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dark_kana ([personal profile] dark_kana) wrote in [community profile] 3_good_things_a_day2026-05-05 02:31 pm

Tuesday 05/05/2026


1) a day at the office with colleagues. Nice talking

2) 2 colleagues have their last working day today. So we're going to have a party this afternoon after work

3) Lazy evening. Probably working on my crochet project ^^

archersangel: (life on-line)
archersangel ([personal profile] archersangel) wrote2026-05-04 07:33 pm
Entry tags:

another 3-sentence surprise


Daria, Daria & Jane, At the 10 year High School reunion.

the fill is more female slash than i wanted, but just mentioned & not shown.
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dark_kana ([personal profile] dark_kana) wrote in [community profile] 3_good_things_a_day2026-05-04 10:51 am

Monday 04/05/2026


1) Managed my morning. Not sure how I did it, but deciding not to worry and just go with the flow seems to have worked... ^^

2) Teambuilding at work in the afternoon. First lunch together and afterwards we go into town for, I think, an escape room

3) Meeting up with Lhune in town afterwards for dinner and cinema ^^ Very much looking forward to that *grins*

lhune: (3L)
lhune ([personal profile] lhune) wrote in [community profile] 3_good_things_a_day2026-05-03 09:40 am

Sunday 03/05/2026

1) yesterday I was inspired and took to painting again ^_^ I’m not quite happy with the result yet but luckily it’s oil paint which means I can work some more on it the coming days

2) I ordered a decent easel to work with (now I have a cheap little thing from a discount shop which gas the tendency to fall over)

3) Gorgeous lilacs from my parents’s garden which bring a divine scent to my living room ♥
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rocky41_7 ([personal profile] rocky41_7) wrote in [community profile] books2026-05-02 09:16 am
Entry tags:

Recent Reading: Together in Manzanar

It seems timely to read about America’s past experience with unjust detention of people based on perceived threats to national security, so last night I finished Together in Manzanar by Tracy Slater, a true story about one of the families in a Japanese internment camp during WWII. The situation of the Yonedas was somewhat unusual as they were a mixed-race family—Karl Yoneda was a Japanese-American citizen and his wife Elaine was white and Jewish.

The Yonedas make for a very interesting case study in what happened in the camps because a) their mixed-race family status (including their 3-year-old son, Tommy) made it clear how little the American military had really thought about this plan, given how thrown-off they were by the mere existence of mixed-raced families; and b) Karl and Elaine had been vocal social activists well before they were imprisoned in the Manzanar camp, speaking up for labor rights, racial justice, and participating in Communist advocacy. They had the language, tools, and knowledge to speak up and speak out, and they did.

Slater has done her research and provides a thorough list of sources at the end of the book, which include interviews with the Yonedas’ grandchildren as well as their own diaries and news clippings.

Together in Manzanar provides an in-depth look at the politics within the Japanese-American community at this time, both leading up to the camps and within. It ably tackles the question of “Why did they go? Why wasn’t there resistance?” (There was.) For the Yonedas in particular, the importance of an Axis defeat was difficult to overstate: as horror stories of German atrocities in Europe began to trickle out, they knew that a German or Japanese take-over of the United States would almost undoubtedly lead to Elaine and their son Tommy going into a death camp.

It provides a three-dimensional look at the discussions on the ground at the time, as well as following up with details from interviews Karl and Elaine gave many years later reflecting back on their statements and advocacy at the time.

I wasn’t a huge fan of the writing style, but this is one of those books you read for content, not style. It jumps around from perspectives in a way that’s occasionally confusing, but I also appreciated getting some more background information on some of those in the camp who opposed the Yonedas’ view on cooperating with the US government. Slater does a good job showing how each person highlighted got to their perspective and why the tension both within the camps and in the world generally at the time put everyone so on edge.

The book is also helpful for reminding us of the names of the hateful racists (architect Karl Bendetsen) who propagated this plan and then later tried to lie about why it was implemented or how bad it was. It’s also a useful reminder that when these people were released, they didn’t get to just waltz back into the lives they had been living before being imprisoned. Many of them were forcibly resettled further into the US, away from the coastal cities where they had lived, and forced to restart their lives from scratch, away from their communities and businesses.

