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  1. We confess. We love Stranger Things. The show lends itself to many layers of interpretation. With this post, we had a little fun debunking the Upside Down and the real science behind its concept. No spoilers included.

    #strangerThings #UpsideDown #MKultra #coldWar #multiVerse #wormholes #quantumPhysics #neuroscience #sciFi

    negativepid.blog/the-science-b
    negativepid.blog/the-science-b

  2. Avanç de STUART FAILS TO SAVE THE UNIVERSE (2026- ).

    Seqüela de THE BIG BANG THEORY en un multivers catastròfic.

    S'estrena el 23 de juliol a HBO Max.

    #TheBigBangTheory

    youtu.be/gnmc33Y55YI

  3. A guardian 𝒜𝓃𝑔ℯ𝓁 who travels the multiverse 💕🕊️ 🌌 🪐 ⚠️ Please be aware that some content is explicit in nature ⚠️ Zoophile ​:zoo_flag:​ / Pokephile ​:surprised_pikachu:​ / Autopedophile ​:transage_flag:​ / Alterhuman ​:nonhuman_flag:​
    🌼 Name: Rachel "Ray" Gardner (Aliases: RachelTheFictionkin and Rachel the Angel)
    🌼 Physical Age: 31 (Birthday: October 8th, 1993)
    🌼 Physical Ethnicity: African American / Black
    🌼 Nationality: North America
    🌼 Gender: Female (Pronouns: She/Her)
    🌼 Species: Angel (Fallen)
    🌼 Plural: Yes
    🌼 Systemmates:
    • Zack the Goblin (Husband)
    • Roofie the Goblin (Son w/ Zack)
    • Knife the Bisharp (Boyfriend)
    • Blade the Bisharp (Brother-in-Law)
    • Guntō the Kingambit (Father-in-Law)
    • Clouse the Slime Cat (Adopted Brother)
    • Claudeous the Slime Cat (Adopted Brother)
    • Kain the Slime Cat (Adopted Brother)
    • Colton the Slime Cat (Son w/ Kain)
    • Victor the Slime Cat (Husband)
    • Jack the Radiaution (Boyfriend)
    • 10+ More Not Listed...
    🌼 About: I'm Rachel Gardner from the psychological horror game and anime, Angels of Death. Unlike the canon, I believe my timeline was more dark and morbid than what was portrayed. I'm not a very active or social person outside from the internet. I currently live with my biological mother and our two cats and I don't work due to my mental health. As an artist and a writer, I primarily like to do character art and drawings of my soulbonds and write stories of myself with those 'bonds.

    I consider myself a little and sex is one of my comfort things. I like Pokémon, horror mascot characters like Freddy Fazbear and Huggy Wuggy, Roblox, Minecraft and so forth.

    I'm an adult when necessary but internally I'm just a little angel girl surrounded by BIG and STRONG men who just want me to be happy.

    My soulbonds and I share a HEALTHY and HAPPY dubcon relationship; I cherish each and every one of them! ​:ficto_flag:​​:plural_symbol:​
    🏷️ Tags: #introduction #zoophile #zoophilia #zoosexual #zoo #pokemon #pokephilia #pokephile #teratophile #teratophilia #paraphile #paraphilia #radqueer #autopedophile #autopedophilia #little #loli #agere #ageregressor #ageregression #alterhuman #fictionkin #otherkin #kin #angelkin #fallenangelkin #divinekin #soulbond #soulbonder #soulbonding #headmate #headmates #system #systemmate #gatewaysystem #rachelgardner #satsurikunotenshi #angelsofdeath #neurodivergent #borderlinepersonalitydisorder #schizotypalpersonalitydisorder #autism #autismspectrumdisorder #zackthegoblin #roofiethegoblin #bladethebisharp #knifethebisharp

  4. In all these #multiverse stories, the focus is always on "what if this regular person were rich an famous in this world?". Personally, I'm more interested in the opposite. If I get access to the multiverse, I want to go to the world where #ConanOBrien ended up as a mid-level manager at a pharmaceutical company and gives the most off-the-wall power point presentations for people who don't realize how lucky they are to see him perform in such an intimate venue.

  5. Why #Scientists think the #Multiverse isn’t just #Fiction : Medium

    #Iran #War could push global #Food insecurity to record levels, leaving 363 million people #Hungry : Live Sci

    #Turing #Award Goes to #Inventors of #Quantum #Cryptography : NY Times

    Latest #KnowledgeLinks

    knowledgezone.co.in/resources/

  6. Naruto Ninja Council with Luke Herr (D’OhMance Dawn)

    Believe it or not, ninja enthusiasts, this week on Play Comics we’re kunai-diving into the pixelated shinobi wasteland that is Naruto: Ninja Council for the Game Boy Advance – because apparently someone at Tomy thought the best way to honor everyone’s favorite orange-clad ramen addict was to trap him in a handheld prison with combat mechanics more frustrating than trying to explain the Chunin Exams to your grandmother. Released in 2003, this side-scrolling “adventure” promised to let players master the art of ninjutsu while battling through iconic locations from the Hidden Leaf Village, but what it actually delivered was a gaming experience so repetitive that even Naruto’s shadow clone jutsu would get bored of itself.

