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Diary of a B+ Grade Polymath ([personal profile] tcpip) wrote2025-10-10 04:55 pm

Harvest Celebrations

This week was the Moon Festival, mid-autumn in the northern hemisphere, a harvest festival celebrated in Chinese culture and among its aficionados for about 3000 years. Due to the use of the lunisolar calendar, the event can be anywhere from mid-September to early October when a full moon is present. Last year it was around the former, this year the latter. The weather permitting, it is often held outside with friends and family, which is meant to coincide with the harvest gathering. Making and sharing mooncakes is one of the hallmark traditions of this festival; last year I made some, a fairly complex process, this year I received some from the Consulate, which I took to Anthony and Robin's where, joined with Matthew, we had a little festival of our own and imbibed several glasses of Maotai; at 53% that stuff is like rocket fuel, but doesn't have bad effects the following day. The following evening, I had a second Moon Festival with Kate, where we engaged in the dice game of Bo Bing, one of the many games of celebration held at such festivities.

There are several additional parts of the tradition that I find particularly charming. One is the reflection on distant friends who, although not present, will be gazing at the same moon at the same time as you are. Another is the opportunity for especially close friends to express their fondest desires and greatest dreams to each other, although one imagines that sometimes that can result in a bitter harvest, so to speak. But perhaps my favourite is reciting one of the variations of the story of the goddess Chang'e, whom the festival is named after. The version I tell recites how she drank an elixir of immortality and flew to the moon, becoming the moon goddess. Her heroic but still mortal partner, the archer Hou Yi, made mooncakes to show how much he missed her; talk about shooting for the moon. Chang'e would later be joined by a rabbit who had been exiled by the Jade Emperor for surrendering the elixir of immortality to the Queen of the West.

I did take the opportunity this year to reflect on distant and absent friends and on the new harvest from the last celebration. Despite some significant disappointments, I am more than satisfied with how this year has progressed so far. I also have my eye on an even more involved and interesting twelve months in the future, which involves a fairly significant life change. It is not something that I am prepared to discuss publicly, but those whom I have told know of its importance. I have already observed some sadness among you with the realisation of what this change will entail, but remember that no matter where we are this time next year, we will be gazing at the same moon and in celebration.
juushika: Painting of multiple howling canines with bright white teeth (Never trust a stranger-friend)
juushika ([personal profile] juushika) wrote2025-10-06 04:57 pm

Picture Books: Spooky, Scary Skeletons, Gold; The Shadow and the Ghost, Min; In the Dark, Hoefler

Title: Spooky, Scary Skeletons
Author: Andrew Gold
Illustrator: Polona Lovšin
Published: Random House Books for Young Readers, 2024
Rating: 2 of 5
Page Count: 30
Total Page Count: 544,255
Text Number: 2020
Read Because: more spooky picture books, hardback borrowed from the Timberland Regional Library
Review: Yes, the meme song; no, no one asked for a picture book adaptation, although I can envision the pitch. And so far as there is narrative, it doesn't translate, and little effort is made to produce a coherent story. But the art is all nostalgic Halloween vibes; not good, but fun to flip though.


Title: The Shadow and the Ghost
Author: Cat Min
Published: Levine Querido, 2024
Rating: 2.5 of 5
Page Count: 50
Total Page Count: 544,305
Text Number: 2021
Read Because: more!, hardback borrowed from the Timberland Regional Library
Review: A story of the friendship between a ghost who only comes out at night and a shadow that can only be seen during the day. I'm a sucker for watercolor with colored pencil detailing, so vibrant and textured and really shining in the climax, when it's needed most; it's enough to make me overlook the way the ghost is drawn. But the story doesn't have much going on beyond the innate tension of a starcrossed Ladyhawke premise. Fine but forgettable.


Title: In the Dark
Author: Kate Hoefler
Illustrator: Corinna Luyken
Published: Alfred A. Knopf, 2023
Rating: 3.5 of 5
Page Count: 40
Total Page Count: 544,345
Text Number: 2022
Read Because: more! & this has a big display at a local toy store because the artist is local, hardback borrowed from the Timberland Regional Library
Review: An eminently striking little book, this has an unusual horizontal arrangement, dark but dreamy and vibrant art that's as good as the cover promises, and alternates PoVs between townsfolk and the kinda-sorta-witches of the woods. The differing perspectives are colored by negative assumptions which are then are ameliorated by acceptance and cultural engagement, so it's pretty on the nose. But the two perspectives and the whimsical cultural exchange presented in the brevity of a picture book and the author's poetic style is, frankly, confusing at worst and distant at best; it doesn't cohere. A pity! Because just look at it: beautiful.

