primeideal: Egwene al'Vere from "Wheel of Time" TV (egwene al'vere)
[personal profile] primeideal
(This part will be more applicable when I crosspost to Reddit:) I know there have been a lot of takes of the form “here are the parts of Wind and Truth that didn’t click for me,” and I suspect this is going to overlap with many of them, so sorry. With a book/series of this scope it’s hard to really do a coherent/organized review, so this is mostly going to be bullet points of things that worked and didn’t work for me. My overall enjoyment of the series isn’t necessarily a function of how many bullet points are on either side.
  
Just walk out! Hit da bricks! )
Bingo: Perfect fit for Knights and Paladins (the hard mode is “the character has an oath or a promise to keep,” lolololol), A Book In Parts (hard mode, four or more parts), Gods and Pantheons.
tafadhali: ([d20] ayda)
[personal profile] tafadhali posting in [community profile] vidding
Title: What Was I Thinkin'?
Fandoms: Star Wars
Music: "What Was I Thinkin'?" by Dierks Bentley
Summary: Han knows what he was feeling...but what was he thinking??
Notes: Made for [community profile] fandomtrumpshate 

AO3 | TumblrDW

tuesday

May. 20th, 2025 10:55 pm
tielan: kate freelander looking troubled (Sanctuary - Kate)
[personal profile] tielan
Went out to visit a friend at Malvern this evening - a FB friend who I've been chatting with about the last six or seven years. Faith and gardening, mostly, but his family was instrumental in some early missions to a section of Indonesia, and there were a bunch of people from those churches who had come to Melbourne for a visit, and so there was gathering and food and company and sharing of stories and theology.

It was great. I was a little apprehensive - I've never met this friend before in person, he's about 70, I think, maybe 75. Still pretty hale, and unfortunately still working. His daughters are my age and a little bit older (the older one was at the dinner tonight and we got talking about perimenopause), so he must be at least 75. But he's lovely, his wife is lovely, it was delightful to talk to a bunch of people and to watch the exchange of stories and histories.

At the daughter's suggestion, I caught two trams back, and I'm glad she made the suggestions she did. A lot better lighting and not so much walking past areas that are a little bit of a problem...

But now I'm back, it's nearly 11pm and I haven't had a shower yet. Need to get to that and get to bed.

No more social dinners. (I did one last night, too, with a writing friend from, oh, 20 years ago. We talked a little bit about stories and people and politics and so forth, and there was duck laksa and so much of it I ended up having half of it for lunch today!

Oof. Anyway, last two nights will be 'quiet' (ie. not social, that's the plan, let's see if it pans out hahah) and then it's HOMEWARD HO.

I'm like this after two weeks. Imagine me after seven weeks...
selenak: (Spacewalk - Foundation)
[personal profile] selenak
I rewatched Rogue One for the first time since I originally saw it in the cinema, obviously inspired by Andor, and curious whether two seasons of an excellent prequel to a prequel would make a difference. In the grand scheme of things, it didn't - I liked the film then, I still do, with a few exceptions, I'm not interpreting things very different from when I was newly introduced to (most of) these characters. I'm still irritated by the same plot element in the opening sequence , possibly even more so post Andor- spoiler cut just in case ). I still like and appreciate pretty much everything else. Then as now, I feel the movie is a love letter to all redshirts, and far more original and creative than the one sequel movie which was already released by the time Rogue One premiered, The Force Awakens, because instead of modelling itself on A New Hope and repeating the exact some emotional and plot beats, it told an actually new story within the SWverse.

