Crossed #3

Feb. 1st, 2026 08:00 am
cyberghostface: (Right One 2)
[personal profile] cyberghostface posting in [community profile] scans_daily


"A lot of what I do seems extreme in comparison with other comics — which, given that the industry staple is still superheroes, are mostly going to seem that bit more restrained. But compare my work to some of the current stuff in TV or movies, and all of a sudden I’m not quite that far out there." -- Garth Ennis

Scans under the cut... )

Stuff I Love: Top Ten Edition

Feb. 1st, 2026 12:32 pm
kat_lair: (Default)
[personal profile] kat_lair
❤️ Stuff I Love: Top Ten Edition
February Challenge

February felt like the perfect time for a cosy, affectionate challenge — so here we are 💕

Accordingly, February's challenge, suggested by [personal profile] dreamersdare is the Stuff I Love: Top Ten Edition



Banner by [personal profile] pushkin666  adapted from[personal profile] corvidology's original, very awesome, graphic.


The aim is simple and warm:

✨ Make a list of ten things you love.
✨ Celebrate the big, the small, the accidental, the obvious, the silly, the profound.
✨ No rules beyond love — only joy.

So how does this challenge work?

Each week in February, you are challenged to write a themed top ten list, with a focus on different aspects of media.

Week 1 (February 1st-7th): Standalone media (e.g. films, novels, short stories, plays)
Week 2 (February 8th-14th): Series (e.g. TV shows, webtoons, comics, web serials)
Week 3 (February 15th-21st): Music picks (e.g. bands, artists, songs, music videos)
Week 4 (February 22nd-28th): Relationships in our media (e.g. platonic, shippy, familial, canon, fannish)


[personal profile] dreamersdare will host a challenge post every Sunday with more detail on the prompt. HERE IS THE FIRST ONE. However, if the prompt doesn't inspire you, the wildcard rule applies in that you can generate your own top ten list.

How to take part?
  • Post your list here on Dreamwidth anytime in February.
  • Tag it or link back to [personal profile] dreamersdares original post so others can find you 💖
  • Any format is welcome: bullet points, numbered list, prose, rambling commentary, gifs, images, or pure vibes
  • Feel free to explain why you love each thing — or don’t. Both are valid.
You can post once, or revisit the list throughout February if your loves shift (as they often do)

There’s no pressure, no judgement, and no “right” answers — just a chance to pause and notice what’s making life a little brighter right now.


***


linaewen: Girl Writing (Girl Writing)
[personal profile] linaewen posting in [community profile] writethisfanfic
 Hello on Sunday! What kind of a writing day has it been so far today -- or if today hasn't gotten going yet, how did you fare yesterday?
 
       - I thought about my fic once or twice
       - I wrote
       - I did some planning and/or outlining
       - I did research and/or canon review
       - I edited
       - I've sent my fic off to my beta
       - I posted today!
       - I'm taking a break
       - I did something else that I'll talk about in a comment
 
Sunday Discussion:  It's a new writing week, and that means a fresh start. Maybe you had a great writing week last week, or maybe last week wasn't the greatest for getting writing things done -- what kind of goals do you have for keeping up your momentum or starting off fresh this week?

Mission Impossible Fic: Power Cut

Feb. 1st, 2026 11:38 am
kat_lair: (MI - team)
[personal profile] kat_lair
***

Title: Power Cut
Author:[personal profile] kat_lair
Fandom: Mission: Impossible (Movies)
Pairing: William Brandt/Ethan Hunt
Tags: Power Outage, Snowed In, Huddling For Warmth 
Rating: G
Word count: 2,022

Summary: Will wakes up to silence. Or, to be more precise, it’s the silence that wakes him.

Author notes:
 Written for [personal profile] jenab for  [community profile] fandomtrees. This is unbetaed so if you spot a typo/mistake, you should absolutely tell me about it.

