Snopes.com ([syndicated profile] snopes_feed) wrote2025-07-20 02:00 am

Wimbledon serves up tennis balls as new homes for threatened harvest mice?

Posted by Emery Winter

The tournament has previously donated tennis balls to conservation groups that turn them into homes for harvest mice, but it's not an ongoing program.
Snopes.com ([syndicated profile] snopes_feed) wrote2025-07-19 11:00 pm
Snopes.com ([syndicated profile] snopes_feed) wrote2025-07-19 06:00 pm

7 rumors about Stephen Colbert we've reported on

Posted by Joey Esposito

The soon-to-be former host of "The Late Show" on CBS has been subject to many rumors about confrontations with guests and getting fired.
rocky41_7: (Default)
rocky41_7 ([personal profile] rocky41_7) wrote in [community profile] books2025-07-19 09:47 am

Recent Reading: The Goblin Emperor

I first read The Goblin Emperor by Katherine Addison last year, but I never got around to reviewing it, in part because I didn't know what to say about it. My friends had loved it, and while I'd found it enjoyable, I was still percolating on what I liked (or didn't!) about it. Listening to The Witness for the Dead, a book in the same universe, got me thinking about TGE again, so this month I gave it a re-read. This time, it all clicked.
 
This book is truly such an enjoyable read. The basics of Maia's tale are not unfamiliar—a seeming nobody is thrust into a position of power no one ever expected them to have—but Addison puts her own fascinating spin on it. It has the same feeling I got from The Witness for the Dead, where the story prioritizes doing the right thing and many if not most of the characters in it are striving to be good people (whatever that means for them). It makes a nice contrast to the very selfish, dark fantasy where you know from the start every character is just in it for themselves (and I do enjoy those too, not to say one is better than other!) The protagonist Maia in particular is put in any number of positions where he could misuse his power for personal gratification—such as imprisoning or executing his abusive former guardian, Setheris—but he, with conscious effort, chooses differently. That is not the kind of person—not the kind of emperor—Maia wants to be. And honestly—there is very gratifying fantasy, particularly today, in the idea of someone obtaining power and being committed to some kind of principles of proper governance, of having some code of honor above their own personal enrichment.