There are a few differences seeing this for the second time and post Andor does make for me:

- Jyn Erso no longer feels like the main character, Cassian does, with Jyn only guest starring, so to speak

- the delighted shock at the appearance of Saw Guerrera (not so much for Saw's sake but for the fact that up to this point, he had been an animated Clone Wars character, and if he was now big screen canon, then so was Ahsoka) made room for a more spoilery reaction )

- I like the Rogue One only (i.e. not appearing in Andor) characters of Bodhi, Chirrup and Baze a lot and in retrospect Bodhi especially forshadows Team Gilroy's ability to create nuanced imperial defectors/undercover-for-the-rebellion people who with not much screen time still make me feel a lot for them (see also Lonni Jung, or even just the maintenance worker Cassian interacts with in the first episode of s2)

- the way fascism works on a dog-eats-dog basis, with groveling towards those above you and kicking downwards, is really perfectly illustrated if you contrast Krennic in this movie (where we mostly see him with people who outrank him, like Tarkin and Vader) versus Krennic in the show (where we exclusively see him with people he outranks, like Dedra and Partagaz)

- yep, the digitally recreated counterparts of Peter Cushing and Carrie Fisher still look creepy, and Andor with Bail Organa proves you can successfully recast if an actor (for whichever reason) isn't available anymore

- I stand by my observation from my original review that the fact Rogue One as a prequel could not show the Death Star destroying a planet (since Alderaan has to remain the first occasion this happens) was a blessing, because what it shows instead - spoilery in nature ) is way more viscerally frightening, only now I think Tony Gilroy might have shown that restraint even without the prequel factor, because the Ghorman arc in s2 illustrated he and his creative team are very very aware of how you buld up to, execute and then show the aftermath of such an event in a way that really affects the audience. (Meanwhile, The Force Awakens went completely into the opposite direction and tried to top the one destroyed planet with multiple destroyed systems and no emotional resonance whatsoever.)

Some more thoughts about Jyn: Which are spoilery. )

What Rogue One and Andor between them accomplished for good, though, is to realign the whole focus of the Rebellion era in SW from the force wielding Jedi and Sith characters to the non-force users (Chirrup's belief in the Force notwithstanding), and thereby making it feel far more of a story about Revolution versus Authoritarianism. This doesn't mean I disdain the Jedi and Sith aspects of the story now, btw. Or that I think the only valid SW has to be like Andor. As mentioned elswhere, I adored Skeleton Crew*, which is defiantely aimed at kids and about them, and which is just as much SW. But I am really really glad there is room for both.

*Speaking of which, I hear one young actress is now the new central Slayer in the BtVS sequel? On the one hand, good for her, she was great in Skeleton Crew, otoh, I guess that means it remains a miniseries without a second sason.....

life

May. 18th, 2025 09:27 pm
tielan: (IM - pepper)
[personal profile] tielan
So, it's been good to meet some of the colleauges I'm working with. Others…well, they're typical 'guys in tech' and, moreover 'South Asian/West Asian guys in tech', which is to say they're very insular socially, and very closed when it comes to including an East Asian female in their outings.

people gonna peop )

--

Spent a great weekend with friends I haven't seen since their kids were much smaller. I've known B for over 20 years - since before she met her husband C (internet dating back some twenty years) - and although we've moved through very different stages of life, we're still good friends.

I gave her a draft (very drafty draft) of the novel, which I've started to fix/adjust/rewrite. Still trying to work out some of the details about the various characters, the various moving parts of the story, and where everything lands up.

We went out on both Saturday and Sunday, which is a lot for her - she has CFS and struggles with her energy levels. We went for a walk around the area on Saturday morning, and then out for dinner that night. Sunday was markets and then taking me to the station, and by the end of it, I think she was pretty exhausted and sore. At least she gets today off - she doesn't work, is on disability (FWIW). Her husband works, currently the service rep at a local mechanic's place and he's got the knowledge for it, but not the body. They've had a lot going on the last 18 months and are hoping for a stretch of quiet.

--

So the hotel is not as nice as last week's hotel in terms of the room and appointments (tile flooring all the way, no carpets, no rugs, and the layout of the room is kind of peculiar), but the location is considerably better for going out and eating and stuff.

Eh. I'll take it.

--

Tonight, I'm catching up with a friend for dinner, and hopefully another friend on Tuesday night. Wednesday and Thursday will be scrounge days, although someone has recommended a place in the city

--

Back home, we have a chicken possible graphicity )

--

Electorate next door has fallen in favour of the Independent. By 40 votes.

