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#kane and feels: paranormal investigators
leo-bandito · 5 months
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45 and Brutus feels <:
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Don't know where he's going Don't know where he's been
#45 - Run - Daughter
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twomystdunstans · 1 year
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the offices of kane and feels
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strix-brigade · 6 months
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me when teh yawning man:
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barnabascollins · 2 years
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uhhhshit · 1 year
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i cannot express how much i need more people to listen to Kane & Feels please i’m begging it’s so fucking good
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cobalt-knave · 2 years
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Supernatural Fiction Podcast Recs
Happy halloween! I wanted to put together another rec list to get out today.
Supernatural fiction includes some fantasy, some horror, and something all on its own. Here is a rec list of some audio dramas I enjoy in this genre.
The Antique Shop
The audio journal of Maya, a university student who takes a job at an antique shop. The shop contains strange and magical and cursed items. It also contains Madam Norna, who can help people with supernatural problems but there is always a cost, and the Madam must work with fate and not against it-- something Maya doesn’t agree with. There is also a great enemies (or acquaintances with animosity between them) to friends relationship that makes me happy.  
What follows is the strange stories of those that come to the shop and the slow corruption arc esque change as Maya becomes closer and closer to Fate and the role of the Madam.
The Bridge
Watchtower 10 sits in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean, keeping lonely watch over the Transcontinental Bridge. Our main character Etta broadcasts stories, often strange, that happened on the Bridge. Meanwhile, some of her backstory begins to be revealed, and the sea creature in lower level 3 has people coming after him.
Etta and the other people who work at Watchtower 10 are all delightful characters.
McGillicuddy And Murder’s Pawn Shop
The podcast is set in 1921 taking the format of the diary belonging to Melinda Maudie Merkle. Maude has a terribly boring life as a typist, and one of her only sources of joy is going every so often to a pawn shop, McGillicuddy & Murder’s. One day, she comes across a broken piece of china with a blue eye on it. After coming home with the eye, strange things begin to happen, and she finds herself immersed in a world of wonder and horror and magic. An adventure, at last. Though perhaps not quite how she imagined it.
A lot of healing into a new person, leaving behind bad relationships, and surrounding one’s self with trusted friends and community. And, of course, adventure.
The McIlwraith Statements
15 years after the fact, Sarah McIlwraith is making her statements regarding the infamous IPP study. The IPP study was a psychology-focused scientific study into mediums, hauntings, and the paranormal. It lasted three years before it was revealed to be a hoax, ruining the careers of those involved. Sarah was a phd student working on the study. But here is the thing: the study never found anything, but Sarah has always been able to see ghosts. And many of those haunted locations were indeed haunted.
Sarah is a great character, and the stories she tells are all very interesting as you hear about how the study worked, the ghosts she met and helped, the mediums that always seemed to be faked. Meanwhile, Sarah is looking into the mysterious funding the projects got, which keeps a good meta plot going.
Kane and Feels
Lucifer Kane and Brutus Feels, paranormal investigators. These two are chaotic, absolutely insane, and fantastic. Great use of narration with both characters alternating narrating. They are buddies, your honor. Horror! Weird things! Dream logic! If it’s a demon, Feels will probably punch it. The little one helps, and the big one makes tea.
The Hidden People
More on the urban fantasy side than the horror side, this podcast follows Mackenna Thorne. It’s very self-aware and has a lot of fun bringing in other genre bits (the hacker, the funny guy, a fair amount of Buffy references I enjoy immensely). Mack’s parents are murdered, apparently by none other than Mackenna Thorne. As this mystery unfolds, a world to the hidden people (the unseelie court) is opened.
Mack has such an incredible character arc.
There is a demonic narrator who is constantly amused by everything the characters do wrong.
The Mistholme Museum of Mystery, Morbidity, and Mortality
Let the AI Audio Tour Guide take you on a tour of the museum. Hear the stories - some horror, some soft, some strange, and some tragic - of the various exhibits. If your Audio Tour Guide is behaving... strangely, you should deposit your audio device in the nearest incinerator.
The Audio Tour Guide gets so much character development, and it is an utter delight.
Beware the man with a voice like honey and chocolate and coffee all at once.
