A Bookshop.org Discount For You!

Mar. 19th, 2026 01:22 pm
[personal profile] duckprintspress
Remember our list of our most anticipated 2026 releases?

10 book covers and 2 gray book cover placeholders on the background of the Rainbow Flag. The books are: Last First Kiss by Julian Winters; I Love You Don't Die by Jade Song; The Girls Will Be Okay by Linnea Peterson; Platform Decay by Martha Wells; Common Bonds 2 ed. by Claudie Arseneault, Emery Lee & RoAnna Sylver; A Long and Speaking Silence by Nghi Vo; The Last Best Quest Ever by F.T. Lukens; Is This a Cry for Help? by Emily Austin; Bridget and Gabe Are Not Okay by Lex Croucher; Smash or Pass by Birdie Schae. The cover placeholders read: A Trade of Blood cover tba; Panguan cover tba.
 

Some of these books are now out, some are not, but regardless – if you’re as excited for any of these titles as we are, and you want to either buy them or pre-order them, I’ve got a deal for you!

Purchase any of these print books through our Affiliate Shop List, use code BSO15 to save 15% off the price!

This deal is ONLY good on print books (not e-books!), applies only to the list price (as in, doesn’t stack with other discounts), and the coupon is good NOW through April 1st 2026 (no foolin’!). You just have to make sure you use our affiliate link and get the book(s) you want through the list!

This is part of a pilot program that Bookshop.org is running to support affiliate shops like ours that utilize their list-building features. I’m pretty curious to see where they’re going with this program, and also am curious to see, like, if any of y’all use the coupon! So check out the books, save a little money, and get your queer read on.



RIP (Read In Progress) Wednesday

Mar. 18th, 2026 03:56 pm
[personal profile] silversea posting in [community profile] booknook
Happy Wednesday! Are you keeping up with your books?
[personal profile] duckprintspress
https://www.tiktok.com/@duckprintspress/video/7618609115929103647?_r=1&_t=ZP-94nJH5w7pz4

(Video ID: a white person with short reddish hair in glasses sits in front of a book case and talks. /end ID)

Transcript: So my next question is, what are some misconceptions that people have about publishing in general or about indie publishing that I would like to talk about?

So, I think the big one for me as an indie publisher is this pervasive idea that indie publishing is somehow “less,” that what we publish is worse, which is really nonsense. There’s a ton of reasons to not do traditional publishing or that traditional publishing would not be interested in your work that has nothing to do with a work’s quality.

In the end the Big Five traditional publishers are ginormous corporations primarily interested in Number Go Up. They’ve got investors and traditional stock stuff going on. If they don’t show returns, they don’t succeed. And so they won’t take risks, especially on things that don’t fit neatly into a category, so they frown on indie – uh, sorry – cross genre. They don’t like to takes risks on queer works, as we all know. They don’t like to take chances on new authors, because what if they lose money on that new author? They don’t want people who don’t have existing followings. And so what gets published by the Big Five aren’t the best books. That’s not even what they’re trying to publish. The Big Five are trying to publish the books they think will make the most money. Which is not at all the same as the best books.

And I’m not saying indie publishing is publishing the best books either. Book quality is part of making money, so yes, a lot of what Tradpub publishes are good books, no contesting that. But a lot of what indie presses publish are also good books. They’re just books that don’t fit neatly into the boxes that indie pub – that traditional publishing likes to try to shove everything into. And so this idea that – that indie publishing is somehow “less” quality is not only wrong, it’s just completely unhinged from what the purpose of traditional publishing and indie publishing are.

Indie publishing is a space for people taking different kinds of risks, for people whose works don’t fit neatly into boxes, for works that the Big Five don’t think will make that much money. And that gives us a lot of room to find really amazing, amazing things to publish that wouldn’t see the light of day otherwise. To amplify voices that don’t usually get heard. To take risks and, you know, push outside of boxes. So, yeah, support indie publishing! We’re not “tradpub light.” We’re awesome! And we’re different! We’re trying to do something different and that’s important.

This has been an Indie Press Month Ask Me Anything with Claire. Feel free to drop me any asks you might have in the comments. Bye!



WWW Wednesday

Mar. 18th, 2026 10:35 am
[personal profile] duckprintspress

I went to the library on Monday and borrowed a whole pile of new books when I hadn't finished the old ones, so I buckled down this week after finishing the main story in Don't You Like Me to see if I could clear out some of my physical library loans to make space for the new physical library loans.

1. What are you currently reading?

  • Don't You Like Me vol. 2 by Lv Tian Yi: I finished the main story and now I'm working my way through the extras.
  • Kase-San and Yamada vol. 4 by Hiromi Takashima
  • Les Normaux vol. 2 by Janine Janssen and S. Al Sabado: I was really excited for this one but I'm running into the problem that I don't remember much of what was going on in vol. 1 and so I'm a little lost and as a result I'm procrastinating.
  • DMBJ in Chinese: I'm almost a third done!!!