    Joining us for this digital journey through the Land of Mediocre Adaptations is Luke Herr from D’ohmance Dawn – a man who’s witnessed more anime-to-game train wrecks than a rejected Akatsuki recruitment video. Together, we’ll explore how this GBA “masterpiece” managed to spawn not one, not two, but THREE sequels despite having the gameplay depth of a puddle in the desert and graphics that make early Dragon Ball Z filler episodes look like Studio Ghibli productions.

    So grab your headband and prepare for an episode that’s more entertaining than actually grinding through the same three enemy types for hours on end – which, let’s face it, isn’t exactly setting the bar at Hokage level. Will this portable ninja adventure redeem itself through sheer nostalgic chakra, or will it vanish faster than Sasuke after a family reunion? Tune in to discover if this manga adaptation belongs in the Hall of Fame… or should be sealed away forever like the Nine-Tailed Fox!

    Learn such things as:

    • Is it dangerous to have pretty eyes?
    • Is all manga and anime just a giant metaphor for the horrible nature of man?
    • Does a game being fun make it a good intro to the franchise?
    • And so much more!

    You can find Luke over on D’OhMance Dawn, Exiled, Multiversal Q, and RPG Pals Club. Or catch him on BlueSky @koltreg or his Patreon, found under Luke Herr.

    If you want to be a guest on the show please check out the Be a A Guest on the Show page and let me know what you’re interested in.

    If you want to help support the show check out the Play Comics Patreon page or head over to the Support page if you want to go another route. You can also check out the Play Comics Merch Store.

    Play Comics is part of the Gonna Geek Network, which is a wonderful collection of geeky podcasts. Be sure to check out the other shows on Gonna Geek if you need more of a nerd fix.

    You can find Play Comics @playcomics.bsky.social on Bluesky, @playcomicscaston Twitter and in the Play Comics Podcast Fan Groupon Facebook.

    A big thanks to the Glitterjaw Podcast Collective and the Kickstarter campaign for Aces and Aros for the promos today.

    Intro/Outro Music by Backing Track, who doesn’t understand Naruto any better than I do.

    #ArcSystemWorks #GameBoyAdvance #JumpComics #KakashiHatake #LukeHerr #NarutoUzumaki #SasukeUchiha #Shueisha #TomyCompanyLtd #VizMedia

  7. Lace up your cleats and dust off your NES cartridges because this week’s Play Comics is kicking off with a real goal-scorer! We’re diving headfirst into the pixelated pitch of Tecmo Cup Soccer Game, the NES classic that’s more RPG than FIFA. Join us as we explore this 8-bit reimagining of the beloved Captain Tsubasa manga, where special moves are more powerful than Pelé’s right foot and every match is a turn-based tactical showdown.

    And who’s that coming onto the pitch? Oh sweet we’re joined by the incomparable Luke Herr from D’OhMance Dawn, who’s here to add some romantic flair to our soccer shenanigans. Will Luke score a hat-trick of puns? Can our host avoid getting a red card for excessive enthusiasm? And just how many soccer metaphors can we cram into one episode? Tune in to find out!

    So grab your controller, warm up those thumbs, and get ready to shout “GOOOOOAAAAAL!” at your podcast app. It’s time to see if Tecmo Cup Soccer Game lives up to its manga roots or if it’s just playing offside with our nostalgia. Let’s kick off this episode!

    Learn such things as:

    • What if Nintendo World Cup was a manga?
    • What king of parents let their child go halfway around the world with someone they just met?
    • How do you make a sports game with basically no sports gameplay?
    • And so much more!

    You can find Luke over on D’OhMance Dawn, Exiled, Multiversal Q, and RPG Pals Club. Or catch him on BlueSky @koltreg or his Patreon, found under Luke Herr.

    If you want to be a guest on the show please check out the Be a A Guest on the Show page and let me know what you’re interested in.

    If you want to help support the show check out the Play Comics Patreon page or head over to the Support page if you want to go another route. You can also check out the Play Comics Merch Store.

    Play Comics is part of the Gonna Geek Network, which is a wonderful collection of geeky podcasts. Be sure to check out the other shows on Gonna Geek if you need more of a nerd fix.

    You can find Play Comics @playcomics.bsky.social on Bluesky, @playcomicscaston Twitter and in the Play Comics Podcast Fan Groupon Facebook.

    A big thanks to Adventures in Erylia and The Last Comic Shop for the promos today.

    Intro/Outro Music by Backing Track, who can dribble the ball on their heads very well and  can prove it with minimal editing.

    https://playcomics.com/tecmo-cup-soccer-game-based-on-captain-tsubasa-with-luke-herr-dohmance-dawn/

    #JumpComics #LukeHerr #NES #Shueisha #Tecmo #TheRazors #TheTops

  8. CW: Descriptions of the novels, repeated from the weekly posts. ~3200 words | ~15k characters | Tag to mute: #BokBooks

    ●●○○○ A New Faith - TinJar (nov) 2025
    Continued climate change resulted in more and more droughts, floods, storms, famines, and most notably, heatwaves, with temperatures and humidity that were simply unsurvivable. After a bad month where tens of millions worldwide died from heatstroke, a woman in Norway had an idea.

