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duckprintspress ([personal profile] duckprintspress) wrote2025-09-02 10:18 am

Created Works Round-Up: August 2025

A banner that reads "Created Works Round Up: August." In the upper left corner is the Duck Prints Press logo with a rainbow of duck prints around the left and bottom of it. On the right is the Dux mascot, a white duck with an orange beak and orange feet and a pleased expression on their face.
Duck Prints Press’s monthly “created works round-ups” are our opportunity to spotlight some of the amazing work that people working with us have done that ISN’T linked to their work with Duck Prints Press. We include fanworks, outside publications, and anything else that creators feel like sharing with y’all. Inclusion is voluntary and includes anything that they decided “hey, I want to put this on the created work’s round-up!”
Check out what they’ve shared with us this month…
(or check out all the created works round-ups in this master post!)
Read more... )
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duckprintspress ([personal profile] duckprintspress) wrote2025-09-01 03:00 pm

Support Independent Queer Publishing: Become a Duck Prints Press Patreon Backer! Like/Reblog to Ente

Graphic with a pale blue background. It features a white duck looking with a smirk toward the viewer, his winges spread behind him; the wings have a rainbow gradient. Text on the gaphic reads "Support Duck Prints Press on Patreon, Receive a Backer Exclusive Freebie or any merch item up to $5."

Duck Prints Press, the indie publisher owned by @unforth/Nina Waters, founded by fancreators to help fanartists and fanfiction writers publish their original work, with an emphasis on works featuring LGBTQIA+ characters, needs YOU! ๐Ÿซต

There are two ways for you to help, now through September 30th:

  • like and share a version of this post post on the platform(s) of your choice to help us spread the word – and to enter a giveaway for an original copy of the first edition of our debut anthology Add Magic to Taste! (Scroll down for details.) Shareable posts: Tumblr | Pillowfort | Mastodon | Bluesky
  • become a Patreon supporter, help an awesome small business, get backer rewards, AND get a merch freebie valued up to $5 US!

To help us maximize the amount of money we can pay to creators, we rely on our Patreon to pay our overhead costs. As things stand, we need to bring in about $750 a month to pay our baseline monthly expenses…and as of now, we’re bringing in about $550 per month. Factoring in our website and other online sales, vending, and crowdfunding campaigns, Duck Prints Press is currently breaking even, but we can’t grow, initiate more projects, pay creators more, expand our offerings, get software and equipment that will help us streamline our processes, and more…without enough money coming in to ensure we make ends meet each month.

That’s where you come in! The more people support us on Patreon, even just at $3/month, the more we’re able to do!

In exchange for monthly support, we offer a bunch of cool rewards to people who choose to back us, with 5 support levels ranging from $3/month to $25/month. All backers get coupons to use in our webstore, access to our Discord, behind-the-scenes blog posts, voting rights on polls that decide anthology themes, and at least one free short story per month. At higher levels, backers get exclusive merchandise, one artwork per month, access to our monthly Duck Prints Press Panel, bonus stories, free selections from our book catalog, extras for supporting our crowdfunding campaigns, and more!

We can reach our goals, and you can get lots of excellent stuff, by backing the Press on Patreon now! AND you’ll get your choice of a freebie if you back during the month of September! (All our current backers will get to claim a freebie too, as a THANK YOU for their long-time support of our work.)

What can you get?

This giveaway is the only way to get access to Patreon-exclusive merchandise usually reserved for Patreon backers who also support our crowdfunding campaigns! Here’s the exclusives we have on offering for this year’s freebies:

A photograph of merchandise arrayed on a white background. Pictured are: a notecard front depicting a peacock standing on a branch emerging from a picture frame, surrounded by a rainbow background; an acrylic pin in shades of blue depicting a wave; two acrylic pins with cute dragons, one in the colors of the Gilbert Baker Pride Flag, one in the colors of the Intersex-Inclusive pride flag; a standee of two chibi white men in hockey shirts holding hands; a magnet of a feather colored in shades of silver and rainbow; a sticker of a mask, one side in sunshine colors, the other in moonlight colors; a magnet of a musketeer's torso shown before a coat of arms, their sword impaling three hearts; a magnet of a dragon in the colors of the polyamory pride flag, holographic glimmers overlaying it, and a postcard of two people tumbling from a stone rook-like tower that's aflame.


You can get any merchandise item we offer on our webstore that costs $5 or less, or you can claim a backer-exclusive reward previously only available to Patrons! The Patreon exclusives that I have leftovers of, listed left to right, top to bottom, are:

  • A Truth Universally Acknowledged – this version of this design is only available in this set of 5 note cards with envelopes (art by A. A. Weston)
  • The Salt in the Sea – blue iridescent acrylic wave pin (art by planetsandmagic) (only 4 available)
  • Pride Dragons – Gilbert Baker Pride Flag and Intersex Inclusive Pride Flag acrylic pins (art by Florilege) (only 5 and 4 of these respectively)
  • Hockey Bois – standee of chibi art of the two main characters (art by diminuel) (only 1 available!!)
  • Scrap Metal Angel – rainbow feather magnet featuring the same art as the chapter dividers (clip art) (only 4 available)
  • He Bears the Cape of Stars/She Wears the Midnight Crown – sun/moon day/night mask die-cut sticker (art by Aceriee)
  • Aim For The Heart – musketeer of pierced hearts magnet (art by Aceriee) (only 1 available!!)
  • Many Hands – poly pride flag dragon with hologram stars (art by reshipkmn)
  • Missed Fortunes – post card of the cover art (art by Jade Hallett)

If none of these are to your taste, on duckprintspress.com we’ve got bookmarks, stickers, key chains, magnets, and more!

