Family vs Books
If you’re looking for more writing humour, please explore this tag on the website: Writing Humour
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
Cosmic Funnies
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TVSTRANGERTHINGS

@theartofmadeline
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ellievsbear
KIROKAZE

tannertan36

祝日 / Permanent Vacation

titsay

Origami Around
Peter Solarz
Game of Thrones Daily
d e v o n

oozey mess
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
art blog(derogatory)
trying on a metaphor
Claire Keane
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@librarianlucy
Family vs Books
If you’re looking for more writing humour, please explore this tag on the website: Writing Humour
my unread books will never forgive me for this quarantine if I decide to still not read them
You are Guinevere, Queen of the Britons and most beautiful woman in the known world. You were sold into a political marriage and queening is an arduous business. You could use some relief. Where do you turn for it?
Arthur
Pros:
Total package. Hell yeah.
No treason, no punishment for treason.
You’re hanging out with him all the time anyway, might as well give it a try.
Cons:
Created Antichrist incest baby.
Lancelot
Pros:
Will murder everyone if you ask him to
Cons:
Will murder everyone if you don’t ask him to
Gawain
Pros:
Solar powered, green energy (hehehe)
Let’s you call the shots
Into mmf threesomes
Cons
Prone to blood feuds
You have to deal with his shitty family
Mordred
Pros
Was your lover in the first written version so you’ll be keeping it old school
Cons
Is antichrist incest baby
Agravain
Pros
Is known as “the handsome”
In Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, is described as “loyal”
Cons
Every other version says he sucks.
Gaheris
Pros:
Arthur married him to some lady he barely knew so he’ll probably be up for it
Cons:
Killed mother in psycho-sexual jealous rage, then framed and murdered her lover for it
Gareth
Pros:
Nothing really bad to say about him
Cons:
In love with Lancelot
Bors
Pros:
Technical winner of the Grail Quest
Will not cheat on you with a shape changed demon
Cons:
Thinks you are a shape changed demon
Galahad
Pros:
Greatest Mary Sue in the land
Cons
Will say no
What if he doesn’t say no? What if he gives in to lust and you’ve effectively destroyed him? Could you ever live with yourself again?
Percival
Pros:
Is hot in a Tarzan kinda way.
Cons:
Dumb as a box of rocks.
Kay
Pros:
You at least know who he is because of the Disney movie
Cons:
Everything else
Tristan
Pros:
Handsome
Hopeless romantic
Cons:
Psychopath
Dinadan
Pros:
Girls dig funny guys
Cons:
If you break up, will write a Taylor Swift style song about you.
Dagonet
Pros:
Girls dig funny guys
Cons:
Is literally a jester someone knighted as a joke
Bedivere
Pros:
Canonically the most handsome knight
Cons:
When he’s the last one left standing at the final battle and Arthur gives him his sword to throw away, it will be really awkward if he has to avoid confessing that he banged his wife.
Morgan le Fay
Pros:
Will probably be up for it.
Cons:
If she isn’t up for it, will never let you live it down.
Best summary of Arthurian myth ever.
You’ve been hit by 🔪
You’ve been struck by 🔪
A Roman Senator 🔪🔪🔪
CAESER ARE YOU OKAY
ARE YOU OKAY CEASER
Hey, do you know any books where a love triangle ends in a poly relationship?
Sure - try Adaptation and Inheritance by Malinda Lo, This Song is (Not) For You by Laura Nowlin, and That Inevitable Victorian Thing by E.K. Johnston.
Places to go via @joannechocolat
I drew a quick little comics essay today about a topic near and dear to my heart: horror for kids!
Or, “why some kids like to read books that scare them, and why you should let them.”
The Prince and the Dressmaker
*I received an advance reader copy of this book in exchange for an honest review*
Rating: ★★★★★
Blurb: Prince Sebastian has a secret: at night he puts on daring dresses and takes Paris by storm as the fabulous Lady Crystallia! Sebastian’s secret weapon (and best friend) is the brilliant dressmaker Frances, who protects his double life. But Frances dreams of greatness, and for that she can’t stay a secret. How long can Frances defer her dreams to protect a friend? Jen Wang weaves an exuberantly romantic tale of identity, young love, art, and family. A fairy tale for any age, this book will steal your heart.
This is such a charming graphic novel. Just polishing up this review makes me want to reread it, and I can’t wait to get myself a physical copy!
A note before we get started: my interpretation (or perhaps headcanon) of Sebastian was as a genderfluid person, based on this quote:
“Some days I look at myself in the mirror and think, ‘That’s me, Prince Sebastian! I wear boy clothes and look like my father.’ Other days it doesn’t feel right at all. Those days I feel like I’m actually a princess.”