    Kaija was a Sami leader, and the governments of Norway, Sweden, and Finland had just ceded the Sami people a homeland across the north of their countries. At the ceremony celebrating the land transfer, Kaija invited climate refugees to live in the Far North. The three governments freaked.

    After protests and hunger strikes, the city of Sequoia was founded, and began taking in select refugees. All was reasonably well at first, then after five years the city had its first murder, and a month later, a second. Since both victims were Muslim men, tensions between Muslims and Christians and Hindus were inflamed, resulting in riots in cities worldwide, as well as groups gunning down other groups. And more murders in Sequoia.

    I was hoping for a cozy murder mystery in a hopepunk setting. I frankly wasn't into the hunger strikes, hate groups, riots, massacres, lectures about the evils of plutocrats. I read books to pleasantly distract myself, not to experience real-world problems in my fiction. The novel is well-written but not what I wanted. Still, if you like painfully realistic stories where you can feel miserable, you might like it.

    ●●●●○ The Unsworth Manor Nudes {Unsworth Manor 1} - P.Z. Walker (nov) 2017
    Cedric Unsworth, the Earl of Unsworth (a Very Proper English gentleman) and his German wife Margarete (twenty-eighth in line to the throne of Germany) decide to take their two kids and visit Margarete's cousin Augusta (and her husband, Kaiser Wilhelm II). While there, they find that Wilhelm, his wife, and their six kids are practitioners of Frei Körper Kultur, free body culture: naturism.

    This leads to Cedric and Gretchen⁵, and their kids Max and Rose⁶, all being taken to a lake where Wilhelm and Augusta and their kids — as well as scores of other people — enjoyed lying on the beach unclothed, playing in the water naked, and picnicking nude. Max and Rose adapt quickly, but it was a trial of fear and embarrassment for their parents.

    But eventually they (as well as the governess the Unsworths brought on their journey) joined in nude activities. After an hour, everything seemed normal and everyone was having fun, such that Max and Rose asked the Empress if they could go again another day, and everyone did.

    When the Unsworths went home, they found that they now all strongly disliked wearing heavy Victorian clothing in warm weather, so they decided to adopt a quiet nude lifestyle. Two of their four servants ended up quickly joining in; their cook found she couldn't strip, but wasn't bothered when others did; pledging not to gossip, the manservant asked to be let go. So now when it was warm, the Unsworths only dressed when they had company, and Miss Nancy conducted lessons on the back lawn, nude like her two charges.

    The Unsworths managed to find other people who enjoyed nudity, and invited them to come to the mansion. This is the first book in a trilogy showing how Unsworth Manor came to host a nudist family, then later became a nudist resort, then how it revived after a post-WW2 slump and changed to survive the latter part of the century.

    ●●●●○ Dogs of War {Dogs of War 1} - Adrian Tchaikovsky (nov) 2017
    Rex is the leader of a Bioform combat team. He's a two-meter-tall, uplifted, gene-mod, cyber-enhanced dog outfitted with heavy shoulder-mount weapons. His teammates include Honey, an even taller biomod bear who's smarter than Rex and carries a huge gun; Dragon, who has komodo dragon roots, with chameleon camouflage and a back-mounted sniper rifle; and Bees, who's a swarm of bees with a distributed sapience (totally unexpected, and her handlers don't know about it); she acts as scout and has the ability to produce several types of venom, from knockout to neurotoxin.

    Revolution has beset Mexico, and international corporations have hired private mercenary armies to fight for them and their property rights. RedMark is one such, and it runs Bioform teams. When an undercover UN spy (posing as a corporate auditor) comes to investigate human rights violations, she's exposed, and a firefight ensues.

    Rex and team end up on the run in a country awash with private armies, local militias, upstart warlords, and remnant government forces. They hook up with an isolated village, protecting it from various dangerous groups while Honey uses local internet links to try to figure out if there's a future for their kind. Can Rex, hardwired for loyalty, find a path to freedom? Can Bees, the only member who needs corporate resources to live — her worker-unit bodies only last 100 days, and her breeding rack was left behind — even survive?

    The second half of the book shows how Bioforms gain rights and become part of society, with flashforward chapters showing ever deeper integration.

    ●●●◐○ He Dies and Makes No Sign {Dr. Constantine 3} - Molly Thynne (nov) 1933
    Family friend Dr. Constantine is called in by the Duchess of Steynes. Her thirty-five-year-old son has finally expressed interest in a woman: an unsuitable commoner in showbiz. Duchess Violet wants Constantine to pressure Duke Bertie into making Alex drop Betty.

    The matter gets more complicated when Betty's only surviving relative, her grandfather Julius Anthony, sends a letter to Alex requesting a meeting, saying the Alex–Betty match can't happen. The old man vanished the night he sent the letter. Dr. Constantine calls on his friend, Detective-Inspector Arkwright of Scotland Yard, to help find the missing man in this, their third and final case together.¹

    It's discovered that after his regular Tuesday night out with friends, Mr. Anthony planned to meet someone at the Trastevere restaurant, a building on the far side of the Steynes property that used to be the stables. Several people saw him enter the restaurant (with his violin case) and leave it (without), and then he vanished,² only for his body to be found two days later, a day after the apartment where he lived with his granddaughter was ransacked and pages from his diary torn out while Betty was at work.

