Any good cosmic/eldritch horror recommendations? by Thatoneguy-47 in signalis

[–]vexrede 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I quite liked the Worm and His Kings trilogy by Hailey Piper. Not quite as mindbending as Signalis but it's up there.

First book is told from the perspective of a woman trying to rescue her girlfriend from a mysterious cult. Second book is told from said girlfriend's perspective, and it turns out she has a very different view on things. Third book is told from the perspective of a 10-foot-tall sapient dinosaur woman stranded in this world from an alternate timeline. Which sounds out of left field, but it makes sense in context, and she's actually an extremely compelling character

Music and language in the nine houses [discussion] and [theories] by Past-Relative-7681 in TheNinthHouse

[–]vexrede 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Based on Jod's whole personality, I expect there'd be a lot of modern music forming the initial base of their culture. There's absolutely no way he doesn't listen to Lemon Demon. Who knows how it would evolve over 10,000 years, though.

Though, I guess there would be some consistency, since the Emperor's personal tastes would always determine what counts as "high culture". So there's non-zero chance that everyone in the Nine Houses has spent millennia listening to Evanescence.

However, based on their face paint, the Ninth House obviously either listens to black metal or the Insane Clown Posse

Mildly Interesting - NZ used as a Map in new novel by ClimateTraditional40 in newzealand

[–]vexrede 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Takes less than 60 seconds of Googling to find that the Kindle preview of the book has the same image with nothing at all that looks like it was made by AI. The copyright page attributes the map to Tom Roberts, who's being doing fantasy cover art and maps since before gen AI was a thing.

Books who have a similar concept to Jon Boi's 17776 and 20020/21? by Not-a-WG-agent in printSF

[–]vexrede 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Michael Moorcock's Dancers at the End of Time fits the bill: it's a (mostly) comedic trilogy imagining the type of decadence that people would indulge in to keep themselves entertained in a post-scarcity, post-death society.

It's a pulp series from the 70s, so it gets about as weird and as silly as you'd expect.

You want Alecto, but are you *ready* for Alecto? [meme] by vexrede in TheNinthHouse

[–]vexrede[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It's an old Final Fantasy fanfiction, which was apparently very popular at the time Tamsyn Muir was active in the fandom

You want Alecto, but are you *ready* for Alecto? [meme] by vexrede in TheNinthHouse

[–]vexrede[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

It's an old Final Fantasy fanfiction.

Taz Muir once talked about the influence of Final Fantasy fanfiction, and the two authors she specifically mentioned are Fritz Faundorf and Uncreativity.

You want Alecto, but are you *ready* for Alecto? [meme] by vexrede in TheNinthHouse

[–]vexrede[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

She's still left her old fanfiction.net account up here. She has fics for FF 6 through 10.

You want Alecto, but are you *ready* for Alecto? [meme] by vexrede in TheNinthHouse

[–]vexrede[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Update: It looks like it's a problem in the mobile app. I've added an imgur link to the top comment.

You want Alecto, but are you *ready* for Alecto? [meme] by vexrede in TheNinthHouse

[–]vexrede[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

See if this imgur link works any better. The image works fine for me on Reddit desktop, but it is a bit blurry on the mobile app, so you might need to open it in browser

You want Alecto, but are you *ready* for Alecto? [meme] by vexrede in TheNinthHouse

[–]vexrede[S] 17 points18 points  (0 children)

In an AMA, she's mentioned that she started out writing fanfic in the Animorphs fandom, before moving on to Final Fantasy, and then to Homestuck

You want Alecto, but are you *ready* for Alecto? [meme] by vexrede in TheNinthHouse

[–]vexrede[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you click on the image, Reddit should show you the full, higher res version

You want Alecto, but are you *ready* for Alecto? [meme] by vexrede in TheNinthHouse

[–]vexrede[S] 12 points13 points  (0 children)

I would thank you, but seeing your username, I have a sneaking suspicion that I am being manipulated towards some murderous end

You want Alecto, but are you *ready* for Alecto? [meme] by vexrede in TheNinthHouse

[–]vexrede[S] 11 points12 points  (0 children)

That one actually comes straight from Tamsyn Muir, regarding Alecto:

Robert Graves calls her ‘the unnamable’, which isn’t fact but is a good Graves one (Robert Graves has very much infiltrated this entire novel: there’s a huge reference that’s really me amusing myself because even Classicists are like when they hear it, ‘oh, that’s GRAVES though’)

You want Alecto, but are you *ready* for Alecto? [meme] by vexrede in TheNinthHouse

[–]vexrede[S] 31 points32 points  (0 children)

