[ SECRET POST #6963 ]

Jan. 28th, 2026 06:32 pm
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[personal profile] case posting in [community profile] fandomsecrets

⌈ Secret Post #6963 ⌋

Warning: Some secrets are NOT worksafe and may contain SPOILERS.


01.


More! )


Notes:

Secrets Left to Post: 01 pages, 17 secrets from Secret Submission Post #994.
Secrets Not Posted: [ 0 - broken links ], [ 0 - not!secrets ], [ 0 - not!fandom ], [ 0 - too big ], [ 0 - repeat ].
Current Secret Submissions Post: here.
Suggestions, comments, and concerns should go here.
primeideal: Egwene al'Vere from "Wheel of Time" TV (wheel of time)
[personal profile] primeideal
I don't do star ratings, because it's really hard for me to sum up what does and doesn't work about a book on a one-dimensional axis. But one of the things that often comes up in these reviews is "does it stick the landing." Because sometimes my assessment would be like "boring first half, 3.5 stars, rounded up to 4 because it finally gets good." Or "compelling prose, 3.5 stars, rounded down because the end is a total anticlimax." This really impacts my reading experience.

Singer Distance is a book that sticks the landing. There are digressions that are less engaging than the SF stuff, like, flashbacks to the narrator's teenage years and pranks that local kids play on his dad's farm. But it all comes together in a way that I didn't see coming but then totally should have, which is the sign of doing something right. There is closure to the plot questions we have, I'm not sitting there thinking "well that was a waste." So it gets the rounding-up seal of approval that way.

Premise: the "channels" on Mars really were canals; there are intelligent Martians, and they're sometimes communicative. From the 1890s to the 1930s, Martians carve large-scale displays that Earth can see with telescopes, and correctly interpret them to be mathematical formulae. Earth responds with similarly large-scale constructions.
Within a few months a robust plurality had settled on this interpretation:
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
2 + 2 = 4
3 + 3 = _
Our first true message from the Martians:
pop quiz, kindergartners.
But then the Martians pose something about distance that befuddles all Earth's scientists, and when nobody can formulate a response, Mars goes silent. The book begins in 1960; Rick is a grad student at MIT, and his girlfriend, Crystal, thinks she's solved the equation. They and some friends go on a road trip from Boston to the Arizona desert to broadcast their answer.

Rick is madly in love, and he proposes, but she tells him to finish his own degree and not bask in her reflected glory. Then she basically ghosts him. Thirteen years later, in 1973, Rick has to go on another cross-country road trip, this time without his buddies in tow.

There's opportunities for US regional humor:
The great thing about Oklahoma, Priya said, was that each state after it got a little better.

Just my luck, I thought--I was trying to find the love of my life and had to rely on the goodwill of a Philadelphian.

I like SF, and math, and can relate to nerdy obsessive mathematicians also having interests in music and cartography and other seemingly unrelated things, so this book was a specific recommendation to me. The flip side is, I can be more critical of things I know well. It's harder for me to suspend my disbelief when it comes to "what if the way we conceptualize distance is misleading, what if there's a more meaningful sense of distance? Sometimes when you're physically close to somebody, emotionally, you're still miles away. Everything is relative, dude." That kind of faux-profundity is a hard sell.

This is the best explanation of "Singer Distance" we get, and I actually think it's a pretty good one in terms of "fake math":

Imagine a mountain range. Traditional measurement was like measuring from the base of the southernmost mountain to the base of the northernmost mountain in a straight line through the Earth, ignoring the complex topography of the thicknesses and compositions of each peak. Though she theorized that mapping the actual, exact topography of any distance was a task on par with mapping the universe, she explained how the averages could be calculated, with a detailed process that had to take into account inertial speed or acceleration, medium, and a mysterious variable the editors referred to as the Tanzer Value, but which Crystal named "Intent."
I sort of agreed with the editors, that
Intent was a troublesome name for the quantity, one that both failed to help visualize how the variable operated and anthropomorphized an ineffable particle; it made distance seem subject to mood swings.

