brightknightie: Midna, in imp form, and Link grin at each other (Zelda)
My favorite ZeldaTuber, [youtube.com profile] Zeltik, posted his close-reading explication of the lore and story of Echoes of Wisdom yesterday. I enjoyed it immensely! He did exactly what I was hoping he would. It's not only as good and as connective as any of his previous game condensations -- which I hesitate to call "summaries," as they are much richer than that word implies -- it hit a home-run right off the top with one specific major canon lore and fan theory connection that I had not yet put together on my own. Key into lock. Lost puzzle piece found under the table where it clearly was waiting all along. Chef's kiss!

When you're ready to be utterly spoiled on everything that matters most in Echoes of Wisdom, I recommend Zeltik's "Lore and Story of 'Zelda: Echoes of Wisdom' Explained" (YouTube, 55:40).

(Next, I'm looking forward to [youtube.com profile] TheLadyOfLore's take...)

brightknightie: With Hank and Diana in the lead, the children confront Tiamat. (Other Fandom D&D poster)
The [community profile] everywoman '24 authors are now revealed! See the collection.

As mentioned, my request went up as a pinch-hit and I received both a gift and a treat for Dungeons & Dragons (cartoon, 1983): "Girl Time" (T, gen, ~700 words; Sheila & Diana) and "The Acrobat's Dream" (T, gen, 100 words; Diana). Both, it turns out, are by [archiveofourown.org profile] DesertVixen, whose assignment in the event was The Man From U.N.C.L.E. (2015): "The Last Night (Before The Rest of Her Life)" (T, gen, ~500 words; stars Gaby).

Here are a few other stories that I enjoyed in the event:
The story that I wrote was "Beyond Illusion" (Dungeons & Dragons (cartoon, 1983); G, gen, ~4K words; Varla & Presto), for [archiveofourown.org profile] DesertVixen's request for “more about Varla exploring/learning about her power.” The piece is a tag/sequel to Varla's one episode, "The Last Illusion;" the day after the day Varla escaped Venger's Forbidden Tower, as she shows Presto around her village, she examines her powers and her options, ultimately choosing a third way that's canon-compliant and yet opens up her future beyond canon.

brightknightie: With Hank and Diana in the lead, the children confront Tiamat. (Other Fandom D&D poster)
The [community profile] everywoman '24 stories have released! The exchange has 69 total works in 56 fandoms. Check out the collection sorted by fandom or in the complete works list.

Fandoms include Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Captain Marvel & The Marvels, Dungeons & Dragons (Cartoon, 1983), Hawkeye, Labyrinth, The Lord of the Rings, 6 kinds of Star Trek, 3 kinds of Star Wars, and Stargate SG-1.

I personally received both an exchange story and a treat!
  • "Girl Time" (D&DC, T, gen, ~700 words). This vignette gives Sheila and Diana a quiet, restful interlude between episodes, an opportunity to relax from the often frantic pace of their adventures and reflect on the actual weight and emotional wear of those adventures. It's full of canonical allusions, yet with an undemanding touch that doesn't require a reader to know the references. Thought-provoking!

  • "The Acrobat's Dream" (D&DC, T, gen, 100 words). This drabble shows Diana triumphant, solo and as a teammate, her hard work and talent fulfilled, both on the Olympic podium and by having made it home from the Realm. Satisfying!

Of course there is a story by me somewhere in the mix. Author reveals are scheduled for this coming Friday, August 9.

brightknightie: Nick raising his fist in triumph (Win)
This year's [community profile] fkficfest had a huge haul of 16 total stories! And many folks were absolutely lovely in reading and commenting, appreciating all the widely diverse tastes and approaches! So I feel it's okay for me to go ahead and recommend just a very few of the total stories that happened to speak most to me, personally, as a reader and fan. Obviously, my own subjective preferences may well not be yours, so you should check out the full collection to find just the right stories for your own tastes. :-D

(These recommendations do contain spoilers.)

"To Say Goodbye" (G, gen, ~1K words; Grace & Natalie) by [archiveofourown.org profile] Sharpest_Asp
This deliciously layered post-LK interlude is simultaneously a slice of life, with Grace relaxing after a long, hard shift; an elegy, with Natalie's good advice, good example, and good friendship remembered and missed; and a supernatural mystery that Grace, in the end, chooses not to pursue, for very good reasons built on costly lessons learned. There's relief and hope as well as grief; the reader has more information than Grace in interpreting Natalie's visit. I felt satisfied.

