auroracloud: vintage drawing of a woman and a lamppost against a text background (Default)
Okay, folks, time for one of these again! Basically just books and podcasts, I haven't engaged with any other culture recently, other than the occasional music.

Books

Since the last, I finished the utterly delightful Dragon Pearl by Yoon Ha Lee, which I was reading at the time. I absolutely loved it, and the ending surprised me and was very different from what I was hoping for but utterly wonderful. Much recommended! After that I read Spellswept, a prequel novelette to the Harwood Spellbook series by Stephanie Burgis, a very delightful historical fantasy romance with a black female lead, and younger versions of some characters from Snowspelled that I read first. And now very recently I've been reading The Edge of Worlds, the fourth book in Martha Wells' Raksura series, which is epic fantasy about this really awesome shapeshifter race. (If I were to say they're kind of like human/reptilian person/dragon shapeshifters, with complicated social structures and matriarchy, you'd have something like the right idea.) It's been so brilliant, and I finished it today. I hadn't realised/remembered this book is actually the first of a duology so it basically leaves off at a very tense point! I might have to borrow the next book immediately.

The Raksura books have awesome and fascinating worldbuilding, with one of the most interesting fantasy races I've ever come across, they're written excellently, and very importantly they have fabulous characters! And I just need to give a special shoutout to Chime, I love Chime so much. I love all the central characters, but the smart snarky sensitive best friend (slight spoiler - relationships, not plot )) is so much my thing. And I could basically read endlessly about Moon, Jade and Chime being awesome. This book also occasionally went into the point of view of characters other than Moon, to show things going on in places where he wasn't, that was also very cool after seeing the world only through his POV for three books.

Anyway, that's my fannish book gushing of the week! Probably.

I've also read and finished some space non-fiction books, and I'm currently reading Randall Munroe's How To: Absurd Scientific Answers to Common Real-World Problems, which is just as delightful as expected (this is the creator of the xkcd webcomic), and a hilarious way to learn some science.

I had to return Dread Nation by Justina Ireland to the library without finishing it, but I've placed a new hold on it, so I'll be able to finish it when I get it again, I hope. It's amazing, but it's also a touch more violent than I'm comfortable with, so I didn't manage to progress very fast... For lighter reading, I've started A Princess in Theory by Alyssa Cole. It's a romance novel with Black characters, and the leading lady is a scientist, which is brilliant. But I'm not great at reading het romance, and entitled dudes who need a good woman's love to learn to not be entitled is so not a favourite trope of mine, so I haven't been progressing lately. Maybe I just need to skip straight to the f/f novella later in the series.

I don't yet know what I'll read next if it isn't the fifth Raksura book. It's probably that. Unless someone else borrows it before I get around to it.

Podcasts

Quite a bit in this realm! I mentioned earlier that I finished the Juno Steel Season 2 stories in the Penumbra Podcast, and it was amazing. Juno Steel Season Two: a long, often arduous journey, but so, so worth it. I'm currently listening to The Battle at World's End, the Second Citadel finale, which is as many as six episodes, and I'm really enjoying it and wanting to squishhug many of the characters, especially that certain human-lizard-human trio.

With Wolf 359, I'm far enough in Season 4 to have entered the Shit-Hits-the-Fan phase, and am kind of scared to go on. The last episode I listened to was episode 55, and I both want to know what happens next and don't want to know, so I've been stuck here for a while. I'm so worried about so many characters.

So I've been listening to a lot of other stuff as well. I've talked about This Planet Needs a Name before, I think - it's a thoughtful, hopeful story about a small crew settling a new planet, meaning to prepare it for a larger group of humans who are in cryo-sleep until the planet is ready with them. It deals with some difficult topics like colonization and ethics of space settlement and ecology, as well as mental health and trauma, but it's also very sweet and lovely and hopeful. All the characters are queer in one way or another, it's very strong on found family, the characters are representative of many backgrounds and nationalities, the characters have been created in collaboration with their actors which is also so cool. It also has the loveliest, friendliest Discord server, which I recently joined, maintained by the creators. It currently has four full episodes out, plus a bunch of minisodes like the characters' job interviews, songs, stories, and even recipes. I've been listening to the new episodes as they aired pretty much since the show started, and I really love it. After listening to the recently released fourth episode, I started re-listening to the whole thing, and I've now re-listened up to the third episode.