Power Cut on AO3

Power Cut )

***

Signs of the times

Feb. 1st, 2026 10:28 am
[syndicated profile] metafilter_feed

Posted by Bella Donna

Before the summer of 2025, Make it Weird never self-identified as an artist. ...In one series, they digitized the handwriting of artist Resistance Ephemera and used a vinyl cutter to paste the text on a bright yellow backdrop. One sign reads, "YOU'D THINK THAT THE CONSTITUTION WAS YOUNGER, GIVEN HOW HARD REPUBLICANS ARE TRYING TO FUCK IT." On another: "SOMEWHERE IN AMERICA, A LITTLE GIRL IS HIDING IN AN ATTIC WRITING ABOUT I.C.E." Isabella Segalovich writes about guerrilla signage that uses a distinctive brand of Philly humor to alert residents of ICE threats and looming authoritarianism in Hyperallergic.

There are many ways to resist occupiers, document horrors, and support reality-based communities. Some examples are offered by a Guardian report on "rage knitters against the machine" with a profile of Gilah Mashaal, owner of Needle & Skein, a yarn store in the suburbs of Minneapolis. "... amid the weeks-long occupation of the Twin Cities by federal immigration paramilitaries, Mashaal and one of her employees decided to turn one of their weekly knit-alongs into a protest stitch-along." An employee did some research and came back with a proposal: a red knit hat inspired by the topplue or nisselue (woolen caps), worn by Norwegians during the second world war to signify their resistance to the Nazi occupation. "Me being a Jewish small business owner, that resonates with me on so many levels," said Mashaal. Sales of the resulting Melt the ICE hat pattern on Ravelry (knit and crochet) has raised hundreds of thousands of dollars, which is going to immigrant aid groups. The Guardian also noted work by fiber artist Sarah Gonsalves. Her "embroidery kits usually feature cheeky slogans and exuberant colors, but on 10 January, she posted an unusually stark piece comprising black lettering on a plain white canvas: the final exchange between Good and the ICE agent who shot and killed her, splattered with flecks of red. 'It looks different than my normal aesthetic because I made it out of sadness and anger,' she said. 'I couldn't believe how many people have said how it instantly made them cry.' "Melissa Laranjeira, an 'xennial' quilter from northern Virginia, also used black letters on a white backdrop to channel her outrage in a haunting quilt that reads: WE KNOW WHAT WE SAW. 'Seeing blatant acts of violence and then being told they were something else entirely feels like an attempt to gaslight the American people,' she said. The quilt is 'a statement about refusing to unsee what happened in plain sight.'" In December ARTnews reported on how artists responded to 2025's surging ICE raids. "The day before mass ICE raids swept across LA, and mere weeks before tightening visa restrictions forced her to return home to Mexico, artist Kiyo Gutiérrez staged what she calls a 'ritual-performance' on the bank of the LA River. Using ice and soil, she spelled out 'No Human Is Illegal' through a sequence of meticulous, physically taxing gestures: breaking ice, arranging the cubes before they dissolved, then covering them with earth." During dangerous times, even quiet gestures can mean a lot. NPR reports that "In Norway, Mats Tangestuen, the director of the country's Resistance Museum in Oslo, was intrigued upon receiving an email with a link to the hat pattern. The fact that the state with the largest Norwegian population in the U.S., was resurrecting what he said is a lesser-known piece of Norwegian history, was a welcome surprise. "Tangestuen said the hat emerged sometime around the last large demonstration protesting Nazi occupation in September 1941. For Norwegians, the hat was meant to be 'distinctively non-violent' and 'not a threatening symbol.' 'It was used in the period of the war where everything looked very dark,' Tangestuen said. 'The main purpose of it was just to keep up morale, keep up hope and not descend into hopelessness and apathy.'"

Valentines Bingo Card 2-1-26

Feb. 1st, 2026 03:52 am
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Here is my card for the Valentines Bingo over in [community profile] allbingo. The fest runs from February 1-28. (See all my 2026 bingo cards.)

