Update

Jul. 18th, 2026 08:37 am
ranunculus: (Default)
[personal profile] ranunculus
The cows have licked their way through one whole 50# salt block.  I just put another block out for them after observing them apparently licking licking the ground. I'm pretty sure it was just the last few fragments of the first salt block. 
I've been feeling pretty bad for the last week.  Persistent nasal and general head congestion.  Today I woke up, looked out at the hills and observed a white haze, which isn't surprising since most of Oregon and Washington States are on fire (dry lightning strikes, most in very inaccessible places), not to mention Canada.  I hasten to say we haven't been really impacted by the Canadian smoke. This morning I put on a N95 mask, which is helping quite a lot. 
The news is full of harvest reports, all of which have said that the harvest is extremely early. Peaches, pears and now grapes.  Apparently it is the earliest grape harvest in 40 years.  In May one of my friends who grows both pears and grapes, said that he was having to compress all the spring chores into a month's less time.
Harvest in my garden is hitting its stride. Here is this morning's cucumber harvest.  This isn't all of it, some was already in the kitchen. I'm going to make dill pickles using the cucumbers, some garlic that is ready to pull, and grape leaves for crispness.
Image

Tomatoes are also starting to ripen.  We had a nice pasta sauce last night with tomato, squash, basil and oregano all out of the garden.  My okra is growing well, and I just put more seeds in to soak for 24 hours before planting.  My experience with okra is that I will want a second planting for the fall.  Since okra takes forever to germinate and get going, now is the time.
Chena has gotten a couple of voles recently which I appreciate very much. 

Mixed bag

Jul. 18th, 2026 04:44 pm
oursin: Brush the Wandering Hedgehog by the fire (Default)
[personal profile] oursin

The transnational journey of Madras Curry reveals several intertwined histories, especially the complex interaction between colonialism and caste.:

Although curry appeared in English coffee houses as early as 1733, it became widespread only in the mid-19th century. The taste for “Oriental” food reflected a growing Western cosmopolitanism, initially confined to elite circles but later spreading more widely.
Historian Nupur Chaudhuri notes that memsahibs “were a major force in nurturing this newly acquired culinary taste.” But the culinary knowledge that sustained it came largely from lower-caste cooks, whose contribution has largely faded from view. Colonialism, however, helped global communities acquire a taste for what had once been dismissed as “pariah food”.

***

Pocket-sized Power: A feminist history of portrait miniatures: online exhibition.

***

I daresay we've all heard about Lord Byron keeping a bear in his college rooms, but really, he was totally an amateur compared to Frank Buckland:

Tiglath Pileser was a young bear. A pet that Buckland kept in his college rooms on Fell’s Buildings along with a menagerie of other exotic animals, snakes, marmots, chameleons and the like. A scientist with a fascination for the weird, Frank also possessed two beer drinking monkeys called Jacko and Judy, a jackal with a blood curdling scream and an eagle that regularly crashed the cathedral’s morning matins.

The whole family sound like eccentricity-maxxing, no?

***

Grosvenor Square reopens as biodiverse city haven:

One of central London's oldest and most famous public spaces is set to reopen on Monday following an "extraordinary transformation" that's been a year in the making.
The new-look Grosvenor Square boasts more than 150,000 new plants chosen to withstand rising urban temperatures, alongside 40 new trees, two new wetland areas, a café kiosk and 300 extra seats.

***

And more on biodiversity: Cambridge & Oxford join forces to unlock over a million biological records:

The University of Cambridge and the University of Oxford have announced a major new partnership to digitise over 1.1 million natural history specimens, creating a step-change in how researchers and conservationists access vital biodiversity data.
The project is part of DiSSCo UK (Distributed System of Scientific Collections UK) – a £155 million national programme to digitise and connect the UK's natural science collections.
Together, the universities steward over 12 million specimens – the largest natural science collection in the UK outside London and Edinburgh. Over the next two years, they will establish the Central England DiSSCo UK hub, a strategic network supporting 23 museums and herbaria to prepare their collections for a digital future. The project aims to contribute 1,195,419 specimen records to the national dataset using cutting-edge technologies, including high-throughput imaging and AI.

jacey: (Default)
[personal profile] jacey

ImageAudiobook narrated by James Marsters.

