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This Week’s LGBTSr Humorscope

đ This Weekâs LGBTSr Humorscope
â Aries
You are feeling bold â possibly too bold. Before you âreply all,â pause. Your energy is magnetic, but your patience is thin. Channel that fire into something productive instead of reactive.
Best Day: Tuesday
Avoid: Impulse spendingâ Taurus
Comfort is calling your name. Answer it â but donât unpack and redecorate. A financial or practical conversation benefits from calm, not stubborn silence.
Best Day: Friday
Avoid: Digging in your heels just to winâ Gemini
Your mind is racing ahead of your calendar. Youâll start three things and finish one. Thatâs fine â just circle back. A message late in the week lifts your mood.
Best Day: Thursday
Avoid: Group chat drama -
Book Review: The Blood Countess: Murder, Betrayal, and the Making of a Monster, by Shelley Puhak
By Terri Schlichenmeyer
The Bookworm SezâThe Blood Countess: Murder, Betrayal, and the Making of a Monsterâ by Shelley Puhak
c.2026, Bloomsbury $32.99 293 pagesYou saw it online, so it must be true.
It canât be just a rumor because you got it from a reliable source. Verification, bah! You trust the origin of this juicy story, even it seems outlandish. Even if, as in the new book âThe Blood Countessâ by Shelley Puhak, the rumorâs been wrong for centuries.
Youâve probably heard the story.
Supposedly, hundreds of years ago, a Hungarian Countess was somehow convinced that eternal beauty and longevity was hers if she bathed in the blood of virgins, so she sent emissaries across the land to fetch all the teenage girls they could find. When the Countess was caught, she was walled up in her castle forever.
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Health Beat: Why Emotional Well-Being Matters as Much as Physical Health

By Mark McNease
I confess: anxiety has been getting the best of me lately. While I prefer feeling busy, associating it with fulfilmment, I also have a bad habit of taking on too much. Part masochishm, part outrunning the passage of time, as if I have to get everything done today or I’ve failed in some way to meet my goals. And while I’m very good at taking naps on a daily basis, I’m not good at preventing the stress and anxiety in the first place. So let’s take a look at some causes and ways to address that knotted-up feeling pleading for our attention.
Weâre very good at tracking the physical, espeically with watches, phones, alerts, step counters, calorie counters, and more alerts to remind us we must try harder. We know our blood pressure numbers. We discuss cholesterol. We schedule scans. We swallow vitamins medications, if we wakt them, with the consistency of a drill sargeant. But emotional health? That often gets the âIâm fineâ treatment, as if fine were a medical diagnosis.
The truth is, emotional well-being matters just as much as physical health, and in many cases it quietly determines how well the rest of the body functions. You canât separate the two. The body keeps score, even when the mind insists everything is under control.
Stress, especially the long-term kind, doesnât simply pass through us. It settles in. It affects sleep (something I know too well). It tightens muscles. It disrupts digestion. It elevates blood pressure. Chronic stress raises cortisol levels, and over time that constant state of alert can wear down the immune system and strain the heart. We may call it âjust life,â but the nervous system calls it an onslaught.
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Listen Along! Night Flight to Murder Town: A Marshall James Thriller, on the Fearsome Fiction Podcast
Listen Along to Night Flight to Murder Town: A Marshall James Thriller (Book 4)
On the Fearsome Fiction Podcast
The engines are humming. The runway lights flicker. And somewhere in the darkened city below, things are about to go very wrong.
On the Fearsome Fiction Podcast, you’re invited to listen along as I roll out three new chapters at a time of Night Flight to Murder Town: A Marshall James Thriller (Book 4).
This is a serialized descent into mystery, murder and corruption on a killer scale. Three chapters. Then a breath. Then three more.
Marshall James returns in Night Flight to Murder Town, Book 4. Marshall is thinking of leaving New York City with his husband for a new life away from the hectic pace of the nationâs largest city. But how did he get here in the first place? After three stories detailing his harrowing Hollywood past, where lovers, losers, and a serial killer or two nearly ended his life before he could make something of it, he finally tells us how and why he left LaLa Land for Gotham.
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Mark McNease’s Fearsome Fiction Podcast: Night Flight to Murder Town: A Marshall James Thriller (Chapters 7 – 9)

Welcome back to the Fearsome Fiction Podcast. One of my offerings is the weekly serialization of Night Flight to Murder Town: A Marshall James Thriller, book 4. This week, we dive into Chapters Seven through Nine of Night Flight to Murder Town: A Marshall James Thriller. Marshall leaves behind Hollywoodâand a heartbreaking goodbyeâto chase a new life in New York City. But from a turbulent red-eye flight to a sunrise over Manhattan, itâs clear this isnât just a fresh start. With Trent waiting at the gate, a mysterious chauffeur, and whispers of danger already in the air, Marshallâs arrival in the City may be the beginning of something far more complicatedâand far more dangerousâthan he ever imagined.
Letâs step into the night flight⌠and whatâs waiting on the other side.
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One Thing Or Another: Life, Aging, and the Absurdities Of It All – The Drawer of Things We’ll Never Throw Away