This is good. There's also a follow-up Martian message about entropy, and the humans comment, "you can't reverse the flow of a river...well actually yes you can, they literally did that in Chicago, maybe entropy isn't the whole story," which was fun. But by the time we get there there's been a lot of "how can you be so far away and I still feel so close to you??? #makesyouthink."

The discovery of intelligent Martians changes very little about Earth's history from the 1890s onwards. The world wars still happen. NASA still lands on the moon in 1969. There are eventually orbiters sent to Mars, but they abruptly lose transmission 13,000 miles away. This disinterest in alternate history makes it feel more like "litfic with SF elements" than "attractive to SF fans."

This is a small nitpick but: "She'd started college at seventeen and grad school at twenty-one. Twenty-four now, she was the youngest of us by four years."

How realistic is this? In my experience it's pretty common to begin college at 18 and, if you go directly to grad school from undergrad, start that at 22 or so. Let's say Crystal is more prodigious than her peers and skipped a grade early on. I still don't think it would be super likely to see a four year gap between her and her colleagues? Was it different for people in the sixties?

More generally, I find the dynamics of "socially awkward genius/"person who has practical and social skills" as a romance trope can be kind of tiresome. This version has a woman in the first slot and a man in the second instead of the reverse, props. But I don't think we get a compelling sense of what Crystal sees in Rick. She treats him (and other people close to her) with incredible callousness for those thirteen years. And then he's extremely forgiving, like, "I would rather have her in my life than be estranged from her for no reason, maybe she just went crazy from too much math and can't help it," but it felt unearned. Their relationship parallels the Earth-Mars one; Mars is aloof and normally doesn't bother to communicate with Earth unless Earth can solve their puzzles. Crystal says that maybe Earth just needs to change the conversational topic. In the Earth-Mars case, it might work, although Mars is destroying/turning off/ignoring their rovers, so it still might not. I'm not convinced that "the relationship between unequals" really works for Crystal and Rick, even if Crystal claims she's in awe of his practical skills.

Bingo: I'll probably use this for the "recycle a bingo square" (there's plenty that it could count for, eg, "Published in 2022," hard mode as Chatagnier's first published novel). I've been very lucky in not needing to fall back on that one yet!

If you're interested in using it for this year's card, arguments could be made for "a book in parts" (there are three parts, longer than traditional chapters, but they aren't subdivided into actual chapters). It's not dwelled on in detail, but Crystal and her parents were refugees from fascism in the WWII era, so arguably "stranger in a strange land." If you really want to stretch it, maybe "Impossible Places," because what if small distances and large distances are actually, like, indistinguishable, dude. Big spoilers:

the bingo square is a spoiler )

Food

Jan. 28th, 2026 02:40 pm
ranunculus: (Default)
[personal profile] ranunculus
Eating with allergies. 
sovay: (Haruspex: Autumn War)
[personal profile] sovay
In the midst of this week, we are in a block of doctor's appointments, but following this afternoon's I climbed up to the railings behind the Salem Street Burying Ground and hung over them with my camera, an operation which still put me in snow to mid-calf. Its winter-drifted gravestones date from the late seventeenth through the late nineteenth centuries, with one modern interpolation for the unmarked, enslaved dead. I should go back for their slate-carved winged skulls in spring.



The current sunset is one of those violet riots, but at the time of this photo, the clouds above the fan of trees were just starting to flush gilt-grey. That attenuated stretch of the Mystic that always looks more like an industrial canal than a river was a glaucous freeze at its margins and flat-skimmed snow down its center. I cannot believe I never encountered Socalled's Ghettoblaster (2006) until its twentieth anniversary. Then again, only forty years after the fact did it occur to me that I would have accepted The Last Battle (1956) much more readily if Lewis had made it Ragnarök instead of Revelations.

