Book Log: Our Moon: A Human History

Sat, Feb. 7th, 2026 09:04 pm
scaramouche: Castiel from Supernatural, black and white (castiel b&w)
[personal profile] scaramouche
Rebecca Boyle's Our Moon: A Human History was a fun read! Clean prose but also poetic in places, with sometimes cheeky delivery that doesn't fully spell out the joke or the implications. She says things like, "The Apollo missions were designed to use the Moon as a tool. It was an instrument of might, just as surely as it was for the stone circles of northern Scotland, the Nebra sky disk, and the temples dedicated to Sin. Americans walked up there to show they could do it, and in doing so, demonstrated what glory was possible through democratic republicanism and white Protestant Christianity, rather than Soviet communism and godlessness." A journey of meaning, in a chain all the way back to the earliest times.

The book is split into three sections:
  • How the Moon Was Made, detailing the physical characteristics of the moon, what it's made of, how its physical characteristics are different from Earth, the Theia hypothesis, and a general overview of its movements in the sky;

  • How the Moon Made Us, detailing the hypothesis of how moon helped evolution via the tides which forced our sea ancestors into amphibious environments, and then of how the moon helped our human ancestors conceptualize time and time-keeping and future planning, which eventually led to civilisation;

  • How We Made the Moon, detailing our projections of religious, emotional and scientific meaning onto the moon, culminating in modern and future moon exploration, feat. the usual suspects of Ptolemy, Copernicus, Galileo, etc.

Lovely journey of exploration and very readable, though I did have to look up some things for better understanding, like the synodic month. I have such difficulty picturing such things in my head! And have to constantly correct the mental picture I have that the moon moves with the night sky, when we can literally see the moon in the sky in daytime. For me, it's somewhat similar to the perception of up and down, which gets tossed if I stand outside at night in low light pollution and the huge huge night sky makes me feel like I could fall into it.

There's also a section about how the moon may actually affect our health in very subtle ways, with reports on possible links to depression and anger. I initially doubletaked like, is she talking horoscope-type effects? But then I remembered how atmospheric pressure does cause migraines and arthritic symptoms, and I myself feel a stinging pressure along my old surgery scars when there's a thunderstorm coming. We are made of lots of liquid, after all.
kingstoken: (Kirk Spock McCoy)
[personal profile] kingstoken in [community profile] fanart_recs
Fandom: Star Trek: TOS
Characters/Pairing/Other Subject: Spock
Content Notes/Warnings: N/A
Medium: Digital 
Artist Website/Gallery: winterfoxdraws
Why this piece is awesome: Lovely motion in the piece of Spock with the whales  
Link: Tumblr

Labyrinth: The Graphic Novel

Tue, Feb. 3rd, 2026 06:28 pm
scaramouche: Sarah from Labyrinth, next to twirling crystal balls (labyrinth twirling crystal balls)
[personal profile] scaramouche
It seems like every time I turn around there's a new Labyrinth comic or book or artbook being released. I just got the rereleased 1986 comicbook adaptation last year! But I went into the city recently, and in a major bookstore walked past the comics section on the way to another section, and my eye got caught by a hardback with an instantly recognisable cover.

A hardback book titled Labyrinth: The Graphic Novel

I stopped in my tracks and had a vicious battle with my dodgy mobile internet to check if this is an actual new thing or a different print of the Marvel comicbook I already had.

It's a new thing! With new artwork! And based on the novelisation instead of the movie itself, so there are differences! I haven't read the full thing yet, but I did browse the pages to check out the artwork, which is stylised and although I do love how Sarah and the creatures of the Labyrinth look, it is hard to capture that magical feeling that is Jareth, king of the goblins.

Photos of some panels. )

his dose of sunshine By rombutan (SFW)

Tue, Feb. 3rd, 2026 07:30 pm
mific: (Heated rivalry)
[personal profile] mific in [community profile] fanart_recs
Fandom: Heated Rivalry
Characters/Pairing/Other Subject: Shane Hollander/Ilya Rozanov
Content Notes/Warnings: none
Medium: digital art
Artist on DW/LJ: n/a
Artist Website/Gallery: rombutan on Instagram
Why this piece is awesome: A lovely double portrait of Shane and Ilya hugging. The artist has several more artworks in the fandom on their Instagram.
Link: his dose of sunshine on Instagram, and reposted on tumblr here

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