By Mark McNease
Every home has one, and ours has several. Not the junk drawer. Thatâs different. The junk drawer is innocent, cluttered through no fault of its own. It has batteries, rubber bands, expired coupons, a screwdriver that doesnât belong anywhere else. Maybe a hammer for no discernable reason. That drawer has plausible deniability.
Iâm talking about the other drawer. The drawer of things weâll never throw away.
It might be in a desk. Or a bedroom dresser. Or tucked into a cabinet no one opens unless theyâre looking for something specific and end up standing there longer than they intended. You donât organize this drawer. You visit it.
Inside mine
A program from a musical I donât remember seeing.
A couple of old photos that never made it into my scrapbook.
Several keys of mysterious origin and purpose.
A napkin from a restaurant Iâve never been back to.
Loose match sticks. -
Audiobook for ‘A Marriage Below Zero’ by Alan Dale Now Available!
Listen to a 20 minute sample – Narration provided by Wondervox
I’ve just released an audiobook edition of ‘A Marriage Below Zero’ by Alan Dale. You can listen to a 20 minute sample by clicking the audio file above OR HERE. It’s just $3.99 at my Payhip storefront storefront, and provides a Zip file with all individual chapters, AND a single MP3 with the entire audiobook.
More about the book …

This month I’ve released a very hidden gem: A Marriage Below Zero, by Alan Dale. It’s one of the earliest published novels to deal with same-sex attraction, narrated by a woman who married a man with a secret life.
A Marriage Below Zero (1889), written by Alan Dale, is a pioneering work of early gay fiction and one of the first English-language novels to center a homosexual male character in a serious, tragic narrative. The story is told from the perspective of Elsie Bouverie, a young woman who enters into what appears to be a promising marriage with the charming and refined Arthur Ravener. At first, their life together seems socially enviableâsecure, respectable, and filled with the expectations of Victorian domestic happiness.
But beneath the surface, something is wrong.
Arthur grows emotionally distant, evasive, and restless. Elsie senses that she is not the true object of her husbandâs affection. Gradually, she discovers the devastating truth: Arthur is romantically and physically involved with another man. In an era when homosexuality was not only taboo but criminalized, this revelation shatters her understanding of marriage, loyalty, and identity.
Rather than portraying Arthur as a villain, the novel presents him as a man trapped between societal expectations and his authentic self. The âmarriage below zeroâ becomes a metaphor for a union devoid of warmth, passion, and truthâfrozen by repression and secrecy. As scandal looms and emotional tensions escalate, the story moves toward a tragic conclusion that reflects the harsh realities faced by gay men in late 19th-century society.
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The Twist Podcast 320: Tooth Worms, Best Climates to Live In, Terrible Texting and More
Welcome to The Twist Podcast, Episode 320. Join co-hosts Mark and Rick as we drill into the bizarre history of teeth, with tooth worms and contagious cavities.
Then we hear from friends and fans about where the climates they prefer to live in, from dry desert air to breezy coastal towns and everything in between.
And finally, we dive into terrible texting habits and experiences, from relentless reminders to mysterious texters. “Who are you?” by the way.
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Weekly Survey Results: What’s More Important To You As You Age?
As you age, what’s more important to you? Multiple answers okay
Feeling calm and content through the ups and downs of life 25 percent
Staying curious, creative and engaged 29 percent
Maintaining friendships and relationships 16 percent
Feeling seen, valued and heard 8 percent
Having flexibility with my time and choices 21 percent
Something else (write in the comments):
“Not holding back. I used to keeep the peace and my thoughts to myself. Not anymore.”
“Having enough money for retirement.”
“Reorienting interest in sexuality in a productive way.” -
This Week’s LGBTSr Humorscope: G is for Gemini

đ LGBTSr Weekly Humorscope
âThe Stars Are Watching⌠and They Have Opinions.â
â Aries
You are filled with bold ideas this week. Some of them are excellent. Some of them involve rearranging furniture at 9:30 p.m. Pause before lifting anything heavier than your optimism.
â Taurus
Comfort is calling your name. Soft blankets. Good snacks. A show youâve already seen three times. Honestly? The stars support this fully.
â Gemini
You will say something âharmlessâ that somehow launches a 40-minute discussion. Consider whether you want entertainment⌠or peace.
â Cancer
Youâre feeling nostalgic. Resist the urge to text that person from 2008. The past is a museum. Visit gently. Donât move back in.









