Zine: my love is strange

Mar. 22nd, 2026 12:57 am
lb_lee: Rogan drawing/writing in a spiral. (art)
[personal profile] lb_lee
EDIT: found typos and formatting errors that somehow escaped all previous read-throughs. Will edit and replace. -_-

Hey, so... since we got a printer, and since our shoulder and eyeballs are increasingly reluctant to let us read long things on the computer, we've taken to slapping together little zines for our personal enjoyment of our favorite stuff. We also use them to fool around with typography and stuff. You know, just make fun little things.

And then we were like, "Hey... what if we shared some of these?"

So here's our newest fun thing: my love is strange: an anthology of eight hundred years of unusual care. It's just a commemoration of being together in ways my current society would like to pretend doesn't exist and never did. Alt-texted, illustrated with pictures from the public domain. Table of contents:
 
I wasn't joking about it covering a swathe of eight hundred years by the way. )

Comic: Sneak Attack!

Mar. 20th, 2026 05:32 pm
lb_lee: a purple horned female symbol interlocked with a female symbol mixed with a question mark (xenogals)
[personal profile] lb_lee
Winner of the 2026 fan poll! All text under this is text-only transcription of the comic.

No Sneaks were involved in this sneak attack. )

Book Spine Poetry

Mar. 19th, 2026 10:31 pm
lb_lee: Rogan drawing/writing in a spiral. (art)
[personal profile] lb_lee
We keep a little stack of books we're reading on the kitchen table and our roommates noticed that the spines lined up in amusing ways. This was accidental, but then we thought, "what if we did that... ON PURPOSE?"

And today, we trashed our room stacking books to make poems. We hope they amuse you!


lb_lee: Rogan drawing/writing in a spiral. (art)
[personal profile] lb_lee
  • Finally finishing the Reverend Alpert book, which has been stalled at around 80% completion for YEARS now
  • Expanding Quick'n'Dirty Plural History into a proper paperback, because the zine sells shockingly well for such a niche subject, we have a lot more info now (though not on the newest slapfights, ha, no, we're talking older, cross-cultural stuff, and spirit marriage/headmate relationship stuff) (if you want us to wade into the hottest new plural communities on Discord or Bsky or what the fuck ever, you're going to have to pay us real money, and in ADVANCE)
  • Finally kicking Rogan's ass into inking Loyal Forever, a comic that involves the muscle car beloved from Crazy Boys Get Money)
  • Expanding Xenogals into a book-length thing, the Mori and Rawlin version of Alter Boys In Love (Xenogals in Love?)
Oh no, all but Loyal Forever are big beefy books. But well, the Xenogals and Plural History ones would replace their floppies, and Reverend Alpert would probably end up a short run anyway.

Books and Bytes

Mar. 18th, 2026 10:02 am
lb_lee: Rogan drawing/writing in a spiral. (art)
[personal profile] lb_lee
Mori: nobody jumps out of bed going, “Good morning world, today I do my TAXES!” with a big smile on their face, but man alive, is it neat to see what sold and what didn’t, when and where.

Read more... )

Tuesday Top Five: Pie in the Sky

Mar. 17th, 2026 06:41 pm
nevanna: (Default)
[personal profile] nevanna
In recognition of Pi(e) Day last weekend, here are five of my favorite pies that I've baked over the last few years.

1. Vegan sweet potato pie with brown sugar and Brazil nut topping

2. Cherry mint pie

3. Apple pear persimmon pie

4. TIED: Peach blueberry pie and peach blackberry basil pie

5. Custard pie with rosewater
lb_lee: a penguin saying "Just because you decide to sell out doesn't mean anyone's going to buy!" ($ellingout)
[personal profile] lb_lee
Mori: Heads up y'all, I'm doing our tax prep, which means I'm going through all our titles, seeing what sold and what didn't, and deciding what gets weeded. In a week or so, I'm going to be removing the following ebook listings from sale, so if you want them, now is the time to get them:
(Rogan's Aphasia is also barely hanging in there, has been for years; for some reason every once in a while people will buy another copy of it, just BARELY keeping it in the running.)

(Also I figure, just as a note, we do this every year. I tally up everything what sold, and shit that sold less than five copies gets weeded. I'm trying to get us more regular about saying when we're removing something from print, since some folks might miss out otherwise. And hey, if enough copies sell, it'll stay up for other folks!)

The Secret Legion

Mar. 16th, 2026 09:49 am
lb_lee: A skeleton wearing a crown of blooming roses (the bony lady)
[personal profile] lb_lee
This is a messy post about death and love.

content warning: abuse. )
nevanna: (Default)
[personal profile] nevanna
I wrote about Cartoon Night, one of the great joys of my life, and about one of the fanfics that it inspired.