All backers, current and new, who back at the $25/month level by the end of September will ALSO get our 2026 Calendar of Queer Art as a freebie! You can learn more about the calendar on our webpage.

Wait, what was that about a giveaway?

Don’t want to be a backer but want to help us spread the word? Have we got a giveaway for you! To encourage people to share this post, we’re offering a free copy of the first edition of our first anthology Add Magic to Taste, which features 20 sweet, fluffy, queer stories set at magical coffee shops, tea houses, and bakeries. There are only three mint, print copies of this book left, and they’re not for sale – this is the rare chance to get one for yourself!

A graphic over a pale blue background. It says "Spread the word!" with a heart and a share symbol below that, then the words "to enter the giveaway." Below that is the art from the front cover of the book "Add Magic to Taste," showing a dragon brewing a potion, beside which is the text "of a print copy of our first anthology Add Magic to Taste."

Want to help a small, fan-run, aroace-agender-owned independent business get more support, and maybe win something awesome for your efforts? Then enter the giveaway! You get one entry for liking this post, and one entry per reblog/reskeet/share for up to three reblogs/reskeets/shares! AND you can get additional entries by sharing our posts on different platforms: we’re posting shareable versions of the giveaway on Tumblr, Pillowfort, Bluesky, and Mastodon! (Note: we will NOT give entries for people making their own posts. We love when people make their own posts, but they’re too difficult for us to track for giveaway purposes.)

TL:DR: Duck Prints Press is a growing indie press working with fancreators to publish queer art and fiction. Become a backer on Patreon during September 2025, and get all the backer rewards associated with the backer level you select PLUS a freebie worth up to $5. Help spread the word and get entries to win a fabulous print anthology available nowhere else!

Stuff for us, stuff for you – couldn’t be better! Don’t miss your chance: this event ends September 30th, 2025!

(And don’t forget to sign up for our mailing list so you can hear about our latest projects, merchandise releases, crowdfunding campaigns, publications, coupons, and more!)

Thanks in advance, everyone.

(For all legalese related to this promotional event and giveaway, go to this link! Make sure you check it out.)


 


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duckprintspress ([personal profile] duckprintspress) wrote2025-09-01 11:17 am

Pre-Order Your 2026 Calendar & Art Prints Today!

Pre-orders for our 2026 calendar of queer art, featuring 12 gorgeous pieces formerly posted to the Duck Prints Press Patreon, are now open! We’ll be taking pre-orders for this 8.5 in x 11 in/21.6 cm x 27.9 cm full-color calendar now through September 15. Not only does every month feature lovely work by 9 different artists, but we’ve also marked major queer events such as Bi Visibility Day and Trans Day of Remembrance right on the calendar, so you can celebrate LGBTQIA+ days all year round!

Calendars are $20 US, plus shipping.

Each art piece is also being offered as a 5 in x 7 in/12.7 cm x 17.8 cm art print – or you can get a full set of all 12 art prints for half the price of buying them all individually!

Learn more about the calendar and art print by visiting our page now!

Or – already convinced?

A mosaic of twelve art pieces, each in a different style and palette. They are in three rows of four across. Top left corner: two women, one spectral, surrounded by a ring of flames. Top left-center: A person with blue hair wearing an orange draws touches noses with a cat dragon; the whole thing is in the colors of the aroace flag. Top center-right: A lineart piece of a person lounging in a forest, reaching toward a pond before them. Top right: Two women standing side by side, both white, one in a leather jacket the other in a t-shirt; both are blushing, and they look with nervous affection toward each other. Middle left: two mermaids, one pink the other turquoise, sing in a dark sea, one reaching for a rainbow seahorse. Middle center-left: Two men, one black and one white, shown from the back. Both wear cowboy outfits, and they have their arms around each other. Middle center-right: Two older men sit together on the deck of a boat floating in a lake. Middle right: Two men in button-up shirts and cowboy hats stand shoulder to shoulder before a fence. Bottom left: a woman in the colors of the bi pride flag holds a flame-like fairy in her raised hands. Bottom center-left: Two epople, gender ambiguous, dressed in leaf-crowns and robes conduct a handfasting before gourds and candles. Bottom center-right: an elderly woman and a sphinx touch noses in a stony landscape. Bottom right: Two people, one black, one white, in fantasy winter garb hold hands, Magic sparks rise from where they hold hands.

All the art pieces are shown above, and the order matches the months. These pieces are:

Top row, left to right: Zel Howland, “Chrysopoeia” (January); May Barros, “Magical Friendship” (February); Jagoda Zirebiec, “I want to be different.” (March); radicalhoodie, “april’s sweet showers” (April)

Middle row, left to right: swev.art, untitled (May); Aaron Kotze, “Ol’ Reliable” (June); Max Jason Peterson, “Treasure” (July); Jagoda Zirebiec, “Sunset” (August)

Bottom row, left to right: May Barros, “Spark” (September); Aceriee, “Samhain” (October); Shea Sullivan, “The Riddle” (November); Max Jason Peterson, “Snow Heart” (December).

Did you know? Every purchase you make helps artists get paid – artists earn royalties on every single calendar and art print sale!

Did you know? Our backers on Patreon at the $5/month level and higher have already gotten access to digital versions of all these art pieces – and backers at the $25/month level will receive a copy of the calendar complementary as a THANK YOU for their support! You can get one too by becoming a backer today!


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duckprintspress ([personal profile] duckprintspress) wrote2025-09-01 10:14 am
Entry tags:

My August Reads





Another month, another fuckton of readings. You can see my new interests by which covers come up the most, lmao. List in text form is below; sorted by type of book; queer reads are marked with a ๐Ÿณ๏ธ‍๐ŸŒˆ; favorites are in bold.

