New Books and ARCs, 12/26/25

Dec. 26th, 2025 07:59 pm
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Posted by John Scalzi

It’s the final collection of new books and ARCs for 2025, and this one is a double decker! What here is something you would want to take with you into the new year? Share in the comments!

— JS

Nomination Queries and Notes #2

Dec. 26th, 2025 01:40 pm
candyheartsex: pink and white flowers (Default)
[personal profile] candyheartsex
Nominations will remain open until 11:59 PM EST on December 27. Here's a countdown clock.


Questions

1. The following nominations were submitted under Assassination Classroom but were all disambiguated with the names of other fandoms. I’ve rejected them for now, but I can add them back if the nominator(s) let me know if they wanted Assassination Classroom relationships or the following relationships in the fandoms in the disambiguation:

Albedo/Dilu (Genshin Impact)
Albedo/Kaeya (Genshin Impact)
Gallagher/Sunday/Misha (Honkai: Star Rail)
Jiaoqiu/Jing Yuan (Honkai: Star Rail)


2. Li Family Gen (Perfect Match): Nominator(s), did you mean to nominate a gen relationship between members of the Li family? If so, would you accept Li Family Member & Li Family Member(s)?

3. Peggy Carter/Angie Martinelli and Peggy Carter/Dottie Underwood have been nominated and approved under Marvel Cinematic Universe. Nominator(s), these ships could also go under Agent Carter (TV). Do you want to leave them in MCU or move them to Agent Carter (TV)?

4. I have nominations for both Final Fantasy X and Final Fantasy X Series. Nominator(s), is it fine to combine these under Final Fantasy X Series, or do the two tags need to remain separate?

5. I have DCU nominations for:

Barry Allen/Leonard Snart
Clark Kent/Lex Luthor
Lena Luthor/Kara Zor-El
Leonard Snart & Lisa Snart
Mick Rory & Leonard Snart & Lisa Snart
Mick Rory/Caitlin Snow
Sara Lance & Leonard Snart


Nominator(s), could you please clarify which of these should be in DC’s Arrowverse, which should be in DC Extended Universe, which should be in DC Comics, Crossover Fandom, etc.? These are usually approved under those subfandoms.

Notes

Evita (Rent) & Allison (Rent) —> approved as Evita & Allison Grey (Rent). Let me know here if this is another Allison.

Riri Williams & Michelle Jones —> approved under Marvel Cinematic Universe as a crossover ship between two MCU properties.

Amilyn Holdo (SWST/Mon Mothma (SWOT) —> approved under Star Wars - All Media Types as a crossover ship between two SW properties.

Anthony DiNozzo/Spencer Reid —> approved as Anthony DiNozzo (NCIS)/Spencer Reid (Criminal Minds). (Crossover nominations must contain the fandoms for the characters in the disambiguations.)

Anthony DiNozzo/Ian Edgerton —> approved as Anthony DiNozzo (NCIS)/Ian Edgerton (Numb3rs). (Crossover nominations must contain the fandoms for the characters in the disambiguations.)

Danny Mahealani/Sebastian Smythe —> approved as Danny Mahealani (Teen Wolf)/Sebastian Smythe (Glee). (Crossover nominations must contain the fandoms for the characters in the disambiguations.)

Aqua | Azura/Lucina (FEA) and My Unit | Kamui | Corrin/My Unit | Robin (FEA) moved to Crossover Fandom, with Aqua | Azura and Corrin tagged as FE: Fates.

The Agent | Hero of Daggerfall/Uriel Septim VII (Oblivion) —> moved to Crossover Fandom, with The Agent | Hero of Daggerfalll tagged as appearing in Daggerfall.

The Friday Five for 26 December 2025

Dec. 26th, 2025 02:37 pm
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[personal profile] anais_pf posting in [community profile] thefridayfive
1. You have the summer and plenty of money to travel abroad. Where all would you go?

2. What foods would you be sure you got to eat?

3. What landmarks would you be sure you got to see?

4. What airline would you use?

5. Would your knowledge of other languages influence where you went? (i.e., would you be more likely to go to France if you spoke French?)

Copy and paste to your own journal, then reply to this post with a link to your answers. If your journal is private or friends-only, you can post your full answers in the comments below.

