Fanfic, Maleficent, Maleficent/Diaval, joy of flying
Author:
Fandom: Maleficent
Ship/Characters: Maleficent/Diaval
Rating/Category: T/Het
Prompt: Maleficent (2014), Maleficent & or / Diaval, joy of flying
Spoilers: Post-movie, ignores sequel
Summary: Even long after her triumphant, joyous return to the skies, Maleficent sometimes feels an urgent call to take wing, and perhaps she always will; Diaval feels the call to keep his Mistress' side, no matter where she roams, and will follow it always - for so long as she allows.
Notes/Warnings: N/A
Wordcount: 1,000
Read on AO3
DecRecs 2025 days 22-25
Today for #DecRecs I want to talk about Saint Cavish a Chinese food youtube channel run by Christopher St. Cavish
https://www.youtube.com/@saintcavish
I'm always a little careful about media by white dudes about China but I was intrigued by the series of videos where Italian chefs visit "China's Noodle Homeland" -- which turned out to be really good! I've since watched a lot more of the channels videos
The videos are thoughtful, never treating the food as too weird or exotic and do a good job of putting stuff in context both historical and with regard to modern China
Day 23
Today for #DecRecs I want to rec fancy seam finishing for sewing projects! I mentioned in an earlier rec that this year I've been sewing a lot of garments for myself. For all of those I've used either french seams or flat felled seams and they are so nice to look at and so stratifying to make!
Day 24
I had PT this morning and it wore me out so for #DecRecs have a pretty picture
https://www.tumblr.com/hisiheyah/794758124462637056/as-the-leaves-on-the-trees-change-with-the
I guess I can link this to the whole year in review theme of this year's #DecRecs by saying that this year I started a tumblr account -- I still don't understand tumblr culture so I just follow people I know and reblog pretty pictures
Day 25
For today's #DecRecs I want to share some of my favorite songs so far form the Chinese reality show Crush of Music which I'm part way through watching having just finished episode 4
Crush of music is a show where songwriters demo original songs and then through a mildly gameifed process are matched with a singer (or two) who then preforms the song.
It's a really fun low stress show and features some of my favorite singers ! I can't really rec the show though because the subtitles are very very bad -- I'm just watching in anyways even though I can only understand about half of what people are saying
Anyways on to the songs! Here's Liu Yuning having the best time rocking his heart out
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ThwZSs1MTqo
Zhou Shen singing with cute children!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gBlR8iSsrTc
I am constantly so impressed with Xue Zhiqian's stage designs (also featuring cute children)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h29GaZroe4g
There's two version of this song and I can't decide which one I like better
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fkxr0uqhgHs
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pO9kRZ3JsKw
Merry Christmas & Happy Holidays!

Yay, 4-day long weekend! \o/
And thank you for the card,
First Day of Christmas!
1. Gaming Dice: A heavy, metal 20-sided die in green with gold accents
2. Diamine Inkvent: A Shimmer + Sheen ink called Myrrh the Merrier. OMG, this is a gorgeous ink. The base color is dark teal, the sheen is metallic purple, and the shimmer is blue sparkles. SO COOL! And it's a large bottle!
3. Anthon Berg: I'm opening two days since it's a 24 day calendar. I got Southern Comfort and Cuarenta Y Tres, which is a Spanish liquor.
4. Redhead Creamery: Lucky Linda Clothbound Cheddear & a small jar of balsamic fig pearls (basically boba pearls in balsamic) It was a pretty good combo, although both were EXTREMELY strong tasting
5. TheFictionPhantom (this is the etsy shop I got the book calendar from): Kindred by Octavia E. Butler. Excellent! I love Butler's writing, so I can't wait to read this. It's been on my TBR for quite a while. Value: $8.60.
Sorry about this, but the only way to get everything in the picture was to do it sideways and I have no idea how to change that after the fact.

Read-in-Progress Not Wednesday
This is your weekly read-in-progress post for you to talk about what you're currently reading and reactions and feelings (if any)!
For spoilers:
<details><summary>insert summary</summary>Your spoilers goes here</details>
<b>Highlight for spoilers!*</b><span style="background-color: #FFFFFF; color: #FFFFFF">Your spoilers goes here.</span>*
Reading Thursday (The October Edition)
This being the book club one. A trans woman in contemporary London feels trapped by mediocrity and inertia. She has a job she doesn't like but pays well enough. She has friends she more or less gets along with, but aren't great people. She writes poetry that does okay, but never really goes anywhere. She has tense meetings with her family, who love her but are bound by an inability to actually communicate. Meeting a new guy seems like it might nudge her into something better, but her overwhelmingly low standards and lack of ambition might sink that too. There are also flashback from the boyfriend's point of view, about a youthful trip to South East Asia, which ends in violence.
