muccamukk: Wanda of Many Colours (Marvel: Scarlet Witch)
[personal profile] muccamukk
AKA, my Very Serious Holiday Break Reading List.

Rainbow heart sticker Flamer by Mike Curato
One of my professors (who's also a librarian) mentioned that they'd just gotten this for the library's graphic novel collection because it was on the banned book list yet again. So I picked it up, then left it on the mantel until school ended for the year.

Centred on a teenager in boy scout camp, the summer before high school starts, the story covers about a week of intense emotional turmoil. The Scouts had banned homosexuality, but were filled with homo-erotically charged jokes and behaviour from the boys, as well as overt homophobia, fatphobia and racism. Like the author, the protagonist is mixed race, chubby and gay, and none of those seem to him like they're going to lead anywhere good. He's looking forward to leaving the Catholic school system, where he got religious guilt on top of bullying, but afraid of the big public high school and future bullying. He's desperately in love/lust with his tent-mate, and terrified what might happen if anyone finds out he's gay.

The art is simple grey scale with occasional red and orange, and showcases the juvenile over-exuberance of the characters, and how every emotion is the most emotion anyone has ever felt. Not a whole lot actually happens in this story, but it does a wonderful job of showing how world-endingly monumental the mundane can be at that age, when everything you feel is going to be all you feel for the rest of your life. The specific experiences aren't something I dealt with at that age, but the intensity felt very familiar.

It's a well done story that I think would be very useful to teens and tweens going through similar situations, which I assume is why it's widely banned.


The Claiming of the Shrew by Lauren Esker
(Usual disclaimer about knowing the author.)

The reservation system worked! For those not following the Fated Mountain Lodge series, the previous novels have all depended on reservation system mishaps putting people in odd situations, but this time it worked! We're in business, baby! The hero does end up in the Honeymoon Suite because it's the only available room, but that's no one's fault but his.

This is probably tied with its sister novel, Joy to the Squirrel, as my favourite in the series so far, with the fully charged shrew (as in she can turn into a shrew) heroine ready to go out there and solve some crime! Even if she has no experience in solving crime. She's paired with the honeymoon-suit inhabiting trash panda private detective, who does know how to solve crime, but is definitely getting off to a slower start. And there also a theatre troop living in the woods. And a dragon. It's just really, really sweet and fun, with charming characters to root for, and largely pretty low stakes. I really appreciated having a disabled heroine, and how she worked with her disability as a shapeshifter. Absolutely this series at its best.


The Curse of Chalion by Lois McMaster Bujold, narrated by James Lloyd
([personal profile] sanguinity just read this, which made me want to read it again (third or fourth time through), so I did.)

I think Sanguinity does a better job of summing up what's great about this book, but to be brief: Caz, our hero, who has had the worst time of it, is my platonic ideal of an iron woobie. He's just trying to get through the day so he can catch a damn break in some hoped-for future, but unfortunately a variety of gods have other plans for him. Does he set out to save the kingdom? No! He sets out to have a nap, but the nap turns out to be on the other side of some serious political shenanigans, so off he goes. Like it or not. And he very much does not like it.

The book is an exercise in slowly ratcheting up the stakes, until the kingdom's fate rests on the fall of some beads, and just doesn't feel like it's going to work out. I really appreciate Bujold's ability to put the reader through it along with the characters. I also like how though there are heroes and villains (and some convincingly loathsome characters), no one's a panto baddie, who's just evil for the sake of the plot. The story is about corrupting influences, and power turning people into their worst selves, and how to fight back against that, which I appreciated.

I have some thoughts about the theology and world building, which will probably get their own post some day.


The Gifts of the Magpie by Lauren Esker
(Know the author, etc.)

The most recent Fated Mountain Lodge book, and the reservation system is... working! But several characters still accidentally get booked into the honeymoon suite, because why not? There were also some fun winter adventures on snowmobiles, and I really liked the set up for the next book's main character.

Unfortunately, that's about all that worked for me. slight negativity )

thursday

Jan. 15th, 2026 12:43 pm
summersgate: (Default)
[personal profile] summersgate
I'm taking it easy today. A "pajama day". It's turned cold (16F), windy, with off and on snow. I was up many hours of the night last night watching "Self Made" and sewing Rowan's crib blanket together. Progress below:

2026-1-15-rowans-pin-loom-blanket.jpg
It'll probably end up being at least 39" by 52". I'll add a border and that will add an inch or two. But then it might shrink a bit after washing because it's cotton so we'll see.