Write Every day 2026: January, Day 28

Jan. 28th, 2026 10:43 pm
trobadora: (Default)
[personal profile] trobadora
  1. Many thanks to [personal profile] sakana17 for offering to host WED in February! We'll continue next month over at [personal profile] sakanawords. :D

  2. This morning I had the plumber in to have my my gas boiler serviced and the flue replaced. "Oh no, you don't need to remove the stuff under it, it'll be fine," they said. - Never mind the stuff directly under the boiler, the entire room ended up covered in dirt.

  3. Mystery of the day: am I developing a cold, or did I just breathe in too much dust/soot? /o\

Today's writing

More exchange fic wrangling.

Tally

Days 1-25 )

Day 26: [personal profile] badly_knitted, [personal profile] brithistorian, [personal profile] carenejeans, [personal profile] china_shop, [personal profile] cornerofmadness, [personal profile] goddess47, [personal profile] luzula, [personal profile] sanguinity, [personal profile] shadaras, [personal profile] sylvanwitch, [personal profile] the_siobhan, [personal profile] trobadora, [personal profile] ysilme

Day 27: [personal profile] badly_knitted, [personal profile] brithistorian, [personal profile] carenejeans, [personal profile] china_shop, [personal profile] cornerofmadness, [personal profile] goddess47, [personal profile] luzula, [personal profile] sanguinity, [personal profile] shadaras, [personal profile] sylvanwitch, [personal profile] the_siobhan, [personal profile] trobadora, [personal profile] ysilme

Day 28: [personal profile] china_shop, [personal profile] trobadora, [personal profile] ysilme

Let me know if I missed anyone! And remember you can drop in or out at any time. :)

(no subject)

Jan. 28th, 2026 03:59 pm
flemmings: (Default)
[personal profile] flemmings
Didn't want to get up this morning. Bed so warm, world so cold. Checked my phone in bed and saw 47 has taken to wearing a glove on his left hand to hide the bruising,  like Cosmo Gilt. Yeah, could be because of aspirin use-- I used to get amazing bruises back in my aspirin and codeine days-- but someone cheerfully remarked that the Queen had a similar bruise on her hand when greeting Lettuce Liz, and two days later she was dead. Of course if he's taking aspirin he's less likely to have a stroke, which is unfortunate, but maybe the Big Macs will do for his heart.

Is still freezing out because wind chill. Went out and scraped packed snow off front walkway and a bit of the sidewalk, but there's ice underneath. It comes up if you hack at the right angle but that irritates my touchy neck vertebrae so I couldn't finish. Removed a bit of the snow mountain in front of the bins and the gas meter. Bins aren't going out any time soon and new company is making noises about not taking bagged recycling like the city used to, but the gas reader is coming next week. Mind, the gas co. should just do another estimate this month and cut their losses.

Reading is still Dr. Siri but I wanted a break and some easily understood classical English mystery,  so I got a .99 special (and why doesn't this keyboard have a cents sign? I can have £ and € and ¥, but cents, no.) It was very silly and I deleted it from my account so I don't even know what it was called. Then had recourse to a Dr. Priestley, but Rhode has a verbal tick that increasingly grates. Whenever a witness is asked about an event, the answer begins with either 'I'll tell you how it was' or 'It was like this.'  Ah well. Back to Dr. Siri.

Dead tree is Flora's Fury to get it off the shelf. I should read at least Flora's Dare to refresh the memory, but Libby doesn't have it and it's non-circulating at the library. Still, the world building is a lot of fun and I'm enjoying it.

A Busy Day in the Revolution

Jan. 28th, 2026 03:10 pm
lydamorehouse: (MN fist)
[personal profile] lydamorehouse
The Portland Frog riding the Minnesota Loon carrying the progressive queer flag towards the resistance by Freddie Schwager
Image: The Portland Frog riding the Minnesota Loon carrying the progressive queer flag and the MN state flag shield, flying towards the resistance by Freddie Schwager.