    Later it's discovered that Julius was drugged, twice: something he drank knocked him out, then an injection killed him. And the body was hidden in the theatre in which he worked. Also, the Duchess says that the Trastavere restaurant has been serving a class of people lower than the owner, Civita, had promised he would. Including the wild young Lady Malmsey, who's known to use drugs…

    ●●●○○ A Fateful Reunion - Martin Brant (nov) 2017
    Paul's nasty divorce officially concluded a month ago, and since then the 28yo real-estate lawyer had mostly huddled in his new apartment. But when he got an email about his twenty-year high school reunion, he decided he had to use it as an excuse to try to start living again.

    There he met Betty, a girl from history class he'd liked, but hadn't had the nerve to ask out. Turns out she'd liked him, too, but since he'd never said anything, neither did she. Betty works in advertising, and five months ago ended a long-term relationship that had gone sour.

    Betty finds herself attracted to Paul. They end up leaving the reunion and walking on the beach, where Paul mentions that he's a nudist.⁴ In fact, he invites her to go to Black's Beach with him and his 12yo twins Tricia and Philip next weekend. Betty accepts.

    A few days after the reunion Paul invites Betty to have dinner at his place. When he offhandedly mentions that he'd usually be nude, Betty agrees that some practice nudity might be a good idea. The pair have a comfortable evening, with no sexual energy or innuendo.

    As she reveals to a nudist friend of Paul's she meets while at the beach with the kids, Betty realizes that Paul “is wounded. His heart is broken, even his masculinity, self-confidence, and pride.” She knows he feels like a failure, as she did when her ex-boyfriend dumped her for a pair of boobs. But Betty has decided that Paul is a good man, and when he finally heals, the two of them might become more than friends. He's worth waiting for. And this is their story.

    ●●●◐○ Tenth Artifact {Artifact 10} - David Collins (nov) 2025
    Another episode of light-adventure scifi. Two minor problems I have with this series. One is that in every novel two to four new aliens races are introduced. They're described the first time they show up, but then rarely are in subsequent appearances.

    Which leaves me thinking "What does a Kassaker look like again? Or a Zemi?" There is a cast list with descriptions at the end of the novel, but I'd really like two sentences of what a race looks like when I meet them: in every book, not just the series.

    The second problem is the basic conceit. In the first book, Ben accidentally acquired a piece of tech that connected him with a sapient Artificial General Intelligence stuck on an empty, stranded starship on Luna.

    In every book since, while voyaging on that ship (and the bigger and better hulls that AI Jessie gets transferred to), Ben and crew find new-old derelicts, with unknown tech like a better FTL drive⁵, an artificial gravity system, subspace scanners, or whatever.

    And many times they rescue some aliens from stasis pods — most races invent FTL, send out tests ships, and lose the first two or three of them — who end up joining the mixed crew of the Stardust III. Finding treasure after treasure just strains credulity.

    Ignoring the plot lines carried over from previous books, the major plot of this novel is Ben and crew discovering yet another derelict, from which they find enough information to track the ship back to its originating star system, where they find Lessoms (chimp-size sugar gliders) on the second planet; their tech is about 200 years past Earth's.

    On the third planet they find Jinakas (anorexic werewolves), whose tech is 100 years behind Terra's. They also encounter the Clothis people (furry, eight-limbed, grizzly-size tardigrades), who stop by from a neighboring star system. Turns out there's trouble between these peoples.

    ●●●●○ More Unsworth Manor Nudes {Unsworth Manor 2} - P.Z. Walker (nov) 2018
    We begin this second Unsworth novel with a former fighter pilot looking to buy the manor, which is deserted and run down. While Avery is looking around, the realtor tells him that the former residents all died when the Lusitania was sunk. The family we followed in the first novel — Cedric and Gretchen, their kids Max and Rose, Nancy the young governess — all wiped out offscreen. Well, that sucks.

    Anyway, Avery the American, Great War pilot, scion of an industrialist — not just anyone can afford a ten-bedroom Manor — finds Gretchen's diary, and becomes interested in the nudist lifestyle her family and staff lived. He tries being nude a few evenings after the workmen who are repairing and modernizing the manor have left for the day. He even goes nude in the back garden, and swims nude in the pool when it's completed. He enjoys it.

    Then it's back to the US to deal with some business. He invites the woman he's previously dated to visit. She does so a month after he returns, when the house is ready, but their relationship founders. Avery likes nudism; Lisa thinks no civilized person would go unclothed. Despite his nudist ways, Avery is a proper gentleman. He finds that Lisa has changed while he was away, and she now drinks too much and parties too hard, the bad sort of Prohibition-era flapper.

    Avery continues in his nudist ways, and like the Unsworths before him, he finds his staff is willing to go along with the lifestyle. Avery also befriends some titled refugees from the Continent, and finds out they're involved in something illegal. And he acquires a girlfriend who eventually becomes his wife. I thought this trilogy was about a naturist resort, but apparently that's only the case for the third volume. If that.