2. What have you recently finished reading?

  • The Apothecary Diaries light novel vol. 4 by Natsu Hyuuga: idk I'm inching closer to not reading more. If I didn't already have a hold on vol. 5 I'm not sure I'd bother. I can't even put my finger on my dissatisfaction, and I actually liked this volume better than some of the others, but... idk. It's maybe just not the series for me, even though it feels like it should be.
  • Yuri Espoir vol. 1 by Mai Naoi: oh, this is fun. It's modern GL about a girl whose parents have set up a marriage for her, so she wants to get all her lesbianism and yuri expressed before she's forced into this wedding, and so she looks at girls around her and makes up wlw stories about them. Except even tho her stories are always wrong, all the girls she looks at ARE wlw so we get glimpses of their lives. And also her (female) best friend is in love with her. And ALSO there's a (male) teacher of theirs who is in love with the affianced arranged marriage guy. So it's all a delightful mess. I really liked vol. 1.
  • Lullaby of the Dawn vol. 6 by Ichika Yuno: worth the wait.
  • At the Flower Capital by Rihito Takarai: this turned out to be the historical setting prequel to 3-book modern BL I haven't read. It wasn't world-shattering, and it was very sad, but I liked it enough to go grab the modern BL.
  • How Do We Relationship? vol. 3 by Tamifull: was very iffy on this volume, decided to read the back blurbs for upcoming volumes, and based on what they said, I've dropped the series. Please just fuckin' communicate, this is idiotic.
  • Sleepless Domain vol. 1 by Oscar Vega and Mary Cagle: an interesting idea for a story (it's a magical girl thing) but it's tagged LGBTQIA+ without any obvious rep (there was maybe a whiff of wlw) and the art quality declined rapidly even just in vol. 1. Also, it's from that Hive-whatever publisher, so I suspect vol. 2 has gotten fucked over in that mess.
  • Wrack and Rune by Chris Kappel: I had such high hopes for this modern BL with a white dude and a fat Black guy holding hands on the cover, but oof, it was. not good. Like there were good pieces in it but the actual relationship development was handled so entirely off-screen that it was impossible to buy-in to why these characters were risking so much for each other.
  • Only the Flower Knows vol. 1 to 3 by Rihito Takarai: this is the 3-book modern BL that the other was a prequel for. Considering it's from like 2010 it's pretty good, one of the better older BLs I've read.
  • Good Old-Fashioned Korean Spirit by Kim Hyun Sook and Ryan Estrada: this was a really good mostly historical graphic novel set in Korea. Taught me some Korean history I didn't know, had a great sense of humor, and also had a surprise trans character making it perfect for the first day of the Trans Rights Readathon (which I'm not technically participating in but hey, if I've got stuff with trans characters, no reason not to read 'um now!)

3. What will you read next?

Novels: The Beauty's Blade by Feng Ren Zuo Shu

Physical Graphic Novels: I still haven't read the last volume of the MDZS manhua, oops. From the library, next is Gaysians by Mike Curato.

Digital Graphic Novels (Libby): Les Normaux vol. 2, which I've already started, is due in six days, so gotta read that. Nothing else is imminent, but my hold on Wild Beast Forest House vol. 3 by Inma R. came through, so probably that, I enjoyed the first two volumes a lot.


(no subject)

Mar. 18th, 2026 10:20 am
[personal profile] conuly posting in [community profile] agonyaunt
Dear Prudence,

I’m a 21-year-old college student living in a house with five other students. There are three women and three men. We’re having an issue keeping our kitchen clean, and I am the only one who consistently cleans. I keep the floors and counters clean, wash the piles of dishes in the sink, wash dish towels, etc. Anytime I’ve asked people to chip in, they never follow through. I’ve tried not doing the cleaning, but then the kitchen gets disgusting and I end up caving.

I’m not completely innocent when it comes to not always washing my dishes immediately and being messy, but I feel like I clean more often than anyone else. A general chore chart doesn’t work, and I am tired of feeling like my roommate’s mother. How can I get them to take some initiative and do more of the heavy lifting that always falls on me?

—Not a Mother to Five at 21


Read more... )

(no subject)

Mar. 17th, 2026 03:05 pm
[personal profile] conuly posting in [community profile] agonyaunt
DEAR HARRIETTE: I've recently gone sober for health reasons, and it wasn't an easy decision, especially because my social life has always involved going out for drinks, celebrating with cocktails and bonding over happy hour. When my friends and I went out last weekend, they were pressuring me to drink. I ordered a mocktail, and almost immediately, my friends started to laugh and said that it would be fine to just have one drink. This surprised me because I never thought that my friends would try to force me to do something that would actively have a negative effect on my health. It made me feel unsupported and, frankly, disrespected. At the same time, I don't want to lose my friendships or isolate myself socially just because I'm choosing not to drink. Now I'm anxious about future outings. I don't want every dinner or celebration to turn into a debate about my personal choices. How should I talk to my friends about setting boundaries without making things awkward? -- Sober

Read more... )

(no subject)

Mar. 17th, 2026 01:51 pm
[personal profile] conuly posting in [community profile] agonyaunt
Dear Eric: My husband and his ex-wife have 50/50 custody of their 15-year-old son. I despise this child. He is completely useless, rude, disrespectful, selfish, ungrateful and lazy. All he does is stare at his computer screen. I have carefully planned my entire life schedule around his schedule, to avoid being at the house on the days he is there for my husband's 50 percent custody.

My husband has just told me that his ex-wife is moving to another state far away and that he is going to take full custody of his son. This means the child I despise so much is now going to be living with me at my house full time, every single day, and there's nothing I can do about it. My husband refuses to let his son move away with his ex. How do I manage this?

– Fed Up


Read more... )
[personal profile] duckprintspress
Text on the background of the Transgender Pride Flag. The text reads: Join the Trans Rights Readathon with Duck Prints Press! 20% of proceeds from the following books you buy between March 17-31 will be donated to the Trevor Project.