Duck Prints Press Titles:

  • Starstruck, Adrift by Cedar D. McCafferty-Svec ๐Ÿณ๏ธ‍๐ŸŒˆ
  • Whispers Through the Leaves by Johnathan Stern
  • Like it Sharp by E. V. Dean ๐Ÿณ๏ธ‍๐ŸŒˆ
  • Business is Blooming by Genevieve Maxwell ๐Ÿณ๏ธ‍๐ŸŒˆ
  • Nycticorax by S. J. Ralston ๐Ÿณ๏ธ‍๐ŸŒˆ

Novels:

  • Lout of Count's Family vol. 1 - 4 by Yu Ryeo-Han
  • Diary of a Roblox Pro 7: Cash Splash by Ari Avatar (MG, read with my son)
  • Lip and Sword vol. 3 by Jin Shisi Chai ๐Ÿณ๏ธ‍๐ŸŒˆ
  • What Fresh Hell is This? Perimenopause, Menopause, Other Indignities, and You by Heather Corinna ๐Ÿณ๏ธ‍๐ŸŒˆ
  • The Wizard by Shi Wu ๐Ÿณ๏ธ‍๐ŸŒˆ

Manga, Manhwa, Manhua:

  • The (Pet) Detective Agency by noji ๐Ÿณ๏ธ‍๐ŸŒˆ
  • One-Punch Man by ONE
  • Fire Force vol. 8 by Atsushi Ohkubo
  • Haikyu vol. 38 and 39 by Haruichi Furudate
  • My Love Mix-Up! vol. 7 by Wataru Hinekure and Aruko ๐Ÿณ๏ธ‍๐ŸŒˆ
  • Terano-kun and Kumazaki-kun by Yoriko ๐Ÿณ๏ธ‍๐ŸŒˆ
  • Magical Girl Incident vol. 1 to 3 by Zero Akabane ๐Ÿณ๏ธ‍๐ŸŒˆ
  • Witch Hat Atelier vol. 12 and 13 by Kamome Shirahama
  • ๅคฉๅฎ˜่ต็ฆ vol. 5 by ๅขจ้ฆ™้“œ่‡ญ ๐Ÿณ๏ธ‍๐ŸŒˆ
  • Yona of the Dawn vol. 15 and 16 by Mizuho Kusanagi
  • A Beast's Descent into Love by Rui Asajima ๐Ÿณ๏ธ‍๐ŸŒˆ
  • Bite Marks and Fluorite by Seno Yanase ๐Ÿณ๏ธ‍๐ŸŒˆ
  • Dinosaur Sanctuary vol. 1 and 2 by Itaru Kinoshita
  • Demon Slayer/Kimetsu no Yaiba vol. 21 to 23 by Koyoharu Gotouge
  • My Beautiful Man vol. 4 by Yuu Nagira ๐Ÿณ๏ธ‍๐ŸŒˆ
  • UNDEAD: Finding Love in the Zombie Apocalypse vol. 1 and 2 by Fumi Tsuyuhisa ๐Ÿณ๏ธ‍๐ŸŒˆ
  • Sakamoto Days vol. 4 and 5 by Yuto Suzuki
  • Our Not-So-Lonely Planet Travel Guide vol. 1 to 3 by Mone Sorai ๐Ÿณ๏ธ‍๐ŸŒˆ
  • The Way of the Househusband vol. 9 by Kousuke Oono
  • World's End Blue Bird vol. 1 by Anji Seina ๐Ÿณ๏ธ‍๐ŸŒˆ
  • Day Off by Dailygreens ๐Ÿณ๏ธ‍๐ŸŒˆ
  • Something Important by Ereyz ๐Ÿณ๏ธ‍๐ŸŒˆ
  • Lout of Count's Family chapters 1 to 100 by PING and Yu Ryeo-Han
  • Cover My Scars With Your Kiss vol. 2 by Io Amaki ๐Ÿณ๏ธ‍๐ŸŒˆ
  • Kindred Spirits on the Roof: The Complete Collection by Aya Fumio and Hachi Ito ๐Ÿณ๏ธ‍๐ŸŒˆ

Other Graphic Novels:

  • The Moth Keeper by K. O'Neill ๐Ÿณ๏ธ‍๐ŸŒˆ
  • Strange Bedfellows by Ariel Slamet Ries ๐Ÿณ๏ธ‍๐ŸŒˆ
  • Clementine vol. 3 by Tillie Walden ๐Ÿณ๏ธ‍๐ŸŒˆ
  • Disney Gravity Falls Cinestory Comic vol. 2 (read with my son)
  • Arcana: The Lost Heirs by Sam Prentice-Jones ๐Ÿณ๏ธ‍๐ŸŒˆ
  • Welcome to St. Hell: My Trans Teen Misadventure by Lewis Hancox ๐Ÿณ๏ธ‍๐ŸŒˆ
  • Far Sector by N. K. Jemisin and Jamal Campbell ๐Ÿณ๏ธ‍๐ŸŒˆ


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duckprintspress ([personal profile] duckprintspress) wrote2025-08-31 10:18 am

Now Available: Fannish Safety Sign Stickers!

A banner with text and images over a simple brick-like background. It's entitled "Fannish Safety Signs: sticker pack by Duck Prints Press." A small banner beside this says, "funded in under 6 hours." At the top of the graphic are two "caution tape" style graphics in yellow and black: one reads "angst beyond this point" the other "caution dead dove do not eat." Two black and white graphics on the left are shown. One says "be alert for idiots in love" and includes two simple figure silhouettes with question marks over their heads passing a heart between them; the other shows a person sinking into a hole with text that reads "be alert for plot holes." At the bottom are two yellow and black caution signs; one reads "there's only one bed" with a picture of a neatly made bed; the other reads "caution enemies to lovers" and features two crossed swords with a heart over their tips. Lastly, there's a blue and white graphic with a list of five items, each illustrated, and text at the bottom reads "the required focus aids above must be prepared before a fanfic-reading session"; the five aids are "preferred website," "suitable timeslot," "cozy blanket," "imminent schedule," and "comfort blorbos."

