Alexander Hamilton. My name is Alexander Hamilton. And there’s a million things I haven’t done!
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Stranger Things

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Jules of Nature

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Sade Olutola

if i look back, i am lost
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
One Nice Bug Per Day
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ellievsbear

★
occasionally subtle
Sweet Seals For You, Always
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
hello vonnie
i don't do bad sauce passes
ojovivo
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@ebonyteach
Alexander Hamilton. My name is Alexander Hamilton. And there’s a million things I haven’t done!
Where do you think the urge for "realism" in comics comes from? It seems weird that people stress such minor squabbles in a world where guys can fly and shoot lasers from their eyes.
Well, it starts with a need for verisimilitude, a desire for there to be a sense of real-world consequences to these fairy stories. That’s a function to a certain degree of age, where you can’t accept the same level of unreality as an eight-year-old can. Additionally, there’s still that sense, especially as one grows older, that all of this stuff is silly, stupid, kid’s stuff. And yet, you love it, and you want other people to respect it–and so you want it more and more to be “serious”, to play by real-world rules. So that it doesn’t embarrass you.
Years ago, when I was just a fan, I once wrote a thing called “The Most Realistic Batman Story Ever”, which amounted to this: Batman, from the rooftop across the street, sees a jewelry store being robbed. So he casts his batline in order to swing down to the attack. Then, having failed to secure it, he reels it back up, resets, and throws it again. And again, and again. Finally, after a dozen attempts, he gets it to catch, and swings down to the jewelry store, surprising the thieves by crashing through the plate glass front window. His body is cut to ribbons–seconds before the startled gunmen pull their guns wildly and shoot him dead.
That’s a very didactic and cynical sort of exercise, even though it’s cynicism about cynicism. But there’s a nugget of truth to it. That’s not the story we want. Even the most realistic-skewing fan doesn’t really want realism, what they really want is verisimilitude–emotional truth, the feeling that the events taking place are of import to the characters, and the imparting of an emotional experience onto the reader. That’s what we consume stories for.
WATCHMEN is rightly considered one of the most realistic and thoroughly thought-through comic books ever created. And it’s full of absolute nonsense that would never work. Hell, its whole ending is predicated on an absurd twist that’s right out of a comic book. To me, though, that’s not a flaw in WATCHMEN, that’s one of the things that makes it great. Because while it spends a lot of time deconstructing a number of the tropes of the super hero genre, it spends just as much time reveling in them.
THANK YOU!!! I feel exactly the same way when someone appoints me the Guru of all things black or mixed or whatever. I don’t fucking know, lol. We aren’t a monolith.
Corinne Duyvis reviews the autistic protagonist in middle grade fantasy novel The Real Boy by Anne Ursu at Disability in Kidlit:
The Real Boy is now my go-to recommendation when people ask me for books with autistic protagonists. Due to the book’s fantasy setting, Oscar is never called autistic, but it’s confirmed by the author and, well, really obvious. Oscar avoids eye contact, doesn’t understand social niceties, is bluntly honest, has an extremely limited diet, values routine, infodumps about his special interests, goes non-verbal when stressed, and more. Refreshingly, however, the book is written solidly from Oscar’s perspective; rather than gawking at his oddities from an outside viewpoint or using a detached narrative voice to indicate “the autistic mind,” the book lets us in on Oscar’s thought processes and emotions, thoroughly normalizing his behavior.
[read the full review]
Looking forward to this one, too!
Maetani’s debut is quite a thrilling page-turner. At its core, it’s a mystery about family and long-buried secrets, as a young girl discovers her father’s checkered past with the Japanese mafia. In doing so, she’s unwittingly opens Pandora’s Box. Maetani does a fabulous job peeling back the layers to the mystery and the subsequent fallout, all of which will keep readers on the edge of their seats. In the midst of the mystery and suspense, she also manages to pull off a rather believable and sweet romance. This different and refreshing book is highly recommended.
A great review for INK AND ASHES! Find out more about INK AND ASHES here!
Congrats! Can’t wait to read!
Please take a moment to sign our petition asking publishers to be transparent about their staff diversity! Share the link with your friends!
We Need Diverse Books has 2 panels at BookCon this weekend and we hope to see you there!