Jar Of Rebuke
Dr. Jared Hel works at the Enclosure, which studies cryptids (for lack of a better word). Jared works there after having amnesia, and he only remembers the past two years. And always wears a key on a necklace. They have one skill that makes him very useful for studying cryptids: he can die and revive.
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old-stoneface · 9 months
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ive relistened to this podcast three times so i finally did fanart. kane and feels, paranormal investigators.......
my commentary on the designs:
kane - needs to wear more amulets but that requires more research and thought. i need to give him a coat that has random pockets sewn onto it for his materials. in that first pic, thats like normal kane, the guy youd see at the beginning of the series, and the sketch next to him is wonderland pt 2 kane. and the other sketches are like post-town council. i need to incorporate that earring in my second pic into earlier designs too, because i needed to add some signifier of my feelings on his sexuality (he is sooo gay). his full outfit is nice, but very old, something he wore as a professor and something he cannot afford to replace. his coat is visibly worn but under that he wears well cared for vest/shirt/slacks, with thin soled dress shoes.
feels - i wanted to play w the idea that hes mediterranean (specifically greek) on at least one parent's side. i gave him dark curls cut short because hes very active, and a large nose because it fits his profile. the square glasses are because i feel that round glasses dont have enough shape contrast on a round face. in general, feels dresses very plainly and quite utilitarian, with only coats and jackets being his stylistic flare. i wouldve given him boots but instead i just gave him durable dress shoes.
theyd both be wearing boots in the minisodes and feels definitely dresses down (in more blue collar clothing) for daytrippers. i wanna do daytrippers designs so bad -_- i have a lot of thoughts abt how kane would look
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If you’ve strayed where you shouldn’t; heard what you oughtn’t; or looked where you mustn’t, you may require the services of Kane and Feels: Paranormal Investigators.
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kaneandfeels · 6 months
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We don't do 'come get our patreon often - but if you're interested in that Live show - give us a buck and become a client. We've got a bunch of other cool stuff too.
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skyfullofpods · 9 months
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K is for @kaneandfeels!
Horror/noir. Lucifer Kane and Brutus Feels are an unlikely pair who, in season one, investigate paranormal cases brought to them by the public. In season two, Feels finds himself in the strange seaside town of Twomy St. Dunstans.
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ghosteso · 1 year
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My friend does this a lot so I’m taking a stab at it. I’m looking for more Podcasts to listen to I need to kill sometime the next few days. I’ll tag ones I’m thinking of and ones I liked so far.
I really liked Malevolent (just look at my blog)
A Voice from Darkness is another big one for me. As is Red Valley (I binged that one)
WTN, Wolf 359,, The Storage Papers, The Scarab Archives and the Technomancy Project.
Ones in my to be listened to pocket are as follows Woe.Begone, Kane and Feels: Paranormal Investigators, and Neighborly.
Started and never finished Penumbra, Spirit Box Radio, and Hello from the Hallowoods.
Any other recommendations? And for the ones I listed which would you start with? I tried the Slit Verses that seems popular but I couldn’t get into it.
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longcatmedia · 8 months
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We’re WELL excited to be part of London Podcast Festival 2023 at Kings Place!
Come for the full Sep 10th Audio Drama Day:
11:30am - Ramon Fear's Terror Tapes (feat Beth Eyre and Lexie McDougall)
2pm - Magenta Presents 😺
4:30pm - Realms of Peril & Glory
7pm - We Fix Space Junk / The Amelia Project / Greater Boston
9:30pm - Kane and Feels: Paranormal Investigators
Getcha tickets here
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twomystdunstans · 1 year
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K&F COUNTDOWN: A CLIENT AND A CASE
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lucifer-kane · 1 year
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Hi I was wondering, what is Kane and Feels? Like how would you pitch it to someone so you’d get them to listen
Oh damn, good question and hope I can answer it well enough, I'm not the greatest at pitching things other than just babbling at them.
But mostly
Kane and Feels: Paranormal Investigators is a horror noir audio drama featuring Lucifer Kane (an ex academic who knows about the things that lurk just beyond your vision better than anyone else) and Brutus Feels (an ex cop with a killer right hook and who is deeply empathic). If you have found out about something you weren't supposed to know, encountered something horrific, then you'll need the services of Lucifer Kane and Brutus Feels.