Did you miss our crowdfunding campaign for stickers of our Fannish Safety Signs designed by Xianyu Zhou? Did you back it but subsequently realized you just gotta get more of these funny, quirky stickers? Well, we gotchu! Fannish Safety Sign Stickers – 39 designs in all! – are now available in the Duck Prints Press webstore!

No idea what I’m talking about? Xianyu Zhou design three different styles of “Fannish Safety Signs” that we have made as stickers – BE ALERT FOR, CAUTION, and THE REQUIRED FOCUS AIDS MUST BE PREPARED BEFORE…. There’s also a caution tape sticker sheet, and we hit a stretch goal and unlocked a fourth design – [BLANK] AT WORK. All the stickers are glossy, vinyl stickers and were printed by StickerNinja, except the AT WORK stickers, which are on glossy vinyl hologram sticker paper and were printed by Vograce.
CAUTION Stickers: There are 16 variations on the basic yellow-and-black CAUTION sign design. Each measures 4.2 in x 3 in (10.66 cm x 7.6 cm).
BE ALERT Stickers: There are 17 variations on the basic Be Alert For… white-and-black foundation. Each measures 3 in x 4.5 in (7.6 cm x 11.4 cm).
FOCUS AIDS Stickers: There are 3 variations on the The Required Focus Aids… design with its list format and blue-and-white color scheme. Each is 4 in x 6 in (10.2 cm x 15.25 cm).
Caution Tape Sticker Sheet: This collection of caution tape is a single sticker sheet with 7 different stickers on the sheet! The entire sheet measures 8 in x 5.63 in (20.3 cm x 14.3 cm).
At Work Stickers: There are 2 variations on the [BLANK] AT WORK design, both on shiny hologram sticker paper. Each is 3 in x 3 in (7.6 cm x 7.6 cm).
Here are all the designs:

Read more... )

See something you gotta have? You can! GET YOURS TODAY!


marthawells: Murderbot with helmet (Default)
marthawells ([personal profile] marthawells) wrote2025-08-29 01:29 pm

Ink to Film Podcast Recording at WorldCon

If you missed the live recording of the Murderbot interview episode at WorldCon, you can watch it here:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W-JRHSABM24

This includes the special message to me that the show's cast sent, which was awesome.


***


I'm still sick, but getting better bit by bit.
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duckprintspress ([personal profile] duckprintspress) wrote2025-08-29 10:39 am

Queer Reads by Australian Authors for Wear it Purple Day!

8 book covers, text and a graphic of a purple t-shirt with text and an outline of Australia, all on a background of the Rainbow Flag. The text reads: Queer Books From Australia. The text on the t-shirt reads: Wear It Purple Day. The books are: An Accident of Stars by Foz Meadows; Stars in Their Eyes by Jessica Walton & Aล›ka; A Strange and Stubborn Endurance by Foz Meadows; The Sweetness Between Us by Sarah Winifred Searle; She Who Became the Sun by Shelley Parker-Chan; A Marvellous Light by Freya Marske; Always Human by Ari North; Strange Bedfellows by Ariel Slamet Ries.

Wear It Purple Day, which is today – August 29th 2025 – is an annual event drawing attention to LGBTQIA+ youth in Australia, with an emphasis on acceptance and education. We thought it’d make a great opportunity to draw attention to some Australian authors and their queer books! The contributors to the list are: Shadaras, Nina Waters, Shea Sullivan, Dei Walker, and an anonymous contributor.


An Accident of Stars by Foz Meadows

When Saffron Coulter stumbles through a hole in reality, she finds herself trapped in Kena, a magical realm on the brink of civil war.

There, her fate becomes intertwined with that of three very different women: Zech, the fast-thinking acolyte of a cunning, powerful exile; Viya, the spoiled, runaway consort of the empire-building ruler, Vex Leoden; and Gwen, an Earth-born worldwalker whose greatest regret is putting Leoden on the throne. But Leoden has allies, too, chief among them the Vex’Mara Kadeja, a dangerous ex-priestess who shares his dreams of conquest.

Pursued by Leoden and aided by the Shavaktiin, a secretive order of storytellers and mystics, the rebels flee to Veksh, a neighboring matriarchy ruled by the fearsome Council of Queens. Saffron is out of her world and out of her depth, but the further she travels, the more she finds herself bound to her friends with ties of blood and magic.

Can one girl – an accidental worldwalker – really be the key to saving Kena? Or will she just die trying?


Stars in Their Eyes by Jessica Walton & Aล›ka

Maisie has always dreamed of meeting her hero, Kara Bufano, an amputee actor who plays a kick-arse amputee character in her favourite show. Fancon is big and exciting and exhausting. Then she meets Ollie, a cute volunteer who she has a lot in common with. Could this be the start of something, or will her mum, who doesn’t seem to know what boundaries are, embarrass her before she and Ollie have a chance?


A Strange and Stubborn Endurance by Foz Meadows

“Stolen me? As soon to say a caged bird can be stolen by the sky.”

Velasin vin Aaro never planned to marry at all, let alone a girl from neighboring Tithena. When an ugly confrontation reveals his preference for men, Vel fears he’s ruined the diplomatic union before it can even begin. But while his family is ready to disown him, the Tithenai envoy has a different solution: for Vel to marry his former intended’s brother instead.

