the manga more but the selfless state nonsense is so dumb. What is with all the pseudo mystical nonsense?!?

  • Kaidou and Yagyuu dressing as each other to play doubles! And I just started the Nationals OVAS, and they did adapt that, yay!

  • It well and truly jumps the shark during the Shithenhoji matches. That boring doubles comedy duo comprised of homophobic stereotypes? They're not even funny! The pinnacles of mastery or whatever the fuck it was is so dull. I know it was slowly going that way, but it stopped being about anything remotely like real tennis, and started being about super powers and pseudo mystical nonsense. Inui and Tezuka doubles but it wastes the chance to be interesting about their partnership because Tezuka turns it into a singles game. Why?!? WHY?!?

  • The Rikkai matches were also so boring.

  • And like, remember early on when Fuji forfeits a match because Taka is injured and it's not actually good for adolescents to play injured? By the end Taka is like 'I am willing to die in this tennis match' and bleeding from every orifice and this is just how tennis works now in this world... The number of games where Seigaku players are bleeding all over the place by the end... I feel like by the end the mangaka forgot he wasn't supposed to be writing about superpowered samurai fighting each other to the death. It's only school sports! 🤣


I reached the bit towards the end of the anime where Ryoma's jetted off to America and Tezuka and Fuji have a match which, if I shipped them, would probably delight me, but as I don't... I'm mostly like, why is there so much exposition?! Well, because they haven't interacted much in the anime but the anime wants to sell this as a super intense relationship you just haven't been seeing so there has to be endless voice-overs about how this is so intense actually! I think it would work better if there had been more interaction between them throughout and there wouldn't have to be so much info-dumping. Also, LOL at the writers having to get Ryoma out of the country first, because realistically both Fuji and Tezuka have been way more intense at him than at each other. And why is this match three entire episodes long??

I feel like this is a writing issue - if there had been better set up long term there wouldn't need to be so much effort put into this 'no it's totally so intense you guys' thing now. I'm happy for the TezuFuji shippers, though, they must have loved this.

Also, LOL at the coach being like "tennis is like a game for him" about Fuji. Okay, but tennis is actually a game though?

Also, 12 year old Ryoma being invited to the US Open is A BRIDGE TOO FAR for me. NO! That is too stupid! And it sort of warps everything around it in the anime, which means that a bunch of scenes which were about Tezuka and people's relationships to Tezuka in the manga become about Ryoma in the anime but without the same emotional heft.

I am finally on to the Nationals OVAs, though, and I am enjoying myself. Even though Eiji basically cloning himself is so much stupider in the anime somehow. But I love Taka and Fuji's doubles match; they're nice boys who are friends and they enjoy tennis and bring interesting things to the game and that's really all I want.

I'm looking forward to seeing the Hyotei rematches animated. Those were basically the last bits of the manga I enjoyed, but also I really enjoyed them, so let's see if the anime lives up to that.

Results on the lump

Mar. 28th, 2026 08:48 am
galadhir: Lt. Gillette restrains Commodore Norrington from jumping off a cliff into the sea. Text says 'Don't jump, wait until they push you.' Both a comment on later movies and a life lesson. (Don't jump (wait until they push you))
[personal profile] galadhir

After much fretting about whether I'd get to the hospital in time, I arrived at precisely the time of my appointment. Then over the course of about two hours had a mammogram, doctor's exam and ultrasound, and they decided that it was a sebaceous cyst - and was perfectly harmless unless it got infected. As it was already getting smaller, this didn't seem likely.

However, it seems that I was not as un-worried about the whole thing as I thought I was. Even before I got home, the deep, lancing fibro pains had started up, and by the time I got home it was the full works: jabbing pains everywhere, back locked up, feeling sick, dizziness, fatigue etc.

I can only assume that this was my body dealing with suddenly not being stressed any more. As a stress reaction, I do not like it.

DH is off at the Halesworth day of dance. Son has borrowed one of our cars because his new car is in the garage, so I do not have a car available. I had planned to cycle into town, do some weight lifting, toddle around the shops, maybe have lunch in a nice little place as a treat, but while I am fatigued, dizzy and in pain I don't know that that's going to be possible.

