Life Update
- Andrew was discharged today and is currently napping on the couch. \o/!! That was his shortest hospital stay yet.
- I have done something terrible to the back of my left knee, argh. At least I don't have to bike on it anymore.
Books & TV Update
- On the second Penric & his Demon audiobook by Bujold. I'm not following it super-closely, but it's a pleasant enough tale to accompany me through chores and so on. :-)
- Started Kdrama Can This Love Be Translated?, and I like it a lot so far. Kim Sun-ho has come so far from his geeky supporting-cast character in Good Manager (AKA Chief Kim). (Do I want to rewatch Strongest Deliveryman? IIRC, it was a bit weak, but otoh, it had enemy-to-hyung slash potential...)
- Looking forward to watching The Pitt s02e02 tonight.
Fandom/Making Stuff
- Inbox and tabs are out of control. I've started ruthlessly closing tabs.
- I didn't manage to finish any gifts before
fandomtrees reveals. The last three days, I've been shuttling back and forth to the hospital for epic Scrabble bouts. I have two fics back from beta that I still hope to finish and post as late treats (both need rewrites), but I haven't had the brain to word. I spent a lot of my spare moments over the last 24 hours icing my knee and trying to draw an art gift, with no success. (Why are faces?? ;-p) So my plan is to finish the fics, and then go back and finish the things I started for Yuletide. And then go back even further and finish the thing I started for
guardian_wishlist. ;-p Also, to continue on with *Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain* in the hopes it will make me better at faces.
fandomtrees gifts, yayayay!!
I received five deliciously wonderful gifts for
fandomtrees!! FIVE!!
- Desperately Seeking Susan - delightful post-canon drabble sequence Pillars of Their Community by
sanguinity :D - Guardian by Priest (novel) - beautiful little Shen San/Wei & Daqing interlude by
facethestrange - Good Manager - hilarious podfic of my Kim Sungryong/Seo Yul crackfic, The Yul3000, ahhh! I've listened to this three times through already.
- Good Manager - flirty/sexy kisses drabble sequence by
maggie33 <3 <3 <3 - Bluey! - adorable timeline-refreshing Bingo fanart by
lomelinde_laurea. <3 <3 <3
ETA: What is even the point of Markdown if you can't nest formatting inside lists? ;-p
I found some dining chairs that I like for $30, but I need to get the car's registration fixed first. I doubt that they would fit in the Kia? Maybe they would.
Bella somehow got mud on her side. I might need to bathe her. I just ordered some dog shampoo.
Woke up a little before 8 AM. Gracie wasn’t bugging me, which is surprising. There’s snow on the ground. The dogs don’t want to come in yet. I told them that was okay. They finally came in. Fed us all.
I told Gracie that I speak fluent Cat, and that swat Oliver gave her was “I’m annoyed,” not “I want to play”. I told her that I was in the process of learning Dog.
Overslept my nap. Got my groceries in.
I’m having an argument with an app that I canceled. I sent them an email a month ago asking them to cancel my account. They charged me again this month. I got them to cancel this time, but I want this last payment back. Sigh.
Had lunch. I’m thinking of taking another short nap (done). Started the evening feeding routine by letting the dogs out.
When I look at Facebook, I despair for humanity, so I should stop looking at Facebook.
Fed us all. I’m going to take a shower in a few minutes and put on clean sweats (done--oiled my body). Then I’ll set the faucets to dripping because it’ll be cold overnight (10F/-12C).
ormolu [awr-muh-loo]
adjective:
1 Any of several copper and zinc or tin alloys resembling gold in appearance and used to ornament furniture, moldings, architectural details, and jewelry
2 an imitation of gold.
