Hi! I'm Vii. This is a little about me, since Dreamwidth seems to be sucking me in.
( general intro )
( fandom interests )
( posting habits )
Hi! I'm Vii. This is a little about me, since Dreamwidth seems to be sucking me in.
( general intro )
( fandom interests )
( posting habits )
Redrawing old artwork is a good way to boost one's self-confidence. I made this today and despite all the trouble the last sketch gave me (legs?? perspective?? how??) it's heartening to know that I'm improving, inasmuch learning to spend more time on a single drawing and actually look up references is improvement.
Now, if only I practiced more than once in a blue moon...
I expect this weekly roundup to be thoroughly demolished since classes have started up again, or maybe dominated by my class readings.
What I've recently finished reading:
Guards! Guards! by Terry Pratchett. This was fun, though not as good as Going Postal, which I felt had a more character-driven plot. In Guards! Guards! it was just "hey, let's summon a dragon in a convoluted plot to gain power" and the consequences thereof. But there were some brilliant moments, like Vetinari and his dungeon, and the attitude of Ankh-Morpork citizens (really, the city itself could be called a character). I think I'll keep reading the City Watch series and see where it goes.
What I'm currently reading:
Red Rising by Pierce Brown.
Made a bit more progress. I'm not really liking the narrator so far, though I'm not sure why. Maybe it's the cockiness, the anger, and the lack of other personality traits. Moist von Lipwig might have been a liar and a cheat, but he had personality in spades. But this guy? Eh.
Worldbuilding is interesting so far but I'm still 30 pages in. What I really want to know is why the reds are on Mars in the first place and if these people are humans or some alien species. The color-coded caste system (?) reminds me of Amenta except Amentans are actually aliens.
China Wakes by Nicholas D. Kristof and Sheryl WuDunn.
It's been a month and I'm still reading this book. So much of it is still relevant that it's easy to forget that it was written in 1994, and then they mention that Hong Kong is still in British hands. There's also an extreme lack of internet. They mention that in the 1990s censorship around literature and media was actually loosening up -- I wonder if the internet gave Chinese citizens more freedom or gave the government more ways to monitor them. (The answer is probably "both".)
I know that much of Chinese fandom is in forums, locked behind registration requirements to make it harder for the government to take them down for writing, say, porn. And then you have all the web novels, which I assume still exist because it's hard to filter through so much text, even with the help of technology. But visual media (or maybe just shows?) seems to be more constrained -- you still have crackdowns on content like Guardian the drama, which was released just last year. Ugh.
In other news, I found that really good Newt/Newt/Hermann fic (yes, there are clones, and yes, there are identity issues in spades) that I read a long time ago back when I was heavily into Pacific Rim and am trying not to waste all my free time reading that instead.
My interests run in cycles, mostly because I lack consistency in all of my hobbies. Recently, I've gotten in an art mood again. Maybe I'll take advantage of this to actually try and build a draw-most-days habit alongside my write-every-day attempt and finish things for once.
In related news, I drew something for the first time in several months. In color!
( sketchy sketch )
This is a tentative character design for Sahariq, one of the main characters of my current WIP and very much a cinnamon roll. I need to get into his head more so I can get unstuck and start working on it again.
Oh, hey, I get to use my new icon for this :D I still haven't figured out the best way to use icons. Anyway, school's coming up in a little over a week. I don't know whether to be excited or nervous.
What I'm currently reading:
Guards! Guards! by Terry Pratchett. Because a bunch of you recommended that I read this, I'm reading this. It's fun so far. Reading Going Postal first has made me think that Terry Pratchett does chapters, but he doesn't, really.
Red Rising by Pierce Brown. A friend of mine really likes this series. I've only read the first 20 pages so far. Not much to comment about so far, except my brain keeps wincing at the way he uses camel case for names, likeThis. Brain, why are you so nit-picky?
