2025 in Books

Jan. 5th, 2026 04:12 pm
starlady: a circular well of books (well of books)
[personal profile] starlady
It's the eleventh day of Christmas and high time to post this roundup. 

2025 Reading Stats
  • 144 books read, of which 12 were a reread
  • By gender: 45.5 (32%) by men, the rest by women and other genders
  • By race: 62 (45%) by people of color
  • By language: 28 (19%) in Japanese, 8 (0.5%) in translation
  • New books: 37 (26%) published in 2025
  • New-to-me authors: 27
…versus 2025 Resolutions
  • Read 125 books ==> Success! 144, an all-time high!
  • Read 25 physical books owned since 2023 or earlier ==> Success! 29
  • Read 35 books by authors of color ==> Success! 62
  • Read 10 books in translation ==> Fail
  • Read a volume of manga a week in Japanese ==> Well, I got closer than I have before?
  • Read all the comics bought before 2025, both physical and digital ==> Fail. But I did buy a refurbished 2021 iPad mini and reading comics on it in Kindle is a pretty good experience, unlike my old iPad which had been blinking off randomly for years. And I think I have done the physical part of it? Except for a few random bandes-dessinées I have lying around.
General Comments
I feel like I'm not entirely sure how I managed to read this many books (well, I read six Lumberjanes collections on the trains to and from New York on New Year's Eve, and I ruthlessly read a lot of novellas that had piled up in December), but I'm pleased about it. I'm especially pleased about reading so much manga, and also that I've gotten faster at reading Japanese again. Which is good because I still have so. much. manga to read. And I buy more every time I go to Japan. I'm also pleased about the physical TBR progress, which includes sorting a bunch of books lurking on the bookshelf for years into piles of "read this and then sell it back," which I will continue doing. Sadly Half Price in town closed because of landlord greed, so now I have to go to either Fremont or Pleasant Hill. Other than that, I did de-prioritize new books to focus on older ones, so there's a lot of good 2025 books that have piled up. Too many books, too little time!

Best of 2025
  • The Witch Roads and The Nameless Land (duology) by Kate Elliott
  • Holy Terrors by Margaret Owen
  • The Wall Around Eden by Joan Slonczewski
  • Tamsin by Peter S. Beagle
  • The Incandescent by Emily Tesh
  • Metal from Heaven by august clarke
  • Fuichin zaijian! (10 vols) by Murakami Motoka
  • Absolute Wonder Woman vol. 1 by Kelly Thompson et al.
  • Audition for the Fox by Martin Cahill

2025 Reading Resolutions
  1. Read 125 books
  2. Read 25 physical books owned since 2024 or earlier
  3. Read 35 books by authors of color
  4. Read 10 books in translation
  5. Read a volume of manga a week in Japanese
  6. Read all the comics bought before 2025, both physical and digital
azurelunatic: Computer parts made of gingerbread.  (gingerbread motherboard)
[personal profile] azurelunatic
* didn't do much for Solstice
* amusingly, both Aunt Tish and V got me the same slipper-socks for Christmas
* pear + green tea perfume was extremely relevant to Thorn's interests, even straight out of the bottle
* got my pill boxes filled for the coming quarter
- started the desk top cleanup for that a little before Just In Time
- did the morning pills first, which always gives me a little grace period to get the evening pills done the subsequent day
- ran out of my joint supplement after the first five weeks were done, but that did allow me to put the first five weeks away and start using them
- Belovedest picked up the missing pills in a very short turn-around, yay
* NYE cat pilling results: Yellface deigned to swallow, finally, after several very polite arguments in favor of spitting the pill out; Mila was too sharp to be pilled
* watched the festivities up at the Space Needle from the comfort of bed, with Belovedest and Thorn and sparkling cider (Belovedest dipped into the Faygo stash also)
* legs still awful
* did not lose the second set of black teardrop beads for the crochet projects
* made an OTC meds order from the usual supplier (Wellspring Meds) despite the sale having expired
- if your household needs industrial quantities of Imodium and you hate blister packs with a passion, consider this vendor: 200 pills in a nice little safety cap bottle, no peeling or shoving required

I also didn’t expect

Jan. 7th, 2026 04:34 pm
conuly: (Default)
[personal profile] conuly
Such an open and bald admission that this is about the oil.

Could Donald Trump beat me?

