Bloomington
Jan. 18th, 2026 08:15 pmUsed copies of Gary Paulsen’s The Cookcamp and Ngaio Marsh’s Singing in the Shrouds, both from the public library.
Used DVDs of Chernobyl and the Ruth Wilson Jane Eyre for myself, plus Brideshead Revisited and season 3 of the 1960s Batman for a friend (who will be therefore enabled to return my copy of Brideshead Revisited)
Mary Stolz’s Ready or Not, which has simply gorgeous endpapers (would any of my fellow Stolz fans like a crack at this book after I’m done?)
And Knight Owl and Early Bird, a birthday present for my niece, whose birthday is not until March, but who am I to turn down an opportunity to support the Book Corner? (I’ll probably also buy her a picture book from my beloved Von’s.)
We also hit up Goods for Cooks, which tragically did not have my beloved dark chocolate hobnobs, but I DID buy a sieve and a garden herb themed dishtowel and a bright springy oven mitt. (I liked to have seasonal dish towels, oven mitts, napkins etc; an easy way to decorate for the seasons.) In between the sieve and the potato masher I got for Christmas, I feel rich in kitchen ware.
And we went to my friend Becky’s house to hang out with the dog and three cats and the baby, who gave us the grumpy Churchill face for about half an hour before deciding that we were all right and toddling over to the coffee table (with the help of her baby walker) to pick up one of our shortbread cookies. To eat it? No. Just to hold it. An interesting texture perhaps.
And then Caitlin and I went back to her place and watched a couple Poirots and ate more cookies, and then I went to bed and read The Cookcamp, a short memoir about the time he spent with his grandmother as a small child when she was working at a road-grading camp, companion piece to Alida's Song and The Quilt. Sweet and poignant if you enjoy a childhood memoir.
Then this morning I drove home and began rewatching Chernobyl. (What a good show! Already watched two episodes and only paused with difficulty to make dinner.) A most successful visit.
Just wondering
Jan. 19th, 2026 12:34 am
Did you watch this 1987 TV show?

Were you a fan of the muppets? Who was/is your favorite?

Links Lists: The Angry Political One
Jan. 18th, 2026 04:30 pmUncategorised Stuff:
CCF: Anger is beautiful. Anger is generative. Anger is ancestral. By Chantelle Ohrling, a justifiably angry defender of Turtle Island.
Technology and Media Criticism: ( L.L.M. slop, gender-based violence, transphobia. )
Canadian News That's Pissing Me Off ( Various human rights violations. )
The United States Immigration Stuff: ( No images of violence, but cutting for folks already burned out. )
OPN Seed Order
Jan. 18th, 2026 05:38 pm( Read more... )
Book Launch: The Timecrossed Engineer: Back to School
Jan. 18th, 2026 03:43 pmA Star Trek-inspired novel featuring an engineer reliving her Academy days in an effort to escape a future life that is overworked and underappreciated… Too bad her captain is here to drag her back kicking and screaming.
Link here!
Now I am an actual author! Well, I had one publication credit before this, "Best in Show" actually had a short story of mine in it, but this is my first novel... And the first time I've managed to get a book all the way from outline to completed story, though I have a decent-sized number of novel-shaped objects I committed on the way to this point.
I owe
I had no idea that writing the book would be the comparatively easy part... compared to launching the book and then making announcements about it. ^.^;; Help, I am an introvert! Why do I have to address the public?
Well, days in the life of a fledgling writer!
Six Sentence Sunday: The Parent Trap remake, post-canon
Jan. 18th, 2026 05:40 pmHad a moment last week where I was like "that Parent Trap post canon fic where the twins encounter Meredith in an airport is, like, basically done, I just need to smooth it all out, how long could this possibly take, 10 minutes" and then had the horrified realization that this fic is in my Started In 2023 folder. Truly, I have no intuitive understanding of time.
On the other hand, when doing a quick note to self on this to figure out the time period, I gave in and referred to the twins as Allie and honestly it just makes life so much easier.
Meredith is so much fun to write, she's got such a specific point of view.
"Oh, girls, girls, girls," Meredith chides them. "Let bygones be bygones! I don't hold a grudge. You made your point perfectly clear: you weren't going to allow your father to use me like that. I respect that in a preteen. You knew your minds and you were looking out for me, truly."
Also and here's a bit from my initial notes from the rewatch, which informs the whole thing:
but wow yeah annie's being such a jerk here, and meredith is rising to it and kind of liking it. I think she sees Annie as more of an intellectual equal than Nick is.
