@elodieunderglass or other horse people:
This is a quote from Swordheart by T. Kingfisher. Can you really tell this level of detail just from hearing horses galloping down the road towards you??

if i look back, i am lost
Claire Keane

⁂

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@elodieunderglass or other horse people:
This is a quote from Swordheart by T. Kingfisher. Can you really tell this level of detail just from hearing horses galloping down the road towards you??
Resting by the Cabin Window (2021)
Baby sphinx trying to be like mama and waylaying travelers, but all its riddles are completely non-sensical like the ones a 1st grader would tell
Finding Harriet Vane: A mini-essay on Sayers' Women
You really do need to read the Wimsey books in order, if just to watch in fascination how Sayers develops her Ideas About Women, which culminates in the whole Harriet Vane arc. For context, Christie doesn’t really have Ideas About Women. She has Ideas About People. Her vision of psychology comes down to environment and social pressures, but these are less frequently gender-based. Class, age, and income dictate her characters much more than relations between the sexes, even in crimes of passion (and there aren’t many).
Sayers, on the other hand, develops the theme that finally comes to full chorus in Gaudy Night. E.g., Whose Body? is very much in the Christie vein. You get the impression she could keep going on like this for several more books, but she doesn’t; she writes Clouds of Witness and gives Peter a mother, a sister, and opens her theme of privilege and sexuality in the form of the farmer’s wife. The wife is vital here to understanding how Sayers sets up Peter as the peer of the realm, used to taking because that's his privilege. I love the pithiness of this line:
[she had] a shape so wonderful that even in that strenuous moment sixteen generations of feudal privilege stirred in Lord Peter's blood.
This image is vital to understanding how Harriet (rightly) sees him as presumptuous in Strong Poison and sets up why she refuses to tangle with him on his own turf.
Unnatural Death offers another vision of womanhood—queer and single womanhood. The relationships between Agatha Dawson and Clara Whittaker, and to a lesser extent Mary Whittaker and Vera Findlater, are clearly Sapphic and complicate the easy upper-class commerce of seduction and possession. In fact, it turns conventional heterosexuality into a farce, in the scene when “Mrs. Forrest” attempts to seduce “Mr. Templeton" to poison him.
He pulled her suddenly and violently to him, and kissed her mouth with a practised exaggeration of passion. He knew then. No one who has ever encountered it can ever again mistake that awful shrinking, that uncontrollable revulsion of the flesh against a caress that is nauseous. He thought for a moment that she was going to be actually sick.
The two principals are in disguise; one is a lesbian and the other suspects her of murder. Heterosexuality becomes a pantomime, a play of dishonesty in violent and overt language (Sayers, notably by Gaudy Night and Busman's Honeymoon, gets much more coy about real and honest feelings). It's the yearning for honesty that becomes the knot to unravel with Harriet (proclaimed pretty baldly in Have His Carcase).
Aside from queering relationships, this book also introduces us to the inimitable Miss Climpson: the smart sleuthing "old maid" who Parker first conventionally mistakes for Peter's mistress and represents Sayers slyly breaking expectations. A proto-Miss Marple, Miss Climpson both provides Peter with a sensibility of feminism that will eventually help redeem him--he's not too proud to see the worthiness of an independent single woman--and (on a narrative level) allows Sayers to explore female protagonism and her own religious outlook in her fiction.
Finally, The Unpleasantness of the Bellona Club offers us two major women, who interestingly collide in the character of Harriet Vane: the artistic Marjorie Phelps, who exists in a relationship of ambiguous intimacy with Peter, and the plain persecuted Ann Dorland, whose essential non-villainy gets endangered by a man she's in love with. I slightly wonder whether Sayers got her idea for Harriet from the way she wrote Ann Dorland especially; Ann, despite her limited page time, suggests the same love problems, level-headedness, and appeal to Wimsey that typifies Harriet, though isn't allowed the same play.
Sayers has been setting up Peter and his relationships this way for maximum impact when we get to Strong Poison. Harriet, interestingly, gets very little initial on-page description in this book (as opposed to, say, Ann Dorland or Mary Whittaker), and there's the simultaneous sense of her being disappeared and becoming typified not by her looks but by her words/voice, as her dialogue is how we get to know her.
There is a great deal of absurd charm in the openings of the Wimsey/Vane relationship, of course, but Sayers reminds us not to get carried away by it with one line:
[The books] could not show him how to save the woman he imperiously wanted from a sordid death by hanging.