Twelve book covers on the background of the Transgender Pride Flag. The books are: Scholarly Pursuits; Lightbringer by boneturtle; Scrap Metal Angel by Nicola Kapron; To Drive the Hundred Miles by Alec J. Marsh; A Truth Universally Acknowledged; And Seek (Not) to Alter Me; Add Magic to Taste; Aether Beyond the Binary; Many Hands; Aim For The Heart; She Wears the Midnight Crown; He Bears the Cape of Stars.

March 17th marks the first day of the Trans Rights Readathon. As their carrd explains, “The Trans Rights Readathon is an annual call to action to readers and book lovers in support of Trans Day of Visibility (TDOV) on March 31st. We are calling on the reader community to read and uplift books written by and/or featuring trans, non-binary, 2Spirit, and gender-nonconforming authors and characters.”

In the spirit of the Trans Rights Readathon, we wanted to bring your attention to our books that feature trans main characters and/or were written by trans creators. And, we wanted to do something tangible!

Duck Prints Press will donate $50 to the Trevor Project in mid-April to support their crisis intervention and suicide prevention work with queer youth. AND, for every one of the above books you buy from our webpage or itch.io between now and March 31st, we will increase that donation by adding 20% of the net we earn from those sales to the amount we donate!

We hope you’ll consider reading some of our work as part of your Trans Rights Readathon read-a-thoning. Want to know more about them?

Learn about the eligible books!

Scholarly Pursuits: A Queer Anthology of Cozy Academia Stories (trans and non-binary characters, trans and non-binary authors)

Duck Prints Press presents 22 delightfully fluffy, happy, odd, snug, and cozy stories about queer characters pursuing academic excellence! From field research shenanigans to cooking adventures, from space station education departments to eldritch libraries, creators brought their vivid imaginings to life in these charming fantasy and science fiction stories. Settle into your favorite research carrel or prepare to read on the sly under your desk as you join us for Scholarly Pursuits: A Queer Anthology of Cozy Academia Stories.

Lightbringer by boneturtle (non-binary author)

I’ve never heard this story told outside our village, but my friend, it’s about you as well as us. Your life is also forfeit to the Lightbringer who mended the chaos, and the chaos which breathed the Lightbringer to life.

In a lonely valley where darkness laps at the ragged shore of reality, there rests a village where the people are reborn each time they die. Though they’ve forgotten their past lives, they faithfully maintain their ancient festival to coax the light back whenever the darkness takes hold.

In this village where no one visits, a man named Ashe arrives. Beloved, yet cursed to be forgotten by those he holds most dear, he waits in the ever-growing darkness for someone who may never return. The villagers beg him to give up, to play the part of the Lightbringer and marry someone else.

Then a new stranger arrives, one who may hold the key to breaking this cycle of darkness once and for all.

Scrap Metal Angel by Nicola Kapron (trans man main character)

Reality, tiny and fragile, is cut off from the sea of chaos and nightmares that surrounds it by seven Gates. One of them is open—and has been since the Stone Age. Through that opening, strange creatures and energies slip through. Some are malevolent. None are harmless. And all of them must be kept a secret.

Every hidden magical world needs a shadowy clean-up crew. Adrian Somer is a Gatekeeper, sworn to protect the cosmic Gates, to defend reality from the unknown entities that exist beyond them, and to help those whose lives are affected by magic.

When a grieving sorceress starts punching holes in reality to try and resurrect her murdered fiancé, Adrian must turn to a ghost from his past in order to save the city, and perhaps the world—even if that means digging up someone he thought was safely buried: the twin brother he killed eight years ago.

To Drive the Hundred Miles by Alec J. Marsh (trans man main character, trans author)

Serendipity, WA is filled with Christmas cheer, beautiful mountain views, and trans man Will’s feminist Wiccan family. Home for the holidays, he avoids their clumsy attempts at support by hiding in the local coffee shop and flirting with Bea, a friend from high school.

The beautiful landscapes can’t make up for the the realities of being queer in a small town, and Bea wants out. Will grabs for a prosperity spell, and finds a new way to connect to the magic he’s become estranged from. New romance and optimism get them through the holidays, ready to face their next problems.

A Truth Universally Acknowledged: Queer Fanworks Inspired by Jane Austen’s “Pride and Prejudice” (non-binary characters, trans and non-binary authors and artists)

With this third installment in our Queer Fanworks Inspired By… anthology series, we set out to explore the truth by which we at Duck Prints Press live: that a classic work without a single canonically queer character must be in want of a very LGBTQIA+ makeover! “A Truth Universally Acknowledged: Queer Fanworks Inspired by Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice,” with 21 short stories and 20 full-page color artworks, is just that. 38 creators have contributed to this project, drawing inspiration from Pride and Prejudice’s characters and story to create delightful, thoughtful, intriguing, and (of course) very queer fanworks and Pride and Prejudice-inspired original works. For this collection, we encouraged our creators to focus on Sapphic/wlw relationships and/or transgender and genderqueer interpretations for their inspiration, though those are definitely not the only types of queer we’ve fit into this diverse collection.