(click to enlarge)
Examples:
Clars had described the clocks in its auction catalog as 'a rare pair of Chinese ormolu bronze automaton clocks' manufactured in a workshop in the southern port city of Guangzhou. (Steven Lee Myers and Graham Bowley, They Look Like the Emperors' Clocks. But Are They Real?, The New York Times, December 2018)
No gilded ormolu appears, certainly, but pieces are not without decorative flourishes. (Antonia van der Meer, Hemingway’s Homey Cuban House, The Wall Street Journal, June 2016)
He claimed almost 100 items had been stolen, including a Persian rug worth £35,000, valuable antiques and clocks, and a 19th century red marble rococo fire surround, with ormolu inserts. (Nina Morgan, St Albans fraudster who staged burglary and committed £1m mortgage fraud jailed, Herts Advertiser, January 2019)
He was rather sorry he had come, till Lady Narborough, looking at the great ormolu gilt clock that sprawled in gaudy curves on the mauve-draped mantelshelf, exclaimed: "How horrid of Henry Wotton to be so late!" (Oscar Wilde, The Picture Of Dorian Gray)
Origin:
1765, 'an alloy of copper, zinc, and tin resembling gold,' from French or moulu, literally 'ground gold,' from or 'gold' (from Latin aurum, from PIE aus- 'gold;' see aureate) + moulu 'ground up,' past participle of moudre 'to grind,' from Latin molere 'to grind' (from PIE root mele- 'to crush, grind'). The sense of the word before it reached English began as 'gold leaf prepared for gilding bronze, brass, etc.,' then shifted to 'gilded bronze,' then to various prepared metallic substances resembling it. (Online Etymology Dictionary)

Challenge #9: Talk about your favorite tropes in media or transformative works.
Y'know, there are a lot of tropes that I like in theory, but which have a tendency to fall flat because the idea is cool but the characterization isn't there. I bring it up because my first thought when I read this prompt was "Megastructures! Progenitors! A megastructure built by a progenitor race!" The problem is, too many stories lean on the coolness of the idea and forget to do character and relationship work and so I get bored as soon as the initial "oooh, neat!" factor wears off.
The tropes I really love in practice and not just in theory are the ones that involve jiggling the characters around and seeing what falls out. Some of the
Time-travel fix-its, where one or a handful of characters wake up in the past and are given the chance to fix something that went wrong in canon, are also a lot of fun, for similar reasons. The time-traveling character knows things that the people around them don't, and usually they have to keep it a secret. Although these sorts of fic are most satisfying when you are specifically mad at something in canon. I was pondering what a TNG time-travel fix-it would look like, and while there are things the characters would like to fix, there is nothing in the show that I as the viewer would specifically want changed ... at least not enough to care about a time-travel fix it. But MCU fix its that undo some of the dumber PTB decisions? DC fix its that fix Bruce's relationship with Jason without heaps of unnecessary angst? Yes please and thank you.
AUs are good--specifically canon-divergence "want of a nail" style AUs where one big thing went differently, or close-canon parallel universes where some things are different, but the setting is broadly recognizable are good for that too. I like them both as self-contained stories, and as stories where two universes meet and compare differences.
I like competency porn, and my definition of competency encompasses emotional intelligence. Give me two people having a hard conversation in good faith and I am there for it. I also like stories that highlight quiet competencies, especially domestic labor, emotional labor, or admin work--basically female coded stuff that'd not even enough respect. It doesn't have to be female characters, though. Anyone doing hard, unglamorous work that's shown to be important will get me, especially if it's respected in story.
I like unconventional heroes, but also conventional ones. Stories where the two team up and actually get along and respect each other are great. I'm thinking of Miss Marple and the police inspectors who know she can run circles around them and listen carefully to her advice, or Jessica Fletcher when the cop of the week is working with her rather than against her.
Ugh. I know the moment I hit post, I'll think of half a dozen more tropes I love, but I've rambled long enough.
There's so much more going on than any simple blog entry can cover. I'm happy, though, to present today's theme song.
Click to read some context for this video...
I had a livestream playing in the background while at work today. The Mercado Media channel has been as important during this federal occupation as Unicorn Riot was during the Jamar Clark protests and George Floyd riots. Minneapolis has been through a lot in the last decade.
I knew about the march that was planned in a different community, east of downtown, and I figured there would be little coverage since their neighborhood asked that all non-residents stay away, so only the locals would counter-protest. As far as I know, every organized group respected their request, and the event was basically non-eventful according to this MPR News article.