It just seemed like a particularly relevant time to remember this.


lhune: (3L)
lhune ([personal profile] lhune) wrote in [community profile] 3_good_things_a_day2026-05-02 09:49 am

Saturday 02/05/2026

1) I was glad the receptor area for coffee spills was big enough when I forgot to put my cup under tge machine this morning ^^’

2) Change of plans means I am now at the hairdresser (otherwise it would’ve been a week later)

3) Sunshine at moment, with a bit of luck the rain will only arrive this evening
archersangel: (USA sheep)
archersangel ([personal profile] archersangel) wrote2026-05-01 11:31 pm
Entry tags:

friday 5; outdoors


These questions were written by [personal profile] pebbleinalake .

1. Do you like to spend time outdoors?
no.

2. What is your favorite flower?
i'm not sure i have one.

3. Any favorite warm weather activities?

staying inside.

4. Have you ever kept a garden? If so, what did you grow?
a long time ago we (our mom, mostly) had a vegetable garden with the usual stuff; tomatoes, corn, onions, green peppers, potatoes, etc. & a flower garden with sunflowers, marigolds, pansies and some kind of wildflower mix (according the the seed packet).

5. Do you know how to swim?

no. fat floats though.
i suppose i "know" in theory; we had a 9-week semester of swimming in freshman & sophomore years of high school.


more answers here at [community profile] thefridayfive
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rocky41_7 ([personal profile] rocky41_7) wrote in [community profile] books2026-05-01 07:44 pm
Entry tags:

Recent Reading: The Last Hour Between Worlds

Yesterday on a lovely walk through then neighborhood I reached the end of The Last Hour Between Worlds by Melissa Caruso. This is fantasy/action novel, set in a world in “prime” reality, beneath which sits ever-descending “echo” layers of reality. The further down you go, the stranger and more dangerous things get. At a New Year’s party, things get unexpectedly tricky when the entire party is pulled down through the echoes.

Our protagonist is Kembral Thorne, a “hound” whose job is to retrieve people, animals, and other things that are pulled or “fall” into the echoes. This party is Kem’s first step back into society after having her first baby two months earlier.

Of course, when things start going wrong, Kem can’t help but get involved. It’s her job.

I’ll say again, I do love queer lit with adults. YA is great and I’m so happy that teens today have access to so much queer lit, but online queer book recs can skew very YA. Here, Kem is very much someone at least in her thirties—she’s got a baby, she’s reached a senior role in her career, and her concerns reflect this position in her life. While she and her quasi-rival Rika have the sort of skittish interactions you might expect from people who are into each other and unwilling to admit they are into each other, they don’t reach the level of comic avoidance or overwrought drama of teens or young adults.

I liked the ebb and flow of Kem and Rika’s relationship. These are two people who already have history and have kind of already had their big, relationship-ending squabble before we even get to this party, which is fun to unravel over the course of the evening. They have some cute moments, some artificially-amplified angst, but are generally enjoyable.

The worldbuilding here is fine. It’s serviceable for what the novel is doing, but we don’t really get a look at much else outside of the party except when Kem ventures out into the echoes, which becomes increasingly less frequent as they descend. There’s some fun stuff, some spooky stuff, some aesthetic stuff.

The book pushes a little hard on maintaining the status quo when the status quo isn’t that great (I think it could have made this more believable with more discussion, but the book is really more about the action than the political debate) and I did think one character’s fate was a cop-out, especially given the former. Violent change to the system is wrong but we’ll all shrug and smile when this criminal we couldn’t nail down conveniently dies without a trial.

On the whole, I enjoyed this one, but it’s nothing earth-shattering. I put the next book on my TBR though because I do want to see what Rika and Kem get up to next.


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dark_kana ([personal profile] dark_kana) wrote in [community profile] 3_good_things_a_day2026-05-01 12:48 pm

Friday 01/05/2026


1) no working day! Sleeping in a little this morning 

2) gorgeous weather. Wearing a lovely dress and enjoying a BBQ with hubby's BFF

3) going to work on my crochet project this evening

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anais_pf ([personal profile] anais_pf) wrote in [community profile] thefridayfive2026-05-01 01:04 am

The Friday Five for 1 May 2026

These questions were written by [personal profile] pebbleinalake.

1. Do you like to spend time outdoors?

2. What is your favorite flower?

3. Any favorite warm weather activities?

4. Have you ever kept a garden? If so, what did you grow?

5. Do you know how to swim?

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!