This book was a lot of people being mildly terrible, and everyone feeling like they ought to do something about improvement, then... not doing that. It was often quite funny, and Dinan has some great one-liners that cut through to the core of people's motivations. Though it's mostly about the failure mode of... pretty much everything, there were glimmers of the protagonist at least trying to work on the people around her, and maybe even herself. None of that was really enough to lift the book out of its mire of dreariness, though. It was a lot of time to spend with the grindingly unpleasant.
I read this when it came out, and remember not being deeply impressed. I think I expected there to be more of a story, or perhaps more of a resolution. Rereading it some years later, I liked it a lot better. (Though several of my classmates had my initial "Is that all there is?" reaction.)
Vivek starts getting oddly poetic transphobic death threats via email, and becomes obsessed with the sender, paranoid it could be someone she knows, afraid it could be a stranger on the subway. She collaborates with artist Ness Lee (always shown drawn in her distinctive black and white line art, while everyone else is in colour) to make the novel we're reading, while still being haunted and possibly hunted by the letter writer.
This benefits from close reading, as the images are symbolically very rich, and the colourists do a lot of work with motifs and character themes. Literary graphic novels can be redundant, at times, with the pictures just showing you what the text is already saying, and a general feeling that this could've been an e-mail, but the art here is telling its own story, running alongside, underneath and through the text. It's very well done, and I'm sad that Shraya switches genres with every project, as I'd like to see more of this from her. Though she does great work in all the other genres, too.
I hadn't managed to read this before, and it's a lot. Bechdel tells the story of her relationship with her father, including discovering he was gay, and his ambiguous death. She's based the story on her teenage diaries, found documents such as family photographs, newspaper clippings, dictionary entries, and maps, and a reading list she shared with her father. Each section takes on themes of one of the works mentioned (including Memories of Lost Time, Great Gatsby, The Importance of Being Earnest), going over and back over the events of her youth and her father's death. The whole thing sits inside a frame of the story of Daedalus and Icarus, though it's not clear which character is meant to be whom.
The text is dense and recursive, as if Bechdel is still unable to face what happened full on, and keeps sliding up to it sideways, keeps feeling the emotions vicariously through other stories. At one point, she talks about how in a childhood bout of OCD, she kept writing symbols over top of the names of important people and things in her diary, as a kind of ward against the evil eye. To some extent, the whole novel feels like that: as if she's writing over and over the events of her childhood to take a curse off them. It probably rewards rereading, but it's also a lot.
Second time through this, and it's still great. It's difficult to imagine the impact of this in the early 1980s, when queer lit was very much a thing, but also more siloed and less diverse. I should look up contemporary reviews, and see if this was indeed like a bomb going off, or was taken in stride. Incredible depth, incredible emotion, wonderful literary voice. I don't have a lot to say otherwise: It's great and you should read it!
It was interesting what I remembered from reading it a few years ago: the abortion, the execution of the Rosenbergs, working in the factory, not fitting in with the butch/femme lesbian bar scene, Kitty. I was surprised at how late in the book we meet Kitty, and how abrupt the ending was.
Yuletide!
First is my gift, which deals with Simon and his weird relationship to technology in a fantastic way:
I Love When Technology Works for Me (2275 words) by Anonymous
Chapters: 1/1
Fandom: Eerie Indiana
Rating: General Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Characters: Simon Holmes, Dash X (Eerie Indiana), Marshall Teller
Additional Tags: Future Fic, Technology, POV Third Person, lightly implied mdash, Mega Voodoo Eerie Weirdness (Eerie Indiana)
Summary:
Simon's work has recently implemented an AI assistant.
the other is Janet and Chisel having a Meeting:
Scene from a Chinese Restaurant (2009 words) by Anonymous
Chapters: 1/1
Fandom: Eerie Indiana
Rating: General Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Characters: Janet Donner, Winston Chisel
Additional Tags: Future Fic, Eerie Indiana Local Politics, Implied Marshall Teller, Implied Mega Voodoo Eerie Weirdness, Chinese Food
Summary:
Several years after escaping the Lost Hour, Janet Donner meets Mayor Chisel for an important conversation.
They're both wonderful!
I'm off to read more yuletide fics and I'll probably make up a longer rec list later in the weekend!
(10 out of 20) Carolers Might be High - Harry Potter (PG)
Author:
Character(s): Harry Potter, Severus Snape
Pairing(s): Harry/Severus
Rating: PG
Length: 100
Summary:
It was an otherwise normal Yule feast.