That respectful distance didn't apply for white nationalists showing up in downtown Minneapolis though, led by Republican Florida Senate candidate Jake Lang. He organized his little "Kristian Krusaders" (I might've exchanged some other letters for Ks), and about half a dozen of them showed up to support him. He was quickly cornered in an alcove of our Minneapolis town hall building, where he planned to burn a Quran. The hundreds of counter-protestors were mostly civil (although I take exception to the water thrown on him during this well-below-freezing day, even though he planned to burn somebody's holy book), and eventually they chased him away. I'm certain my eyes saw a black man helping to protect the racist. His humiliation must be complete.
What was the proverbial "cherry on top", though, was this Republican candidate for Florida congress (and Trump-pardoned police-beating traitor from January 6th) being chased away to the music of Elsa from the Frozen movie. He was previously doused with liquid water, so he must've been bitterly cold during this song, since the temperature in Minneapolis today is well below freezing. I expect stupid Disney will place a very unwarranted copyright ban eventually, so watch this segment while it's available. I've queued the video to the relevant timestamp.
Let it go! Let it go! Can't hold it back any more.
Let it go! Let it go! Turn away and slam the door.
I don't care what they're going to say.
Let the storm rage on. The cold never bothered me anyway.
It's funny how some distance makes everything seem small,
and the fears that once controlled me can't get to me at all.
It's time to see what I can do. ...
Let it go! Let it go! I am one with the wind and sky.
Let it go! Let it go! You'll never see me cry.
Here, I stand. And here, I'll stay.
Let the storm rage on...
My power flurries through the air into the ground.
My soul is spiraling in frozen fractals all around
And one thought crystallizes like an icy blast:
I'm never going back! The past is in the past!
Some of the lyrics aren't as appropriate, necessarily, for this event and counter-protest. But most of it is curiously appropriate. I'm willing to adopt "Let it go" as a new Minneapolis anthem.
Talk about your favorite tropes in media or transformative works. (Feel free to substitute in theme/motif/cliche if "trope" doesn't resonate with you.)
I don't know if there's already a trope and/or term for this, but I'm a huge sucker for what I'm going to call ( house voyeurism. )

これで以上です。

351/365: Westbourne Street, Bewdley
Click for a larger, sharper image
I didn't do a great deal today, and I was more than happy with that. It was the kind of day when reading a book or looking at the telly were highlights. An unexpected NHS letter turned up in the morning, which was briefly concerning until I discovered it was simply a copy of the doctor's notes from my last ophthalmology consultation, which didn't say anything unexpected. As the weather was okay I got a bit of walking in, though only around town. This is Westbourne Street in Wribbenhall. In days of old it was called Whispering Street, because the wind would sound like whispers as it blew along the road.
Challenge #6
Top 10 Challenge. Post your answer to today’s challenge in your own space and leave a comment in this post saying you did it.
I always love making lists of my top 10s, so this is a great challenge. But... what to choose? My first thought was to make it about my top 10 video games, but right now I'm not even sure I have ten proper answers to that. I fell out of Genshin Impact when Natlan was released, and that was the obvious "modern" game on my list - other than that I mostly play either simple games on the phone, or old games from the NES/SNES era, neither of which could measure up to modern games in terms of complexity or graphics. Then I also thought of video game characters, but I already did something similar ages ago.
So, that leaves the current obsession top 10 - snooker people. Note, I'm not saying snooker players exclusively, simply because I need a way to include a couple of others, too.
Maybe this could be your way to get to know these guys a bit more? Here we go:
1. Mark Selby
If you had asked me prior to the 2024 World Championships whether I would ever put him first on a list like this, I would've laughed in your face. That's how much I used to not like him. Yet, here we are, and he easily means the most to me now. It's not just that I love how he plays - even more, it's the fact that I love how he comes across in interviews, and how he is as a person. Yes, the warmth I feel for him just keeps increasing after meeting him in person several times.
He's an incredible player to watch - and by the way, the "he plays boring and destructive snooker"-crowd need a reality check. But also, he's thoughtful and elegant in interviews, honest about himself and classy about his opponents, even in defeat. And finally, he's always warm and kind to the fans when you meet him at events. It will also never stop feeling surreal to me that he knows me now, and that he says "nice to see you again" when we meet, or asks which event is my next one.