But given that Sebastian being nonbinary doesn’t seem to be an inference other reviewers drew, I’m not going claim it as canon. It might be a book about a cis boy who enjoys crossdressing, which is still great because it shows with a lot of fun that there’s nothing wrong with that. Either way, the fact that this exists as a fluffy, middle grade book that shows gender nonconformity in a positive light is such a good thing and I love it.
On the actual story: !!!!!!!!!!!!!
I LOVED it. The art was beautiful, pastel and fun and a little childish, which fits perfectly. I loved the character designs, like all the scruffy hair and how Sebastian got to have a long, pointy nose and still be considered beautiful. More! big! noses! that aren’t villain-coded! please!
I loved the cute little romance and all the dress designs — all the gorgeous dresses. And that we’re getting this kind of positive representation in books suitable for kids… it’s wonderful. I was just smiling giddily to myself the entire time. It’s the kind of aesthetically pretty historical fiction I would have loved as a kid and never would have found with these kinds of characters. Frances and Sebastian are funny and adorable and yes I really need to reread this goodbye.
I am a(n):
⚪ Male
⚪ Female
🔘 Writer
Looking for
⚪ Boyfriend
⚪ Girlfriend
🔘 An incredibly specific word that I can't remember
*wakes up in the middle of the night in a cold sweat*
WAIT IT’S CALLED A THROW PILLOW
here is a super helpful website for this kinda thing!
the first result isn’t always the one you’re looking for but when you press enter it’ll give you a ton of words related to your query that’ll probably have what you’re wanting, or something better
here’s some examples:
Reblog to save a writer's sanity.
@bixbiboom
Update: I added more shelves to my SSF section
I spent the afternoon arranging our books by size and color (and it’s so satisfying and looks amazing) and my partner came home and stared in shock at the bookcase and then said “i’m a librarian, you can’t do this.”
him: you split up all the song of ice and fire books
me: yeah i know, they’re all primary colors, it’s perfect
him: [self-destructs]
You’re a monster
As a former bookstore employee, this hurts my soul. I mean, sure it looks nice, but how do you find anything?
it has occurred me during this process that apparently not everyone thinks about books by what color they are? like, literally when i’m looking for a book, i picture it in my mind. i have a very…tactile experience with the books i read and idk! i thought everyone did that lol.
my partner was like “how will i find [this book] for instance” and i replied “easy, it’s purple” and he looked at me like i was a witch.
Shelfie 😊
This. Freaking. Book. “In Garner County, girls are told they have the power to lure grown men from their beds, to drive women mad with jealousy. They believe their very skin emits a powerful aphrodisiac, the potent essence of youth, of a girl on the edge of womanhood. That’s why they’re banished for their sixteenth year, to release their magic into the wild so they can return purified and ready for marriage. But not all of them will make it home alive.” The Handmaid’s Tale + Lord of the Flies + The Power + The Hunger Games. There’s some really interesting world building in this feminist dystopian young adult novel.
in need more people to read this book, it’s SO GOOD
I know that not everyone reads my book reviews (and honestly, no one even needs to…*side-eyes the bullshit way Wordpress posts pull through to tumblr*) so here are some quick and dirty reviews of some of my fave books of the last couple of months!
Empire of Sand by Tasha Shuri
Postcolonial fantasy romance – emphasis on romance (arranged marriage-to-lovers storyline, YMMV on whether it’s your jam or not but consent is super clear). Heroine, who is one of the few surviving remnants of a colonised people. uses her SMARTS and SOCIAL GRACES to escape oppressive captivity.
Laura Dean Keeps Breaking Up With Me by Mariko Tamamaki
Graphic novel – disaster gay girl in high school comes to terms with the fact that her girlfriend is shitty. Much more feel good than it sounds – a coming-of-age story about acknowledging your flaws and cutting toxic people from your life. The artwork is wonderful and Absolutely Everyone is queer.
This Is How You Lose the Time War by Max Gladstone and Amal El-Mohtar
This book guys. This book is only 200 pages long but it cut me to my very soul. Two female spies (no, not spies, SHAPESHIFTING TIME TRAVELLERS ON ENEMY TIME TRAVELLING FACTIONS) exchange letters and gradually FALL IN LOVE. The enemies-to-lovers you never knew you needed. Both of these nerds write such pretentious letters. I cried.
If you are not enjoying your book, you are free to close it and never open it again. Even if it's a classic that everyone loved. A book has one job, it literally only has to be interesting. If it's not, have no guilt about not finishing it.