Notes:
For
For
Carolers Might be High on AO3
25 Purrfect Classy Cat Memes to Have a Very Meowry Christmas Morning
Merry Christmas, everyone! It has officially happened. We have made it all the way to this day. A day of joy, a day of freedom, a day during which we focus on the things that we love and bring us happiness only. So really, here at ICHC, we thought that it would only be fitting to start this day by saying thank you to the one thing that has made us smile consistently, every single time we looked at it, throughout the entire year. You know what it is. It is time for some hissterical cat memes.
We tried our very best to start each and every one of our mornings with a whole bunch of silly cat memes like these ones. Becausee they make it smile. It really is that simple. Sometimes, all that you need to start your day on the right paw is a little collection of funny cat memes to scroll through first thing in the morning. The same thing is true for Christmas morning just as much as any other. Starting the day on the right paw today is, in fact, kind of crucial. This is why you're here, and we promise you… these memes will definitely help you have a merry, merry Chirstmas.
Community Recs Post!
This works great if you only have one rec and don't want to make a whole post for it, or if you don't have a DW account, or if you're shy. ;)
(But don't forget: you can deffo make posts of your own seven days a week. ;D!)
So what cool fics/fanvids/podfics/fancrafts/fanart/other kinds of fanworks have we discovered this week? Drop it in the comments below. Anon comment is enabled.
BTW, AI fanworks are not eligible for reccing at recthething. If you aware that a fanwork is AI-generated, please do not rec it here.
Wishing everyone Merry Christmas (if you celebrate) and a Happy Thursday (if you don't.) 😉
Biology major student adopts a stunning lab cat with a unique coat and markings who has taken part i
One of the coolest things about cats is how unique each and every one of them is. And we're not just talking about the cats with the rare coat patterns and markings that you only ever see on the internet. Of course, we have the beautiful brown cats, which is a rare enough thing in and of itself. And we have snow white kitties, who look like they are a little fluffy pile of cotton. And then you have the cats with hearts on their fur - little special patches of color that came together in the most purrfect way.
You have the "special" cats, but in reality, each and every one of our cats is special. Sometimes, it's obvious, when their fur marks out those special shapes. And other times, it's a little speck of color in their eyes that you can see when you look close enough or one of their toe beans being a different color. It's the little things that make them all unique, the same way that it is with us humans. And for the cat in today's story, it's in her one eye that looks like it has the purrfect eyeliner.
Culturally appropriate seasonal wishes or lack thereof, according to your chosen norms!

Culturally appropriate seasonal wishes or lack thereof, according to your chosen norms!
May your solstice experiences harmoniously conform to your preferences!
merry == brief?
From Middle English mery, merie, mirie, myrie, murie, murȝe, from Old English meriġe, miriġe, myriġe, myreġe, myrġe (“pleasing, agreeable; pleasant, sweet, delightful; melodious”), from Proto-West Germanic *murgī (“short, slow, leisurely”), from Proto-Germanic *murguz (“short, slow”), from Proto-Indo-European *mréǵʰus (“short”). Cognate with Scots mery, mirry (“merry”), Middle Dutch mergelijc (“pleasant, agreeable, joyful”), Norwegian dialectal myrjel (“small object, figurine”), Latin brevis (“short, small, narrow, shallow”), Ancient Greek βραχύς (brakhús, “short”). Doublet of brief.
The shift from "slow, leisurely" to "agreeable" is an easy one. And likewise the shift from the cause of happiness to the state of happiness — from the OED's sense I.1.a "Of an occupation, event, state, or condition: causing pleasure or happiness; pleasing, delightful" to sense II.4.1 "Full of animated enjoyment (in early use chiefly with reference to feasting or sporting); full of laughter or cheerfulness; joyous".
But the earlier shift from "short" to "slow" is less intuitive: short→long does match slow→fast, but matching brief with slow, not so much. There's a diminutive in the song "(Have Yourself) A Merry Little Christmas", but "Have yourself a brief little Christmas"? I don't think so.
So have a merry Christmas, of the calendrically designated duration!
N.B. According to genius.com,
“Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas” is a song written in 1943 by Hugh Martin and Ralph Blane and introduced by Judy Garland in the 1944 MGM musical Meet Me in St. Louis. Frank Sinatra later recorded a version with modified lyrics. In 2007, ASCAP ranked it the third most performed Christmas song during the preceding five years that had been written by ASCAP members. In 2004 it finished at No. 76 in AFI’s 100 Years…100 Songs rankings of the top tunes in American cinema.
The 1944 Judy Garland version is here, and the original verging-on-tragic lyrics are here.