If you'd like to sponsor a particular square, especially if you have an idea for what character, series, or situation it would fit -- talk to me and we'll work something out. I've had a few requests for this and the results have been awesome so far. This is a good opportunity for those of you with favorites that don't always mesh well with the themes of my monthly projects. I may still post some of the fills for free, because I'm using this to attract new readers; but if it brings in money, that means I can do more of it. That's part of why I'm crossing some of the bingo prompts with other projects, such as the Poetry Fishbowl.

Underlined prompts have been filled.


VALENTINES BINGO CARD

Read a BookPraiseInterracial or Interspecies LoveMarrakesh in Morocco Take a Class
Taking It SlowYellowstone National Park in Wyoming USAExperimentationCan't get no satisfactionNonphysical Passions
Validate YourselfHelplessnessWILD CARDLac Rose in SenegalBreaking the rules
Nonsexual TouchRespect LimitsSedona in
Arizona USA 
DenialFantasies 
Odd coupleYou are so bustedDo What You LoveSuch a gentlemanEnjoy Some
Private Time

February Buddy Assignments

Feb. 1st, 2026 10:56 am
siberian_angel: (Default)
[personal profile] siberian_angel posting in [community profile] thestoryinside


The themes for February are:
THRILLER // HORROR // FEMALE AUTHOR
You must choose books with these genres and themes for your buddy. If you think you might not have books in your TBR pile that fits this month's choices, please let your buddy know.

You can find your buddy's TBR lists here.

[personal profile] fred_mouse & [personal profile] monkiainen

[personal profile] royalblue31 & [personal profile] siberian_angel

[personal profile] yourivy & [personal profile] spaciireth

You have until the 5th to choose your partner's books.

Rabbit rabbit rabbit!

Feb. 1st, 2026 09:50 am
mdlbear: Wild turkey hen close-up (turkey)
[personal profile] mdlbear

Welcome to February, 2026!

Because I am at a con, the weekly "done since" post will be put off to Monday. Also see yesterday's s4s post for today's remembered disaster.

Recrudescence

Feb. 1st, 2026 07:23 am
smokingboot: (anger)
[personal profile] smokingboot
So I came in from the night and the moon and noodled around on the web for a bit, including a reply to some biblically inclined gent re C.S.Lewis' Christianity. But sometimes - I have no idea how this works - under the thread you see related notes. There was Kafka, there was stuff about healthy fats and dandelions and then.

An illustrated poster tells us that National Socialism is growing, and next to that statement places two lightning strikes. The poster itself shows a pair of mountains with the sun rising between them. In front of it is an aryan maiden, corn gold hair, babe in arms, roots in the earth beneath, all very blut und boden. Why did it appear near our conversation? Maybe it connected into this idea of the ideal of woman as home maker. There is a sign on the sun, obscured by the figure of the woman, but nonetheless recognisable as a swastika. The post/note had 133 likes, 13 restacks, 7 comments. There were other posts too from the same author, in more forthright vein.

I stared at it, sick to my stomach. Looking at the hearts and the restacks, not many in the great scheme of things. 'You're a troll or a nutter calling out to another few nutters,' I thought, and wondered whether to just ignore it because I believe in free speech, a right that is being compromised everywhere. One thing that has alienated me from what's commonly termed the progressive left has been the overuse of words like Nazi and Fascist, trivialised to mean any view they want others to regard as heinous. Another major problem has been the authoritarian creep and policing of thoughts, words, ideas, the label of 'hate' thrown at every fidget of dissent. Nate Silvers' excellent piece on Blueskyism takes a while to get going but once the graphs are out of the way it's well worth the effort and is the best analysis of the issue I have read. (https://www.natesilver.net/p/what-is-blueskyism)

I am a believer in freedom of expression but there are limits, for me at least. No death threats, no rape threats, no incitements to murder, no child pornography, no waggling your tackle in front of folk who haven't consented to it, no attempts to revive the ideology that triggered the deadliest conflict in human history...doubtless there are others I forget.