Harry Dresden is the only wizard listed in the Chicago phone book, so the cases that come his way are weird and often extremely dangerous. In Death Masks an ancient vampire is out to kill him on the pretext that it will end the ongoing war between the Wizards’ White Council and the vampiric Red Court. Harry’s former lover, Susan, now half-vampire herself shows up after a period of silence, and to complicate matters Harry takes on a case to locate and return the stolen Turin Shroud. His ally from the Chicago police, Murphy, is off the case thanks to an asshole of a boss, but Harry has some help from Michael and a bunch of knights on the side of God. Harry’s landed in a whole world of hurt this time, both physical and emotional. Fast-paced and engaging this is beautifully read by James Marsters (Spike from Buffy). He gets Harry’s voice just right, sharp-tongued with a touch of world-weariness. Highly recommended.


jacey: (Default)
[personal profile] jacey
ImageIn the anthology Shadowed Souls

Set in the world of Harry Dresden, and featuring Molly, Michael’s daughter, now a Queen of Faerie. Mab, Queen of the Winter Court of the Fey directs her to collect the missing tribute from the Miksani in the town of Unalaska, Alaska. There’s a problem, however (there always is). When Molly crosses local thug Clint in a bar, she’s ‘rescued’ by wizard Carlos Ramirez (even though she probably didn’t need rescuing.) Clint and his cronies are not as human as they seem. Some of the town’s children are missing and Molly (with Ramirez) has to retrieve them before she can collect the tribute. There’s an unexpected twist at the end.


Inside Medicine newsletter

Jul. 18th, 2026 10:29 am
redbird: closeup of me drinking tea, in a friend's kitchen (Default)
[personal profile] redbird

Semi-random offer: After reading Jeremy Faust's Inside Medicine newsletter for a couple of years, I signed up as a paid subscriber, which comes with five one-month premium memberships I can give away. It's a mix of health and medical news (on things like new treatments and medical AI) and political news and discussion related to medicine and healthcare. It's a teaser offer, of course, but without the cancel-or-be-charged problem of some free sign-ups.

If you're interested, comment or send me a DM with your email address. I'm screening comments on this entry.

Personal best

Jul. 18th, 2026 06:06 am
mildred_of_midgard: (Default)
[personal profile] mildred_of_midgard
9:50, lungs burning, heart pounding, screaming brain kept firmly under lockdown by dint of pep talks. I collapsed on the grass afterward.

I think I was helped by the fact that my splits were better than ever, so I was motivated to keep pushing. I knew the watch would be great! Also, I was helped by a couple of cars that were approaching intersections or waiting on me, so I sped up to get across faster.

Lately, part of the problem has been that I'm retreading old ground and not achieving anything new. So even if I was hoping to repeat the elusive "9:55 but easy" experience, I *am* glad to see that the daily torture sessions are paying off with something new.

I'm still using the method of telling myself I only have to push myself on the first leg, and then I can cruise. The first leg feels very doable, it's less than half a mile, and then I *have* to slow down and recover, partly to turn the corner, and partly because the sidewalk becomes very winding. The pace on my watch drops instantly from ~7:30 to 9:00. And then by the time I get through that, I feel a bit better, and by then I can usually keep pushing.

My times on the first leg were 2:53, second leg 4:42, third leg 8:05. (The legs are not of even length, obviously.) This was compared to 2:55, 4:45, 8:11 on my last fast run, so I knew I was gaining time immediately.

Incidentally, because of the choppy route and the way my brain works, I have been doing the opposite of what's recommended, which is putting in my fastest time at the very beginning, when I'm not breathing hard. That's when the watch drops down to 6:20 and doesn't get above 7:45. It works for me because it's what gets me out of the door, and I haven't noticed better times when I try it the other way. For longer runs I try not to do that, obviously.

Also, when I got up from the grass, I was drenched. I thought insects were walking on me, but it was just sweat droplets rolling down. I couldn't believe I had run *that* much faster than normal, and sure enough, when I checked my phone, I was like, "Yeah, no, it's 20 degrees." It's not even 6 am and already 20. Usually it's 17 when I run lately. (12 is my ideal when I can get it.)

(no subject)

Jul. 18th, 2026 12:35 pm
oursin: Brush the Wandering Hedgehog by the fire (Default)
[personal profile] oursin
Happy birthday, [personal profile] sciarra!

(no subject)

Jul. 18th, 2026 11:26 am
beccaelizabeth: my Watcher tattoo in blue, plus Be in red Buffy style font (Default)
[personal profile] beccaelizabeth
I have finished relistening to the Big Finish Owen audios.
They're really good, and fascinating. Lots to poke and think about later. They're an example of What's The Worst Thing We Can Do To Them Now, but they're also a nasty set of dilemmas. Read more... )

It's a really good set of stories that make me want to turn the characters around and chew on them basically.

