Dickens of a Blog

The third iteration of Doug Bolden's various thoughts and musings.

Oeps! De afvoer is ontploft!

This past weekend, a pretty notable stormfront moved through and not only dropped a good amount of rain, but also did weird stuff to the pressure.

Somewhere in there, plus an undiscovered bit of blockage in our outgoing pipes (presumably), the extra water + “wax-sealed bottle” effect + pressure ups-and-downs resulted in several liters of rancid water burping back into our garage.

To quote my description shared with a friend at the time:

I could tell you what it smelled like, but you’d never eat Taco Bell again.

It was rank and it covered most everything in the garage.

Kaz took charge and got a lot of stuff cleaned and since then I’ve done spot disinfecting as I locate a place that obvious needs it and, frankly, it all needs it. Spiritual taint abounds.

We called a professional who came out and got the pipes cleaned out and washed back out the sediment and such that had been shoved forcibly into our system.

Now I’m washing dishes with a sense of dread. Just waiting to hear The Burp again.

Last Week’s Top 10 (a slight test)

I’m not 100% sure I can make sense of a regular “Last Week’s Top 10” because (a) I listen to a lot of [self-curated] playlists and (b) I listen to large swaths of background music. In both cases, just letting the PLEX Algorithm Gods take the wheel. There have been a few peak songs this past week, though, so this is one of the cases where it might work.

Going to start a record and see if there’s anything interesting to note in a week or two.

The Top 10 last week (27 April to 03 May, 2026)

  1. Yorushika – Bubbles
  2. tuki. – Zero
  3. tuki. – Bansanka
  4. majiko – Kurai Kurai
  5. Yorushika – Amy
  6. Yorushika – In May, From the Emerald Green Window
  7. krage – Request
  8. Sawano Hiroyuki (feat Tomorrow x Together) – LEvel
  9. Bear McCreary (feat Serj Tankian) – Godzilla
  10. veno – Becoming

Overall Analysis and Comments

There is only a slight surprise, here, which I will discuss.

March and April have largely been the “Months of Yorushika” for me — second person has topped monthly plays for both March 2026 and April 2026 by a margin — and their new single, “Bubbles,” is backed by a fun music video.

Likewise, tuki. — a fairly new artist to me — was first picked up pretty hard by a clever video for “Zero” which plays a singer revealing their face.

As for majiko’s “Kurai Kurai,” the video is quite fun but the song continues just to show up near the top top since it was released.

The surprise, though, is that Ado’s “Kira” isn’t on the list. In this case, it might because I’ve mostly listened to it via the music video, but it feels like it should show up.

Oh, speaking of surprises, there was definitely a fair amount of listening to Oliver Tree’s new album. And I would have guessed Brandy Senki’s “End of the F***ing World” would have been there since that’s cropped up multiple times in the playlists.

I’m also not 100% sure what counts as a play, here. I feel like I’ve listened to several of those songs more than given. Anyhow, I’ll keep tracking it as it goes and it seems interesting I’ll keep doing it.

2026 so far…

Lots of Yorushika and with majiko up top. I guess the main two that have “dropped” off in the past couple of weeks are Pami’s “Candydate” and Zico’s “Duet” with Lilas. A couple of weeks ago also had a fairly heavy Gorillaz rotation which has slowed.

This One Thing about BookTube Drives Me Mad…Click for…blah blah blah…

Ok, that’s a lie. A lot of things about “BookTube” drive me a bit mad. Most of it, really. There is good stuff, real good stuff, but I rarely care to watch enough to find the good stuff.

I’ll be in a mood to discuss more later, maybe, but here’s something from dozens of thumbnails that is now irritating me enough I’m going to start telling Youtube to not recommend me channels which use it:

Books {held | stacked | pointed to} spine back while a thoughtful face is front and center and there’s a title like…

Five Books I Will Never Read Again Because They Are TOO Good

or

Three Books You Have Never Read but Should Get Right Now

or

These Books Absolutely Wrecked My Summer

The last one probably with fake tears added to the thumbnail, or some such.

And it is so annoying to be so constantly baited into every video where even if you know the BookTuber or subscribe or whatever you still have to essentially pretend to be tricked into watching it.

The new The Algorithm demands sacrifice. Tricks for Clicks! If you know what are you getting into, you might not waste so much time forming addiction to screens, amirite?! It’s that or absolutely low-tier enragement farming.