WHEW.

That's "automatic recount" territory, of course, but it's been very carefully scrutinised, and so the counts are unlikely to change.

a variety of other things

May. 18th, 2025 07:58 pm
musesfool: a baseball and bat on the grass (the crack of ash on horsehide)
[personal profile] musesfool
I enjoyed this week's Leverage. spoilers )

I also watched the first two episodes of Murderbot. It was cute. I like Mensah a lot. I only read the first novella and thought it was fine but not at all memorable, so I have no real dog in this hunt. spoiler )

Ugh, I just found out the Mets are on ESPN next Sunday night too. ESPN is the worst broadcast.

*

Doctor Who, Eurovision, Murderbot

May. 18th, 2025 06:19 pm
pandarus: (Default)
[personal profile] pandarus
DOCTOR WHO

So I’m wondering, upon reflection, what story the Doctor Who writers thought they were telling last night?

I’m not so uncharitable as to take it for granted that RTD is consciously ripping off Catherynne Valente with the concept of Space Eurovision: it’s entirely likely that as his new era is QUEER AF Space Eurovision seemed like an obvious choice.

But then…honestly, the more I think about the episode, the more I wonder what they intended. Read more... )

The Babylon 5 original show synopsis

May. 18th, 2025 09:02 am
sholio: (B5-station)
[personal profile] sholio
Curious what the original B5 plan was before all the cast changes/brushes with cancellation, I went hunting for it and I found an absolutely fascinating rundown of the original 10 (not 5)-year synopsis from a message board, summarized from JMS's script books.

Because this is on a message board from 2008, I'm going to copy it below the cut to avoid having it vanish due to link decay. I found it here:

https://www.trekbbs.com/threads/synopsis-of-jmss-synopsis-of-the-original-arc-for-b5-spoilers.53739/

Original 10-year synopsis and my comments )

Thoughts?

Emily Tesh: The Incandescent

May. 18th, 2025 11:00 am
selenak: (Default)
[personal profile] selenak
The second Tesh novel in a couple of weeks for me, thanks to friendly comments pointing out a new one was about to be published. This one in a completely different genre: magical school story with some horror mixed in instead of military space opera with some dystopia. Unusually and refreshingly for any type of school story, our heroine and central character is one of the teachers, and so is most of the supporting cast. There are four students who are important to the plot in the way teachers are in other boarding school stories - from Enid Blyton to Harry Potter - , which is to say, you get to know them, but strictly from the outside, they are plot relevant, but the narrative emphasis is strictly on the teacher side of things, not just in terms of our central character but also the main supporting characters.

Since Dr. Walden (first name Sapphire which is her parents‘ fault; friends refer to her as „Saffy“, but the narration and her own pov call her „Walden“ almost through the entire novel) is near forty and a determined bisexual workoholic, the difference to the Young Adult tone with which many a boarding school story usually arrives is there from the start. At first, the novel seems to go for wry comedy as we get to know the characters and the setting; the rules for this particular universe are established: An AU in which magical abilities are publically known and a thing; the problem is that teenagers with their magical abilities running wild and them not yet able to really control them are the favourite snacks of demons, both, depending on the size of the demon, in the literal sense or via possession or for the smallest imps just via annoyance by them possessing machines. I mean, we all knew that about printing machines and photo copiers in offices, right? Anyway, hence the need for schools simultanously teaching the kids how to control their abilities and doing their best to save them from ending up as snacks. This can be difficult because teenagers by definition think THEY are invulnerable and able to conjur up the cool demons, which is why in addition to the regular teachers like Walden, there are also „Marshals“, i.e. magical cops who mostly don‘t have an academic background but excell at demon fighting. We open the novel with Walden meeting the latest Marshal, Laura Kenning; there is mutual resentment and UST from the get go.

