reminder to add the colors in your medias descriptions, all blind people weren't born like this, and it must be nice to be able to visualise what you used to see
seen from Australia
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Germany

seen from Japan

seen from Malaysia
seen from Türkiye

seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Türkiye

seen from Australia
seen from Ukraine
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States

seen from United States
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seen from Malaysia
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
reminder to add the colors in your medias descriptions, all blind people weren't born like this, and it must be nice to be able to visualise what you used to see
Media Description
W. A. Gallenbury, Entry 3
The Crow, The Widow, The River
Disclaimer: I have not read these books in order nor have I read all the pages.
328 pages seemingly only of scenic descriptions of a river throughout the seasons. I've been jumping throughout this book so often that I started hearing the river in the woods when I biked to school. There is no river in the woods.
I doubt the river counts as a paper being, so let's call it a paper scenery. Unsure how this is follow up to the two first books?
Media Description
W. A. Gallenbury, Entry 2
The Crow, The Widow, The River
Disclaimer: I have not read these books in order nor have I read all the pages.
The Widow is the sequal to The Crow. Similarly to the first book, the title character isn't who the story is about. Or, it is on the surface, the whole book focuses on a man's interactions with a newly widowed woman (from a farm in rural England... ringing any bells? She happens to be the protagonist of the first book.) In the background you see his family life play out and how his father and mother pass away in sickness and leave to fight for his part of the inheritance with his entitled brother. Throughout the story he falls in love with the widow despite having a wife. At the end he loses both inheritance and wife, blaming the widow and losing her too.
After being spooked by my encounter with the paper beings from the previous book I was extra careful and took this reading much slower and more broken up, making sure I couldn't turn the page properly by putting paperclips everywhere. I almost flunked physics to get through this one.
No encounters with the Paper World during this read. Still definitely Paper World related by the feel of it, as I've mentioned in the diary you just know.
Note: the layout of the man's house is the exact same as the one in the comic book Raifort by F. Vachon