Good stuff.
mrkinch: Erik holding fieldglasses in "Russia" (bins)
[personal profile] mrkinch
Our final Least Tern Watch shift was much less exciting than last week's, many fewer Terns although still several hundred including chicks of all sizes. Happily the only flyovers were Turkey Vultures and Osprey, neither a danger to the colony. So at the end of our three hours we said good-bye and good luck to the Least Terns and went looking for Elegant Terns out at Antenna Pier. We could see them, but not well enough for U's County list, but before we continued on to Elsie Roemer I took a picture for [personal profile] wellinghall. USS Hornet and an Alameda-San Francisco ferry )

At Elsie Roemer we found Elegant Terns and a number of other species, more than I expected in July, including a few Least Terns.:) A short list: )

The Black-bellied Plovers were in beautiul breeding plumage. Last stop of Arrowhead Marsh in hopes of the Cackling Goose that had been reported. No luck, but again there were more birds than I feared there would be. Another short list: )

Most surprising were the two aechmophorous Grebes floating out in San Leandro Bay. Most fun was hearing the racket from the Barn Swallow nests under the boardwalk.

Fan Writer 26✍️: Alex Brown

Jul. 17th, 2026 08:20 pm
[syndicated profile] camestrosfelapton_feed

Posted by camestrosfelapton

Alex Brown is a prolific reviewer and commentator on genre fiction (especially on the topic of YA fiction), as well as an advocate for libraries. As well as writing on social media and their own blog, they are a contributing editor at Locus (https://locusmag.com/2011/05/alex-brown/ ) and a regular columnist at Reactor (https://reactormag.com/author/alex-brown/ ). While they often write about YA, they aren’t to be confused with the YA author Alex Brown who is a completely different person (https://locusmag.com/review/rest-in-peaches-by-alex-brown-review-by-alex-brown/ ). I think this is their second time as a Hugo finalist in this category, and they have been on the longlist several times. They are also an Ignyte award winner.

Here is their introduction in their own words:

“Alex Brown is a queer Black librarian, local historian, writer, and author of two books on local marginalized history: Lost Restaurants of Napa Valley and Their Recipes and Hidden History of Napa Valley. They have a BA with honors in Anthropology and Sociology, a Master’s of Library and Information Science, and a Master’s in US History, specializing in Black history in Napa, California. They are an Ignyte award winning and Hugo award nominated writer and critic who covers speculative fiction and young adult literature for Reactor Magazine, Locus Magazine, NPR Books, Reader’s Digest, and elsewhere. Their work on local marginalized history, librarianship, and diversity has also appeared in publications such as the Lee & Low Blog, Napa Valley Life Magazine, Napa Valley Register, Mill Valley Historical Society Review, Booklist, etc. Their librarianship experience includes archives, special historical collections, and public, academic, and school libraries. Alex lives in California with their pet rat and ever-increasing piles of books. “

https://bookjockeyalex.com/about/

Alex has a short contribution to the Hugo packet, which directs people to their website. Most of their writing appears on their blog as full posts, but with links to relevant websites when it has been published elsewhere. This link will get you to 2025 posts https://bookjockeyalex.com/2025/

Alex reviews a lot of books, so a lot of the reviews sum up the book quickly and efficiently, while providing key information. As with my previous entry, I thought I’d focus on books I haven’t read, to give an example:

“Set in a near-future dystopian version of North America full of bioweapons and shifters, Coyote spends her time getting into trouble and punching her way out of it. She’s hired for a tough job that gets bloody fast—just the way she likes it. Coyote is a propulsive main character, much more of an anti-hero than a hero. She’s hotheaded and spiky, just the way a good pulp protagonist should be. The secondary characters are all just as interesting. Saintcrow has created a fascinating, well-thought-out world and peopled it with characters you can’t help but want to follow around.”

https://bookjockeyalex.com/2025/02/06/review-coyote-run-by-lilith-saintcrow/

There’s a wealth of reviews on their website.


Do give a thought to voting for Alex Brown for Best Fan Writer! 🙂

[syndicated profile] writerbeware_feed

Posted by Victoria Strauss

Header image: an iPhone screen with the Anthropic logo, against a multi-colored background of $100 bills (Credit: Ascannio / Shutterstock.com)

We’re currently waiting for Judge Araceli Martinez-Olguin to issue final approval of the historic settlement in the Bartz v, Anthropic copyright infringement lawsuit. (If you need a refresher, my past blog posts include a general overview of the settlement and an April update.)