    ●●◐○○ Civilizations - Laurent Binet (nov) 2019
    A series of murders and flights from vengeance sent various groups of Vikings from Norway to Iceland to Greenland to Vinland. Eventually a woman named Freydis came to lead a large group with several ships, along with their horses and cattle. They worked their way down the eastern coast of North America, stopping from time to time to spend a year, making friends with some Skraelings and enemies of others.

    The Vikings learned local crops and customs, and taught the natives how to make bog iron. But after some time, the Skraelings inevitably became sick with smallpox and other European diseases, and the Vikings moved on, usually leaving some horses and cattle behind. Some of Freydis's group settled in Cuba, while she and the other half continued on to Mayan territory, and eventually down to Peru.

    Desired result one: the natives of North and South America are exposed to European diseases early, and have a chance to recover before Columbus shows up some 500 years later. They also know how to work iron, and have horses and cattle. Columbus shows up on schedule. The natives get more horses and cattle, more tools and knowledge, plus guns (though they don't learn how to make gunpowder). Things end badly for the Genoan. Desired result two: one young woman learns Castillian. This sets up the Chronicles of Atahualpa.

    When the Sapa Inca died, his sons Huacar and Atalhuapa fought for the throne of the Incan Empire. The latter ends up being forced ever northward with his retreating army. Eventually the young prince ends up on Cuba, where he meets the middle-aged Higuénamota, the princess who knows Castillian. He's also shown the hulks of two of Columbus's boats. Atahualpa has his people fix those ships, and build a larger third ship, and sets forth across the sea.

    Higuénamota comes along, and the three ships of non-sailors who grew up in the Andean mountains successfully arrive in Lisbon, sailing in on a tsunami, after a great earthquake has leveled the town. (In our timeline, this happened in 1755, but Binet moves it to the early 1500s, because if it helps your plot, why not?) Events happen, and Atahualpa and his people end up walking to Spain.

    More buckets of authorial fiat then water the plot, as Atahualpa ends up taking over Spain, setting up an alternative to taxation, providing for the poor, abolishing the Inquisition, instituting freedom of religion, and becoming a power in Europe, culminating in being crowned the Holy Roman Emperor. A restrained #AlternateHistory tale of "one small change" this is not.

    He also starts trans-Atlantic trade with his brother (who sends a fleet that magically arrives, in the nick of time, at the city where Atahualpa and his forces were being besieged, which wasn't the city he was in when Higuénamota was sent to Huacar), and more. And Pedro Pizarro, Lorenzo de Medici, Michelangelo, Martin Luther, and loads of other famous people make appearances.

    As usual, non-SF writers don't write SF according to the conventions, which can annoy people who like those conventions, but if one makes allowance after allowance, and doesn't choke on the "you're kidding me" moments, the book isn't terrible.⁰ At least the first three-quarters or so. I admit my patience plummeted when the Aztecs showed up in Europe.

    ●●●●○ The Hemingway Hoax - Joe Haldeman (nov)² 1996
    Our story begins with a conman, Sylvester Castlemaine (Call me Castle) and a literature professor, John Baird, who specialized in Ernest Hemingway. A casual conversation reveals that early in Hemingway's career he'd lost a suitcase of manuscripts, encompassing half of a novel he'd written, and ten or twenty short stories.

    Castle more-than-halfway interested Baird in attempting to forge that half-novel, which he could do, since he had an eidetic memory and likely knew more than anyone in the world about Hemingway and his works. Baird had also published some short stories earlier in his career, so he could write, as well. And since payments from John's trust fund would soon stop, leaving him in a financial hole, why not try?

    For reasons beyond the comprehension of mere humans, this drew the notice of forces who monitored the timelines of the multiverse. Rather than an Element who looked like a blond Russian spy being assigned to the case, à la Sapphire and Steel, the agent assigned to Baird looked like Hemingway. It switched between avatars of the writer at various ages. After a conversation on a train, that agent killed Baird for threatening to upset events in the near future.

    For reasons beyond the comprehension of extra-dimensional beings, Baird's death did not take. He woke up in his own body — with different wounds from Vietnam, and with a second set of memories that matched his new timeline³ — and life carried on. And when Baird continued on his forgery quest, not-Ernest showed up and killed him again, in a different way, to see if it stuck. It did not, and things began to get rather more odd.

    ●●◐○○ The Case of the Quaker Quarry {Miles Grant 21} - Jack Dearborn (nov) 2022
    A wealthy clothier hires Miles to find his missing college-age daughter. An interview with her roommate reveals that Annalise took some outfits with her, and her teddy bear, so she wasn't kidnapped. Miles investigates, and finds the young woman sold the car her parents gave her, using the money to buy a ticket to Los Angeles.

    Miles finds out that Annalise, who was into theater, had talked about meeting her agent, whom Miles manages to track down. It's revealed that the man is more than just an agent, that Annalise is a prisoner, and that the man had plans for her.

    The mystery part of the novel is workaday, if a bit sleazy. I know that the Miles Grant series ends three books from now, after a case that made Miles fully retire because it was too much. I wonder if we're descending toward that.