Technically I am not breaking the rule against me sitting in the dark in 161
Jan. 18th, 2026 06:37 pmvital functions
Jan. 18th, 2026 11:07 pmReading. Small progress on Index, A history of the (Dennis Duncan); quite a lot of Wrangling My Terrible E-mail Situation feat. skimming geochemistry abstracts; flipped through some of the latest batch of Alex Was Sad cookbooks; also some more poking to see if there's, like, An Official Formulation of CBT-(for-)I(nsomnia), and came to the conclusion that the reason I can't find it is that there isn't. Exactly.
Writing. Alas I have not made sufficient progress this week to announce that the number at the front of the wordcount of The Putative Book has got bigger, BUT I have spent a bunch of time tinkering with ideas and asking you lot things, so. Maybe. Maybe this will be the week the second complete reworking of the introduction actually takes shape.
Playing. I continue with Squardle (via
vass) and, despite its shortcomings, Metaflora (via
ewt). Sudoku remains The Special Interest Of The Moment.
Cooking. It has been a Weird Week for food because A and I have mostly not been eating together (because A has been unwell and mostly not eating), but: another dal variant for my breakfasts (thereby also ticking off another item on the Cook The Cookbook project list), and lots of minor variations on Leon's ~superfood salad~ from days of yore.
Making & mending. Technically progress on glove and learning continental knitting; in practice I'm probably going to frog it and have Attempt #3 At Tension.
Growing. Lemongrass is germinating! Lithops are germinating?????
At home: the overwintered bell peppers and ancho chilli are turning Ripe Colours. The overwintered jalapeño is extremely unwell and I should... do something about that. Both orchids continue Determinedly Making Flower Stems.
At the plot: I MADE IT TO THE PLOT, Project: Bulk Up The Spinach Seed is progressing, and I have done a tiny bit of weeding and infrastructure (mostly taking down last year's growing supports...). At some point I will want to kick the things that are currently in the propagator out of the propagator in order to sow the next batch of seeds, but they'll get a little longer yet.
And more saffron keeps appearing in the various places it's planted on the patio, though I sincerely doubt any of it will flower...
Calmind turns a phone flashlight into a guided unwind session
Jan. 18th, 2026 10:00 pm
TL;DR: Get Calmind Premium Master Plan for $49.99 (reg. $299) and try flashlight-based sessions that may help with relaxation, focus, and sleep.
Some apps want your attention. Calmind Premium Master Plan is trying to do the opposite, and right now it's just $49.99 (reg. — Read the rest
The post Calmind turns a phone flashlight into a guided unwind session appeared first on Boing Boing.
第五年第九天
Jan. 19th, 2026 07:34 am心 parts 14-19
虑, to think over; 悉, to know; 悔, regret; 患, misfortune/to suffer; 您, you (formal); 悬, to hang/unresolved; 悲, sad; 情, feelings/conditions; 惊, to surprise; 惑, confusion; 惜, to pity; 惦, to remember; 惨, miserable; 惩, to punish; 惯, used to; 想, to think/to want/to miss; 惹, to provoke; 愁, to worry
( pinyin )
https://www.mdbg.net/chinese/dictionary?cdqrad=61
语法
2.16 (part 2) Questions with A不A / A没A
2.17 "About to..." with 要/快要/快/就要...了
2.18 正在...呢, to be doing
https://www.digmandarin.com/hsk-2-grammar
词汇
潮, 潮湿, damp/humid; 潮流, trend; 高潮, climax
彻底, thorough
沉, to sink/deep/heavy; 沉默, silence; 沉重, heavy
称赞, praise
成人, adult; 构成, to constitute; 养成, to cultivate; 赞成, to agree
诚实, honest; 诚信, honesty
( pinyin )
https://mandarinbean.com/new-hsk-4-word-list/
玩玩
Two from Pei-Yu Hung: 她者 (with Lala Hsu) and 明室.
好累啊,果然是周一早晨。大家过得怎么样?好好保重身体呀。
Art
Jan. 18th, 2026 04:24 pmWrite Every day 2026: January, Day 18
Jan. 18th, 2026 11:20 pmToday's writing
Not as much progress as I'd have liked ... see above re: time. *sighs*
Tally
( Days 1-15 )
Day 16:
Day 17:
Day 18:
Let me know if I missed anyone! And remember you can drop in or out at any time. :)
Website Updates
Jan. 18th, 2026 03:11 pmClimate Change
Jan. 18th, 2026 02:48 pmThe authors are clear that their framework is a foundation, not a finish line. It explains a big, stubborn piece of the puzzle – the coupling of CO2 gain to water loss – and does so at the leaf-to-tree scale where decisions are made.