And Seek (Not) to Alter Me: Queer Fanworks Inspired by William Shakespeare’s “Much Ado About Nothing” (trans and non-binary characters, trans and non-binary authors and artists)

In “And Seek (Not) to Alter Me,” 16 authors and 15 artists have come together to create an exquisite, full-color collection of artwork and stories inspired by William Shakespeare’s play “Much Ado About Nothing.” We encouraged contributors to stretch their imaginations, think outside the box, and put their own unique—and queer—twists on Benedick, Beatrice, Hero, Claudio, Don Pedro, and the whole gang! In true Shakespearean fashion, our creators utilize gender, sexuality, romanticism, and a host of costume changes to tell unique artworks and stories—some featuring original characters, some characters from the play—that show Shakespeare’s work in a whole new light.

Add Magic to Taste Second Edition (trans and non-binary characters, trans and non-binary authors)

For this gorgeous re-issue of Duck Prints Press’s debut anthology “Add Magic to Taste,” 18 authors have come together to produce new, original short stories uniting four of our absolute favorite themes: queer relationships, fluff, magic, and coffee shops! Our diverse writers have created an even more diverse collection of stories guaranteed to sweeten your coffee and warm your tart. This edition also includes the 16 microfics originally written for our Kickstarter extra Mini-Morsels!

Aether Beyond the Binary (trans and non-binary characters, trans and non-binary authors)

How would Earth look if the very atoms around us were suffused with magical aether? How would our lives be different if this aether was discovered last year, or last century, or last millennia? How might the people who lived with this magic explore their gender identities? These are the questions we posed to the 17 authors who contributed to “Aether Beyond the Binary.” Their inventive answers comprise this must-not-miss collection about magical realms, adventures and mysteries, new chances and well-earned endings, and characters as gender-diverse as the worlds they inhabit.

Many Hands: An Anthology of Polyamorous Erotica (trans and non-binary characters, trans and non-binary authors)

For those who love their short stories spicy, welcome to Duck Prints Press’s debut explicit anthology. In this collection of brand-new stories, we celebrate many flavors of polyamory. Orgy? Yes please! Ménage à trois? C’est magnifique! Foursomes and moresomes? Delighted to attend! We asked our 15 contributors to blow our minds with their fun combinations, unusual settings, favorite trope usage, and (of course) super sexy smut—and they didn’t disappoint. From a vampire free-for-all to a heartfelt reunion, from surprise soulmates to enemies-to-lovers, this collection has polyamory in lots of scrumptious varieties that lovers of erotica won’t want to miss!

Aim For The Heart: Queer Fanworks Inspired by Alexandre Dumas’s “The Three Musketeers” (trans and non-binary characters, trans and non-binary authors and artists)

“Aim For The Heart” features 20 stories, each up to 5,000 words long, 19 full-page art pieces rendered in black-and-white or grayscale, and a 12-page comic. Our contributors have delved into their imaginations and the intricacies of Dumas’s novels to tell new stories and create new images. They take us from the depths of deep space to the streets of 17th century France to the modern day, with a healthy dose of fluff and feels along the way. Every creator has shared their vision of these beloved characters, some with fanfiction and fanart, others with original pieces, and all with a heaping dose of inspiration.

She Wears the Midnight Crown (trans and non-binary characters, trans and non-binary authors)

“She Wears the Midnight Crown” is one of our two paired masquerade-themed anthologies. It features 17 stories exploring wlw relationships developing, growing, and changing while the characters attend or participate in masquerades!

Our contributors stretched their imaginations to present innovative stories exploring what a masquerade can be…and, of course, tell rich, engaging tales of wonderful queer folk finding love, companionship, acceptance, the queer platonic relationship of their dreams, or the found family they deserve. The collected works feature characters in all the colors of the Pride rainbow, queer and genderqueer, and these diverse individuals inhabit worlds ranging from science fiction settings where everyone must be masked to breathe, to fantasies where no one wears a literal mask but everyone shows the world a false guise, to iterations of the real world where some people lean into deception.

“He Bears the Cape of Stars” is the companion to this anthology, featuring 17 mlmstories.

He Bears the Cape of Stars (trans characters, trans and non-binary authors)

“He Bears the Cape of Stars” is one of our two paired masquerade-themed anthologies. It features 17 stories exploring mlm relationships developing, growing, and changing while the characters attend or participate in masquerades!

Our contributors stretched their imaginations to present innovative stories exploring what a masquerade can be…and, of course, tell rich, engaging tales of wonderful queer folk finding love, companionship, acceptance, the queer platonic relationship of their dreams, or the found family they deserve. The collected works feature characters in all the colors of the Pride rainbow, queer and genderqueer, and these diverse individuals inhabit worlds ranging from science fiction settings where everyone must be masked to breathe, to fantasies where no one wears a literal mask but everyone shows the world a false guise, to iterations of the real world where some people lean into deception.

“She Wears the Midnight Crown” is the companion to this anthology, featuring 17 wlw stories.

Note: only books purchased from duckprintspress.com and itch.io will count toward the donation!

In mid-April, I will post an accountability update with our total donation amount and proof of donation! (Same as I’ve done for our Pride Bundles every year.)


Book Review: The Lightning Thief

Mar. 16th, 2026 05:26 pm
[personal profile] deckardcanine
On the first of this month, there was a local production of The Lightning Thief: The Percy Jackson Musical. I didn't watch it, but it demonstrated that the 2005 start of Rick Riordan's Percy Jackson and the Olympians series still has its fans. That may have inspired my reading choice.

Cut for length )

To take a break from fantasy and sci-fi, I'll try Sue Grafton's O Is for Outlaw. Not long since my last mystery, but this one should be magic-free.