2. Iulian Boiko
Okay, this is the first time I'm doing this, but let's face it: He's my second most loved player now. I've had a soft spot for him ever since he became the (then) youngest professional ever as a 14 year old in 2020. That stint on the pro tour didn't go well for him, as he was simply too young and inexperienced, so I ended up following amateur snooker to the best of my ability for a few years, until he regained his tour card in the spring of 2025. Believe me, I was watching the end of that match - the U21 European Championship final - with tears in my eyes when he made it.
3. Ronnie O'Sullivan
My first favourite in this sport, and forever a player I love. He's amazing to watch when he plays well, but it was his expressiveness that made me take him to heart from the first moment. He wears his heart on his sleeve, and for me that means that I also feel very strongly about him when he plays. When I first got into snooker during the 2014 Masters, there was one thing I didn't want to do: I was not going to adopt the biggest star of the sport, just because everyone else loved him. I like to joke that Ronnie thought "Oh, really? Let's see about that!" before he knocked in 556 consecutive points in the quarter-final vs Ricky Walden - a record that still stands today. My love for snooker started with that match. Over the next few days, I kept researching Ronnie, because he refused to get out of my mind despite my best efforts, learning about his past scandals and consciously looking up "negative" facts to see if I could make him budge. But no - you just can't tell your heart what to do, and I had already given him a piece of mine. He still has that, even though there are others who have more now. But: first love, still a player I love fiercely.
4. Thepchaiya Un-Nooh
It took me a while to really open my heart to him. I've probably only been his fan since he lost to Selby at the British Open in 2024. That was such a beautiful match, seeing the two of them around each other, and paying attention to their completely opposite playstyles. Thepchaiya is apparently nicknamed "F1", because he's as fast as an F1 car - a very fitting nickname. Unfortunately, if you would try to drive an F1 car on a regular road, the first adjective people would use to describe that endeavour would likely be "careless" - which is the very definition of how he plays, too. In full flow, he's great to watch. But then, he can and will also miss carelessly several times in a match, including having missed the final black on a maximum on three different occasions. He sees the irony himself, too, having once made a t-shirt which said "I love #140" on it! On a personal note, it also doesn't hurt that he's probably the most handsome man in snooker - when it comes to looks, he's an absolute beauty.
5. Michael Holt
So, Michael might not be among the best players anymore - he's just inside the top 64 for now, needing to stay there in order to retain his tour card. He is, however, the most endearing and charming man in the sport. He dances around the table if he's playing well, smiling like the Sun. Or, if things aren't going so well, he's just as visibly devastated. It's the way he wears his emotions on his sleeve that has made me love him, and I always want him to do well. The last really good run came at the UK Championship 2024, where he reached the quarter finals after having defeated Jak Jones 6-5 from 2-5 down - believe me, I was screaming in front of my telly.
6. Judd Trump
I like to say that Judd is my "fallback joy" player, because he tends to always go far in tournaments. So, when everyone else I love is out, he is often the one that remains. Even though he hasn't won a tournament for more than a year now - and that sounds absolutely mad if you ask me - he's still the world number one in the rankings. He deserves it, too - at his best he is probably the best player out there right now. Even though he used to have this "playboy"-like image, and sometimes likes to show off fancy cars and holidays in expensive places, he seems a rather soft-spoken person when you see him in interviews, and he has this quietly sharp way of answering questions. In short, he makes it very hard not to love him.
7. Rob Walker
So, there's the reason I couldn't let this list be only about the players. Rob is the MC at some of the major events - apart from being the one who introduces the players when they walk into the arena for their matches, his job is to gear up the crowd before the cameras go on, and also sometimes to do immediate, post-match interviews with players. The thing about Rob is that he's a kind of polarizing person in the snooker fandom - either, people hate him for being an excessive bundle of energy (and for being annoying as commentator when the BBC decide to put him behind the microphone), or they love him for being a bundle of joy and - yes - energy. Even though I tend to be in the first camp with a lot of overly energetic people, I've always had a soft spot for Rob. He's funny and he feels authentic, even though he has admitted that he of course overdoes it a little with his jumping around like something on a string, at times. On a personal note, he's also good-looking to me - I love his smile and his eyes.
