Sunday, February 22, 2026
Saturday, February 21, 2026
RIP Junti 2013-2026
We had to put my little cat down. The vet told me it was a miracle she had lasted this long, with the kidney numbers they were seeing. I know they said when I took her in the first time that she could have as little as a week, but I don't think I heard that.
She was doing really well for several days -- eating and playing like her old self -- and then yesterday she just crashed. Last night she cried for about an hour, until I finally got her to go to sleep (cuddled in my arms). After that she was lethargic and almost motionless, all bone under her beautiful coat. When we reached the vet, she only weighed 3 and a half pounds.
We got her when she was a fluffball of a kitten, just seven weeks old. She was meant to be a companion to Jasper, our first cat, who hated her on sight. (Jasper was a year old then.) Eventually they got to like each other enough that they would often sleep cuddled together, though for years they had giant hissing fights. When both of them were younger, they would also play together sometimes, chasing each other around the house and leaping up and down on things.
They loved the bookshelves in our first house, which had a really high place at the top for them to sleep on, like panthers.
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| Junti on the High Place |
Junti was a beautiful Siamese mix, sable brown with black paws and a face, and the clearest, meanest blue eyes imaginable. Dr. Skull was really her favorite, but sometimes she would deign to sleep on my lap, if the days were cold enough.
She was a good cat. I'm glad she didn't suffer long.
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| Junti on my Lap |
| Junti Contemplating the Green Space |
Friday, February 20, 2026
On Having Enough
I've inherited my father's money about two years ago now. I've been (moderately) wealthy for two years, in other words.
I still think like someone who is lower-middle class, which was how I was raised, and how I lived for most of my life.
Lower-middle class: there was always enough food, even though it wasn't great food, and we always had clothing, even if it was terrible clothing. Our vacations were spent visiting my parents' relatives in Indiana, or driving to Florida to spend a day at the beach. (This was about what we did for my kid -- our vacations were day-trips to state parks; or an overnight trip to Tulsa, where we would visit the zoo; or a week at my parents' house in New Orleans.)
There was never money for extras like field trips or meals in restaurants or books. I remember a terrible fight my parents had because my mother subscribed to a children's book club which delivered books once a month. Those books were how I read Tom Sawyer and Little Men and Aesop's Fables.
And when I got out on my own, I almost at once fell into serious debt due to thyroid cancer, so even when both Dr Skull and I were earning pretty good money (from sixty to eighty thousand a year total), we were still living paycheck to paycheck. Money was always a constant worry. When the car broke down, which it frequently did, because it was a crap car, it was always a disaster.
So it's only been in the last two years that I've had enough money. This is such a change, I can't even tell you. We can eat in restaurants. We have a good car. We can afford good health insurance. When I needed another pair of shoes, I just bought them. (I wore a pair of shoes that was cracked across one sole for about a year, because there was never any money for a new pair.) I got new glasses when I needed them, like right then, not waiting and squinting for months.
I have a wealth manager.
I do still think like someone who doesn't have money. The kid has to keep reminding me, when I hesitate to buy something at the grocery (have you seen the price of chicken lately?), that I can afford to buy food. (When the kid was little, we only bought fresh fruit in the summer, which was when I had extra money from summer teaching.)
It may be true that money doesn't buy happiness, but life without the constant worry and fear about money is certainly making me happier.
Thursday, February 19, 2026
What's the End Game?
So MAGA arranged, by voting for an extremely corrupt and dangerous president, to overturn Roe v. Wade. Obviously that was not their end game -- despite what the rubes believe, conservatives aren't at all interested in 'protecting babies.' During the 50s and 60s they used racism to motivate their base; during the 70s and 80s they used the existence of gay people. Starting in the 90s they used abortion, which previous to then not many people had cared about.
Once they overturned Roe v Wade they had to find a new target, something new for their base to get outraged about. They've tried various things -- trans people and immigrants, currently, pedophilia and voter fraud formerly -- but sadly these aren't really getting the base enraged enough to actually, you know, do anything like vote, probably because even MAGAts know most of the claims being made by the Right are silly lies.
Since the attacks on our civil rights and liberties does enrage leftists enough to actually vote, you see the problem, from their point of view.
What to do about this? It's simple, for a simple sort of mind like we see in most conservatives these days. If certain groups of people vote 'wrong,' keep those groups of people from voting.