    The flirty nudity part isn't great, because Miles travelled to Los Angeles alone, leaving Shirley back in Seattle with her mother. Miles does encounter a nudist couple he met before, upon a nudist cruise, but they just come across as sad, and the fact that the man had the questionable contacts needed to find the skeevy agent didn't help.

    [0] Footnotes have been removed, so some parts may lack further explanation. If you absolutely must see the footnotes, they were in the weekly posts, along with descriptions of the shorter works.

  9. CW: #Reading in Week Seventeen of 2026 | April 20–26 | ~2600 words | ~15k characters | Tag to mute: #BokBooks

    ●●●◐○ The Fish Tank Crab - Genna Gardini (ss) 2021
    Two arguing women pass a writer in a park, and he hears one tell the other with some emotion, “Listen, you just pick up the phone and tell him, ‘Lewis. Your fish tank crab has escaped!’” The writer imagines a whole darkly comic scenario from this:

    Jess, the Kinsey-4 who's feeling suffocated in her new relationship. Keisha, the judgmental lesbian who feels Jess isn't trying hard enough. Lewis, who has a crush on Jess and doesn't realize she's in a relationship, who asks her to watch his fish tanks for him while he's away for a week, secretly hoping she'll be impressed.

    Ramon, the small, red crab who grabs the net Jess is cleaning his tank with, before leaping at her face, then falling to the floor scuttling for the apartment door. Maureen, the octopus whose tank gets knocked over when Keisha is startled by Jess's scream, and who realized that tasty Ramon was no longer locked away in another tank…

    So, this last story from the Disruptions collection of short African fiction — Hurrah! — isn't depressing. It's maybe not even a real story, since a character just idly imagined it all. And it might not be African. I mean, the characters discuss an event in East Croyden, and I don't think London has moved. We do learn Keisha is originally from Johannesburg, but is that enough?

    I also wonder about a couple lines like this, where Keisha is remembering her and Jess's second date: “Jess was shy, Keisha had thought, and it was aDɔrəble.” There's another line with a word in IPA. Don't know why.

    ●●●●○ More Unsworth Manor Nudes {Unsworth Manor 2} - P.Z. Walker (nov) 2018
    We begin this second Unsworth novel with a former fighter pilot looking to buy the manor, which is deserted and run down. While Avery is looking around, the realtor tells him that the former residents all died when the Lusitania was sunk. The family we followed in the first novel — Cedric and Gretchen, their kids Max and Rose, Nancy the young governess — all wiped out offscreen. Well, that sucks.

    Anyway, Avery the American, Great War pilot, scion of an industrialist — not just anyone can afford a ten-bedroom Manor — finds Gretchen's diary, and becomes interested in the nudist lifestyle her family and staff lived. He tries being nude a few evenings after the workmen who are repairing and modernizing the manor have left for the day. He even goes nude in the back garden, and swims nude in the pool when it's completed. He enjoys it.

    Then it's back to the US to deal with some business. He invites the woman he's previously dated to visit. She does so a month after he returns, when the house is ready, but their relationship founders. Avery likes nudism; Lisa thinks no civilized person would go unclothed. Despite his nudist ways, Avery is a proper gentleman. He finds that Lisa has changed while he was away, and she now drinks too much and parties too hard, the bad sort of Prohibition-era flapper.

    Avery continues in his nudist ways, and like the Unsworths before him, he finds his staff is willing to go along with the lifestyle. Avery also befriends some titled refugees from the Continent, and finds out they're involved in something illegal. And he acquires a girlfriend who eventually becomes his wife. I thought this trilogy was about a naturist resort, but apparently that's only the case for the third volume. If that.

    ●●○○○ The Last Ride of German Freddie - Walter Jon Williams (nvt) 2002
    In this #AltHist tale, Friedrich Nietzsche has gone to the Old West. He caught diphtheria and cholera in the Franco-Prussian war, and his health is fragile. Add in that his father died mad at age 35, and Freddie thinks the same will happen to him, and he's prepared to take wild risks. Freddie has become a Cowboy, capital C¹ — a rustler. His group is currently in Tombstone, Arizona, trying to get their man elected sheriff (rather than Wyatt Earp), since it's convenient for a criminal gang to have a sheriff in its pocket.

    Freddie gets involved with the current sheriff's girlfriend, and also is more than a bystander to the famous street fight in Tombstone. Despite betrayals and scheming, this talky story seems overlong.

    ●●○○○ Hunt the Hunter - Kris Neville (ss) 1951
    Ri and Mia are a pair of rich big-game hunters, who discovered a world with farn beasts, which makes for a good hunting challenge. They tried to keep this a secret when they went back to civilization, but their pilot talked, and a richer and nastier big-game hunter — Extrone, the dictator of human space — has kidnapped the pair and made them his guides. There's little doubt he'll kill them if he doesn't have a successful hunt; he may do so even if he does.

    The situation is made worse by the fact that farn beasts are known to be spread across alien worlds, and the fact that they're found on this planet means the never-named aliens put them there. The aliens are known to react violently to intrusions upon their space.

    ●●◐○○ Civilizations - Laurent Binet (nov) 2019
    A series of murders and flights from vengeance sent various groups of Vikings from Norway to Iceland to Greenland to Vinland. Eventually a woman named Freydis came to lead a large group with several ships, along with their horses and cattle. They worked their way down the eastern coast of North America, stopping from time to time to spend a year, making friends with some Skraelings and enemies of others.