Jan. 5th, 2026 04:16 pm
lauradi7dw: two bare feet in water (frog pond feet)
[personal profile] lauradi7dw
Every few months Trump boasts about how well he did on what he refers to as an IQ test but which is almost surely a version of this
https://www.mdcalc.com/calc/10044/montreal-cognitive-assessment-moca

I expect I could do OK on that (it would be cheating to test myself).
Directed by an article on NPR
https://www.npr.org/sections/shots-health-news/2025/07/16/nx-s1-5468647/healthy-brain-aging-alzheimers-sleep-science
I went to the mindcrowd site
https://mindcrowd.org/
and took the test (played the game, as they said). They require more info than one might should (southernism) give them, but I was curious.
I found the memory part of the test hard, although it got better with repetition. Still, I scored somewhat higher than average for people in my category (race age "biological sex" highest education level) on the memory portion and was a good bit better at tapping a key (any alphabetic letter will do) at the sight of a red (they say pink) ball on the screen. Is that because I ring synthetic bells using a keyboard? Because I can touch type pretty well?

Of course I am somewhat younger than DJT and live a healthier lifestyle, so we wouldn't be in the same category anyway.
rachelmanija: (Books: old)
[personal profile] rachelmanija


This is a difficult book to review as almost all of the plot is technically spoilery, but you can also figure out a lot of it from about page three. I'll synopsize the first two chapters here. We follow two storylines, both set in an alternate England where Hitler was assassinated in 1943 and England made peace with Germany.

In one storyline, a young girl named Nancy lives an isolated life with her parents. In the other, which gets much more page time, three identical young boys are raised by three "mothers," in a home in extremely weird circumstances. They rarely see the outside world, they're often sick and take medicine, their dreams are meticulously recorded by the "mothers," and all their schooling comes from a set of weird encyclopedias that supposedly contain all the knowledge in the world, which are also the only books they have access to. There used to be 40 boys, but when they recover from their mysterious illness, they get to go to Margate, a wonderful vacationland, forever.

I'm sure you can figure out the general outline of what's going on with the boys, at least, just from this. What's up with the girl doesn't become clear for a while.


Spoilers through about the 40% mark )



Spoilers for the entire book )



This book was critically acclaimed - it was a Kirkus best book of 2025 - but I thought it had major flaws, which unfortunately I can only describe by spoiling the entire book. It's not at all an original idea, and I do think we're supposed to be ahead of the characters, but maybe not that much ahead. It also contained a trope which I hate very much and its thesis contradicted itself, but how, again, is under the end cut. It's a very serious book about very serious real life stuff, but that part really didn't work for me because of spoilers.


Lots of people loved it though. It would probably make an interesting paired reading with a certain very acclaimed spoilery book (Read more... )), which I have not read as I have been spoiled for the entire story and it doesn't really sound like something I'd enjoy no matter how great it is. But I suspect that it's the better version of this book.



Content Notes (spoilery): Read more... )

(no subject)

Jan. 5th, 2026 03:06 pm
aurumcalendula: gold, blue, orange, and purple shapes on a black background (Default)
[personal profile] aurumcalendula
Harmony Secret, episodes 1 and 2:

some thoughts/reactions )
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll


More than two thousand pages of material for Champions, 6th Edition.

Bundle of Holding: Champions 6E (from 2021)




A bundle focusing on the late Aaron Allston's groundbreaking multiversal Strike Force superheroic campaign.


Bundle Of Holding: Aaron Allston’s Strike Force

BALL x PIT

Jan. 5th, 2026 09:06 am
sineala: Mac laptop whose Apple logo has no bite (Young Wizards reference); text reads "my other Mac is a manual" (Young Wizards: My Other Mac)
[personal profile] sineala
As I think I have mentioned, I usually attempt to finish games before posting about them, but I suspend this rule when the game is clearly designed to be an unholy timesink. I'm not actually sure this game has an end. Or a plot.

I bought BALL x PIT during the Steam winter sale, which I mention because it is theoretically still the Steam sale for a few more hours and I don't want to deprive anyone else of the sale opportunity, although the game is reasonably cheap anyway. It is the new hotness of "roguelite games that have combined roguelite meta-progression with some other genre of popular game," most recently exemplified by Balatro (roguelite poker), Vampire Survivors (roguelite bullet-heaven, which is of course a variant of bullet-hell shooters) and my beloved Slay the Spire (roguelite deckbuilder, and, yes, I am counting down the months until the sequel hits Early Access; I would count down the days if they had said anything more specific than "a Thursday in March").

So BALL x PIT is a roguelite version of Breakout. Or Pong, I guess, if you prefer. You shoot bouncy balls at enemies. The balls have powers like poison and lightning and whatnot. You level them up and then combine them to make different balls with more powers. In between levels you retreat to your base, which is full of buildings and resources and so on that you arrange in order to have balls bounce around them with maximum efficiency like if SimCity were pinball, and then you build buildings that buff your characters. They have this gameplay loop down solid. It's fun.

Anyway, I am posting because I wanted to mention the accessibility options, since I watched a bunch of streamers and read a bunch of reviews, could not figure out if I could play this, bought it anyway, and then discovered I could.