Thank you for your well wishes for Skye. I feel like the situation has finally become real and we are on the home stretch now. Important decisions to be made and nuances in Skye's behavior to notice. It feels oppressive.
sinesofinsanity: For use in times of contrivance (Plot summary)
[personal profile] sinesofinsanity posting in [community profile] fancake
Fandom: Star Wars Clone Wars era
Pairings/Characters: All the Clone Commanders and the Jedi Council so:
Obi-Wan Kenobi, Mace Windu, Plo Koon, Aayla Secura, Depa Billaba, Quinlan Vos, Anakin Skywalker, Yoda, CC-5052 | Bly, CC-2224 | Cody, CC-3636 | Wolffe, CC-1004 | Gree, CC-1010 | Fox, CT-7567 | Rex, Doom, Monnk, CC-8826 | Neyo, CC-1138 | Bacara, CC-6454 | Ponds
Rating: Gen
Length: 4,700 words podfic is 29min 10s
Creator Links: written by always_a_slut_for_hc
Podfic done by PolynomialPandemic
Theme: Crack Treated Seriously, angst (with a happy ending), crack, fix-it, humour

Summary: The Jedi Council was nervous. The Jedi Council was very, very nervous, so much so that the usual meditation-and-releasing-emotions-into-the-Force shtick had failed and High General Mace Windu had broken out the spotchka.

If anything called for drinks, it was discovering that your whole Order was sitting on a primed thermal detonator - well. More like a million of them.

Reccer's Notes: A bit less Crack-Treated-Seriously and a bit more Serious-Treated-Crackily. Starts out super funny, veers into heartbreaking, and then swings right back to being funny again. I love the attention to detail that makes every single character (and there are a lot) feel unique and in character even if they only get a couple lines. The Clone Commanders chat is also super fun and is a feature I've seen used before but never so well with so many characters.

Fanwork Links: your heartbeat's a countdown on AO3 and the podfic
[syndicated profile] ao3_news_feed

International Fanworks Day Is Coming Soon

February is approaching with faster-than-light speed, which means it's nearly time for International Fanworks Day (IFD) once again! On February 15, we'll gather for our 12th annual observance of IFD to celebrate all aspects of fandom, fan-communities and fanworks—fics, art, podfic, zines, filk, research and more—together!

As we're gearing up towards IFD, we at the OTW would love to hear from you about what you associate with this year's theme: Alternate Universes! An Alternate Universe (AU) in fandom can mean a departure from canon, exploring diverging events and character choices, a themed AU like the cozy and popular Coffee Shop AU, or a fundamental change in worldbuilding, like Omegaverse fanworks. We are curious: Which AUs do you like best? Have you encountered an idea for an AU that changed your whole perspective on a piece of canon? What are your most treasured headcanons in your fandom(s)?

We'll be keeping an eye out for any posts about AUs shared by fans, so tag your posts with #IFD2026, and we'll signal-boost them on our OTW social media accounts!

In the next couple of weeks we'll announce what we're doing to celebrate IFD 2026. But we also want to know how you'll spend the festivities! Back in December, we asked you to let us know about any events you'll be running in your community for this IFD. You can still submit those events through our form until January 28.

Also in February, we'll be running our annual Feedback Fest! Spend the time until February 13 keeping an eye out for any AU-related recs!

We can't wait to hear from you about your fandom experiences and events for this IFD!


The Organization for Transformative Works is the non-profit parent organization of multiple projects including Archive of Our Own, Fanlore, Open Doors, OTW Legal Advocacy, and Transformative Works and Cultures. We are a fan-run, donor-supported organization staffed by volunteers. Find out more about us on our website.

[syndicated profile] atlas_obscura_places_feed

The mounds on the LSU campus were originally built at a prominent landmark along the Mississippi River that would have been recognizable to any traveler 11,000 years ago when construction most likely began. The mounds were periodically built and modified over thousands of years, even while the River shifted its course. Experts don't know why the Native American builders created them, or how they used them. But people believe that they may have been a meeting place and a site for sacred and secular events.