8. Stephen Hendry
The big legend of this sport; a seven-time world champion in the '90s. Nowadays he's a commentator - and of course he's one of the best at that, too. He got an invitational tour card a few years ago, something that led me to researching him in detail. I spent quite an amount of hours watching '90s snooker on Youtube, simultaneously enjoying it and feeling gutted that I had no idea about this sport back at that time. Still, I like him both for what I've learned about him as a player, and for what I see of him today. He also has a great Youtube channel, by the way - including some of the best interviews ever done with Ronnie, because their communication is absolutely something else.
9. Zhao Xintong
Okay, filling the last spaces of this list is getting a bit harder from this point onwards, as I've already mentioned the players I love the absolute most. As for Xintong, he became the first Chinese world champion in May 2025, and for that he's definitely worth loving. In fact, I like several of the Chinese players, and it might even be hard for me to put them in order, because I like them more or less on the same level, yet a bit emotionally differently. The reason I'm mentioning Xintong first is simply that he had that amazing run to the world title - and of course the fact there were some very gorgeous moments with Ronnie after their semifinal. I prefer to not think of the match too much, because I didn't enjoy watching Ronnie lose clearly, but I can never forget the warmth and the smiles between them immediately afterwards. Absolute Master and Protégé energy, and very beautiful to see.
10. Neil Robertson
I have a very ambivalent relationship with Neil as a fan - so much that I had to mentally convince myself to even put him on the list. As a person, he's absolutely one of the nicest people around the snooker, happily stopping to talk with fans, remembering us between tournaments, and even giving me a sort of hug on his own once. I really like what I've seen of his personality, and I can absolutely imagine him being someone I'd get along great with - especially considering his "nerdy" interests like gaming and sports.
He used to be one of my liked players when I first got into snooker, and I'll never forget his joy when he became the first person to make 100 century breaks in a season in 2014 - when he made the 100th, during the World Championships that year, he ran around celebrating like a madman, and it made me smile so much. However, in the last couple of years he's developed a nasty habit of beating people I love more a bit too often, meaning I rarely support him these days. But okay, let him have the 10th spot, for old times' sake and for seemingly being a genuinely warm person.
⌈ Secret Post #6952 ⌋
Warning: Some secrets are NOT worksafe and may contain SPOILERS.
01.

( More! )
Notes:
Secrets Left to Post: 02 pages, 39 secrets from Secret Submission Post #993.
Secrets Not Posted: [ 0 - broken links ], [ 0 - not!secrets ], [ 0 - not!fandom ], [ 0 - too big ], [ 0 - repeat ], [ 2 - posted twice ].
Current Secret Submissions Post: here.
Suggestions, comments, and concerns should go here.
Talk about your creative process.
Swoopers write a story quickly, higgledy-piggledy, crinkum-crankum, any which way. Then they go over it again painstakingly, fixing everything that is just plain awful or doesn’t work. Bashers go one sentence at a time, getting it exactly right before they go on to the next one. When they’re done, they’re done.” — Kurt VonnegutI am a hopeless basher.
Challenge #6
Top 10 Challenge. Post your answer to today’s challenge in your own space and leave a comment in this post saying you did it.
Let's do something a little different and talk about my ( favorite recordings of the slip jig Elizabeth Kelly's Delight. )

これで以上です。
( 136. The Cloud Roads - Martha Wells ) This was fun! I'm hoping to read the sequels.
( 137. Death in the Spires - KJ Charles ) Definitely not a romance - but I like mysteries more than I like capital-r Romances, so that worked for me.
( 138. Rivers of London - Ben Aaronovitch ) This is still a cracking series opener. What a banger.
( 139. That Stick - Charlotte Yonge ) A lesser Yonge, but still relatively entertaining.
( 140. The Wicked + The Divine vol 1 - Kieron Gillen and Jamie McKelvie ) I didn't love this, but it started a number of interesting plot threads; I'll have to see where it goes.
( 141. Meddling and Murder - Ovidia Yu ) A decent conclusion (at least so far) to the series! I'm sure she could write sequels if she wanted, but this changes the status quo enough that it feels like a good place to stop.
( 142. Augustine the African - Catherine Conybeare ) This was fascinating; I lent it to our parish priest (who is sort of mentioned in it! as part of the group of Augustinian friars Conybeare meets when visiting Annaba (the city formerly known as Hippo) and he's already told me he's buying his own copy.