On Saturday, May 30th at 11am in Room 1A21 will be the science fiction & fantasy focused panel “We Need Diverse Books: In Our World and Beyond” with Daniel Jose Older, Ken Liu, Joe Monti, Kameron Hurley, and Nnedi Okorafor!
On Sunday, May 31st at 11:15am in Room 1A10 will be “We Need Diverse Books presents Luminaries of Children’s Literature” featuring David Levithan, Jacqueline Woodson, Libba Bray, Meg Medina, and Soman Chainani (Note Sherman Alexie will not be at this panel)!
*pauses reading to admire my bookshelf*
Love that your books are arranged by color!
As a writer and critic, I am not just bored with this conversation. I am sick of it. I have written these sentences before. I will write them again. Discussing diversity in publishing is the worst kind of Groundhog Day. What’s more, these lists put writers and readers of color in a deeply awkward position. We don’t want to take anything away from the writers who have been included on the list. I am currently reading Don Winslow’s The Cartel and I never want to put the book down. It is thoroughly immersive, finely detailed and the action has me breathless. The problem is and has always been the exclusion of writers of color and other marginalized writers who have to push aside their own work and fight for inclusion, over and over and over again. We beg for scraps from a table we’re not invited to sit at. We are forced to defend our excellence because no one else will.
Roxanne Gay, “The Worst Kind Of Groundhog Day: Let’s Talk (Again) About Diversity In Publishing.” (via tubooks)
photos by Patty Maher
Reblogging because we don’t often see Black women depicted this way: soft, fey, innocent, dreamy.
This is a portrait...
...of myself...
....as a visual literant...
...as of the end of May, 2015.
#NickSousanis killin’ visual dissertation. His dissertation #Unflattening “Unflattening: A Visual-Verbal Inquiry into Learning in Many Dimensions” studying his ideas and visual traditions. He is a really smart guy that is furthering the cause of asethetic education and Art as Experience. #MaxineGreene student, and elegant artist.
Hit him up at www.spinweaveandcut.com twitter: @nsousanis #spinweaveandcut (at Fordham Rd.)
By Toby Morris
To be black is also to be other to the European Middle Ages, and this fact has had major implications for the construction of modernity and the place of race in it. It is but a short hop from imagining blackness as other in the Middle Ages to imagining it as absent in the period altogether. If blackness is not present in the European Middle Ages, then the evidence of black people’s abiding presence in modernity – when black people write, appear in the television and radio media or, at the very least, board trains with the rest of us – means that they must be exclusively modern.
Cord J. Whitaker, “Race-ing the dragon: the Middle Ages, race and trippin’ into the future” (via medievalpoc)
All of this. And this needs to be made central in conversations about diversity in children’s and young adult literature as well as kid and teen mass media. The way that we collectively imagine the past influences those who create our young people’s very dreams.
Philly gets its very own Renaissance Faire
Designing a Ren fest specifically for a big-city audience, Rodgers says, has meant doing some things differently at this Faire than at most. For starters, its cast of performers boasts not just a merry improv troupe of knights, jugglers and tavern wenches but a relative big-name headliner: Hafþór Júlíus “Thor” Björnsson, the Icelandic strongman who stars in HBO’s Game of Thrones as “The Mountain,” the giant, 420-pound warrior who serves House Lannister. At the Philadelphia Renaissance Faire, Björnsson will play Thor, King of the Vikings, in a storyline that will see his crew of Norsemen land at the Faire’s fictional trade outpost of Amman.
That’s another way this festival is unique: Where most others are set decidedly in a fantasy version of medieval England or France, the Philadelphia Renaissance Faire boasts an elaborately constructed backstory that draws upon the full diversity of the Middle Ages’ most multicultural mercantile hubs. It pulls elements, for instance, from Moorish Iberia, the centuries-long era when Northern Africans occupied much of Spain, Sicily and France, and from the Jewish and Muslim cultures of Spanish Córdoba.
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Health permitting (and it’s still up in the air right now), I’ll be there. :)
Glad to see this coming to town. Hope it packs out the house so that we get the full 3 weeks in 2016
america-wakiewakie:
This telling other PoC that hashtags and social media actions like #BrownandProud or #AsianInvasion are anti-black bothers me. I’ve seen folks calling these events co-opting, but I am wondering how broadening the narrative and base to dismantle white supremacy co-opts...
EbonyTeach on Twitter
Toni Morrison Quote
Thanks for posting that quote last summer, medievalpoc. I have been sitting with it ever since.
(And Toni Morrison is so essential. The recent New York Times Magazine interview just verifies what we already knew: she’s a living legend.)