Twenty-first century research has indicated that these mounds are older than previously proven with scientific techniques, suggesting that they may be the oldest extant human-built structures in the Americas. In the century before these findings were reported, students and families regularly frolicked and picnicked on the mounds, sometimes using cardboard, cafeteria trays, and other items to sled down the mounds during snow, football games, or rain.

Now the mounds are protected by fencing and monitoring, and the campus is investing in preservation and conservation activities. LSU is working to educated its students and the public to encourage respect for the mounds for both their historic value and their sacred and cultural importance to modern Native people.

dolorosa_12: (peaches)
[personal profile] dolorosa_12
I'm so far behind on this, so let's attempt to catch up somewhat.

two log cabins with snow on the roofs in a wintery forest the text snowflake challenge january 1 - 31 in white cursive text

Challenge 6 is Top 10 Challenge — a list of top ten anything. I was going to do something music-related, but a better idea popped into my head this morning:

Top 10 things to do with tomatoes )

Challenge 7 is LIST THREE (or more) THINGS YOU LIKE ABOUT YOURSELF. They don’t have to be your favorite things, just things that you think are good. Feel free to expand as much or as little as you want.

List of three things behind the cut )
duckprintspress: (Default)
[personal profile] duckprintspress
Graphic 1 of 11. Text and a screenshot of Wikipedia’s title page. The text reads: Our Favorite Wikipedia Articles for Wikipedia Day!

Today is Wikipedia Day, an annual celebration of Wikipedia’s founding anniversary! The community-built encyclopedia for all turns 24 years old today. Normally, Duck Prints Press doesn’t highlight specific businesses or even non-profits as part of our posts, but we decided to make an exception for Wikipedia, especially with it facing unprecedented challenges caused by the growing popularity of generative AI (boo, hiss). There are a handful of services and organizations that Duck Prints Press supports with modest monthly contributions, and Wikipedia is one of them.

Since we love Wiki so much, we wanted to celebrate its birthday too! Many of us have wiled away otherwise empty hours by falling down the Wikipedia rabbit hole. We’ve uncovered many gems that way, or while researching specific topics. Today, Nina Waters, S. J. Ralston, boneturtle, Shannon, Rascal Hartley, Shadaras, and an anonymous contributor share our favorite Wikipedia pages!

Graphic 2 of 11. A screenshot of a Wikipedia page titled: Gvle Goat. For full text of this and the other screen caps in this blog post, use the links shared below the images.
Wikipedia Page: Gävle Goat

Graphic 3 of 11. A screenshot of a Wikipedia page titled: Scam.

Wikipedia Page: Scam
Graphic 4 of 11. A screenshot of a Wikipedia page titled: Dancing Plague Of 1518.

Wikipedia Page: Dancing Plague Of 1518
Graphic 5 of 11. A screenshot of a Wikipedia page titled: Disco Demolition Night.
Wikipedia Page: Disco Demolition Night
Graphic 6 of 11. A screenshot of a Wikipedia page titled: Eternal September.

Wikipedia Page: Eternal September
Graphic 7 of 11. A screenshot of a Wikipedia page titled: Nobel Disease.

Wikipedia Page: Nobel Disease
Graphic 8 of 11. A screenshot of a Wikipedia page titled: Ten-Cent Beer Night.

Wikipedia Page: Ten-Cent Beer Night
Graphic 9 of 11. A screenshot of a Wikipedia page titled: List Of Obsolete Units Of Measurement.

Wikipedia Page: List Of Obsolete Units Of Measurement
Graphic 10 of 11. A screenshot of a Wikipedia page titled: List Of Legendary Creatures By Type.

Wikipedia Page: List Of Legendary Creatures By Type
Graphic 11 of 11. A screenshot of a Wikipedia page titled: List Of Common Misconceptions.

Wikipedia Page: List Of Common Misconceptions

We hope this list has given y’all some fun things to read! Please, PLEASE tell us your favorite Wikipedia pages too – we’d love to read them!


cimorene: Closeup of a colorful parrot preening itself (>:))
[personal profile] cimorene
[personal profile] cimorene: I actually was impressed enough with Francois Arnaud to go watch him in other stuff, but not enough to watch The Borgias.
[personal profile] waxjism: Would you watch some fuckass weird French Canadian arty movie? Are you willing to watch Xavier Dolan?
[personal profile] cimorene: I've heard of that, but I don't know who it is.
[personal profile] waxjism: That's what it is. French Canadian arty weird movie. I think it's blahblah from year, or year. And I think it's in French.
[personal profile] cimorene: Okay, definitely not.