We’re Ready
I was presenting an assembly for kids grades 3-8 while on book tour for the third PRINCESS ACADEMY book.
Me: “So many teachers have told me the same thing. They say, ‘When I told my students we were reading a book called PRINCESS ACADEMY, the girls said—’”
I gesture to the kids and wait. They anticipate what I’m expecting, and in unison, the girls scream, “YAY!”
Me: “'And the boys said—”
I gesture and wait. The boys know just what to do. They always do, no matter their age or the state they live in.
In unison, the boys shout, “BOOOOO!”
Me: “And then the teachers tell me that after reading the book, the boys like it as much or sometimes even more than the girls do.”
Audible gasp. They weren’t expecting that.
Me: “So it’s not the story itself boys don’t like, it’s what?” The kids shout, “The name! The title!”
Me: “And why don’t they like the title?”
As usual, kids call out, “Princess!”
But this time, a smallish 3rd grade boy on the first row, who I find out later is named Logan, shouts at me, “Because it’s GIRLY!”
The way Logan said “girly"…so much hatred from someone so small. So much distain. This is my 200-300th assembly, I’ve asked these same questions dozens of times with the same answers, but the way he says “girly” literally makes me take a step back. I am briefly speechless, chilled by his hostility.
Then I pull it together and continue as I usually do.
“Boys, I have to ask you a question. Why are you so afraid of princesses? Did a princess steal your dog? Did a princess kidnap your parents? Does a princess live under your bed and sneak out at night to try to suck your eyeballs out of your skull?”
The kids laugh and shout “No!” and laugh some more. We talk about how girls get to read any book they want but some people try to tell boys that they can only read half the books. I say that this isn’t fair. I can see that they’re thinking about it in their own way.
But little Logan is skeptical. He’s sure he knows why boys won’t read a book about a princess. Because a princess is a girl—a girl to the extreme. And girls are bad. Shameful. A boy should be embarrassed to read a book about a girl. To care about a girl. To empathize with a girl.
Where did Logan learn that? What does believing that do to him? And how will that belief affect all the girls and women he will deal with for the rest of his life?
At the end of my presentation, I read aloud the first few chapters of THE PRINCESS IN BLACK. After, Logan was the only boy who stayed behind while I signed books. He didn’t have a book for me to sign, he had a question, but he didn’t want to ask me in front of others. He waited till everyone but a couple of adults had left. Then, trembling with nervousness, he whispered in my ear, “Do you have a copy of that black princess book?”
He wanted to know what happened next in her story. But he was ashamed to want to know.
Who did this to him? How will this affect how he feels about himself? How will this affect how he treats fellow humans his entire life?
We already know that misogyny is toxic and damaging to women and girls, but often we assume it doesn’t harm boys or mens a lick. We think we’re asking them to go against their best interest in the name of fairness or love. But that hatred, that animosity, that fear in little Logan, that isn’t in his best interest. The oppressor is always damaged by believing and treating others as less than fully human. Always. Nobody wins. Everybody loses.
We humans have a peculiar tendency to assume either/or scenarios despite all logic. Obviously it’s NOT “either men matter OR women do.” It’s NOT “we can give boys books about boys OR books about girls.” It’s NOT “men are important to this industry OR women are.“
It’s not either/or. It’s AND.
We can celebrate boys AND girls. We can read about boys AND girls. We can listen to women AND men. We can honor and respect women AND men. And And And. I know this seems obvious and simplistic, but how often have you assumed that a boy reader would only read a book about boys? I have. Have you preselected books for a boy and only offered him books about boys? I’ve done that in the past. And if not, I’ve caught myself and others kind of apologizing about it. “I think you’ll enjoy this book EVEN THOUGH it’s about a girl!” They hear that even though. They know what we mean. And they absorb it as truth.
I met little Logan at the same assembly where I noticed that all the 7th and 8th graders were girls. Later, a teacher told me that the administration only invited the middle school girls to my assembly. Because I’m a woman. I asked, and when they’d had a male author, all the kids were invited. Again reinforcing the falsehood that what men say is universally important but what women say only applies to girls.
One 8th grade boy was a big fan of one of my books and had wanted to come, so the teacher had gotten special permission for him to attend, but by then he was too embarrassed. Ashamed to want to hear a woman speak. Ashamed to care about the thoughts of a girl.
A few days later, I tweeted about how the school didn’t invite the middle school boys. And to my surprise, twitter responded. Twitter was outraged. I was blown away. I’ve been talking about these issues for over a decade, and to be honest, after a while you feel like no one cares.
