your periodic podcast rec request post
Feb. 26th, 2026 01:33 pmMy favorite ongoing podcasts are In Bed With the Right, Know Your Enemy, If Books Could Kill, Maintenance Phase, Panic World, and A Bit Fruity. These are the shows I listen to every episode of and (most of them) support on Patreon so I get extra episodes. Oh, and On the Nose from Jewish Currents.
There are a number I also like but don't listen to every episode of, just dipping in and out as they interest me. These include Behind the Bastards, Hoax!, HyperFixed, Search Engine, Straight White American Jesus, Culture Study, Decoder Ring, American Hysteria, Strongwilled, 5-4, and The Dream.
Then there are my classic favorites that I haven't listened to in a while but loved madly: You Must Remember This, You're Wrong About, and You Are Good.
One limited run I listened to lately was What Happened in Nashville, about the unregulated fertility treatment industry through the lens of a big scandal that happened in my hometown and found it interesting.
Things I like in a podcast:
+ Culture and/or history and/or current events through a leftist/feminist lens. It's really important to me that these are serious thinkers or deeply insightful people, even if what they're talking about is lighter fare
+ People who take culture and internet culture seriously but want to deeply critique it
+ Stuff about religion--not in the sense of being religious but in the sense of talking about how religion works in the world
+ Stuff that is well-researched
+ Stuff about moral panics
+ I tend to be drawn to podcasts that are created by people who are first and foremost either writers/journalists or scholars (with the exception of A Bit Fruity, all my favorite current podcasts are created by people in those categories)
+ Anything Michael Hobbes is involved with lol
+ Oh and my guilty pleasure is anything about cults (other people listen to true crime stuff, I listen to cult stuff)
Things I don't like in a podcast:
+ Humor podcasts (a lot of these people are very funny, but none of these podcasts are comedy podcasts)
+ Generic culture/pop culture stuff (by which I mean the sort of overviews of just what's going on in the world of pop culture)
+ Fiction (I'm sorry, but Welcome to Night Vale is the only one that ever truly worked for me)
+ Pure news podcasts
+ Interview podcasts that focus on celebs
+ Honestly anything about celebrities, I just don't care
+ Self-help stuff
check in day 26
Feb. 26th, 2026 06:34 pmHow is the writing going?
Today I
wrote
4 (80.0%)
edited
0 (0.0%)
posted
1 (20.0%)
sent to beta
0 (0.0%)
researched
0 (0.0%)
planned
2 (40.0%)
had a break
0 (0.0%)
dealt with life
2 (40.0%)
Discussion: What do you do when you get stuck with a fic?
The monthly posts will be up sometime tomorrow as I'm still double checking all of the dates for March.
Cardinal John Henry Newman filk, repeated
Feb. 26th, 2026 12:22 pmThere. That was written by me some while ago -- September 20, 2010, I guess it was. Enjoy!
The Fantastic Journey: The Biggest Adventure [Amnesty 49, using Challenge 58: Travel]
Feb. 26th, 2026 05:55 pmTitle: The Biggest Adventure
Fandom: The Fantastic Journey
Author:
Characters: Scott, Varian, Willaway.
Rating: PG
Written For: Challenge 490: Amnesty 49, using Challenge 58: Travel.
Setting: After the series.
Summary: Despite the dangers, Scott is enjoying the adventure.
Disclaimer: I don’t own The Fantastic Journey, or the characters. They belong to their creators.
A/N: Triple drabble.
The Biggest Adventure
Books - February 2026
Feb. 26th, 2026 04:46 pmThe Shadow Puppet by Georges Simenon
Continuing my plan to read all the Maigret's in our library this year. A Parisian based mystery, where all is not as it seems.
Stories for Lovers edited by Lucy Evans
The latest edition in the British Library Women Writers series. These are short stories from the 1920s through to the 2000s. I enjoyed some of the stories, mostly the earlier ones.
Murder at Gulls Nest by Jess Kidd
I've read a number of books by Jess Kidd, but this is her first crime mystery. It's set in 1954 in a seaside town in Kent. It wasn't a brilliant story, although by the end I'd enjoyed it. I suspect because I'm used to reading crime novels written in the 1950s it felt a bit out of time. A second in the series is due out later this year, so I'll probably read it at some time.