So you can play this game either with keyboard/mouse or with a controller. If you're playing with keyboard/mouse, it's WASD to move and mouse to aim/fire, my least favorite control scheme. If you're playing with a controller, it's left stick to move, right stick to aim, right trigger to fire. (There's an option to aim in the direction of movement, but sadly only if you're using a mouse.) I will say that you can play this while not being especially great at aiming, because the balls will eventually bounce approximately where you want -- it's not like playing an actual shoot-'em-up.

You can remap the controls if you need to (Settings > General, then scroll down) but for me the most useful general thing is the ability to turn autofire on, which you can do while playing. Your character slows down a bit if you turn this on, but there are buffs during the game to bring your movement speed up, so it's not so bad. Then you just need to aim and move (and not fire), and I can do left and right stick with one hand if I have my 8bitdo Lite SE controller.

However, there are points where this game becomes an actual bullet-hell shooter. You can shoot down some projectiles, but not all of them, and the boss of the first stage -- for example -- shoots a bunch of intricate projectiles that you do in fact have to just dodge. Now, I bought this game anyway and figured I was just gonna die a lot, because I can't dodge worth a damn, but it turns out the devs thought of that! Under Settings > General, turn on "Allow slower movement speed."

The regular game has three movement speeds you can cycle through while playing, which I knew, and I nearly didn't select this option in the settings because I figured this was how you opted into that, but it turns out the three regular speeds are there anyway. What this option does is turn on super-slow "1/4" and "1/2" speeds so you have five speeds to choose from. Yay!

(As far as I can tell, this does not lock you out of achievements; you can get an achievement for completing a level even if you have fought the boss at half-speed. I don't know if there are any locked achievements for completing a level at a specific speed, in which case those are probably still locked.)

So it turns out that I can definitely mostly dodge projectiles in the boss fight in a bullet-hell game at half-speed and that there's still quarter-speed available if I need it. I hadn't seen any of the reviews mention this setting, so I thought I would bring it up. You too can play BALL x PIT even if your reflexes are not usually up to par for bullet-hell shooters!

2 Movies

Jan. 5th, 2026 09:47 am
scifirenegade: (film | buster)
[personal profile] scifirenegade

Not Untamed, But Childish



Joan Crawford’s all-talkie debut, Untamed, begins as a drama with music set in South America, then makes a choppy transition to a society romance in which the lovers are reconciled only after she attempts to murder him. The film’s tone shifts with every new scene. At no time does any character in Untamed resemble any human being who ever lived, but its flamboyant unreality gives the film a vaguely comic, unintentional charm.

-Scott Eyman, The Speed of Sound

So I watched it for the madness.

It was something alright.

It is all over place, with a dash of South American exoticism. They're acting as if South America (as a monolith) is the anals of hell, dear lord.

Anyway, wow this lady sounds a lot like Joan Crawford, I thought in the first five seconds. You doofus, she is Crawford! And this is how I learn that she was in The Unknown. I saw her onscreen way before I saw her in Mildred Pierce. Fuck my stupid baka brain.

See, the thing that I could not take from this movie, which sadly made it more painful than funny, was that her character (B-I-N-G-O, and Bingo was her name-o) was supposed to be naive, but came across childish. And it wasn't Crawford's fault (this was her first talkie, she still sounds a bit Southern even), but the writing's. And it's not even in a teenager way, she acts like she's five years old.

And then pulls a 180 and she acts like she's ten when we get to the high-society bit.

I did guffaw at the improvised boxing match, and how willing Bingo was to punch people she didn't like.

The Artist



From an early talkie, to a late silent (really late, 2011).

I had to rewrire my brain for this one. It's not supposed to emulate a silent film, but to be a modern silent. It's not supposed to be historically accurate, but to be like Singin' in the Rain, grabbing the myth and twisting it to tell its story.

Because it was filmed on digital, and the camera acts very modern, and the acting is still very modern talkie.

Afterwards, I was on board. At the end of the day, it's a celebration, of the silents, of the talkies (musicals), of melodrama. And I had a blast.

It's weird, because it won so many awards and it didn't create this wave of modern silent movies. Like La La Land didn't create a wave of musicals. Sigh.

And it has a top tier dog. Such a good boy. Deserves all the pats.