Caethari Aeduria always knew he might end up in a political marriage, but his sudden betrothal to a man from Ralia, where such relationships are forbidden, comes as a shock.

With an unknown faction willing to kill to end their new alliance, Vel and Cae have no choice but to trust each other. Survival is one thing, but loveโ€•as both will learnโ€•is quite another.

Byzantine politics, lush sexual energy, and a queer love story that is by turns sweet and sultry. Foz Meadows’ A Strange and Stubborn Endurance is an exploration of gender, identity, and self-worth. It is a book that will live in your heart long after you turn the last page.


The Sweetness Between Us by Sarah Winifred Searle

After health problems wiped out their first few weeks of school, Perley and Amandine are both starting their Junior year behind their classmates, and both have major changes in their lives that they’re struggling to get used to. Perley was diagnosed with diabetes over the summer, and worries that all these new medical expenses will be a hardship on his family. And Amandine, part of a venerated family of vampires, has been turned much younger than she expected to be after a car accident nearly killed her. The two of them form a fast friendship – both feel a little out of step with their old lives, and as a bonus, it turns out that Amandine’s new vampire abilities can help Perley save money on blood glucose tests. But as the year goes on, they’re forced to admit that maybe their coping strategies – and their blood-sipping-turned-romance – aren’t working out so well after all. Will they be able to get their lives back to normal? Or will both have to figure out new ways for their “normal” to look?


She Who Became the Sun by Shelley Parker-Chan

To possess the Mandate of Heaven, the female monk Zhu will do anything

“I refuse to be nothing…”

In a famine-stricken village on a dusty yellow plain, two children are given two fates. A boy, greatness. A girl, nothingness…

In 1345, China lies under harsh Mongol rule. For the starving peasants of the Central Plains, greatness is something found only in stories. When the Zhu family’s eighth-born son, Zhu Chongba, is given a fate of greatness, everyone is mystified as to how it will come to pass. The fate of nothingness received by the family’s clever and capable second daughter, on the other hand, is only as expected.

When a bandit attack orphans the two children, though, it is Zhu Chongba who succumbs to despair and dies. Desperate to escape her own fated death, the girl uses her brother’s identity to enter a monastery as a young male novice. There, propelled by her burning desire to survive, Zhu learns she is capable of doing whatever it takes, no matter how callous, to stay hidden from her fate.

After her sanctuary is destroyed for supporting the rebellion against Mongol rule, Zhu takes the chance to claim another future altogether: her brother’s abandoned greatness.


A Marvellous Light by Freya Marske

Robin Blyth has more than enough bother in his life. He’s struggling to be a good older brother, a responsible employer, and the harried baronet of a seat gutted by his late parents’ excesses. When an administrative mistake sees him named the civil service liaison to a hidden magical society, he discovers what’s been operating beneath the unextraordinary reality he’s always known.

Now Robin must contend with the beauty and danger of magic, an excruciating deadly curse, and the alarming visions of the future that come with it—not to mention Edwin Courcey, his cold and prickly counterpart in the magical bureaucracy, who clearly wishes Robin were anyone and anywhere else.

Robin’s predecessor has disappeared, and the mystery of what happened to him reveals unsettling truths about the very oldest stories they’ve been told about the land they live on and what binds it. Thrown together and facing unexpected dangers, Robin and Edwin discover a plot that threatens every magician in the British Isles—and a secret that more than one person has already died to keep.


Always Human by Ari North

In the near-future, people use technology to give the illusion of all kinds of body modifications-but some people have “Egan’s Syndrome,” a highly sensitive immune system that rejects these “mods” and are unable to use them. Those who are affected maintain a “natural” appearance, reliant on cosmetics and hair dye at most to help them play with their looks.

Sunati is attracted to Austen the first time she sees her and is drawn to what she assumes is Austen’s bravery and confidence to live life unmodded. When Sunati learns the truth, she’s still attracted to Austen and asks her on a date. Gradually, their relationship unfolds as they deal with friends, family, and the emotional conflicts that come with every romance. Together, they will learn and grow in a story that reminds us no matter how technology evolves, we will remain . . . always human.


Strange Bedfellows by Ariel Slamet Ries

In the not-too-distant future, most of humanity resides on its last-ditch effort at Meridian, a remote alien planet where you’re more likely to be born superhuman than left-handed.

None of that is important to Oberon Afolayan. Since his mildly public breakdown, his whole life seems to be spiraling out of control—from dropping out of university to breaking up with his boyfriend, it seems like only a karmic inevitability when he wakes up one day with the ability to conjure his dreams in the real world.

Oberon’s newfound powers come with a facsimile of his high school crush, Kon, who mysteriously dropped off the face of the planet almost three years ago and who is a little more infuriating (if not also infuriatingly hot) than Oberon remembers.

Kon makes it his mission to turn Oberon’s life around, and while they struggle to get a handle on his powers and his disastrous personal life (not to mention the appearance of strange nightmare creatures), it turns out this dream version of Kon has secrets of his own—dangerous ones.

Oberon might have more on his plate than he originally thought, but is giving up his dreams—even the one he might have accidentally fallen in love with—the only way to find happiness in reality?

Find these books on our Goodreads book shelf or buy them through the Duck Prints Press Bookshop.org affiliate page.

Join our Book Lover’s Discord server to chat books, fandom, and more!



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duckprintspress ([personal profile] duckprintspress) wrote2025-08-29 10:39 am

Friday Five: Garbage and Recycling

1. Does where you live have regular doorstep rubbish collections or do you have to take your trash somewhere else?

Yep, where I live now does - we just have to drag everything to the back alley on the right day and the municipal garbage trucks take care of it. Most places I've lived do. Only exception was my grandfather's place, which was in a small town - that we'd have to take ourselves.