If you'd like to suggest questions for a future Friday Five, then do so on DreamWidth or LiveJournal. Old sets that were used have been deleted, so we encourage you to suggest some more!
conuly: (Default)
[personal profile] conuly
And very heavy on the dudes. I'm not sure if women don't go into this sort of thing, or if they're just too classy when they do it, and thus don't get onto the playlist. Though I guess it would be strange for lesbians to sing an ode to Jingle Bell COCK. (Emphasis all theirs, and totally unnecessary. We know where the song was going.)


Anyway, in honor of this, I'm posting three belated Christmas videos. The last is Boynton and totally SFW.





This one won't let me embed it.

Mopping Up a Few Books from November

Dec. 26th, 2025 02:04 pm
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[personal profile] osprey_archer
At the end of November, I was racing to the end of a few books to finish them before All Christmas Advent. I finished reading them in time, but ran out of time to post about them, so I’m posting about them now.

First, I finished The Spring of Butterflies and Other Folktales of China’s Minority Peoples, translated by He Liyi and edited by Neil Philip. This is one of those books where the story behind the book is as interesting as the stories themselves. He Liyi started studying English in the 1940s, but during the Cultural Revolution he lost all access to his English language study materials. However, after the Cultural Revolution, he took it up again, and in the 1980s he got in touch with the BBC, which eventually arranged for this collection of translated folktales to be published.

They also held a contest in China to find an illustrator, and eventually narrowed it down to either Zhao Li or Aiqing Pan… at which point they discovered that these two illustrators were actually a married couple! So they ended up illustrating the book together.

I also finished Sarah Rees Brennan’s Long Live Evil. What a ride! What a riot! Our heroine Rae is dying of cancer when she gets the chance to go into the world of her favorite fantasy series and steal the Flower of Life and Death. Of course she jumps at it… only to discover herself in the body of the villainess on the eve of her execution! Aided only by her wits and her somewhat vague memories of the series’ plot (cancer did a number on her memory), Rae sets herself up as a prophetess in an escalating series of schemes that keep steering the story more and more off course.

And then it ends on a cliffhanger! This is the first book in a duology. Not deep but good fun. I usually steer well clear of cancer books (well, any kind of illness books), as they tend to set off my hypochondria so I decide I’m probably dying of whatever the main character has, but in this case the cancer is a fairly light presence after the first chapter so I didn’t feel that. Much. Except maybe a little bit in the days after, whenever I forgot something. Who knew memory loss could mean cancer?

Finally, because I was concerned I would run out of reading material before December, I got Peter Beagle’s Tamsin, and then December and my all-Christmas-all-the-time resolution were barreling down on me and I still have two-thirds of the book to go. But Bramble politely lay on my legs until two pages from the end to ensure I finished, which was suitable, as Tamsin features one of the great cats in literature: Mister Cat, our heroine Jenny’s Siamese cat, who falls in love with a ghost cat and therefore leads Jenny to meet and fall in love with the ghost girl Tamsin.

[personal profile] skygiants recommended this book to me with a comment on Jenny’s massive crush on Tamsin, which I expected to be subtextual. But no! Two paragraphs after they meet, Jenny muses, “I think that was when I fell in love with her.” She’s a BEAUTIFUL SAD GHOST, what more could you want?
hamsterwoman: (ASOIAF -- Hermes Tyrell sandal)
[personal profile] hamsterwoman
B is back and appears to have somehow given me his jetlag, because I was awake around 5 a.m. and then got up about half an hour later so he could make me coffee and eggs, since he was making himself some.

I’m consequently a bit bleary for anything productive, but might as well post some Yuletide recs:

recs for Ballad of Wallis Island, Doctrine of Labyrinths, D&D:HAT, The Odyssey, Philosopher's Flight, R&G Are Dead, Some Desperate Glory, Summer in Orcus, and a couple of 5 min fandoms )

*

I think new fandom developments are unlikely in the next 5 days, so I might as well do the year-end fandom meme:

Fandom end-of-year meme: fandom meme #1 )

Happy holidays, LS and Teratornis!

