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@missmagicss
Little miss doesnt like taking pics
We are not talking right now, but why am i making bday gifts for him instead of studying for my exam tomorrow ? Why am i so deeply in love with him ?
Michael Cunningham, The Hours
POV #222
He changed her. the moment he told her that she was beautiful something new sparked inside of her. it was like being reborn and her confidence going from 0 to 100 in a matter of days. she felt like on top of the world, nothing could ever match her expectations now. Not even the prettiest rose in his garden could please her. His effect on her was like being transported into a new dimension. cool water hitting her face, sending chills down her spine, like being struck with a poison sword, blood spilling out from her veins it hurt, but it felt so good. she didnât have the time to fuck around now. she never came to him for love. she got what she wanted and now it was time to take everyone down. fuck up everybody who dared look down on her.Â
 she came there as one of devilâs minions, but she picked a dance with the devil and lucked out.Â
Susan Sontag, Reborn: Journals and Notebooks, 1947 - 1963
i wish life was like that carl sandburg poem about fog
People my age dating, and dressing up and looking like hot shit, while i sit at home in pj's and scroll through my insta feed watching couples make reels. Its not that i can't be like them, its just that i dont know where they get the confidence from to look like that.
Native American Authors of Dark Fiction
Since my Black Horror Writers post was so well-received, I thought it would be a good idea to make a similar list for Native American authors. No Sherman Alexie or N. Scott Momaday here (although theyâre good too) â here are some contemporary authors you probably havenât heard of but who you should totally be supporting. The list is a bit of a mix of horror, sci-fi, fantasy and contemporary fiction, but Iâve focused as usual on darkly imaginative stories. Enjoy!Â
Stephen Graham Jones A Blackfeet author of horror and crime fiction, SGJ is both prolific â with more than 20 books to his name â and magnificently talented. You might want to start with Mongrels, which gives a fresh spin on the werewolf genre, or you can skip ahead to this yearâs release The Only Good Indians â a heart-pounding supernatural thriller with a classic slasher pace.
Owl Goingback An author of horror and crime fiction for adults and children, Goingback specializes in stories that are high-horror, low-gore. Start at the beginning with Crota, which won a Stoker for âBest First Novel,â or jump to the present with the Stoker-award-winning âCoyote Rage.â
Cynthia Leitich Smith Writing for children and young adults, Smith is a member of the Muscogee Creek Nation. If you like urban fantasy, youâll probably enjoy her Tantalize and Feral series, which give you all the shapeshifter/vampire/angel goodness you could ask for. If youâd rather go for something more classically Native, try Rain Is Not My Indian Name, a contemporary coming-of-age type novel.
Cherie Dimaline A MĂ©tis writer and activist hailing from Canada, Dimaline considers herself first and foremost a writer of Indigenous stories. Her books arenât shy about exploring themes of colonialism and genocide â consider The Marrow Thieves, a dark dystopia about Indigenous people who are hunted and harvested for the properties of their bones. Or you might enjoy Empire of Wild, which draws on the MĂ©tis story of the Rogarou - a werewolf-like creature with a rich folklore history tracing through the mixed heritage of the MĂ©tis people.
Waubgeshig Rice An Anishinaabe writer from the Wasauksing First Nation in Ontario, Rice is a journalist and author of dark fiction. Start with Moon of the Crusted Snow, which is a brooding post-apocalyptic thriller set in Canada.
Rebecca Roanhorse OK, Roanhorse is kind of a controversial listing here. Some critics take issue with the way she portrays fictionalized, fantastical reimaginings of traditional mythology from a culture she is not intimately part of (she married a Navajo man and claims some Ohkay Owingeh ancestry but thereâs some dispute about that). But a lot of people (especially young readers) think her books are badass and really give a face to their experiences. Iâll leave it up to you to decide. Youâll probably want to start with Race to the Sun, which is this yearâs novel, but Trail of Lightning and Black Sun are much-loved fan favorites, too. If youâd rather just enjoy her writing without venturing into the argument about her use of cultural elements, she also writes Star Wars books.
Darcie Little Badger A scientist and author from the Lipan Apache tribe, Little Badger is a member of the Indigenous Futurism movement, imagining Native characters in sci-fi settings that honor historical and cultural perpsectives. Sheâs also noteworthy for her LGBT+ inclusion. Sheâs mostly known for short fiction and comic books, but she does have a novel this year â Elatsoe, set in an alternate version of America filled with ghosts and magic.
