Identity V - Welcome, Saphyr

Dec. 26th, 2025 10:59 pm
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[personal profile] luvcrumbs posting in [community profile] 100words
Title: Welcome, Saphyr
Fandom: Identity V
Rating: General

welcome, saphyr )

(no subject)

Dec. 26th, 2025 10:40 pm
skygiants: Princess Tutu, facing darkness with a green light in the distance (Default)
[personal profile] skygiants
Every year I'm like "I should really read the Neon Hemlock novellas" and then perhaps I actually manage to get around to reading one of them, but this year I ... thought I had read all of them because I thought there were only four published but it turns out in fact now that I check there were several more than that. Well! I read four of them! They were all very gay and very tropey; under these subheadings, I enjoyed two of them quite a bit, one of them didn't hit for me, and the last one I found incredibly frustrating, for personal reasons.

The two I liked were No Such Thing as Duty, by Lara Elena Donnelly, and The Oblivion Bride, by Caitlin Starling. Both of these have a definite air of fanfiction about them: No Such Thing As Duty is a 'what if my favorite historical guy met a sexy vampire' fic, the favorite historical guy in question is W. Somerset Maughan. I have come to the conclusion that I'm really quite charmed by this sort of thing as long as the favorite historical guy in question is not a pre-existing big seller like Christopher Marlowe or Charlotte Bronte but someone who I actually have to look up:* the author's real victory is in making me Wikipedia their special historical guy and go 'whoa, sure, lot going on here actually'

*I'm aware this is very subjective and there are many people out there who don't have to go to Google to know basic things about W. Somerset Maughan. But they ARE a lot fewer I think than the people who don't have to go to Google to know basic things about i.e. Lord Byron. That said, if you are experiencing boredom at the idea of Yet Another Sexy W. Somserset Maughan fic, I'd love to know about it.

The Oblivion Bride meanwhile is a classic Lesbian Arranged Marriage fic that, per the author's note, appears to have grown out of a Dishonored fic the author wrote several years back. I don't know anything about Dishonored so I can't tell you much about that. What I can tell you is that she's a normalgirl cadet member of an important family who's been thrust into an important political position because all her actual aristocratic relatives have mysteriously died, she's an icy cold Murder Alchemist General and also Magical Detective who's marrying her by order of the prince to solve the mysterious deaths and keep the political assets in the hands of someone loyal to the throne; could they actually fall in love? The answer will shock you! Anyway, I like tropes, and I like lesbians, and I like that Caitlin Starling is never afraid to lean into her id; I was as happy to read this in novella form as I would have been on AO3.

The Dead Withheld by L.D. Lewis is the one that didn't quite hit for me -- it's a supernatural noir about a PI who can talk to the dead investigating the cold case death of her wife, and it is doing exactly what it says on the tin but something about it never quite grabbed me. Too short? Not enough oomph? Anyway, it might grab you!

and The Iron Below Remembers by Sharang Biswas drove me up a wall, in large part because the worldbuilding it's doing is extremely playful and interesting and fun -- it's set in an alternate universe where a South Asian empire was the major early colonial power instead of Rome, and their abandoned artifacts and technology power contemporary superheroes. The protagonist is an academic dating a superhero; the text is heavily footnote-studded and 50% of the footnotes are really fun and interesting little explorations of this alternate history. Unfortunately for me, the actual plot laid on top of this rich worldbuilding is all Gay Superhero Relationship Drama and the other 50% of the footnotes are gossipy anecdotes about the protagonist's sex life. This is certainly going to be a feature for some people but was, alas, a bug for me; every time I went through the effort to click through the annoying footnotes format on my digital edition I was really hoping to get a meaty paragraph about what happened after Siddhartha marched into the city of Rime and did not feel rewarded any time I got a smug half-sentence about shibari instead.

fic rec

Dec. 26th, 2025 11:13 pm
sixbeforelunch: An illustrated image of a woman holding a towering stack of books. No text. (woman holding a stack of books)
[personal profile] sixbeforelunch
For anyone who read Mansfield Park and wished that poor Fanny had been given a third option.