Death on the Downbeat by Sebastian Farr
A Shedunnit runner up this month, which had appealed for a while. I liked the idea of the orchestra conductor being shot in the middle of a concert and the story being told in epistolary fashion, with lots of musical references. But I didn't enjoy it.
The Edge of Darkness by Vaseem Khan
The next in the Persis Wadia series, I reserved a copy as soon as I knew the library were getting them. Persis, the first female inspector in the Indian police force, has been banished to the Naga Hills. A murder is committed and events tie in with both the current unrest (it's 1951) and previous times. It's a locked room mystery with an interesting cast of characters and a lot of action. I thoroughly enjoyed it.
Fra Angelico by Christopher Lloyd
Mainly talking about the over 50 colour plates of his paintings, while also providing details about Fra Angelico's life. Not my preferred style of painting, but nonetheless very interesting.
The Fire Next Time by James Baldwin
I'd not come across Baldwin before, so it was interesting to read his very powerful essay on the plight of black people in America in the 1960s. What's alarming is that although some things have changed, 60 years on many attitudes haven't.
The Double Turn by Carol Carnac (E C R Lorac)
The latest British Library Crime Classics book, featuring Inspector Rivers. This one was written in 1956 and features some interesting characters and a lot of twists and turns. It also gives an idea of London at the time.
The Saint-Fiacre Affair by Georges Simenon
This time ends up back in the small town he grew up in and where there are people he still recognises. Very different from the one I read earlier in the month, although both date from the same time.
War with the Newts by Karel Capek
This took me a while to get into, although even at the beginning I knew I wanted to read it. Capek, a Czech, wrote this in 1936 as an allegory on the current political situation. Some of his observations of different national characteristics are hilarious, others terrifying. If you're looking for something a bit different to read this year, then I'd recommend this. A sea captain discovers a colony of newts in Sumatra who can be trained to do various things, and things take off from there.
Hunting the Falcon
Feb. 26th, 2026 11:15 amA history/biography.
( Read more... )
Connor Storrie vs David
Feb. 26th, 2026 10:32 am
Lean On Me
Feb. 26th, 2026 02:00 pmEverybody clap your hands and sway a little, k?
Some guys and their wives
See only shame
See only sorrrrrow
But if they are wise
they know that wrecks
Are so much more, oh!
Lean on me
When you're stacked wrong!
And I'll be your end
I'll mock you WITH this song
For
It won't be lo-oo-ong
Until gravity
Makes sure that you're cleeean gone!
Please, don't tell the bride
If it's a wreck, it needs no intro
For
no one can tell; maybe she'll need
something sweet to throw!
Lean on me!
When you're stacked wrong
And I'll be your end
I'll mock you WITH this song
For
It won't be long
Until gravity
Makes sure that you're clean gone!
You just call on your mother
When you need a hand
These cakes need somebody to leeeean on!
I just might have a Pisa
That we never planned
These cakes need somebody to leeean on!
Just faaaalll free!
(If you need to end)
Faaaaallll free
Oh, wreck it, now!
Faa-AAA-aalll
free-ee-eeeeee!!
Thanks to Steve, Deanne M., James N., Rachel O., Jessica R., Carol Anne, Kat B., Richard B., Anony M., & Rebecca Z. for the wedding crash course.
[Get it? Instead of 'main course?' Eh? OH C'MON THAT WAS AWESOME.]
*****
P.S. Anyone want to bring vintage style pins back? Because this entire set of 7 lovelies is only $12:
OooOOOooh. I think the owl is my favorite. And the peacock. And the dragonfly.
*****
And from my other blog, Epbot:
Bonus: Whatever Happened to the Conglomerate?
Feb. 26th, 2026 05:58 pm
An extra JLI-adjacent feature inspired by your…yes, YOUR…comments on the Conglomerate in Justice League Quarterly #1! ( Really, it's almost as if YOU wrote this! Or at least as if you told ChatGPT to do it! )
Miguel/OC fanart by karolushek (SFW)
Feb. 26th, 2026 10:11 amCharacters/Pairing/Other Subject: Miguel/Original Male Character
Content Notes/Warnings: N/A
Medium: Digital
Artist Website/Gallery: karolushek
Why this piece is awesome: If you ever thought Miguel from The Road to El Dorado deserved a love interest too, then you might be interested in this piece. It's lovely and colourful, and fits right in with the feel of the film.