Chapter 101: Page 16

Jan. 5th, 2026 12:00 am
[syndicated profile] gunnerkrigg_feed
Just ask.
-------------
Hey! Did you know there is a Gunnerkrigg subreddit? I'll be doing an AMA there on January 18th at 11 AM EST! That's plenty of time to think of questions you might have.
tamaranth: me, in the sun (Default)
[personal profile] tamaranth
2026/001: The River Has Roots — Amal el-Mohtar
Something, you might think, happened here, long, long ago; something, you might think, is on the cusp of happening again. But that is the nature of grammar—it is always tense, like an instrument, aching for release, longing to transform present into past into future, is into was into will. [p. 4]

A short novella from the co-author of This is How You Lose the Time War. The River Liss runs from Faerie, past the Refrain (an assemblage of standing stones) and through the Modal Lands, between two ancient trees known as the Professors, and between ordinary fields to the town of Thistleford. Read more... )

My Mother's Holiday Message

Jan. 4th, 2026 09:55 pm
labingi: (Default)
[personal profile] labingi
A bit late, I wanted to share my mother's holiday letter (with her permission):

My Year of Not-doing

by Patricia Spicer

In 2025, while friends and relatives were busy with many accomplishments, I did NOT do several things:

My house was painted, but not by me. A painter did it.

A tiny home was installed on my property in Glen Ellen, but I did not do it. My remarkable tenant, Juan Sanchez, did it.

A new gate was added to my front porch railing, but I did not do it. A carpenter did it.

You can see how much I did NOT do. And there was much more.

But I did make two trips to Iceland, one with Rick Steves and one through the remarkable pictures of my cousin Holly, who also took me to all the film sites for the Lord of the Rings in New Zealand. How beautiful and what an easy way to travel!

Yes, Arwen and I did take one actual trip to Glen Ellen in June, very brief, due to my painful back injury. Much better now.

I look forward to another year of Not-doing, when I expect to xeriscape my front yard, but I will let the landscaper do it.

New Years Book Meme

Jan. 5th, 2026 10:20 am
swingandswirl: text 'tammy' in white on a blue background.  (tammy)
[personal profile] swingandswirl
 Ganked from [personal profile] muccamukk

01. Grab the nearest book.
02. Turn to page 126
03. The 6th full sentence is your life in 2026.

So the closest book to me was Indian Christmas: Essays | Memories | Hymns, about how the nearly 30 million Christians in India celebrate the festival. 

Sentence #6 on page 126 is from the chapter 'Did Your First Christmas Cake Come Out Of An Ammunition Box, Too?' by Estherine Kine. 

Mrs Tanquist baked her cakes in a big mud oven, but her students ingeniously used ammunition boxes after the men discovered they were airtight and preserved head very well.

So for context, cooking on gas ranges rather than wood- or kerosene-fired stoves only came to India in 1965, and even then, it was limited to larger urban areas. Electric ovens came even later - my mother, born in 1961, has stories of my grandma baking cakes in a 'sand oven' -  a large pot filled with sand that was heated over a flame, functioning as a sort of bain-marie. Even now, gas is standard in any home that can afford it rather than wood or kerosene. Electric stoves are not common, or are used as a sort of secondary cooking device, since power cuts are pretty common even in big cities.

The ammunition boxes mentioned were left by British troops when they quit the subcontinent in 1947. Mrs Tanquist, the wife of a missionary, taught the author's mother and her friends how to bake Christmas cakes, among other things. 

Given the state of the world around us, let's hope this sentence heralds a transition to peace after years of conflict. We can hope, right? 

(For my own sanity, I am choosing not to delve into RL politics on DW. Let's keep it that way in the comments, please.)



New Year's Book Prediction Meme

Jan. 5th, 2026 02:38 pm
vass: a jar of Vegemite (Happy Little Vegemite)
[personal profile] vass
via [personal profile] sanguinity

  1. Grab the nearest book.
  2. Turn to page 126
  3. The 6th full sentence is your life in 2026.


Immortalized in ballads, they became a central part of the mythology of the Australian past.
mistressofmuses: Image of nebulae in the colors of the bi pride flag: pink, purple, and blue (Default)
[personal profile] mistressofmuses
I doubt I'll end up doing all the [community profile] snowflake_challenge posts this year, but here's an easy one!

As if I need an excuse to post pet pics. :)

So here are the critters, ringing in the new year (ish).


Belladonna! (She really does still have ears, I promise.)


Summer "Berry Mad" Refresher, the Woodhouse's toad, dug down into a hole.


Guava Splash Electrolyte, my very chubby little chorus frog.


(This picture is from Alex.) It's Clickbait, the katydid! I am *blown away* (and delighted) that we still have a living katydid into the new year.

Bonus pet:


Jaspurr, my mom and younger sibling's cat.

(Not pictured: Ripley, my mom and younger sibling's garter snake. I don't have any new pictures of her since last time.)

Doctor Who - Pit stop

Jan. 5th, 2026 01:23 am
desecrets: (Default)
[personal profile] desecrets posting in [community profile] 100words
Title: Pit stop
Fandom: Doctor Who (1963) - Third Doctor
Rating: G
Notes: Engine failure

Read more... )

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