Not a new tactic, I know. It's the same one that was used in the South from about 1890 to 1965, and in various places and ways since about 2000. Keep the 'wrong' people out of the voting booth, America Becomes Great Again. Or White again, at least.
The latest idea, which I'm seeing bruited about more and more from those on the Right, is to remove the right to vote from women and from anyone who isn't 'head of a household,' which is to say certain married men with children.
For people who scoff at this, the notion that Roe v Wade could be overturned was equally laughable twenty years ago.
Women have only had the right to vote in America since 1920. Brown and black people didn't really get the right to vote until the Civil Rights act in most places in America. Universal suffrage is a really, really new concept.
If you don't think conservatives can strip away that right, look at all the other rights they've erased over the past year, never mind that last decade.
P.S. They're also coming after contraception, obviously. Keeping people bound down with more children than they can support or educate (this is why conservatives are attacking public schools), especially if several of those children are chronically ill (this is why they're opposed to vaccines), they won't have time or money or energy to kick up a fuss. Plus all those uneducated, malnourished, sickly people will make excellent workers: desperate enough to work for low wages, in such terrible health that they will die in their fifties or sixties, well before society needs to worry about paying retirement.
Sunday, February 15, 2026
What I'm Reading Now
Nancy McCabe, From Little House to Little Women
McCabe writes about her childhood and young adult reading, as well as a trips she and her daughter take to visit literary sites across the US and Canada, including the Little House museums. I've never been to any of these museums except the one outside of Independence, with the reconstructed Little House on the Prairie; but I was reading most of the same books McCabe read in the same years she was reading them, so I enjoyed this memoir a great deal.
McCabe, her daughter, and various friends visit not only the Little House museums, but other museums, such as the Betsy-Tacy houses; the Anne of Green Gables museums on Prince Edwards Island; and the Alcott museum in Concord. Interspersed with the travel memoirs are reflections on McCabe's own life growing up in a religious conservative family in Kansas, focusing on her relationship with her mother, aunts, and female cousins; and how she evolves, both as a reader and person, as she comes of age and adopts her own daughter. Her memories of her family intertwine interestingly with her memories of the books she reads.
There's also some political musing about the various books -- feminism in Anne of Green Gables, as well as the conservative strictures that helped to create the Little House books (and even more so in the horrible television show). Both Wilder and her daughter were opposed to the New Deal created by FDR's administration, and these books (among other things) worked to create a narrative that explained why the New Deal, or any government aid, was a bad thing. (Never mind all the government aid Pa got, which among other things gave them their land in the Dakotas and sent Mary to college.)
McCabe is the author of Vaulting Through Time, which I reviewed for Asimov's. It's also about mothers and daughters, aunts and cousins. Plus time travel! Both that novel and this memoir are wonderful reads.
Ron Charnow, Mark Twain
This is a biography of Mark Twain, and about a zillion pages long. Twain has never been one of my favorite writers, being very uneven, though of course I read Tom Sawyer about a million times as a kid. I've read Huck Finn a couple of times, and enjoyed the first half every time. I don't think I have ever made it through any of his other books, though bits of his diaries of Adam and Eve are funny. Anyway, I picked this one up off the new books shelf at the library and mostly enjoyed it.
The second half of the book, when Twain's life is falling apart and his kids and wife are dying, is a bit depressing. Also he (and they) were constantly ill with things that antibiotics would cure, or which could have been prevented with vaccines. The baby son died from diphtheria, for instance. And they were always getting boils or dysentery; the youngest daughter had her life ruined by epilepsy. Life before modern medicine was awful. (On that topic!)
If you want to know what it was like to be a writer born before the Civil War who lived through a number of historical events and social changes, this book will tell it to you. Warning: Charnow doesn't try to gloss over the racism and misogyny of Twain's younger days. To his credit, Twain learned better and did better in his adulthood.
Reading the biography made me want to give Twain's works another chance, and I might even do that.
Stephen Graham Jones, The Buffalo Hunter Hunter
This one was recommended to me by my kid, who likes horror novels. I do not like horror novels, but he said I would like this one. I did!
It's about a Pikuni -- a Blackfoot -- Indian, Good Stabs, who becomes a vampire after attempting to kill a 500 year old vampire who immigrated to the US from Europe in the early 19th century. Good Stabs lives, as a vampire, through the destruction of his people and his culture by Europeans, attempting to fight back by killing Europeans, especially the Buffalo hunters who are wiping out the great herds that his people lived on.
