lsanderson: (Default)
lsanderson ([personal profile] lsanderson) wrote2026-05-12 10:57 am

2026.05.12

Hennepin County property tax is due May 15th.

US inflation jumped to 3.8% in April as war with Iran continues to drive up prices
Prices rose 3.8% over the last year, according to Bureau of Labor Statistics data, highest jump since 2023
Gaya Gupta
https://www.theguardian.com/business/2026/may/12/us-inflation-april-iran-war Read more... )
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james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2026-05-12 09:38 am
Entry tags:

Bones of the Earth by Michael Swanwick



Human paleontologists have the professional opportunity of a lifetime... but there's a catch.

Bones of the Earth by Michael Swanwick
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lydamorehouse ([personal profile] lydamorehouse) wrote2026-05-11 06:36 pm

Lilac Hanami

 art shot of lilac
Image: artsy shot of lilac buds (photo credit: Naomi Kritzer)

A few years ago, [personal profile] naomikritzer and I were talking about cherry blossom viewing (Hanami) in Japan. We were lamenting that we don't really do anything like that nation-wide in the US, even though there are plenty of places, like Washington, DC, which are intentionally planted with a lot of cherry trees. We decided that the only thing that comes close here in the Midwest is leaf peeping. People will follow maps of when peak leaf color is hitting various parts of the states and make destination trips to see the fall colors. 

However, we wanted to do something in spring and decided that lilacs are kind of more like the Midwestern cherry tree. They're planted everywhere, even along the highways, and they come in lots of varieties. So, we've decided to make Lilac Hanami an annual thing. This is our second year. 

Besties at a picnic
Two dorks out enjoying the spring blossoms. (Photo credi: Naomi Kritzer)

Last year, we bought sushi at a grocery store and wandered up Summit Avenue to the lilac tunnels. Saint Paul, in its infinite wisdom, decided to chop those hundred year old lilacs down to the ground. I'd actually worried that they'd killed them. However, they do seem to be recovering, but they do not have the energy to produce flowers this year. So, we had to try a new place. Naomi found a park literally called Lilac Park. (https://restorelilacway.com/parks/renewed-lilac-park-formerly-roadside-park-st-louis-park-mn/about/). The drive over there was gorgeous. We went past the Lake of the Isles and all through some really fancy parts of Minneapolis. 

The park itself is quite small, but the information about it is fascinating. It was established in 1939 and was once part of "Lilac Way" whixh was a bunch of intentional lilac plantings along Highway 100. It also happens to be right across fro the Nordic Wear factory.  

We decided this year to home-make some of our treats. Naomi made both egg sandos and fruit sandos

fruit sandos
Image: fruit sandos

My onigiri were fun to make, but not as photogenic:

Onigiri
Image: home-made rice balls (in the background is visible egg sandos, Pocky. and a Korean fruit drink.)

It was a lovely way to spend an afternoon. There was a whole gaggle of fairly tame geese who were happy to eat our leftovers and, as we were leaving a giant tom turkey and hen showed up to strut around. We hung out for an hour or so just chatting about books (the new Murderbot being out), life, and such. 

white lilac
Image: white lilac
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2026-05-11 02:17 pm
Entry tags:

Bundle of Holding: Atomic Robo (from 2021) & Atomic Robo New Era



Nine complete .PDF graphic albums of the Atomic Robo comic series from Tesladyne LLC, plus the 2014 Atomic Robo RPG tabletop roleplaying game from Evil Hat Productions.

Bundle of Holding: Atomic Robo (from 2021)




Eight more albums of Robo's continuing adventures for an unbeatable bargain price.

Bundle of Holding: Atomic Robo New Era
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lsanderson ([personal profile] lsanderson) wrote2026-05-11 11:40 am

2026.05.11

Less than half of kindergartners in the north-central Minnesota city of Menahga are vaccinated for measles, reports the Minnesota Star Tribune. Statewide the measles vaccination rate for kindergartners is 86%, compared to 92% nationally. In Menahga it’s 49%. Via MinnPost
https://www.startribune.com/in-one-small-minnesota-city-less-than-half-of-kindergartners-are-vaccinated-for-measles/601601089

No going topless at the beach in Blaine, reports Bring Me The News. Despite a Minnesota Supreme Court ruling declaring breasts don’t constitute indecent exposure, the Blaine City Council decided to pass an ordinance disagreeing with that and updating its own nudity law. Via MinnPost
https://bringmethenews.com/minnesota-lifestyle/blaine-updates-nudity-law-following-minnesota-supreme-court-decision Read more... )
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james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2026-05-11 10:11 am
Entry tags:

Two Plot-Friendly Approaches to Generation Ships



When it comes to governing a generation ship, do you prefer the Watsonian or Doylist strategy?

