auroracloud: vintage drawing of a woman and a lamppost against a text background (Default)
Oh, hello, hello. I am still around, and healthy and well and all, I'm just kind of bad at getting around to doing things, so this journal has suffered as a result. I've thought about posting on many days, but turns out just thinking about it doesn't make it happen!

But here, let's have that my recent culture round-up (maybe I need to call it that instead of "culture consumed". The latter sounds so... consumer-like).

Books

I'm still slower at reading than usual, brain just doesn't have the usual energy to focus on reading so I to read in much smaller chunks, and so books are getting read slower. But at least I can read and enjoy it, so that's good. I finished the reread of my beloved This Is How You Lose the Time War. It's one of those books that I only love more, the more I read it, and keep discovering new layers as I read it again.

I'm currently reading The Ten Thousand Doors of January by Alix E. Harrow, and I've liked it quite a bit. Beautifully written, and I really like the concept of doors between different universes, and the role stories, storytelling and writing play in this. Though I will say this is not maybe the best time ever to be reading a book about a woman of colour written by a white woman (January is mixed-race). But at least I really like the fact that her problems are not primarily because of the colour of her skin, though oppression and racism play into her experience of the world and why some things go the way they do - it's all very much present in the story. As a white person from an overwhelming-majority-white country, I'm not qualified to say how well the book does by race. So far it hasn't raised major red flags for me, but obviously my perspective is limited.

I've also been reading some nonfiction - still continue to mainly get my dose of my own language in writing by reading nonfiction books written in or translated into Finnish. I've recently started a book on astrobiology, and I've been inspired to pick up again the book I was reading earlier in the year about how weather and climate have affected human history, which is really interesting.

I keep trying to write something about Black Lives Matter, but it's hard, because it's so easy to get into topics that my mental health doesn't like. But suffice it to say: while I've been intentionally diversifying my reading for some years, and have only had excellent results - so many great books and authors I've discovered, such a richer world of cultures, thoughts, histories etc. - I've realized now I still don't read enough by Black authors. It's probably partly because they're not promoted as much, and partly because they're often about really painful and traumatic topics, because that's what publishers will publish from Black writers. Plus goodness knows what internalized racism I've picked up from living in a white society with plenty of racism even if it often isn't acknowledged. So I've been going through the book rec lists that have been coming out / linked to lately, looking for books that look like they'd be my mind of thing to read, and placing them on hold in the library or, so far in one case, making a successful request for the library to buy the book so I can then borrow it. Hopefully I'll find some gems as I get to reading these.

Justina Ireland's Dread Nation, which has been on my TBR for ages anyway, has just arrived to me at the library, so I hope to pick it up soon! It also fits my plan of reading as much queer stuff as I manage during June, since no offline Pride stuff is happening. (My city postponed the Pride Week until September, hoping that big events can happen then. Otherwise next week would have been Pride Week. It's really hot here now, though - at least for my poor heat tolerance - so honestly I don't even mind that it's only in September.. Hopefully it works out then.)

I haven't got much money to buy books myself, but at some point I'm going to pull together enough scraps of money to buy P. Djèlí Clark's novellas, because they're amazing. If you want a book rec from me for amazing books written by Black authors, I highly recommend his alternate history fantasy/steampunk stories, they're some of the best stuff I've read. And somewhere I saw the Tor.com folks say he's going to have a full-length novel coming out next year set in the alternate history Cairo that's depicted in A Dead Djinn in Cairo and The Haunting of Tram Car 015. I can't wait!



Podcasts

Uh, where was I the last time I did this? Let's see the main things:

The Penumbra Podcast: I've listened to The Sportive Nymphs and started on Juno Steel and the Long Way Home... Which means that, incredibly, I'm getting closer to the end of S2. Still quite a few episodes to go, what with the last Second Citadel story of the season being something like 5 or 6 episodes, but not many stories left! Of course there's already plenty of S3 to go before I'm anywhere near caught up - at the moment I'm something like 1 3/4 years behind.

I finished re-listening to The Far Meridian, and have now progressed to the minisodes that have been published lately. The show makes me feel happy and seen with all its complicated human emotions and very-slow-burn queer female longing and connection. Also on a re-listen you notice so many things that you didn't notice the first time around because then you didn't know what would be significant later.

I'm starting to dive back into Wolf359, and finished listening to the very long special episode, Change of Mind, which is past!Lovelace and I loved it very much. (I continue to have a massive crush on her.) It connected interestingly to the end of S3/what will probably be the beginning of S4. So I'll get to S4 at some point soon, if I dare...