The next challenge is scaling those decisions up into regional and global climate models without smoothing away the very dynamics that matter.
( Read more... )
TV Talk: The Pitt & Wild Cards
Jan. 18th, 2026 03:44 pmWild Cards: I was surprised that this show was back, but I'm happy because this is a fun feel-good show. ( spoilers )
Weekend reading
Jan. 18th, 2026 03:43 pmRead Constructing a Nervous System by Margo Jefferson, a fragmentary, fascinating mix of memoir and cultural criticism into her story of coming of age as a Black woman and writer, told through a lens of the "gentlemen-dandies of jazz and cabaret" - and, later, soul and funk - she "collected ... as alter egos", Ella Fitzgerald, Gone With the Wind, Bing Crosby, Uncle Tom's Cabin, Ike and Tina Turner, the books of Willa Cather, a side-by-side reading of George Eliot's The Lifted Veil and W.E.B. Du Bois' The Souls of Black Folk, Nina Simone, Josephine Baker, and more. (As Jefferson explains, "This book was inspired and driven by the art of others. The scope, the daring, and the cost of that art have shaped and influenced me.") She weaves in snippets of real and imagined conversations, evocatively described play-by-plays of musical performances, and commentary on what she considered adding in or taking out or revising versus what actually made it into the book; she rewrites and reinterprets other writers' poetry. It's everything and the kitchen sink and it's so good.
In books in progress: picked up Émile Zola's Thérèse Raquin on
In other media, highly recommend this vid of 2025 in movies and TV, although it did make me realize how few new movies/shows I actually watched last year— I recognized a number of movies/shows, but only caught two I actually watched (Sinners and Wake Up Dead Man), and I have no idea where maybe half to 2/3 of the clips were from?? Incredibly well-edited vid, though.
Birdfeeding
Jan. 18th, 2026 01:53 pmI fed the birds. A few sparrows approached as soon as I put seed in the fly-through feeder.
I put out water for the birds.
EDIT 1/18/26 -- I did a bit of work around the patio.
EDIT 1/18/26 -- I did more work around the patio.
EDIT 1/18/26 -- I put out a fresh peanut suet cake.
I've seen a flock of sparrows and two male cardinals.
EDIT 1/18/26 -- I did more work around the patio.
I am done for the night.
cutting the warp
Jan. 18th, 2026 11:39 am( recent tries at weaving )
3. Weaving as a diversion has paused. The process of warping a second inkle attempt and weaving it off has shown me that my vast ignorance crosses understanding how something can function and getting one's fingers to do it at a strange angle. In sport-weight cotton yarn, most of my 2" = 5 cm band looks as neat and even as the stuff that Etsy-shop vloggers show themselves making on Instagram or TikTok; I'm a fumbling beginner with peripheral neuropathy only for starting and ending. Sew the ends under, and no one would see---but learning to make tidy starts and finishes is more than my current hands could endure.
I dipped back into weaving specifically to practice being a beginner at something. Having learned a few things since I was a knitting beginner (almost 20 years ago) regarding dexterity, mobility workarounds, how other people do various fibercrafts including forms of weaving, and how plant and animal fibers behave, the on-ramp for my hands-on weaving is quite short. Like, that's it, I'm already into an objectively intermediate stage, and my hands cannot do what would need doing there.
4. Crocheting has always been tougher on my joints than knitting, or rather, my best refinements over time of self-accommodation for each craft succeed better for knitting. Weaving at narrow output (tabletop, backstrap, inkle) demands less of any individual body part than crochet or knit because it's better distributed across many parts---but weaving wants specific actions that need fingers, not fingernail-substitution or the use of an external tool.
I can tie square and surgeon knots with my nails (lacking usual-range fingertip sensation), but the junk comm packets I wrote about a few years ago, whereby since #2020 my brain or central nervous system directs a limb to do something and it fails to report back timely, or CNS forgets momentarily that the limb exists---junk buildup is still a thing. Trying to weave more, doggedly doing more by eye, would mean accumulating more of a junk backlog than I have the capacity to expel (nap/resting self-accommodations). Weaving and laptop typing and food prep occupy the same bucket, just about. So, weaving drops out, at least for now.