Two Plot-Friendly Approaches to Generation Ships
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james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2026-05-10 10:09 pm

My weekend

Just as I was closing my house manager shift last night, an important door lost an integral part. So, I was late getting home.

Today, get in, door not fixed. I get to make sure it is used judiciously.

During the early part of the evening shift, someone on campus, concerned that there was someone on campus pretending to be a cop, decided that the best course of action was to dress entirely in black, including mask, then approach random people to warn them there was a fake cop on campus. This did not instill calm but the campus cops dealt with it.

As I was waiting to go home, I thought I could smell skunk. Asked my HM about it. It seems someone managed to anger the local skunk enough to get sprayed. Not me!
kaffy_r: (pink blossoms and blue sky)
kaffy_r ([personal profile] kaffy_r) wrote2026-05-10 08:29 pm

Dept. of Beloved

This is My Mother

I lost her in 2013, and I still miss her. 

This is what I wrote about her and delivered at her funeral.

And this is how beautiful she is. 

 


 
lsanderson: (Default)
lsanderson ([personal profile] lsanderson) wrote2026-05-10 09:50 am

2026.05.10

Pardoned January 6 rioter sentenced to seven years for Virginia burglary
Zachary Alam spent four years in jail for his role in the Capitol attack before Trump pardoned him in 2025
Ramon Antonio Vargas
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/may/10/pardoned-january-6-rioter-sentenced-virginia-burglary

Health advocates warn government’s claims of baby formula safety contradict data
Independent scientists who reviewed the results said most samples were contaminated with Pfas or phthalates
Tom Perkins
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/may/10/fda-baby-formula-safety-claims-contradict-data Read more... )
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james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2026-05-10 08:56 am

The Death of Grass by John Christopher



A crop blight offers the British a chance to apply to the UK the same pragmatic measures they used during famines in Ireland and Bengal.

The Death of Grass by John Christopher
kaffy_r: Felix and his abs at '24 Chicago Lolla (Felix w/abs at Lolla)
kaffy_r ([personal profile] kaffy_r) wrote2026-05-09 01:15 pm

Dept. of Catching Up

Simply Sisyphean

Read more... )
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lsanderson ([personal profile] lsanderson) wrote2026-05-09 01:29 pm

2026.05.09

Twin Cities residents report gas stolen from vehicles
Estelle Timar-Wilcox
https://www.mprnews.org/story/2026/05/09/twin-cities-residents-report-gas-stolen-from-vehicles

Experts wonder 'Where is the CDC?' as a hantavirus outbreak unfolds on a cruise ship
The Associated Press
https://www.mprnews.org/story/2026/05/09/experts-question-cdc-response-as-hantavirus-spreads-on-cruise-ship Read more... )
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james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2026-05-09 09:13 am
Entry tags:

Books Received, May 2 — May 8



Six works new to me. Three are SF, two fantasy and Fiyah is a mix. At least two of the novels are series. Interesting that SF is such a large fraction. Is SF making a comeback?

Books Received, May 2 — May 8


Poll #34579 Books Received, May 2 — May 8
Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 43


Which of these look interesting?

View Answers

If We Cannot Go at the Speed of Light by Kim Cho-yeop (April 2026)
24 (55.8%)

The Republic of Memory by Mahmud el Sayed (May 2026)
22 (51.2%)

Mortal Things by Marie Lu (October 2026)
4 (9.3%)

Maker of Gods by Maria Z. Medina (October 2026)
1 (2.3%)

Forged in FIYAH: Celebrating Ten Years of Black Speculative Fiction edited by Davaun Sanders (September 2026)
18 (41.9%)

This Crimson Ruin by Rebecca Thorne (December 2026)
5 (11.6%)

Some other option (see comments)
2 (4.7%)

Cats!
33 (76.7%)

pegkerr: (The beauty of it smote his heart)
pegkerr ([personal profile] pegkerr) wrote2026-05-08 01:20 pm

2026 52 Card Project: Week 18: May Day

May Day this year was spectacular and beautiful and badly needed.

The weather was absolutely perfect: a deep blue sky with only a very occasional wisp of cloud, with a slight breeze and pleasant temperature.