( 143. Salt, Fat, Acid, Heat - Samin Nosrat ) I had high expectations for this book, so it's probably partly my own fault that I wasn't blown away; it did have some good stuff in it, but I spent a lot more time arguing with the author than I expected.
( 144. Princess Puck - Una Silberrad ) A delightful tale.
( 145. Death of a Dormouse - Reginald Hill ) A really fun character arc; I enjoyed this.
( 146. Murder on the Orient Express - Agatha Christie ) Just fabulous.
( 147. Mona Maclean, Medical Student - Graham Travers ) Not as medical as the title implies, but very charming.
( 148. Blue Machine - Helen Czerski ) An interestingly different perspective on the oceans compared to my usual more animal-focused natural history versions.
( 149. The Fox Wife - Yangsze Choo ) A satisfying read, and interesting as a historical as well as fantasy.
( 150. Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation 3 - Mo Xiang Tong Xiu ) The story is moving right along now!
( 151. The Nine Tailors - Dorothy L Sayers ) Excellent reading of a good book.
( 152. Deeds of Wisdom - Elizabeth Moon ) These short-story collections are always enjoyable, even though they don't usually go much beyond that.
( 153. Alien Clay - Adrian Tchaikovsky ) A decent idea, reasonably well done, but Tchaikovsky just fundamentally doesn't do it for me.
( 154. Night Sky Mine - Melissa Scott ) I'm very glad I discovered this in my collection! Scott is always a good time.
( 155. The Curse of Chalion - Lois McMaster Bujold ) An absolute classic which I will re-read many more times yet, if I get the chance.
( 156. The Hero and the Crown and 157. Beauty - Robin McKinley ) THatC is still just such a weird book, and Beauty is so conventional! McKinley what are you even doing.
( 158. The Summer War - Naomi Novik ) Terribly short novella but it still manages to pack a lot in! Excellent siblings.
( 159. Still Life - Sarah Winman ) Endlessly charming even when it gets implausible; I really enjoy this book.
( 160. The Sisters Avramapul - Victoria Goddard ) Goddard is such a compulsive writer! I enjoyed these.
( 161. Heated Rivalry and 162. Tough Guy - Rachel Reid ) Decently-entertaining hockey romances.
Challenge #5
In your own space, create a list of at least three things you'd love to receive, a wishlist of sorts. Leave a comment in this post saying you did it and include a link to your wishlist if you feel comfortable doing so.
This is simultaneously my favourite kind of challenge - one where I get to wish for things - and also one of the hardest kinds of challenges, simply because I don't really know what to "realistically" wish for. But okay, here goes:
1. Of course, my first wish is always fic. If someone would be willing to write me Mark Selby/Ronnie O'Sullivan, that would be the best gift possible. There's so much to work with when it comes to these two - the rivalry and driving each other mad with their contrasting styles, of course. But also, the surprise warmth and friendship they showed in that famous Eurosport interview at last year's Masters.
I do love the "secret lovers" trope with them, too, but it would also be lovely to see the moment where they started seeing each other in a "new" way; finding attraction in the person that used to drive them mad.
Hurt/comfort is great, too - perhaps with a bit of having to fight the natural lack of trust, or being in a situation which forces them to rely on each other even when they initially don't want to.
My only catch is that I want Mark to have the upper hand if there's any kind of conflict - just for my sanity, as I do love him most.
2. Icons. Back in the day, I used to have more icons than I do now. Nowadays, I don't even feel like I can make decent ones for myself anymore. So, it would be great to have some more - maybe especially related to snooker or music, but also plain text ones with cool fonts and nice words.
Some ideas would me:
Snooker: Mark Selby (❤️), Ronnie O'Sullivan, Iulian Boiko, Stephen Hendry (from his younger playing days, when he still had the longer hair), Michael Holt, Thepchaiya Un-Nooh, Xiao Guodong, Wu Yize, Zhao Xintong, snooker table and balls, snooker cue with some text.
Music: Volbeat or Lord Of The Lost especially, as these are my favourite modern bands. Maybe Alice Cooper (without the make-up) or W.A.S.P. or just some text in stylistically rock-ish fonts would be great, too.