**Remember that we rely on you, our members, to help keep the community going. Also, please remember to play nice. We are all here to answer the questions and have fun each week. We repost the questions exactly as the original posters submitted them and request that all questions be checked for spelling and grammatical errors before they're submitted. Comments re: the spelling and grammatical nature of the questions are not necessary. Honestly, any hostile, rude, petty, or unnecessary comments need not be posted, either.**
marycatelli: (Golden Hair)
marycatelli ([personal profile] marycatelli) wrote in [community profile] books2026-04-30 06:13 pm

The Perks of Being an S-Class Heroine, Vol. 7

The Perks of Being an S-Class Heroine, Vol. 7 by Grrr and Irinbi

The tale continues. Mid-cliffhanger, so spoiler warning for the earlier volumes

Read more... )
lhune: (3L)
lhune ([personal profile] lhune) wrote in [community profile] 3_good_things_a_day2026-04-30 12:40 pm

Thursday 30/04/2026

1) Lunch on my sunny balcony where I’m mostly shielded from the wind

2) Reading one of those books that I bought some time ago but never got to ^^

3) Possibly going to an art fair this evening Didn't go to the art fair but I did receive the mail I had been waiting for from my landlord. I feared they were ignoring my messages.
angrboda: Viking style dragon head finial against a blue sky (Default)
Plutonian #2 ([personal profile] angrboda) wrote2026-04-29 08:28 pm

(no subject)

So today's Wednesday, so I have that off, because I am part-time employed and Wednesday thus became the Best Day of the Week.

I also have Thursday off this week, because I had work on Saturday, so we get a protected day off for that (as well as some time in lieu and a bit extra per hour because it's the weekend) and mine is always on the Thursday. We have an unofficial work Saturday every seven weeks, but we can put it up for grabs if we can't work that weekend (or even if we don't want to) and they tend to be very easy to get rid of. Some of the others will nab as many Saturdays as they can, because it's a quieter work day and a week day off. I'd personally rather have my weekend intact with Husband, but it takes all sorts. It's unofficial because as far as the rest of the hospital is concerned we're not open. We'll only be six or seven people there, and we're largely there in order to give ourselves a helping hand so Monday's work load isn't quite so huge.

This week I also have Friday off because it's the first of May and according to our general agreement we are supposed to have the right to have that day off. Well, that doesn't actually work in reality because there's an obvious limit to how often you can just arbitrarily close down the work place when you work in the health sector and we already don't work weekends (sort of) and holidays. So we usually have as many people having the day off as possible and it's determined by drawing lots where the people who didn't win last year are guaranteed it this year.

And then after that of course it's the weekend. So through sheer luck I've managed to get five days off in a row. That's like a little holiday. I shall make a great deal of progress on my puzzle.

Today, I've taken the bicycle into town to have it serviced, and treated myself to coffee to go for the trip home. I can pick it up tomorrow, and I'm sort of toying with the idea of going in and just having a coffee and some breakfast at the Espresso House before I go to the bicycle shop. I could bring a book. Right now this idea is very tempting. It's not unlikely tomorrow I'll just want to get the bike and go home as quickly as possible.

Also accidentally picked up a succulent. It was flowering, it wasn't my fault! It only took Husband a couple hours to notice it. Can't sneak anything past him...
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dark_kana ([personal profile] dark_kana) wrote in [community profile] 3_good_things_a_day2026-04-29 08:03 am

Wednesday 29/04/2026


1) Gorgeous weather! Going to enjoy lunch in the sunshine and cycling to training

2) Reading a good book

3) Dinner with friends from volley. Really looking forward to that, it's been a while since I've last seen some of them... ^^

marycatelli: (Golden Hair)
marycatelli ([personal profile] marycatelli) wrote in [community profile] books2026-04-28 11:14 am

Alchemist of the Wilds

Alchemist of the Wilds: An Ex-Assassin's Guide to Cozy Romantic Brews by A. T. Valentine

A slightly misleading subtitle -- but only slightly.  The first volume

Read more... )
dark_kana: (3_good_things_a_day official icon)
dark_kana ([personal profile] dark_kana) wrote in [community profile] 3_good_things_a_day2026-04-28 02:16 pm

Tuesday 28/04/2026


1) a hot water bottle to relax my aching back/shoulder/neck muscles

2) enjoyed eating outside in the sunshine with hubby for lunch

3) lazy evening, going to work on my crochet project. Or read a library book

rocky41_7: (Default)
rocky41_7 ([personal profile] rocky41_7) wrote in [community profile] books2026-04-27 09:46 pm
Entry tags:

Recent Reading: Cuckoo

Wrapped up yet another horror novel last night, Gretchen Felker-Martin’s Cuckoo. This book is about a group of kids in 1995 who are sent to a conversion camp, experience The Horrors, and then reunite many years later to have another crack at taking The Horrors down.

