Book review: In the Night Garden
Jan. 6th, 2026 07:17 pmAuthor: Catherynne M. Valente
Illustrator: Michael Kaluta
Genre: Fantasy, fairy tale
First book of 2026! This was The Orphan's Tales: In the Night Garden by Catherynne M. Valente with illustrations by Michael Kaluta. I have no recollection of how this ended up on my TBR and I was a little skeptical checking it out in the library, but I'm glad I stuck with it because it ended up being a lot of fun and I will definitely check out the second volume.
You might be a little confused in the beginning, as In the Night Garden is a series of nested stories within stories and the style takes a minute to get used to, but it's worth it. Valente unfolds a veritable matryoshka of tales into neat blooms whose petals all fit together. Retroactive reveals and recontextualiations are delightful here.
Valente's vivid prose brings together her fantastical tales with such clarity; she attends frequently to all five senses, so that the reader knows what the characters are not only seeing, but hearing, smelling, tasting, and feeling as well. There's obviously a lot of fairy tale inspiration here, but Valente definitely brings her own flavor. Women are almost always the hero of Valente's tales (though they play the villains too!) and there are such a great variety of them. Monsters abound too, but they get their chance to tell a tale too. (There's also some gentle ribbing at the Arthurian legends, with one witch lamenting about "all that questing" princes get up to.)
I was so engrossed in the work I didn't realize until quite late in the book how little romance factors into it. In a fairy tale inspired book like this, I would have expected a great many characters motivated by romance, but I can only think of two here who are primarily motivated by a love interest, and this delights me too. I'm arospec myself and while I enjoy a good tale of romance, I also weary of how frequently and totally it is centered in stories, so I was really enthused by how little that's the case here.
Friendship and family relationships do make frequent appearances though, and the friendship between the orphan teller of tales and the young boy hanging onto her words is the framing story. Love between mother and daughter, between brother and sister, even between strangers is a common thread.
She also avoids a pitfall I see in various modern fantasy stories which are so keen to explain the magic of their world they strip it of all mystery. Valente's world remains largely unexplained and asks the reader to simply take it as it is, which I found fun and appropriately mysterious.
The style of the book allows Valente to pull in a great many diverse characters and voices, which she does it well. Most impressive though is her ability to pull a cohesive tapestry out of all the various threads she's juggling.
A really fun and unusual story which I enjoyed a lot--a great start to a new year of reading!
Reading goals for 2026:
Jan. 6th, 2026 08:12 pmSo now it’s time to sort out the reading goals for this year.
I’ve already talked about some of them (maybe too much!)
I’ve also talked a lot about the constant source of dismay that is my TBR list. That… has only grown, haha. (Both the list and the sense of dismay!) Now that I’ve been reading, I suddenly keep hearing more about other books; I see recommendations based on things I’ve read, or find more books by authors I like, or I give in to the desire to browse a bit and find a dozen things… I’ve also started actually adding things to my TBR list when my friends mention something they like, instead of just saying it sounds good and then pretending that my brain will retain that information, haha.
Figuring out how to read ebooks has certainly been a double-edged sword. I used to easily be able to completely ignore ebook sales! Now when something comes up for $1.99 or $2.99 and I know it’s something I’ve heard good things about, or thought about maybe wanting to read someday, it’s really difficult to resist grabbing it for later! (I often do not resist.) So that has certainly added pretty exponentially to the list. Like, really exponentially. I’ve gotta rein it in, because a couple bucks each still adds up to $$$ eventually.
My list last year was, I think, around 200 or so, once I factored in some most-of-a-bibliography bundles I had. Now that I’ve read 68 books, that list has shrunk down to… 321. :|
(To be fair, that includes some things that are on my wishlist or that aren’t out yet, so that I do not currently have available to me, but even so; those are things I plan to someday read. It does also include some rereads.)
Buuuut, because I figured I should have an accurate picture of things, I decided to also finally count up the indie and other miscellaneous ebooks that I have saved. (Lots of romance/erotica stuff from “stuff your kindle” events and such, some indie books that I bought to support an author I’d talked to/liked reading posts from/etc., the free “first reads” book per month that Amazon lets you pick, etc. ) I have resisted counting those up for years, now. Once I factor in all of those… the total list is at 509 books, and I want to cry a little bit.