One of the things that needs to be gauged carefully each year is when to show up. Show up too late, and it is impossible to find space on the curb to watch the parade. Show up too early, and it can be a very long time to wait (with no convenient porta-potties nearby). This year, I judged it perfectly. The parade started at 12:00 noon, but I had picked my spot and was seated in the shade by 10:30 a.m. Some years, I have been content with a blanket on the curb, but this year, given the problem I've been having with my hips, I decided to bring a foldable camp chair, an excellent decision, and I was entirely comfortable.

I brought a mini picnic for myself and my reading tablet, and spent part of my time reading and part of it watching the crowd. Bicycles and unicycles zipped back and forth, and entrepreneurial vendors trundled wheeled carts past the gathering crowd, selling food and drinks, pinwheels, and balloons. Eventually, people in costumes started drifting by: an elderly couple dressed in silk robes, carrying walking staffs hung with ribbons and crystals, a tuba player striding quickly on his way to join a band at the parade starting place, dressed in a colorful costume with sunblowers stitched to his trousers. I saw a man in a gorgeously sequinned dress skate by on rollerblades.

Eventually, both sides of the street swelled with a huge, excited crowd, and the parade began, an extraordinary explosion of color. All the floats were human-powered, and all the parade participants were brimming with joy, calling out to the onlookers, "Happy May Day!" Women dressed in fluttering chiffon, silks, feather boas, and ribbons carried poles mounted with papier-mache bees, teasing the children in the crowd, lowering the poles so that the bees 'gathered nectar" from the flowers they wore in their hair. Bicycles tricked out with cardboard painted as colorful alebrijes, fire horses, dragons, and beetles streamed by. A float representing a snow plow named "Abolish Ice" pushed cardboard federal ICE cars ahead of it with its shovel. A huge loon towered over the crowd, flapping its wings. Aztec dancers danced down the street (some of them did the entire parade barefoot), shaking jingle belts and tamborines, beating drums, and smudging the crowd with clouds of burning sage. Several bands marched by in motley costumes, and the Southside Battle Train revved up the crowd, led by a Tyrannosaurus rex that cheerfully snapped its jaws at the crowd. A newly married couple marched by, accompanied by cheering friends and family, carrying a banner introducing them to the onlookers. Hari Krishna adherents, chanting, a huge trans flag carried by people of all ages, people dressed up as locusts and whistles and lotus flowers, members of a boxing gym, representatives of the postal union, protesting against ICE, and more.

When the parade had passed by, the crowd gathered their chairs and blankets and streamed into Powderhorn Park. After the usual couple of hours' delay, the Ceremony was held at the edge of Blanket Hill, culminating in the rowing of the Sun across the lake to raise the Tree of Life on the shore.

A small group of friends gathered in the spot where we have assembled for years. To my delight, Fiona, Alona, and M were there. M grinned and chortled and flirted with everyone and did her dogged best to eat every speck of dirt around herself as far as her little arms could reach, a wreath of flowers in her hair.

A perfect May Day and a perfect day.

Background: a perfectly blue sky. Upper Right: A woman in a hat and sunglasses (Peg) smiles at the camera. A sign just below her face reads "L♥ve wins." The End. Upper left: an Aztec dancer in full regalia. Center: A loon rampant spreads its wings. In front and slightly to the left of the loon: the May Day Sun. Lower portion: The May Day Tree of Life spreads its arms wide, upheld by a crowd dressed in red.

May Day

18 May Day

Click on the links to see the 2026, 2025, 2024, 2023, 2022 and 2021 52 Card Project galleries.
lsanderson: (Default)
lsanderson ([personal profile] lsanderson) wrote2026-05-08 11:56 am

2026.05.08

Mississippi River groups tell feds to act on nitrate contamination
Nrate pollution is especially acute in rural areas and has been linked to disease. More than 80 groups nationwide say immediate action is needed.
By Madeline Heim, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
https://www.minnpost.com/environment/2026/05/mississippi-river-groups-tell-feds-to-act-on-nitrate-contamination/

Promising ideas emerge for both Minneapolis and St. Paul downtowns
Officials are pushing a park along the Mississippi River in downtown St. Paul, while Minneapolis mulls an indoor playground.
by Bill Lindeke
https://www.minnpost.com/cityscape/2026/05/promising-ideas-emerge-for-both-minneapolis-and-st-paul-downtowns/ Read more... )
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james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2026-05-08 08:58 am

Behind Five Willows by June Hur



Shin Haewon's family falls far short of haughty aristocrat Yu Seojun's very reasonable standards, as he is gracious enough to explain to Haewon. How cruel that fate compels extended proximity between Haewon and Seojun.