Clearly, we know Peter wants Harriet. We even believe that the way he wants her is rather nice, and at least infinitely superior to the way she had been wanted by her lame ex Phillip. But Sayers cautions us with that fantastic adverb, "imperiously." Remember the farmer's wife in Clouds of Witness, she seems to say. Remember that the way Peter likes Harriet has as much to do with the certainty of his own brilliance as how he sees her. Remember that, even if he says he's not blackmailing her into marrying him by helping her out, he's still Lord Peter, second son of the duke.
What's most fascinating about tracing this evolution, for me, is that you almost see Harriet happening upon Sayers in real time: yes, she's a self-insert, but she's also the natural conclusion to a long line of women through whom Sayers has been trying to talk about women and class and obligation and love, and the best medium for her to come to her final thesis.
vigneto
Blue Hour Inc.
The last portion of the landscapes for Hull Rupture for now! Playtest is still available here:
🔗 https://store.steampowered.com/app/4358660/Hull_Rupture/
More pretty photos of the Monsieur Touissant Louverture (French) edition of The Thief and The Queen of Attolia by @meganwhalenturner, ft. bookmark art from @chimaerakitten
Lucky for @chimaerakitten and me, Shae takes excellent photographs!
I'm waiting for this fall for the fourth book to go on sale so I can eat the shipping costs for both KOA and ACOK at once and then. Then! There shall be more.
Been thinking about sea wolves. Prints.
I am currently reading one of the Richard Sharpe books (Sharpe's Rifles) and they are traveling along the pilgrimage route of Santiago de Compostela. Which, you know. Is centuries old. And this book is set at the turn of the 19th century *and* was written in the 80s before Tumblr existed.
But all I'm thinking is:
Ah yes, the pilgrimage route. Elodie's pilgrimage route. The route specially chosen by Elodie to lure Tumblr folk on to. That pilgrimage route.
Ha!! It's lovely of you to think of me. May we all find our way onto an accessible and relevant Camino!
Sharpe spends that WHOLE book thinking about boots like a hermit crab eyeing up shells. Impervious protagonist locked into the WRONG thing.
Just finished Sharpe's Havoc, which comes chronologically after Rifles. And this time he spends the whole time fixated on getting his telescope back. 😂
Invasion of Portugal, deserters, beautiful damsel in distress (of course, de rigeur for Sharpe novel), traitor... But the telescope!
Richard why are you like this?
Folktaleweek doodles: Bone and Depth ♥
My boyfriend is trying to explain cricket to me again. “He’s only got two balls to make 48 runs”, he says. The camera focuses on a man. Underneath him it says LEFT ARM FAST MEDIUM. A ball flies into the stands and presumably fractures someone’s skull. “There’s a free six”, my boyfriend says. 348 SIXES says the screen. A child in the audience waves a sign referencing Weet-Bix
The first time he showed me this I assumed he was pranking me
if people haven’t been exposed to cricket before, here is the experience. The person who likes cricket turns on a radio with an air of happy expectation. “We’ll just catch up with the cricket,” they say.
An elderly British man with an accent - you can picture exactly what he looks like and what he is wearing, somehow, and you know that he will explain the important concept of Yorkshire to you at length if you make eye contact - is saying “And w’ four snickets t’ wicket, Umbleby dives under the covers and romps home for a sticky bicket.”
There is a deep and satisfied silence. Weather happens over the radio. This lasts for three minutes.
A gentle young gentleman with an Indian accent, whose perfect and beautiful clear voice makes him sound like a poet sipping from a cup of honeyed drink always, says mildly “Of course we cannot forget that when Pakistan last had the biscuit under the covers, they were thrown out of bed. In 1957, I believe.”
You mouth “what the fucking fuck.”
A morally ambiguous villain from a superhero movie says off-microphone, “Crumbs everywhere.”
Apparently continuing a previous conversation, the villain asks, “Do seagulls eat tacos?”
“I’m sure someone will tell us eventually,” the poet says. His voice is so beautiful that it should be familiar; he should be the only announcer on the radio, the only reader of audiobooks.
The villain says with sudden interest, “Oh, a leg over straight and under the covers, Peterson and Singh are rumping along with a straight fine leg and good pumping action. Thanks to his powerful thighs, Peterson is an excellent legspinner, apart from being rude on Twitter.”
The man from Yorkshire roars potently, like a bull seeing another bull. There might be words in his roar, but otherwise it is primal and sizzling.
“That isn’t straight,” the poet says. “It’s silly.”