Even at last year’s pace that I am very proud of, this is between five and ten years of reading, and I KNOW I will keep adding to the TBR at a pace that outstrips the actual reading that I’m capable of.
Welp. The only way out is through, and all that.
I remind myself again of what I settled on last year: it is a wonderful thing to have so many books that I want to read ahead of me. It is fine for it to be a list I may never reach the end of, because I would certainly never want to run out of things to read. How lucky to have these things available to me!
So what are my reading goals for 2026?
My goals!
The top-level one: read at least 50 books.
(Obviously, I’d like to read more than that, but 68 was a big stretch for me, while 50 is close to a book per week, which feels doable, but still an effort.)
Secondary goal: read more of the genre classics, specifically starting with Tolkien, Le Guin, and Pratchett.
This is one that I’ve talked about before, when I was talking about avoidance and feelings of shame. There are several classics of the fantasy and sci-fi genres that I haven’t read, or didn’t read when I was in a place to appreciate them. The biggest one is Tolkien. Two of the other authors on that list (who I happen to have humble bundles of books by), are Ursula K Le Guin, and Terry Pratchett. They’re authors I want to read, but because I’ve gone so long without doing so, I feel guilty, and then continue to avoid them because I feel bad. Which is, objectively, stupid haha. So this year, I want to at least start reading some of their work.
Additional secondary goal: reread The Murderbot Diaries in preparation for the new one coming out this year.
I love The Murderbot Diaries, and have wanted to reread them anyway. I’m excited we get another book this year, and so want to reread the series.
Less related to the reading itself, but a parallel goal: make sure I’m being consistent with how I rate books. (I’m planning on using that chart I posted a while back as a starting point, weighing the good parts against the less-good parts.) It feels a little wrong that most of what I read gets a 4, when theoretically 3s should be the most common rating. But I do try to curate my list based on what I expect to enjoy, so perhaps it’s not that surprising that I like more than I don’t. But I also should get over feeling like a 3 is “mean” or a bad rating. It’s just in the middle!
Also setting a few extra “stretch goals”:
- Read the 2025 Pride storybundle of ebooks (14 queer-themed ebooks)
- Read 75 books for the year
- Start incorporating some anthologies of short stories into my reading rotation
Some broader goals, which may or may not fully happen this year:
- Read a little more widely in terms of genre/subgenre/within my genres. I’m not sure I’ll branch out super far; I like my fantasy/sci-fi/horror/romance fiction, and I am perfectly fine sticking primarily to my genres of choice. However, a lot of my TBR is pretty strongly curated; it’s by authors I already know I like, or works that I feel fairly confident that I will enjoy. Yet one of the things I was happiest about with my 2025 reads was reading that horror bundle, including books I probably wouldn’t have picked up on their own. While I didn’t love everything in there, it let me discover some books I really did love and some authors I hope to read more of. So… especially when I give in to those $1.99 ebook sales, or when I get to pick a freebie at the beginning of the month, I want to pick some things that might be a bit to the side of what I’d usually read.
- Sort of related: some of the books now on the list are ones that I’ve heard very mixed things about, but that were pretty buzzy. I don’t want to hate-read, or buy books I know I’m not likely to enjoy,
(Unfortunate side note to the above: because I just keep adding my new acquisitions to the end of the list, those buzzy reads and such are really… not likely to be terribly relevant anymore by the time I reach them. I may have to figure out a way to rebalance the list a bit, so I can read things when they’re still being talked about, rather than five+ years after the fact. (Not that books become IRRELEVANT after release, and thinking they do is terrible! A good book can matter forever!) But in terms of like… discussion around a book, or seeing how people feel about it, sometimes it’s nice to not be years late to the party, y’know?)