3. I've recently learned a new word - squish. It's essentially like a crush, but without the romantic/sexual component. So, it seems what I do when I get into someone as a fan, has a name now. I'd love to hear other words for concepts you think apply to me or my interests - I'm sure there are many that I'm just not familiar with. So, go on, teach me!
Talk about your favorite tropes in media or transformative works. (Feel free to substitute in theme/motif/cliche if "trope" doesn't resonate with you.)
I cheated and read an article online that listed a bunch of tropes and these are my findings. I like hidden worlds and secret societies, but I strongly dislike chosen one stories. And I don't read a lot of fantasy, so I don't tend to encounter hidden worlds much. I guess I just like the idea of their being a secret mirror of our society. I've written a couple of fics where various pantheons of gods intersect with modern society and with each other because I like imagining what might be going on that we don't see.
I LOVE me an amateur sleuth. That's why Miss Marple has always been my absolute favorite, closely followed by Jessica Fletcher. Right now I'm reading Three Bags Full where the sleuths are the ultimate amateurs - a flock of sheep whose shepherd has been murdered! I also like amateur spies like Tommy and Tuppence and Mrs. Pollifax.
If I like the source material, I will try almost any type of AU. The only kind I tend to bounce off of are set in school; as a teacher, I find them so unbelievable that I can't suspend my disbelief.
I'm also very fond of crossovers. Sometimes I'll see someone bigging up a crossover on the AO3 subreddit and, even if I know nothing about either canon, I'll give it a try. I also really enjoy writing crossovers; it's like weaving together two different fabrics or putting together a puzzle.
And while we are on the subject of things I like, I love writing and reading drabbles. I enjoy a fic where someone has provided a link to a playlist. I like when people play around with form and experiment, even when it doesn't quite work. I like an author with audacity.

Mae's Top Reads of 2025!
I wanted to put together a little highlight reel of the year's reads, so here it is!The Masquerade series by Seth Dickinson: This series is is all fantasy politics. There's no magic or fairies or prophecies, just Seth Dickinson's invented world and the titanic machinations of Empire. And it is electric...Baru herself is the epitome of ruthlessness. Her goals are noble—her desire to free her home, to end the tyranny of the Masquerade—but she will do anything to achieve those goals. She is a truly fascinating character, calculating, controlled, brilliant—and constantly tormented by the need to weigh her choices and the potential futures ahead.
The Dispossessed by Ursula Le Guin: Le Guin captures truly great sci-fi because this work is so imbued with curiosity. Le Guin is asking questions at the heart of any great sci-fi work: What defines humanity? What can we achieve, and how is it done, and what does that mean for society? What is society? What does it mean to be alone? What does it mean to be part of a whole? To me, sci-fi can't be truly sci-fi without a measure of philosophy, and The Dispossessed has this in droves.
Our Wives Under the Sea by Julia Armfield: Armfield's writing beautifully illustrates this journey, and she does a particularly good job of doling out information a little at a time, so that the reader often share's in Miri's confusion and muddled state of mind.
The Originalism Trap by Madiba K. Dennie: Dennie does a great job making this book accessible to everyone...She doesn't stop at "here's what's wrong" either--she has proposal and suggestions for how to counter the outsized influence of this once-disfavored theory and what we as citizens can do to push back against it.
Anti-Intellectualism in American Life by Richard Hofstadter: The book is obviously well-researched, and Hofstadter does a thorough job of documenting his sources and influences, as well as recommending additional reading on a broad range of topics touched on in his own book. So much of what he establishes here makes perfect sense when looking at modern American society. He so neatly threads the needle between where we started and where we are now that at some moments, it felt like the fog was lifting on something I should have seen ages ago.
The Spear Cuts Through Water by Simon Jimenez: Jimenez's writing is beautiful and vivid—for good or for ill, as there are some gruesome events that take place—and really sweeps you up in the events of the story. He also does a wonderful job capturing the emotional mindsets of the characters. In particular, I thought the way he handled the relationship of the two main protagonists, Jun and Keema, was very realistic given who they are, and the emotional payoff of his taking the time to work through that was so worth it.
And for the haters among us, below the cut are my most disappointing reads of 2025.
( Booooo )