    The Vikings learned local crops and customs, and taught the natives how to make bog iron. But after some time, the Skraelings inevitably became sick with smallpox and other European diseases, and the Vikings moved on, usually leaving some horses and cattle behind. Some of Freydis's group settled in Cuba, while she and the other half continued on to Mayan territory, and eventually down to Peru.

    Desired result one: the natives of North and South America are exposed to European diseases early, and have a chance to recover before Columbus shows up some 500 years later. They also know how to work iron, and have horses and cattle. Columbus shows up on schedule. The natives get more horses and cattle, more tools and knowledge, plus guns (though they don't learn how to make gunpowder). Things end badly for the Genoan. Desired result two: one young woman learns Castillian. This sets up the Chronicles of Atahualpa.

    When the Sapa Inca died, his sons Huacar and Atalhuapa fought for the throne of the Incan Empire. The latter ends up being forced ever northward with his retreating army. Eventually the young prince ends up on Cuba, where he meets the middle-aged Higuénamota, the princess who knows Castillian. He's also shown the hulks of two of Columbus's boats. Atahualpa has his people fix those ships, and build a larger third ship, and sets forth across the sea.

    Higuénamota comes along, and the three ships of non-sailors who grew up in the Andean mountains successfully arrive in Lisbon, sailing in on a tsunami, after a great earthquake has leveled the town. (In our timeline, this happened in 1755, but Binet moves it to the early 1500s, because if it helps your plot, why not?) Events happen, and Atahualpa and his people end up walking to Spain.

    More buckets of authorial fiat then water the plot, as Atahualpa ends up taking over Spain, setting up an alternative to taxation, providing for the poor, abolishing the Inquisition, instituting freedom of religion, and becoming a power in Europe, culminating in being crowned the Holy Roman Emperor. A restrained #AlternateHistory tale of "one small change" this is not.

    He also starts trans-Atlantic trade with his brother (who sends a fleet that magically arrives, in the nick of time, at the city where Atahualpa and his forces were being besieged, which wasn't the city he was in when Higuénamota was sent to Huacar), and more. And Pedro Pizarro, Lorenzo de Medici, Michelangelo, Martin Luther, and loads of other famous people make appearances.

    As usual, non-SF writers don't write SF according to the conventions, which can annoy people who like those conventions, but if one makes allowance after allowance, and doesn't choke on the "you're kidding me" moments, the book isn't terrible.⁰ At least the first three-quarters or so. I admit my patience plummeted when the Aztecs showed up in Europe.

    ●●●○○ Consumership - Margaret St. Clair (ss) 1956
    Group Mother was distressed by Marian, the latest child to progress to her Group. Unlike Tommy, who knew all the latest slogans, and always preferred new things, Marian wanted to eat her usual food, not something different every day, depending on what companies were pushing that week. Marian even wanted to keep her doll, not exchange it for something new each week. It was a trial.

    ●●●●○ The Hemingway Hoax - Joe Haldeman (nov)² 1996
    Our story begins with a conman, Sylvester Castlemaine (Call me Castle) and a literature professor, John Baird, who specialized in Ernest Hemingway. A casual conversation reveals that early in Hemingway's career he'd lost a suitcase of manuscripts, encompassing half of a novel he'd written, and ten or twenty short stories.

    Castle more-than-halfway interested Baird in attempting to forge that half-novel, which he could do, since he had an eidetic memory and likely knew more than anyone in the world about Hemingway and his works. Baird had also published some short stories earlier in his career, so he could write, as well. And since payments from John's trust fund would soon stop, leaving him in a financial hole, why not try?

    For reasons beyond the comprehension of mere humans, this drew the notice of forces who monitored the timelines of the multiverse. Rather than an Element who looked like a blond Russian spy being assigned to the case, à la Sapphire and Steel, the agent assigned to Baird looked like Hemingway. It switched between avatars of the writer at various ages. After a conversation on a train, that agent killed Baird for threatening to upset events in the near future.

    For reasons beyond the comprehension of extra-dimensional beings, Baird's death did not take. He woke up in his own body — with different wounds from Vietnam, and with a second set of memories that matched his new timeline³ — and life carried on. And when Baird continued on his forgery quest, not-Ernest showed up and killed him again, in a different way, to see if it stuck. It did not, and things began to get rather more odd.

    ●●○○○ Cormorant Cove - Mel Cowan (ss) 2025
    The second day of Elara's vacation was a masterpiece of organized leisure. A map, a GPS watch, and a hiking app would assure that she, with her carefully stocked backpack and professional hiking outfit assured she'd reach Beacon's Point by her planned lunch break.

    Except three hours in, she got a curt call from her boss demanding to know where a file was. That meant Elara⁴ had to email her assistant to handle it, which led to her missing a turn off on the path, so she ended up at Cormorant Cove, a secluded nudist beach.

    The usual follows. She's initially shocked, she watches a while from behind the boulder the wrong path dumped her out at, she comes to see the naked humans as just people doing people things, and she ends up trying nudity for herself and enjoying it.