Yesterday was very busy for me.

I got a text from MONARCA in the late morning that there were 20 heavily armed iCE agents attempting to gain access to the Dorothy Day facility in downtown Saint Paul. I hopped in my car and headed out, but, as seems to be typical of me, I arrived fifteen minutes too late. I talked with a witness and he told me that the staff locked the doors and demanded a warrant. ICE was forced to leave without abducting anyone. I was joking to a friend that they should send me out to every one of these calls because every one I have ever arrived at, it has either been a false alarm or, as in this case, the ICE agents left empty-handed. I am, apparently, some kind of anti-ICE luck charm. ;-)

So, even though, for me, it wasn't a confrontation, I was still really keyed up afterwards. So, I basically just went directly to my Food Communists and spent three hours packing up groceries for folks sheltering in place/in hiding. The nice thing about my Food Communists is that they are also a homeless/unhoused warming shelter and so they have free meals. I can't forget to eat if I'm at ZCC because someone will tell me to sit and eat at some point, which is good.

Then, at 6 pm yesterday, I signed up for a legal observer training with COPAL. I'll be honest with you all? I have only ever kind of been half-assed trained in this. I was signed up with MONARCA, but I missed the actual training session, and have been relying on notes taken by a friend. So, this seemed like a really good opportunity to get the whole deal. I'd also attended that national training via the ACLU the night before, and, given that my brain is a soupy seive right now, I figure the more times I hear how it's done, the better.

The Observer trainers were expecting 150 people so I walked over. Despite the temperatures, the church sponsoring this event is only five or six blocks away. The place was packed. They actually had Constitutional Observers outside on ICE watch because... I guess because we no longer trust those jackbooted thugs not to terrorize people just trying to learn how to protect their neighbors.

A couple of funny things about the training. First, Minnesotans are still entirely Minnesotan.

The person running the training tried to get us all to introduce ourselves to our seat mates by asking us to ask a stranger "why they were here." Literally the people I sat by in the pew, were like, "I don't even know where else I would be? I am literally worried about our actual neighbor," I was like, "I know. It's kind of a weird question because the answer is: fascism?? Also, why would we sit by and let our neighbors get kidnapped when fifty of us show up to help someone get out of a ditch?" So, that was both good and very awkward because it was clear that a couple of guys just wanted to shrug because Minnesotan men are like "eh? 'Cuz it's the right place to be??"

Second, the trainer kept trying to get us more engaged by having people "popcorn" (which I guess just means shout out as the spirit moves you??)  some of the slides and this was... so very Minnesotan. You could tell people hated being asked to do this, but we were all there because we were willing to get out of our comfort zones so people just FORCED themselves to speak up. It was kind of hilarious because the, like "OMG, FINE I WILL SPEAK WITHOUT RAISING MY HAND THIS IS SO PAINFUL I WILL DIE IF I ACCIDENTALLY TALK OVER SOMEONE" was palpable in the air?

But, it was a good meeting and I am now signed up on COPAL as well as MONARCA.

I woke up really sore from all the physical work at the Food Commies, so I have declared today a mental and phsyical rest from the revolution.

Have I read anything?  Just the training manual for the constitutional observers. It's been rough!

Early Humans

Jan. 28th, 2026 02:47 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
430,000-Year-Old Wooden Tools Are the Oldest Ever Found

The finding, along with the discovery of a 500,000-year-old hammer made of bone, indicates that our human ancestors were making tools even earlier than archaeologists thought.

Read more... )

Birdfeeding

Jan. 28th, 2026 02:32 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Today is sunny and cold, but less frigid than yesterday.

I fed the birds.  I refilled the suet feeder.  I've seen a flock of sparrows, two starlings, a mourning dove, and a fox squirrel at the corncob. 

I put out water for the birds.

