New K-9 fic: Good luck, Yuu-san (Ren/Oboro/Fujimaru/Kagari)
Good luck, Yuu-san | K-9 | Fujimaru Jin/Hizuki Ren/Kagari Yukito/Oboro Yuushirou | <700 words | rated T
Summary: Fujimaru accidentally discovers a new weakness of Oboro.
Read it on Dreamwidth or AO3.
December Days 02025 #24: Gamer
( 24: Gamer )
Community Thursday
Community Thursday challenge: every Thursday, try to make an effort to engage with a community on Dreamwidth, whether that's posting, commenting, promoting, etc.
Posted and commented on
bnha_fans. The comm is really active in all sorts of good ways, which is LOVELY! :D
Commented on
goals_on_dw.
Posted & commented on
getting_started about whether image links also get redirected when using a rename token. The answer is YES which is pretty cool and good to know :D
Signal boosts:
- Someone is asking about the kind of CSS allowed on Dreamwidth over at
newcomers, in case any of you have more tips and paths to share.
Historical games about not being violent
So here's what I came up with after exploring the historical and education tags on steam, if anyone has any recs or anti-recs please let me know!
( Read more... )
Review: A Chorus, Divergent anthology

A Chorus, Divergent anthology by Reckoning Press
A special issue featuring reprints by neurodivergent creators from Reckoning’s first decade.
Essays, poetry, fiction, and art by Oluwatomiwa Ajeigbe, E.C. Barrett, Kaye Boesme, Offor Chidera, Jacob Coffin, Kelsey Day, Tania Fordwalker, Abbie Goldberg, A.P. Golub, Ruth Joffre, Taylor Jones, Laura McKnight, Kat Murray, Micah Nemerever, Mari Ness, Ellis Nye, Maria S. Picone, T.K. Rex, Ariadne Starling, and Adam Stemple, with new cover artwork by Abi Stevens.
I read quite a few anthologies this year and this was one of the best. It has some real stellar stories that I'll be thinking about for a long time, and some new writers that I definitely want to see more from. The stories are all speculative fiction and many dance with the climate apocalypse in its many forms and stages.
The real knock-out of the whole book was SQUAWKER AND DOLPHIN SWIMMING TOGETHER. I am a sucker for animal communication stories, and dolphins, and climate disasters and finding glimmers of hope amongst the rubble. There was so many cleaver plot threads dropped in here and there, the story felt like a much longer and fleshed out novel. (I've already preordered their upcoming anthology!)
Also shout out to The Blackthorn Door and Fixing the System in Tilt Town, both with really interesting worldbuilding. And a nod to Icediver, which started off strong but I feel like the wheels fell off halfway through.
I didn't dip into the poetry but if it's of the same quality of the fiction than it's pretty good too.
The entire anthology is free to read online or follow the links to support through an indie bookseller.
'Tis the season.
🎄 Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays 🎄
₊˚。⋆❅⋆。˚₊ ₊˚。⋆❆⋆。˚₊ ₊˚。⋆❅⋆。˚₊ ₊˚。⋆❆⋆。˚₊ ₊˚。⋆❅⋆。˚₊ ₊˚。⋆❆⋆。˚₊
Wishing everyone a wonderful and peaceful time this holiday season, and even if you don't celebrate I hope you have a good day regardless. ❤
distant glitter
Krissy brought up the version of Blue Christmas that is sung by Porky Pig and Emma told us about how, twelve or so years ago, her brother called up Kiss 108 asking them to play it and they’re like “we don’t have that record” and he was heartbroken.
That’s a thing I’m familiar with but haven’t heard in over twenty years.
Also, I recently learned because the guy died that Driving Home For Christmas is not only older than I thought it was, it’s more British than I thought it was. I seriously thought it was from 2005 or so because fetishization of rural white southern culture and American because we’re the ones obsessed with living a hundred miles from anything.
Krissy brought this movie up, featuring the voice talent of Mark Hammill and Nancy Cartwright of all things. Rapsittie Street Kids: Believe in Santa. Eesh, this is worse than Dire Straits and their video is from the 80s. I’m genuinely surprised Video Brinquedo isn’t responsible for this atrocity.
Emily had physical copies of Calvin annd Hobbes but ruined them by looking at them in the bath.
Lou was once in a rock version of A Midsummer Night’s Dream.
On Elf, Sam says no pianist wants someone singing in their ear like that. She’d be on the other side of the piano. Or else.
I called Polar Express “Uncanny Valley: The Movie.” Emily says that the music is good but the animation is terrible because they tried and failed to have it look like the book and they couldn’t do it with the technology at the time. Maybe the animators of The Wild Robot could pull it off.
Kiki once took a bite out of Sam’s birthday cake. Jiji took raw chicken and ran around with it. Julia’s cats would grab things like the skewers for Chinese food. Drake gobbled up half a cheese sandwich that some kid dropped in three bites and he stole a tuna sandwich.
Emily forbids Sam from giving Jiji bunny-shaped toys. So he has a squirrel shaped toy instead.
Sam appreciates the Andor signs from the Boston protest. Geez, that feels like forever ago.
Sam brought up the 1970s Scrooge musical and FUCK YES to that.
burning question: who actually played Mouse Trap instead of just setting up the Rube Goldberg machine and setting it off?