Look, we’re adults, here. Just show the books. Let me know.

If I have not read the books, then good! New stuff!

If I have read the books and hate them, then good, I can avoid it (or join in to see a difference in opinion).

If I have read the books and love them, then I can either avoid or watch to have my sense of utter-correctness validated. Win win!

Mostly, I suspect, the middle-of-the-road absolutely un-timeless, un-classics which proliferate across BookTube’s for-all-tastes vibe will bear little interest for me and that’s ok. I’m not here to yuck your yum, not really. I love that you love to read.

Let me choose to click or not.

Otherwise, I’m no longer clicking a goddamned thing. Well, except the hide channel and such.

I’m sorry the soul-sucking, orphan-crushing machine to which your livelihood is attached requires you to screech like performing monkeys and trick your audience to make it happy.

OH, here are the books, by the way. Lest hypocritical be I:

There’s no real reason for those three. They were just near my desk and I didn’t feel like spending longer taking the photo than typing the rant.

All three: recommended, if you are into that sort of thing.

Joining the Standard Ebooks Patrons Circle (for a bit, at least)

A few days ago, I wrote about loading up a back-up Kindle with non-Amazon, non-DRM type books. Towards the end of that, I mentioned Standard Ebooks. Just in case you haven’t heard of them (from their about page):

Standard Ebooks is a volunteer-driven effort to produce a collection of high quality, carefully formatted, accessible, open source, and free public domain ebooks that meet or exceed the quality of commercially produced ebooks. The text and cover art in our ebooks are already believed to be in the U.S. public domain, and Standard Ebooks dedicates its own work to the public domain, thus releasing the entirety of each ebook file into the public domain. All the ebooks we produce are distributed free of cost and free of U.S. copyright restrictions.

There are other sources of pub-domain materials but Standard tries to standardize [hence, you know, the name] and modernize the layout. Having used just a small handful of their ebook versions, the difference is pretty noticeable. Some images and such put back properly. Text-corrections.

Sure, I could somewhat replicate using Calibre and tweaking a few settings to fix up some bits, but still: it’s nice to just be able to read a book without having to pre-edit it, first.

With the realization — from experience of formatting large amounts of text | information over my years as a web & marketing librarian — that such undertakings are hugely time intensive and involve a lot of people using a lot of scripts to download entire catalogs putting strain on a server: I went ahead and signed up for the Patrons Circle, today.

$15 a month and you get a few things like a better feed and a better access to collections. Can also suggest books. I won’t really use any of that.

This is just my general thanks.

The public domain — and stuff like CC-0 — are vital and important. They also require people like the folks at Standard Ebooks to actually provide the media to others. What’s more, I like the way that Standard Ebooks does it.

Recommended. The using of them, not necessarily the donation. Unless you end up really liking them, too.

EDIT: Forgot to add when I first clicked post, bonus points for not requiring me to go through something like Patreon to do this. They do use a third-party system to collection donations but the benefits themselves are currently directly from the site. I appreciate that. We need to de-Third-Party our internet, Space Pilgrims.

Converting My Couch into an All-Day Nest

Last week, a growing pain in the right ankle/calf divide grew increasingly until now, when I am taking pretty much a full on breather from the whole moving thing.

This is by way of introducing my “Avoiding | Reducing Chronic Pain All-Day Resting Nest of a Couch”:

You can see the expert skill of repurposing the back cushions into a resting place for my head and elevated legs. Kind of thing you don’t learn in those fancy-pants colleges and whathaveyou.

Ah, good times. Great times.

On the other hand, I have already finished off two books today and starting a third, so there is that. I’m just going stir crazy enough that I’m going to put aside the “all day rest” for a portion of the day and do a very, very slow stationary bike workout. Something like the equivalent of just floating on your back and letting the wind take you across the lake while you paddle here or there to stop from slamming into gators.

“Don’t float on your back so long you drift into gators,” isn’t, but feels like it could be, a proper Alabama saying.

Bonus sad times: my favorite black jacket which I have worn for…nearly (?) twenty-years finally had its zipper break. It was obvious that it was starting to break down but still…

Goodbye my old friend.

Am I being gaslamped by YouTube?

I got the above prompt while scrolling YouTube on my phone — bit laid up in bed due heavily inflamed right leg — and it’s the first time I have seen such.

