Posts

Reading: The Blood Countess

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       I should start this review by mentioning that I would never even have heard of Andrei Codrescu's Blood Countess if not for the Girls Guts Giallo book club. If you support the podcast on patreon , you get access to curated weekly movie screenings, a fun discord server, and a book club! I've never been a part of a book club before and having one hosted by and joined by smart, funny, insightful queer folks has been an invaluable experience. If you like subversive film, kink and queer horror you'll love Annie's podcast and the inclusive community she's building. I've learned so much about weird and beautiful works and a lot about theory from listening and participating in her spaces. I'm not being paid to promote this, it's just something that's been meaningful and a source of joy for me, especially when the broader online conversation about art tends to be really reductive, skittish about sex and taboo, and moralistic to a degree that creators ge...

Reading: Manhunt

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     Mild spoilers ahead. More focused on themes than plot beats or infodumps about the characters though.        It's been too long since I've written a book review and I wanted to get in depth about an interesting book from a contemporary author. Manhunt by Gretchen Felker-Martin is a book that takes on the tired trope of "what if only women survived an apocalyptic event" and revitalizes it with a transgender perspective. Considering that there were recent attempts to make a TV series out of Y The Last Man , a story which trots out this premise about "biological" sex that's been fucking tired since the 70s, it feels very necessary to have a trans take on the subject. I find too with a lot of SF/F (which is often adjacent or overlapping with horror) that a lot has absolutely regressed in the contemporary despite claiming some very by-the-numbers elements of progressiveness.      And I should note, regarding the 70's, James Tiptree Jr...

Funny little guys in a jar

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 In January, I discovered I had a bunch of isopods (aka pillbugs, rolypolies, woodlice, carpenters, etc) living in a Rubbermaid tub of soil that I was over-wintering. The soil had come from my little balcony garden, where some of my plants didn't survive the colder months. I was quite surprised to see them in there since I didn't expect these tiny moisture loving bugs to make the journey up to my second story balcony. I wasn't entirely sure what to do with them.      After some thinking I opted to dispose of the soil and use the tub for storage, but I wanted to see if I could save some of the isopods and keep them in a small terrarium. I started with a large squared glass jar from Michael's, a couple scoops of soil from the tub, plenty of isopods, and a couple spider plant babies from my garden plants. Many people are now keeping different isopod species as pets and I thought it looked neat enough to try myself.  I added in some leaf litter from my balcony ...

An introduction to collecting and archiving

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      Without intending to, I had a tweet about physical media collecting and file collecting go a bit viral (sigh) and I've decided to make a little introductory post on how to start collecting both physical media and digital media- including making back-ups, digitizing things in your collection, and organizing. It won't be fully comprehensive and some aspects of collecting requires spending some money and having space for things- do what's reasonable for you and your goals . I definitely don't expect everyone to be able to spend money, but if you can pay for several streaming services per month you can probably afford to cut back on those and instead invest in some real media or some digital downloads. Someone's gotta own these movies, might as well be me.      This post will be focusing mostly on movies/TV and music, since those are the things we rely on streaming the most for. I'm also working on the assumption that you have a computer- a desktop ...

LA to Boise, Christmas 2021

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 I hadn't been on a proper trip since 2019, when I was in Australia visiting with family. This year my spouse and I felt safe enough making the drive down to Idaho to see my parents for Christmas since all of us are vaccinated and boostered. We usually make the drive every year with some scenic stops and an overnight stay in Fallon, Nevada. This year we wanted to take a different route to mix things up a bit (and avoid the horrible snow we encountered in previous years where the route took us into Oregon). This time we opted for a route that'd take us through Las Vegas and with an overnight stop in Ely, Nevada. It was a good choice, given that there was quite a bit of snowfall in Nevada and Idaho, and we got to see interesting new things along the way. Usually when we make the LA to Boise drive there's planned stops in little towns en route so that we can have a meal and and stretch our legs. This year was a bit different because neither of us felt safe with indoor dining (...