“What the fucking fuck,” you say out loud at this point.
“Shh,” says the person who likes cricket. They listen, tensely. Something in the distance makes a very small “thwack,” like a baby dropping an egg.
“Was that a doosra or a googly?” the villain asks.
“IT’S A WRONG ‘UN,” roars the Yorkshireman in his wrath. A powerful insult has been offered. They begin to scuffle.
“With that double doozy, Crumpet is baffled for three turns, Agarwal is deep in the biscuit tin and Padgett has gone to the shops undercover,” the poet says quickly, to cover the action while his companions are busy. The villain is being throttled, in a friendly companionable way.
An intern apparently brings a message scrawled on a scrap of paper like a courier sprinting across a battlefield. “Reddy has rolled a nat 20,” the poet says with barely contained excitement. “Australia is both a continent and an island. But we’re running out of time!”
“Is that true?” You ask suddenly.
“Shh!” Says the person who likes cricket. “It’s a test match.”
“About Australia.”
“We won’t know THAT until the third DAY.”
A distant “pock” noise. The sound of thirty people saying “tsk,” sorrowfully.
“And the baby’s dropped the egg. Four legs over or we’re done for, as long as it doesn’t rain.”
The villain might be dead? You begin to find yourself emotionally invested.
There are mild distant cheers. “Oh, and with twelve sticky wickets t’ over and t’ seagull’s exploded,” the man from the North says as if all of his dreams have come true. “What a beautiful day.” Your person who likes cricket relaxes. It is tea break.
The villain, apparently alive, describes the best hat in the audience as “like a funnel made of dove-colored net, but backwards, with flies trapped in it.”
This is every bit as good as that time in Australia in 1975, they all agree, drinking their tea and eating home-made cakes sent in by the fans. The poet comments favorably on the icing and sugar-preserved violets. The Yorkshire man discourses on the nature of sponge. The villain clatters his cup too hard on his saucer. To cover his embarrassment, the poet begins scrolling through Twitter on his phone, reading aloud the best memes in his enchanting milky voice. Then, with joy, he reads an @ from an ornithologist at the University of Reading: seagulls do eat tacos! A reference is cited; the poet reads it aloud. Everyone cheers.
You are honestly - against your will - kind of into it! but also: weirdly enraged.
“Was that … it?” you ask, deeming it safe to interrupt.
“No,” says the person who likes cricket, “This is second tea break on the first day. We won’t know where we really are until lunch tomorrow.”
And - because you cannot stop them - you have to accept this; if cricket teaches you anything, it is this gentle and radical acceptance.
Since first one was really popular, here is my next vampire comic. This one is inspired by old anime and....it is the tale about me and my friend and our love for vampire romances :D
(I put both of my comics on Gumroad if you want to support me https://chechula.gumroad.com/ ....well, it is same thing as here just in the PDF x_x )
I saw a post saying that Boromir looked too scruffy in FotR for a Captain of Gondor, and I tried to move on, but I’m hyperfixating. Has anyone ever solo backpacked? I have. By the end, not only did I look like shit, but by day two I was talking to myself. On another occasion I did fourteen days’ backcountry as the lone woman in a group of twelve men, no showers, no deodorant, and brother, by the end of that we were all EXTREMELY feral. You think we looked like heirs to the throne of anywhere? We were thirteen wolverines in ripstop.
My boy Boromir? Spent FOUR MONTHS in the wilderness! Alone! No roads! High floods! His horse died! I’m amazed he showed up to Imladris wearing clothes, let alone with a decent haircut. I’m fully convinced that he left Gondor looking like Richard Sharpe being presented to the Prince Regent in 1813
*electric guitar riff*
And then rocked up to Imladris a hundred ten days later like
Some people have been wondering about the raccoon. Listen. Listennn. Don't ask about the raccoon.
But does the racoon survive the Uruk-Hai? Does he curl up on Aragorn's head, or does he go straight to Faramir? Does he bite Denethor?
My friend. My colleague. My brother my captain my king. I too have been pondering this question, and in my mind there can be only one ultimate outcome.
A few months later
All hail the High Warden of Gondor.
Epilogue: It ADORES Faramir.
This. Is my pride and joy. A gift for my dad, who played Zork with me when I was a kid, and with his dad when he was a kid. I designed this pattern myself and had a great time puzzling out how to hide the glow in the dark letters!
Pattern: “West of House” by me Fabric: 2x1 on 18ct Blue-Grey Aida Started: 11/27/2021 Finished: 12/25/2021