Just One Thing (15 January 2026)

Jan. 15th, 2026 04:29 pm
nanila: me (Default)
[personal profile] nanila posting in [community profile] awesomeers
It's challenge time!

Comment with Just One Thing you've accomplished in the last 24 hours or so. It doesn't have to be a hard thing, or even a thing that you think is particularly awesome. Just a thing that you did.

Feel free to share more than one thing if you're feeling particularly accomplished! Extra credit: find someone in the comments and give them props for what they achieved!

Nothing is too big, too small, too strange or too cryptic. And in case you'd rather do this in private, anonymous comments are screened. I will only unscreen if you ask me to.

Go!

(no subject)

Jan. 15th, 2026 11:22 am
pshaw_raven: (Raven with Coffee Mug)
[personal profile] pshaw_raven
Fox and I just got done using an electric hand warmer and a heat gun to revive some torpid bumblebees we found in the garden. How's your day going?

Since it's going to freeze tonight we wanted to get them dried off and active, so that they didn't stay put and die in the cold tonight. Mission probably accomplished. As a bonus, I got to pet a bumblebee.

taro

Jan. 15th, 2026 09:02 am
prettygoodword: text: words are sexy (Default)
[personal profile] prettygoodword
taro (TAHR-oh, TAIR-oh) - n., a widely cultivated tropical Asian plant (Colocasia esculenta) with large arrow-shaped leaves and edible starchy corms; any of several related plants (genera Colocasia, Alocasia, Xanthosoma, etc.) cultivated for their corms or as ornamentals; the starchy corm from these plants, food made from the corms.


a few taros, one split in two
Thanks, WikiMedia!

When grown as ornamentals, taro plants are often called elephant ears, for some indeed have very large leaves. This was mentioned in the entry on potatoes, but just to reiterate, taros aren’t related to either potatoes (which are nightshades) or sweet potatoes (which are morning glories), and instead are arums. Convergent evolution in action. Colocasia esculenta is native to southeast Asia and was probably domesticated in Malaysia. It was one of the staple crops Polynesians carried wherever they settled, and it’s even called taro in several languages (others have sound changes), but we got the name specifically from Maori via Captain Cook’s account of his voyages, where he first describes it as a Maori crop.

---L.

January Talking Meme - Dream Job?

Jan. 15th, 2026 11:12 am
aurumcalendula: gold, blue, orange, and purple shapes on a black background (Default)
[personal profile] aurumcalendula
Jan 15 - 'Dream Job?' for [personal profile] corvidology

Read more... )

(there are still slots open for the January Talking Meme here)

2026.01.15

Jan. 15th, 2026 10:10 am
lsanderson: (Default)
[personal profile] lsanderson
All ICE: Read more... )

The full list of 75 countries where Trump is suspending visa processing
The Trump administration indefinitely suspended immigrant visa processing from 75 countries – see which nations have been affected
Joseph Gedeon in Washington
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/jan/14/full-list-75-countries-visa-processing-suspended

Trump is making China – not America – great again, global survey suggests
Exclusive: US is less feared by its traditional adversaries, while its allies feel ever more distant, results show
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/jan/14/global-survey-suggests-trump-is-making-china-not-america-great-again

Suspended Michigan autoworker who heckled Trump gets outpouring of donations
Tens of thousands of dollars raised for TJ Sabula after he reportedly calls Trump ‘pedophile protector’ during Ford plant tour
Michael Sainato
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/jan/14/trump-suspended-michigan-autoworker

Wolf’s dinner preserved in Siberia for 14,400 years sheds light on woolly rhino
Decoded genome of meat in pup’s stomach helps scientists build picture of what caused extinction of species
Ian Sample Science editor
https://www.theguardian.com/science/2026/jan/14/wolf-cub-preserved-permafrost-woolly-rhino Read more... )
[syndicated profile] dailykos_feed

The doomsday scenario former Vice President Kamala Harris and other Democrats warned about has arrived.

President Donald Trump on Thursday threatened to invoke the Insurrection Act to sic the military on American citizens in Minnesota, which is already under siege by armed Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents who are brutalizing citizens in the streets and even killing them in cold blood.