2. Do you separate recycling? What sort of stuff gets recycled from your household?


Absolutely. Cardboard, plastic when possible, metal, glass, all together cause we have single-stream. We also have can and bottle deposit, those go to the supermarket and we get our 5 cents per can/bottle back - that's, like, beer and soft drinks.

3. Do you take things you don't need to charity shops, or give them away online, or sell them secondhand, or ...?

A mix. We take a lot of eligible things to a charity shop (usually Goodwill, here, or if it's furniture, the ReStore). For stuff that isn't eligible for those, we'll often post them on a "Buy Nothing" group my wife is on FB. Occasionally, if it's actually something with substantial value, we'll sell it. But that's really rare, we mostly give it away. I'd rather something go to a place where someone can use it.

4. Do you pick up litter in your local area, from streets or trails or play areas or parks? Have you ever found anything interesting discarded or lost in a public space?

Not as often as I feel I should, but I try to do a little, yeah. I'll sometimes clean up other dogs' leavings when I get my own, and any trash that blows into our section of the back alley or front yard, I pick up. Sometimes, if it's easy and a garbage can is convenient, I'll grab other stuff too, especially if it's like - I'm out hiking and there's relatively "clean" garbage on the trail. It doesn't belong there! I pick it up. My dad actually often brings a garbage bag when he goes hiking - he did trail maintenance for a while so he Gets It.

5. Are there "repair cafés" near you to help mend fixable items? Have you ever been helped by a community repair service or volunteered for one? Do you do any other kind of upcycling?


I have never heard of a repair cafe but that sounds glorious. I don't know of anything like that around here. I do occasionally upcycle but not often. I also, though it hasn't been mentioned, fairly regularly dumpster dive for furniture or household goods or toys. Since we all put our garbage out in the back alley, when I walk the dog on garbage night/morning I can see what everyone else has put out, and I'll grab things that look good if I'm able to. I often wish I could do more, people throw out so much furniture that looks fine or like it'd be fine with a little repair, but that's outside what I'm able to do rn.

marthawells: Murderbot with helmet (Default)
marthawells ([personal profile] marthawells) wrote2025-08-27 10:46 am

Back

I'm back, sort of. We did a week of vacation after WorldCon, then got sick on the last day, so I'm still recovering. Covid tests were negative, so I think it's just a bad cold. It probably wouldn't be so bad if we hadn't had to do a full day of travel from 6:00 am to 10:30 pm to get home.


More later, but one of my favorite things was the really wonderful piece that N.K. Jemisin wrote about me for the program book.



***

Big thing I wanted to mention here: https://www.humblebundle.com/books/martha-wells-murderbot-and-more-tor-books

This is a 14 ebook Humble Bundle from Tor, (DRM-free as usual) and you can select a portion of the price to donate to World Central Kitchen.
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duckprintspress ([personal profile] duckprintspress) wrote2025-08-27 08:59 am

WWW Wednesday

1. What are you currently reading?

I'm finally making progress on The Tainted Cup by Robert Jackson Bennett; I've finished the first part (which is the first six chapters) and enjoying it so far. I also decided to read the Lout of Count's Family manhwa because... eh, why not? Mostly I'm hoping it'll go past what I've read in the novels but given the pacing of the first 50 chapters that's looking pretty unlikely, sigh. I'm impatient, just give me the ending already. Oh, I'm also reading the ็ ดไบ‘ manhua vol. 1, for a Chinese read.

2. What have you recently finished reading?

  • Lout of Count's Family vol. 4 by Yu Ryeo-Han
  • Clementine vol. 3 by Tillie Walden: the problem with grimdark zombie settings is so many bad things happen that I stop being invested and they stop feeling bad. Still, I guess this was as satisfying a conclusion as could be hoped for in a 'verse where "nothing good ever happens" is a fundamental premise. (it's set in The Walking Dead verse)
  • Sakamoto Days vol. 5 by Yuto Suzuki
  • The Way of the Househusband vol. 9 by Kousuke Oono
  • Disney Gravity Falls Cinestory Comic vol. 2 (read with my son)
  • Our Not-So-Lonely Planet Travel Guide vol. 2 and 3 by Mone Sorai: continuing to enjoy this modern m/m manga
  • World's End Blue Bird vol. 1 by Anji Seina: dystopian sci-fi BL manga. Interesting premise, depending where it goes. The "intersex" (so-called) part is, uh, awkward. 
  • Day Off by Dailygreens: cute modern boss/employee BL manhua. Wish there was more "there" there
  • Something Important by Ereyz: I wanted to read this cause I like Ereyz's fan art. It was fine, but I wish it were longer. I mean, I knew it was short (it's only 32 pages) but it doesn't really feel finished.
  • Arcana: The Lost Heirs by Sam Prentice-Jones: really good m/m (with trans, wlw, etc. side characters) that would be a lot better if there'd be any indication whatsoever that this was a volume 1 instead of a full story. Modern, magic isn't known, mystery aspects, fat mc...
  • Lout of Cout's Family manhwa "Season 1" by Yu Ryeo-Han: the first 50 chapters are listed as one "volume" on Storygraph so that's marked "done" I guess.

3. What will you read next?

Next on my books tbr is (still) Dream of the Red Chamber by Tsao Hsueh-Chin; it got bumped because of reading club and me buying Lout of Count's Family, but I'll start it once I finish The Tainted Cup.

Next "from the physical library" read is Welcome to St. Hell by Lewis Hancox; I already read his second autobiographical graphic novel (Escape from St. Hell) - I hadn't realized that one was a sequel. So now I get to read the first. :D

Next from Libby is still Far Sector by N. K. Jemisin and Jamal Campbell, I've been procrastinating and reading other stuff instead, oops. Nothing else I have on Libby is due imminently so I'll just read whatever after that.