I did report it, because if the world is full of nonsensical ideas, we can at least boot the rubbish that got millions of us killed. Fck that noise.But why are we hearing it again?
sovay: (Sovay: David Owen)
[personal profile] sovay
Rabbit, rabbit! January really came apart toward the end, but we are catching just enough of the nor'easter to snow February in and I have just learned of the existence of the cobalt crust fungus, which looks like scales of lapis on dead wood. Hestia has been dealing with the sub-zero wind chill temperatures by means of aggressive basking.

[syndicated profile] smartbitches_feed

Posted by Amanda

Welcome back!

It feels like it’s been forever. I have a couple romances for this round, plus an epistolary and some non-fiction. I really love this selection!

Do you have any recommendations to share? Let us know in the comments!

A Holy Maiden’s Guide to Getting Kidnapped

I saw this while shopping at Lovestruck a week ago. I was super tempted to grab it and the leads are both sort of morally gray, which I love. Unfortunately, it wasn’t what I was after at the time and I was trying to limit myself to only two purchases!

A Holy Maiden should never drink, get kidnapped, nor kiss a Dark Lord, but Ysabel is breaking all the rules to escape her fate as a human sacrifice.

In a world where magical powers are commonplace, Holy Maiden Ysabel is revered as a goddess among her people. She’s the only one able to heal the sick and injured with a simple touch. But her spectacular gift comes at a steep price. For each person she saves, she loses a day of her own conscripted life. To add insult to injury, she’s supposed to maintain a pure image even though she’d rather drink and play dominatrix until her sorrows fade away.

After the corrupt Head Cardinal Jiang abuses her gift, forbids her from leaving the city, and takes her brother hostage, Ysabel doesn’t dare drag anyone else into her problems—especially since it won’t change her fate. But when Dark Lord Kaine arrives at her clinic doorstep grievously wounded, she’s touched by his refusal to accept her healing lest it cost her another day of her life.

The mysterious and sexy Dark Lord awakens forbidden desires in Ysabel, and the nagging survival instinct she tried to drown with booze and drugs comes back with a vengeance. She’s less impressed, however, when he threatens to sack her city in return for his injuries. Fortunately, she can flirt her way to an alliance against the Head Cardinal instead.

Armed with only a ferociously loyal female bodyguard named Alzira, Ysabel attempts to make the most of her mere months left to live, protect the refugees around her city, prevent a war, and hide her face blindness. But before her life flickers to its sad end, she must either die a proper Holy Maiden or risk it all to run off with Kaine.

Add to Goodreads To-Read List →

You can find ordering info for this book here.

 

 

 

Against a Wall

Shout out to Katie! While giving Katie quarterly recs as part of After Dark, she mentioned she loves Cate C. Wells in her survey. As someone who wasn’t sure where to start, I asked her for some suggestions. I blew through The Tyrant Alpha’s Rejected Mate, but she also put this one on my radar with a few caveats about the hero. I immediately bought it, though haven’t started it just yet.

My high school bully is now my fake boyfriend.

Cash Wall has been messing with me since junior high.

Nuisance stuff, mostly. Name calling. Pranks.

Honestly, he’s nowhere near the worst of my problems. Back in school, I had bigger fish to fry, and now, I’ve got a “scarlet letter” situation going on. The whole town hates me.

For some reason, Cash offers himself up as my knight in shining armor.

So now my former bully is my fake boyfriend. What could possibly go wrong?

Cash

Glenna Dobbs thinks I’m an idiot, and she’s mostly right.

I hunt. Fish. Go mudding. I’m not a “brain” type. I’m not really a “thinker.”

But I ain’t stupid. When I see that Glenna needs a rescue, I’m in.

‘Cause what Glenna doesn’t know? I’ve been in this whole time, and once I’ve got her, I’m not letting her go.

Against a Wall is a small-town, enemies-to-lovers romance. It is the second book in the Stonecut County series, but it can be read as a standalone. Intended for adult readers.

HEA guaranteed.

Add to Goodreads To-Read List →

You can find ordering info for this book here.