(Knitting is still fine in moderation.)
Fic: aye blythe blink
Jan. 18th, 2026 07:27 pmTitle: aye blythe blink
Content: angst with a happy ending, nightmares, hallucinations, soulbonding as horror, Biggles/EvS, 11k words
Summary: Biggles starts to have strange nightmares. Algy looks for a solution.
( the only thing they could recommend )
Given the News...
Jan. 18th, 2026 11:46 am
A sled in the shape of a jug of windshield de-icer with ICE out of MN on it with a laser loon! (photo credit, Naomi Kritzer).
...I should probably try to remember to post more often, least you all think that something dire has happened to me.
I think when I last checked in MONARCA was still up in operation and I was responding as a legal/constitutional observer. Well, as you may have gathered from the news things have gotten more chaotic here and so MONARCA was overwhelmed and is no longer functioning as a coordinated way to send people to active abductions by ICE.
Thus, since none of the calls I responded to were anything more than ten minutes too late or false alarms, I have switched to mutual aid work. (Activists are being careful not to sully the waters if you will since ICE is also keeping tabs on the watchers. So we don't want anyone who has been actively protesting or observing to be delivering groceries to people sheltering in place/hiding out from the gestapo, lest we lead the bad guys right to their doors.) I've found a local organization that was already in the business of giving out free food, a group that I lovingly called the Food Communists, who have pivoted their efforts towards feeding people who are sheltering in place/hiding from the gestapo.
They basically have open doors for folks to drop by and help when and how they can and that's been really good for me because it means that if I start to feel anxious about the police state at any point during the day I can wander down the street and see if there something I can do to aid the resistance. So far, it's been organizing doubled-up grocery bags and breaking down cardboard, but I think that all of us in this fight (and there are a lot of us) feel like all effort is good effort if it's helping our comrades and neighbors.
I have also been showing up to the various protests around the city.
There is a group of Midway neighbors who have organized a daily protection/protest gathering in front of our local Somali mosque so that we can defend people while they are vulnerable and in prayer. I joined them the other day while the temperatures plummeted and the wind whipped around our faces. But, it was so warming to the soul when the imam came out and thanked us all for being there and we waved to everyone heading out from safely prayers.
I'm in a Signal group for people who are gathering every day on a different street corner to sing songs of love, resistance, and hope. I've only been able to make one of their gatherings, but it was lovely to sing and be in community.
Mason and I joined the student walk out at the Saint Paul capitol a few days ago and it was nice to see all the youths being just as fierce as their more grown-up counterparts.
And then yesterday, I met

Image: Naomi (left) and me (right) out at the art sled rally. Very bundled up. There was a high of 12 F/-11 C yesterday.
Because Minnesota is like that.
And if there is one thing that I could impart to my out of state and international friends it's that, yes, everything you see on the news is 100% happening, and also? We are sledding.
Mostly, what you see on the news makes it look like the streets are full of tear gas and, yes, it's true, ICE agents are deploying tear gas, rubber bullets, real bullets, flash grenades, and smoke bombs, but people are also still going to work and walking their dogs and singing. A lot of us are doing anything we can. People are carrying whistles and charging our phones every night to get all the film possible of the atrocities we are facing at the hands of masked, domestic terrorists who are abducting people without due process. We are standing guard over daycares and mosques and restaurants and sex shops and toy stores. (Because our sex shops have become food distribution centers and our Toy Shops have been giving away free whistles.) We are showing up and baking cookies for people on patrol. We are sweeping up after the people packing bags for people too afraid to leave their houses. We are taking to the streets with signs, sometimes all alone, but we are showing our neighbors, our immigrant and refugee families, that we want them, we love them, and we will not let them be taken without a fight.
This is what resistance looks like and it is awful, but it also hopeful and kind and loving, and, yes, even sometimes we make time for fun.
Fairy Cat, by Hisa Takano
Jan. 18th, 2026 09:54 am
One rainy day Kanade, a high school student, finds a mouse-sized cat in his room. It's a fairy cat or "palm-sized cat!" They are elusive magical creatures which sometimes adopt humans, but mostly behave like ordinary cats. Only extra-tiny!