Our Groves Were Planted to Console (17711 words) by ChronicBookworm
Chapters: 1/1
Fandom: Mansfield Park - Jane Austen, AUSTEN Jane - Works
Rating: General Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Relationships: Fanny Price/Original Male Character
Characters: Fanny Price, Original Characters, Mrs. Norris (Mansfield Park), Edmund Bertram, Sir Thomas Bertram
Additional Tags: Courtship, Alternate Universe - Canon Divergence, Family, Family Dynamics, Slow Burn, Strangers to Friends to Lovers
Summary:

Dr Grant receives a prebendary at Westminster before Mr Crawford can propose to Fanny. Fanny likes the new occupant of Mansfield Parsonage much better than the previous ones.

hrj: (Default)
[personal profile] hrj
Actually the one book I finished in May is going to get its own separate entry (Inventing the Renaissance by Ada Palmer) because I've decided it's my favorite book of the entire year.

The Invisible Library by Genevieve Cogman -- (audio) The entire Invisible Library series came up on sale as a set on Chirp, and since I'd heard interesting things about it I picked it up. I've only listened to this first volume. Although I find it interesting and imaginative, I kept not getting back to listening to it (hence it took me an entire month to finish). That's made me less interested in trying the next book in the series. I didn't dislike it--it just didn't grab me.

The Unlikely Pursuit of Mary Bennet by Lindz McLeod -- (text) I actually bought this one in both text and audiobook, but since I was already listening to a book of similar genre and setting (see next entry) I went for the text version to keep psychological separation. This is a sapphic Jane Austen-inspired story (as one might guess from the title). I've always felt that Mary Bennet got short shrift in the original book. This story begins well after the end of Pride and Prejudice and has paired her with the now-widowed Charlotte Collins (née Lucas). Mary has the advantage of having acquired a mentor in London who runs a not-very-covertly queer household, which eases the way for Mary and Charlotte to be able to share their attraction and provides a short-cut around the economic challenges for a female couple. I found the story cute and emotionally satisfying although Charlotte occasionally shocked me in blowing off the expected social isolation of recent widowhood.

A Rare Find by Joanna Lowell -- (audio) Another Regency-era sapphic romance, involving an amateur archaeologist and the love/hate relationship with her neighbor. Enjoyable, though a bit over-packed with subplots similarly to the previous book of hers that I've read (A Shore Thing). Lots of occasionally improbable hijinks on the quest for Viking-era artifacts and recognition. There were a few places where my historic sensibilities were trampled on. (You do not just "park" a horse and carriage overnight while you're off canoodling. I mean, maybe a groom was summoned to take care of them? But something it didn't get mentioned.) The conclusion seemed a bit contrived but overall I liked it.

Servant Mage by Kate Elliott -- (text) I have no idea how Elliott managed to pack so much plot and worldbuilding into one tiny novella! Secondary-world quest fantasy with a very relatable protagonist and lots of peril. There are unexpected and satisfying twists. I really hope this is a set-up for more fiction in this world.

The Tapestry of Time by Kate Heartfield -- (audio) Historic fantasy set during World War II focused around the war efforts of a family with various psychic powers who are connected in some way to the Bayeux Tapestry. Told through multiple viewpoints, the novel gradually builds up a fragmentary picture of how all the parts relate until it all comes together. There’s a fair amount of violence and peril, as one might expect in a wartime espionage story, but the ending is satisfying. A strongly woman-centered story with positive queer rep (and resolution). Heartfield writes dense, twisty books that can take some concentration but I’ve enjoyed every one that I’ve tackled.

Murder by Post by Rachel Ford -- (text) This fairly short story introduces the continuing detective couple, Meredith and Alec Thatch, set in the wake of World War I in England. Alec is passing as a man in order for them to marry, but is not presented as transgender as far as I can tell. This adds an extra element of risk and danger when the resident of a neighboring flat is found dead with signs of poison. This is a classic cozy-style mystery, with lots of clues and red herrings, allowing the reader to think just one step ahead of the characters. This initial story—really just a novelette—is free on the author’s website. I hope that some day she’ll decide to release the rest of the series more widely than just Kindle Unlimited. It deserves a wider audience. It's really testing my resolve not to buy Amazon-only books unless I'm committed to doing a review.