EDIT 1/28/26 -- I did a bit of work around the patio.

EDIT 1/28/26 -- I did more work around the patio.

I refilled the hopper feeder.

I've seen a male cardinal and a wren.

EDIT 1/28/26 -- I did more work around the patio.

I am done for the night.


Stream

Jan. 28th, 2026 09:12 pm
catness: (characters)
[personal profile] catness
Wrote this kinda poem for the Creative Court prompt "Birthday", I guess I can post in my own journal as well.

(It had originated on the night of a thunderstorm when our building was hit by lightning, and we had a power outage, and I couldn't sleep.)

the year falls down like heavy rain
crashing into the ground
the thunder of memories crushing my brain
drenched and dazed
I stumble around my maze of disquieting voids
avoiding the vortex of voices
incessantly drowning my mind from within
and without
you
another year runs out
another year streams in
lebateleur: Ukiyo-e image of Japanese woman reading (TWIB)
[personal profile] lebateleur
Inhospitable commuting conditions have kept me home the last few days. (Fun fact: the city counts any road as plowed that 1) a city vehicle has driven down, or 2) has less than two inches of snow on it...which may explain why a truly perplexing number of people have tried to drive—and ended up marooned—on so many of them.) If nothing else, it's been a great boon to my page count totals.

What I Finished Reading This Week

Mannaz – Malene Sølvsten
The final volume in the Whisper of Ravens series, after Ansuz and Fehu. These books are by no means Literature, but they are a great deal of fun. Although they are original fiction, they have the vibe of a really excellent fanfic epic, if that makes sense. There are definite strengths and weaknesses to the story itself, but by this point in the trilogy I was just along for the ride and enjoying myself despite whatever happened.Read more... ) But at the end of the day, this novel—and the entire trilogy—were entertaining reads and ones that I will return to again.

Freya the Deer – Meg Richman
This book is very well written. It will frustrate—if not anger—many readers with its almost complete refusal to pull punches, but will also probably frustrate the remainder of its readers by easing backing from the few punches it does pull at absolutely critical moments.

What it does well:
  • There's no moralizing (or even handwringing) to be found about women's sexuality here.
  • Richman's nuanced, uncompromising portrayal of Freya's autism. This is not "neurodivergence" i.e., just an informed attribute, or conflation of feeling socially awkward with fundamental mental difference, or something that's "solved" with the right romantic partner or found family. Freya is differently made from most of the people around her.
  • That fundamental difference just is: sometimes it helps Freya, sometimes it hurts her; she is not always aware that it's doing one or the other, and even when she knows or suspects, she doesn't necessarily know why.
  • Richman's characters—even the secondary and tertiary ones—are generally complex and well-rounded. These are real human beings with opinions, motivations, virtues, and flaws that don't fall into easily defined (or easy to stomach) categories.
  • The same goes for novel's approach to the complexity and messiness of human existence. Good and bad can exist in the same person, institution, or event, and by and large Richman avoids railroading the reader into intellectual straitjackets or moralizing about any of it. It doesn't shy away from asking uncomfortable questions and refuses to provide facile answers, even at the risk of upseting or alienating readers who'd rather be comforted with easy, packaged solutions.
  • Richman can evoke a three-dimensional scene, interpersonal interaction, emotion, or psychological state with an absolute economy of words.
Where it fumbles (major spoilers ahead): )

TL;DR—This book is not perfect, but it does things that many other authors are not talented or courageous enough to attempt, let alone succeed at, and frequently does them very, very well.


What I Am Currently Reading

The Dog Stars – Peter Heller
So far, this is The Road, if that novel were written by a far less precious and pretentious author who—unlike McCarthy—is not a child rapist.

The Stations of the Sun - Ronald Hutton
I read the chapter on Imbolc this week.

The Bone Chests - Cat Jarman
With about 100 pages left to go I can confidently say that this is a well-written book about a subject that does not interest me.