In a Truth Social post, Trump falsely accused Minnesotans—who have been racially profiled and violently beaten by immigration agents—of being paid protesters.

Trump said that if Minnesota's leaders don't "obey the law and stop the professional agitators and insurrectionists from attacking the Patriots of I.C.E., who are only trying to do their job, I will institute the INSURRECTION ACT, which many Presidents have done before me, and quickly put an end to the travesty that is taking place in that once great State."

Of course, the protesters are not paid. 

Here's how one Minneapolis resident put it in an interview with Status Coup News:

I've never protested in my life. ... You know what really pisses me off is the fact that they detain people, cuff ’em, and then still beat the shit out of ’em. They tell you it's immigrants, only immigrants—it's fucking anybody. I have friends that got detained and all they were doing was fucking driving home from work. What the fuck? I'm not fucking paid to be here lik e everybody fucking says. What the fuck is that? I gotta work in the goddamn morning, just like everybody else. I'm just here trying to stand up for community, dude.

x

In fact, many of the people getting beaten and arrested aren’t even protesters. They were just people caught in the wrong place at the wrong time who filmed the horrifying behavior of agents—as the First Amendment gives them the right to do. 

For example, one woman said she was trying to get to a doctor’s appointment when masked ICE agents broke her car window, ripped her from her vehicle, and arrested her as she screamed.

Here's how The Minnesota Star Tribune’s editorial board described what is going on in the city:

Heavily armed and masked government agents are prone to confront any American they encounter in the street but especially people of certain colors, accents or styles of dress. The encounters are often violent. The federal agents operating under the insignia of Immigration and Customs Enforcement or the Department of Homeland Security, functioning largely anonymously, have disrupted the life of large swaths of a state.

Deploying the military in an American city already under siege by ICE and other federal immigration agents will do nothing but further inflame a volatile situation.

But that is exactly what Trump wanted all along. He relishes in seeing those who may not have voted for him suffer.

During the 2024 presidential campaign, Harris had warned this chaos and violence was what Trump wanted.

"He considers anyone who doesn't support him or who will not bend to his will an enemy of our country," Harris said at an October 2024 rally in Pennsylvania. "This is among the reasons I believe so strongly that a second Trump term would be a huge risk for America, and dangerous."

Democratic presidential nominee Vice President Kamala Harris speaks to the media after walking off Air Force Two in Madison, Wis., Friday, Nov. 1, 2024. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast)
Former Vice President Kamala Harris, shown in 2024.

A few days later, she made that warning again.

“Yesterday, we learned that Donald Trump’s former chief of staff John Kelly, a retired four-star general, confirmed that while Donald Trump was president, he said he wanted generals like Adolf Hitler had," Harris said in a speech, referring to a then-recent report in The Atlantic. “He does not want a military that is loyal to the United States Constitution. He was a military that is loyal to him.”

Sadly, it is unlikely Minnesota politicians can stop Trump's invasion. Trump wanted this violence and chaos, and he is probably watching it unfold on cable news with glee as he sips a Diet Coke

But there is hope for us yet.

While Trump derives pleasure from the horrific images we’re seeing, Americans do not. Polls show ICE’s conduct is overwhelmingly unpopular. A Yahoo News/YouGov survey released on Tuesday shows that 54% of Americans think ICE’s actions have done more harm than good, while just 34% think ICE has done more good than harm. Overall, 54% view the agency unfavorably.

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz gave a powerful speech Wednesday night, saying that "[n]ews reports simply don’t do justice to the level of chaos and disruption and trauma the federal government is raining down upon our communities."

But Walz also tried to give residents hope and an action plan to combat the nightmare that we all knew was coming if Trump ever took office again. He implored residents to record ICE's actions "to bank evidence for future prosecution."

"We will not have to live like this forever. Accountability is coming at the voting booth and in court," Walz said. "We will reclaim our communities from Donald Trump. We will re-establish a sense of safety for our neighbors and we will bring an end to this moment of chaos, confusion and trauma. We will find a way to move forward and we’ll do it together. And we’ll not be alone."

Arisia bound. Ish.

Jan. 15th, 2026 11:05 am
vvalkyri: (Default)
[personal profile] vvalkyri
Honestly, I'm thinking about how except that I gave up the hotel room, it's not too late to bail, because kicking my interfusion membership forward a year isn't processed until after the event so it probably could actually go.