In August I started two long-term reading projects. Having enjoyed the tv adaptation of the first Murderbot book, I decided to give the series another try (after having bounced off one of the middle books). And I've been enjoying Rachel Fraimow and Emily Tesh's podcast, The Eight Days of Diana Wynne Jones so much I decided to do a (possibly non-exhaustive) reading project of Jones's books. I have twelve of her books on my shelves, though I'm not entirely certain I've read all of them, and I hadn't quite connected up which ones were in series and what order they came in. Having very belatedly acquired a local library card, I've been taking advantage of Libby audiobooks to tackle these two projects, which spaces them out nicely, given wait times.

All Systems Red by Martha Wells, Artificial Condition by Martha Wells -- (audio) It's hard to evaluate the first book separate from having seen the tv series first. It was interesting both how closely the series followed the plot and the places it diverged. Having more details on all the characters (and there are a lot of them for a novella), the story began to grow on my seriously by the second book. It helped that it didn't feel like it was wall-to-wall combat scenes like my first (out of order) encounter with the series. Artificial Condition had a more mystery-like plot, which I enjoyed.

A Charmed Life by Diana Wynne Jones -- (audio) Young adult. This seems to be a very typical Jones set-up: a disfunctional family with the least-regarded kid as the protagonist. (That's all my notes say. I confess that some of her books have now run into each other in my memory.)

Oops, almost forgot one of my August books!

Lake of Souls by Ann Leckie -- (audio) A short fiction collection, with some stories tying in to her Imperial Radch universe and others feeling like they're part of some other connected setting. Leckie writes the most vivid and believable truly alien characters I've encountered since back when I was reading a lot of C.J. Cherryh in the '90s. The title story is a great example.

On Audiobooks

One of the things I cut back on in preparation for my retirement was my Audible subscription. (I had the three-books-a-month level.) That's changed my audiobook consumption somewhat. What I borrow from Libby is a bit random, not simply because I tend to only put one book at a time on my wait list, rather than having several lined up in Audible, but because the types of books available are different. As I've previously mentioned, I've also been buying audiobooks from Chirp, but primarily using it for random discovery within their sale books. When I decide to outright buy a audiobook these days, I'll try Apple Books first (because: Amazon). Very much like my approach to ebooks, I dislike having books on multiple platforms because I lose track of what's where. But I can't really escape that, alas.

Why do I do so much of my reading in audio? Mostly because I do so much print and e-text reading for the Lesbian Historic Motif Project. Also, between bicycling a couple hours a day and yard work, I have a lot of contexts when I can multi-task audio. Another factor is my aging eyes. When I'm focusing on something close up for an extended period of time--whether it's my LHMP reading, or needlework, or whatever, my eyes take up to an hour to recover and be able to focus at other distances properly. It's annoying. And I can't avoid it for the LHMP work. Audio avoids adding annoyance. (Unintentional alliteration.)

Anyway, enough for now. Tomorrow I'll do my Inventing the Renaissance review, which I plan to post widely. When I first started doing this catch-up book posts, I also disseminated them to several review sites, but that got a bit exhausting and awkward. (I discovered that there's a limit to how many book reviews you can post to Amazon on a single day. A good thing, probably, but hard to keep track of when I'm doing catch-up reviews.)
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[personal profile] rfemod posting in [community profile] rarefemslashexchange
There is a little over one day left to sign up! If you haven't signed up yet, you can do so here. Sign-ups are closing on December 27th, 10PM PST. [Countdown to sign-ups closing] [In Your Timezone]

Helpful Links: Sign-Up Instructions | General Rules & Guideline | Request Summary | AO3 app

If you've already signed up, you can check the Request Summary and/or App to make sure that you're matchable.

Please make sure the email address attached to your AO3 account is one that you have access too, in case you need to be contacted.

Any linked letters should be ideally completed by the time assignments go out. The sooner that you complete them, the easier it will be for your creator to work on their assignment!

Do not match requests will only be accepted until sign-ups close. Please refer to the sign-up instructions on how to make one.

Any questions/concerns can be left on this post (anonymous is on, screening isn't) or you can reach out via email at rarefemslashexchangemod@gmail.com.

More Rocks

Dec. 26th, 2025 04:46 pm
ranunculus: (Default)
[personal profile] ranunculus
From Red Barn Stream




torachan: (Default)
[personal profile] torachan
The rain for this week was predicted to be pretty heavy, so we were prepared just in case, but as it actually got closer, it seemed the worst would be on the 24th, and then lighter rain on the 25th. We still planned to take parkas and umbrellas, but that morning it was dry and the forecast said there might be some light rain in the afternoon, but not a steady all-day thing, so when we got to the park we actually ended up leaving the parkas and umbrellas in the car.

Read more... )

Paperwork

Dec. 26th, 2025 01:17 pm
ranunculus: (Default)
[personal profile] ranunculus
I've made a start on the paperwork on my "desk".  The bills are paid and details entered.  
10 minutes ago it was dark and pouring rain so hard we couldn't see the nearby hills. Heck, even the other side of the circle, 125 feet away was a bit misty.  Now the sun is shining.  Apparently we will have a few dry days before the next storm moves in which will be nice. 
Edit: the above was written a couple of hours ago.  It has been a beautiful day since then. 
We went down the hill to town for a few minutes, mailed my letters and got some food.  On the way down I touched up the road a bit more. Mostly things are looking very good and no flooding.  My clearing out of the culvert area has worked very well, water is barreling through, and I hope it is carving the channel on the downhill side out a bit.  Lots of robins chattering away  in the tall trees down around the culvert.  A red shouldered hawk is hanging out near the house.  Dark Eyed Junco's are sitting on my amaranth plants eating the seeds. 
The greenhouse has a small window in the roof.  It is perfect for getting airflow moving through when it is warm or hot. The kit comes with an automatic opener/closer which I did not install because it gets both too hot and too cold here for it to work.  In our high winds the last few days that little window blew off.  Yesterday I was able to get it back in place and install a hook so it couldn't open. The wood on the hinge is still broken, but it is doing a good job of keeping in the heat. 
M just brought me a little bowl with pieces of Lively pepper that we picked from the garden yesterday.  It is really good.  I have no idea how those pepper plants have survived. 

Quick Yuletide post

Dec. 27th, 2025 09:16 am
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[personal profile] nnozomi
Things are a little up and down, but I got two really lovely Yuletide gifts, so making sure to note them here: What Abigail Did When She Housesat, a Rivers of London fic with wonderful Abigail and Indigo and an absolutely inspired original character of sorts creating the plot, and Names Give Us Away, which is exactly what I wanted with regard to Rachel Abramoff at the Crater School. Delighted with both of them <3 <3 <3
Best mid-holiday-or-otherwise wishes to everyone!

Daily Check In.

Dec. 26th, 2025 05:54 pm
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[personal profile] adafrog posting in [community profile] fandom_checkin
This is your check-in post for today. The poll will be open from midnight Universal or Zulu Time (8pm Eastern Time) on Friday to midnight on Saturday (8pm Eastern Time).


Poll #34010 Daily poll
This poll is closed.
Open to: Access List, detailed results viewable to: Access List, participants: 25

How are you doing?

I am okay
18 (72.0%)

I am not okay, but don't need help right now
7 (28.0%)

I could use some help.
0 (0.0%)

How many other humans are you living with?

I am living single
10 (40.0%)

One other person
11 (44.0%)

More than one other person
4 (16.0%)




Please, talk about how things are going for you in the comments, ask for advice or help if you need it, or just discuss whatever you feel like.

Happy Yuletide!

Dec. 26th, 2025 11:51 pm
trobadora: (Discworld: Hogfather)
[personal profile] trobadora
The holidays have been calm and quiet for me so far, but I've spent them with my mum, so somehow almost all the time was filled up anyway. *g* Tonight I finally found the time to properly settle down with my Yuletide gifts! I got three of them, two in the main collection and one in Madness. ♥ ♥ ♥

Here they are:
  • Nicky and Gwarha from Ring of Swords, completely spot on, in an episode mentioned but not described in detail in canon:
    Veni, Vidi, Arrivederci (1516 words)
    Fandom: Ring of Swords - Eleanor Arnason
    Rating: Teen And Up Audiences
    Relationship: Ettin Gwarha/Sanders Nicholas
    Content Tag: Pre-Canon

    Summary: The purple jungle adventure, from Gwarha's point of view.

  • The Nantucket Trilogy, a few generations later - future history my beloved:
    Portraits of the Past (1371 words)
    Fandom: Nantucket Trilogy - S.M. Stirling
    Rating: Teen And Up Audiences
    Relationships: Kenneth Hollard/Raupasha, Kashtiliash/Kathryn Hollard
    Characters: Raupasha (Nantucket Series), Kashtiliash (Nantucket Series), Original Characters
    Content Tags: Post canon, Canon as Seen Through The Lens of History

    Summary: A new exhibit opens at the Athenaeum...

  • More Nantucket Trilogy - a Raupasha drabble about her arrival on Nantucket:
    Her New Future (100 words)
    Fandom: Nantucket Trilogy - S.M. Stirling
    Rating: Teen And Up Audiences
    Relationship: Kenneth Hollard/Raupasha
    Characters: Raupasha (Nantucket Series), Kenneth Hollard
    Content Tags: Yuletide Madness Drabble Invitational, YUMADRIN 2025, Drabble, Post-Canon

    Summary: Raupasha reflects on the future.

I'm so pleased! So far I'm having a fantastic Yuletide. :D

Now I'm looking forward to diving into the rest of the collection! How's everyone else's Yuletide so far?
[syndicated profile] wonkette_feed

Posted by Matthew Hooper

Yes, I prefer Scotch with soda. I’m a Philistine. Deal.

Greetings, Wonketeers! I’m Hooper, your bartender. By the time you’re reading this, I’m pulling a final shift at Hemingway’s before flying to New Orleans for an … extended R&D session. Yeah. That’s the ticket. R&D session. Whole lot of taste testing and investigation going on, I promise you. In any event, I thought I’d keep it simple and share a bottle I was gifted for Christmas. Let’s have some Scotch. Because it’s the holidays, dang it. Here’s the recipe, if you need it.

Here is where you subscribe.

Scotch

Glenturret Triple Wood 2025

Neat: Pour 2-3 oz in a tulip glass. Add a dropperful of ice water. Wait 1-2 minutes before drinking. Take a moment to smell the Scotch before tasting. Take a small sip. Let it sit on the front of your mouth before swallowing. Wait and let the finish and flavors rise through your palate. Repeat.

Scotch and Soda: Combine 2 oz Scotch and 2 oz cold, high-quality soda water in a chilled highball or old-fashioned glass. (Don Q is recommended.) Taste and savor as per straight Scotch.

Scotch whisky is one of the few liquors I’m not familiar with. There are only a few Scotch-based cocktails; the Blood and Sand is a fairly infamous old-school drink, and the Penicillin is a solid modern creation. I’ll find a few Scotch fans at Hemingway’s on occasion, but there are far more bourbon fans than Scotch drinkers in America these days.

It’s not too hard to understand why. Scotch is nowhere near as approachable as bourbon or rye whiskey. It’s layered, smoky, and complex. It’s not remotely sweet. Tequila requires sugar, lime, and salt, but Scotch stands on its own. It takes some time to grow on you, but once you learn to appreciate it, you’re hooked. In a world that seems more and more juvenile over time, Scotch is decisively a drink for the adults of this world.

There’s always been a touch of defiance to Scotch, a refusal to bend to the winds of fate. Bessie Williamson, a secretary who went on to manage the Laphroig distillery after World War II, insisted that the quintessential Islay whisky retain its peaty, rough character even as American bourbon devolved into sweetened moonshine. That commitment to smoky, peaty flavor is a touchstone to Scotch across the country; I can find gentle smoke flavors in lowland blended whisky made far from Islay.

The Glenturret I’m sampling today is made in Perth, far from Islay’s rough coastline. The Triple Wood is their youngest Scotch, and I have to confess I found it a bit harsh when sampled neat. On the rocks, or with soda, the whisky opens up. A subtle liquor, like a complex wine, benefits from some suggestive selling. This bottle of Glenturret Triple Wood is hard to pin down on its own. When you hear the adjectives Glenturret uses to describe the Scotch — fruit, apple, toffee, wood spices — the flavors become recognizable.