China Wakes by Nicholas D. Kristof and Sheryl WuDunn. Slow going.
Webcomic Recs
Caught up with these two recently. Good stuff.
Heir's Game - When a new heir to the duchy of Belluna comes of age, there is held the Heir's Game: a brutal series of duels to determine the heir's bodyguard. When Theuden, the new heir, meets Isran, a quiet duelist with a mysterious past, their love will threaten to change everything. (LGBTQ, romance, political intrigue)
Lavender Jack - What begins as a simple game of cat and mouse leads the two opposing forces of Detective Ferrier and Lavender Jack down a rabbit hole of mysterious organizations, betrayal, and lost love. (Mystery, thriller, flavors of Holmes/Poirot/Jeeves & Wooster)
I'm still reading. This is good.
What I've recently finished reading:
The Gone-Away World by Nick Harkaway. The first half of the book was pretty slow, but I blitzed through the second half. There were many twists, most of which I didn't expect. It reminded me of the Southern Reach Trilogy, except more lighthearted. A good read despite the occasional encyclopedic rambling, and I liked how all the bits and bobs throughout the story came together neatly at the end.
What I'm currently reading:
Going Postal by Terry Pratchett. After The Gone-Away World I needed something a bit lighter, so here we are! This is my second attempt at Discworld. My first attempt was chronological; I read the first two books years ago (Colour of Magic, etc) and they were fun, but evidently not good enough to hold my interest. So far, Going Postal is equal amounts funny and clever, and I need me some more Vetinari.
China Wakes by Nicholas D. Kristof and Sheryl WuDunn. Still getting through this one. So far it's been describing to me in very detailed anecdotes how corrupted China was. Fun.
What I'm reading next:
I'm thinking I'd like something light so I can keep up with this reading habit. Currently loaded on my Kindle: A Darker Shade of Magic by V. E. Schwab, Borne by Jeff VanderMeer, and Red Rising by Pierce Brown. Or I could read more Discworld. I welcome any and all recommendations!
What I've recently finished watching:
SSSS.Gridman. A 12-episode anime series that I'd never heard of until I saw a youtube video talking about the antagonist. I stopped about five minutes in to avoid being further spoiled and went and watched the series. I enjoyed it despite some pacing issues and the fact that I don't watch that whole genre (normal people gaining powers and fighting kaiju, yada yada), and I'm sure I missed a whole lot of references. The best parts were the slow unveiling of something wrong with the world and the chilling effect caused by the antagonist acting just like a normal girl in high school while doing antagonistic things.
What I'm currently watching:
Guardian (镇魂) - I snuck a look at the recent meta posts and was spoiled on the ending in a slightly more specific fashion, whoops. But I'm still slowly making my way through this. 12 episodes to go, hoo boy.
I don't know why it's so much easier to watch anime than actual dramas. Probably has to do with how the episodes are half as long. I really don't know how I managed to watch all of Stargate... nowadays, I can hardly get through a single episode of a thing without having to pause and do something else.
Now that I've made some goals for the year, I might as well keep myself accountable with a hopefully weekly reading post. And while I'm doing that, I might as well talk about other media, so here we go.
What I'm currently reading:
The Gone-Away World by Nick Harkaway. My friend E really likes this book and even got me a (fuzzy neon!) hardcover copy of it, so I'm finally getting around to reading it. I'm only about a hundred pages in, and so far it's very... interesting. A little long-winded, but also humorous. It's very much "the mundane made absurd" at times. Also, the first chapter is entirely unrelated to the next two, and I'm looking forward to see how it ties into the rest of the book.
China Wakes by Nicholas D. Kristof and Sheryl WuDunn. Another recommendation from a friend, who lent me their copy. It's dated -- it was published in 1994 -- but hopefully this will give me a place to start when it comes to Chinese history.