    ●●●◐○ The Goggles of Dr. Dragonet - Fritz Leiber (ss) 1961
    In a story that seems more Radium Age than Golden Age, a professor makes some goggles that block electro-magnetic radiation, but allow one to see gravito-electric and magneto-gravitic spectra. The former makes anything living (or derived from living sources, like leather or wood) invisible, but still shows nonliving things. The latter allows one to see minds. Not thoughts, just personality traits and emotions.

    For instance, the minds of newspaperman Marty and sculptor Alice were both green with flashes of blue — they're extroverts with dashes of introversion — while writer Arthur was the reverse. Dr. Dragonet then passed out white canes, and his chauffeur Karl drove the foursome from the house in the Hollywood Hills into the city, where they observed people for hours.

    At the end of the afternoon, the quartet arrived back at the doctor's estate. After hours wearing the goggles, they'd become sensitive, and Dragonet instructed them to look up, where they saw the Milky Way span the sky, shining in mindlight: the galaxy was populated. He also pointed them at a bright violet light in the sky, which Marty identified by its position as Mars. That proved to have some repercussions.

    ●●●○○ The Gardener - Margaret St. Clair (ss) 1949
    There are fifty Butandra trees in the sacred grove a few dozen kilometers from the planetary capital of Cassid. There had always been fifty trees in the small, no more, no less, for all of recorded Cassidan history. You'd think that Hobbs, acting chief of the Bureau of Extra-Systemic Plant Conservation would respect that, but no. On the last day of his posting to Cassid, he'd gone to the grove and cut down a sapling, planning to make a walking stick of the fine-grained white wood.

    The Gardener — a figure of myth on Cassid — traced the missing sapling to a hotel, where the meter-tall, stocky figure with skin like rough, brown bark was seen by a green-skinned maid. But Hobbs had already boarded a spaceship and left the planet. The Gardener looked upward, and began to rise ever faster into the sky. The next day, Hobbs was just starting to whittle the Butandra sapling into a walking stick, when he looked out the porthole in his cabin, and saw a face looking back at him. The story proceeds from there.

    ━━━━━━━━━━
    Week Seventeen's numbers added to year-to-date totals:
    132+06 ss | 08+1 nvt | 07+0 nva | 34+3 nov |
    #books #Bookstodon #ScienceFiction
    ━━━━━━━━━━

    [0] Though its cover is the most childish of anything I've read in years.

    [1] “[Brocius] and his crowd defiantly called themselves Cowboys. It was a name synonymous with ‘rustler,’ and hardly respectable — legitimate ranchers called themselves stockmen.”

    [2] This is barely a novel, by the screen counts I'm using — short→150, novelette→300, novella→450 — but 465 screens is over 450.

    [3] Not-Ernest is killing John twice — a body left behind in one timeline, a mind overwritten in another — and he's still not happy. Some entities just can't be satisfied.

    [4] Kate's spellcheck objects to ‘Elara’ but has no problem with ‘Elara's’? ‹sigh› Oh, and another word I wish I could remove. I occasionally mention ‘chauffeur’, a driver. I never mean to mention ‘chauffer’, a small stove (think ‘chafing dish’). Kate is the most adequate text editor I've tried in Linux, but it lacks so many abilities I was used to under Windows.

  10. Sentinel Comics: eight decades of Silver Age history, a sprawling multiverse and exactly zero actual comics. Handelabra Games has bought it from Flat River Group along with the Greater Than Games brand, rescuing Sentinels of the Multiverse from a year in hibernation. #SOTM #SentinelsOfTheMultiverse #GreaterThanGames #HandelabraGames tabletopsentinel.com/news/supe

  11. It's #webcomicday! Check out my #Undertale AU fancomic, Negatedtale! It's got skeletons, time loops, multiverse theory, the power of friendship, and the determination to keep going, no matter how many times you fall.

    It's returning to regular updates later this month, so now's the perfect time to catch up on the backlog!

    🔗 : negatedtale.thecomicseries.com

    #undertaleAU #MastoArt #CreativeToots

  12. #ttrpg #indiettrpg Tonight - Session 6 in the Chronicle of the Glyphskimmers. We finish downtime for Spring Season in #SpeedRune and sojourn into our first multiverse jump to the ‘verse of #yazebas #yazebasbedandbreakfast #YazebasBnB

  13. Je veux juste un peu de vacances 😭
    I just want some vacations 😭

    ★ NEW DBMultiverse PAGE
    dbm.pw/last

    #DBMultiverse #fanmanga #dragonball #doujinshi #dbz #thorn #gast #bulma #krillin #gohan

  14. Rude combat
    Rough fight

    ★ NEW DBMultiverse PAGE
    dbm.pw/last

    #dragonball #dbz #bojack

  15. Rude combat
    Rough fight

    ★ NEW DBMultiverse PAGE
    dbm.pw/last

    #dragonball #dbz #bojack

  16. En avant !
    Forward !

    ★ NEW DBMultiverse PAGE
    dbm.pw/last

    #dragonball #dbz #bojack

  17. Vous êtes plus faibles que nous
    You're weaker than us

    ★ NEW DBMultiverse PAGE
    dbm.pw/last

    #dragonball #dbz #bojack