Admin: Loss of a member

Mar. 16th, 2026 10:20 am
[personal profile] cereta posting in [community profile] agonyaunt
As some of you already know, our wonderful [personal profile] minoanmiss left us on March 3rd. Her loved ones asked us not to make any public announcements for reasons involving her family of origin, but we've been given permission to announce to the community now.

Those here in [community profile] agonyaunt will remember her for her contributions from Ask A Manager, and her insightful comments on family, found family, and other topics. The wider fannish community will remember her for her amazing fiction and her art, particularly her drawings of Minoan culture. Others will remember her for her amazing fruitcake and other culinary adventures.

[personal profile] sabotabby created this lovely portrait. I think I will try to remember her this way.
[personal profile] duckprintspress
Flier for A Big Gay Market with text that reads: A Big Gay Market Troy. In the middle is a photograph of a Duck Prints Press vending table set up with a benner, books, stickers, and more, beside a badge that says I'm a Vendor. Bottom text reads: Pop-up market: Sunday March 22nd at Mount Ida Preservation Association Troy NY KN 95 Mask Only Hour 11am - 12pm, market 11 AM - 4 pm. At the very bottom it says Learn More www.abiggaymarket.com and there are two QR codes to scan.

This Sunday, A Big Gay Market is back in 2026 and back in Troy at the Mount Ida Preservation Hall from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. I’ll be among more than 30 vendors there with our awesome wares (vendor list here!). I hope you’ll come say hi if you’re in the area.



[personal profile] duckprintspress
https://www.tiktok.com/@duckprintspress/video/7617502272712494366?_r=1&_t=ZP-94iEydNlINj

(video ID: a video of a white person with short hair and glasses sitting in front of a bookcase, talking. /end ID)

Transcript: My next question is what about being an indie press is the most rewarding?

The people. Yeah, hands down. I mean, I’m an introvert, I sometimes find all of the peopling involved in this job to be rather exhausting, but the community of authors and artists with whom we work is amazing and helps keep me going every single day. The community of people who I’ve met who are doing similar things, whether they’re other indie press people or self-published authors, and how hard we all work and how much we all want to lift each other up – it’s not a competition, it’s “how do we grow the pie for everybody.” And the readers and even just the supportive non-customers, just everybody, like, you know, “I don’t have any money, but what you’re doing is really cool.” Or, “this isn’t the one I’m interested in but I can’t wait to see what else you do.” And of course, the people who are like, “I read the book and it’s awesome” or “this piece of art is amazing, I need the sticker. Obviously, you know, every version of that is the best part.

I do this for the people. I do this because I wanted to be a writer but I didn’t want to do it alone. And, I don’t have to it alone and that’s really great. Thank you, everyone. You make this awesome every day.

I’m Claire. I’m doing an Ask Me Anything. Uhhh…hit me up if you’ve got anything you wanna ask me! Bye!


Pizza History

Mar. 14th, 2026 09:29 pm
[personal profile] deckardcanine
The pizza got its famous name just short of Y1K,
But similar creations sure go back a longer way.
From paintings on some tombs of ancient Egypt, it appears
Their flatbreads could be covered up in cheese; that’s very near.
The Persian soldiers serving under Darius the Great
Were feeding on baked flatbreads that were topped with cheese and dates
And served upon their shields around 500 BCE.
(OK, that might be bogus, but it sure sounds good to me.)
Three centuries would pass; then Marcus Cato (not the younger)
Wrote down a cheesy recipe that’s apt to sate your hunger.
Another thousand years and we get flatbread in Provence
With onions, olives, anchovies—did pizza come from France?
We couldn’t trace the earliest for sure. Regardless, I
For one declare that pizza is my favorite kind of pie.
[staff profile] mark posting in [site community profile] dw_maintenance

Happy Saturday!

I'm going to be doing a little maintenance today. It will likely cause a tiny interruption of service (specifically for www.dreamwidth.org) on the order of 2-3 minutes while some settings propagate. If you're on a journal page, that should still work throughout!

If it doesn't work, the rollback plan is pretty quick, I'm just toggling a setting on how traffic gets to the site. I'll update this post if something goes wrong, but don't anticipate any interruption to be longer than 10 minutes even in a rollback situation.

Pi and Pie: Two Cozies for Pi Day

Mar. 14th, 2026 09:22 am
[personal profile] duckprintspress
A photograph of a table with a circle-motif quilt on it. In the center of the quilt are a board with a large number of digits of pi written out next to the book Scholarly Pursuits (which shows a dragon surrounded by books) and a plate with a slice of apple pie and a dollop of whip cream and a form, beside a copy of Add Magic to Taste (which shows a dragon in a bakery).

Happy Pi Day!!!

I’m having a fun one, doin’ some math while reading and eatin’ some pie.

Want to join in? Scholarly Pursuits: A Queer Anthology of Cozy Academia Stories and Add Magic to Taste: A Spellbinding (and Scrumptious) Collection of Heartwarming Queer Stories fit right in on both vibes!



[personal profile] duckprintspress
`A light blue graphic entitled Words of Motivation, DPP Roundtable, with a clipart of a woman flexing her bicep.

Today is National Tell Your Story Day, so we had a chat about strategies and self-motivators that help us tell our stories!

The contributors to the discussion are: Cedar, Nina Waters, H. Armstrong, jumblejen, Shea Sullivan, Mikki Madison, Sage Mooreland, Tris Lawrence, Lucy K.R., Shadaras, boneturtle, JD Rivers, Shannon, theirprofoundbond, Dei Walker, Merlin Grey, Sanne and an anonymous contributor.

