Sunday, April 12th, 2026 02:25 pm
At one point, Oldsmobile created a behemoth of an engine with 32 valves and 455 cubic inches. But regulatory issues meant it never went to full production.

Sunday, April 12th, 2026 09:05 am
Scorched Earth is described on its website as a piece of dance theater about a detective reopening an Irish cold case, a description which fascinated us so much that we made a second patently absurd decision to once again park in NYC just exactly long enough to see a show before continuing on our multi-state travel.

If you'd forced me to describe what I expected from this show, I would have hazarded something like 'Tana French book, adapted as a ballet?' Not at ALL correct. The cold case is not a mystery, not full of twists: we've got one detective, one suspect, one victim, one piece of land (and one ambiguously metaphorical donkey.) The ninety-minute show begins with a series of projected documents explaining the history of Irish Land Dispute Murders before establishing a more-or-less regular pattern: short interrogation scenes between the detective and the suspect, interspersed with bursts of emotion and memory, some dramatized and some in dance.

Sometimes -- often -- this worked extraordinarily well. The land under dispute is represented, personified, by a dancer in a ghillie suit who slithers in and out of the central interrogation/morgue table* like a giant muppet, or the Swamp Thing and dances a violently romantic duet with the suspect -- and it could have looked so silly, as I'm describing it it sounds silly, and instead it was haunting and evocative, perfectly elucidating the narrative themes of the show while also just being a gripping and powerful piece of performance.

*remarkable piece of set design, that table; afterwards we all agreed it was the hardest-working table in show business

Other times, the balance felt a little off; the dialogue would tell us something and then a duet would be danced and I'd think, well, you didn't need to tell us both ways, one or the other would have worked fine. Or I'd start to admire the dialogue for its spareness in suggesting the complexity of a dynamic -- who's from here, who isn't, who has rights to land, who doesn't, what's worth punishing on behalf of the community, what isn't -- and then it say it again more explicitly and I'd be like, well, okay, but you didn't have to. What I'm saying is that I think the show probably could have been just as powerful at sixty minutes as at ninety minutes. But I wasn't at all unhappy to be there for ninety minutes! I was compelled the whole time! If the show sometimes told me things about the situation more times or more explicitly than I needed to hear them, it did an admirable job of not telling me what to think about them, and trying to decide what I did think about them left me plenty to occupy my mind.

A lot of the creative team seem to have a history with Punch Drunk and have worked on Sleep No More explicitly, and it was interesting for me to compare/contrast -- the style of expressive choreography is notably similar, but Sleep No More is a piece of theater that has almost no dialogue, that draws a lot of its power from being oblique and ambiguous to the point of fault. Finding that exact right point of convergence for dance and theater seems to be an ongoing challenge and point of interest for the people coming out of the Punch Drunk school and I'm very curious to see other explorations of it.
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Sunday, April 12th, 2026 03:28 pm
The Other Bennet Girl

1.4/Chapter 4

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1.5/Chapter 5

Read more... )
Sunday, April 12th, 2026 09:02 am
Hello on Sunday!  What kind of a writing day has it been so far today -- or if today hasn't gotten going yet, how did you fare yesterday?

       - I thought about my fic once or twice
       - I wrote
       - I did some planning and/or outlining
       - I did research and/or canon review
       - I edited
       - I've sent my fic off to my beta
       - I posted today!
       - I'm taking a break
       - I did something else that I'll talk about in a comment

Sunday Discussion:  It's a new writing week, and that means a fresh start. Maybe you had a great writing week last week, or maybe last week wasn't the greatest for getting writing things done -- what kind of goals do you have for keeping up your momentum or starting off fresh this week? 


Friday, April 10th, 2026 11:54 pm
In the last few weeks, I have been spending each week obsessed (somewhat) with a different song by Raye.

It began with “Click Clack Symphony. (feat. Hans Zimmer)”, which Spotify recommended to me – presumably because of Hans Zimmer. I listen to more soundtracks and to orchestral music than I do to pop, usually, and I love the epic orchestral aspect of “Click Clack Symphony”.

But I also like storytelling. I think that’s why the song kept going around my head and why I kept wanting to listen to it again – wanting to really make sense of the lyrics and the story they told.