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duckprintspress ([personal profile] duckprintspress) wrote2025-08-26 11:53 am

Coming Soon: Pre-Order a 2026 Calendar of Queer Art!

Mock-up graphic showing a calendar on a blue background. The image shows two women side by side, one white with blonde hair wearing a leather jacket reaching out to cup the cheek of the other, who is white, dark-haired, blushing, and has her arms crossed over her chest. Below this is a page that says April 2026 and shows a calendar set-up for Sunday-through-Saturday weeks. Queer events are shown on the calendar. Behind this mock-up, part of a second mock-up peeks out. Next beside the mock-up reads "Duck Prints Press Presents 2026 Art Calendar

Very excited to share our next project with you all: a 2026 calendar featuring 12 months of queer art! This gorgeous 28-page calendar features artwork originally made for our Patreon backers between August 2024 and July 2025 – 12 art pieces by 9 different artists!

All 12 art works are also available as art prints!

Have I caught your attention? Learn loads more about the calendar, art prints, artists, and art works by visiting our pre-order campaign page on our website!

This crowdfunding campaign will run from September 1 through September 15, 2025. This way, we can 100% guarantee that even if things go wrong, everyone will have their calendars before January 1, 2026.

Want to make sure you are notified when this campaign goes live? Sign up for our Duck Prints Press General Imprint Newsletter! Or, of course, follow us on the social media platform of your choice.


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duckprintspress ([personal profile] duckprintspress) wrote2025-08-23 11:53 am

August Patreon Releases

you can see a version of this post with loads o' images here.

Every month, we release five short stories, an art piece, and conduct a convention-style panel for our backers on Patreon. What backers have access to depends on their backer level, with $3/month backers only getting access to a single story and $25/month backers getting access to everything, with our intermediate levels – $5/month, $7/month, and $10/month – getting intermediate amounts. These releases are in addition to behind-the-scenes access, voting rights on anthology themes, exclusive coupons, extra merch, and the many other benefits we offer our supports on Patreon. Read on to learn about what we released on Patreon in August 2025!

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Aurora by æonswinter

Access to viewing the full artwork available to backers at the $5/month and $7/month levels; access to print-suitable download available to backers at the $10/month and $25/month levels.

æonswinter had this to say about the inspiration for this piece: “The figures in this painting are doing doubles hammock. For this trick, the two aerialists run in a circle on the ground before inverting into the air, reaching out towards each other. The painting captures the moment before their hands meet—the moment before contact, before connection. The base color of each figure and each hammock was sampled from the colors of the trans flag. The shadows and highlights on the blue figure and fabric were done in variations of that pink, and the shadows and highlights on the pink figure and fabric were done in variations of that blue.”

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Nycticorax by S. J. Ralston

Available to backers at the $7/month level and higher.
Genre: Tragic Science Fiction with Super Powers
Rating: General Audiences
Length: 28 pages/9,925 words

Excerpt: Nycticorax turned to the control panel at his right hand and punched in the coordinates: the southeastern shore of Lake Huron, July 23rd, 1834 CE. He checked his safety measures, pointed to each status light to confirm its greenness, and ensured the Third Law Allocation was set to DISTRIBUTED. With a deep breath, he put his thumb over the button labelled ACTIVATE.

He hesitated.

There was an extremely slight but also extremely real possibility that pressing that button would instantaneously kill 2.8 million people—Nycticorax among them.

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Like it Sharp by E. V. Dean

Available to all Patreon backers.
Genre: Modern
Rating: Explicit
Length: 25 pages/9,979 words

Excerpt: Green and purple lights dance on the stainless steel of her knife, her grip agile, motions swift, like she was born with it in her palm. The chop-chop-chop against the wooden board cuts through the muted thumping of Avicii from the living room. She’s not quite the Iron Chef, but the blade’s her best friend.

Kathy can’t take her eyes off it. The rest of the kitchen is spinning around her, and she’s found her anchor. The skilled arm is attached to the woman Kathy’s been swooning over the whole evening from afar, like a school girl with a crush.

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Starstruck, Adrift by Cedar D. McCafferty-Svec

Available to backers at the $25/month level.
Genre: Science Fiction
Rating: General Audiences
Length: 19 pages/6,913 words

Excerpt: Penny had seen a lot of things in her time aboard the UNS Bridget. She’d seen her fair share of alien worlds and new ways to travel during her fourteen years of service. This, however, was not something she had previously encountered.

“This” being the large mechanical dragon hovering outside the windows at the bow of the ship. And when she said “mechanical,” she meant completely sentient, made of metal, stuff-she’d-seen-in-comics-and-movies mechanical. Not an animatronic. Not a puppet. Fully realized robotic life.

Flying outside the spaceship. In space.

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August Patreon Panel: How to Work Worldbuilding Into the Narrative

The recording of this panel is available to backers at the $7/month level and higher.

Description: No matter what genre you write, world building is essential for setting the scene, helping readers understand the when and where and why of the story, and framing the narrative. Some stories require a lot of worldbuilding, others very little, but no matter how much is necessary to help the readers navigate the characters’ surroundings, figuring out how to work that worldbuilding into the story is a perpetual concern. This panel, we discuss effective and ineffective ways of integrating the worldbuilding into stories, how approaches may vary depending on the length of the story and the genre, standard worldbuilding advice such as “show don’t tell” and “don’t infodump!”, and examples of stories we’ve read where we thought the worldbuilding was especially well or especially poorly integrated with the narrative.