Words We Motivate Ourselves With

Cedar: “You get to watch the number go up” and “Write for 5 minutes and then you get a treat.” Those are my main two lol. I treat my brain like a kid and reward it when it lets me write.

Nina Waters: “It’ll feel good once I start typing, so I just gotta start typing” and “It doesn’t need to be perfect, it just needs to be written.”

H. Armstrong: Some days writing is hard, and it’s okay. These are some of the phrases I tell myself when it’s one of those days:

“You just need to write a single word, nothing else”; “Writing down thoughts for this next scene or for future me to edit is also writing and helps the process.”; “It’s okay to take breaks, let brain recharge, make it an official Rest Day and try again another day.” And when things get real dire: “You will write again.”

jumblejen : That last bit is so important to remember! You will write again. “It’ll come ’round again,” is what I say to myself when I hit a particularly rough patch.

Shea Sullivan: Single word has changed my life. That was my rule for Nano one year (when everything was nuts and writing felt impossible) and I think I got 12k words.

Mikki Madison: I would tell myself constantly (during NaNo especially, RIP) “quantity, not quality,” as well as “any words are more words than you had at the beginning of the month.”

Sage Mooreland: “The only goal of the first draft is to exist. If it does that, it’s perfect by definition.”

Tris Lawrence: “While you’re writing it, no one needs to love this story but you. Have fun with it.”

Sage Mooreland: “Write by hand. Type it into notes. Speak it via talk to text. It doesn’t matter if it’s one sentence or it takes off into a whole thing. The point is to give yourself the outlet instead of holding it in.”; “No one but you ever has to see what you write. You don’t have to write for literally anyone else.”

Lucy K.R.: “You have to keep writing to write your next best story” gets me going sometimes! It’s easy to look at past successes and wonder how it happened, but the answer is always “you just typed it, you can do it again.”

Shadaras: “Just one sentence,” yeah, and also “It’ll be so fun to show this to my friends” (sometimes via the cheat code of “just narrate the gist of the story into discord chat while your friends leave emoji reacts and/or add their own thoughts, and decide later if you want to clean it up”)

boneturtle: i love this. i’ve also written my stories to my friends in discord first and cleaned them up after, it’s not only really fun but also a great way to get feedback in real time if something doesn’t make sense or doesn’t hit the way you expected.

Shadaras: Or to lean in to things which hit harder than expected!

JD Rivers: “I want to read the full story” plain and simple

Shannon: “It’s gonna bother me more if I don’t” happens a lot. kind of in the same vein as “I want to read the full story”, it’s going to keep nudging me until I just do it

jumblejen : “If you want this idea to stop haunting you, you have to actually write the story.” Also, “If you want to have stories to submit for publication you have to, you know, write them.”

theirprofoundbond: For general motivation, I tell myself, “You’re the only one who can write these exact stories.” On low wordcount days, I tell myself, “Hey, [low number] is better than 0!”

Dei Walker: “dare mighty things” (which I pulled out of Sandra Tayler’s Structuring Life to Support Creativity) – no one’s going to write this in this way except for me, and if I’m going to fail, I want to do it spectacularly. and if I don’t try, it’s not going to happen.

“fifteen minutes” – because usually I can get something started, and then build that momentum, if I give myself 15 minutes of focused writing time, not faffing-around-online time, not distracting myself or procrastinating. and if I can’t get going in 15 minutes, I have tried, and can come back and try again later.

“you can’t edit a blank page” – even if it’s awful, even if I hate it, I can’t fix it until it’s there. so I owe it to myself and my ideas to get those words out onto a page, and then I can make them better.

Merlin Grey: “You can’t edit a blank page” is a good one! I also tell myself “It can’t be good until it exists.”

Other Motivational Strategies

Sanne: Does external motivation count? I try to share ideas with friends, who can then hype me up, and then I can use that to motivate myself! “I’ve told my friend about this story idea and they want to read it, so let’s get it written so they can!”

boneturtle: i think external motivation definitely counts. these days i can only get words down if it’s for a submission deadline or a contract deadline; i want to write more, but it’s really hard to convince myself it’s a good use of time unless i have someone else counting on me.

Cedar: Another one that gets me is one of my partners shaking me by the shoulders saying “write it or i’m going to fight you.” Always good to have outside support

jumblejen : I’m of two minds. On the one hand, the urge to write is sometimes so strong that it isn’t so much a concern over motivation, it’s trying to hold onto that energy until I have the time/ability to write.

On the other hand, I have taken out some of the need for independent motivation by having a dedicated writing time. I work full-time at a non-writing job, so I don’t have a lot of time to write in my day-to-day. A friend hosts a weekly zoom for writing every Saturday morning and I’ve been joining them for about 5 years now. I show up and give it a good try, and more often than not, get some good words (or editing) in.

I also try to really listen to myself and ensure that if I truly need a break, I let myself have one so I don’t hit burnout.