On the surface, this song is about the sound of high heels and about going out dancing. But it’s also about struggling with mental health, about friendship and sisterhood, about doing the things you enjoy. Even though I don’t wear heels or go out dancing, I can still relate to the sentiment and to the reasons behind why the heels and the dance floor are significant for the song’s protagonist.

(I do think it is curious, the tendency to assume that a first-person protagonist in a singer-songwriter’s song must be the singer-songwriter, rather than considering that this protagonist could be a character or at least be somewhat fictionalised…) ‘She must have faith in the seeds that are planted beneath the snow / She must hold on and she must let go / She'll be alright, no riding, shining, armoured knight / She will save herself this time’ ) I love the imagery that this song ends with.


Then last week, I started listening to “The WhatsApp Shakespeare.” on repeat. Apparently I’ve now listened to this even more than “Click Clack Symphony”. Once again, I wanted to understand the lyrics and the story they told. ‘My mother knew when she met him / Wolf in sheep's clothes, oh, but in this case, denim’ ) I like the intertextuality – the references to Eve and the serpent, to Romeo and Juilet and to fairytales (because as well as the one line about Prince Charming, the wolf in sheep’s clothing always reminds me of Little Red Riding Hood). I like the juxtaposition of the modern with the old school, pairing WhatsApp with Shakespeare, Juliet with notifications.

I also like the self-deprecating, self-aware editorialising – lines like Yeah, yeah, sounds very dramatic, don't it? and Though I'd like to clarify / No one did die in the story / But I did inside when…


This week, I’ve still been listening to “The WhatsApp Shakespeare” but I’ve also had “Joy. (feat. Amma & Absolutely)” stuck in my head. There’s not as much of a story to unravel there and it’s more upbeat – as well as it being not really the sort of thing I can have on as background music if I’m reading or working – so I’m not sure how much I will listen to this one. But there’s still something compelling about it.

Then in the past day or so I’ve been listening to “I Know You're Hurting.” and “Happier Times Ahead.” There are other songs on the album that I don’t mind but have not felt a need to listen to repetitively and other songs that I still haven’t really listened to yet, but I have still found myself picking up something of the whole album’s narrative and appreciating that. Having spent so much time with “Click Clack Symphony” and “The WhatsApp Shakespeare”, there’s something quite satisfying to then hear Raye’s voice sing Though I may cry in the night, but my joy comes in the morning or There will be happier times again.

I know that some people insist that albums be listened to the whole way through, in order to be properly appreciated, but that has not been my experience. Especially with pop music, when I’ll often end up skipping through an album in search of the few tracks I actually can tolerate.


... I actually sat down to write more book reviews but that will have to wait.
Sunday, April 12th, 2026 01:32 pm

Posted by Mark Liberman

Or maybe "initialism lengths"? Wiktionary defines initialism as "a term formed from the initial letters of several words or parts of words, which is itself pronounced letter by letter"; while some (fussy) people argue that the term acronym should be reserved for words like laser (= "Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation") or NATO (= "North Atlantic Treaty Organization").

Acronyms/Initialisms are (mostly) words, under any reasonable definition. But this category has the special property that most items have multiple specific and distinct senses, generally known to small groups and/or used in very special circumstances.

For example, American linguists know that LSA stands for "The Linguistic Society of America" — but the LSA didn't act in time to lock up https://lsa.org, which belongs to the "Louisiana Sheriffs' Association". And Acronym Finder gives 123 interpretations for LSA, including the linguists but (curiously) not the sheriffs.

Mark Davies' NOW ("News on the Web") Corpus has 3,680 hits for the string LSA — quickly checking a few of them (literally) at random gives us references to the Liangmai Sports Association's Badminton team; the Law Students Association at McGill;  a recipe's abbreviation for a mix of ground linseed, sunflower seeds and almonds; Lifesaving South Africa; the Law Society of Alberta; and so forth. In that corpus, the Linguistic Society of America gets 55 hits, and the Louisiana Sheriffs Association has 6.

Someday it would be fun to run an acronym-finding script over that dataset, or a similar one. But this morning,  as a crude approximation to the (non-frequency-weighted) distribution of initialism length, I checked the entry counts for probes of Acronym Finder with random letter-string samples of different lengths, generated by this simple R script.

