
Day 182: Happy Halloween from low-key Loki!
Enthusiastically Ambiverted Hopepunk
The stuff about me and my life. The “diary” side of blogging.

Day 181: Sitting here trying to figure out what to do for a photo when my wife decided that she could help. And she did, to everyone’s amusement.

Day 180: While we share laundry duties, folding sheets is always my responsibility. Partly because my arms are long enough to do it more easily, and partly because I have, if not mastered, at least approximated the dark art of folding fitted sheets.
61/2023 – ⭐️⭐️⭐️
The last of the three Prodigy middle-grade novels. Where the first two were set roughly during the break between the first and second half of the first season, this one is set during the gang’s shuttle trip to Earth. In need of a spare part for the shuttle, they find a mysterious moon that may have the part they need…if they’re all allowed to leave.
As with the rest, it’s another fun, quick adventure. To my (50-year-old) eyes, when reading all three back-to-back, it suffered a bit from having so many similarities to the first book, also by the same author: a search for a missing part leads the crew to a mysterious location where they get captured and have to figure out how to escape with the part they need. But for the age range these books are actually aimed at, the similarities might not be as noticeable.

60/2023 – ⭐️⭐️⭐️
The Prodigy kids continue on their adventures, this time following a clue to a planet where they have to face nightmares from their past. This one is a little more Gwyn-focused, expanding on her backstory a little bit.

59/2023 – ⭐️⭐️⭐️
A fun, quick adventure with the Prodigy crew as they try to acquire a replacement part at a disreputable market, and Dal learns a bit more about command. The first of three middle-grade books released to tie into the show.


Day 179: With this cold snap hitting the Seattle area, it was the perfect morning to build our first fire of the season and relax with books while listening to the crackle and pop of the logs as the living room warms up.
58/2023 – ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
I first read this just a few years after it came out, when it was very much a “thing”. A few years ago I picked up another copy and it’s been waiting for the right time for a re-read; apparently this October was the right time. I really enjoyed diving back into this. It’s definitely not something everyone will enjoy, with its multiple narrators, footnotes-within-footnotes, pseudo-academic tone for one through line, and experimental layout. But it has an incredibly effective sense of eerie, creeping dread, and the unusual structure brings the labyrinthine nature of the house into the experience of reading the story. Fascinating and perfect for the Halloween season.


Day 178: My final week-before-Halloween work shirt has Jack-o-lanterns, some wearing witch’s hats. The skeletons and skulls from earlier in the week are shirts that I wear year-round, this one is one that I’ll likely only wear close to Halloween.

Day 177: Back at the hospital again, but for entirely mundane reasons: time for my annual physical. I continue to be medically unremarkable. Everything looks good, all tests in normal range, nothing to report, you’re healthy, go home, come back in a year. Sounds good to me! Also, today’s pre-Halloween week work shirt: big cute (and sometimes beribboned or beflowered) skulls.