- Allow myself to be a DNFer. I DNFed one book in 2025, and still feel very vaguely guilty about it. But with creeping-up-near-500 books waiting for me, I really don’t want to spend time on things I’m not enjoying or getting anything out of. I don’t intend to DNF just anything that I’m not loving (though maybe I should, considering the length of the list.) I can see value in reading things I don’t like, too. Sometimes it helps me figure out what specifically I don’t care for, which can help me identify why I enjoy the things I do. Sometimes it helps me clarify things for my own writing that I may want to keep in mind. So… I’m okay with reading things I don’t like, but if I’m having to force myself to keep reading, or it feels like it’s turning into a chore, then I’d rather DNF than kill my momentum for reading entirely.
So what is my plan for tackling the list in 2026?
My plans!
My plan for the year is similar to what I did in 2025. I plan to alternate between different “types” of book. I want to alternate between some of those classics I’m planning to read, those pride ebooks, and other books from the TBR list. (And the TBR list is a set list, that I have already picked an order for. This saves me from decision paralysis, haha. It also means that hopefully nothing just gets pushed perpetually to the bottom of the list.)
As before, I plan to have ebook side-reads. Now that I’ve actually counted them up, hoo boy, there are a bunch. (Though I actually have almost as many of miscellaneous genres as I do the romance/erotica ones that I thought dominated the list. Those do have the highest numbers, but not by the margin I expected.) Rather than picking quite at random, I’m also planning to alternate these; random genre ones alternating with the romance or erotica ones alternating with short story anthologies.
Another thing I’m doing for myself as a sort of incentive: when I do reach the end of a “group” of things I have as a goal (so… when I finish Lord of the Rings, or finish UKLG’s Earthsea books, or finish the Murderbot reread, etc.), then I get to pick something from anywhere on the TBR list. That way I can pick something I’m excited for, or that might be a newer acquisition, without throwing off the whole plan, haha.
I do also have seven 2026 releases (all continuations of existing series) that I’m looking forward to, and that will have permission to jump the line as soon as they come out:
Butterfly Effects by Seanan McGuire; the next Incryptid book - March 10
Platform Decay by Martha Wells; the next Murderbot book - May 05
Inkpot Gods by Seanan McGuire; the next Alchemical Journeys book - June 09
A Divided Duty by Seanan McGuire; the next October Daye book - September 29
Dead Beat by Leigh Bardugo; the next Alex Stern book - September
Abdication by Jeff VanderMeer; the next Southern Reach book - October (rumored)
The initial tentative TBR:
-
- Through Gates of Garnet and Gold (released today, and jumping the line!)
- Ninth House (has been on the TBR basically since it came out, keeps getting pushed back)
- What Feasts at Night (Christmas gift; sequel to What Moves the Dead)
- We’re Here: Queer Speculative Fiction Anthology 2023 (Pride storybundle ebook)
- Hell Bent (Christmas gift; sequel to Ninth House)
- What Stalks the Deep (Christmas gift; sequel to What Feasts at Night)
- Point of Dreams (Pride storybundle ebook)
- The Hobbit (Tolkien!)
- The Map and the Territory (Pride storybundle ebook)
- The Fellowship of the Ring (Tolkien!)
- These Fragile Graces, This Fugitive Heart (Pride storybundle ebook)
- The Two Towers (Tolkien!)
- Be the Sea (Pride storybundle ebook)
- Return of the King (Tolkien!)
Starting off with a couple that I just wanted to get to: the first two Alex Stern novels, and the next two Sworn Soldier novellas. Also starting to work in the queer ebooks, and then Tolkien.
That should get me through the first two or three months of the year! (I’d like that to be the first two months; I am guessing it may be closer to three or even four, since some will certainly not be quick reads.)
We’ll see how it goes from there!
As Always, There Is Much Happening
Jan. 6th, 2026 07:05 pmAnd my desire to condense it into an update prevents the update itself.
Since it's the last thing I wrote about here, inbox zero, combined with a switch from Google to Proton for mail services has increased my enjoyment of mail and made newsletters more readable. I'd been following some good writers, now I actually read them. And the reading is inspiring, moreso than microblogging.
Along the lines of microblogging, I am more rigorous about writing on my Letterboxd, even though I was delinquent for the beginning of the year. I'm trying to get together various retrospectives for 2025, including my top new releases.
I also recently participated in a music mix/swap where I took inspiration from my movie-going. There's a youtube playlist and explanation list.