Dec. 26th, 2025 10:18 am
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[personal profile] killabeez posting in [community profile] hlh_shortcuts
The Road Forward by Anonymous for [personal profile] argentum_ls 
Category: Gen
Characters: Connor MacLeod, Richie Ryan
Summary: On the cusp of the new millennium, Richie has been sent to New York for some training with Connor. But do you think these two are going to ignore a party this big? They're going to train. Really. Tomorrow.


Tales of SG-1 by Anonymous for [personal profile] teratornis 
Category: Gen
Characters: Methos, Tessa Noel, Silas, Darius, Duncan MacLeod, Joe Dawson, Sam Carter, Daniel Jackson, Jack O'Neill, Sha're | Amaunet, Jacob Carter, George Hammond, Lucian (Underworld), Catherine Langford, Virág (Original Character), Gautwin (Original Character)
Relationships: Sam Carter & Daniel Jackson & Jack O'Neill, Sam Carter & Virág (Original Character), Daniel Jackson & Darius, Jack O'Neill & Silas, Jack O'Neill & Joe Dawson, Duncan MacLeod/Tessa Noel, Jacob Carter & Sam Carter, Jacob Carter & Sarolt (Original Character)
Summary: A collection of insights into the lives of three immortals - Immortal, Ascended, Lycan - who all end up at the SGC, and the lives of those around them that are changed because of them.

I like having stuff

Dec. 26th, 2025 10:13 am
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[personal profile] lauradi7dw
I watched a couple of episodes of "Swedish Death Cleaning," based on the book (?). I hated it. I am all too aware that clearing out papers, especially, will be a help to Flo in case of my sudden demise or to myself when I need to move to a more accessible place. I just don't like people telling me that I'll be happier without stuff.
Next week (ie in 2026), the first four of the Nancy Drew novels will leave copyright and venture into the public domain. Those are from 1930. I don't have any of those, but I have the 1931 edition of The Secret at Shadow Ranche and the 1934 of The Clue of the Broken Locket. I read the article about what's becoming available in the new year and could just wander over to the shelf and touch something that will come out of copyright in a year. That coolness probably doesn't extend to keeping socks with holes (that I can't really mend properly).

The Little Engine that Could also becomes public domain next year. I'm a little concerned about what people will do to it.

No check-in for today

Dec. 26th, 2025 04:10 pm
goodbyebird: Pluribus: Carol wearing a Santa hat and a decidedly grumpy expression. (Pluribus carol of the bells)
[personal profile] goodbyebird posting in [community profile] rec_cember
I'll post the final check-in for the event on the 1st of January, so if you're planning any big Top Reads of the Year post or some such, we'll get those in there as well! I hope you're all having a cozy time <3

podcast friday

Dec. 26th, 2025 09:26 am
sabotabby: (doom doom doom)
[personal profile] sabotabby
 This week's podcast is such inside baseball metapodcasting, but it's one where I've literally emailed the podcasters asking for it, and apparently so did many other people. Bad Hasbara has finally, finally covered the fall of Jesse Brown in "A Jesse Brown Christmas ft. Rachel Gilmore." (I've linked to the video here in case you want to see dogs that I assume appear on screen at some point; here is another audio link).

Of all the public figures who got October 7th brain, Jesse was the saddest for me personally. He was someone I respected a lot as a journalist. He broke the Me to We scandal, which I'd been on about for years, he broke the Jian Ghomeshi story, which friends of mine who are in media circles had been whispering about for years without the clout to speak up, and as the show details, he produced "Thunder Bay," which is one of the best journalistic deep dives that this country's media has done in ages. If anyone could be relied on to be sensible and level headed and critical, it was him. Until his brain melted.

I've had personal correspondence with him (to his credit, he does read everything you send to him and responds, in detail) and that just made me sadder, because as they describe here, a younger Jesse would have eviscerated older Jesse for his backwards logic. In fact many of the journalists he helped make prominent do exactly that, including the fantastic Robert Jago, who you hear at the end. He never really struck me as a person who started from a conclusion and worked backwards to find (or fabricate) evidence, so even when he did questionable shit, like interview people who were against safe injection sites or insist that an immediate return to school during a covid spike was a good idea, I at least listened to what he had to say. Unfortunately, his post-Oct. 7 brainworms throw all of his earlier reporting into question.

