Game of Thrones Daily
šŖ¼

Love Begins
YOU ARE THE REASON
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

blake kathryn

Andulka

⣠Chile in a Photography ā£

JBB: An Artblog!
cherry valley forever
taylor price
Show & Tell

PR's Tumblrdome

Origami Around

Product Placement
No title available

No title available

ā

No title available
Keni
seen from Germany
seen from United States

seen from Thailand

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Germany

seen from India
seen from Japan

seen from South Korea
seen from Greece

seen from Singapore

seen from Singapore
seen from United States

seen from Azerbaijan

seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Switzerland
seen from Hungary

seen from Sweden
seen from Brazil
@risingphoenix-nowreading
black and white version!
Arthur beaucarne is not safe from me
What I am is the Indian who can't die. I'm the worst dream America ever had.
If you like slasher horror and you haven't read The Final Girl Support Group by Grady Hendrix, literally what are you doing?
I just recently finished rereading it, and it was even better than the first time. Fun fact, this is the book that pushed me down the slasher horror movie rabbit hole, the one that started it all. At the time, I've only watched Halloween (1978) and A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984). After finishing this book, I binge watched the Halloween franchise, the Friday the 13th franchise as well as the Texas Chainsaw Massacre movies. After looking through the slasher tags on here, I've found even more gems like The Boy, House of Wax, Laid to Rest, The Collector etc. I got so into watching 80s horror movies that I've found The Lost Boys and in association to that, Near Dark.
This book is a love letter to the classic slasher horror movies of the late 70s to 90s. When I read it the first time, I only got the surface level, very obvious references. But coming back to it a few years later after delving deep into this world, I noticed a lot more. I had so many moments when I had to stop reading because I caught another easter egg and got a bit too hyped up. There are so many little details and references sprinkled in there for the people who really get it.
The book also discusses violence perpetrated against women by men, how society treats female victims, and what's left after the interest in their cases dies down and they are left to pick up the pieces. The characters have been through a lot, they are far from perfect, they make stupid and sometimes infuriating choices, they all cope in their own ways. But in the end they are still fighters who don't give up.
I have such a deep love for slasher horror now, and it's all thanks to this book.
Grady Hendrix is always so good! The final girl support group was the first book of his that I read, and ever since I've been hooked! So, absolutely agreeing here, if you need a reading recommendation, this is itš„°
I humbly suggest that true crime freaks should get into learning about scammers instead of serial killers. I LOVE reading about fraud and grifts and pyramid schemes. true crime ppl have all this paranoid energy about murder, which is rare in the grand scheme of things.....maybe instead that could be channeled into some productive rage toward capitalism.
And u know a side effect of learning about scam artists is that you start to understand certain things about economics, and just how STUPID these systems are and how easily they are taken advantage of....and I'd much rather people gained a passing familiarity with economics than whatever armchair psychologist shit these true crimers get on. We need fewer people who think they're experts on "sociopaths" and more people who understand how people like Elizabeth Holmes and the WeWork guy were able to do what they did
Here are some of my favorite books about financial scams:
The Wizard of Lies: Bernie Madoff and the Death of Trust by Diana B. Henriques.
The Big Short: Inside the Doomsday Machine by Michael Lewis (about the 2008 stock market collapse).
The Caesar's Palace Coup: How a Billionaire Brawl Over the Famous Casino Exposed the Corruption of the Private Equity Industry by Max Frumes and Sujeet Indap. (I admit I've never finished this one; the writing is hard to read.)
The Great Beanie Baby Bubble: Mass Delusion and the Dark Side of Cute, by Zac Bissonette. I bought this book because of the subtitle and I have never regretted it. You must read it.
Catch Me If You Can by Frank Abagnale. They turned this one into a movie! The book was very different and is worth reading.
The Cult of We: WeWork, Adam Neumann, and the Great Startup Delusion, by Elliot Brown and Maureen Farrell. I haven't read this one yet, but it's on my tbr pile!
