Sewing and Shakespeare

Aug. 2nd, 2025 08:55 pm
queen_ypolita: Painted, happy-looking elephant (Norsu by later_tuesday)
[personal profile] queen_ypolita
I took my sewing machine out this morning and started working on the trousers I cut last week. It's been a slow process so far. I messed up attaching the zip when I was trying to follow the "helpful tip" for zips—I clearly didn't understand what it was trying to get me to do. So I tried again another way, and got it attached, but it's probably not quite as invisible as intended. I'm aiming to continue tomorrow.

In the afternoon, took a break from sewing and walked to town to pick up a couple of things I needed. And to go to see a promenade performance by Secret Shakespeare of the Scottish play at the abbey ruins. It was good, although as the director explained before the start, due to illness, they had a couple of people doing the roles for the first time. And the ruins worked well as the background to the performance. We did the play at school, which probably helped. I'm not sure I would have followed it as well otherwise. But all in all, it was a great way to spend a couple of hours.
landofnowhere: (Default)
[personal profile] landofnowhere
Musical Chairs, Amy Poeppel. Recommended by Ask A Manager; I liked Small Admissions by the same author, which was also recommended there. I didn't like this one quite as much; I suspect that's partly because Poeppel had experience in private school admissions, but not the classical music world, and also partly because of the larger cast of characters making it less focused. But it was still enjoyable and hard to put down!

It's basically a pastoral comedy -- a group of family and friends spend their summer in small-town Connecticut, learn things about themselves and their relationships, and end up romantically paired off at the end. It's having lots of fun with that, and also with its multi-perspective storytelling; at one point we get the POV of a character who has just arrived from New York City, doesn't know anyone, and is like, "wow, these rich Connecticut people are all super weird". The classical music angle didn't really do much for me (but also I am not a musician, just a fan). One thing I realized after finishing the book is that it's a fairly white book; or at least all of the major cast members are white or unspecified race. This is made more noticeable by the fact that there are a few Asian-American characters with walk-on parts or brief mentions, to represent the younger generation of classical performers who are even better than our protagonists; but we don't get their story. Though I do appreciate that this is a book that spends most of the time with characters who are 50 or older.

Wednesday reading

Jul. 30th, 2025 08:42 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
Between the Teeth, which I read mostly for series completion. I'd forgotten how I don't really get along with the protagonist, but I think the author has also softened his edges a little bit by this book.

Learned by Heart, which I liked as a different angle to the Anne Lister story.

Currently reading
Not much progress on Crypt. Started reading a German YAish romance novel series Jonas, Dennis, und die Liebe by Katharina B. Gross and not finding it very easy. Also started reading, for reading challenge purposes, Riders by Jilly Cooper

Reading next
I've got another library book waiting

More dentist appointments coming up

Jul. 29th, 2025 07:36 pm
queen_ypolita: Woman in a Mucha painting (Mucha by auctrix_icons)
[personal profile] queen_ypolita
I had an appointment today to fit the permanent crown for the tooth that flared up in June, following an appointment about two weeks ago when the dentist worked on the mould and other preparations. Before doing anything with the crown today, I had a new X-ray of the jaw and this time it showed signs of infection at the root, which the June X-ray didn't. So I didn't get the permanent crown today, I just needed to make more appointments. The dentist did do some prep work for fitting the crown, and the crown itself will go back for some final adjustments. At my next appointment I'll have the root canal treatment, and at the next one I'll get the permanent crown.

wednesday books have romance

Jul. 23rd, 2025 08:57 pm
landofnowhere: (Default)
[personal profile] landofnowhere
Sorry, it's been a few weeks, but I have books to catch up on!

Homer's Daughter, Robert Graves. This continued to hold up well on reread -- though it does have the feature that you know there's going to be an absolute bloodbath at the end, just like in the Odyssey. I need to reread the Odyssey -- I'm sure there are references I missed, though at least I got the reference to the Iliad where after an important character died the plot stopped for his funeral games. The romance was a small part of the story, but surprisingly adorable. Trying to convince more people to read this so I have people to talk about it with!

Behind Frenemy Lines, Zen Cho. The second in Cho's series of contemporary romances set in London: this is in the same continuity as The Friend Zone Experiment, but there's only one very minor character overlap. Better than its title makes it sound -- it starts by quickly checking off the enemies-to-lovers and fake-dating trope bingo squares, but then goes on to become its own sweet workplace romance. Also super charmed by Charles's cousin who met her wife on Tumblr and their adorable cosplay wedding. I liked it better than The Friend Zone Experiment, though maybe it was that I hadn't read any genre romance in a while. If there's anything I didn't like it's that the characters and their situations felt stereotypical for their gender -- Kriya is dealing with workplace harassment, while Charles is a spectrum-coded workaholic.

Josephine Lang: her Life and Songs by Harald Krebs and Sharon Krebs. Josephine Lang is my newest forgotten woman composer obsession -- a respected contemporary of the Mendelssohns and Schumanns whose career was kickstarted when a Felix Mendelssohn heard her play her own songs. There aren't nearly enough recordings of her songs our there, which is a shame as they are delights: here's Fee'n-Reigen (Fairy Round Dance), one of the songs she composed as a teenager and played on her first meeting with Felix Mendelssohn, and the song of hers that first grabbed my attention -- an unaccompanied choral Ständchen (Lullaby, lyrics here ) from an unpublished manuscript.

Harald and Sharon Krebs are largely responsible for rehabilitating Lang's reputation as a composer, and this book was part of that: it was published in 2007 along with a companion CD, which is unavailable, but fortunately most of the songs discussed can be found to stream online, so I was able to listen along. (ETA, actually the songs are available on the publisher's website as .aiff files.) This is a very readable book (though I skimmed the denser musical analysis) -- Lang's life story is fascinating, though at times depressing -- in her mid-twenties, she fell in love and married Christian Reinhold Köstlin, a law professor and poet, who comes off in the book as a bit of a Romantic failboat. This derailed her career as she took up her new position as a housewife in a small university town without a large musical scene and quickly had 6 children. She did find some time to compose, but had to deal with family health problems (she outlived not only her husband but three of her four sons), which makes for a rather depressing arc, though the book is able to point out the occasional moments of hilarity (link goes to my tumblr, where I've been posting more lately).

Wednesday reading

Jul. 23rd, 2025 06:40 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
Seeing, which was a rather slow read because I kept having to go back a couple of pages because I got confused about what was going on. The immediate repression by the government when it encounters something it doesn't understand was rather chilling.

The Dangerous Kingdom of Love, which was focused on Francis Bacon and plotting in James VI/I's court, was a quick and easy read in comparison.

Icebreaker by AL Graziadei, a YA romance novel with rivals turned lovers.

Currently reading
Not much progress with Crypt but it's still on the go. Also reading Learned by Heart by Emma Donoghue and Between the Teeth by Taylor Fitzpatrick.

Reading next
I have two library reservations ready to pick up, so probably them. .
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