knowing you are dreaming of me, knowing we will always be each other's muse, forbidden lover, witch and warlock joined by a filament of flesh lover through the looking glass.
Erica Jong, The Demon Lover

seen from Azerbaijan

seen from Kazakhstan

seen from United Kingdom

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Australia
seen from China
seen from Argentina

seen from Morocco

seen from Russia
seen from Canada
seen from Ireland
seen from Argentina
seen from Kazakhstan
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seen from United States
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seen from United States
knowing you are dreaming of me, knowing we will always be each other's muse, forbidden lover, witch and warlock joined by a filament of flesh lover through the looking glass.
Erica Jong, The Demon Lover
on change
Ursula Le Guin Dragonfly; The Tales from Earthsea / BoJack Horseman (2014-2020); Nice While It Lasted dir. Aaron Long / Eric Jong Becoming Light: Poems New & Selected / Ocean Vuong On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous / C.G. Jung The Red Book (via @tamsoj) / Charlotte Eriksson Everything Changed When I Forgave Myself / BoJack Horseman (2014-2020); Nice While It Lasted dir. Aaron Long / Rainer Maria Rilke Letters to a Young Poet
Erica Jong, Becoming Light: New Poems; from ‘Gazing Out, Gazing In’
Queer Reads: Riley Nash
For day 11 of “this book is hella gay and you should read it,” I bring your Riley Nash.
Riley Nash has written 7 novels and a handful of novellas, and they are all fantastic. His characters have some fucked up shit happen to them, from surviving abuse to struggling with gang violence, poverty to mental health issues. These books aren’t “dark” in the “oh hey, it’s a serial killer” (legit a whole subgenre of mm romance), but they are definitely dark in the angsty, emotional way.
Featured in the little graphic are the four books found in the Water, Air, Earth, Fire series, and the two Dirty Strays books. Hold Me Under is about Victor, a former swimming champion with a horrific past and Ethan, the fake boyfriend hired for PR who ends up helping him heal and find true love. Make Me Fall features Gray, Victor’s old family lawyer who feels really bad about the events preceding book 1, and Jonah, the law student who is really terrible at it but who is the most endearing character ever. Show Me Wonders, my personal favorite of the four, is about Oliver, a single dad who likes knitting and his kid, and Jackson, a convicted felon with a heart of gold. Oliver and Jackson get stuck in a cave-in while riding a train, and are the only two survivors. Teach Me To Sin is a MMM book featuring Colson, who is Gray’s asshole ex, Alek, Victor’s childhood friend and swimming teammate, and Benji, a little chaos gremlin who deserves nice things (Colson and Alek. Benji deserves Colson and Alek.) The other two books in the little graphic are a duo (which I have hopes might become a trio) set in a trailer park in north eastern Colorado. Scout, from Bad Dogs, is the little brother of Jackson, from Show Me Wonders, but otherwise the books are unconnected.
Aside from gut-wrenching emotional turmoil, Nash does a fantastic job with found family, overcoming said emotional turmoil, and finding love even when life is full of lemons. Nash also is a own-voices trans author, and the novella Becoming Light is the softest, sweetest, hottest story about a guy recovering from top surgery and his best friend’s dad, who is very helpful to his recovery (wink wink).
Remember folks, read queer all year.
— Erica Jong, from “I Sit at My Desk Alone”, “Becoming Light: Poems New and Selected”
Erica Jong, “The Other Side of the Page”
The truth is simple, you do not die from love. You only wish you did.
Becoming Light by Erica Jong