Merlin Grey: Having a writing community definitely helps for me. With all of my ideas, it starts out as something burning inside of me that I have to get out and onto paper. Yet once I actually start writing my story, I often begin to question whether it’s actually any good—whether I’m executing my ideas well, or even whether the idea is worth writing in the first place. Having friends (online or IRL) to bounce ideas off of and get feedback from, or just generally cheer me on has been the most helpful thing for me. I was in a fandom writing server for a while (which sadly seems to be dying now), and last year I found an offline writing group in my area that I go to every other week to work on original fiction. Writing with other people—whether it’s in the writing group or running sprints online—helps me feel less alone in what I’m doing, and also helps me stay focused. I’ve also started using 4thewords, which is a game where you defeat monsters by writing a certain number of words in a certain amount of time. It’s been the most helpful specifically for pushing through doubt about whether my writing is any good and just getting words on paper. Because even if everything I’m writing is absolute garbage, I just need to get 500 more words down so I can defeat this last monster and get a cool hat for my avatar. Then later, I have a draft that I can come back to and work on polishing. (You can cut the 4thewords part from the social media post if it seems to much like an advertisement. But it honestly has been helpful in motivating me.)

(Also, the fiction writing group I go to is on Tuesday evenings, every other week. But there’s apparently a nonfiction writing workshop on Tuesday evenings at the same time on the alternate weeks. So people kept telling me “Oh, if this day and time is good for you then you should come to the nonfiction workshop too, on the other weeks,” and I kept thinking uh, nonfiction and fiction are very different; it seems strange to go to a workshop just because the timing is convenient, but I finally caved and tried it out. It was honestly a lot more fun than I expected! Our latest session focused on humor in creative nonfiction—and how that can take different forms in an essay versus a piece of travel writing—and it was really interesting. So I feel like that just speaks even more for the power of community in motivation, if it got me thinking about trying out a different type of writing.)

Anonymous: I have a few strategies when it comes to motivation.

If my motivation is flagging but I still love the story, I tend to need structural fixes: check the outline, rewrite it if necessary. If it feels like I’m hitting a wall outright, I’ll rubber duck to figure out why that is–usually it’s a plot or character issue from two chapters ago, and talking it through can help me locate and fix it so that I can get back to the writing.

On days when I end up blank staring at the document, I set a timer for however long, and tell myself that I have to write one word. Just one. Almost always, that one word ends up connected to a sentence that is connected to a paragraph, and I get a decent amount of writing done. On the rare days where my fingers are twitching towards the delete key because I feel like it’s all terrible, I close everything and walk away, because I know it’s not as bad as I think it is in the moment. Even if it was, that’s what editing is for. I just come back tomorrow, and try again.


AMA: Publishing Fanfiction?!

Mar. 13th, 2026 12:00 pm
[personal profile] duckprintspress
https://www.tiktok.com/@duckprintspress/video/7616760976498511134?_r=1&_t=ZP-94eqYeuCWjO

(Video ID: a white person with short reddish hair and gold-rimmed glasses sits before a bookshelf and speaks. /end ID)

Transcript: How do you feel, given Duck Prints Press’s mission statement and origin, about publishing books that are proudly “serial number filed off” fanfiction?

So, for people who aren’t familiar with that term, it just means somebody took a fanfic and, like, used find-and-replace to change the characters names and now are marketing it as original fiction. So if it was, I don’t know, Castiel and Dean – to use my own example – not that I’ve filed off serial numbers but I have written a lot of Destiel – then, you know, maybe Dean becomes some guy named Mitch, and Cas becomes, you know, Richard, and Mitch and Richard have their romance for the ages.

In this “original work,” how do I feel about it? I think it depends. I think it can be well done. I certainly – I don’t wanna name names, but I’ve been in fandom long enough that I know of major published works that were fanfic that are not widely known to have been fanfic and are very popular and are not getting, the, “oh, it’s got the serial numbers filed off, it’s bad.”

I think, just like most kinds of writings, it can be well done, it can be poorly done. I know as an author, at a point when I was having trouble making words on original work, I would write – I mostly write alternative universes, often very very far from the founding material. And part of the reason I did that was with the expectation that someday I would file the serial numbers off my own work. And it’s relatively easy to do when it’s very far from canon. That said, I think needs to be more than just a find-and-replace.

There’s things that work in fanfiction that won’t make sense if it’s an original fiction. If it’s poorly done, if those things aren’t changed, then it’s gonna read like fanfiction even if – you know – every will know, if I – I used Dean and Castiel as an example. If Dean – I mean if Mitch is still a monster hunter, and Richard is still an angel of the lord, it’s going to be pretty damn obvious that it was Supernatural fanfic, and that’s not necessarily gonna be that entertaining for people to read if they’re not interested in the fandom.

On the other hand, you know, I know of a Dean/Cas work that got remade as femslash – as sapphic – and completely rewritten. It’s a completely different book now even tho it has the same basic story and that’s bad in and of itself. So, what I think about it is – it really depends.

I think when they lean-in on that part for the marketing, though, that’s a little awkward. I feel like if any fan author did what tradpub is doing with “it’s actually Dramione” which is the ship for Draco Malfoy and Hermione. Or, you know, this was very clearly Reylo – which is Kylo Ren and Rey from Star Wars. Like… if any of us did that, we’d get our butts sued off. And it’s a little obnoxious to see places that are bigger than us taking advantage of that part of fandom culture in a way that fans never actually could. And that’s quite aside from whether or not they’re good books or bad books, because I think trying to say it’s okay when they’re good and it’s bad when they’re bad is actually not maybe the best framework for it.

But, yeah, sorry, I could keep going. I have strong opinions about fandom stuff. Basically, I think it can be done well. I think it can be done poorly. I don’t love the way it’s being marketed.

This is an Ask Me Anything. I’m Claire, the owner of Duck Prints Press. Hit me up if you have any questions!