Opus: The Cult of Dark Money, Human Trafficking, and Right-Wing Conspiracy Inside the Catholic Church, by Gareth Gore. I'm reading this one right now. The author is a financial journalist who stumbled onto this story by unraveling a bank failure in Spain.
And here's a list of more non-fiction books about fraud and financial scams. The first book on this list is about Theranos and Elizabeth Holmes, which I also haven't read yet.
Enjoy!
From Joan Aiken's book : 'The Wolves of Willoughby Chase' illustrated by Pat Marriott
happy lottery day girlies!
Here's to my birthday twin! I loved her so much I named myself after her! š„³
It really should be acceptable and normal to say āI donāt entirely understand what I just read, but I loved it.ā
I just finished How To Ru(i)n A Record Label, Larry Livermoreās first-hand account of the rise and fall of legendary East Bay punk label Lookout Records, which he cofounded and, among many other bands, gave the world Green Day.
Iām not a massive nonfiction fan, but Livermoreās voice and brutally honest accounts of major and minor events made this a great read, not just for fans of pop punk music, but those who like a good story well told.
I was introduced to Lookout Records by my roommate at the start of my freshman year of college when he loaned me Energy by Operation Ivy. I couldnāt stop listening to it. It was my gateway to Green Day, Screeching Weasel, Mr. T Experience, Pansy Division, and so many more awesome bands.
I loved Lookoutās releases so much, it became one of two labels from which I would buy a new release even of I didnāt know the band. The other was 4AD, home of the Pixies.
And my love of the East Bay pop punk sound led to me see Green Day play a small club in Richmond, VA about a year before they signed with a major label. The second time I saw Green Day was last year at SoFi Stadium in L.A. Quite the change.
(Itās also worth mentioning Richmond, VAās own Avail became one of the few non-East Bay bands on Lookout.)
Anyway, if youāre a music fan, an old punk, or just like a good memoir about a historic moment in music created by a handful of outcasts and misfits, check out the book.
What if this year was the year I finish reading The Neverending Story?
Picked up a neat little pocket sized edition of The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes this weekend and got around to starting it this afternoon, but a few pages into it, we've hit a serious problem.
There's a misprint.
According to this edition, Holmes's landlady is named Mrs Turner.
Library Friday (On Saturday)
No new books this week, so here's my plan for the weekend:
Almost finished with Miracle and, as happens with every book about words I've ever read, it's putting me in the mood to write. Pre-Code should be exciting in another direction, and I'm anticipating adding a lot to my watch list.
Just mentioning again...
...that all the prices on our Ebooks Direct ebook bundles are still holding at Black Friday levels (pretty much 50% off, and in some cases more...), because frankly I think everybody can use a little bit of a break around now.
I invite you to pause the doomscrolling (assuming that's what's been going on), take a few deep breaths, and visit another universe. Or two.
The complete* Young Wizards bundle is here:
This bundle contains all the Young Wizards material in the Ebooks Direct inventory. That's nineteen ebooks, containing: The nine New Mille
Or maybe you want just the feline wizards? Their bundle's here.
This bundle contains the three novels of Diane Duane's Feline Wizards trilogyāThe Book of Night with Moon, To Visit the Queen, and The Big M
And the LGBTQ-centered Middle Kingdoms bundle is here:
This bundle contains all the Middle Kingdoms material in the Ebooks Direct inventory. That's ten ebooks, including: The three main-sequenc
And if you're feeling like going utterly ham, here's the Whole Store bundle. At a truly silly price. (Possibly we need our heads felt, but that's an internal issue.**)
This ebook bundle (not available in the UK: details below) contains our complete inventory of non-new-release* works. All our ebooks are DRM
As usual: all these bundles are DRM-free and come with our lifetime free replacement guarantee. (Because as non-billionaires, we somehow don't feel any urgent need to make you pay for lost or mislaid ebooks twice). Lose a loaded device, have a drive crash, or suffer some other local difficulty that results in ebook loss? Mail us with your order number and we'll send you new download links.
That's it! That's the post. Support your local non-AI-using authors!
And thanks, everybody. :)
(I keep forgetting to add this, probably because i hate it: UK friends, please note that we can't sell directly to you any more, because of Brexit. Dammit. But still: sorry.) :/
*Except for Games Wizards Play, which we can't offer due to not holding rights for it.
**As one of us used to be a professional head-feeler, so we can handle such requirements in-house.