What I'm currently watching:
Guardian (镇魂) - I'm on winter break right now, which means time to actually watch things! I've just finished episode 26, and am at the point where they've basically paired up all the members of the SID. Now, whether I actually like the love interests... ehh. I maintain that episode 13 was the best episode of the series so far, because that was the first time I've ever actually fangirled over something. So much squee.
What I'm currently listening to:
Well, what I should list here are podcasts like The Adventure Zone or SAYER or something but I remain incapable of listening to podcasts while multitasking, which makes it difficult for me to get into anything.
So here are some songs I've been listening to:
And as a bonus... I recently stumbled upon "One Day More," except Waluigi is every part and it is great and terrible.
Happy New Year, everyone! It's already 2019 -- how is it that time can pass so quickly, and yet each day feels excruciatingly slow?
Now that it's a new year, I might as well list some yearly goals. This year is going to be my last semester in university (if all goes well) and I'll be starting a full time job this summer. So, I don't know if I'll manage to meet these goals, but since they're all habit-based, hopefully winter break will give me a head start before classes start back up again and give me the momentum to keep going even after life gets busy.
( Goals for 2019 )
Since I came up with these goals pretty late today, I'm giving myself amnesty if I don't get all of these done today, but I hope to get cracking at it tomorrow. I'm feeling pretty optimistic for this year -- hopefully this will last longer than a week :P
Dipping my toes into fanfic for the first time in a very long time... this was fun. Done for the 3 Sentence Ficathon.
any, any, in SPACE (Les Miserables)
It was in the galactic year 3315 that Jean Valjean, formerly PT#24601, was released from his nineteen-year-long captivity in the prison-ship Toulon. The stone-faced prison guard snapped a yellow band around his wrist -- ("temporary identification, until they reenter you into the system") -- and so they set free him from one cage and let him into another.
Four years later, Monsieur Madeleine rubs his thumb against the cuffs of his long sleeved shirt, pretends it's just stiff cloth that's cutting into his wrist, and goes out to greet the inspector newly assigned to the floating city of Montreuil-sur-mer.
any, any, in SPACE (Good Omens TV/Doctor Who)
The man with the same face as Crowley spins a metallic stick in his fingers, shining it this way and that. As they stand in the dark echoing guts of an alien planet, Aziraphale glances at the big blue police box beside them.
"Does it play Queen?"
any, any, dragons (Stargate Atlantis)
"That's it, which one of you block-headed morons touched the alien tech in the 'very off-limits, very possibly black-hole inducing' corner of the lab again?"
"I assure you, none of us did," says Radek, peering at McKay's thunderous face over the rim of his glasses, "why do you ask?"
For the first time in a very long time, someone beats McKay at responding -- a very tiny black dragon pokes its head out from over McKay's shoulder, rolls one yellow eye at them, and gives them Sheppard's trademark lazy, lazy smirk.
Some prompt fills for one_sentence_only, done out of order.
These all take place in my original setting Ten Realms, specifically before/during the events of Of Wind and Sea, a novel that currently only exists in my head. Maybe it'll stay that way; I don't mind. But if anyone wants to know more about it, please ask :)
( house, knitting, dragon, rebel, tea )
I actually quite like these prompts. The "one sentence only" requirement takes off a lot of the pressure, but is in some sense a lot more challenging than writing longer pieces, because every word counts. The first versions of the first two I wrote -- "house" and "dragon" -- were way too infodump-y, because I was trying to fit an entire story into one sentence. And then I saw narya_flame's wonderful Tolkien fill and realized I didn't have to. Negative space, and all that.
Signed up for some writing prompts recently. Stashing them here for future reference.
( genprompt_bingo )
( one_sentence_only prompt table )
( 100prompts )
I don't know if I'll manage to fill the bingo card; if anything, I'll just do ficlets. Signed up under "Original Work" for the one sentence only table, and was a little tempted to sign up for "angst - hurt/comfort" under Guardian, but decided against it for reasons of "if I finish the drama, I probably will want all the fluff instead".