marycatelli: (Golden Hair)
marycatelli ([personal profile] marycatelli) wrote in [community profile] books2025-09-14 10:12 pm

The Mating Season

The Mating Season by P.G. Wodehouse

A Jeeves book. One with continuing history, so spoilers for earlier books ahead.

Read more... )
white_aster: (bullshit sinfest)
Aster ([personal profile] white_aster) wrote2025-09-12 01:35 pm

(no subject)

At NIH, Political Appointees Get More Say in Grant Decisions
In a shift from longstanding precedent, political priorities may now override peer review in research funding decisions.

:head in hands:  This is the exact opposite of the way that current peer review works.  Yes, science agencies have always had priorities and shifted funding toward initiatives that might be priorities of the current administration, but not at this nitty gritty grant level.  Before, you might fund, say, the BRAIN initiative because it's something the president backs.  But you would then let the peer review process (ie, actual brain experts) figure out who should get the funding.  Now?  Now a political appointee could decide they don't like a project for apparently literally any reason, and even though it's actual, non-sarcastic "gold-standard science", it could be passed over.  

This opens up all kinds of corruption influences.  Who is going to be watching the watchers?  What criteria are appointees allowed to use to thumbs-down these grants...or can they do it for any reason at all?  Are they just looking for a keyword?  Are they looking at the PI's internet history?  The Institution, to see who the administration is fighting with now?  Are they relying on their unscientific opinion of what "sounds important"?  Are they open to bumping up funding for PIs or institutions that are friendly to them or their higher-ups. regardless of the science involved?

And the anecdotes at the end from how all this is affecting the peer review process--how scientists are starting to nope out of this onerous and increasingly apparently thankless task--are the predictable signs of a scientific funding process in absolute crisis.  Scientific review runs on volunteers, and people stop wanting to volunteer if they feel they're just going to be ignored, jerked around, and wronged.


rocky41_7: (Default)
rocky41_7 ([personal profile] rocky41_7) wrote in [community profile] books2025-09-09 10:23 am

Recent Reading: Tales of Earthsea

We're back at the Earthsea Cycle with book 5: Tales of Earthsea. This book is a collection of short stories set in Earthsea, crafted as a kind of bridge between books 4 and 6.

Friends may recall that the last book, Tehanu, was not my favorite of the series, although I appreciate what Le Guin was doing. In Tales of Earthsea, we get the best of both worlds in a sense--a return to the fantasy adventure themes of the original trilogy combined with Le Guin's updated views on gender and roles. Like TehanuTales of Earthsea is no longer really children's fiction. Sex, substance abuse, child abuse, and various other mature themes are much more present here than in the original trilogy. These later Earthsea books read like they were written for the then-adult fans of the original trilogy, and I think it works well.

In each of the five stories of Tales of Earthsea, Le Guin is introducing us to elements of Earthsea society not seen before in the series: How women ended up being excluded from wizardry, a young man with the ability to become a wizard (the magical aptitude) who decides he wants another sort of life for himself, a wizard of Roke who misuses his power and chooses not to return although he is invited to, a woman who wants to study at Roke but is refused. In this way, Le Guin gives much breadth to the world of Earthsea by introducing these stories outside the "mainstream" Earthsea narratives.

I respect that Le Guin doesn't just try to retcon the sexism written into the earlier Earthsea books--instead, she really tries here to reckon with how the women of Earthsea manage it, how they get around it, and how it hurts them. The resultant picture feels realistic, up to and including how frustrating it is to watch women be excluded from the school of Roke despite having helped found it. 

She continues with her theme of unexpected heroes--protagonists who are average people from little nothing towns on little nothing islands who despite expectations prove themselves capable of great things, which is always fun to watch. 

We get backstory on several things present in the original trilogy, like the founding of the school and some history of Ged's first teacher, Ogion, which was great fun (and once again I am screaming clapping cheering as the specialist boy in all of Earthsea Ged makes a cameo).

A very enjoyable read overall, and I feel properly enthused and excited for the next book. 
white_aster: (:O)
Aster ([personal profile] white_aster) wrote2025-09-04 11:53 am
Entry tags:

Any value to staying on fanfiction.net anymore?

 

Because of the state of the world and Our AI Overlords, I'm thinking more and more of just pulling my stuff into fewer and fewer places.  My TF stuff is still up on fanfiction.net, as when I switched to AO3 (when it started lol) it was the main fandom I was in.

Now, ff.net mostly seems to be a source of random spam PMs, and I'm thinking of just taking down the stories and leaving a profile that points to AO3.  Does anyone see any downsides to this plan?

I am amazed to see that some folks are still, evidently, actively posting to ff.net.  God, that thing is an UNDEAD Pit of Voles.


white_aster: stacks of books (books)
Aster ([personal profile] white_aster) wrote2025-09-04 11:40 am
Entry tags:

What We Weading...Thursday

I am still reading all the things I was reading last week:

Fiction:  Moonstorm by Yoon Ha Lee and City of Miracles by Robert Jackson Bennett - Enjoying both!  Hopefully I can finish both before they go back.

Nonfiction:  Stories Are Weapons by Annalee Newitz and The Technological Republic by Nicholas Zamiska and Alexander Karp

In particular, the two nonfiction books are ahahaha fun to read together.  The Technological Republic is making me cringe, but it's not that long (and so very repetitive, so it's not a hard read), so I'll finish it out of spite.  It's about what you'd expect from some guys who run a defense contractor company.  It's also hilariously self-contradicting.  For two guys who keep talking about how kids these days don't ~believe~ in anything and how the focus on not ~offending~ people is such a blight on society, they sure seem awfully ~offended~ that people have beliefs that mean they don't want to work for Palantir.  Curious.  Standard privileged folks who are trying to say "you have no moral compass!  you're wasting your talents!" when anyone outside their box is like, "...no, I believe in things, just not the same things YOU do."