pedanther: (Default)
2018-09-01 06:55 am

Fiction log - August 2018

Fiction books
John Buchan. Witch Wood (e)
Ian Edginton, Matthew Dow Smith. Batman '66 Meets Steed and Mrs Peel
John le Carré. Call for the Dead (re-read)
John le Carré. A Murder of Quality
John le Carré. Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy

In progress
CJ Dennis. Songs of a Sentimental Bloke
Diane Duane. The Book of Night with Moon (e) (re-read)
Terry Pratchett. A Hat Full of Sky (e) (re-read)
WC Sellar, RJ Yeatman. 1066 and All That

Non-fiction books in progress
Grant Morrison. Supergods

short, screen, and stage )
books bought and borrowed )

Top of the to-read pile
Stephen Curtis. Staging Ideas
pedanther: (Default)
2018-08-01 11:05 pm

Fiction log - July 2018

Fiction books
Terry Pratchett. Monstrous Regiment (e) (re-read)

In progress
John Buchan. Witch Wood (e)
CJ Dennis. Songs of a Sentimental Bloke
Diane Duane. The Book of Night with Moon (e) (re-read)
Terry Pratchett. A Hat Full of Sky (e) (re-read)

Non-fiction books
Jason Morningstar. Fiasco
Jack Plotnick. New Thoughts for Actors (e)

Non-fiction books in progress
Grant Morrison. Supergods

short, screen, and stage )
books bought and borrowed )

Top of the to-read pile
Stephen Curtis. Staging Ideas
pedanther: (Default)
2018-07-29 11:17 am

Five Things Make a Post

1. There's a "post the opening sentences of your recent fics" meme going around that nearly every fic-writing person on my friendslist has done. I keep looking at it and then remembering that I haven't finished any new fic since the last time I did a meme that involved posting the opening sentences of my recent fic.


2. Another thing I keep looking at and then deciding not to do is Remix Revival. I do just scrape into eligibility for it this year; the trouble is the bit where you also have to say what fandoms you're willing to write for. I never know what to put when it's left completely open. (That's one of the reasons I like exchanges like Yuletide where there's an eligibility requirement, because they generate a list of eligible fandoms and I can go through crossing off the ones I don't know or don't like or don't feel up to, and then choose from what's left. If I'm left to choose from all fandoms that exist everywhere, with no idea of what people are likely to ask for, I don't know where to start.) (Well, Doctor Who, obviously. But then what?)


3. At gaming group this week, I played Potion Explosion and Dice Forge.

In Potion Explosion, players have to assemble magic potions out of randomly-dispensed ingredients (represented by coloured marbles); completing potions earns points, and then completed potions can also be used to gain advantages (some potions let you collect more ingredients in a turn, others let you substitute ingredients, and so on). I'm pretty sure I came last, but I'd be willing to try it again.

Dice Forge is a variant on the deck-building game, where you start with a deck of weak cards and over the course of the game acquire more powerful cards, but instead of a deck of cards each player has a pair of dice with removable faces that can be upgraded over the course of the game. There's also a map of locations with mythologically-themed challenges; completing a challenge gives some benefit in resources to use on other challenges, unique special die faces, or just massive amounts of victory points.


4. I don't think I've mentioned yet that I signed up a while back for LearnedLeague, an online trivia competition. I've now competed in two seasons, one as a rookie that ended with me being placed in the C grade (the second-best possible result of a rookie season, as you can't go straight to A), and one in C grade where I performed solidly but not well enough to be promoted. In each round, players get matched in head-to-head contests where points are scored not just for getting the correct answers but for predicting which answers their opponents will get right (to be precise, a player's prediction will affect their opponent's score, and vice versa; it's balanced so that a player who gets every question right that round will get full points regardless and conversely a player who gets every question wrong will get no points). To aid players in their predictions, there are detailed statistics kept, including breakdowns of each player's performance by question subject: apparently my best subjects are Science, Language, Mathematics, Film, and Classical Music, while my worst subjects are Business/Economics, Pop Music, Art, and Current Events.