One of the interesting outcomes–so far–has been that while participation by class members has been extraordinarily robust (91.3%, with claims filed for 440,490 of the 482,460 works on the elgible works list), the number of class members who opted out has been quite small–just 350, according to a motion for final approval filed by plaintiffs in March (the opt-out deadline was February 9).

Opting out preserved those individuals’ right to sue Anthropic on their own. And indeed, in recent months, several lawsuits have been filed, representing approximately a third of the writers who opted out. Each suit is interesting in its own way.

Carreyrou v. Anthropic

If you’ve been following the progress of the settlement, you may remember a group called ClaimsHero. A law firm whose leadership team members do not appear to have law degrees, ClaimsHero got in trouble last year with the court over its attempts to recruit Anthropic class members for representation in alternative copyright lawsuits, using the lure of a higher payout (since the settlement will pay around $3,000 but the statutory maximum for copyright infringement is $150,000) without adequately disclosing to potential clients that signing with ClaimsHero meant authorizing ClaimsHero to opt them out of the settlement. (I wrote about this at the time.)

ClaimsHero was forced to change its recruitment and advertising tactics. However, it continued to seek clients, and in December 2025, its efforts bore fruit: six authors, including author and journalist John Carreyrou, filed suits against Anthropic and several other AI companies, based on allegations similar to those that led to the settlement they’d opted out of: that the AI companies had infringed their copyrights by copying and storing pirated books in order to use them for AI training.

The suits, which seek a judgment of willful infringement, statutory damages of up to $150,000 per infringed work, and attorney fees and expenses, are being litigated not by ClaimsHero (one of the things that came out when ClaimsHero was hauled into court was that it had no litigation experience) but by a partner law firm. You’ll also notice that I said suits, plural. The Carreyrou filing isn’t a class action, but six individual lawsuits related by a common cause of action and filed together.

13. Plaintiffs elect not to bring this case as a class action because theCopyright Act entitles them to recover individualized statutory damages, determined by a jury, for each Defendant’s infringement of their work. Plaintiffs desire to retainfull control of their case and avoid having their rights diluted by being swept into sprawling class-action settlements structured to resolve claims for pennies on the dollar.

Class action settlements, the plaintiffs argue, serve defendants rather than creators, sidestepping creators’ right to have statutory damages individually determined and allowing companies like Anthropic to “easily extinguish thousands upon thousands of high-value claims at bargain-basement rates, eliding what should be the true cost of their massive willful infringement.”

This unusual approach, with individual cases joined together into a single action, is used by third-party claims filers, companies that specialize in recruiting claimants in class action settlements and batch-filing individual claims on their behalf. The tactic doesn’t always pan out, and whether it will succeed here remains to be seen. The plaintiffs have already suffered a setback, with most of the AI companies named in the original complaint severed from the case. The case has also been consolidated with several other infringement cases against Anthropic.

Back to ClaimsHero for a minute…ClaimsHero’s recruitment efforts have been aggressive. Between February and April, I got at least seven of these emails.

Dear Victoria,We are reaching out because your published works below may have been included in the copyrighted content allegedly downloaded and used by major AI companies without authorization.     Color Song, Guardian of the Hills, The Lady of RhuddesmereSince our partner firms, Freedman Normand Friedland and Stris & Maher, first filed suit against major AI companies in December, the case has continued to grow:    More than 1,000 authors and publishers have signed up to potentially pursue their case    Chicken Soup for the Soul, a publisher with over 500 million books sold, has joined and filed suit (as covered in Reuters here)    Apple and Nvidia have been added as defendantsInterested in joining these 1,000+ authors/publishers in pursuing up to $150,000 per work, per defendant on a no win, no fee basis? Click below to learn more and sign-up!LEARN MOREYou can also schedule time to speak directly with one of our team members here: Schedule time here.We believe authors and publishers deserve the opportunity to protect their rights and seek compensation where their works were used without permission. We look forward to fighting for you. If you have any questions, just reply to this email!Sincerely,The ClaimsHero TeamClaimsHero, an Arizona law firmwww.claimshero.comAttorney Advertisement. Not legal advice.

