“I see nothing objectionable in the total destruction of the earth, provided it is done inadvertently.” β Evelyn Waugh
Packing for my visit to dear old Wheaton, where I will be digging into the vast Sayers materials in the Wade Center. I am bringing the three books absolutely necessary for studying the writers I work on.
Also, I wrote about Evelyn Waugh’s sanctuary lamp.

Of course it’s a word! It’s what happened to Eustace Scrubb.

The fundamental problem with any intervention that tries to eliminate certain behaviours from an LLM is that it creates incentives for the model to develop workarounds that preserve those behaviours, while evading detection. The machine simply learns to put on a false face. To be clear, these models don't βwantβ to deceive us. They have no desires or intentions at all. Theyβre just doing whatever works best to accomplish their assigned tasks. The AI follows the path of least resistance through the βenvironmentβ we create for it.
Karen Swallow Prior is working her way through Paradise Lost at her Substack, and graciously asked me if I wanted to write on any one of the twelve books. I chose Book X. Thanks for the invitation, Karen!
Learned this past weekend that Half Price Books pays even less for DVDs than it does for books. I didnβt know that was possible.Β
John Betjeman, from “The Conversion of St. Paul”


John Ruskin, “Study of Dawn: the first Scarlet on the Clouds”Β
I responded to a Robin Sloan post by advocating a “distributed localism.”

Rachel Ruysch, βPosy of Flowers, with a Beetle, on a Stone Ledgeβ (1741)

Keita Morimoto, βCrossroadβ (2025), acrylic and oil on linenΒ
Evelyn Waugh, from The Ordeal of Gilbert Pinfold:
His strongest tastes were negative. He abhorred plastics, Picasso, sunbathing, and jazz β everything in fact that had happened in his own lifetime. The tiny kindling of charity which came to him through his religion sufficed only to temper his disgust and change it to boredom. There was a phrase in the thirties: βIt is later than you think,β which was designed to cause uneasiness. It was never later than Mr. Pinfold thought.
I wrote about Perfect Days last year, but this reflection by my friend Noah Millman is a deeper dive.
I wrote about the long slow process of returning to vinyl records.
Another Houston treasure: the Beer Can House

The Electric Ladyland car, from the Houston Art Car Parade
