Accumulated links -- certified organic, so you know it's a good salad:
Socks are my greatest love.
Animator vs. Animation. Yeah, sometimes characters are like that.
How to fail to promote yourself by blogging.
Literary analysis can be fruitful for worldbuilding. Take, for example, how the question of whether "spells themselves are imperatives or performatives, and, if the latter, what happens when you violate their felicity conditions" can spark ideas.
Emma of Normandy: by her marriage to Ethelred the Unrædy,* she was queen consort of England, replacement for his previous wife Aelfgifu, stepmother of King Edmund Ironside, mother of King Edward the Confessor; by her marriage to Canute the Great, she was queen consort of England, replacement for his previous wife Aelfgifu, stepmother of King Harold Harefoot, and mother of King Harthacanute. I'm surprised Judith Tarr hasn't wrapped a novel around her already. Especially since she was often, as a replacement, called Aelfgifu.
* You all DO know that in Old English, his name means "unlucky" and not "unprepared," yes? Good.
---L.
Socks are my greatest love.
Animator vs. Animation. Yeah, sometimes characters are like that.
How to fail to promote yourself by blogging.
Literary analysis can be fruitful for worldbuilding. Take, for example, how the question of whether "spells themselves are imperatives or performatives, and, if the latter, what happens when you violate their felicity conditions" can spark ideas.
Emma of Normandy: by her marriage to Ethelred the Unrædy,* she was queen consort of England, replacement for his previous wife Aelfgifu, stepmother of King Edmund Ironside, mother of King Edward the Confessor; by her marriage to Canute the Great, she was queen consort of England, replacement for his previous wife Aelfgifu, stepmother of King Harold Harefoot, and mother of King Harthacanute. I'm surprised Judith Tarr hasn't wrapped a novel around her already. Especially since she was often, as a replacement, called Aelfgifu.
* You all DO know that in Old English, his name means "unlucky" and not "unprepared," yes? Good.
---L.
no subject
Date: 21 October 2007 08:54 pm (UTC)*obligatory remarks about pathetic-ness of self*
*obligatory 1066 reference to paddling one's own Canute*
no subject
Date: 21 October 2007 09:00 pm (UTC)Or "foolish", or, if you look at the word from the right angle, "poorly advised."
no subject
Date: 21 October 2007 09:30 pm (UTC)---L.
no subject
Date: 21 October 2007 09:32 pm (UTC)Though if her second husband was into spanking, she probably did paddle her own Canute.
---L.
no subject
Date: 21 October 2007 10:44 pm (UTC)Um, no, I didn't know that about Unredy. Now I do. *feels smarter*
Now I have to go look at your other intriguing links.
no subject
Date: 21 October 2007 10:54 pm (UTC)D'oh.
third of three comments....
Date: 21 October 2007 10:56 pm (UTC)Re: third of three comments....
Date: 21 October 2007 11:21 pm (UTC)---L.
no subject
Date: 21 October 2007 11:22 pm (UTC)---L.
no subject
Date: 21 October 2007 11:24 pm (UTC)---L.
Re: third of three comments....
Date: 21 October 2007 11:24 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 21 October 2007 11:24 pm (UTC)