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Alex Isle [Rattfan] ([personal profile] rattfan) wrote2020-04-27 06:10 pm
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Book waffle

Rest day.

I note changes in Dreamwidth have meant Rich Text is now unusable, so I can't italic book titles or cut text. This bugs me. And yes, I've cleared my cache and yes, I've told them. I'm not the only one.

All jobs are done, it’s a public holiday and we're under quarantine, so you know where I was, apart from half an hour strolling around the streets this evening. I made some game moves, did some reading and sorted out my Word files so everything that needed backing up has been. Got through a bit more of Winston Churchill’s The Gathering Storm.

I now know that Churchill narrowly escaped death in December, 1931, when he crossed Fifth Avenue, New York, without proper care, having forgotten that the Americans drive on the other side of the road and also what a red traffic light meant, they not existing in Britain at the time! By his own admission, he caused “a shattering collision. I was a wreck for two months.”

Sometimes I just read one book at a time and power through it quickly. At the moment, for some reason I’m not able to settle on any one book, so have several of them on the table next to my armchair and also the Kindle, usually the go-to for more lightweight fiction. Well, sometimes. I’m also pushing through Moby Dick, [64% complete) which I downloaded from the Gutenberg site, since the cost of e-books has risen lately, thanks to the abysmal exchange rate.

I like to read an actual book where finances permit, so bought William Gibson’s The Agency from Rabble Books in Maylands. I expected to like it more than I do, to be honest; I enjoyed his earlier works, but this one seems to be very slow moving and I’ve had to page backwards to remind myself who characters are. Probably also a result of reading several at once, to be fair. I obtained Lewis Dartnell’s The Knowledge via Book Depository. Of all books, it didn’t seem right to have this one as an e-book. Its subtitle is How to Rebuild Our World After an Apocalypse. [And Good Luck With That would probably make a good subtitle to the subtitle].

Recent rereads have included an e-book titled The China Pandemic. I couldn’t remember how close it had gotten to reality. The answer is thankfully not very, since its fictional pandemic wipes out nearly everybody!

The author, A.R. Shaw, does create a tricky situation where a group of preppers have managed to bug out in time to save themselves, but still have no immunity, so they have to avoid all contact with a nearby group of immune survivors, who would otherwise pass the plague to them. It’s a nice twist on her part; provides dramatic tension without the otherwise inevitable band of marauders (though there are some of those also to endanger the women and otherwise be threatening) that often crop up in this sort of book.

If you think of books as ingredients for the mind’s preservation, I wonder what stew comes out of this lot? What a person reads influences them, if it’s at all memorable, and so has to affect one’s own writing. It’ll be interesting to find out.
mific: (Retro Phone Star Trek)

[personal profile] mific 2020-04-27 11:30 am (UTC)(link)
D'you mean you have no rich text option when posting?
I still seem to have it, weird.
I remember that if you turned on "beta testing" for "Create Entries" https://www.dreamwidth.org/beta you lost the rich text option, which is why I never turned it on. I like bouncing between HTML and rich text, as that saves your draft in case you accidentally close the tab, which I'm prone to do.
mific: (Default)

[personal profile] mific 2020-04-27 12:02 pm (UTC)(link)
Damn pesky updates!
ariaflame: Sombrero galaxy (Default)

[personal profile] ariaflame 2020-04-27 04:58 pm (UTC)(link)
I must admit I never bothered with the Rich Text feature because I automatically just used html tags for italics and bold.
fred_mouse: line drawing of sheep coloured in queer flag colours with dream bubble reading 'dreamwidth' (Default)

[personal profile] fred_mouse 2020-04-28 04:58 am (UTC)(link)
If you put
!markdown
in the first line on its own, you can then use one asterisk at each end of the italics section and two asterisks at each end of a bold section:

*italics*
**bold**

That doesn't solve your 'cut text' option. However, markdown can also be used for lists and a range of other basic formatting. If the glitch doesn't get itself sorted out, I can pull up the nice clear references on this for you.