That's about it for the plot. What this manga is actually about is showing an incredibly adorable tiny cat being an incredibly adorable tiny cat. It's an incredibly adorable manga. Proof:

The eyes, and what the eyes see
Jan. 18th, 2026 04:29 pmTwo nice things happened on Dreamwidth yesterday:
I've read three books, and one serialised short story this week. All but one of these (the third in a really silly romantasy series that I'm grimly carrying on with for completionist reasons; it involves human women falling in love with the personified gods of the North, South, East and West winds, and is really not good) were excellent.
The other two books were The Left-Handed Booksellers of London (Garth Nix), and The Stolen Heart (Andrey Kurkov, translated from the Russian by Boris Dralyuk). Booksellers is Nix's first foray into novel-length fiction for adults, and is set in alternative version of 1980s Britain in which the titular booksellers have a secret life acting as a sort of supernatural security service. Back when I was a book reviewer, I interviewed Nix in his Sydney office, which was packed to the rafters with all the books he used as inspiration — encyclopedias and folklore dictionaries, fiction of all genres, popular history, anthologies of folktales and mythology, etc — and I could see the varied, myriad works of this personal reference library put to good use in this novel, which is heaving with references and allusions from all sources. There's Arthuriana, British children's fantasy (such as Susan Cooper, Alan Garner, Diana Wynne Jones), Terry Pratchett, Romantic poetry, local folklore, weird bits of London history, Cold War-era spy novels, and so on. It's the sort of book that will appeal to people who enjoy playing spot-the-reference to all the ingredients of this genre salad, and Nix clearly had the time of his life writing it.
The Stolen Heart is the second in Kurkov's series of historical mystery novels in which his hapless protagonist Samson (who fell by accident into a job working for the Soviet police force in 1919 Kyiv) tries to solve another bizarre mystery while struggling to survive the chaos around him. As with the previous book in the series, The Stolen Heart is written with a careful balance of humour and empathy, conveying both the terror and the absurdity of living in a place and time of violent, destabilising transition. I haven't finished it yet, but I'm confident that I'll enjoy its conclusion.
Finally, I read 'The Road Less Taken', a serialised short story by Amal El-Mohtar. The link goes to the final chapter of the story, with links to the previous six chapters gathered at the top of the page, so if you are interested in reading it, ensure you start at the beginning. The story interweaves a relationship breakup with the recent jewellery theft from the Louvre and the folktale of Thomas the Rhymer in a manner so clever that you will feel by the end that these three things are, of course, connected in reality! It's an Amal El-Mohtar story, so all her trademarks — the power of music and of female friendships, and food and cooking as a way to show love and care — are of course front and centre.
The most recent

( Fictional cities, and more )
In the time it's taken for me to write this post, the light has left the sky, although it's still silvery blue at 4.30pm, as opposed to total darkness. The Earth moves on its slow tilt back towards the Sun.
Protein in the morning
Jan. 18th, 2026 07:38 amI went to turn on the dishwasher last night and saw that the sealant at the bottom of the door was nearly completely gone. So I placed a work order and turned it off. I'll run it today when I'm awake and can stop it if it leaks. I'd really not like to go back to washing dishes but I'd rather than than mopping floor.
I did not leave my apartment after the game started but did check the score. Ooops. Sad to be a 49er fan. I am happy not to live in the condo any more. Seahawks fans are not lovely to have in your neighborhood - especially when the team is winning. They are not in their own neighborhoods so they feel free to act like wild animals and the cleanup is always painful. I do not miss it.
Today I have plans to do the usual. Jigsaw puzzle in the elbow, TV and knitting. But also I plan to pack up all my shoes. I have paper grocery bags to put them in and I can store them on the floor on the far side of the bed. Then on Friday morning, I can take down all the hanging clothes and plop them onto the bed. I did get a note from Closets by Design to expect the install to take an hour and a half and they will be here before 11.
Ok the muffins are done.

My goal was to make them in the most simple manner possible. So. I took the silicone molds and placed them into the air fryer pan. I sprinkled in some frozen sausage crumbles. Then I added a layer of shredded cheddar cheese and poured in some eggbeater and cooked it at 350 for 20 minutes. Straight out of the oven they weren't bad. They need a few more sausage crumbles, a bit more cheese and a little bit less egg. But, I need to taste them after they have been fridged and then nuked to be sure. But, this could clearly be a viable option. It was sure easy and the only dishes dirtied were the molds and a fork I used to stir the ingredients in each muffin mold.
I turned on the dishwasher about 15 minutes ago. No leaking so far. Whew.