Basically everything is terrible. I'm going to the garden to eat worms. But I don't have cancer, so that's something :)

Fire & Water - Stargate SG-1 icons

Mar. 28th, 2026 06:54 pm
magnavox_23: Jack and Daniel are huddled together in a ditch, weapons drawn, ready to fight. The caption reads "With you". (Stargate_Jack/Daniel_with_you)
[personal profile] magnavox_23 posting in [community profile] icons
28 Stargate SG-1 icons from 1x13 Fire & Water

  

Check out the rest here. <3 

Fire & Water - Stargate SG-1 icons

Mar. 28th, 2026 06:44 pm
magnavox_23: Jack and Daniel are huddled together in a ditch, weapons drawn, ready to fight. The caption reads "With you". (Stargate_Jack/Daniel_with_you)
[personal profile] magnavox_23 posting in [community profile] fandom_icons
28 Stargate SG-1 icons from 1x13 Fire & Water

  

Check out the rest here. <3 

2026 Nomination Queries #4

Mar. 28th, 2026 01:30 am
firebatvillain: Drawing of a hand in darkness, holding a ball of fire. (Default)
[personal profile] firebatvillain posting in [community profile] bitesizedfandomsex
Less than 24 hours left in nominations!

Final queries: Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them (Movies), Star Wars Legends: Dawn of the Jedi (Comics), Baccano!, 月刊少女野崎くん | Gekkan Shoujo Nozaki-kun, Anodyne 2, Changing Planes - Ursula K. Le Guin, Even the Ocean, OneShot (Video Game), LOVE DEATH + ROBOTS (Cartoon)

Stand-alone fandoms?

The following Fandoms appear to be part of a larger media franchise, or are sequels or prequels. Please let us know if these can be experienced and understood by someone with no background in the relevant franchise/superfandom, and you would be happy receiving a gift from someone who only experienced this bite-sized segment. If no response, these nominations will be rejected.
Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them (Movies)
Star Wars Legends: Dawn of the Jedi (Comics)

Scoped to anime-only?

These anime fandoms have LN or Manga versions that exceed length limits for this exchange. Can you scope these tags to be anime-only? If no response, we will modify and accept these fandoms as anime-only.
Baccano!
月刊少女野崎くん | Gekkan Shoujo Nozaki-kun

Needs Rel tags

These fandoms have been nominated without rel tags - please add rel tags. If no response, these nominations will be rejected.
Anodyne 2
Changing Planes - Ursula K. Le Guin
Even the Ocean
OneShot (Video Game)

Needs anthology disambig

LOVE DEATH + ROBOTS (Cartoon)

One more anthology disambig?
Thank you to nominators for handling one of these - one more to go. Please nominate this anthology fandom using a more specific fandom tag, such as LOVE DEATH + ROBOTS S1E1. If no response, the remaining nomination will be accepted and renamed at the end of noms period.

(no subject)

Mar. 28th, 2026 07:15 pm
[syndicated profile] farsidecomics_feed

“Okay, Billy. … Tide’s coming in now. … Dig me out, Billy. … Billy, I don’t want to get angry. …”

Whatcha Reading? March 2026, Part Two

Mar. 28th, 2026 08:00 am
[syndicated profile] smartbitches_feed

Posted by Amanda

Keukenhof flower garden, also known as the Garden of Europe. One of the world's largest flower gardens. Lisse, the Netherlands.Welcome back! March is coming to a close. Here’s what we’re reading right now:

Lara: I’ve just started The Luckiest Lady in London by Sherry Thomas from 2013! It’s my first historical romance of hers so I’m excited for it. So far I’m enjoying it but I’m only one chapter in!

Claudia: I just finished A Most Worthy Husband by Faye Delacour ( A | BN | K | AB ) and really liked it, except the ending felt very rushed. Great working-class hero.

Sarah: I am reading Here for All the Reasons: Why we Watch the Bachelor, ( A | BN | K | AB ) an anthology edited by Ilana Masad, and Stevie K Seibert Desjarlais

Binding the Baron
A | BN
It’s a terrific collection of critical essays that examine the culture and fandom of the Bachelor franchise and it could not arrive at a more appropriate time.

One essay by Jeanna Kadlec examines the way the franchise is Evangelical coded and “peddles conservative fantasy.” And she wrote something I cannot stop thinking about: “The contestants are in an open relationship with the lead while professing traditional values.”

Amanda: I’m reading Binding the Baron by Charlie Lane. It’s historical fantasy and I recent featured it in the After Dark Sunday Sales because it was FREE! I’m enjoying it so far but it does have a sexist and classist magical structure.

Whatcha reading? Let us know in the comments!

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Adventures in Mamboland

"Jazz Fish, a saxophone playing wanderer, finds himself in Mamboland at a critical phase in his life." --Howie Green, on his book Jazz Fish Zen

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