But if you love shows that are great all around, from audio design, music, and the writing, you'll love Kane and Feels. It's got wonk, it's a bit confusing, but everyone who I know who's ever listened to it love how weird it is, and it only gets more and more weird as you listen. Conversations are realistic and funny, our rude ex academic does care deep down, but has too much else on his plate to deal with that until later.
And I always tell people, if they want to listen, to have the transcripts handy, just for the sake of understanding when things get the most wonky. But it's got some of my favorite sound design and voice acting out of any show I've listened to, and I can't recommend it enough (Though I tend to not recc it as much to those new to audio drama, this really isn't a first few sort of podcast.)
I get a bit deeper into it in This Post from awhile ago, note this was pre s2 finishing up!
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tuesday again 3/28/2023
accidentally read five books.
listening
look i know there's a new fall out boy but i have conflicting opinions about that band bc i am no longer seventeen.
MARINA (formerly Marina and the Diamonds) was another artist coming up when i was in high school, but even though Family Jewels was one of the first albums i really got into, she has soundtracked far less of my life compared to FOB so listening to her is a little less fraught. nothing else has taken up space in my brain this week like the lyrics to hollywood: "hollywood infected your brain/you wanted kissing in the rain".
kind of obsessed how the music video cuts out an entire chunk of lyrics about dissatisfied flight attendants? also jesus christ this came out in 2010. BABY marina
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originally stuck in my brain bc my sister and i were talking about the musical chicago, and this song contains the lyrics "oh my god you look just like shakira/no wait you're catherine zeta/actually my name's marina"
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reading
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Star Wars: Dark Disciple by Christie Golden. ventress has never been my favorite of count dooku’s batmanesque kidnapped children. i respect her! she’s awful! i want to see her flirt with obi-wan more but maul (my beloved) has always had more screen time and depth.
it’s spackled together from most of a cancelled eight-episode clone wars arc and it kind of shows? this is not to say that star wars books are uninterested in the interiority of their characters, but we rarely get in their heads. star wars books are much more focused on what it looks like in the movie— there are big cinematic set pieces where it’s important to know exactly where everyone is in a fight.
golden writes a competent action scene. this is more than i can say for many star wars writers.
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^ i am shoving my fist into my mouth and screaming.
anyway, one of my worst character traits is a latent previously discussed fondness for steampunk and a less latent fondness for urban fantasy.
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i read Alexis Hall's Iron and Velvet Kate Kane book a million years ago possibly at the rec of @bronanlynchh during the new hampshire internship, one of the worst depressive periods of my life, but i did consume a lot of gay romance during that period. bc im in my noir era now, reread it and realized there were more! so i devoured them all over the weekend.
to quote @quaraxuanzenith who seems to be the only other person here who has read them recently,
have you ever thought, "Twilight sure is a book, but it would be better if Bella ( a ) realized that Edward is a weird controlling creep, ( b ) dumped him, ( c ) came out to herself as lesbian, and ( d ) went off to become a paranormal private investigator"?
these are just fun nonsense! i loved them and will buy paper copies after i move! i would not call these "spicy", but she falls in and out of the arms of SO many femmes and fatales (who sometimes overlap). there are SO many women throwing themselves at her. it is a delightful way of nodding at the genre's roots bc kate has some game! she doesn't have zero game! she not an oblivious useless lesbian archetype either! but she's usually like ?????? this person is OUT OF MY LEAGUE and never actually realizes a tall, tortured, sad, purple-eyed lady in a trenchcoat is catnip to nearly all wlw.
i think the third book hits its stride and flings you into a rapidly entangling web of loyalties and motivations that i really enjoy in a noir. i like how the author feels no need to write the YA vampire book trilogy she survived. i like how kate has a life going on apart from the stuff that happens in the books. she does not feel like she started existing the moment the book opens.
i finally understand the little old lady love of endless mystery series, bc this is some really comforting reading. i would read twenty of these. i trust that this author's got me and may fling some twists or red herrings at me but ultimately i won't turn the page and she'll be beaten in the street for being an out lesbian. okay so she does get whumped in the street but it's for case reasons
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watching
virtuosity (1995, dir leonard). the tagline of this film is "Hell hath no fury like a composite of 183 serial killers. Meet Sid 6.7"
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is this a Good film? oh god no. if you've seen the tv show interview with the vampire, it has the same contrasting vibes between the two leads, where one is turning in an incredible performance about a black man trying to hold onto family and dignity while the other is prancing around like a deranged show pony. except without the clarity of purpose or production values of a big budget amc tv drama. however, russell crowe (guy i love to see) put his whole ass into this performance. this is not a half-assed acting effort. it is a joy to watch him zip around screen while denzel washington is giving a very good performance as a disgraced, widowed ex-cop.