Three Sentence Ficathon fills
Jan. 18th, 2026 10:40 amIt's very exciting to write for fun.
Some fills I did yesterday, with more to come in the days ahead:
( Severance, Gemma Scout )
( Stranger Things, El & Kali )
( One Battle After Another, Bob Ferguson )
( BtVS, Buffy/Faith )
Something l’m annoyed about
Jan. 18th, 2026 03:06 pmNothing happened for a couple of weeks.
Then I got the following email: Me: “I’m up for it if I can afford it.”
“Him”: That's not the main issue: I'm sure we could have a whip round or something.
“I have now looked at various venues but it will be difficult to make a decision as they are so good, if diverse. Even if I confined this decision to those with bedrooms on the ground floor and disabled access, I am still doubtful that you could even manage. You could barely walk in August and I don't feel you could travel for 2-4 hours on public transport without a carer/plus size wheelchair now. Anyway, I don't want the risk of you collapsing in transit on my conscience.
“Unless I find somewhere I feel is particularly possible, participation doesn't seem viable to me. Sorry about that. I hope you understand.”
What this boils down to, shorn of its verbiage, is: I have decided that as a disabled person, you can’t manage, so I have decided you can’t come. I therefore rescind my invitation. Plus, I can’t be arsed to find a suitable venue.
Now, I don’t want to go somewhere where I wouldn’t be welcome, but I’m also well pissed off that he didn’t even ask me what kind of venue I would need.
Shoebox of Dreams Kept Under My Bed
Jan. 18th, 2026 03:02 pmI was, for reasons, re-reading a bunch of raven’s fic the other night and came across and re-read their Piranesi fic from yuletide (I think?) a few years back. It reminded me how much I enjoyed the book and made me want to re-read it. In a remarkably sensible move, given that I was just sitting at my computer reading fic and chilling to classical music, I got up and grabbed it from the shelf, sat back down and started reading it, planning just to read the first chapter before bed to get me started on the project. I read half the book that night and the rest of it the following morning. (I pretty much only didn’t just stay up stupid late because I got uncomfortable in my desk chair and in getting up to decant to the sofa realised the time and reluctantly made the sensible choice to go to bed.
( Here be Spoilers )
Fandom Trees 2025 Reveals: Gifts Given
Jan. 18th, 2026 09:57 amTitle: Winter Wonderland
Author: Spikedluv
Fandom: The Sentinel (tv)
Rating: PG13/Slash
Pairing/Characters: Jim/Blair
Length: 1,600 words
Spoilers: Nothing specifically, but for entire series to be safe.
Summary: "Don't be mad," Blair said.
"Well, it's not auspicious that those are the first words you say to me when I walk in the door."
Author's Notes: Written for
Feedback: Would be greatly appreciated.
Disclaimer: None of these characters belong to me.
Posted: December 2, 2025
Read Fic @ AO3: https://archiveofourown.org/works/75130406
Title: But What If There Was a Demon vs Dinosaur Cage Match?
Author: Spikedluv
Fandom: Angel: the Series(tv)[/Primeval (tv)]
Rating: PG13/Het
Pairing/Characters: Dawn/Connor & Faith
Length: 1,935 words
Spoilers: Takes place post-series, but no real spoilers unless you don't know who Dawn and Connor are. o_O. General spoilers for the concept of Primeval (dinosaurs!).
Summary: "Dinosaurs?" Faith said, sounding dubious after Dawn and Connor had given their account of their experience with Jennifer and the Triceratops.
Author's Notes: Takes place post-Some Things You See With Your Eyes . . . Written for
Feedback: Would be greatly appreciated.
Disclaimer: None of these characters belong to me.
Posted: December 19, 2025
Read Fic @ AO3: https://archiveofourown.org/works/76027846
Night of Camp David by Fletcher Knebel
Jan. 18th, 2026 08:58 am
A deranged President sets his eyes on Canada and Scandinavia, forcing one senator to consider the prospect of contemplating the preliminaries to action.
Night of Camp David by Fletcher Knebel
Weekly (ish) check in
Jan. 18th, 2026 09:42 pmHow goes the decluttering? Have you shifted anything out of the house? Found something to sort through? Had thoughts on things you can let go of?
Comments open to locals, lurkers, drive by sticky beaks, and anyone I've forgotten to mention.
Congratulations to everyone who has found and/or disposed on any clutter in the last week!
Optional extra, for those doing the low key January challenge: how go the work spaces?