Does this video feel like low-quality AI? Then results from not-at-all to extremely-likely.

Which makes me wonder if I’m being manipulated.

I do often tell YouTube not to recommend videos and channels that are obvious AI. Not always. Just in principle. YouTube’s floodgate recommendation system requires that. Watch one AI fake trailer and you will never know which movies are actually being released ever again.

Alerting me to the concept of AIness while promoting a 35min video about boardgame rulebooks from a creator I’ve never watched before, though? It feels weirdly manipulative…

(a) …like a little seed of doubt about what is or isn’t AI.

(b) …like a prompt to get me to watch a boardgame video after generally ignoring them for the past couple of years.

I watch a lot of solo rpg stuff, and I think this convinces YouTube, incorrectly, that I want broader tabletop slop in as addictive a manner as possible. Way too much D&D drama whinging and far too much boardgame critical theory about edge cases.

Because of that prompt, I was tricked into watching 5 minutes of a video I would have outright skipped, otherwise.

Hmmmmm.

BTW, posted this from my phone to try it out.

[Poem] The Grammar of Bicycles

in the foggy maw of spring
fall breath rises up all clove smoke
like kraai kraait
like yesterday met its gray road gray sky gray
stems gray

over broken fields await be low awash all calico
winds and creeping feline shouting
the scent of dying grass and living soil
while wisteria, stuk voor stuk,
is parsed purple upon the ground

and roses strive new branches new
thorns and out there, somewhere
a child by laughing unseen calls up
the grammar of bicycles
and saturdays

Background and Writing

It’s a quick poem that came to me more or less all at once so unlike nearly every other poem I have contemplated since restarting my blog, I was able to get it down without any significant loss between thought and pen.

It is a quite literal poem of this morning. It was gray and foggy and felt extremely autumnal with fields cut low and crows cawing and a general late-year grayness about BUT there are also children riding bicycles and shouting and purple wisteria blooms.

There was an experimental aspect to it, though, which I want to document.

First, Fast Draft

The creation was a bit unique and not necessarily something I will use often but I wrote the poem, initially, like this:

in the foggy maw of spring
autumnal breath rises up like clove smoke
like crow caw
like yesterday gray road gray sky gray
voices

over shorn fields waiting all calico
and cat like
in the smell of grass shout

while wisteria, one by one, purples
down into the ground

and roses rise up to the occassion
of new branches
and thorns and

somewhere a kid shouts bicycles
and saturdays

Line by Line Machine Translation

Then, I fed line by line into Google Translate, including all the broken lines and misspelled words, and asked it to translate them into Dutch, and got this:

in de mistige muil van de lente
De herfstgeur stijgt op als kruidnagelrook
zoals kraai kraait
zoals gisteren, grijze weg, grijze lucht, grijs
stemmen

over geschoren velden wachtend allemaal lapjeskatoen
en katachtig
in de geur van gras schreeuwen
terwijl de blauweregen
1, stuk voor stuk, paars kleurt
de grond in

en rozen komen tot hun recht in de gelegenheid
nieuwe vestigingen
en doornen en
Ergens roept een kind: fietsen!
en zaterdagen

Putting Back to English

Then I had Google Translate translate the whole thing back into English, and got this:

in the misty maw of lente
The autumn scent rises like clove smoke
like a crow crows
like yesterday, grey road, grey sky, grey
voices

over mown fields waiting all patchwork cotton
and feline
screaming in the scent of grass
while the wisteria, piece by piece, turns purple
into the ground

and roses come into their own in the opportunity
new establishments
and thorns and
Somewhere a child calls: cycling!
and Saturdays

Finally, Dougifying It

Then I took all three versions and blended them together and edited them in various ways. In a couple of places, leaving the Dutch obvious such as “kraai kraait” and “stuk voor stuk.”

In others, though, I teased out Dutch >> English puns. Paars is Dutch for “purple” so the wisteria is “parsed purple” and “met” is likewise for “with” so “yesterday met its gray road” is technically “with its gray road”.

“Stemmen” = “voices” so that became gray stems instead of gray voices.

Then, I went through and added a second draft of “Doug-ness” to it. “Shouts bicycles” became “the memory of bicycles” to make it more obvious and then “the grammar of bicycles” to make it more Doug-like. A few other similar tweaks occurred.