It comes more and more evident that larger demons are no laughing matter and really incredibly dangerous, though the black humor never leaves the narrative tone, either. Walden, for all that she oozes competence and cool in the present, had A Tragic Event in her own youth; basically she‘s female Rupert Giles if you‘re a Buffy the Vampire Slayer (and/or female John Constantine from Hellblazer, if John/Joanna had gone into teaching after the event in question), and while she is really as good as she thinks she is in all things magic, she also is slightly hubristic because of it, and that becomes highly plot relevant. I also appreciate that she has a genuine passion for teaching. As for the demons, they‘re gratifyingly complicated and alien; leaving the comic relief ones you find in printers (I KNEW IT) aside, the reader is presented with two important ones, and while the first one‘s goals are obvious and very Exorcist the tv show, what the other one is up to is infinitely trickier and yet the hints are there early on.

By now, I‘ve found out that there were some complaints re: Some Desperate Glory regarding the characters being queer but their romances only seen in glimpses, so to speak, which I thought was appropriate for the characters and the story of Some Desperate Glory (plus it invites fanfic), but I take the general point, so let me say that Walden‘s romantic and sexual life gets more narrative room, plus Walden/Laura is central to the plot. Also, the novel avoids two extremes I find annoying which some media take with bisexual characters: either a character is declared to be bi but we only ever see him or her with one gender of romantic partner, i.e. the opposite if it‘s a more main stream show (looking at you, Da Vinci‘s Demons) or the same (Torchwood fanfiction; the show itself gave more screen time to Jack‘s same sex romances, but we did get some examples of him and women as well); OR there is the cliché of the evil, disturbed or at least amoral bisexual, unable to commit and breaking hearts that way (famously Basic Instinct, but also the novels of an author I otherwise really like, Sosan Howatch). By contrast, both in the past and in the present Walden is someone the reader sees to be attracted to people of both genders, we‘re not just told that in theory she is, and she‘s emotionally involved in the relationships in question (with one exception). (While at the same time being a sensible force for good. )That said, it is rather clear which relationship in the present we‘re meant to root for. *g*

In conclusion, this was another highly readable and very captivating novel by this author, who I hope will gift us with many more in the years to comem.

Murderbot TV show

May. 17th, 2025 03:35 pm
sholio: Made by <lj user=aesc> (Atlantis city)
[personal profile] sholio
I watched the first two episodes of the Murderbot show. With no particular associated feelings about the books, I'm really enjoying it!

Some things about that )

Doctor Who ? 05 + 06

May. 17th, 2025 02:52 pm
selenak: (Rani - Kathyh)
[personal profile] selenak
I lilked last week's episode, but didn't find myself able to say much about it.

Spoilers are into myths, but evidently not Klingon myths, because.... )

Now, on to this week's contribution. Here I must confess I have not watched a single Eurovision contest, not even the one time in my living memory that Germany won (though I do remember the winner, Nicole, as her "Ein bisschen Frieden" was played everywhere all those decades ago). So I had to google Ryan Clark whom based on Belinda's reaction I judged to be a real person doing a DW cameo, ditto for Graham Norton. But thankfully, even a complete ESC ignoramus like myself got captivated by the episode, even before You Know Who graced the screen. Let alone the MCU like tag scene after the first few credits which was a ZOMG! capper on a ZOMG! episode.

Spoilers are finally having some revelations at hand )
tielan: (SG1 - SJ1)
[personal profile] tielan
3 degrees around here. The heater that I have is barely keeping the cold at bay. I think the space needs a few more curtains to cut down the area that needs warming...

Anyway, I'm just here for another night.

Good to catch up with my friend B, who used to be on LJ and has a DW account but probably hasn't used it in over a decade! I haven't seen her or her husband, C, since 2023 when her FIL died, and haven't seen her sons since...even longer. They were shorter than me when last I saw them, they have since shot up and tower over me at a 6-foot minimum. Haven't visited her family down here since before the pandemic, and she's had a lot going on in so many dimensions.

Got down here last night, ate pizza and had a long chat to catch up on all the things that don't get put on FB. Went for a walk today around town and did more talking about directions and futures and stuff, then back home for lunch, and out for dinner. Tomorrow is markets.