Jones does interesting things with vampire lore, and he's a good writer. Trigger warning: lots of genocidal murder in the backstory. If you can handle that (I skimmed some parts), this is an engaging read. The ending left me a little underwhelmed, I'll admit.
Friday, February 13, 2026
Dealing with Home Ownership
We've been in the house about fourteen months now. I always said I didn't want to own a house because then we'd have to repair things, and neither of us is very much of a DIY person.
Here are things I've had to repair (or pay to have repaired) over the past 14 months:
(1) Installed a walk-in shower for Dr Skull, who no longer has the mobility to use a tub shower. My SIL recommended a contractor for this, and he did an excellent job.
(2) Rebuilt the back deck and screened in the porch. The same contractor did this as well. Also an excellent job.
(3) Put in a gas stove when the electric stove quit working. Hired plumbers to do this one.
(4) Swapped out various electrical outlets -- this was paid for by the previous owner, really, who took over the closing costs.
(5) Put in a "cricket" on the chimney, also paid for by the previous owner.
(6) Replaced the circuit breakers so the house didn't burn down. Also the water heater vent, same reason.
(7) New washer and dryer, ugh -- the house came with a washer/dryer, but they were very old and when the washer quit working I just went ahead and replaced both.
(8) Fixed the plumbing leading into the laundry room, which entailed fixing the plumbing that lead into the house -- the pressure had been set too high, which was why the feed in the laundry room started leaking.
(9) Smoke alarm battery needed replacing. I did this one myself!
(10) Repaired the automatic garage door opener. Surprisingly cheap!
So yeah, owning a house = lots of repair work. I guess some of that comes under "remodeling," by which I mean the porch and the shower. Both very much worth it, though!
Thursday, February 12, 2026
Links
PZ Myers fell on the ice and concussed himself. I worry more about falling these days, though so far I feel pretty stable. During the snow, I stepped in a hole and hurt my Achilles' tendon, which I do not recommend. It is very slow to heel. (Pun not intended, but it's hilarious, so I'm leaving it.)
Fraser Sherman blogs about the situation in MN. Like Fraser, I have been given hope by the people of Minneapolis especially. From the post:
Adam Serwer: “Vice President Vance has said that “it is totally reasonable and acceptable for American citizens to look at their next-door neighbors and say, ‘I want to live next to people who I have something in common with. I don’t want to live next to four families of strangers.’” Minnesotans are insisting that their neighbors are their neighbors whether they were born in Minneapolis or Mogadishu. That is, arguably, a deeply Christian philosophy, one apparently loathed by some of the most powerful Christians in America.
I too have notice how unChristian many American Christians are. If this were 2026 years ago, they would be standing with the Romans, celebrating the Crucifixion of that trouble-making Jew.
This was bizarre: the FAA closed the airspace around El Paso for ten days and then a few hours later reversed the decision. No one seems to really know what happened, though I have seen claims that a "party balloon" alarmed someone. Also claims that DoD and Hegesth are having a spat. Who knows, with this regime.
| Same, Charles. Same. |
Palate cleanser: N&M talk cats. My little cat seems to be doing better, which is good news.
Donate to MN. They run a daily Go-Fund-Me for people in the city, plus links to food banks and immigrant aid.
The science of the protests:
UPDATE: Looks like the protests worked. We should all take note. This is how we win.
Wednesday, February 11, 2026
We Need Unity
I still remember the student who told me she was voting for Trump because the country was too divided, and we needed to "heal" those divisions.
At the time, I was knocked speechless. Why would she think Trump, of all people --
But clearly I just wasn't understanding what she meant. Trump wasn't Obama, that's what she meant. What she meant was, we need to return to a time when white nationalism was the norm, and we could murder any brown person who stepped out of line.
Monday, February 09, 2026
Terrible Dreams
I had an awful dream last night where we were moving again. I was packing, or trying to pack, except the moving boxes kept falling apart. Also, it was our house in Idaho. Also, every time I thought I'd gotten all the books off the shelves, more books would show up.
If we believe Freud that in dreams the house is the body, then this dreams means....
Honestly, no idea.
Sunday, February 08, 2026
My Poor Little Cat
My little cat (her fighting weight is five pounds) had been losing weight. I took her to the vet, to find she weighed just a few ounces over four pounds, and that she has kidney disease.