[personal profile] cereta posting in [community profile] agonyaunt
Dear Care and Feeding,

I’m a stay-at-home mom, and my husband works outside the home. We have three kids and obviously we all sometimes get sick. However, for some reason (*cough* I wash my hands and he doesn’t *cough*) I usually seem to get a much milder case of whatever bug we’re all dealing with than my husband, or sometimes don’t get it at all, leaving me to care for sick kids without any help. I know I should be grateful that I don’t usually get as sick, but being under the weather and nursing sick babies while my husband sleeps all day is hard. I usually end up completely run down, exhausted, and sometimes even depressed.

Recently, we all got the flu, and this time I did get it pretty bad. My husband was still recovering, and the baby was still sick so my mom had to come stay with us for a while … and then she got it. My husband and I talked after we were all healthy about how we could better handle a house full of sick people and, uncharacteristically, we didn’t come to a great resolution. I’m tired of not being able to get significant rest time when I’m ill and being on my own with sick kids, so I think we should rely on help from family more and also that my husband should accept that being sick as a parent isn’t the same as being sick without kids. I asked him to really consider what help he could offer me while he’s sick and volunteer it more. I also admitted that I should do a better job of asking him to work from home occasionally when I need to recover from being sick. He agreed on the last point but didn’t accept either of the first two: He thinks it’s out of line to ask family to come help us and get sick themselves and isn’t willing to commit himself to doing more when he is sick. We’re all healthy now but I’m sure the next virus is just around the corner, so who is right? How do you fairly split the work when everyone doesn’t feel good?

—We’re Not at Our Best

Dear WNaOB,

I am always thrilled to hear anyone is out there, washing their hands, which is one of the best forms of preventive “medicine” we have. This may indeed help account for the times you manage to avoid the bug entirely but can have no possible relationship to the times you just have milder symptoms than your less fortunate family members.

Every illness is different. So is what “doing more” can mean. I’m glad you are on the same page about him working from home more frequently while you are recovering; I am not sure why it hinges on you asking as opposed to him making the decision based on the situation, but if that’s what it takes, fine.

On the family question, I’m torn. I would not ask an older relative to risk the seasonal flu, if at all possible. For minor bugs, if you are extremely honest that you are floundering and need a second pair of hands and that those hands may wind up catching whatever illness the family has, people can make their own informed decision about helping.

Sometimes everyone is sick at once. One of the worst parts of being a parent is not being able to retreat to the couch with a Gatorade, regardless of how terrible you feel, because a child needs you to hold their hair back or heat up some soup. It’s a good time to rely on food delivery for a short period (if anyone actually feels like eating), and I recommend having basic sickness prep ready to roll (children’s cold medicine to bring down fevers and help with sleep, Pedialyte, extra mattress protectors under extra fresh sheets so you can just yank off the soiled top set and have a pre-made bed ready to go, etc.)

You and your husband are not going to solve for all time the “but I’M sicker when I’m sick” argument. You do need to ask for what you need and to be specific with what those needs are. “Can you please switch the laundry to the dryer? Can you load the dishwasher? Can you bring home saltines and ginger ale?” It seems as though communication in your household has become contentious and now carries the weight of grievances from Ghosts of Seasonal Flu Past. He thinks you’re telling him he’s a malingerer, you’re drowning in gross tissues, etc. Please try to strip emotion out of these interactions whenever possible. Fake it like you’re on a team until you’re actually on a team here.

Also, I hesitate to tell a grown man to wash his hands during cold and flu season, but if he hasn’t grasped the repeated and unpleasant cause and effect at play here, you have my permission to tell him a professional advice columnist thinks he’s being a real tool.
[personal profile] cereta posting in [community profile] agonyaunt
Dear How to Do It,

I made a mistake. I have been very close with my friend, who’s a woman, for the past three years. I am a man, and for the most part, I’ve been able to convince her that I am gay.

At first, I just yearned for the platonic affection that only a woman can offer; nothing obscene. But now … I am enticed by her smooth skin and curves. I’ve seen her naked several times, and she’s always felt safe around me because she thinks I am gay. How can I proposition her so that she’ll forget all about my so-called gayness? Should I pretend to be bisexual? HELP!

—Cross My Heart and Hope to Die

Dear Cross My Heart and Hope to Die,

Did you consult with any media before deciding to pursue opportunistic identity impersonation? With icing on her face, Mrs. Doubtfire would have shrieked at you, “Hell noooooo!” You have placed yourself in a farce that rarely works out as intended. You purposely deceived someone in order to make a connection, and now that you have that connection, you want more. Meanwhile, your friend will end up with less. It is safe to assume that her attachment to and comfort around you are predicated on your lie. You’re asking what to say to make her forget, as if I’m a wizard who’s been holding out on revealing a magic technique for mind-editing and not just some guy sitting on his couch in Brooklyn.

Here are your options: Keep up the deception and forget any kind of romantic pursuit because to her, you are as good as gay. You will have to keep up this deception for the rest of your life and/or friendship (whichever ends first), which seems exhausting and doomed to fail. Or you can come clean and hope that she is already in love with you and has been secretly wishing that you would just turn straight already. Unless she is under love’s spell, she is likely to be angry when she finds out that you have deceived her. Since your relationship is built on a lie, you can expect the relationship to collapse once the lie is dismantled. I don’t think there’s any way around that, but at least now you know what not to do next time.

February 2026

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