I gave her the rough (exceedingly rough) draft of my novel, and promptly found a bajillion spelling and name mistakes. I'm in the process of cleaning it up, but it's slow. Rewriting the next novel will be even slower, trying to fit everything in. There's a lot of stuff to get through!

For the cold tonight, I've piled a few extra things on the bed to help keep me warm - pillows, clothing, etc. It'll be fine, just a wee smidge colder than I'm used to (and I like things warm and toasty, but can't be helped). Like I said, it's only for one night.

Good to catch up with B though.

Fandom things

May. 16th, 2025 11:28 pm
sholio: (B5-station)
[personal profile] sholio
The Bodyguard Protocol, my post-canon Babylon 5 fixit (for one particular story thread), is now complete at 17K. (There may be a sequel in the works with further aftercare/comfort for everything I put them through.) This is not only the longest thing I've written for these characters, but apparently the longest thing I've written since 2022.

As per my AO3 stats, I've already posted almost as many words in 2025 as I did in all of 2024.

And I'm doing exchanges again! [community profile] unsent_letters_exchange revealed yesterday, and I received this lovely MASH fic (a follow-up to Sons & Bowlers) that I really enjoyed. Somewhere in the exchange collection, of course, is a very surprising, not at all predictable story written by me.

2025 52 Card Project: Week 19: Garden

May. 16th, 2025 01:16 pm
pegkerr: (The beauty of it smote his heart)
[personal profile] pegkerr
Just as I did last week, I stuffed this week's collage with color, as this is about the garden I put in this week. Each year I tell myself, "I'm going to scale it back!" and usually I don't.

Well, it is a little smaller. I did not plant my big City Picker planters. I will still put kale and Swiss chard in one. I limited myself on tomatoes to just two plants in smaller pots. I have about given up because the squirrels get so many of the tomatoes and the ones left are usually afflicted with blossom rot. But as I do every year, I have put geraniums by the front door, herb pots on the back porch, a hanging pot of lobelia by the back door, and petunias in the four planters on the back patio.

The lilacs are blooming (Rob planted that bush over thirty years ago), as well as the bleeding hearts, and bunnies sit in the yard every day.

It is a lot of work, and I always grumble about the work and the cost. But I am always so happy when I get it done.

Description: Background: a riot of colors from flowers. Lower left: a crouching bunny. Lower right: a terra cotta pot planted with basil and a tomato plant. Center: a row of herb pots. Upper third: a white planter planted with multicolored petunias

Garden

19 Garden

Click on the links to see the 2025, 2024, 2023, 2022 and 2021 52 Card Project galleries.
siderea: (Default)
[personal profile] siderea
Story has it that a thief was captured and hauled before the local ruler. "Give me one good reason I shouldn't have you put to death," the monarch said. The thief replied, "Your majesty, I can teach your finest horse to sing – if you give me a year to do it!" The court burst out in laughter at this, and the ruler, bemused, said, "Very well. You will be imprisoned in the royal stable besides my finest stallion, and in a year if he cannot sing, you will be put to death." So every day the prisoner sang to the horse. Eventually one of the stablehands sneered at the prisoner, "I don't see why you bother. Everyone knows horses can't sing. Your stupid gambit gained you nothing."

"To the contrary!" replied the prisoner with equanimity, "It gained me a whole year which I didn't have before. A lot can happen in a year. The king may die. The horse may die. I may die.

And maybe he horse will learn to sing."

I just got this email announcement from Patreon:
A big win for creators

We've got great news: you'll soon be able to earn from U.S. fans through the iOS app again, and the November 2025 subscription billing requirement deadline is no longer in effect.

Thanks to a recent U.S. court ruling, Apple must now allow apps to offer U.S. based users checkout options outside of Apple's in-app purchase system (which includes the 30% Apple fee)—something that was previously prohibited under Apple's App Store requirements.

[...]