I've been trying out some new fiction podcasts; so far I've made the most progress with Under the Electric Stars, which is a cyberpunk drama by and with queer people and people of colour (and queer people of colour - I have the impression most are both, at least character-wise) and I really like it so far. Another story I've started listening to is Valence - it's an urban fantasy thingie and it has Ishani Kanetkar (Arkady on The Strange Case of the Starship Iris) on it which was honestly all I needed to want to check it out (plus, Jordan Cobb who's Kathy on Among the Stars and Bones!), but also all the others are really good and the story seems really interesting. Contains honest treatment of mental health stuff, I'm kind of having to take it slowly because the main character's negative inner voice is rather effective at times. But it's good!

In terms of nonfiction podcasts, I found Exolore on [personal profile] st_aurafina's recommendation, it's about worldbuilding science fiction planets based on all the sciences the host and the guests can possibly bring into a single podcast, and it's just what I needed. And connected to the topic I mentioned earlier, Heather Rose Jones's Lesbian Historic Motif Podcast just did an episode on f/f historical fiction by Black authors with at least one Black protagonist. There's a transcript on the page I just linked to, so check it out if you don't feel like listening, and get some book recs that way.

Other culture

I'm super slow at watching any TV series, but I'm halfway through Gentleman Jack now, so yay? I really need to just turn off my subscription, though, either try to speed through the rest of the series before my current month runs out, or just buy it, it'll be cheaper. I'm still liking it lots, I don't know why it so hard to focus.

And last night was Midsummer's Eve, which is kind of a big deal in Finland, and I had exactly zero plans beyond food, so I watched some of the Finnish National Ballet's A Midsummer Night's Dream ballet online. I find it a lot easier to focus on ballet than on TV shows, so maybe I should just switch to ballet. Should check out how opera works for me at the moment.

Museums have opened here, so I hope to get around to visiting one soon.
auroracloud: a book held open by a reader who is unseen except for their sleeve (reading)
The world is being scary in lots of ways, and I'm not the right person or in the right state of mind to talk about it, I'm just going to talk about the recent culture I've consumed/enjoyed/whatever is the right word. Look, I'm actually managing this on a Reading Wednesday! I don't manage that often.

Books

I am reading, even if not as much as I used to, back in the old days. But since my last post like this, I've finished the Finnish space book I was reading, and I read the first book of K.J. Charles's A Charm of Magpies series, The Magpie Lord. I found it mostly a delightful gay historical fantasy romp with interesting characters and lots of sex in various English settings; though at times a touch too violent for my liking, and the relationship & sex dynamics in this one aren't the kind I often go for. But it was good and interesting, and a light enough read to manage with my quarantine brain in a reasonable amount of time, and I do want to continue reading the series.

I also finished a volume of translated Chinese poetry from more than a millennium ago, which I much loved, and which I've been reading for a long time.

I continue to read and enjoy The Priory of the Orange Tree; I'm nearly 90 % through it, so it shouldn't take terribly long, it's just the quarantine brain that makes it slow. I'm also rereading This is How You Lose the Time War, because I want to, and rereads of a favourite and hopeful and beautiful f/f book are probably one of the best things for quarantine brain and anxiety brain.

I'm planning to DNF and return to library a bunch of books that, let's face it, I don't want to read enough to actually finish them. I don't know why I've had weird guilt about not-finishing books lately, I'm usually pretty merciless at that - life is too short to waste on books you don't like. Seriously this is not a time to feel obligated to read anything that isn't working for me, regardless of how many prizes it won or how much I liked the author's previous book or how many months I've already had it from the library or even how I really should read more from non-English-speaking parts of the world. Also, a lot of these books were started/borrowed/placed on hold before the pandemic, and we all know that was about 72 years ago at least, so ugh, who cares. I've got books around I actually want to read.

(I do wish people from my country were slightly better at writing books I want to finish, though. Non-fiction still seems to go all right, though, and sometimes poetry works.)

Podcasts

I've somehow calmed down in my "only consume podcasts" frenzy of the early isolation days. But I finished my re-listen of The Strange Case of the Starship Iris, and aaah I love it so much, even more the second time around, and I have so many feelings and thoughts about the characters, and especially this time around I was hit by Massive McCabe Feels. And generally Agent Feels but especially McCabe feels. I want to write fanfic about this show. (Let me know if you're a native English speaker who'd like to beta such fanfic, if I get it written. Though I generally need to do a beta call for "hey who can help me with all these tiny fandoms I seem to have picked up".)

