tipping my phrygian cap toward you in a cheerful greeting
Oct. 17th, 2025 09:44 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
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basic info: tombstuck, mid 20s, missouri usa
I mostly post about: daily life, my current exciting interests, music, and fandom
i hope to hear from some of you soon!~
(no subject)
Oct. 17th, 2025 02:49 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
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Age: mid 20s
I mostly post about: personal stuff and fandom equally, also my creative projects (I'm a huge writer and artist!) I also talk about my tech projects and such. Health struggles & disability/mental health activism and destigmatization. Cooking. Life goings-on. My OCs. I'm trying to get back into using dreamwidth more, so I'd love to make some new friends!
My hobbies are: writing, digital art, watching tv, making video games, playing video games, crafting, thrifting, technology (mostly self-hosting and personal websites right now), cooking...
My fandoms are: I'm a huge science fiction fan, so right now it's Babylon 5, The Orville, Star Trek (mostly lower decks and star trek online), etc. Also super into Yellowjackets and Psych at the moment.
I'm looking to meet people who: don't mind my journal being a little all over the place, are kind and accepting, love science fiction, art, writing, tech, or making OCs, or creativity in general. People who are spiritual but queer-affirming, pro-choice and open-minded. People who like to talk and don't mind if I'm awkward. People who share my fandoms, especially my special interest which is currently The Orville. Other neurodiverse folks. Or anyone who is cool with the things I mention here!
My posting schedule tends to be: sporadic
When I add people, my dealbreakers are: Racism, homophobia, transphobia, ableism, fatphobia. Please don't be a bigot. Also, I don't wish to add anyone who identifies as an "anti" or believes certain types of fiction should inherently be censored, and will unadd for this kind of behavior.
Before adding me, you should know: I have autism and dissociative identity disorder. These things make it a little hard for me to communicate, but I promise I always mean well. I also have memory issues.
multifandom icons.
Oct. 12th, 2025 01:27 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
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What I have been reading, September edition
Oct. 7th, 2025 09:50 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
The Bewitching by Silvia Moreno Garcia. Iβve enjoyed everything I have read by this author, and I enjoyed this one as well. It has three timelines, but I found those easy to keep apart, and the three protagonists each with their own voice. There is a young Mexican woman, Minerva, who in the 1990 studies at an old New England university. She writes her thesis on a mostly forgotten horror author, Beatrice Tremblay who attended the same university in the 1930s. The second timeline is her diary Minerva gets access to, where Beatrice describes the disappearance of her best friend. And last there is the story Minervaβs great grandmother Alba told her about what happened on the family farm in the 1910s. All the stories are linked, and like all of Moreno Graciaβs books I have read there is something supernatural in action. Here it is witches. Even though I guessed from the start who the antagonists were, i still found this a very interesting read.
The Five by Hallie Rubenhold. Iβm not a big fan of true crime, and Iβm not especially interested in Jack the Ripper. But The Five isnβt about him, but about the five women he killed. Rubenhold is a historian and she has made a thorough research into their life. The only thing she doesnβt describe is their murders, she cuts away at the last sighting, and returns to talk about their families reaction. Because most of them had families who cared deeply for them. And what I found very interesting was that she could find no proof any of them, apart from the last victim, was a prostitute at the time they were killed. Most of them were homeless, and all of them poor and alcoholic. Evidently Rubenhold has received a lot of flack, even outright hate, for daring to claim Jack the Ripper didnβt kill prostitutes. She has also received critique for not describing the actual murders, but personally I liked that. I thought it was a good book, and I found her descriptions of the five women thoughtful and interesting.
Story of A Murder by Hallie Rubenhold. Because I liked The Five, I went on to read her book about the Crippen murder. I knew the basic fact about it, mostly because Agatha Christie was inspired by it in Mrs. McGinty Is Dead. Again I thought Rubehold did a good job describing Belle Elmore, the victim, Crippen and his mistress Ethel Le Never, and she has clearly done her research. But I just canβt find this murder interesting, even if it was deeply tragic, so I can't say I enjoyed this book much. But if you are interested in true crime, I think you might like it.