Link: Instagram
Five Science Fiction Stories About Investigating Enigmatic Artifacts
Feb. 26th, 2026 10:04 am"What is this thing, and where the heck did it come from?" is a great way to start any story!
Five Science Fiction Stories About Investigating Enigmatic Artifacts
Community Recs Post!
Feb. 26th, 2026 09:15 amThis works great if you only have one rec and don't want to make a whole post for it, or if you don't have a DW account, or if you're shy. ;)
(But don't forget: you can deffo make posts of your own seven days a week. ;D!)
So what cool fics/fanvids/fanart/fancrafts/other kinds of fanworks/podfics have we discovered this week? Drop it in the comments below. Anon comment is enabled.
BTW, AI fanworks are not eligible for reccing at recthething. If you aware that a fanwork is AI-generated, please do not rec it here.
Keeping track of the details
Feb. 26th, 2026 01:55 pmHowever, right now I'm struggling with writing a transition. There are some exciting scenes to come, but there needs to be what I always think of as a "joining bit" where the characters are very busy, but it's all boring planning meetings and making preparations. I find transitions particularly difficult to write and make interesting.
Hell’s Heart by Alexis Hall
Feb. 26th, 2026 08:37 am
What better cure for melancholy than to serve under a captain whose obsessed pursuit of a leviathan will surely doom all involved?
Hell’s Heart by Alexis Hall
Book Review: Post Captain
Feb. 26th, 2026 08:04 amI had just settled in for a reverse Austen novel, told from the point of view of the naval captain rather than his young lady, when Jack’s prize agent absconds with all his money. Jack, eleven thousand pounds in debt, flees to the continent with Stephen in tow - just in time for war to begin again!
This is all in the space of about four chapters. At this point I concluded I had better not settle in for anything at all, as we were clearly in for an ever-shifting picaresque novel.
In this book:
Stephen disguises Jack as a bear so they can flee from hostile France to still-neutral Spain.
Jack is subsequently so ill that Stephen has to nurse him back to health, which takes place entirely off page, because O’Brian could not care less about hurt/comfort.
Other things O’Brian can’t care less about? Spy plots. Stephen has become a hotshot spy for British intelligence and spends months in Spain gathering intelligence, which entire trip O’Brian disposes of in three paragraphs.
However, Stephen’s spy shenanigans allow O’Brian to skip the entire sequence during which Jack gets not-engaged with a girl whose mother won’t let her enter an engagement with a man who is eleven thousand pounds in debt, but emotionally they’re basically engaged.
So if O’Brian has cheerfully skated over hurt/comfort, spying, and romance, what IS he writing about?
Well, at one point Stephen declares that he has “a horror of appearing eccentric,” and asks worriedly whether it would make him look weird to practice swordplay on deck. (It will not, the captain of the marines assures him.)
(A few chapters later Stephen, the man who has a horror of appearing eccentric, shows up on Jack’s new ship wearing a wool onesie and carrying a glass hive of bees. The bees promptly invade the morning cocoa.)
Stephen and Jack almost have a duel but then it just kind of fizzles. They seem to have simply forgotten about the duel without, at any point, formally deciding not to duel.
The debt collectors catch up with Jack but fortunately he’s out with a bunch of officers from his ship so they turn the tables on the debt collectors and impress at least two of them into the navy. Ha-HA, take that debt collectors!
Oh, and obviously we DO finally have a sea battle at the end. We may not need spying or hurt-comfort but we MUST have a sea battle.
Catching a cold
Feb. 26th, 2026 09:18 pmAfter the Storm by artgroves (alby_mangroves) (SFW)
Feb. 26th, 2026 11:58 pmCharacters/Pairing/Other Subject: Lestat de Lioncourt/Louis de Pointe du Lac
Content Notes/Warnings: none
Medium: traditional art (drawing)
Artist on DW/LJ:
Artist Website/Gallery: alby_mangroves on AO3, alby_mangroves on tumblr
Why this piece is awesome: As usual with alby, gorgeous detail and a beautiful drawing, with Lestat and Louis lying intertwined.
Link: After the Storm