I've recently found a whole lot of new shows I love. Directly via This Planet Needs a Name, because some of the same creators are involved, I found:
- Light Hearts, a super cute queer comedy show about a queer café/bar that has ghosts. It's very new and they've only got three full episodes out, but they're absolutely adorable episodes. The recent one even had a song! A totally adorable one, too.
- Hughes and Mincks, Ghost Detectives. A cute, silly comedy about two ghost detectives. The ghosts so far have been adorable.
- Also I've started on Seen and Not Heard, which is a podcast "about hearing loss and deaf gain" as it's described. It's only got a few short prologues out so far, and I haven't listened to all of them yet, but so far it's really good.

Shows I've found otherwise through recommendations:
- The Beacon, which I just binged in less than three weeks (it has two seasons and a bunch of minisodes). It's an urban fantasy podcast about college students who discover they've suddenly acquired magical powers, and try to navigate these powers and each other and, well, themselves. They've all got code names based on animals, and the main character, Bee, is an adorable queer ace anxious mess of a girl who tries to bring everyone together despite, and all the other characters are fabulous and adorable as well, and it's very queer.
- Phantomwise, which has just started and only has a few short episodes out, but I loooooove it. Basically when it was mentioned and I looked it up, I saw that it was based on Alice in Wonderland and the cast included Beth Crane (of We Fix Space Junk), and I didn't have to ask anything else, I went to look it up. It's got delightful dialogue and monologue and lots of alliteration, and it's basically about everything else except Alice's adventures (so far we've been hanging out with Alice's sister when Alice disappears, and Mary Ann a.k.a. Mock Alice who comes from Wonderland and ends up in Alice's place).
- Hit the Bricks, which was promoted in the outros of Phantomwise. The summary said "a musical radio play starring Michelle Agresti" and I basically didn't need to know anything else to check it out. Though also they're based on the Oz books. (Michelle Agresti appears in parts of Wolf 359 and, like several other members of the cast there, is one of the people I'd genuinely listen to recite a phone book.) It's really lovely and feel-good and the music is great, and though I'd probably get more out of it if it hadn't been almost 30 years since I read the Oz books, it's still really enjoyable.
- Solutions to Problems, a sci-fi comedy which is basically an advice radio show but in space, with aliens. One of the hosts is human and one is alien, and callers are from all over the galaxy, and it's hilarious and the host characters and their actors are so great. Really good if you need cheering up and enjoy sci-fi comedy.

One final note, We Fix Space Junk started it's Season Three recently, and it's been so much fun already! Definitely recommend checking out the new episodes.

I'm probably forgetting a few I've checked out recently, but it's so late I need to stop. (I got distracted playing Animal Crossing Pocket Camp for a bit. Which has happened a lot, to be honest.)

Uh, I'll try to soon post content of other kinds, too!
auroracloud: a retro 1930s style drawing of a woman with a red umbrella, lower half of her face visible (retro lady umbrella red)
Hey, let's have a recent culture & media round-up since I've actually got stuff to report for, and I feel like posting something! It's also very rainy here, which feels like the appropriate mood for some cultural posting. I think I'll start calling these recent culture round-ups rather than "culture consumed" which stuck to me from some fannish podcast but doesn't really work for me.

Books

Very promisingly, it seems that my reading block might be lifting! Since I last posted about books, I finished The Ten Thousand Doors of January by Alix E. Harrow, which I enjoyed quite a bit. I also read two novellas: Sisters of the Vast Black by Lina Rather, which is nuns in space and living spaceships and other cool space biology stuff, as well as an f/f subplot, and it was good; and Snowspelled by Stephanie Burgis, which is the first of her alternate historical fantasy of an England where men are mages and women rule politics, because that whole thing with Boudicca and the Romans went rather differently than it did in our universe. It was really enjoyable, a sweet bit of feel-good escapism that still wasn't too fluffy or insubstantial. I really look forward to reading the rest of the series, and the third novella is going to be an f/f romance. This one was m/f romance, but for once it was an m/f pair I totally adored and enjoyed! Yay!