 

 

 

The Examiner

If you love mysteries that feel more like a puzzle, this one makes clever use of epistolary elements.

Told in emails, text messages, and essays, this innovative pause-resister follows a group of students in an art master’s program that goes dangerously awry.

Gela Nathaniel, head of Royal Hastings University’s new Multimedia Art course, must find six students from all walks of life across the United Kingdom for her new master’s program before the university cuts her funding. The students are nothing but trouble from day one.

There’s Jem, a talented sculptor recently graduated from her university program and eager to make her mark as an artist at any cost. Jonathan, who has little experience in art practice aside from running his family’s gallery. Patrick runs an art supply store, but can barely operate his phone, much less design software. Ludya is a single mother and graphic designer more interested in a paycheck than homework. Cameron is a marketing executive in search of a hobby or a career change. And Alyson, already a successful artist, seems to be overqualified. Finally, there is the examiner, the man hired to grade students’ final works—an art installation for a local cloud-based solutions company that may have an ulterior agenda—and who, in sifting through final essays, texts, and message boards, warns that someone is in danger…or already dead. And nothing about this course has been left up to chance.

With her trademark “unique and exhilarating” (Megan Collins, author of The Family Plot) voice, Janice Hallett weaves a fresh and mind-bending mystery that will keep you guessing until the very end.

Add to Goodreads To-Read List →

You can find ordering info for this book here.

 

 

 

My Parents are Dead: What Now?

I honestly wish I had this when my bio dad died (I was his only surviving relative). My partner’s mom unexpectedly passed in the fall and has had to take the lead on making arrangements, handling things that come up, etc. It’s never a good time to think about these things, but I can’t overstate the need to be prepared.

An approachable, expert-fueled guide to dealing with the legal, financial, and logistical hurdles of parent death—without losing your sense of humor.

Whether you’ve recently lost a parent or are just trying to plan for the toughest day of your life so far, you’re probably experiencing a lot of dizzying emotions. Unfortunately, our legal and financial systems don’t care about your feelings. Whether you’re holding it together or falling apart, you are going to need to enter an overwhelming labyrinth of paperwork and bureaucracy.

But you don’t have to do it alone.

After losing both parents, Becky Robison devoted herself to making death and post-death logistics easier on others—reading up on estate law, becoming a trained death doula, and starting her website DeadParentsWhatNow.com. She draws on her own experience, plus interviews with experts from monument makers to morticians, to hold your hand through:

– Asking your parents about their end-of-life wishes while you can
– Getting a body buried, cremated, or donated to science
– Planning a funeral
– Securing a death certificate
– Dealing with your parents’ property—or debt
– Handling even more tricky issues you never wanted to be in charge of
– And still being able to laugh, a little, sometimes

Nothing about this is easy. The good news is, you have someone on your side.

Add to Goodreads To-Read List →

You can find ordering info for this book here.

 

 

 

Week in review: Week to 31 January

Feb. 1st, 2026 05:13 pm
pedanther: (Default)
[personal profile] pedanther
. The group from the board game club that sometimes meets on Sunday afternoons to play longer games met on Sunday afternoon to have another shot at Tainted Grail, a long-form game (the kind where there's a mechanism to save your progress because you're definitely not finishing in one session) that involves exploring and learning the stories of a land being overwhelmed by chaotic magic. Read more... )


. We had another long session on the regular board game day, because it was a public holiday so we started in the early afternoon instead of being restricted to the evening.

We took advantage of the extra time to play Nemesis: Retaliation, Read more... )

Afterward, to finish off on a lighter note, we played a game of Jamaica, a game in which each player is a pirate competing to sail back to port with the most gold and best treasures. Read more... )


. I spent much of the week reading Sansûkh, and ended up being happy I'd put in the time. The ending is pretty satisfying, as long as you're able to take it on its own terms and not worry about how much or little it has to do with Tolkien's Middle-Earth.


. I had another go at Zombies Run; I took a water bottle with me, which contributed to having a significantly better experience than last time I tried it.