Tommy Orange A member of the Cheyenne and Arapaho Nations of Oklahoma, Orange is a pretty new name on the scene. His book There There is more literary, having been a Pulitzer finalist in 2019, so you might not be as into it if youâre primarily a genre reader. But itâs a hard-hitting contemporary narrative twisting together multiple stories, and a downright ambitious debut. Keep an eye on this one.
Daniel Wilson A robotics engineer and New York Times best-selling author, Wilson is a citizen of the Cherokee Nation. He writes Asimov-style hard sci-fi about robots, which heâs more than a little qualified to do! Start with Robopocalypse, which is an action-packed horror-scifi romp.
Drew Hayden Taylor A Canadian playright and author with Ojibwe heritage, Taylor likes to joke about his mixed-race background. His writing covers a whole spectrum from plays, short stories and even graphic novels. If youâre looking for a book, The Night Wanderer is a good choice â a vampire Gothic set on a reservation.
Louise Erdrich A member of the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians, Erdrich is widely acclaimed as an author in the Native American Renaissance. Like Tommy Orange, her books are more on the literary side of things, but thereâs plenty to enjoy for genre fans as well. For my money, I say start with Future Home of the Living God, which is a dark dystopian apocalypse about evolution running backwards and a woman struggling to keep her baby safe.
As always, reblog with your recommendations and suggestions for any names I left off the list!Â
You don't need to limit yourself from choosing a pretty feminine aesthetic or a dark goth one. If persephone can be the godess of spring and queen of the underworld at the same time, so can you.
Tips for (beginner) writers
Set yourself a daily word count. You don't have to do it daily, just make sure everytime you sit down and write you do it with the thought of "I'm gonna write at least a page today".
Don't let bad writing demotivate you. Fuck it, if its bad, it's bad. You can edit it. But don't just stop at bad scenes, write your way through it.
If you're stuck in a scene and you don't know what's coming next, write another chapter. Just a random one. Maybe one you don't even know where to put it in the plot.
When you don't know how to write a scene, write the dialogue, then add the actions.
Don't loose yourself in endless planning. Your characters are bitches, they're gonna do it differently anyway.
Following that, don't characterise your characters in detail before you start writing. As I said, they know better. Instead, characterise them while you are writing.
The Comic Sans writing tip works.
You don't have to edit every chapter right after writing it. You're gonna have to edit the whole thing again anyway and your gonna change things in previous chapters, so save your time and finish the story before you edit.
Never speak the sentence "I'm kinda in a flow, writing is so easy currently." The writing gods can hear you and they hate you.
If you have no motivation to write, read.
Don't be afraid to try out stuff.
Don't be afraid to be evil.
Drink enough water/tee/coffee.
"I have an idea for my story, but I'm gonna memorise it, I don't have to write it down." YES YOU DO.
Make sure you can answer the question "Oh, what is your book about?" with two simple sentences.
Have fun and find your way. Every writer is a little different. Don't care too much what others do.
Publishing is not easy, especially your first book. Find an agent or good people who will support you with self-publishing.
Because I had loved him but never wholly possessed him, he stayed in my mind like a myth...
Erica Jong, from âSapphoâs Leapâ
Anatomical studies of the shoulder, 1510, Leonardo Da Vinci
Medium: chalk,ink,paper
Da cats be sunbathing
Cute.
âJennifer Bartlett, from "The Hindersances of a Housholder"
If we had met on a different day, under different circumstances, would I still dream about holding your hand and looking into your eyes someday? And would you be denying my existence like you do now or would you think about me then ?
I wish I could say this to you.
i think id black out if i experienced even an ounce of romance at this point
Relatable on a spiritual level. I have a crush on this guy and he probably doesn't know that I exist. But the sight of him, or rather the mere thought of him, makes my stomach flip and heart explode. I can't even look him in the eye because he makes me so nervous and i can't help but feel butterflies explode in my stomach at his presence. It's funny how I think of him everyday and my heart aches to see him another time, while he on the otherside is thinking about someone else, the sound of my name not meaning anything to him. The enunciation of my name just being a tid-bit of information to him.
It hurts, to not being able to confess, or start a conversation because somehow I know already that nothing is ever going to come out of it. I have fallen in love, before, but not seriously. Had a ton of crushes, but somehow this time it feels different, funny thing is, don't they all? Nothing lasts forever. Specially not butterflies at the sight of someone.
Woman Holding a Water Jar (detail), Abdur Rahman Chughtai (Pakistani, 1894-1975)