Last year, we let you know that all creators would need to switch to subscription billing by November 2025. This forced switch wasn't something we chose — it was the result of needing to comply with Apple's requirements at the time or risk the removal of Patreon's app from the App Store. While we've long believed subscription billing is the strongest long-term model for creators, forced compliance with Apple's mandates and deadlines was obviously not how we ever wanted to roll out changes to creators on Patreon.

We've stayed in close conversation with Apple and have continued advocating for a more flexible approach — one that gives creators more time and choice. As a result of the recent court ruling and changes on Apple's end, the November 2025 deadline is no longer in effect.
In other words, no, I don't have to convert away from the by-works funding model.

Yet again I have prevailed over adversity by means of my greatest superpower: spite procrastination.

Sucks to be a responsible Patreon creator who duly responded to the deadline by converting their account – Patreon doesn't let you revert that change – or by migrating off Patreon well in advance. Those folks kind of got screwed. I know that if I had bailed to some sort of lifeboat option, and possibly paid handsomely and compromised my personal security to do it, I would be really pissed off right about now.
musesfool: iconic supergirl (up up and away)
[personal profile] musesfool
I realize I owe replies to comments and I will get to that. Work has just been eating my brain lately and not leaving much leftover.

In the meantime, I bring you two cool links:

- the Superman trailer which looks so good (I also ordered this adorable Superman dress for Baby Miss L); and

- this interview with John DeMarisco, who directs Mets games for SNY (and a cool behind the scenes video here).

*

moar sleep achieved

May. 15th, 2025 08:19 pm
tielan: sam, daniel, teal'c in a lab when the lights go out: oops! (oops)
[personal profile] tielan
But not restfulness.

Off to catch up with a friend tomorrow and the weekend, back on Sunday to a hotel in the city.

Interestingly, I and one other guy are at the hotel where most of the others were last week...the others have been moved to a high-end hotel!

Anyway. I'm just glad to not be out here after tonight. Although how I'm going to manage to pack my bag again, I really don't know.

Star Wars: Andor 2.10 - 2.12

May. 14th, 2025 04:01 pm
selenak: (Gwen by Redscharlach)
[personal profile] selenak
In which a spy comes in from the cold. Overall a worthy conclusion, I thought, with some minor nitpicks.

Spoilers were there for the Ballad of Kleya and Luthen )

In conclusion: truly a great show, and I hope the creative team will get many more works to produce in whichever universe.

Speaking of creative people in other universes, last week I learned JMS has emigrated to the UK and sees employement there. This caused a great many people to wish he'd become the next Doctor Who showrunner. To which I say: nonsense, a Blake's 7 reboot is clearly the British show for him to run! Crusade had definite B7 overtones already.

Some entrepreneurial books

May. 14th, 2025 05:07 am
sholio: a red cup by a stack of books (Books & coffee 2)
[personal profile] sholio
Quite a bit of my reading over the last couple of months has been nonfiction about marketing and running a small business. My year's theme is sustainability and reinvention: learning how to do this business in a way that makes decent money and doesn't burn me out. I've had some misses, but I felt like I got useful insight (for me personally) from these:

Write to Riches by Renee Rose: I am deeply annoyed that one of the most personally useful books I've read in the last few months is a book on manifesting. (For those who don't know, manifesting is big right now in the indie writer community; it's a philosophy that involves nurturing the correct energy to energetically attract/manifest the things you want from the universe. In other words, if you want a new house, tell the universe that you want a house and really believe in getting a house and it will give you a house.) I don't believe in the energy side of it at all. But ...
more on that the positive thinking, forward-looking, "seize the opportunity when it comes along" mentality of it has actually been very helpful for me on a purely non-metaphysical basis. Similarly, manifesting philosophy is big on clearing "energy blocks" that prevent the energy from flowing freely through you, but - once again I am deeply annoyed that this is so useful - on a non-metaphysical level, it involves identifying the specific beliefs that are stopping you from going out and getting a thing you want, and going, "Well, is that a rational belief to have? What's the basis of it? What if I didn't believe that? What if I tried anyway?"