"Day 17" (G, gen, ~3K words; Tracy) by [archiveofourown.org profile] Calliope24
Surprisingly suspenseful for what's fundamentally a character study, this story exhibits Tracy's motivations, fears, and sense of self through a single shift of escalating incidents attended by raw rookie Tracy and her training officer, from a routine traffic stop, to a domestic violence intervention, to crowd control at a murder scene. Almost every tidbit of Tracy's background winds in somewhere, deployed for maximum resonance. I felt riveted.

"Homecoming" (T, gen, ~5K words; Janette, Nick & Lacroix) by [archiveofourown.org profile] SwitchbladeEyes
This is Janette's vivid story of what happened in 1925 after the "Father's Day" flashbacks. It's rich with Janette being fully Janette, navigating between a spot-on Nick and Lacroix not remotely at their best, beautifully carving out her own full, conflicted life under their radar. It's wholly in tune with canon themes, and cleverly stitches together some key missing developments from between canon flashbacks. I felt nostalgic.

"Noblesse Oblige" (G, gen, ~10K words; Nick, Janette, Natalie, Schanke & Alma) by [archiveofourown.org profile] Calliope24
Set in late first-season, this charming story poses a new reason for the Raven redecoration. In some ways, this tale unfolds like an episode, with a dramatic historical flashback, entwined human and vampire interests, and deeper insights, but it's oriented toward a crisis for Toronto's vampire community, not a police procedural, and has a notably light touch, mining humor wherever it can. Throughout, it offers the positive thematic orientation and openheartedness that I cherish in first-season. I felt delighted.


-----
The story that I wrote for the fest myself is "Found in the Fog" (T, gen, ~5K words; Nick & Lacroix). It's Nick-centric, pro-Nick, and anti-vampirism, as you'd expect from me. I set it in 1890s California, where Nick, working as a lighthouse keeper, has gone to process the "Love You to Death" flashbacks before moving on to "Dark Knight"'s Altun Kinal dig. (It's based on real historical incidents, so of course has endnotes.)

Thank you, everyone, for your wonderful participation in this year's ficfest!

brightknightie: With Hank and Diana in the lead, the children confront Tiamat. (Other Fandom D&D poster)
[community profile] saturdaymorningex, the animation exchange, did release overnight! Find 21 total stories in its AO3 collection. Fandoms include AtLA, BatB, D&DC, Pinky and the Brain, My Little Pony, She-Ra and the Princesses of Power, Yu-Gi-Oh!, X-Men: Evolution, and more. (To my personal surprise, a full ~25% are rated M or E. Interesting!)

The story written for me is delightfully for my Dungeons & Dragons (cartoon, 1983) request: "A Challenge for the Acrobat" (G, gen, ~1K words).

It stars Diana (clearly!) and creates a scenario specifically to comment on a key difference between her and the others, that her totemic weapon of power facilitates an astounding skill that she already had -- had already earned -- back home, while the others are directly and newly dependent on their weapons to interact with the dangers of the Realm. That is, the others' weapons are metaphorically related to their characters; Diana's is literally manifesting her skill as a gymnast. In addition to thoughtfully giving Diana the spotlight, which I love, the story also gestures to my fondness for interludes between adventures -- those moments of downtime trailing connections to what comes before and after.

brightknightie: Toronto sunset cityscape (Toronto)
I recently stumbled across a beautiful Toronto photography project, the "Toronto Sunrise Series," by Taku Kumabe, a freelance photographer and art director. I highly recommend enjoying this art. I particularly like this one.

It began as a personal project in 2014 and has grown to be not only an amazing gallery, but apparently also a community with an annual meet-up. Kumabe writes: "[The] majority of my images are taken from various parks along the lakeshore in the West end of the city; "[my] photos serve not only to capture the beauty of the sunrise, but also document major meteorological events" and can be "a study on Toronto's waterfront." Inside the overall "Sunrise" series are "Birds in flight" and "Abstraction" sub-series.

Read about the project. Or go directly to the photographs in the portfolio. There's apparently an Instagram account, too, if you're on that platform.

(Of course I was looking for a new image for my home-computer desktop to inspire me while writing this month. I specifically searched on "Toronto sunrise" -- not sunset -- and found this delightful surprise.)

brightknightie: Sun Wukong, the Monkey King, floating on a cloud, as drawn by Red of Overly Sarcastic Productions (Other Fandom OSP JttW)
Challenge #9: Rec your newest thing -- enthusiasm, obsession, fandom, earworm, etc.