I didn't get into this in the post itself, but my roommate's initial invitation to Cartoon Night was perfectly timed. I'd recently had a disappointing and upsetting experience at what I didn't yet know, but probably suspected, would be my last Intercon, and I was afraid that if I stopped LARPing, I wouldn't be able to maintain the friendships that I'd formed through that shared activity. I am glad that I was wrong.
nevanna: (Default)
[personal profile] nevanna
Here five of my favorite maligned or frequently bashed female characters in media, based on my own memories and a brief review of fandom wiki pages.

1. Ginny Weasley (Harry Potter)

Even when I (and most of us) still liked the HP books, I had mixed feelings about how Ginny was developed as a love interest for our hero, but that had more to do with Rowling’s frequent inability to write a convincing romance than anything objectionable about Ginny herself. (We all remember Harry’s chest monster, don’t we?) I admired her bravery and how readily she shot down her brothers’ attempts at slut-shaming, and I also liked thinking about her backstory with Tom Riddle and how it might have informed the young woman she became. I did not appreciate it when other readers insulted her or mischaracterized her in fanfic because they wanted Harry to end up with somebody else.

2. Dawn Summers (Buffy the Vampire Slayer)

I wrote about Dawn for a Fandom Throwback Thursday post last year (after the actress who once played her, Michelle Trachtenberg, unexpectedly passed away). Although I didn’t start watching BTVS until after the show ended, I was aware that making fun of Dawn – particularly at screenings of the musical – was a fandom tradition, and one that made me very uncomfortable. I found Dawn, in all her emotional messiness, to be a compelling character, and I never thought that she, or Michelle, deserved the vehement hatred that the fandom directed at her.

3. Jean Grey (X-Men: Evolution)

In his recap of an early episode of XME, Jay Edidin (then writing under his old name) noted “a running theme with Jean: the subtle disharmony between the perfect façade people see and the fact that she’s really only got about as much of her shit worked out as the next scared teenager.” I think that this is a brilliant take on her character, but it also serves as a reminder that many viewers in the fandom of the early 2000s – including myself, sometimes – only saw Jean’s model-student persona and judged the hell out of her for it, dismissing her as a shallow and fickle Mean Girl with no substantive inner life or real problems (never mind that her powers could be incredibly destructive to herself and others if left unchecked).

4. Gwen Cooper (Torchwood)

As a spinoff from Doctor Who, Torchwood struggled at first to find its own narrative identity. The early episodes positioned Gwen as the Nice Girl Swept Up In Alien Adventures – the equivalent of a companion for the Doctor – as well as a source of morality and human empathy for her colleagues, who’d lived behind the curtain of “normal” life much longer than she had. For this reason, especially in earlier episodes, she came across as sanctimonious at times – much like Jean in XME – and I admit to having been one of the viewers who was dismissive or and even hostile toward Gwen, especially when I thought that the show was trying too hard to make me like her. (A lot of audience hostility, which I find a lot harder to understand or forgive, was also probably due to shipping preferences and Gwen’s own sexual and romantic choices.) Once she was given storylines that leaned into her flaws and mistakes, I started to enjoy her character a lot more.

5. Joan Watson (Elementary)

I was lucky to have missed a lot of this drama while it was happening, but according to Fanlore and other sources, much of the negativity toward Joan and toward Lucy Liu (including some inexcusable sexism and racism) was generated before the show even aired, primarily from fans of BBC Sherlock. Thankfully, once Elementary was underway, both the show and its Watson deservedly gained their share of fans.

Plural Death and Dormancy Survey

Mar. 10th, 2026 12:36 pm
lb_lee: A skeleton wearing a crown of blooming roses (the bony lady)
[personal profile] lb_lee
[personal profile] vaguelyautonomous linked us a cool survey Sprites made regarding death and dormancy among plurals: https://docs.google.com/document/u/0/d/1wARJSMVDVYhX1v4WKAdrCbS_f6hIdXvpHNw810gSOhA/mobilebasic

Too bad we didn’t know about it while it was running; death is a large part of our inner workings and we have strong opinions on it. (I am also utterly baffled and deeply annoyed that apparently headmate death is STILL considered impossible or an “endo thing”; I guess they never read When Rabbit Howls. I’m sure I could find earlier medical references if singlet death wasn’t currently devouring my attention.)

Very interesting was to learn we’re apparently in a major minority in that we don’t really experience dormancy! (Except arguably Rawlin? But she was imprisoned in the deep bowels of headspace for years, so it’s not like she was GONE, just we lost track of her. She eventually went into hibernation because what else was there to do in solitary confinement for decades?) We lose access to people from elsewhere, but they aren’t dormant; our metaphorical rail just doesn’t go to their stop anymore and their lives just continue without us.