“Potentially” in that first bullet point is doing a lot of work; as far as I know, the Carreyrou action is the only one ClaimsHero has facilitated to date. And although I haven’t gotten a solicitation in a while, ClaimsHero is still recruiting–and there’s still some, well, lack of transparency. Here’s its current website pitch:

AI Book PiratingAI Book Pirating Header ImageMajor AI companies are being sued for allegedly copying millions of copyrighted books from piracy websites to train commercial language models. Authors and rightsholders may be able to pursue individual claims for these infringements.Max Damages: Up to $750k Per Work*Status: Accepting SubmissionsTotal Eligible: 500,000+Time to Submit: 4 mins

But wait, you’re thinking, where is that $750k per work figure coming from? Isn’t the $150k the maximum for statutory damages in a copyright suit? Well, yes, and ClaimsHero does clarify that, but only if you bother to scan down the page to find the asterisk:

*Assumes statutory damages of up to $150,000 per work for five defendants.

This is the same kind of bait-and-switch advertising as calorie claims on food packaging that don’t mention that the calorie count is per serving.

Daniel Benjamin Gilbert v. Anthropic

This second infringement case filed by an author who opted out of the Anthropic settlement touches on a sore issue for writers who did not opt out: they must split their payouts with their publishers if their contracts are still in force and the publisher files a claim.

Originally filed in May and amended on July 7, Gilbert’s complaint makes familiar allegations (infringement based on Anthropic’s copying and storage of pirated books) and seeks familiar relief (including full statutory damages, attorney fees and costs, and destruction of the infringed material). However, Gilbert also wants to make sure his publisher, Wiley, can’t share of any of the proceeds.

32. Paragraph 16 of the Publishing Agreement provides: “If the copyright in the Workor in any derivative work is infringed, the Publisher shall have the right, but not the obligation, topursue a claim for infringement in such manner as it deems appropriate. If it does so, thePublisher shall recoup the expense incurred from any recovery, and the balance of the proceeds,if any, shall be divided equally between the Author and the Publisher. If the Publisher does notpursue such a claim after the Author’s request to do so, the Author, at the Author’s expense, shall have the right to prosecute an action, and any recovery shall belong solely to the Author.”8

Gilbert says that he notified Wiley in writing of Anthropic’s infringement, and “asked Wiley to advise within thirty days whether it intended to pursue the claim, and stated that if Wiley did not, he would proceed as provided in Paragraph 16.” Wiley did not respond within that time. Later, however, it notified Gilbert that it had submitted a claim under the settlement–but that the claim was moot thanks to Gilbert’s opt-out (under the terms of the settlement, an opt-out by one rightsholder opts out all other rightsholders as well).

The question here is whether, should Gilbert win his case, Wiley could claim a share of the recovery by arguing that making a claim under the settlement counted under Paragraph 16, despite the opt-out issue and even though it took more than 30 days to respond to Gilbert’s notification. Gilbert argues that it can’t: “Because Wiley declined to pursue the claim after Plaintiff’s request, as between Plaintiff and Wiley any recovery in this action, which Plaintiff prosecutes at his own expense, belongs solely to the Author, and Wiley has no contractual entitlement to share in it.”

Whether a court will agree remains to be seen. It’ll be interesting to watch how this particular case unfolds.

Shakespeare v. Anthropic

Filed June 17, this is the most recent infringement suit by Anthropic settlement opt-outs. Defendants are not just Anthropic, but Dario Amodei, Anthropic’s co-founder and CEO, and Benjamin Mann, who is identified as “a founder and member of the technical staff of Anthropic” and who the suit alleges personally handled the downloading of the pirate datasets that included the plaintffs’ books.

Plaintiffs bring this case to address Defendants’ unlawful downloading and exploitation of their works from library websites known to consist of pirated works by using BitTorrent, a file-sharing technology widely used for mass copyright infringement. Defendants downloaded works by torrenting an enormous number of unauthorized copies of Plaintiffs’ works from illegal shadow libraries to avoid paying for those works, while at the same time uploading via torrenting unlawful copies of the same works, all in violation of Plaintiffs’ copyrights.

The case is similar to Carreyrou in approach–“joined individual actions pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 20”–but much larger, comprising 100 authors, authors’ estates, and publishers who either timely opted out or are seeking permission from the Bartz judge to opt out late.

Plaintiffs are seeking damages not just under the Copyright Act, but under 17 U.S.C. § 1203(c) of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, which allows awards of up to $2,500 or up to $25,000, depending on the violation. They demand individual judgment on each of their claims, statutory damages “up to the maximum provided by law”, attorney fees and costs, a permanent injunction barring Anthropic and its agents from future infringement of “any of Plaintiffs’ exclusive rights under copyright”, and “[a]n order requiring that Defendants destroy under the Court’s supervision all infringing copies of Plaintiffs’ copyrighted works in Defendants’ possession or control.”