I'm trying not to commit to too much in the new year where I am full of restless energy, but some other thoughts for 2026:
- Accept the poor image
- Dispel the illusion of explanatory depth
- Barf forth apocalyptica
Fandom things
Jan. 6th, 2026 05:43 pmAmperslash is still looking for two pinch hits! You can find the details here at the Amperslash comm.
• PH 3 - 镇魂 | Guardian (TV 2018) RPF, 镇魂 | Guardian (TV 2018), 镇魂 | Guardian - priest
• PH 9 - Fire Emblem: Soen no Kiseki/Akatsuki no Megami | Fire Emblem Path of Radiance/Radiant Dawn, Honor Harrington Series - David Weber, The Goblin Emperor Series - Katherine Addison
If any of those sound like you might want to write them, the exchange has already had several delays and fingers crossed it'll be able to get them filled and open on time! I know there used to be some Guardian people around here; I don't know if anyone's still actively writing in it, or might be able to advertise the PH in Guardian-centric fandom spaces?
Poem: "Done to Perfection"
Jan. 6th, 2026 08:24 pm"Done to Perfection"
-- a cinquain
Pain's Gray
bakes French pastries --
beignets and petits fours,
choux à la crème and tartes des Alpes --
exquis.
* * *
Notes:
Read about the cinquain form.
French pastries include beignets, choux à la crème, petits fours, and tartes des Alpes.
exquis
French: delightful, delicious
snowflake day 2: pets
Jan. 6th, 2026 09:28 pm
Challenge #2: Pets of Fandom
I originally wasn't going to do this one because it got me thinking about Phoebe and I was sad, but then I decided I wanted to talk a little about Phoebe and let myself be sad.
( CN: Pet death )
Poem: "Beneath the Sea"
Jan. 6th, 2026 08:05 pm"Beneath the Sea"
-- a hexaduad
Jules reads
job feeds.
Come work beneath the sea!
Stock Cans; room and board free.
He knows it's good work and good pay,
but should he go or should he stay?
Tides rise and fall,
feelings, sea call.
Beach, a liminal place;
teen, in similar space.
Jules scans the shore,
texts, Tell me more.
* * *
Notes:
Read about the hexaduad form.
Yaybahar III Nadiri [music]
Jan. 6th, 2026 07:27 pmThe description text:
The essence of gold was rare, he conquered with his virtue, offered his gifts and fell behind the sun...I am surmising that "Nadiri" means "Of Nadir". Yaybahar is the instrument, the artist is its inventor:
Dedicated to the soul of my dear friend's father, Nadir Oğuz...
The name yaybahar (pronounced /jajba'har/) has Turkish origin. It is a composite of two words: yay means a "string" or a "coiled string" and bahar means the season "spring." According to Gorkem Sen, the name is derived from the idea of a new life or a new beginning. [1]I assume this is the third one of its kind the artist has made.
Artist's website: https://www.gorkemsen.com/
No Man's Land: Volume 3
Jan. 6th, 2026 07:09 pmThe tale concludes! Spoilers ahead for the earlier two.
( Read more... )
Science
Jan. 6th, 2026 04:26 pmA striking 97.5% of women pursuing graduate degrees in STEM report moderate or higher levels of impostorism.
Nearly all women in STEM graduate programs report feeling like impostors, despite strong evidence of success. This mindset leads many to dismiss their achievements as luck and fear being “found out.” Research links impostorism to worse mental health, higher burnout, and increased thoughts of dropping out. Supportive environments and shifting beliefs about intelligence may help break the cycle.
That's probably because 97.5% of their male coworkers are misogynistic assholes, and so are a lot of people even outside of STEM.
After decades of being told that girls are bad at math, go play with dolls, harassment as soon as their breasts start growing, male students being put in charge of groups, professors stealing their work, getting lower grades than they deserve, struggling to find a job, their name being left off papers or awards, promotions going to less-qualified males, fighting for funds ... of course women realize that they are aren't wanted, aren't welcome, and nobody likes them.
The last 2.5% of women in STEM? They don't give a shit if people like them, and they aren't there to stroke anyone's ego or penis. Shut up and work. Impostor syndrome? It can be beaten to death with facts.
