Wednesday reading

Oct. 22nd, 2025 05:54 pm
queen_ypolita: A stack of leather-covered books next to an hourglass (ClioBooks by magic_art)
[personal profile] queen_ypolita
Finished since the last reading post
When Will There Be Good News?, which I liked.

The Voyage Home by Pat Barker. I think I've enjoyed the previous two in the series more than I did this one, but it was still good.

Currently reading
Started reading Co-intelligence by Ethan Mollick. Also started reading The End of Innocence by Simon Garfield. I don't think I've made progress with anything else.

Reading next
I've got a library book waiting

AWS outage

Oct. 20th, 2025 10:11 am
alierak: (Default)
[personal profile] alierak posting in [site community profile] dw_maintenance
DW is seeing some issues due to today's Amazon outage. For right now it looks like the site is loading, but it may be slow. Some of our processes like notifications and journal search don't appear to be running and can't be started due to rate limiting or capacity issues. DW could go down later if Amazon isn't able to improve things soon, but our services should return to normal when Amazon has cleared up the outage.

Edit: all services are running as of 16:12 CDT, but there is definitely still a backlog of notifications to get through.

Edit 2: and at 18:20 CDT everything's been running normally for about the last hour.
landofnowhere: (Default)
[personal profile] landofnowhere
The Barbarous Babes: being the Memoirs of Molly by Edith Ayrton Zangwill is now freely available on Project Gutenberg! Thanks to [personal profile] kurowasan for scanning the book and the volunteers at Distributed Proofreaders for all their work m

This is Edith Ayrton Zangwill's first published book from 1904, an episodic children's book that reminds me of E. Nesbit's non-fantastic fiction. Molly is a relatable protagonist with an engaging narrative voice that sucked me in instantly. I reviewed it in a bit more detail here.

wednesday books procrastinate

Oct. 15th, 2025 10:46 pm
landofnowhere: (Default)
[personal profile] landofnowhere
For the last two weeks I've been in a state of "I really need to work on these paper revisions", which, being who I am, means that I have been coming up with all sorts of ways to procrastinate. Which is not a very good excuse for not posting last week, when I should have told you about the awesomeness of Una Silberrad, and in the past week I have been procrastinating by other means than reading; so I should still write up these books even though they are less fresh in my mind.

Una Silberrad was a popular early 20th century British novelist; like many popular women writers of the time, her books, though in the public domain, are hard to find electronic copies of. I first heard of her from Jo Walton's reading posts on Reactor. A friend of mine is involved with the process of getting her books into project Gutenberg -- in fact we became friends after I messaged her and said "hey, it would be great if someone did this for Edith Ayrton Zangwill, too", and she volunteered to do this, without having read anything of Edith's, just on a Discord friend-of-a-friend's suggestion!

Princess Puck, Una Silberrad. This book just made it to Project Gutenberg, thanks to my friend's efforts. This is a really charming coming-of-age story, with a girl who comes of age and ultimately gets to save the day with her interest in family/local history and her strength of purpose to do what is right. (I think the protagonist maybe could be read as having autistic spectrum traits, in particular her talent for mimicry, but it's unclear.) There is a romance, but this is the sort of story where you feel like the protagonist would have had a meaningful life even if the plot contrivances hadn't arranged to make the romance work out in the end. Reminded me a bit of The Secret Garden, with its combination of romantic tropes and groundedness in everyday work. Of the supporting characters, I particularly liked the protagonist's business-minded older cousin, and how the relationship between the two develops over time.

The Good Comrade, Una Silberrad. This is the only other fiction book of Silberrad's on Gutenberg so far (but this will change soon!) -- it was Silberrad's mos popular novel, and I can see why. This fits the conventional structure of a romance novel much better than Princess Puck, but it goes some really interesting places (Holland, and horticulture) first. Julia is a very resourceful heroine; she has the key Una Silberrad heroine traits of valuing hard work and not caring too much for social norms and class distinctions, but is also very much herself, and shaped by her family circumstances (her father is an alcoholic and gambler, her mother is a professional at keeping up appearances).

Desire, Una Silberrad. This one is not yet on Gutenberg, but was particularly recommended to me. This one has two protagonists; the titular Desire, a wealthy and alluring young socialite, and Peter, an aspiring young writer from a middle-class background. Again the ending is conventional, but the way it gets there is not. (Early in the plot there's some fake dating, but it's not at all used in a tropey way.) Desire starts out being not entirely likeable as a character, but I liked her arc.

Made a trip to London today

Oct. 11th, 2025 05:16 pm
queen_ypolita: Woman in a Mucha painting (Mucha by auctrix_icons)
[personal profile] queen_ypolita
The last time I went to Knit + Stitch, or the Knitting and Stitching Show as it was, was in 2019. No matter how much I enjoyed my day there, I've never quite forgiven it for giving me what seemed like a mild cold for a week, which was swiftly followed by what I think was bronchitis during the time I was also covering for my colleague (away doing jury service) in the lead-up to a release.

So today was the first time since. I hadn't really planned to go until about a couple of weeks ago, so by then it was more or less pointless to look at workshops and stuff. So I didn't. The journey to Alexandra Palace is a bit of a trek but it went fine in the morning. I've previously used the shuttle bus from Wood Green tube, but this time I skipped the tube and took the Elizabeth line (Paddington to Farrington) and Thameslink (Farrington to Finsbury Park) and Great Northern (Finsbury Park to Alexandra Palace) trains instead. And I treated the walk up from the train station as useful hill training. I had planned a shopping list of sorts but nothing really caught my eye. So I didn't actually buy anything and didn't stay very long.

Afterwards, given I was already in London, I went out to look at backbags because my larger one is starting to fall apart. I've had it for years and used it all the time, so that's no wonder. The other day at work, a colleague was praising her Roka backbag so I was curious to see the options. But looking at them in person showed they weren't quite what I was looking for. But I found one that I liked, so I bought it.

Back in Reading, I went to Waterstones to browse for a little while and emerged with two books. As if I didn't have enough piling up already. And I've got one in transit that I ordered online. Royal Mail are doing their best to deliver on days I'm not in. After the first attempt on Wednesday, knowing I was going to be in the office on Thursday since I missed Tuesday, I requested Friday, only for them to skip yesterday completely and try to deliver today when I was still in London. Looks like I'm going to have to go to the delivery office to pick it up, and the earliest I can do that is probably on Wednesday.

Frustrating moments at work

Oct. 9th, 2025 07:52 pm
queen_ypolita: Woman in a Mucha painting (Mucha by auctrix_icons)
[personal profile] queen_ypolita
While I welcomed the reshuffle in my work responsibilities in February/March time because it meant I could get more and broader experience in the tasks I'd done less until then, giving up the other half hasn't always felt that easy. The hardest part has been watching somebody with a significantly shallower level of product knowledge struggling to get to grips with doing that half. And product knowledge is a funny thing anyway: you can be effective even when you don't know that much but you do need to be curious and use the opportunities you get to learn. And exercise some critical thinking and judgement. Not seeing a lot of those is probably what feels hardest at the moment. The setup that this colleague works in is different from the one I had previously, but even so, stopping to think and question rather than just regurgitating without understanding would come in handy so often.
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