It has been a LONG time since I have tried writing a poem to completion, so I’ll likely need a bit of practice but there you go.

  1. It might be a false connection, but I love that the Dutch word for wisteria is “blauweregen” which, broken up into “blauwe” and “regen,” would mean “blue rain.” ↩︎

The Weighted Reading Tally Returns (finally)

A fairly long habit of the older version of Dickens of a Blog was to have a reading tally where I personally tracked the books I read.

It started with “The Winter of Reading Lots” which was actually from September through December. The challenge, then, was to read 20 books and I seem to have hit it. To keep it “fair,” I introduced a weight, initially, so that different books had different points based on length and format. The data of the original weight is somewhat lost since I did not keep a changelog once I completed the challenge and just kept it as a rough tally.

Then, in 2007 I started the true precursor to the weighted reading tally. I will warn you, this is back when I read in the range of 70-120 books per year. 2007 was the first year where I actually started to properly try and break it down to get a better sense of what fit where in the reading spectrum based on my own vibes about the reading material.

In 2008 I started to develop the formulae to weight it towards a normalized book. Books were 1-2 books per book. That’s all you need to know to get where the madness might lead. The end result was 117 books.

By 2015, the last year it was kept as such, the formulae had developed to have a few different content types/lengths and had developed into what I felt was a pretty accurate reflection of my reading speeds and such. However, my reading habits were plummeting and I was only updating the notes semi-frequently so no doubt numerous things were getting lost.

Note that 2013 was incomplete and 2014 is effectively non-extant (presumably lost to some website update/glitch).

After almost a decade of rough years, really good years that involved a new kid, COVID, a life-changing accident, and all sorts of things I am finally wanting to try and get back into the “Reading as sport as well as pleasure” mindset and so today I spent a couple of hours building a brand-spanking new weighted reading tally and then converting my Have-Read List 2026 into that format. This now includes slightly different math on Short Stories and Graphic Novels and introduces Light Novels.

The new math/weights helps different divisions to add up more consistently (the old math meant it would count as reading “more” to list each comic/story in a graphic novel collection separately, for instance, now it is closer to a 1:1 for most).

But, Why?

There are a few reasons why I like doing this:

  • This is the kind thing that librarians who work with metadata and build web-pages consider fun, frankly.
  • Bragging.
  • I like having the data for myself because sometimes I forget exactly which volumes I read, and when, and having at least a basic finding tool helps me remember “Oh, I was on volume 7!”
  • A lot of systems that track reading lists tend to weight everything as 1 so you end up with a manga volume counting the same as War and Peace and that does not feel right.
  • It’s frankly a bit of a tragedy that readers who track this sort of thing are some of the most susceptible — besides people tracking their fitness/diet — to requiring third part data scrapers to enumerate their good habits.
  • Several of the more prominent ones are either baked into an eco-system — such as Amazon/Goodreads — or require at least as much time to add it to an external system and it would take and this way I can control the data.

The big reasons are mostly that I like external memory devices and it’s fun to brag, but I want to brag with a veneer of math.

Any 2026 Reading Goals?

Absolutely not. It will be what it will be.

Please Don’t Lie about Item Value when Fulfilling Kickstarters

Photo by Elijah Mears on Unsplash

I got a text from UPS this evening that required me to click enough things that I was slightly convinced it was a scam for the longest time.

Turns out that a book I ordered through Kickstarter — at this point I am not naming-and-shaming because I’m going to assume honest mistake or software glitch — was shipped into Belgium with a reported value of $0.01.

Just in case someone was trying to outsmart the system, here’s a bonus fact for you: Customs officials aren’t stupid.

No one is spending $10-$20 + $10-20 in what should have been submitted as VAT charges just for a $0.01 item.

And that’s the story of how I had to use my phone to try and edit a screenshot of the reward and likely pay a +€20 customs up-charge1 because no way they actually paid the VAT if they declared it for a penny [if they did, they drastically underpaid].

Anyhow, we’ll see what the next step is.

I’ll let the person who came up with the project know the exact specifics, no doubt.

  1. To clarify, I’ll have to pay the VAT on the book and THEN a €20 processing fee, which together will likely come close to equaling the cost of the book once you factor in the shipping I already paid. ↩︎

It’s not about the teeth…

From “Happiness” on SMBC-Comics.com

Remember, Space Pilgrims, find your happiness.

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