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this really throws a wrench into my whole "if a movie is about being afraid of a robot it's about being afraid of women" bc crowe is not a woman, but he is a malevolent neural network given an android body. a private company has a contract for a police training tool (the neural network trained on 183 serial killers who you can fight in VR) and is testing the interface on prisoners. i wish this movie had anything to say or critique about this three-way partnership other than using it as an inciting incident for what turns into a chase movie. the movie does not attempt to convince you this would be a good idea in a different private company's dev team but i wish the movie spent slightly less time going AAAAAA HOW TO STOP and any time at all going AAAAAAA HOW DID WE LET THIS HAPPEN
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i would call this film camp on vibes alone except it is almost completely uninterested in sensuality. the special effects have not aged very well at all, but the film has the same production designer (Nilo Rodis-Jamero) as Johnny Mnemomic (also 1995) so the film Looks.
why? it was leaving canopy soon and when my gender isn't "woman in the same way a sailing ship is a woman" it's "nineties movie club scenes"
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playing
weird west! still! (image from the steam page bc i keep forgetting to take screenshots)
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not terribly worried about the somewhat repetitive nature of the locations themselves, bc the enemy encounters are varied enough it feels like solving a new puzzle each time. also im still having fun.
i have been picking off guys from around the edges of enemy encampments with a silenced rifle and then tanking through this rest with a shotgun and liberal bandage application, as i am wont to do in shooty games, but i cannot currently break my husband out of a mine run by...cannibals? human traffickers to the cannibals? the xp-giving bad guys without getting one of my companions killed. i really don't want to ditch ann lara (i'm not entirely sure what her deal is? sort of a smooth-talking hustler archetype? but really good with pistols?) who has been with me for most of the eight hours i've played this game. the sheriff/my neighbor, along for the ride for her own reasons, has four times as much health as either of us so she's staying. she's been the only one left alive most of my attempts at this one FUCKING cave.
so i am looping back out into the world (sorry husband) to go think about some real tactics. practice my dodge rolls in a less tense environment. perhaps level up some guns and armor. now you might say "kay! isn't it worrying that you're hitting such a big difficulty cliff?" and to that i say "not really bc i cannot stress the amount of simply dicking around and exploring ive done, also i am not a clever woman."
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making
fallow week
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uovoc · 1 year
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2022 media consumption year in review
God tier
Matthew Swift series and Magicals Anonymous duology by Kate Griffin (reread). London sorcerer is raised from the dead and accidentally gets fused to the blue electric angels of the telephone lines along the way. Luscious prose, best urban magic I've ever read, and wickedly funny sense of humor.
Kane and Feels - podcast. Paranormal investigators go around London poking the mystic forces with a sharp stick. Surreal. Funny. Moderately comprehensible. There's nothing else quite like it. Someone described it as "the anti-TMA: you cannot form any theories about it no matter how hard you try."
The First Fifteen Lives of Harry August by Claire North (reread) - two time travelers, defined as people stuck in time loops of their own lives, attempt to unravel the mystery of their existence. Suspenseful and beautifully constructed piece of nonlinear storytelling.
The Particular Sadness of Lemon Cake by Aimee Bender (reread) - Rose tastes people's emotions in food. Her brother disappears into thin air. Their parents are fine. Surreal and haunting pearl of a story.
We Have Always Lived in the Castle by Shirley Jackson - after a family tragedy, the surviving Blackwoods live in isolation from the village. A little Piranesi-ish subverted horror: the sense there's a secret at the heart of the world, and the secret is both joyful and terrible.
Our Flag Means Death - the crangst-filled pirate show that it seemed like the internet lost its mind over, for good reason.