In other podcast-listening news, on the Penumbra Podcast I finished Juno Steel and the Monster's Reflection, which was not an easy story, but damn it was significant and damn it was good. I also cried my eyes out after finishing it because just so many feelings, how dare they, it was good.

I finished re-listening to Midnight Radio, and I've continued re-listening to S2 of The Far Meridian. It's got a few recent bonus minisodes released, but I figure I'll finish my re-listen first and then listen to them so it goes in sequence. Mind you, it's trying my patience a bit to keep seeing them on my podcast feed!

I've been trying to slowly check out some new shows, but it's really hard to focus on anything new, anything that isn't either continuing an existing favourite or re-listening to something I've already heard. I also might need to stop my subscriptions to short-story podcasts because I can't seem to listen to any of those. Except for Toasted Cake, it's apparently short enough (it's delightful SFF flash fiction, for those who don't know it).

Other

Hmm, I really shouldn't subscribe to streaming TV because I'm still making my way through Gentleman Jack though I really like it. I'm, uh, almost halfway through (for reference, it's 8 episodes long), but then it turned out I wasn't in the right mindset for working conditions of 19th century English coal mines. Hmm, I also managed to somewhat make use of all the free arts and entertainment online, by watching the first act of Swan Lake by English National Ballet, but then I failed to continue to the rest of the ballet before it went offline. Still, it was beautiful! Maybe I'll manage to catch some other ballet and actually watch all of it. It could be relaxing!

Some things are opening up in my country, so there exists a chance I might go to visit an actual physical museum at some point.
auroracloud: vintage drawing of a woman and a lamppost against a text background (dancing fairy)
I had such a fabulous time tonight seeing Don Quixote at the Finnish National Ballet tonight. Polina Semionova, an international ballet star, was visiting to perform the lead role of Kitri, and she was fabulous and everyone on stage was giving a marvellous performance, the energy was mind-blowing. I'm so happy to have seen this! I'm only now starting to come down from the high.

Sorry I didn't reply to all the comments yet - I'll get back to the rest tomorrow! I need to start calming down to sleep...

Today's Writing

I didn't have much time between work and leaving for the ballet, but I snatched a moment to write a couple of sentences for my novel, knowing I'd be out late. That's all for today!

Tally

Days 1-7 )

Day 8: [personal profile] auroracloud, [personal profile] carenejeans, [personal profile] cornerofmadness, [personal profile] shopfront, [personal profile] sylvanwitch, [personal profile] talkingtothesky, [personal profile] trobadora, [personal profile] ysilme

Day 9: [personal profile] alexseanchai, [personal profile] auroracloud, [personal profile] carenejeans, [personal profile] cornerofmadness, [personal profile] iberiandoctor, [personal profile] st_aurafina, [personal profile] sylvanwitch, [personal profile] talkingtothesky; [personal profile] trobadora, [personal profile] ysilme
auroracloud: (cabin in wintry woods)
I hope you all are enjoying a lovely Christmas or any other midwinter festival you might celebrate! I've had a pleasant Christmas with family and good food, and though we don't have much of a white Christmas (alas) we have beautiful clear skies. I've got two new wonderful books, a blissful number of days off, nothing much to do, and it's almost Yuletide. Not that I edited until the last minute, myself. Never would do that, me. Well, maybe just a teensy bit.

The books are The Glass Town Game by Catherine M. Valente, which I've wanted ever since she told the audience at Finncon 2016 that she was writing a book about the Brontë siblings in which their shared fantasy world becomes a real place where they travel; and Messages from Islands by Ilkka Hanski, a nature book which I've heard much about.

I also saw a lovely Nutcracker performance just before Christmas. Our National Ballet's version is so beautiful, and they've set it into early 19th century Finland which warms my history-geeky heart. The wonderful Hanako Matsune was Clara, and oh, she's my princess. I don't have a video from it, but here, have a gratuituous Royal Ballet Nutcracker video instead.



Wheee!

Dec. 7th, 2016 11:41 pm
auroracloud: vintage drawing of a woman and a lamppost against a text background (Jack smile Utopia)
First I go to see a performance of The Nutcracker and the Mouse King that is all kinds of lovely and beautiful and exhilerating, and then I get home to see that [livejournal.com profile] navaan has written a lovely Ten/Jack fic for me as my Public Call gift! I'm kind of hyper now. Making-pancakes-in-the-middle-of-the-night kind of hyper.

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