CHECK IN: DAY 6
Jan. 6th, 2026 10:12 pmQuestion of the day: what do you do next when you have just finished a fic?
Unexpected connections
Jan. 6th, 2026 04:16 pmBut there was another element of the talk that caught my attention: Hernandez began the talk by talking about her father, who survived what she described as a genocide that occurred during the civil war in El Salvador. I'm not sure I'd heard the Salvadoran civil war described in those terms before, but now it seems to me I should probably spend more time learning more (I think it's this?). What I DO know is that her father is from the part of El Salvador that I got to visit in 1995, where a lot of people wound up fleeing to Guatemala to avoid violent conflict during more intense phases of the war, and where resettlement after the war posed a new series of challenges for everyone.
At the end of the talk, an audience member asked an interesting question: (this is a scientific meeting, so the audience is full of people who identify as scientists) as scientists, we're generally highly aware of how climate change is displacing people in greater numbers and in newer ways than in the past. How will this displacement from traditional homelands affect this context of indigenous thinking and ways of knowing?
This is obviously a hard question without a simple answer; I'm only going to kind of obliquely talk about it. One other element of indigenous science that Hernandez commented on was how, for a while, people were adopting the terminology of "Traditional Ecological Knowledge" as a way of acknowledging indigenous contributions to scientific understanding. However, she noted that the phrasing has caused some people to hyperfixate on the word "Traditional," which pushes a particular and problematic historical view on indigenous understanding. In contrast, indigenous cultures across the globe are living cultures that change through time and in response to changes in the world, and there are tons of examples of that. So she is now using the term "indigenous science" to characterize ways of knowing things about how the world works based on deep/long-term observation and relational thinking. This can therefore include more long-term insights from long-term observation, but also respect the experiences and perspectives of people who relocate/are relocated.
I have a feeling that people who like to keep science in a tidy box will find lots of things to quibble over in all of this. (and I won't claim to have done the best possible job of characterizing what I heard about, in any case!).
My main personal takeaway, especially as someone who has moved around a lot, is that I need to be more deliberate about learning more about the immediate environment around where I live and work, because for all the cases where Western science focuses on generalizability on a global scale, it's connections to the local landscape that are the most powerful for individual learning and lived experience. And that's important for me both as an individual and as a teacher.
Birdfeeding
Jan. 6th, 2026 03:23 pmI fed the birds. I've seen a large flock of sparrows.
I put out water for the birds.
EDIT 1/6/26 -- I did a bit of work around the patio.
EDIT 1/6/26 -- I did more work around the patio.
EDIT 1/6/26 -- I did more work around the patio.
As it is getting dark, I am done for the night.
Nature diary
Jan. 6th, 2026 09:17 pmAt first, I didn't hear any bird calls. I did see a few sanderlings darting around, some big birds (probably black-backed gulls) hovering over the sea, and a huge swarm of smaller birds, but they were all far away. I was about to leave when suddenly an impressive formation of geese appeared in the sky. My birding app identified them as barnacle geese. Then the app recorded some more calls, including one from a dunling, a bird I had never seen or heard before.
The snow and the greyish sky skewed my perspective in interesting ways, so that it looked like there were mountains growing out of the sea near the horizon, or like there was a huge wave rolling towards the beach. It felt surreal and a little eerie.

Write Every day 2026: January, Day 6
Jan. 6th, 2026 09:20 pmToday's writing
Just a little
(I did finish my
Tally
Day 1:
Day 2:
Day 3:
Day 4:
Day 5:
Day 6:
Let me know if I missed anyone! And remember you can drop in or out at any time. :)
Tuesday, 6th January 2026
Jan. 6th, 2026 03:12 pmOff-Dreamwidth Links
Blogtor Who: Video of the Day – Doctor Who Classic: Revenge of the Cybermen, 1975
Blogtor Who: Video of the Day – Doctor Who: Planet of Evil, 1975
Blogtor Who: Video of the Day – The Whoniverse Show, 2025
Blogtor Who: The War Between the Land and the Sea +7 Viewing Figures
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Complete
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Communities & Challenges
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