And then I wouldn't have been up all night accidentally although there were other things that contributed to that not all of them my being a dumbass

And there's really no contest as to which would be the more fun and fulfilling event. Interfusion is going to have available acro shibari every night. And maybe rope dancing. And definitely all sorts of other dancing and Acro and several different people I know who are going to be moving away shortly thereafter.

I'm reminding myself that I'm staying with someone up at ariza who I haven't seen in at least a decade and moved all the way away for a long while and I've set up seeing different friends where it's been at least a year if not well over a year.

But man it really turned out to be a bad decision to land at 11:00 last night home from Missouri expecting originally to be on a train about 10 minutes from now


I'm deliberately missing the 125 flight and just making sure to be there within 2 hours after it leaves.

I'm not expecting much out of the con.



There was someone who needed to be around people and it was important and that person joined me in covert at my place about half past 12:00 which was already getting stupid late and I was so tired and then somehow
I got a second wind after saying look it's three I need to go to bed and they left around 3:20 and then I was like okay I still need to get more stuff off the phone which I couldn't do while covert was sitting next to my computer for various reasons and decided over right I was going to up the die on the hair and there's too much stuff in the suitcase so that I didn't just bring the overtone to deal with that tonight and then I don't know what happened I kept being like a God it's so late oh my God and then the next thing I knew it would be even worse.



There's been pretty much daily protests in one way or another here in DC today is another ice out of DC as opposed to ice out for good or the union rally yesterday.


Tuesday there's a national walkout and lobbying. By flying away I can't help with any of those actions
[personal profile] this summary shared in a local southwest group suggests the recommendation was to just take the 2 hours at 1 o'clock (unless you prefer to be out longer) and then get back to business: "they are asking folks to be at Pershing Park because it is near the Wilson Bldg, and if Home Rule is directly threatened we may all need to get/gather there. This event is a way to start normalizing leaving jobs and other 'normal' activities to protest what is not a normal situation so that we can build the muscle to do more. The event is 1-3 pm and while they would like people to be there at 1, you can get there later (ideally by 1:30-45) if need be. And if you can only be there for an hour that is ok too.

This is not a dramatic walkout scenario. You are encouraged to take sick leave if that is available to you. Also DC residents may have access to paid sick/safety leave from DC. If leaving your job would put your job at risk you are encouraged *not* to participate. And this event is for all, not just people currently employed."

There's such a mess. Such a mess. Active lying from the administration obviouslying from the administration were obviously trying to lie with implication (. The new bed is announcing that Ross had internal bleeding, announced a full week later anonymously sources say they were told and oh right there's no method of injury consistent with the implications there although oh by the way bruising would technically count maybe because sure as hell the man stayed standing and walking normally and packed out a house the next day.



Ice shot someone else in Minneapolis yesterday. Seems not fatally.

The ones they shot in Portland they said that they were weaponizing the car. Are we going to believe that assertion in general anymore?

It's getting really scary out there.
[syndicated profile] atlas_obscura_places_feed

Mock houses

Deep inside Germany’s Eifel National Park lies Wollseifen, a deserted village whose silence tells two very different stories. First mentioned in medieval records, Wollseifen was once a normal rural community of farmers and shepherds perched on a plateau above the Urft Reservoir. But in 1946, just after World War II, the British Army ordered all 500 inhabitants to evacuate — not because of war, but because their village was needed as a military training ground. 

Within months, homes, barns, and the village school stood empty. Shortly afterwards, British forces constructed a bizarre mock village, a cluster of windowless concrete blocks meant to simulate urban combat zones. These stark training structures still stand today, lending Wollseifen the unsettling atmosphere of a film set abandoned after shooting.

Nature has started reclaiming the site: trees grow through ruined doorways, and moss covers the walls of the old church, the village’s last intact original building. Hikers who wander through speak of the strange contrast between the peaceful national park around them and the hollow, echoing shell of a community that vanished overnight.

 Today, Wollseifen is freely accessible to visitors exploring the Eifel, a haunting reminder of a village erased not by war, but by the quiet decisions of the postwar military bureaucracy.

January 2026

S M T W T F S
     123
45678910
1112131415 1617
18192021222324
25262728293031

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jan. 18th, 2026 12:45 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios