Went to see a live club performance by the Swedish band Kolonien last night, they were great and just starting a two week US tour.
Trying the T-mobile free Network Pass for a few weeks, using an e-SIM for the first time.
Probably not warm enough for shorts today ๐ฉณ
Still figuring out iOS 16. I am now using a custom lock screen but need more apps to provide widgets.
Go go omicron booster ๐
Interesting posts about The Rings of Power title sequence: twitter.com/Literally…
Garlic and black pepper sausage, fresh oregano ๐
Finally getting to the laundry ๐งบ
I did not order a new iPhone but I did order new AirPods.
I did not order a new Apple Watch.
Back in the office ๐ฅ
Home again ๐
Ready for the morning swim.
Dead bottles.
Made it to camp.
Packing up for camp (assuming we get negative rapid tests this afternoon).
This was not me: twitter.com/WCVB/stat…
I am happy to say that my one-day career as a truck driver is now over.
Moving day ๐
Where has the summer gone? ๐ถ
Scrub for the big rocket today ๐
The Seventh Bride by T. Kingfisher ๐
Having read Nettle and Bone recently and enjoyed it greatly, I decided to pick up some other works by the same author. This one turns out to have been one of her earlier titles, and it bears more than little resemblance in the plot, prose, and setting to the later work.
The young protagonist is a millerโs daughter rather than a princess, and is herself threatened with marriage to a mysterious nobleman, but this is a fairy-tale world and not a Jane Austen novel and the noblemanโs intentions are quickly revealed to have more to do with magic and theft than happy-ever-after. Rhea must look for allies in unlikely places, perform terrible tasks set by her self-declared intended, and find a path to escape what seems likely to be a tragic ending.
The story is well told, the adventures scary and magical, and one can clearly see the inventive imagination of the author at work, but it does have a bit of early novel about it, the characters are a bit less vivid and the plot much more linear in how it unfolds. Still I banged though the book in short order (itโs not all that long) and enjoyed doing so.
Recommended.
Where is the line in linear TV?