The Glenturret is a single-malt Scotch, which means that all of the Scotch used in this blend comes from the same location — Glenturret’s distillery in Perth. That doesn’t mean this is the product of a single barrel or distillation. The “Triple Wood” in the name refers to three different aging processes in this whisky. Scotch aged in sherry-seasoned American oak, European oak, and ex-bourbon barrels all contribute to the final product. The sheer artistry of Scotch master blenders continues to amaze me. I’m astounded at how much flavor an artist can coax from the same product, aged and barreled in different ways. That’s probably why I don’t use Scotch much in my cocktails. The artistry in this bottle deserves significant respect; adding lemon juice and sugar to it feels like sacrilege. But on my weekend off, I’m happy to yield the spotlight to another artist.

Let’s talk ingredients:

Ingredient shot, from my kitchen table. It’s my day off, what can I tell you?


Genturret Triple Wood 2025: This bottle is a touch rare; it was a gift from a friend, and not always easy to find. Don’t let that stop you from exploring Scotch. Johnny Walker Black is an excellent place to start exploring Scotch. Johnny Walker Red? Dewars? Not so much. Good Scotch costs some money, but it’s worth it. Go ahead and splurge; it’s Christmas. There’s so much subtlety and flavor in good Scotch; take your time and explore the choices open to you.

Soda Water: Neat Scotch can be delightful, but I have to confess I prefer my Scotch with a splash of soda. There’s a lot of cheap soda water on the market, but splurging on better soda is a better choice. It’s a shame to add soda that costs less than a dollar to $75 Scotch. Don Q is the fizziest soda water available; feel free to use what you like. Keep the soda water in the fridge; the colder your soda is, the fizzier it will be.

My home bar is Hemingway’s Underground, the hottest cocktail bar in pretty little Medina, Ohio. I’m behind the stick Wednesday-Saturday, 4-10. Last call’s at midnight. Swing on by and I’ll make a drink for you… or anything else from our little Happy Hour here at Wonkette.

OPEN THREAD!

Wonkette Christmas Bonus!

Write every day: Day 26

Dec. 26th, 2025 11:14 pm
luzula: a Luzula pilosa, or hairy wood-rush (Default)
[personal profile] luzula
Day 24: No writing, also I didn't have time to reply to comments because my sister's family is here and it takes up all the time (in a very good way!)

Tally:
Read more... )
Day 25: [personal profile] luzula, [personal profile] sanguinity, [personal profile] sylvanwitch, [personal profile] trobadora, [personal profile] goddess47, [personal profile] china_shop,

Day 26: [personal profile] china_shop

Bonus farm news: I love my sister. <3 Also, she gave me heirloom bean varieties for Christmas. She definitely knows me...

Book recommendations needed

Dec. 26th, 2025 12:50 pm
petrea_mitchell: (Default)
[personal profile] petrea_mitchell posting in [community profile] booknook
It's gift card season and there are a couple sorts of books I would like to get with mine, but I don't even know what sorts of terms to start searching on.

1) Something about different legal systems and the philosophies that go with them. How they shape how people think about what the law is even for, and so forth. Would prefer to focus on modern systems, but historical examples are fine if they help illuminate the present. (E.g. I have come across mentions a few times that things work in such and such a way in France or its former colonies because they were shaped by the Napoleonic code.)

2) How the governments of really huge cities/metropoles work.

Blogs or newsletters are okay too. But no podcasts or YouTube series unless they're scripted, please.

Check-In Post - Dec 26th 2025

Dec. 26th, 2025 08:13 pm
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[personal profile] badly_knitted posting in [community profile] get_knitted

Hello to all members, passers-by, curious onlookers, and shy lurkers, and welcome to our regular daily check-in post. Just leave a comment below to let us know how your current projects are progressing, or even if they're not.

Checking in is NOT compulsory, check in as often or as seldom as you want, this community isn't about pressure it's about encouragement, motivation, and support. Crafting is meant to be fun, and what's more fun than sharing achievements and seeing the wonderful things everyone else is creating?

There may also occasionally be questions, but again you don't have to answer them, they're just a way of getting to know each other a bit better.


This Week's Question: What are your crafting goals for 2026?


If anyone has any questions of their own about the community, or suggestions for tags, questions to be asked on the check-in posts, or if anyone is interested in playing check-in host for a week here on the community, which would entail putting up the daily check-in posts and responding to comments, go to the Questions & Suggestions post and leave a comment.

I now declare this Check-In OPEN!



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