. I'm currently running a few episodes behind on Natural Six, but the advantage is that when I hit a big cliffhanger like the one at the end of episode 43 I don't have to wait a fortnight to find out what happens next. I might be able to catch up again soon; part of why I've been lagging is that the last few episodes had been making me uncomfortable waiting for a plot shoe to drop, and Episode 44 dropped it good and proper.


. Speaking of an absence of shoes, my week came to an unhappy conclusion when I was getting ready for bed and banged a toe against a piece of furniture I was too sleepy to successfully navigate past. I think it's just bruised, but it complained loudly and at length. It seems to have mostly settled down now.
[syndicated profile] metafilter_feed

Posted by chavenet

Letterboxd is to film cataloging as Spotify is to music listening; the platform is Popular Because It's Popular, thereby the most convenient option no matter the benefits of its alternatives, leaving the likes of RateYourMusic and Soulseek by the wayside in the cultural consciousness. Yes, you read that right. RateYourMusic is my film cataloging tool of choice, contrary to the solely musical focus its name implies. I get the best of both worlds in one place! Seriously, everything I just criticized Letterboxd for is something RateYourMusic already figured out eons ago, and that's without being valued at over 50 million dollars. from Death to Letterboxd, and Long Live the Independent Web

Absolute Martian Manhunter #7

Feb. 1st, 2026 12:51 am
laughing_tree: (Seaworth)
[personal profile] laughing_tree posting in [community profile] scans_daily
image host

We’re celebrating what I think is really interesting about the original character and concept. I’m going back and reading all of the early Silver Age appearances from the first detective stories. I thought there was something with this character that can see into people’s minds, but has a truly alien perspective that even Superman doesn’t possess, that was really powerful and interesting. -- Deniz Camp

Read more... )

Book Chain 2026: Weeks 4 & 5

Feb. 1st, 2026 04:31 pm
pedanther: (Default)
[personal profile] pedanther
#6: A book whose title has the same first letter as the name of the previous book's author

James Randi: Psychic Investigator, the companion volume to the 1991 TV series of the same name.

An introductory overview of a topic and a person I was already interested in, so there wasn't much in it that was new to me except in the details, but it was an entertaining overview and an enjoyable refresher, and now there's one less unread-for-over-a-decade book on my shelves.


#7: A book with the same number of words in the title as the previous book

It took me over a week to pick a book for this prompt, because I kept trying to match the previous book to the extent of having four proper words with no articles or prepositions, which leaves a lot of candidates out (anything titled "The X of Y", for a start). In the end, I settled on:

Till We Have Faces by C.S. Lewis, a retelling of the myth of Cupid and Psyche in which Psyche's sister decides it's time to tell her side of the story.

Another unread-for-over-a-decade book; as an adult, I've developed a tendency to distrust Lewis. In this case, I'm glad I finally read it.

Orual makes an interesting protagonist and narrator: she's not a nice person, proud and selfish, but it's always clear why the things she does made sense to her at the time. And, balancing the fact that she's ready with a justification for her bad actions, she's also capable of doing signficant good and doesn't always recognise how good she's been. (I was reminded of the saying about how life is like working backstage at a theatre or doing an embroidery from the wrong side, where you're always aware of the messy scaffolding that nobody else can see and only have an indistinct idea of what it looks like to everyone else.)


#8: A book with a cover in the same colour as the previous book

The cover of Till We Have Faces has a full-cover illustration with a very similar colour scheme to the previous book I had for this prompt last year, which would have been a useful thing to notice then but now means that, unless there's another such book lurking unnoticed on my shelves, I'm facing a similar struggle to find something to match it.

Sunday Sale Digest!

Feb. 1st, 2026 07:00 am
[syndicated profile] smartbitches_feed

Posted by Amanda

This piece of literary mayhem is exclusive to Smart Bitches After Dark, but fret not. If you'd like to join, we'd love to have you!

Have a look at our membership options, and come join the fun!