Again, this kind of joint action is “unorthodox”, in the words of some of the news coverage of it, and it remains to be seen how the court will respond–especially since the number of plaintiffs is so large and they are each demanding a separate jury trial.

Keeping Track

There’s a tremendous volume of AI litigation right now. Keeping track of it is a monumental task.

The best resource I’ve found for that is Chat GPT is Eating the World. This extensive resource provides overviews and updates for every case that’s being litigated (128 of them as of this writing), news and articles, a master case calendar, and more, including a data center lawsuit tracker. It’s an essential resource for keeping up to date with an issue of vital importance not just for writers, but for…everyone. (Forgive its clunky formatting.)

The post Anthropic Settlement Update: The Opt-Outs Strike Back appeared first on Writer Beware.

Questions:

Jul. 17th, 2026 02:49 pm
fabrisse: (Default)
[personal profile] fabrisse posting in [community profile] thisfinecrew
Does anyone know:

a reputable organization which is fighting what the executive branch is trying to do by federalizing elections

whether this is even a concern that I can take to my congress critters (i.e. do they have any real power to stop what's being attempted)

are there any lawsuits being filed over this in any state but especially Georgia

is this an issue which can be brought as an emergency suit to the Supreme Court even though it's out of session

Thank you.

Fete For A King, by Sam Starbuck

Jul. 17th, 2026 11:09 am
runpunkrun: Dana Scully reading Jose Chung's 'From Outer Space' in the style of a poster you'd find in your school library, text: Read. (reading)
[personal profile] runpunkrun
An original m/m romance novel about a prince and a celebrity chef that's utterly charming and very kind, a modern fairy tale where the prince is democratically elected and publicly gay, and the celebrity chef promotes local, sustainable practices.

And because this is Sam Starbuck, aka [archiveofourown.org profile] copperbadge, you can read an early draft on AO3 (which is what I did, it's fine!) or download the final draft in PDF from Drive.

And if you like that (and I did!), there's plenty more Sam's written in this universe, though I've only read this first piece, twice now.

Contains: low heat (implied sex only), three kinds of cheese (lots of descriptions of food and eating and a celebrity chef made in the mold of Guy Fieri (affectionate)).

(no subject)

Jul. 17th, 2026 11:59 am
watersword: A ship at sunrise, with the words "not all those who wander are lost" (Stock: wandering)
[personal profile] watersword

As I have mentioned previously, I am working my way through Patrick O'Brien's Aubreyad and have finished #19, The Hundred Days.

cut for spoilers )

How dare you, sir.

Well, I am miffed (and Not Amused)

Jul. 17th, 2026 02:36 pm
oursin: Photograph of Queen Victoria, overwritten with Not Amused (queen victoria is not amused)
[personal profile] oursin

As my dearios know, I have spent quite a lot of time pursuing and correcting popular factoids about The Victorianz.

And I continue to polish and update my webpages on this as and when I come across further info, somebody else does pertinent research, etc.

Today, I was browsing Kobo's New and Recommended and there was a Pop Sex History Book by somebody I have some passing acquaintance with because I was interviewed for their podcast some while ago. It was (misleadingly) priced as a deal (but apparently it is still at full price) so I clicked on it because sometimes I am prepared to pay 99p for something I would not pay much more for, and looked at the preview.

Where it mentions that longstanding canard about the Victorian mothers' advice to their girlies apropos of the wedding night, 'just close your eyes and think of England'. I chased this down to its (if even accurately cited, which is dubious) Edwardian, or even later, origin, and some further dubious attributions. Work gives the details that I dug up but no citation.

Okay, it is pophist and one does not expect footnoting but what is wrong with mentioning Other Historian's name and maybe their website?

(Of course, maybe it was just scraped by AI....)

Even slower

Jul. 17th, 2026 06:19 am
mildred_of_midgard: (Default)
[personal profile] mildred_of_midgard
11:25, maybe? I didn't even bother taking my watch, so I'm guesstimating based on the music I played.

I realized that yesterday's run was still too close to a sprint to be "fun", and I didn't want to take the extra 1-2 minutes to wrestle my watch on over the gauze bandage I use to reduce the amount my skin reacts to the wristband. So I just went for a slower, untimed run. I even put on slower music!

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ithiliana

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