Bee and Puppycat: Lazy in Space - Bee travels between the island and fishbowl space working temp jobs with Puppycat, until their pasts catch up with them. Dreamy, bittersweet, and gorgeous. Season finale was a banger.
Vesper Flights by Helen MacDonald (reread). Nature essays on humans and birds. Quiet, luminous, and filled with love of place. Faves were "The Human Flock", "High Rise", "Eulogy", and "What Animals Taught Me"
Natsume's Book of Friends (anime) - Technically about boy who can see youkai, learning how to navigate the world of human relationships. But really about masking, healing from trauma, and learning to trust.
Decent entertainment
The Deep by Rivers Solomon with Daveed Diggs, William Hutson, and Jonathan Snipes
Encanto (2021) - movie
The Witcher, season 2 - show
What We Do in the Shadows - seasons 1-3, got bored afterwards
The Hands of the Emperor by Victoria Goddard
Seraphina by Rachel Hartman
Shadow Scale by Rachel Hartman
Island of the Blue Dolphins by Scott O'Dell (reread)
The Faceless Old Woman Who Secretly Lives in Your Home by Joseph Fink and Jeffrey Cranor
Touch by Claire North (reread)
Sing - movie
Notes from the Burning Age by Claire North
The Sign of the Beaver by Elizabeth George Speare (reread)
The Brothers Lionheart by Astrid Lindgren
Moon Knight - show, season 1
Moon Knight comics - 2011, 2014, 2016, 2021
The Batman (2022)
Spider-Man: No Way Home (2021)
The Girl with the Silver Eyes by Willo Davis Roberts (reread)
The Bad Guys (2022)
The Golem and the Jinni by Helene Wecker (reread)
The Hidden Palace by Helene Wecker
The Pursuit of William Abbey by Claire North
Johannes Cabal series by Jonathan L. Howard (reread): Johannes Cabal the Necromancer, Johannes Cabal the Detective, Johannes Cabal: The Fear Institute, The Brothers Cabal, and The Fall of the House of Cabal
The Owl House season 2
Dear Mr. Henshaw by Beverly Cleary (reread)
Strider by Beverly Cleary (reread)
Loki - show, season 1
Tess of the Road by Rachel Hartman
Paprika (2006) dir. Satoshi Kon (rewatch)
Sideways Stories from Wayside School by Louis Sachar (reread)
The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories by Angela Carter
Supernatural - seasons 1 – 6, selected episodes
The Sandman by Neil Gaiman - comics (reread)
The Sandman - show, season 1
Microcosmic God: The complete short stories of Theodore Sturgeon, volume II by Theodore Sturgeon
Various Dick King-Smith books (reread): The Merman, Harry's Mad, and Harriet's Hare
Klara and the Sun by Kazuo Ishiguro
Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro
The Girl From the Other Side - anime
She Who Became the Sun by Shelley Parker-Chan
The Farewell (2019) dir. Lulu Wang
Horatio Lyle series by Catherine Webb: The Extraordinary and Unusual Adventures of Horatio Lyle, The Obsidian Dagger, The Doomsday Machine, and The Dream Thief
Mononoke (2007) dir. Kenji Nakamura - anime
The Haunting of Hill House by Shirley Jackson
Dark Tales by Shirley Jackson. Fave: "The Beautiful Stranger"
The Lottery and Other Stories by Shirley Jackson. Faves: "Like Mother Used to Make" and "Flower Garden"
Legend of Nezha (哪吒传奇) - the 2003 cartoon
Annihilation by Jeff Vandermeer
Jane Doe by Victoria Helen Stone
Song of Achilles by Madeline Miller
Lucie Babbidge's House by Sylvia Cassedy
The Goblin Emperor by Katherine Addison
Pinocchio (2022) - dir. Guillermo del Toro and Mark Gustafson
Bloodsucking Fiends by Christopher Moore
You Suck by Christopher Moore
Bite Me by Christopher Moore
Disliked and usually DNF
Guardian (cdrama)
The Gameshouse by Claire North
Kim's Convenience - show
Across the Green Grass Fields by Seanan McGuire
Victoriocity - podcast
Sporadic Phantoms - podcast
Guardians of Childhood series by William Joyce - okay I finished it out of loyalty but it was no rotg that's for sure
Iron Widow by Xiran Jay Zhao
Keep Your Hands off Eizouken - anime
Arcane - show
The Girl in the Flammable Skirt by Aimee Bender
Willful Creatures by Aimee Bender
The Color Master by Aimee Bender