If you want to have a little extra fun, be a little more yourself, and be part of keeping the site open for everyone in the future, we can’t wait to see you in our new subscription-based section with exclusive content and events.

Everything you’re used to seeing at the Hot Pink Palace that is Smart Bitches Trashy Books will remain free as always, because we remain committed to fostering community among brilliant readers who love romance.

[syndicated profile] smartbitches_feed

Posted by Guest Reviewer

This Bookstore Trip Report is from Danielle Fritz. Danielle is a former librarian who has a special affection for children’s lit and books about the funeral industry. She first cut her criticism teeth as a fanfic writer. A resident of the upper midwest, she’s learned to love beer and tater tot casserole and tolerate long winters. Most nights will find her cuddled up with her pups and wearing out her wrists with yet another crochet project.

I have visited quite a few bookselling establishments over my 30-ish years, but this was my first opportunity to check out a genre-specific bookshop. I follow a number of romance bookshops on social media and as my appreciation for the genre has deepened, I’ve looked forward to patronizing one of these niche shops. Tropes and Trifles in Minneapolis, Minnesota, was a great introduction to what a romance bookseller has to offer.

Tropes and Trifles a romance bookstore in a white circle in blue swoopy letters with a purple pattern at the bordersWhen I think “romance bookstore,” I envision pastels (especially pink), hearts, and an overall coquette aesthetic. This is not Tropes and Trifles, which boasts high ceilings, white walls, and dark wooden shelving. There’s a cute accent wall behind the register where staff have hung garlands of origami hearts and birds in a rainbow of colors. In one corner you’ll find a comfy purple and white couch with some funky purple wooden chairs, perfect for a bookclub gathering.

I really liked the minimalist approach to design, because it really allows the books to shine. The store is also very neat, with orderly shelves and thoughtfully stocked displays. Overstuffed shelves can be overwhelming to shoppers (especially if you were once a librarian and have to stop yourself from instinctively pushing spines out so they all align against the edge of the shelf).

A view of the store from one wall: in front are books on a table with a sign that says BINGO! and books that include Black Love Matters, The Bone King and the Starling, and a Fire Born of Exile. Behind the table are bookshelves for Not Quite Romance and Non Fiction, and against the far wall is Contemporary romance
Inside Tropes and Trifles – photo credit: Danielle Fritz

The majority of titles are from within the last five-to-ten years and they sell exclusively new books – no used titles here. You’re not going to find, say, Lynsay Sand’s entire backlist here, or that one Nora Roberts you read back in 2005, though I am sure if you spoke with store employees they could obtain it for you easily. There’s a lot of BookTok and indie rep. None of this is bad — it’s a smart way of stocking, given the current publishing market, and similar to how Barnes and Noble stocks their own shelves. It’s clear the staff knows the market and is working with it rather than against it.

A poster displaying upcoming author events including Denise Williams (The Re-Do List) Stephanie Archer (The Wild Card) Ashley Herring Blake (Get Over It, April Evans) and Amy Spalding (In Her Spotlight)

As an example, just below the registers there is a Heated Rivalry display. Given the publisher’s head-scratching decision not to amp up printing ahead of the show’s debut, it’s difficult to find a hard copy of the now highly-sought-after title. Therefore, there were no copies of Heated Rivalry to be had but a great selection of other hockey romances.

Their stock reflects the market today — big walls of dark romance, romantasy and paranormal, and an especially large contemporary section. YA, historical, and classics all had smaller, but well-stocked sections. In addition to the expected subgenres, there was a “not-quite-romance” shelf full of titles that might feature romance but weren’t romances per say, and a selection of graphic novels. I was delighted to also find non-fiction titles, covering subjects like pleasure, anatomy, civil rights, and abortion. Up front you can find a “MN-Related” shelf, full of books with some connection to the state, and the “Local Authors” section.