They kept her for three days, giving her IV fluids and appetite stimulating meds, and she's home now. She's eating, but she's still awfully skinny. I have to continue the appetite stimulation meds and also give her subcutaneous fluids. The vet says she could live another year or another month, it's hard to say at this point.
| Junti, the Tiniest Cat |
Thursday, February 05, 2026
What I'm Listening To Now
I listen to audio books when I'm doing kitchen work or laundry, and when I'm trying to fall asleep (my insomnia is really bad at the moment). These are the ones I've been listening to lately.
Angela Thirkell, High Rising
Read by Jilly Bond. Written in 1933, this is what my kid calls a "family book," by which they mean books about families doing nothing much except having tea, raising kids, and falling in love. This is Thirkell's first book that focuses on Tony Moreland, I think, and his mother; but George Knox and Lord Stokes and others show up as well. There are some anti-Semitic moments and casual classism, as is usual with Thirkell's early books. Since nothing much happens, this was a good book to listen to when I was trying to fall asleep.
Josephine Tey, Miss Pym Disposes
Karen Cass reads it. One of my favorite books, which I have read so often I know it almost by heart. This is also a good category of book to listen to while I'm trying to sleep. Miss Pym gives a lecture at a physical training college and then stays on for a few weeks, dealing with a murder toward the end and middle of the book. The mystery isn't the point, though it features heavily in the plot. Rather, this is a study of the students and faculty at the college, and of a particular kind of English life. Published in 1946, there is some classism and eugenics commentary, but this is nevertheless a charming novel.
Richard Russo, Nobody's Fool
Read by Ron McLarty. I have listened to this one before, but it's such a good book, and McLarty does an excellent job reading it. It's really long, over 24 hours to listen to, but well worth it. If you haven't read Russo yet, this is his best book. We follow working class Donald Sullivan -- Sully -- and the other inhabitants of the dying town of Bath, NY, through a few months in the winter of 1983 or so. Just a great book.
Wednesday, February 04, 2026
This Isn't at All Alarming
From Paul Krugman's column, which I encourage everyone to read all of:
Trump is now calling for “nationalizing” the midterms, meaning to put voting and the counting of votes under his administration’s control. He can’t do that, but his demand is a clear sign that he will not accept the public’ s verdict in November.
So it’s just being realistic to say that MAGA will try, somehow, to prevent voters from having their say. Will ICE try to prevent blue districts from voting? If that fails, will they reject the results, in a midterm version of Jan. 6? Call me alarmist, but remember: The alarmists have been right, and the people telling us to calm down have been wrong, every step of the way.
Sunday, February 01, 2026
Still Cold, MN Still Occupied
It was 16 degrees when I took the dog to the dog park this morning -- the first time we've gone in a week, due to all the snow and ice. It was still snowy there plus lots of ice. The pond and stream were frozen over. The dog still had a good time, though. He loves to run.
I'm limping a bit because I slipped on the ice a few days ago and bruised my Achilles tendon. It's not serious, just annoying.
Minnesota is still occupied. Donate if you can: https://www.standwithminnesota.com/
Saturday, January 31, 2026
AI Being Very Helpful
So on my Gmail account, which I use to communicate to editors I write book reviews for, AI has started helpfully attaching summaries to the threads, explaining what the emails have covered.
For all kinds of reasons I do not like this.
Tuesday, January 27, 2026
Still Snowy, MN Still Occupied
No sign of snow melt yet. About seven or eight inches on the ground, I think. The high today is supposed to reach 33, but not for long enough to melt much. Tomorrow we're reaching the 40s, but for today at least we are still snowed in.
I take the dog out for his walk twice a day (in multiple sweaters, a ushanka, wool gloves and snow boots) so I'm doing okay, but Dr Skull is getting stir-crazy.
I've made donation to food pantries in Minneapolis and to the ALCU of Minnesota, and I encourage you to do likewise if you can. One of my students lives there now, as do many of my favorite SF writers. Naomi Kritzer has a page about how to help.
Kritzer also includes links to local news services, if you want to read about what's happening but don't want to be fed MAGA propaganda.
I've seen lots of MAGAts on FB and elsewhere saying Pretti shouldn't have been armed -- these are the same people that love to preach about the 2nd Amendment, so I don't know how to square that circle -- and others saying that he should have "informed" the agents that he was armed. You know, like Philando Castile did.
Most of the other boot-licking MAGAts are saying he should have just stayed home. Because that's the way to deal with injustice and tyranny and people murdering your neighbors -- stay home and watch TV.
These people sicken me.