Yesterday, I read an impressive Journey to the West AU fanfic, told from the dragon-horse's perspective, in which Monkey is mute. (This is a sober re-imagining, not the bonkers humor I often go for in JttW.) This change makes humanity (and Heaven) take him even less seriously (though Buddha treats him exactly the same). Removing his voice swallows his patter and boasts and exposes his foundational motivations in new, evocative ways. Killer final line. "Spring Unheard" by [archiveofourown.org profile] Idonquixote (T, gen, ~8K words).

A few days ago, I finished watching the five episodes of Echo, the latest MCU show on Disney+, the first officially under the "Marvel Spotlight" imprint for standalone, don't-need-to-know-canon, adult-aimed productions (Werewolf by Night belongs there, too, imo, if they're willing to relabel it). The title sequence -- theme song and graphics -- is absolutely fantastic, ten out of ten. Further opinion is a high-level spoiler )

I'm presently spacing out the final few episodes of season one of My Adventures with Superman because I don't want it to be over. This is my kind of Superman! A very good guy being good! This is a show that deeply understands why Superman must rescue the cat. The story is so clearly told by people who love the characters, and who change them only in ways that make them more essentially themselves for today's audience. I adore how they addressed and subverted certain tropes, like Lois finding out Clark is Superman. Fundamentally, this is a story where he is Clark to the bone, and Superman is just his work clothes, his "customer service voice," and I am there for that. (I think that the "my" in the title is Clark's.)

brightknightie: Richie parries prime as Duncan teaches him (Other Fandom HL Richie)
[community profile] hlh_shortcuts brought us 25 new Highlander stories this year. Check them out via the community or directly in the AO3 collection. They're still anonymous, pending this fest's traditional author-guessing game.

The story gifted to me in the exchange is "Hellish Dreams of Heaven" (G, gen, ~4K words) (Richie, Duncan, Connor, Powell, Joe, Tessa). Entirely from Richie's perspective, it navigates sequentially through missing scenes fitting within -- or sparking off lines in -- "The Gathering," HL's premiere. I love the first few HL seasons best of all, as you know, and I like missing scenes and canon awareness, so this story is very comfortable in some ways. In others, though, it's rightly challenging; this early Richie's internal narrative bristles with disenchantment, between what he thinks he's found to be the ideal and the real. He wants to believe; he tells himself he's seen too much to believe... Yet he believes.

I haven't read all 25 stories, but of those I have, I'd especially like to recommend:
  • "Know Where It's At" (G, gen, ~5K words) (Richie, Darius, Methos, Tessa, Duncan) -- This time-travel fix-it pulls Richie from an unspecified future moment (possibly circa "Richard Redstone," possibly later) back into his younger body in the days leading up to Darius's murder by Horton. Can Richie put right what once went wrong?
  • "Friendship And Favors" (G, gen, ~2K words) (Rebecca, Darius) -- Of the two stories this year featuring Darius and Rebecca, this is the cooking one (the other is chess). This precisely-set historical interlude richly intertwines Darius and Rebecca in their shared hopes for the future: in individual students, in a community, and, implicitly, in the whole world exponentially in expanding rings. We readers know we'll lose them both too soon, but their work (and hope) will survive them.
  • "The Polyglot" (G, gen, ~3K words) (Methos, Richie, Joe, Amanda) -- This fun story lightly romps through some practical, ordinary, real-world threats, nothing a sword can solve, and delivers a happy ending all around.


brightknightie: With Hank and Diana in the lead, the children confront Tiamat. (Other Fandom D&D poster)
I contributed 6 D&DC recommendations to [community profile] fanart_recs in November. If you're interested:Maybe I will do more sometime.

By a curious quirk of the show's age and the internet's age and the licensing of reruns, almost all the D&DC fanart online is by artists who live in the southern hemisphere (mostly, but not exclusively, Brazil). I understand that Robson M. (appears once in the list above; could have supplied all six slots) actually made the leap to pro illustrations for Wizards of the Coast.

I gather that the show is running on the new DnD channel/linear-streaming thing now. (I have the "red box" DVDs and haven't looked into that, so don't know details.)

brightknightie: With Hank and Diana in the lead, the children confront Tiamat. (Other Fandom D&D poster)
I'm up to 4 of my planned 6 (max 8) D&DC fanart recommendations this month at [community profile] fanart_recs. If you're interested, check them all out on that community's newly added D&D fandom tag.

And if you enjoy fanart, follow the community, and recommend yourself!

Profile

brightknightie: At dawn, a white knight raises her lance (Default)
Amy

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags

Tags

Style Credit

Powered by Dreamwidth Studios
Page generated Monday, May 26th, 2025 04:14 am