First, I have to say the decision to set a horror novel in a conversion camp is kind of galaxy-brained, because it is a place that by design is traumatizing and horrifying. This book will make your skin crawl and your eyes tear up well before the monster enters the scene. There are seven protagonists and they come from all walks of life—gay kids, trans kids, kids from Christian families, kids from Jewish families, white kids, Asian kids, Latino kids, fat kids, mentally ill kids—but they all come from families who were willing to stuff them, sobbing and kicking and begging, into the back of a van and ship them off with a bunch of strangers to be “cured.”

And then there’s the monsters.

Generally I’m not a fan of “body snatcher” kind of horror stories, in the same way I’m not a fan of conspiracy theory stories, but I think it largely works here, because this is what the families want isn’t it? For their problem child to go away for a while and come back a new person, without all those icky traits mom and dad didn’t want. For the teens, watching the queer kids around them succumb to “curing” would feel like a kind of body-snatching—who are you and what have you done with the queer person I knew?

The book is also very gross, and I mean that not pejoratively, but factually. If you have a low tolerance for grossness, this one may not be for you. The monster and its ilk are nasty galore (see minor complaint below) and Felker-Martin does not pull punches about the grossness of human existence, particularly as an angry, horny, repressed teenager in a desperate situation. The characters here puke, piss, make out in public bathrooms, masturbate amidst their sleeping peers, eat pussy during menstruation, and are generally grody in the way teenagers are grody. I think grounding the book in these bodily realities works well given the nature of the horror, which is incredibly personal and physical.

I liked the teens themselves and I felt like they represented a decent spread of attitudes and behaviors from people in circumstances both similar and diverse. They exhibit many of the kinds of irritating and off-putting behaviors you’d expect from a group of young people who’ve already learned they must hide their true selves or be punished for it.

There were a couple of things that didn’t totally land for me though. First, I think the descriptions of the monster(s) are overdone sometimes. Not because it grossed me out too much but because yes okay, we get it, the thing is nasty, it’s ugly, it smells bad, it’s inchoate; can we move on? Also, I never felt like I had a real idea of what the thing(s) looked like, despite all the descriptions.

Second, the book jacket description makes it sound like the majority of the book will be the teens as adults, returning to the horrors they faced when they were young, but two thirds or more of the book is the actual events of the conversion camp. It makes the final third in their adulthood feel somewhat rushed.

However, on the whole, I liked this book and I’d be open to reading more from Felker-Martin. There are so many moments here where you want to hug these kids and take them somewhere safe, and I enjoyed the book’s balance of the power of love with the grim reality of the cost of life.


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dark_kana ([personal profile] dark_kana) wrote in [community profile] 3_good_things_a_day2026-04-27 01:42 pm

Monday 27/04/2026


1) a day at the office. It's nice to catch up with the colleagues

2) going to enjoy cycling home, enjoying the sunshine ^^

3) Lhune is coming over for dinner and Merlin episodes :-)

lhune: (3L)
lhune ([personal profile] lhune) wrote in [community profile] 3_good_things_a_day2026-04-26 09:55 am

Sunday 26/04/2026

1) Wearing the new clothes I bought yesterday ^_^ Always such a nice feeling

2) Dinner at my parents’s place, which means time on the canopied swing. I love my own apartment but, if ever, I move there should be place for one

3) Going to a plants fair in the afternoon to get new tomato plants (the Fuzzy Wuzzy I bought last year was delicious and easy)
lhune: (3L)
lhune ([personal profile] lhune) wrote in [community profile] 3_good_things_a_day2026-04-25 03:26 pm

Saturday 25/04/2026

1) Went shopping for one item, met up with my mum, and ended up with a whole new outfit ^^

2) Had a delicious lunch at a temporary place in the city

3) Going to an English improvisation theater this evening