5. After my run of John Buchan's thriller novels last month, I saw Witch Wood mentioned somewhere as the most highly regarded of his other novels, so I decided to give it a go. The first few chapters have been an interesting experience, because I didn't know anything about it going in except the title and the author, so on top of the usual figuring out of plot and characters I needed to figure out what genre it is. It's set in the 17th century, in a village on the outskirts of forest with a dark and mysterious reputation, and revolves around a young priest who - we're informed in a present-day prologue - is remembered in local legend as having been carried away by either the Devil or the Fair Folk, depending on who you ask. There's several ways a premise like that could go, depending on whether the author is writing fantasy or horror or an adventure story where everything turns out to have a material explanation, and at first I wasn't sure which this was, which added an extra level of ambiguity to scenes like the one where the protagonist is travelling home one night and meets three men who he senses are not quite what they seem to be.
pedanther: (Default)
2018-07-01 12:38 pm

Fiction log - June 2018

Fiction books
Bertolt Brecht, Eric Bentley (tr). The Caucasian Chalk Circle
John Buchan. The Courts of the Morning (e)
John Buchan. Greenmantle (e)
John Buchan. The Island of Sheep (e)
John Buchan. Mr Standfast (e)
John Buchan. The Thirty-Nine Steps (e) (re-read)
John Buchan. The Three Hostages (e)
Ben Muir, Jess Napthine, David Ash, Lee Cooper. How to Survive a Zombie Apocalypse

In progress
CJ Dennis. Songs of a Sentimental Bloke
Diane Duane. The Book of Night with Moon (e) (re-read)
Terry Pratchett. Monstrous Regiment (e) (re-read)

Non-fiction books in progress
Grant Morrison. Supergods
Jack Plotnick. New Thoughts for Actors (e)

short, screen, and stage )
books bought and borrowed )

Top of the to-read pile
Stephen Curtis. Staging Ideas
pedanther: (Default)
2018-06-11 10:03 pm

Five Things Make a Post

1. At gaming group this week, I played Spyfall and Unstable Unicorns. Spyfall is one of those hidden role/social deduction games that I'm bad at and don't enjoy. Unstable Unicorns is a fun card game that I would happily play again, although the endgame got a bit draggy because the emphasis shifted to everyone trying to figure out who was closest to winning and block them. In the discussion afterward, the more experienced players said that the set we were playing with (which had a lot of expansion cards in) might have had too many blocking cards in it to play well; it certainly had too many cards in it to shuffle easily.


2. The Rep Club's next production is the musical Can-Can, which has just opened. I have not been actively involved, since I was still up to my elbows in Boston Marriage when casting and pre-production started, and once Boston Marriage was over I decided I needed a rest and thus steered well clear of the maelstrom that even a well-organised musical production inevitably becomes. After that will be the comedy How to Survive a Zombie Apocalypse, which is holding auditions this week.


3. The brass band competed in the state championships over the long weekend, and won our division. It was a fun weekend, and we are looking forward to doing states again next year (and probably the nationals the year after that, when they will be in Perth again).


4. I am still doing Parkrun. I even managed to do it when I was in Perth for Swancon, since the hotel was not far from the Claisebrook Cove course. (I went early, to make sure I could find the starting line before it began, but it turned out that they didn't set up the starting line until five minutes before the start time, so all I got for arriving half an hour early was half an hour of wandering around worrying that I'd somehow ended up in completely the wrong place. The actual course was great, though, very scenic, and I would happily do it again next time I'm in that neighbourhood.) I didn't manage to do it when I was in Perth for the state band championships, though, because the place we were staying was well situated in relation to the championships but not well situated relative to any Parkrun locations.