A close up of one of the tables showing Our Vicious Oaths by NE Davenport, Here for a Good Time by Pyae Thet War, and Tia Williams' Audre and Bash are just friends. Below are shelves with 3d-printed articulated baby dragons in green, purple, orange, and lavender
Books and Baby Dragons! – photo credit: Danielle Fritz
A bookcase full of books, spine out, with white shelf talker tags about three to five tags per shelf
Photo credit: Danielle Fritz

My one tiny criticism of Tropes and Trifle’s set-up is the number of staff recommendation cards they have on some of the shelving. There were some sections where there were so many it made browsing difficult, as in hard to see the books themselves. It’s wonderful to have booksellers who are so excited about the titles they have to offer, but the number of shelf talkers on display could be scaled back a pinch.

I’m very much a trinkets girlie, so I had fun browsing the non-book offerings. Beyond the branded totes, tees, and mugs, Tropes and Trifles filled displays with scented candles made by local vendors, themed to certain genres or popular characters. There were fancy locally-made chocolates, handmade book sleeves, coloring books, puzzles, book annotation supplies, cards, and my biggest weakness — stickers. My favorite sticker of the bunch was a cute “Girls just wanna have guillotines.” That was the first thing I picked up to purchase.

Interior shelves inside Tropes and Trifles with chocolates, cards, games, coloring books and stickers
Trifles! It’s in the name – photo credit: Danielle Fritz

I like shopping for books in person, precisely because I can be exposed to titles beyond what my algorithm serves. It can be hard for me to sometimes look past reviews when choosing to pick up a title. I find walking aisles, devoid of the stars and commentary of Goodreads/BookTok/reading influencers, can help me find unexpected treasures. With a neat, diverse, and genrefied collection, Tropes and Trifles is a great place to find a hidden gem.

The Classics display: ornate bound editions of classic books on a narrow shelf with mugs for sale hanging below the middle shelf. Titles visible include Fingersmith by Sarah Waters, Little Women and Carmilla
Photo credit: Danielle Fritz

Books and trinkets aside, I want to address how Tropes and Trifles shows up for their neighbors. Because if there’s one metric by which I judge a small business, it’s by how it supports its community. And the community Tropes and Trifles inhabits is currently under attack by our federal government.

A laminated sign with a QR code that says Donate to Community Aid Network MN
Donations made very easy. Photo credit: Danielle Fritz

The day I visited, ICE agents had been especially active in their neighborhood, which sits only a few blocks away from George Floyd Square. Almost every storefront I passed featured a red and yellow sign, indicating that ICE was prohibited from entering that establishment. Citizens stood on street corners, keeping an eye out for ICE activity, whistles and phones at the ready. Tensions are high everywhere in the Twin Cities, but particularly in the neighborhoods where members of the community are being snatched or assaulted by ICE agents.

Tropes and Trifles have a yellow and red sign at the front. On the display beside the register, there is a bowl of whistles, flyers outlining your rights and how to be an observer, bumper stickers, and buttons. While I browsed the shelves, I noted small mutual aid posters beside the Historical section. And as I was checking out, the store clerk quickly offered me a whistle and the other resources they were offering for free. They told me grimly that they’d gotten a lot of experience in being an observer and using their whistle in the last few days.

Last night, while browsing my socials, I saw a post on the store’s Instagram that they will be closed for sales this coming Friday, January 23rd, in solidarity with the strike calling for an end to ICE’s occupation of the state. However, they will be open as a community resource station with coffee, charging station, and a place to warm up.

Now more than ever, we need to stand up for one another. It’s especially heartening to see a business make the effort to support their neighbors, particularly in light of the harassment other stores have faced as a result of their anti-ICE stance. I was excited to visit a romance bookstore, and now I’m excited to continue supporting a local business that has a proven record of lifting up their community.

The storefront of Tropes and Trifles. The sign is a small square and the sidewalk has a thin layer of snow and footprints.
We stand with Minnesota.

Thank you for the trip report, Danielle! If you’d like to write a trip report about your visit to a romance-focused bookstore, I would LOVE to hear from you.

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Mark T. B. Carroll

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