The Disabled Tyrant's Beloved Pet Fish vol. 1 – Xue Shan Fei Hu
Is the premise silly? Yes. Does the author know this? Yes. Is the book great fun for precisely these reasons? Yes. I'm currently a third of the way through and will probably pick this up as my next main-focus read.


What I’m Reading Next

I acquired no new books this week.


これで以上です。

Wednesday Reading Meme

Jan. 28th, 2026 01:57 pm
sineala: Detail of Harry Wilson Watrous, "Just a Couple of Girls" (Reading)
[personal profile] sineala
What I Just Finished Reading

Nothing.

What I'm Reading Now

Comics Wednesday!

1776 #3, Iron Man #1, Sorcerer Supreme #2 )

What I'm Reading Next

IDK. Once again, I need fewer migraines.
just_ann_now: (Reading: Cold? Check out a book!)
[personal profile] just_ann_now
Same icon! Still cold! We got six inches of lovely fluffy snow, but then we got two inches of horrible heavy sleet, which froze hard as cement. Thanks to neighbors with a snowblower and a teenage son, I'm dug out in the front of the house, but am still chipping away at the back walkway. Fortunately we don't have anywhere we need to be in the foreseeable future, and it is supposed to warm up some next week, so we are just taking it easy right now. And reading! Of course.

What I Just Finished Reading

The Lightning Thief by Rick Riordan. I read this for a Children's/YA Book slot on Dreamwidth Book Bingo. It was fun! I will highly recommend it (and possibly the movie, too, though I haven't seen it) to the grandkids.

When We Were Real, by Daryl Gregory. This was also loads of fun in a very wacky way. [personal profile] rachelmanija, I was sure I heard about this from you, but can't find a review. Was it some other one of y'all? In any case, thank you - it was great for the snow day. For A to Z Authors.

Silk: A World History, by Arathi Prasad. This was absolutely riveting - a biological, economic, and technological examination of THREE types of silk: from silkworms, from spiders, and from a mollusk. Wow. For a "Global History" slot in my own book bingo (I didn't know if there would be one on Dreamwidth, so I made my own.)

What I Am Currently Reading

Time Traveler: In Search of Dinosaurs and Other Fossils from Montana to Mongolia, by Michael Novacek. Not a book about dinosaurs, but about A Paleontologist's Journey - from his youthful fascination with the big dinos, to his finding his niche in the study of tinier, but still amazing creatures. For A to Z Authors.

Inventing the Renaissance, by Ada Palmer. Simultaneously breezy and dense, a very readable combination. I'm more natural-history than world-history, so it's a good switch for me.

What I Am Reading Next

Tonight I plan to dive in to Moniquill Blackgoose's To Ride A Rising Storm, the sequel to To Shape a Dragon's Breath, which I absolutely loved.

Question of the Day: I don't have one today! Do you?

Three Sentence Ficathon

Jan. 28th, 2026 07:54 am
snickfic: Oasis: Liam and Noel Gallagher, text "Some Might Say" (Oasis)
[personal profile] snickfic
Finally managed to write some fills for the [community profile] threesentenceficathon!

1. MCU, Valkyrie
https://threesentenceficathon.dreamwidth.org/6398.html?thread=14482686#cmt14482686
any, any, “Let the past die. Kill it, if you have to.”

Valkyrie )


2. Oasis RPF, Liam/Noel
https://threesentenceficathon.dreamwidth.org/6398.html?thread=12601086#cmt12601086
Any, any, soft underbelly

Gallaghercest )


3. The Long Walk - Stephen King, Stebbins
https://threesentenceficathon.dreamwidth.org/6398.html?thread=14502654#cmt14502654
The Long Walk (book), Stebbins, ghosts

The Long Walk )

Wednesday Reading Meme

Jan. 28th, 2026 10:05 am
osprey_archer: (Default)
[personal profile] osprey_archer
What I Just Finished Reading

Kate Seredy’s The Open Gate. Driving toward their destination for summer vacation, a New York City family pauses at a farm auction. No one is bidding on the farmland itself, so Granny cunningly suggests to Dad, “Why don’t you bid? Just to get things started?”