Although I'm so tired of outdoor cats in picture books in 2023, y'all.
juushika: Screen capture of the Farplane from Final Fantasy X: a surreal landscape of waterfalls and flowers. (Anime/Game)
juushika ([personal profile] juushika) wrote2025-10-06 04:40 pm

Book Review: Do You Dream of Terra-Two? by Temi Oh

Title: Do You Dream of Terra-Two?
Author: Temi Oh
Narrator: Nneko Okoye
Published: Simon & Schuster Audio, 2019
Rating: 3.5 of 5
Page Count: 530
Total Page Count: 544,225
Text Number: 2019
Read Because: honestly no idea how this landed on my TBR, audiobook borrowed from the Multnomah County Library
Review: A group of elite students are chosen to make a colonist effort to the habitable planet of Terra-Two. I wouldn't be surprised to learn the author has a background in fanfiction, not because there's there any serial numbers filed off here but for the focus is on character work above plot. It makes for contemplative science fiction, a little teen drama, a little psychology; I like that the worldbuilding has so many ramifications for the characters, but there's something strained in the messaging, not just how characters narrativize their own experiences, but the judgment from on high: who succeeds, and why. Interesting, but more conceptually than practically, because sometimes feels like a very long book in which nothing much happens.
yhlee: Alto clef and whole note (middle C). (Default)
yhlee ([personal profile] yhlee) wrote2025-10-06 10:48 am

PSA

I'm now aware that Imgur images are broken for people with UK IP addresses; will repair those image links eventually by hosting own my own space but I have a bunch of work/school to deal with so it'll be slow.
yhlee: Alto clef and whole note (middle C). (Default)
yhlee ([personal profile] yhlee) wrote2025-10-06 05:58 am
Entry tags:

emotional support spinning

This fiber colorway is from a monthly subscription (Feral Scene in Texas, so semi-local to me) - usually wool-based blends to push me out of my comfort zone. (I find wool to be the second-most difficult fiber to spin. First is cotton, which is more "normal" for a beginning spinner.)



I think of this as Pumpkin Spice yarn! It'll be going to [personal profile] ursula.

The current emotional support spinning WIP is cotton, widely regarded as hard mode for treadle wheel spinning. It only took six months of dedicated practice to skill up...



Shout-out to Mohairandmore [Etsy], which sells superlatively prepared fiber; the combed top for ramie and cotton are exquisite. They're also in Texas, so also semi-local to me, although I think most of their non-mohair fiber (they raise angora goats) is from other suppliers. I've got to budget for some of their merino blends at some point because I bet they're amazing to spin.

I wanted to learn to spin cotton because

(a) It's less wildly expensive than mulberry, eri, muga silk (my faves). You can get 4 oz. cotton fiber for ~$6 USD (not including shipping or tax). Silk fiber (unless it's "sari silk" loom waste) usually costs three times as much if not more.

(b) I'm in the US South. This is about as local as you get for fiber production! There's a little silk fiber production in the USA but not a lot of it, and again, whatever the source of the fiber, it's an inherently spendier fiber.

I went all-in on spinning because

(a) It's weirdly difficult to doomscroll on the internet while spinning. :p It's much better for my mental health; that alone would make it worthwhile.

(b) For my own use, I'm personally most interested in thread for needle lace, embroidery, cross stitch, hand-sewing, weaving. But I don't do any of those things very fast so I don't need very much for myself, and I'm narrowly interested in cotton or ramie or silk. I don't knit or crochet, but I have friends who do, and who can make use of yarns spun from Those Other Fibers! (I have functionally zero use for wool ever.) So anything I spin for my own learning/pleasure can go to a good home.

(c) I have wrecked ankle tendons (medical), and treadling on a spinning wheel is surprisingly good sneak physical therapy.

(d) I have neuropathy in my hands and feet, prognosis unknown. I don't want to wait five or ten years to pursue physical crafts further. My favorite thing is working with my hands (obviously, this isn't especially visible online). I regret I was never able to take a shop class because my high school didn't offer one. I don't know that I'm going to have sufficient use of my hands/feet in five to ten years (assuming the world hasn't imploded, a big assumption). So I might as well get some enjoyment out of hand/physical crafts now.
goodbyebird: Birds of prey: Big Barda and Cassandra Cain. There is most certainly a size difference oh yes. (C ∞ big lady tiny bat)
goodbyebird ([personal profile] goodbyebird) wrote2025-10-06 10:01 am

This and that and a very tired me.

+ All I've done since making it home is sleep, download some stuff, watch the entire season of Wayward, and play undemanding video games. Man have I slept. Would like to lie down right now and sleep some more, but I'm headed back to work for the day (we abruptly left Thursday instead of Friday as planned, so I left behind a wee bit more chaos that I'm comfortable with).

Surprisingly smooth ride on the ferry though, given the weather.

+ Dear Vidder letters for Festivids are cropping up, and they're such a pleasure to read through. Aww fandom ❤️

+ Hunting down the digital singles for Birds of Prey, bc waiting for the trade to drop in six months is just not on the table. More Big Barda and Tiny Bat NOW. And they cancelled it, so I ain't giving them extra money, no sir :p

Now to figure out how to read them in an enjoyable manner.

Oh! And posted some scans to [community profile] capshare from the second and third trade.

+ Watched the new Fantastic Four. It was cozy! I'm enjoying this new return to more child-friendly superhero movies. Like, I can see letting my nephew watch both this and the new Superman movie with me. I don't need all this dark stuff for grownups; the world is dark enough as is, gimme escapism!
yhlee: Alto clef and whole note (middle C). (Default)
yhlee ([personal profile] yhlee) wrote2025-10-05 01:36 pm
Entry tags:

Rook & Rose Pattern Deck has landed!

Gilt edges not pictured, largely because I couldn't wrangle a photo setup for them.

yhlee: Alto clef and whole note (middle C). (Default)
yhlee ([personal profile] yhlee) wrote2025-10-05 08:24 am
Entry tags:

latest spinning



Two-ply ramie handspun. I still have to BOIL it with soda ash to set the twist, but this will be going to [personal profile] ilyena_sylph. ♥