This podcast, featuring one of his main targets, is over 2.5 hours long and doesn't even get into everything. (The specific incident I wrote to him about isn't mentioned.) It's really good. Mostly it's very cathartic as a story about someone you thought was cool turning out to, in fact, not be very cool at all, and how you cope with that. I seriously hope he's listening and reflecting.

End of Year . . .

Dec. 26th, 2025 05:33 am
sartorias: (Default)
[personal profile] sartorias
I hope everyone got as much peace, joy, and good surprises as possible during the year's end festivities!

It was very quiet here; last night son and I watched the third Knives Out film together. Tightly written, really well acted, but there were plot holes, and not nearly the tightness and humor of the first one.

LOVING the rain, so very needed.

Hoping my daughter can visit today--she had to work yesterday.

So! It's Boxing Day, pretty much uncelebrated here in the US (who has servants???) but! Book View Cafe is having its half off sale!

Giant backlist, and lots of new books since last year's sale. Go and look and if you've got some holiday moulaugh, buy some books! We all need the pennies, heh!

New Worlds: That Belongs in a Museum

Dec. 26th, 2025 09:11 am
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[personal profile] swan_tower
I've been talking about the preservation of history as a matter of written records, but as a trained archaeologist, I am obliged to note that history also inheres in the materials we leave behind, from the grand -- elaborate sarcophagi and ruined temples -- to the humble -- potsherds, post holes, and the bones of our meals.

Nobody really took much of an interest in that latter end of the spectrum until fairly recently, but museums for the fancier stuff are not new at all. The earliest one we know of was curated by the princess Ennigaldi two thousand five hundred years ago. Her father, Nabonidus, even gets credited as the "first archaeologist" -- not in the modern, scientific sense, of course, but he did have an interest in the past. He wasn't the only Neo-Babylonian king to excavate temples down to their original foundations before rebuilding them, but he attempted to connect what he found with specific historical rulers and even assign dates to their reigns. His daughter collated the resulting artifacts, which spanned a wide swath of Mesopotamian history, and her museum even had labels in three languages identifying various pieces.

That's a pretty clear-cut example, but the boundaries on what we term a "museum" are pretty fuzzy. Nowadays we tend to mean an institution open to the public, but historically a lot of these things were private collections, whose owners got to pick and choose who viewed the holdings. Some of them were (and still are) focused on specific areas, like Renaissance paintings or ancient Chinese coins, while others were "cabinets of curiosities," filled with whatever eclectic assortment of things caught the eye of the collector. As you might expect, both the focused and encyclopedic types tend to be the domain of the rich, who have the money, the free time, and the storage space to devote to amassing a bunch of stuff purely because it's of interest to them or carries prestige value.

Other proto-museums were temples in more than just a metaphorical sense. Religious offerings don't always take the form of money; people have donated paintings to hang inside a church, or swords to a Shintō shrine. Over time, these institutions amass a ton of valuable artifacts, which (as with a private collection) may or may not be available for other people to view. I've mentioned before the Padmanabhaswamy Temple in Kerala, which has eight vaults full of votive offerings that would double as an incomparable record of centuries or even millennia of Indian history . . . if they were studied. But making these things public in that fashion might be incompatible with their religious purpose.

Museums aren't only limited to art and artifacts, either. Historically -- especially before the development of the modern circulating library -- books got mixed in with other materials. Or a collector might equally have an interest in exotic animals, whether taxidermied or alive, the latter constituting a proto-zoo. More disturbingly, their collection might include people, individuals from far-off lands or those with physical differences being displayed right alongside lions and parrots.

What's the purpose of gathering all this stuff in one place? The answer to that will depend on the nature of the museum in question. For a temple, the museum-ness of the collection might be secondary to the religious effect of gifting valuable things to the divine. But they often still benefit from the prestige of holding such items, whether the value lies in their precious materials, the quality of their craftsmanship, their historical significance, or any other element. The same is true for the individual collector.

But if that was the only factor in play, these wouldn't be museums; they'd just be treasure hoards. The word itself comes from the Greek Muses, and remember, their ranks included scholarly subjects like astronomy and history alongside the arts! One of the core functions of a museum is to preserve things we've decided are significant. Sure, if you dig up a golden statue while rebuilding a temple, you could melt it down for re-use; if you find a marble altar to an ancient god, you could bury it as a foundation stone, or carve it into something else. But placing it in a museum acknowledges that the item has worth beyond the value of its raw materials.