Fandom primer: K-9: Public Security Bureau – Division 9 – Special Abilities Countermeasure

...and I didn't really ask any more questions before reading the manga. Bonus impact for stumbling on it in Japanese because the "kept pet" implied in the verb is delicious, and obviously plays with the K-9/"police dog" title.
Anyway, meet Oboro on the left - he's great - and Ren on the right - she's great. The art is beautiful, and everyone is very pretty.
About the world
Some people have special abilities, most of which are not well understood. Only one thing is known for sure: these abilities manifest after someone commits a crime. For example, the criminal from the first chapter is an arsonist and can control/become fire. (Somewhat unrelated, but this is pretty fun coming in from the BNHA world because it's like a universe in which only bad guys get a quirk.) Here, these abilities are called "sins," haha. In the Japanese, it's simply the kanji for crime with "sin" written in katakana beside it.This seems pretty simplistic at first glance, but that slowly changes as we drill deeper into the worldbuilding and learn the nuances of these abilities and how they manifest. The implications are deeply fucked up, with often devastating consequences that I'm totally here for as my heart gets shattered again and again.
The story premise
Our plucky detective Ren is selected to join Division 9, a newly created division that pairs a detective with a sin user in order to fight fire with fire -- what could possibly go wrong?! I love her. She kicks so much ass.
So, who's our main cast?
( Short character profiles )
TOGETHER THEY FIGHT CRIME! More specifically, crime related to sin users. But they also get their asses kicked and handed over to them quite a bit, haha.
( A bit more on the story and on them )
Where to read? How many chapters are out?
( 37 chapters, 3 volumes. You, too, could catch up in a reasonable amount of time! 🫵 )Cross-posted to
New K-9 fic: Oversight (Ren/Oboro/Fujimaru/Kagari)
Oversight | K-9 | Fujimaru Jin/Hizuki Ren/Kagari Yukito/Oboro Yuushirou | 1.4k words | rated T
Summary: Ren has never questioned where Oboro lives, until now.
Read it on Dreamwidth or AO3.
December Days 02025 #23: Chaos
( 23: Chaos )
New K-9 fic: Looking great (Ren/Oboro/Fujimaru/Kagari)
...Right?! 😨
Looking great | K-9 | Fujimaru Jin/Hizuki Ren/Kagari Yukito/Oboro Yuushirou | 1.6k words | rated T
Summary: After an incident, it's decided that it would be better for the four of them to stay in Akihabara during the investigation.
Read it on Dreamwidth or on AO3.
Under and over and around the 'bridge
Today's December talking meme prompt is from
I could talk about so many, but I will limit myself to three(ish), in three different categories. You'll get lots of guides to Cambridge highlighting the beautiful old colleges and grounds, the standard walk out to the village of Grantchester along the river, punting tours and so on, so I'll stay off this beaten track.
My favourite museum/gallery in Cambridge is Kettle's Yard, which is a contemporary art gallery with a difference. It started out as the home of Jim and Helen Ede, art collectors, who hosted frequent open house events for students to view and tour their collection, and was later gifted by the Edes to the university. Now, the former living space is preserved essentially as it was — filled with objects from the Edes' collection, plus lots of lovely indoor plants — and students can come in and use it as a quiet study space. Other visitors to the gallery get a guided tour of the space, and then can move on to the extension, which is an exhibition space displaying temporary exhibitions. It's an absolutely beautiful, jewel-like little oasis of calm, and rewards return visits. This is a photoset of photos I took there many years ago.
My favourite outdoor space in Cambridge was somewhere I discovered serendipitously during the first days of the pandemic lockdown in early 2020. I had leapt into working from home with enthusiasm, and had deliberately built a whole bunch of routines into the day out of a mistaken fear that Matthias and I would be stressed or irritated or find things monotonous, and one such deliberate routine was my obsession with having short walks outside after lunch, to ensure we moved and saw the sunlight. One day, I made a spontaneous decision to go down a little street I'd never ventured before, and I ended up, quite literally, in Paradise (Nature Reserve). This is Paradise. We had lived with this beautiful, green, jungly place just around the corner from us for eight years and had never known. For the last year we lived in that little house under the ivy, it became a favourite spot. Walking into it was like inhaling deeply.
Foodwise, my favourite high-end places are this one (entirely vegetarian tasting menus; they also have a wonderful newsletter that gathers together curated links on all things foodie, crafty, cultural and local), this one (seafood), and this one, and in general I love the Mill Road area, which is home to two of the previously linked restaurants, but also a great cocktail bar, some excellent cheaper restaurants and takeaway places, and all the Asian, Eastern European, South Asian, Middle Eastern etc grocery stores in the city.
It was a good place to live — and it became more interesting, especially in a culinary sense, during the thirteen years that I lived there.
December Days 02025 #22: Magister
( 22: Magister )
(no subject)
The 4chan-Coded Ideology Behind Elon Musk’s War on Normies
Aspie supremacists do real harm to autistic people in their embrace of gendered, racialized stereotypes, and in drawing spurious lines between themselves and anyone they consider “severely” autistic. Musk may simply be a jerk, but he’s a jerk with a tremendous platform—and one whose fans loudly, publicly connect his shitty personal behavior and fascistic policies to “mild” autism.
December Days 02025 #21: Troll
( 21: Troll )
