Tim Slee's Blog: How's the Serenity? - Posts Tagged "metoo"

2018's charity of the year is...

Plan International!

For me at least. I write for fun and to raise money for charity. Last year it was Medecins Sans Frontieres.

In this #metoo year, it is Plan International, which works in countries around the world to advance child rights and equality for girls.

Such as? Right now they are running a campaign to support Rohingya girls in refugee camps in Bangladesh:

- Build latrines so people, particular women and girls, can go to the toilet in safety

- Construct sanitation facilities to halt the spread of disease

- Identify and register unaccompanied children so that they don’t become invisible

- Run education sessions about hygiene and avoiding waterborne diseases

- Create safe spaces where women and children can be protected from violence, exploitation and neglect - and have somewhere to learn and play.

If you'd like to support too, you can donate here:

https://www.plan.org.au/give/appeals/...
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Published on March 18, 2018 12:51 Tags: girlsrights, metoo, plan-international

Review of: Peril in the Old Country, Sam Hooker

Peril in the Old Country (Terribly Serious Darkness) Peril in the Old Country by Sam Hooker

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


When Terry Pratchett died we didn't just lose an author, we lost the entire Discworld universe. It was a fantastically humorous universe peopled with warty witches, goblins, færies, evil despots and hapless heroes.

But rejoice! For Peril in the Old Country is a rollicking story peopled with warty witches, goblins, færies, evil despots and hapless heroes!

There is more than a little Pratchettiness about the prose, but more in the way of an homage than straight fan fiction and it's a very easy and entertaining read. I read it during and in between international flights and it's the sort of book that bears multiple interruptions (boarding, meal service, movies, deplaning, straining to hear announcements) because the plot moves forward nicely in small bite-sized pieces and isn't so tricksy that you need to go back and re-read to remember what had happened the last time you picked it up.

Check my highlights for examples of the prose, but there are many chuckle-worthy gems:

"Grans of the Old Country seemed certain that young people were in constant danger of freezing to death, and took up knitting so they could stare death in the face and say, “Not today. Not on my watch.”

***

"Sladia continued talking, but Sloot could hear nothing but a high-pitched whine. He’d expected the sound of his life as he knew it bursting into flames to be more dramatic, yet there it was. A sort of highly efficient eternity passed, during which he managed to have a mental break, lose the power of speech, and rehabilitate himself before Sladia finished speaking."


It can be a little chaotic at times (I never really did work out what the spy called Roman's 'grand plan' really was ... but maybe that was the point?) but a bit like a ride at a fairground, the fun is in being flung around and turned upside down, not in the destination itself!

The main protagonist 'Sloot' is very reminiscent of Rincewind from Discworld and I would definitely recommend this one to Pratchett fans who miss Sam Vimes, Lord Vetinari and Nanny Ogg!



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Published on July 04, 2018 08:07 Tags: girlsrights, metoo, plan-international

How's the Serenity?

Tim Slee
A blog about the fun of balancing life, work, family, friends, writing and karma... mostly writing and karma.
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