Where the Drowned Girls Go by Seanan McGuire
Megan's Island by Willo Davis Roberts (reread)
First Light by Rebecca Stead
Goodbye Stranger by Rebecca Stead
The Apothecary by Maile Meloy
To Your Eternity - anime
Bloomability by Sharon Creech
Everything Everywhere All At Once (2022) dir. Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert
Malevolent - podcast
Midnight Burger - podcast
Under the Whispering Door by TJ Klune
Sunshine by Robin McKinley
The Blue Sword by Robin McKinley
Carter & Lovecraft by Jonathan L. Howard
Swordspoint by Ellen Kushner
The Order of the Pure Moon Reflected in Water by Zen Cho
Black Water Sister by Zen Cho
M.E. and Morton by Sylvia Cassedy
Forty Stories by Donald Barthelme
Hangsaman by Shirley Jackson
The Bird's Nest by Shirley Jackson
The Ten Thousand Doors of January by Alix Harrow
The Witness for the Dead by Katherine Addison
The Stench of Adventure (podcast)
We Ride Upon Sticks by Quan Barry
Invisible Cities by Italo Calvino
Assorted nonfiction
Songs of the Gorilla Nation by Dawn Prince-Hughes
The Organized Mind by Daniel J Levitin - nothing new except for the part about using your spatial memory to hack organization.
The Art of Gathering by Priya Parker - how to organize social gatherings for meaningful and memorable experiences
Rust: the Longest War by Jonathan Waldman - investigative journalism book about corrosion, the hazard it presents to physical infrastructure, and how we mitigate it
Fall Down 7 Times, Get Up 8 by Naoki Higashida
Dear Friend, from My Life I Write to You in Your Life by Yiyun Li - DNF
The One-Minute Manager: The World's Most Popular Management Method by Ken Blanchard and Spencer Johnson - techniques for one-minute goal setting, one-minute praisings, and one-minute reprimands
The Chinese Language: Its History and Current Usage by Daniel Kane. Good concise history of the development of written Mandarin Chinese and the underlying structure of the characters.
A Sand County Almanac by Aldo Leopold - essays on the American landscape and conservation ethics ca. 1950. Neat from a historical standpoint, but nothing to write home about these days. Which kinda is the point I guess.
Oregon Salmon: Essays on the State of the Fish At the Turn of the Millennium, ed. Oregon Trout
Caring for your Parents by Hugh Delehanty and Eleanor Ginzler
The Man Who Mistook His Wife For a Hat by Oliver Sacks - DNF
The Grid by Gretchen Bakke - history of how the physical and regulatory infrastructure of the American power grid was developed, and how it needs to be reimagined for the future.
Wildlife Wars : The life and times of a fish and game warden by Terry Grosz. Tales from his career as a California game warden catching poachers.
The Undocumented Americans by Karla Cornejo Villavicencio. DNF. author's writing voice was supremely annoying
Wilderness and the American Mind by Roderick Nash, 3rd ed (1982) (reread) - history of Americans' changing attitudes towards nature and definitions of wilderness. A classic banger.
Black, Brown, Bruised: How racialized STEM education stifles innovation by Ebony Omotola McGee - good summary of what the successful programs for STEM students of color are doing right, everything else is the same old same old
Maybe You Should Talk to Someone: A Therapist, Her Therapist, and Our Lives Revealed by Lori Gottlieb. Account of the experience of going through therapy while working as a therapist. Excellent look at how we construct our personal narratives, and how to change them.
Crucial Conversations: Tools for Talking When the Stakes are High by Kerry Patterson, Joseph Gremmy, Ron McMillan, and Al Switzler. Strategies for having effective high-stakes conversations and managing your emotions. Good stuff.
Engineering and Social Justice by Donna Riley. Pretty entry-level, but it's a good bibliography for further reading.
Send in the Idiots by Kamran Nazeer
Why Are We Yelling? The art of productive disagreement by Buster Benson - DNF. disliked his writing style.
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