“DON’T YOU DO IT, BOY!” I shouted, but as so often happens, the characters ignored my wise advice.

Of course Dad wins the farm. Of course, the family has to stay the night, and having stayed one night, they have to keep on staying. And then Granny goes to another farm auction, promising piously not to open her mouth to bid–

“YOU DON’T HAVE TO OPEN YOUR MOUTH TO BID AT AN AUCTION!” I shouted at Dad, who once again foolishly failed to listen to me. He accepted Granny’s promise, and Granny promptly rules-lawyered the farm into two cows (both pregnant) and two horses (also both pregnant) by bidding with a twitch of the hand.

I am all for people going back to the land if they want to, but I prefer stories about it to feature people who actually want to, rather than people who get bamboozled into it by Granny.

Multiple people have recommended Uketsu’s Strange Houses (translated by Jim Rion), and it did NOT disappoint. The book is a mystery based around floor plans, and I am happy to report that there are indeed MANY floor plans (I love a floor plan), which makes the book an even zippier read than you might guess from its size.

Now, do I think the mystery is “plausible” or “makes psychological sense”? Well, no, not really, and if it took longer to read that might have bothered me. But the floor plans and the pacing make the book fly by, and I enjoyed it for what it was, which is an amusingly bizarre puzzle box mystery with, let me repeat, enough floor plans to satisfy even my floor-plan-mad self.

What I’m Reading Now

After years of procrastination, I’ve begun Umberto Eco’s The Name of the Rose. Happy to report that this ALSO features a floorplan in the endpapers. All the rooms are lettered, but curiously the key only includes some of the letters, so we are left guessing just which room Q might be.

What I Plan to Read Next

Obviously I need to read Uketsu’s Strange Pictures, too.

fic: of wild honey

Jan. 28th, 2026 09:56 am
lirazel: Anne Shirley from the 1985 Anne of Green Gables reads while walking ([tv] book drunkard)
[personal profile] lirazel
Because I never brought it over here! Here's the Yuletide fic I wrote!!!

Can you believe it took me 39 years of life to write The Blue Castle fic? I'm very proud of this--it's a love letter to the book and the characters, and I'm so glad that Yuletide gave me the nudge to write it. Yuletide!!!!

of wild honey (7940 words) by Lirazel
Chapters: 1/1
Fandom: Blue Castle - L. M. Montgomery
Rating: Teen And Up Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Relationships: Barney Snaith/Valancy Stirling
Characters: Barney Snaith, Valancy Stirling, Cecilia "Cissy" Gay, Abel Gay
Additional Tags: Yuletide, Yuletide 2025, 5 Things
Summary:

Abel held up his hands, helpless. “She’s sitting in my house holding Cissy’s hand this very minute! She gave me her valise before I left the house, and I thought sure she’d send an errand boy to fetch it back tomorrow. But no, not an hour ago she walked right up to my door, determined as you please, and I do believe she intends to stay despite how the whole damned ruck of Stirlings must be throwing a tantrum as we speak. The spunk of the girl! The ways of Providence are strange.”

Life was full of surprises, but in Barney’s experience, people generally weren’t. Oh, people had surprised him before, in his callow youth, but that was because he hadn’t understood who they really were. Once you got down to someone’s true character, you could see that they’d been who they were all along. People mostly kept doing just what they’d been doing their whole lives, what they’d been brought up to do. Of course he’d met a handful of those who bucked tradition and struck out on their own, but he hadn’t expected to find one in Deerwood.

“Is it Providence?” he asked. “That seems as clear a demonstration of free will as anything I’ve ever heard.”

Five times Valancy Stirling surprises Barney Snaith.

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