But for whatever reason, this time people were ready. I wrote a post explaining what happened, and tens of thousands of people read it. National media outlets interviewed me. People who hadn’t thought about gendered reading before were talking, comparing notes, questioning what had seemed normal. Finally, finally, finally.
And that’s the other thing that stood out to me about Logan—he was so ready to change. Eager for it. So open that he’d started the hour expressing disgust at all things “girly” and ended it by whispering an anxious hope to be a part of that story after all.
The girls are ready. Boy howdy, we’ve been ready for a painful long time. But the boys, they’re ready too. Are you?
I’ve spoken with many groups about gendered reading in the last few years. Here are some things that I hear:
A librarian, introducing me before my presentation: “Girls, you’re in for a real treat. You’re going to love Shannon Hale’s books. Boys, I expect you to behave anyway.”
A book festival committee member: “Last week we met to choose a keynote speaker for next year. I suggested you, but another member said, ‘What about the boys?’ so we chose a male author instead.”
A parent: “My son read your book and he ACTUALLY liked it!”
A teacher: “I never noticed before, but for read aloud I tend to choose books about boys because I assume those are the only books the boys will like.”
A mom: “My son asked me to read him The Princess in Black, and I said, ‘No, that’s for your sister,’ without even thinking about it.”
A bookseller: “I’ve stopped asking people if they’re shopping for a boy or a girl and instead asking them what kind of story the child likes.”
Like the bookseller, when I do signings, I frequently ask each kid, “What kind of books do you like?” I hear what you’d expect: funny books, adventure stories, fantasy, graphic novels. I’ve never, ever, EVER had a kid say, “I only like books about boys.” Adults are the ones with the weird bias. We’re the ones with the hangups, because we were raised to believe thinking that way is normal. And we pass it along to the kids in sometimes overt (“Put that back! That’s a girl book!”) but usually in subtle ways we barely notice ourselves.
But we are ready now. We’re ready to notice and to analyze. We’re ready to be thoughtful. We’re ready for change. The girls are ready, the boys are ready, the non-binary kids are ready. The parents, librarians, booksellers, authors, readers are ready. Time’s up. Let’s make a change.
What's the real thing the 3am text/creepy grandma at your door prompt is based on!?!? Please, I need details!!! 💙
A friend got a text from an unknown number that said “do NOT answer the door” during a sleepover, which was instantly followed by someone knocking at the door and an elderly woman calling out, asking if any of us had any honey to spare. Given the fact they lived up a crazy long driveway, surrounded by forest, and it was 3 am, it was pretty sus.
Our small group kind of freaked out, and naturally I was delighted.
It was at this point that I remembered we had gone shopping for sleepover provisions earlier in the day, and had mistakenly bought honey instead of syrup, and no one liked honey (there was much complaining). So I did a dash for the kitchen and snatched the honey, then rather gleefully bounded over to the door, much to my friends horror.
Sure enough, very old lady is standing at the door, looking like every grandma stereotype you’ve ever heard of. I looked rather manic myself, with what my friends called, “That freaky unhinged grin you do.”, and handed her the whole thing of honey, and told her she could have it.
She looked genuinely surprised and kind of straightened a bit, then got this glint in her eyes and started fighting a grin.
We stood there and bantered for a while as my friends freaked the fuck out inside, before she finally said goodbye, told me to “Keep making mischief” and then strode off down the drive with a walk that was very much at odds with her hunched “feeble” appearance from a few moments earlier.
None of my friends slept that night, and I took particular glee in making strange noises whenever they would start to calm down. I was always a little shit like that.
Never saw her again, but I was gifted a rather beaten looking metal (Brass maybe?) flute the next evening on the doorstep with a simple “Thank you” written on a leaf of all things. None of my friends wanted to go anywhere near it, and I still have it to this day.
@jaeebitch
This is the bitch I’m talking about. Simple and banged up looking.
Bruh…You met a faerie.
@deliriumcrow
@normal-horoscopes
YOU ABSOLUTELY MET ONE OF THE GENTRY
THE FACT THAT THAT HAD THE BALLS TO ACTUALLY APPROACH THE THRESHOLD OF YOUR HOME IMPLIES A FAIRLY OLD OR HIGH RANKING ONE AS WELL
YOU HANDLED THE SITUATION PERFECTLY YOU DID THEM THEIR FAVOR WITH NO QUESTIONS OR IMPOLITENESS AND WITH UTTER SINCERITY YOU DIDNT GIVE THEM THE CHANCE TO MAKE IT MORE COMPLICATED AND THUS THEY WERE LEFT INDEBTED TO YOU
DONT LET ANYTHING HAPPEN TO THE FLUTE