A sample 20 random single letters yielded a mean of 65.5 hits and a median of 64.5:

G 66
V 65
Y 31
E 77
L 64
W 60
H 64
V 65
X 48
D 115

A two-letter sample yielded a mean of 58.1 and a median of 25.5:

ZZ 13
BO 85
UO 26
ND 82
OY 10
WY 8
MM 248
JR 25
YI 6
SK 78

A three-letter sample has a mean of 47.7 and a median of 41:

KXS 2
WRK 4
DCL 63
KNU 6
NPN 37
IPE 60
PVP 45
CCB 154
BJH 4
MCM 102

A four-letter sample has a mean of 1.4 and a median of 0:

EKCK 0
EPRL 6
BLUE 6
WIXI 0
QLCS 1
DZCZ 0
YJGM 0
BTDW 1
CWJI 0
FVOE 0

(Though the AcronymFinder's "acronym attic" has one unverified entry for EKCK as "Embassy in Kuwait City Kuwait".)

And a five-letter sample has mean and median of 0 — though ARKEM has one "unvalidated" entry in the AcronymFinder's attic, listed as "alarm remote keyless entry module":

RDZCI 0
LPEYZ 0
TUWRX 0
WMHXQ 0
ARKEM 0
VCEGP 0
MZMKH 0
WTFAY 0
RDITH 0
DBRBY 0

If we believed the unreliable probability estimates derived from those mean values, we'd estimate 6.55*26=170 single-letter entries, 5.81 *26^2=3928 two-letter entries, 4.77*26^3=83838 three-letter entries, and 0.14*26^4=63977 four-letter entries.  Implausible estimates that still confirm my prejudice that three-letter initialisms are the most commonly used.

For sequence lengths of six and above,  traditional initialisms or acronyms are increasingly unlikely, though "backronyms" like DREAM and PATRIOT buck the trend. And  social-media and email names sometimes involve initialisms combined with abbreviations, like @FmrRepMTG.

The longest example I 've ever seen is MMIWG2SLGBTQQIA+. For an explanation and motivation of all 16 characters in that one, see Lezard Dr, Percy, Noe Prefontaine, Dawn-Marie Cederwall, Corrina Sparrow, Sylvia Maracle, Albert Beck, and Albert McCleod. "2SLGBTQQIA+ Sub-Working Group MMIWG2SLGBTQQIA+ National Action Plan Final report." (2021).

 

Monday, April 13th, 2026 01:54 am
Ok I lied about going to bed.

Hilarious vid “To Be A Princess” -
set to some musical song, possibly Disney? By theburialofstrawberries.

https://www.tumblr.com/theburialofstrawberries/813616979119407104/to-be-a-princess-is-to-know-which-spoon-to-use

Sunday, April 12th, 2026 11:55 pm

Six-ish sentences from the next chapter of The Secret Marriage:

"Are you ready?" Ilya asks, reaching over to cover Shane's hand with his own once Shane has engaged the parking brake and turned off the engine.

"It's four minutes before ten. I'll have to be."

"We don't have to get married this week."

Shane's hand grips the gear shifter convulsively, and turns to look at Ilya properly. "Do you not want to get married after all?" he asks.

Ilya smiles at him, that oh-so-fond smile that tells Shane he's just said something ridiculous. "Of course I want to get married. But I also want you to be happy about it."


Sunday, April 12th, 2026 02:15 pm
I've just rushed in to gather the remainder of the laundry, as it suddenly began bucketing down rain. Amusingly, the neighbours on either side sprinted out to their own gardens at exactly the same moment to do exactly the same thing, and we all gave each other rueful smiles. It's that time of year.

I was recovering from a fairly mild cold this weekend (the worst of it was on Wednesday and Thursday, so by Saturday I was just at the stage of sniffling a bit, and having constant nosebleeds), so things have been relatively quiet, even by my standards: no pool, no gym, very limited activities. I did go to Waterbeach with Matthias yesterday, to sit for a few hours in the taproom of the brewery that only opens up one Saturday a month (where we listened to the couple next to us plan their wedding, with much arguing over seating plans and whether or not to have a traditional fruit cake, but general agreement as to the — seemingly bottomless — quantities of alcohol they were going to serve their guests), and eat handmade pizza from the food truck next door.

Otherwise, the only eventful stuff this weekend has been gardening: readying a few containers with compost in order to transfer the mixed lettuce, dill, and spring onion seedlings out of the growhouse some time later in the week, and planting the next batch of growhouse seedlings (rocket, radishes, corn, zucchini, butternut pumpkin, garlic kale, red spring onions, giant cabbages, and peppermint chard). I'm feeling quite smug that we managed to get all this done this morning, before the rain began.