From an actual best-practices standpoint, it turns out that going into a new venture, even if it's just like, doing a highway drive or something, and telling myself ahead of time that it's going to work out for the best, I'll have a good time and accomplish what I want and I'm prepared to deal with anything that happens along the way, is useful! Far more useful than dwelling on what might go wrong. To be completely fair, this isn't a huge perspective shift for me, more like leaning into my natural optimism and confidence, which I do have a lot of to begin with, at least on my more positive days. But doing it deliberately and with intent is something a bit new for me, and I like the results, so I think I'm going to keep working at it.

I ran into a summary of the useful-for-me aspects of manifesting somewhere else, not in this book, which is basically (paraphrased from memory): if you really want a duck, and you spend all your time learning about ducks, and you hang out around people who have ducks and talk about ducks and start noticing ducks and tell everyone you want a duck and spend time in places where ducks are, eventually you will have a duck. Manifesting at its less energetic end is just that. Once you start really applying yourself to getting a duck, you notice ducks everywhere! Or at least you realize that if you want a duck that badly, you need to change your life in ways that are compatible with duck ownership.

(This book has a number of journaling exercises that also combine well with some other journaling practices I've been discovering via other books I've been reading, so if nothing else I might come out of this with some self-soothing journal habits too. Like writing down three successes from the day, major or minor; that kind of thing. Or asking your subconscious to help solve a problem while you sleep. I'm not doing any of this regularly, but I'm kicking around the idea of doing more of it, and more often.)



Slow Productivity by Cal Newport: This book is on pacing yourself to avoid burnout. I don't know how personally useful it's going to be for me, but I enjoyed reading it - there are also quite a few actionable suggestions in the last section for putting this into effect as a creative person - and I think in particular, this book is reassuring as a reminder that you don't have to be on the go all the time to get anywhere. Fallow periods and taking the time to do something right from the beginning are just as important as rushing through to the finish line, and this is not only a reminder of that, but it has a number of useful case studies of creative people who played the long game well. And sometimes intentionally making less money and enjoying life more is the right choice. As indie publishing can be geared towards sellsellsell at all times, this was a nice antidote to that.

10x is Easier than 2x by Benjamin Hardy & Dan Sullivan: This is a book with a caveat, which is that it's based on this one self-help guru's "get ahead faster" (and pay me money to find out how!) shtick. But it actually did give me quite a bit of food for thought. The idea here is that, as a creative person trying to make a living or a small business owner, incrementally improving your business/creative life by making small improvements to what you're already doing is actually more difficult and less productive in the long run than learning to make big sea-change shifts to discard what didn't work before, embrace the best of what you've already learned, and level up rapidly. (And be happier, work better, and enjoy your life more.)
More on thatBasically, you can go on making small improvements to things you're already doing - or find ways to toss/eliminate/outsource everything that is cluttering up your creative life and embrace the aspects of it that you really want to do more of, to lean into what you really want to do rather than being sucked down by minutiae and aspects of creativity/entrepreneurship that you don't enjoy.

This book is largely aimed at self-employed people, whereas the Slow Productivity book is geared more towards those who don't have as much freedom to self-pace. So they're complementary in a way. But the philosophy of both has some things in common. I think one thing that keeps coming up in the books I'm reading is: as a business owner, outsourcing or - if possible - eliminating the things you don't want to do simply makes sense. It's better business practice (why do something exhausting, that you're not that good at, that takes you away from what you really want to be doing?) and frees up more time for doing what you're good at, that you do and enjoy best, or simply having more unstructured leisure time to refresh and recharge.


Obviously the exact amount of usefulness in any of these books is going to depend on where you are in your life, creatively and otherwise, but these are hitting me in the right way for what I'm currently working on figuring out, which is how to go forward in a way that's more sustainable for me long-term than the past few years have been. My big issue is that 2022-24 burned me out so badly - not just including work, but also personal, health, family issues - that I'm only now feeling like I'm starting to get back some of the creative fire that I used to deploy without even thinking about it in the 2010s. So I'd like to keep enjoying and building on that in a healthy way going forward, and not dig myself right back into the same hole.

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queenbookwench

September 2023

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