Behind Five Willows by June Hur
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lsanderson ([personal profile] lsanderson) wrote2026-05-07 07:10 pm

2026.05.07

Health deserts, hospital windfalls, and a phalanx of pharma lobbyists: Inside the most controversial healthcare program you never heard of
The Minnesota Legislature is reckoning with 340B, a labyrinthine program that gives prescription drug discounts to nonprofit hospitals, for better or worse.
by Matthew Blake
https://www.minnpost.com/state-government/2026/05/inside-340b-controversial-drug-discount-program/

Hmong photo exhibit at Walker Art Center reframes disability and identity
The “Many Ways of Being” show features eight stories of Hmong people with disabilities.
by Shubhanjana Das
https://sahanjournal.com/arts-culture/hmong-disability-exhibit-minneapolis-walker-art-center/ Read more... )
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james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2026-05-07 05:38 pm

What fascinating timing

Seen in email:



(QWOP)



Free League Announces Legends of Stormbringer RPG Based On Dragonbane Mechanics

Elric returns to the tabletop in an officially licensed RPG powered by the award-winning Dragonbane system
Hello!

Today, we are thrilled to announce Legends of Stormbringer, a new officially licensed tabletop roleplaying game based on the iconic fantasy works of Michael Moorcock, planned for release in 2027.

Legends of Stormbringer will carry you into the Young Kingdoms – a world of dying empires, warring gods, and doomed heroes – and bring Moorcock’s richly imagined setting to the tabletop using rules mechanics based on our award-winning Dragonbane RPG. The game will feature the same accessible, dynamic, and deadly approach that has made Dragonbane one of our most celebrated titles.

Returning to the Young Kingdoms as setting writer is Richard Watts, whose work on previous Stormbringer RPGs helped define how generations of roleplayers have experienced Moorcock’s world.

“This has been in the works for several months and we’re thrilled to finally share the news,” said Tomas Härenstam, CEO of Free League Publishing. “We are honored to bring Elric and the Young Kingdoms to the tabletop once more.”

Further details – including crowdfunding plans and additional creative team announcements – will be revealed at a later date.


Seen online:

Goodman Games secures official Elric of Melniboné license for 2027 release

james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2026-05-07 09:10 am

Another seed I will put down to get it out of my head

Humans discover ancient and extremely enigmatic alien relics around the Solar System. On inventing plot-enabling As Fast As Light starships (PEAFAL), humans determine pretty much any system old enough has relics from the Whoever They Were (WTW). The WTW showeed up in the early Proterozoic, did their thing for 300 million years--although not on Earth, as far as anyoe can tell--and then vanished seemingly overnight for reasons that at as yet unclear.

They seem to have been interested in smaller terrestrial worlds, many of which now have life forms whose last common ancestor was six billion years ago. So probably they were xenoforming worlds? But apparently only barren worlds, for some reason. Also, if they used the PEAFAL drive, there's absolutely no evidence of it.

Age is one reason why the WTW are very enigmatic. 2.5 billion years of radiation and micrometeorites has turned all their artificial stuff into scrap. Sometimes, into subtle chemical traces in regolith. Nobody has ever reverse-engineered WTW relics into something novel to us. In fact, nobody is sure what the WTW even looked like (there are a couple of candidate remains of things that might have had big brain analogues). So, they make a nice Rorschach test for scientists to project their issues onto.

Added later:

Opinions on the WTW vary from "they were nigh-gods" to "they weren't actually intelligent at all" to "they are a Satanic plot."

PEAFAL ships interact with the interstellar medium (ISM) in ways that piss off astronomers specializing in the ISM. PEAFAL wakes could be detected at galactic distance but no non-human wakes are visible. The deal with the ISM means the longer the journey, the more likely it terminates in an energetic event somewhere in deep space. Effectively, this means there's a 1% chance per light year traversed of an unplanned terminal energetic event, which can be reduced somewhat by sending ships in pairs: one (presumably automated) trail blazer and one survivor. This is just annoying for robot probes but is an inhibiting factor for crewed starship recruitment.

PEAFAL ships are sufficiently expensive nobody builds huge ones. As well, nobody knows how to make closed cycle life support systems (LSS): the longest anyone has gone before an isolated ISS fell over and died is 20 years. Efforts to establish colonies on other planets have been very educational.