I think I've only finished two books this week — probably not helped by the fact that I spent Thursday in bed dozing — but both were relatively satisfying.

The first was The Rider of the White Horse, continuing my Rosemary Sutcliffe reading with a big shift from her Romano-British trilogy to the time of the English Civil War, and from her resolutely male protagonists and worlds to a female protagonist: the wife of an aristocrat from the north of England fighting for the Parliamentary cause who follows him across the various battlefields as their fortunes wax and wane. As with other Sutcliffe books, it has a very strong sense of place, as well as a strongly crafted depiction of life with an early modern army on the move: the muddy plains of battle, the besieged cities, with their populations' fate resting on the choices and consequences happening outside their walls, but here also with an additional focus of what this world might have been like for its women. The other feature that I've come to recognise as a Sutcliffe staple — the sense of the catastrophic ending of a particular kind of world, and the disorienting horror felt by people as old familiar certainties are cast aside, unmooring them from former expectations and reference points — is also present and correct. The central relationship — between the protagonist and her husband — is an interesting authorial choice, in that it is an aristocratic arranged marriage which opens with one spouse (the wife) loving the other while knowing that this love is not returned, and over the course of the book, and all the pair experience together and separately, their feelings shift and change until their love for each other is mutual, and more mature, being based, at this point, on a deeper understanding of each other as people. In general, I found the whole book very solid, although it didn't resonate quite as strongly with current global politics as some of her previous fiction that I've read.

I followed this with Mythica, in which classicist Emily Hauser uses the women of and adjacent to Homeric epics as a jumping off point to explore the lives of women in the historical record, and in the material culture of west Asia and the eastern Mediterranean, with digressions into reception studies, and many millennia of literary criticism, historiography, and the shifting western literary canon (as well as some contemporary female character-centric Iliad and Iliad-adjacent retellings).

It's a good thing that although Hauser's name seemed vaguely familiar to me, I had forgotten that this was because she had written a Briseis-centric Iliad retelling that I absolutely detested, because if I'd remembered that detail, I would never have picked up Mythica. (In a very comical moment, she mentions her own retelling as one among many supposedly feminist recent takes on Homer's epic that restore interiority and agency to its women: you and I remember your novel very differently, Emily Hauser.) I'm not enough of a classicist or an archaelogist to know how solid her pulling together of the various threads was, but I felt that as a picture of a specific region in a specific moment in time, shedding light on its non-elite residents (women, enslaved people, ordinary artisans and traders) it did a pretty good job, although Hauser had a frustrating tendency towards certainty where I felt she could stand to be more equivocal when it came to the evidence available. When it came more to the literary and intellectual history of the many millennia of human engagement with Homeric epic, I found the book to be more superficial (is it really news to anyone that for most of recorded 'western' history, the male intellectual and political elite were either silent or misogynistic about the women of the Iliad and the Odyssey?), but possibly this is a reflection both of the type of fiction I tend to read for pleasure (I have a 'briseis fanblog' tag for a reason) and my academic background. Ultimately, I felt that the 'women of the Iliad and the Odyssey' framing of the book was a convenient structure and marketing gimmick for what in reality was an interesting and accessibly told survey of the history and material culture of the lives of ordinary people of the eastern Mediterranean (she does a particularly good job at emphasising the extent that the sea operated as a road, and how outwardly oriented everyone's lives were) that might otherwise have struggled to find a publishing foothold.

In the half-hour or so that it's taken for me to write this post, the rain has, of course, stopped, and my laundry — now laid out on every available surface of the house — is looking at me in a somewhat accusatory manner!
Sunday, April 12th, 2026 09:08 am
Eleanor & Park by Rainbow Rowell



Blurb:
Bono met his wife in high school, Park says.
So did Jerry Lee Lewis, Eleanor answers.
I’m not kidding, he says.
You should be, she says, we’re 16.
What about Romeo and Juliet?
Shallow, confused, then dead.
I love you, Park says.
Wherefore art thou, Eleanor answers.
I’m not kidding, he says.
You should be.


Set over the course of one school year in 1986, this is the story of two star-crossed misfits—smart enough to know that first love almost never lasts, but brave and desperate enough to try. When Eleanor meets Park, you’ll remember your own first love—and just how hard it pulled you under.