5. I've had a set of the Richard Hannay thriller novels -- The Thirty-Nine Steps and its sequels -- sitting in my to-read pile for ages, and I took them along as light reading for the band trip. They're all reasonably enjoyable, but I can see why The Thirty-Nine Steps has been repeatedly filmed and all the others have faded into obscurity.
pedanther: (cheerful)
2013-02-06 11:17 pm

Fiction log - January 2013

Fiction books
John M Ford. The Final Reflection (re-read)
John M Ford. How Much For Just the Planet? (re-read)
PC Hodgell. Honor's Paradox (e)
Sharon Lee. Carousel Tides (e)
Sharon Lee, Steve Miller. Mouse and Dragon (e) (re-read)
Sharon Lee, Steve Miller. Necessity's Child (e)
Sharon Lee, Steve Miller. Scout's Progress (re-read)
Tamora Pierce. Wild Magic (re-read)
George Bernard Shaw. Caesar and Cleopatra
Patricia Wrightson. The Nargun and the Stars

In progress
Tamora Pierce. Wolf-Speaker (re-read)

Abandoned
Rosemary Sutcliff. Sword at Sunset

Non-fiction books
TA Shippey. The Road to Middle-Earth 2nd ed.

short, screen, and stage )
books bought and borrowed )

Top of the to-read pile
Peter Macinnis. Mr Darwin's Incredible Shrinking World
pedanther: (Default)
2012-05-04 09:05 pm

Fiction log - April 2012

Fiction books
Bennett Cerf, Roy McKie. Bennett Cerf's Book of Riddles
Marianne de Pierres. Code Noir
Marianne de Pierres. Crash Deluxe
Marianne de Pierres. Nylon Angel
Phyllis Ann Karr. The Idylls of the Queen
Anthony Price. Our Man in Camelot
Brandon Sanderson. The Way of Kings

In progress
Murray Leinster. The Forgotten Planet

Non-fiction books
Declan Donnellan. The Actor and the Target

In progress
Barbara Sher, Barbara Smith. I Could Do Anything If I Only Knew What It Was

short, screen, and stage )
books bought and borrowed )

Top of the to-read pile
Verlyn Flieger. Interrupted Music: The Making of Tolkien's Mythology
pedanther: (Default)
2011-11-01 10:56 pm

Fiction log - October 2011

Fiction books
Ed Brubaker, Greg Rucka, Michael Lark. Gotham Central: Jokers and Madmen
Brian Clevinger, Scott Wegener. Atomic Robo and Other Strangeness
Mike Costa, Fiona Staples. Secret History of the Authority: Hawksmoor
PC Hodgell. Bound in Blood
PC Hodgell. To Ride a Rathorn (re-read)
Bob Ingersoll, Tony Isabella. The Case of the Colonist's Corpse
Greg Rucka, JH Williams III. Batwoman: Elegy

In progress
Walter Simonson, et al. Thor by Walter Simonson

Non-fiction books
(none)

short, screen, and stage )
books bought and borrowed )

Top of the to-read pile
Mary Shelley. Frankenstein
pedanther: (Default)
2011-05-05 08:17 pm

Fiction log - April 2011

Fiction books
Warren Ellis, John Cassaday. Planetary: Spacetime Archaeology
Grant Morrison, et al. Doom Patrol: Crawling From the Wreckage
Ellis Peters. Brother Cadfael's Penance (re-read)
Ellis Peters. A Rare Benedictine (re-read)
Ellis Peters. The Virgin in the Ice (re-read)
Justina Robson. Keeping It Real
Jeff Smith. RASL Volume One
Vernor Vinge. The Witling
Sean Williams. The Changeling
Sean Williams. The Dust Devils
Sean Williams. The Scarecrow

In progress
Leo Tolstoy. War and Peace

Non-fiction books
Warwick Davis. Size Matters Not: The extraordinary life and career of Warwick Davis

short, screen, and stage )
books bought and borrowed )

Top of the to-read pile
Ed Brubaker, Greg Rucka, Michael Lark. Gotham Central: In the Line of Duty