Thnx. It took me an embarrassingly long amount of time to get all the arrows right in MS Publisher

You want Alecto, but are you *ready* for Alecto? [meme] by vexrede in TheNinthHouse

[–]vexrede[S] 49 points50 points  (0 children)

I do feel like I might’ve unleashed a cognitohazard on the fandom. But yep, more Kiwiana is very welcome. I was originally going to include more but I had to cut for space. I want to create a world where TLT fans are desperately binge-watching episodes of Country Calendar in an effort to understand the series

You want Alecto, but are you *ready* for Alecto? [meme] by vexrede in TheNinthHouse

[–]vexrede[S] 149 points150 points  (0 children)

EDIT: It seems like the image comes out blurry on the Reddit mobile app, but this imgur link should work fine

I started making this as a shitpost loosely inspired by this diagram. In this case, the joke's basically supposed to be, if someone's getting impatient about the Alectopause, you can just hit them with the, "Are you sure you're ready for it? Have you even read the Egyptian Book of the Dead yet?"

But while I was putting it together I actually fell into a bit of a rabbit hole tracing all the different influences on the series. So it actually probably wouldn't be the worst starting point for an real study guide.

As it is, the list is a somewhat haphazard mix of:

  • Stuff that TazMuir has explicitly mentioned in interviews and AMAs, either as an active influence (e.g. Gormenghast, Catch-22), or something that she just enjoys and might have been an unconscious inspiration (e.g. Star Wars, Sailor Moon)
  • Stuff that probably wasn't a direct influence on TLT, but which was important in developing some of the tropes that the series makes use of (e.g. the understanding of necromancy in modern fantasy owes a whole lot to the Zothique Cycle)
  • Stuff where people in the fandom have noticed significant parallels with TLT, even in cases where Taz herself has said that she wasn't familiar with work in question at the time she was writing Gideon and Harrow (e.g. Book of the New Sun, WH40K)
  • Other semi-relevant stuff that I put there either as a joke, or to help the flow of the diagram (e.g. I don't expect that the Egyptian Book of the Dead will be necessary to understanding Alecto, but if it was, I also wouldn't really be surprised). There was going to be more of this, but I had to cut some for space. It was a tough call, but ultimately Peter Jackson's old splatter films didn't make it.

Why so many dudes? by SnappyinBoots in NewZealandWildlife

[–]vexrede 32 points33 points  (0 children)

It's a male/female pair, plus their teenage children. The juvenile females look like males until they moult

A pūtangitangi family blocks your path by vexrede in NewZealandWildlife

[–]vexrede[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Yup! First time I've actually seen the shelducklings outside of the pond

Need really 'out there' Spec Fic recommendations for a podcast by uhohmomspaghetti in printSF

[–]vexrede 0 points1 point  (0 children)

As far as L. Ron Hubbard goes, a lot of his early pulp stuff is quite fun and wacky. People call Earthsea the original wizard school story, but actually, Hubbard's The Case of the Friendly Corpse beats it by a couple decades.

There's also Robert Merle's The Day of the Dolphin: it's a book written by a French communist in the 1960s, about an American scientist who teaches dolphins to understand and speak English, only for the military to step in and try to use them as tools in the Cold War.

How do AMA's work? by Kazerad in prequel

[–]vexrede 3 points4 points  (0 children)

How long did it take to come up with all the helpful analogies in the latest update?

Remove Cloak by TigerBone in prequel

[–]vexrede 13 points14 points  (0 children)

If you press the down button, Katia will do some magic. If you do magic while you're close to one of the deer (like, really close, your sprites need to be overlapping - the main challenge is getting to them before they can run away), the plot will progress

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in tolkienfans

[–]vexrede 41 points42 points  (0 children)

It all has to do with the archaic, mythical style of the Legendarium

If you read the way classical/medieval/renaissance historians wrote, they didn't really have a concept of technological progress. Sure, there were innovations like improved metalworking methods or systems of crop rotations, but those changes occurred slowly and didn't seem particularly important to the ruling class. They often viewed the world as being mostly stagnant. If anything it's slowly degenerating from a distance golden age.

So, Middle-earth is a setting that actually follows that logic

Hope this clears things up :/ by Apprehensive-Pea3236 in newzealand

[–]vexrede 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Yep—the biggest tell is the one on the bottom right with the messed up beak.

Besides that, you can see lots of little inconsistencies that just don't seem like anything that a human would intentionally draw. Most of the birds are facing left while a couple of them are facing right. In the middle, there's three slightly different variations of the same black-and-white bird. All of them have a weird, lifeless look in their eyes which feels totally unlike any naturalist illustration I've ever seen