I checked out this book from the library based on the author's name alone!

The book is a great examination of first love between two teenagers. When holding hands feels monumental and daring. How sharing music leads to falling in love.

TW warning though: the book is searing indictment of the poor choices facing divorced women with children when the father doesn't fulfill his responsibilities. Abusive men. Predatory men, although he doesn't succeed - Eleanor gets away from him.

It was most likely banned because of its exploration of the burgeoning sexual awakening between two teenagers and its unfavorable opinion of abusive men.

DNF Note: I started In God We Trust (All Others Pay Cash), which is the series of essays that A Christmas Storywas based on. I had no patience for the misogyny and casual ageism in the first few pages.
Sunday, April 12th, 2026 12:05 pm
Tires can suffer from a myriad number of issues, and if you don't keep on top of their maintenance, you could be in for a tough time on the road.

Sunday, April 12th, 2026 07:40 am
An Obscure Deed of an Emperor (380 words) by Zdenka
Chapters: 1/1
Fandom: Le Comte de Monte-Cristo | Count of Monte Cristo - Alexandre Dumas
Rating: General Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Relationships: Eugénie Danglars/Louise d'Armilly
Characters: Eugénie Danglars, Louise d'Armilly
Additional Tags: La Clemenza di Tito References, Classical References
Series: Part 2 of 100 Ships
Summary:

Eugénie looks to see whether an operatic role has any basis in history. (100ships prompt 004: spark)



save me from my own heart (549 words) by Zdenka
Chapters: 1/1
Fandom: Norma - Bellini/Romani
Rating: Teen And Up Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Relationships: Clotilde/Norma (Norma)
Characters: Clotilde (Norma), Norma (Norma)
Additional Tags: Confidants and Confidantes, Secret pregnancy, Trust, Secrets, Background Norma/Pollione
Series: Part 50 of 100 Ships
Summary:

Only Clotilde knows Norma not as the revered high priestess of their people, but a woman of flesh and blood. (100ships prompt 088: mystic)



Mod, could I please have a new fandom tag?
f: count of monte cristo
Sunday, April 12th, 2026 11:29 pm
As often happens, after all the dramatic warnings cyclone Vaianu was only a period of heavy rain and moderate winds where I live. Just another Sunday. More flooding elsewhere, but not too bad. Oh well, at least I got my camping gear out ready for any future power cuts. off to bed with me now, night all!

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Sunday, April 12th, 2026 10:05 am
Many Harleys are equipped with compensators, but some riders choose to ditch them. Is the boost in throttle response really worth it, or should you keep yours?

Sunday, April 12th, 2026 12:09 pm
Going back to work was a bit of a horrible shock. Why must we work, why can I not merely lie around all day doing nothing.

However, before that time I did manage to get the sewing machine out and fix things, and also wash the second net curtain. And I'm wearing the repaired NASA hoodie right now! Not too bad for a week off. Now I just need to make the cookies I've had ingredients sitting on the side for, for the last, uh, several weeks. And maybe the pancakes I bought (and froze) milk for, for Shrove Tuesday, since we're currently up to the second Sunday of Easter.

I've also prodded various social things; as ever, it is a terrible balance between my desire to stay at home and do nothing, and my desire to hang out with cool people who I like. I did finally send out the invite for the David Attenborough Centenary Dinner I decided needed to happen - cool people don't turn 100 every day! And I've been vaguely planning a large group invite to the local food truck place for a while, so this seemed like a good excuse. I've invited twenty-odd people, and am hoping for maybe half-a-dozen - I booked Miss H in advance, so at the absolute worst I would have someone to eat with! And one other person has already signed up, so that seems like a success. If it goes well, perhaps I will repeat the concept (although probably without the Attenborough theme!); I really like the idea of regular social things with a bunch of people, but it's always so complicated (and see above re: staying at home forever). But this is extremely low-key, and doesn't require coordinating anything much, which might make it more sustainable. We'll see.

It's really getting quite spring-like now; still cold overnight, but the sun can be properly warm, and we've had a few really nice days; I'm keeping my windows open a lot because I can although am also sneezing a lot, corroborating the "very high" pollen forecast. But everything is green, the grass is growing, there's blossom and new leaf buds on the trees, flowers are popping up around the place, and a new spider has spent several days hanging around in my room (got me out of bed early one day, when it decided to pop up next to my pillow!).