Panelists: Nina Waters, Vee Sloane, Dei Walker, and Zel Howland

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Whispers Through the Leaves by Johnathan Stern

Available to backers at the $10/month level and higher.
Genre: Horror
Rating: General Audience
Length: 8 pages/2,394 words

Excerpt: The pressure had dropped.

Gray clouds were gathering in the sky to the west, and the faint breeze that whistled through the windows of your car was picking up speed.

A storm was coming, of that you were almost certain.

It never hurt to check, though, and so you reached over to the center console to turn on your radio. Far from home as you were, your presets would assuredly be useless, and sure enough, pressing the first one tuned into nothing but the scratch of static. Playing with the dial, you scrolled through perhaps a dozen stations and frequencies before you found the first live human voice. 

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Business is Blooming by Genevieve Maxwell

Available to backers at the $5/month level and higher.
Genre: Fluffy Modern Romance
Rating: General Audiences
Length: 12 pages/3,740 words

Excerpt: “What in the world?” Hester’s voice trailed off as she approached her doorstep, frowning at the potted plant sitting on the doormat. Hester wasn’t much of a plant person. Or a keeping-things-alive-besides-herself person. The plant had flowers, which at least were pretty. Did someone send her flowers? But why a living plant instead of a bouquet? Why leave it at all instead of giving it to her directly?

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Not a backer? Looking for even more stories, artwork, and more? We’re also thrilled to share that now, all Patreon-exclusive works now become available, six months after they were originally posted, in our Patreon shop. If there’s an author you love, a work you missed, a type of story you’re on the hunt for – come take a look. There are 65 works in the shop, and we add more every month!



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duckprintspress ([personal profile] duckprintspress) wrote2025-08-22 10:09 am

Friday Five: Travel

Been a while since I saw a Friday Five that appealed to me!

1. Have you ever stayed in a hostel? If so, where? Did you like it? If you haven't stayed in a hostel, would you?
Only once, in Amsterdam. It made me a little nervous to share a room with strangers but all's well that end's well. I'd probably do it again, though if I could afford my own room, I'd prefer that.

2. What is your favo(u)rite airport that you've been to? Why?
Hmm... I rather like the Indianapolis Airport, it has a lot of sculptures by local artists. This is the new airport, the rebuilt one, it's a lot nicer. And by new I mean like. 20 years old lmao.

3. What is the best museum you have visited on vacation?
If I could move into the Louvre I would.

4. Have you ever made friends while traveling whom you keep in touch with on a regular basis?
I can't think of anyone I've stayed in touch with long-term.

5. Have you ever had a conversation with a seatmate on a plane?
As little as I can possibly get away with, but yes. I did once make friends with two people in my row, cause we realized we were going to same con, and we stayed in touch for like 5 years before relationship attrition happened.

True story, my brother met his first wife when they were seated next to each other on a plane.
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duckprintspress ([personal profile] duckprintspress) wrote2025-08-20 09:00 am

WWW Wednesday

1. What are you currently reading?

I'm still 14 pages into The Tainted Cup by Robert Jackson Bennett so uh. Technically I'm currently reading that, I guess. I'm going to pick it back up and read it next, tho, now that I'm home from last week's travel.

2. What have you recently finished reading?

  • novel - The Wizard by Shi Wu: all in all, this was fine. Everything felt like it wrapped up very quickly and surprisingly neatly, given the promised angst levels, but eh.
  • novels - Lout of the Count's Family vol. 2 and 3 by Yu Ryeo-Han: uh. my mom gave me money to buy books, and here we are, lmao.
  • Dinosaur Sanctuary vol. 1 by Itaru Konshita: this is SO cute. slice of life at a dinosaur zoo, my beloved.
  • Demon Slayer/Kimetsu no Yaiba vol. 21 - 23 by Koyoharu Gotouge: finally done with this shounen series! It was fine when all was said and done. Wasn't expecting quite so many characters to die.  Also I wish we'd gotten a little more backstory on the main villain.
  • The Moth Keeper by K. O'Neill: this was a very sweet (and quietly queer) middle grade fantasy graphic novel. K. O'Neill has delivered on everything I've read.
  • My Beautiful Man vol. 4 by Yuu Nagira: given how toxic everything is, this has grown on me to a startling extent. Genuinely thinking I'll read the light novels.
  • Undead: Finding Love in the Zombie Apocalypse vol. 1 and 2 by Fumi Tsuyuhisa: quick BL duology that's exactly what it says on the tin. The second volume tried to do too much and wrapped it up too neatly considering how dire the situation was but it wasn't, like. bad.
  • Sakamoto Days vol. 4 by Yuto Suzuki
  • Haikyu vol. 39 by Haruichi Furudate
  • Our Not-So-Lonely Planet Travel Guide vol. 1 by Mone Sorai: modern mlm. I've kinda procrastinated reading this for no reason I could put my finger on, but I liked it. I'm interested to find out some of the reveals that have gotten teased about the backstory of the mcs relationship and what illness half the ship is recovering from.
  • Strange Bedfellows by Ariel Slamet Ries: sci-fi mlm. I really liked this, but I wish it hadn't gotten quite so abstract at times. really appreciate the nbd trans mc.

3. What will you read next?

The Tainted Cup, obviously. For graphic novels from the library (physical), next in the pile is the third and last volume of Clementine by Tillie Walden. I gather people who are in TWD fandom weren't thrilled with the first two vols but from an outside perspective (I've only read TWD vol. 1 and seen the first few episodes of the show) I liked them fine, so expect this to be about the same and about as sad. For graphic novels/manga from the library(ies) (digital), I'm pretty caught up right now (nothing due imminently), so I'll probably read Far Sector by N. K. Jemisin and Jamal Campbell next; it's not due soon but 6 people are in line behind me so returning it quick feels like a courtesy. :D