Currently I'm reading Yoon Ha Lee's Dragon Pearl, which is middle-grade space opera science fantasy and it's totally, totally awesome. I'm not even finding it as easy as before to read middle-grade or YA books, but here it all totally works for me, while I'm sure it also works for younger readers and damn would I have liked to have something like this to read when I was a kid. If someone's curious to try Yoon Ha Lee's work but is scared to dip into the Machineries of Empire series for whatever reason, this could be a good one to try!

I've also started reading Justina Ireland's Dread Nation, which is alternate history steampunk-ish historical-fantasy-horror with black girls being badass at killing zombies. I'm not great at reading about zombies without getting squeamish, so this is progressing more slowly than it deserves - the writing is great and the story super engaging. Anyway, this means I'm currently reading about two Very Bad Teenage Girls who it would be a horror to be in any way responsible for. I'm finding this very empowering.

Podcasts

In non-fiction podcasts, I continue to enjoy Exolore's exploration of fictional alien planets and the life that could develop on them. I have listened to other shows as well, but my mind's a bit of a sieve.

In fiction podcasts:
In The Penumbra Podcast, I finished Juno Steel and the Long Way Home (very exciting ending, and I cried a bit at a certain point, and I look forward to the next story but need to be in the right mindset for it) and I also listened to the Second Citadel Story The Spiral Sage, which was awesome. I in particular enjoyed Rilla's speech in the courtroom, hee. *squees a bit* Not saying more here because of spoilers - at some point I should do a proper spoiler-cut post just about the Penumbra. Anyway. This means I've only got two stories of each left before the end of S2 - it's actually in sight! Two Juno stories, each of them two episodes, and two Second Citadel stories, one of them two episodes and the other five (!) episodes, plus a one-episode special for the Second Citadel. Very exciting!

I've started listening to S4 of Wolf 359. Extremely exciting! I've listened the first three full episodes plus the minisode after the first episode. All very intense stuff. I was amused / surprised by Zach Valenti's intro to the season, though, because it turns out there's absolutely no difference between hyper-excited Eiffel and hyper-excited Zach Valenti, at least in how they speak. Heh.

I finished listening to the Far Meridian minisodes, and am now waiting for S3 with queer longing.

Other stuff

I've actually watched some things! I watched the recording of the Globe Theatre's A Midsummer Night's Dream that was available on YouTube for about a week after Midsummer. Then I also watched the National Theatre / Bridge Theatre version of the same. I of course had to watch both just before the time to watch them ran out because I'm like that. But anyway, I enjoyed them both, but found the NT/Bridge Theatre one particularly great, it really did something unique with the play and the characters, and I felt the changes they did worked, and made sense in the context of the production, which is more than you can say for many other reworked productions of classics, and they dealt really well with some aspects of the play that are... rather uncomfortable if you think about them. I was so excited by this experience I might actually get around to watching more of these theatre recordings online as they're available. We'll see! It would be nice. I used to be such a theatre nut, and it's been bothering me that I haven't been able to take advantage of all that's been offered online for free in the past months. Though I do wish I could afford to donate. Maybe later.

I'm wondering if I need to start including a section for gaming... Not that I've got a wide range of games I play, but this year I've started playing a few mobile phone games, mostly for distraction and comfort during stress and bad times. I've been playing too much Animal Crossing: Pocket Camp since I started it a couple of months ago, but it does make me feel good. Anyway, this week I learned about a game called June's Journey, where you play a 1920s lady who ends up having to investigate the suspicious deaths of her sister and brother-in-law. You alternate between solving mystery scenes by finding clues etc. and restoring and building up the fancy estate she's now in charge of. It's extremely pretty and atmospheric, the gameplay is really good and the balance between the different aspects works for me, and the main character looks very Miss Fisher-like, which makes me want to watch some Miss Fisher. I might do some of that next. I'm also mostly managing not to call her Juno instead of June, which I think is very good of me.

December 2020

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