And that worth can be put to a number of different purposes. We don't know why Nabonidus was interested in history and set up his daughter as a museum curator, but it's entirely possible it had something to do with the legitimation of his rule: by possessing things of the past, you kind of position yourself as their heir, or alternatively as someone whose power supersedes what came before. European kings and nobles really liked harkening back to the Romans and the Greeks; having Greek and Roman things around made that connection seem more real -- cf. the Year Eight discussion of the role of historical callbacks in political propaganda.

Not all the purposes are dark or cynical, though. People have created museums, whether private or public, because they're genuinely passionate about those items and what they represent. A lot of those men (they were mostly men) with their cabinets of curiosities wanted to learn about things, and so they gathered stuff together and wrote monographs about the history, composition, and interrelationships of what they had. We may scoff at them now as antiquarians -- ones who often smashed less valuable-looking material on their way to the shiny bits -- but this is is the foundational stratum of modern scholarship. Even now, many museums have research collections: items not on public display, but kept on hand so scholars can access them for other purposes.

The big change over time involves who's allowed to visit the collections. They've gone from being personal hoards shared only with a select few to being public institutions intended to educate the general populace. Historical artifacts are the patrimony of the nation, or of humanity en masse; what gets collected and displayed is shaped by the educational mission. As does how it gets displayed! I don't know if it's still there, but the British Museum used to have a side room set up the way it looked in the eighteenth century, and I've been to quite a few museums that still have glass-topped tables and tiny paper cards with nothing more than the bare facts on them. Quite a contrast with exhibitions that incorporate large stretches of wall text, multimedia shows, and interactive elements. Selections of material may even travel to other museums, sharing more widely the knowledge they represent.

It's not all noble and pure, of course. Indiana Jones may have declared "that belongs in a museum," but he assumed the museum would be in America or somewhere else comparable, not in the golden idol's Peruvian home. When colonialism really began to sink its teeth into the globe, museums became part of that system, looting other parts of the world for the material and intellectual enrichment of their homelands. Some of those treasures have been repatriated, but by no means all. (Exhibit A: the Elgin Marbles.) The mission of preservation is real, but so is the injustice it sometimes justifies, and we're still struggling to find a better balance.

Patreon banner saying "This post is brought to you by my imaginative backers at Patreon. To join their ranks, click here!"

(originally posted at Swan Tower: https://is.gd/WA5QzG)
full_metal_ox: A gold Chinese Metal Ox zodiac charm. (Default)
[personal profile] full_metal_ox posting in [community profile] fancake
Fandom: Original Work, Christmas Tales & Traditions, Barbie
Pairings/Characters: OCs; a child & her faithful dolls.
Rating: General Audiences
Length: 612
Content Notes: No Content Warnings Apply
Creator Tags: Barbie Dolls, Christmas, Christmas Tree

Creator Links: (AO3) [archiveofourown.org profile] Rubynye; (Dreamwidth) [personal profile] minoanmiss; (Tumblr) [tumblr.com profile] rubynye

Theme: Amnesty, Female Relationships, Action/Adventure, Comfort Fic, Female Friendships, Folklore & Fairytales, Teams

Summary: All around her spread the magnificent brilliance of the shining tree, its decorations alight and glittering.

Author’s Notes: Merry Christmas to my dear friend Amaebi!

Reccer's Notes: A little girl’s Barbie dolls come to life to keep her company on Christmas Eve. The author maintains a keenly lived-in sense of scale; acting as a team in the fashion of the Madagascar Penguins, the dolls scale the California redwood heights and marvel in the celestial lighting of the Christmas tree (while remaining vigilant against the approach of the Parents—or, worse, the Kitty!)

A nostalgic snapshot of the fierce Velveteen Rabbit Reality of our imaginary friends.

Fanwork Links: How to View a Christmas Tree, by [archiveofourown.org profile] Rubynye for [personal profile] amaebi.
Part 18 of How To Indulge Your Writerly Soul.

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