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cherry valley forever
Xuebing Du

shark vs the universe
taylor price
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda

roma★
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trying on a metaphor
One Nice Bug Per Day
Sade Olutola
todays bird

oozey mess
Claire Keane
occasionally subtle
Cosimo Galluzzi
wallacepolsom
will byers stan first human second
DEAR READER
KIROKAZE

Origami Around

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@thebookexperience
Brussels (via epipha_ny on Instagram)
Quote of the day. Happy NaNoWriMo!
Amy Tan: Where does creativity hide?
Books on writing #nanoprep
NaNoWriMo preparation is in the air right now, everyone is hustling to put together an outline or at least find a decent idea to start with.
I find books are the best resources to give us motivation and perspective. So the link below has 10 of the best books on writing. Go ahead and get your boost of motivation!
10 books about writing
Let me know what you think about the list and if you’ve read any of these books.
Poem of the day: Aimless Love
This morning as I walked along the lakeshore, I fell in love with a wren and later in the day with a mouse the cat had dropped under the dining room table.
In the shadows of an autumn evening, I fell for a seamstress still at her machine in the tailor’s window, and later for a bowl of broth, steam rising like smoke from a naval battle.
This is the best kind of love, I thought, without recompense, without gifts, or unkind words, without suspicion, or silence on the telephone.
The love of the chestnut, the jazz cap and one hand on the wheel.
No lust, no slam of the door – the love of the miniature orange tree, the clean white shirt, the hot evening shower, the highway that cuts across Florida.
No waiting, no huffiness, or rancor – just a twinge every now and then
for the wren who had built her nest on a low branch overhanging the water and for the dead mouse, still dressed in its light brown suit.
But my heart is always propped up in a field on its tripod, ready for the next arrow.
After I carried the mouse by the tail to a pile of leaves in the woods, I found myself standing at the bathroom sink gazing down affectionately at the soap,
so patient and soluble, so at home in its pale green soap dish. I could feel myself falling again as I felt its turning in my wet hands and caught the scent of lavender and stone.
-Billy Collins
12 of the Most Anticipated Books of 2015
Joss Whedon
The blank page is yours. Cast aside worries over art and criticism. Imagine a land without rules. Imagine that nobody has ever told you that you cannot or should not do this thing. Those people were wrong. Forget those voices. Because, for real? It’s an empty field and you’ve got the keys to a freaking Ferrari. It’s a white tablecloth and you’ve got ketchup, mustard, and relish. It’s a blank page and you’ve got all the letters and words you need. Rev the engine and take the ride. Paint with all the colors the condiments at your table allow. Create whatever robot-human monstrosities your mind cares to conjure. Crack open your chest and plop your heart onto the page. Right now: just write. Donuts in an empty field. Leave your mark.
Chuck Wendig from his Pep Talk at NaNoWriMo
There is nothing to writing. All you do is sit down at a typewriter and bleed.
Ernest Hemingway
Almost all good writing begins with terrible first efforts. You need to start somewhere. Start by getting something—anything—down on paper. What I’ve learned to do when I sit down to work on a shitty first draft is to quiet the voices in my head.
Anne Lamott
24 Quotes That Will Inspire You To Write More
A beautiful talk by Zadie Smith on writing.
"Each novel I've written, any novel anyone writes, it's not that you sit down saying 'I believe this, and now I will write this," but by the nature of your sentences, just by the things that you emphasize or that you don't emphasize, you're constantly expressing a belief about the way you think the world is, about the things that you think are important, and those things change. They do change. And the form of the novel changes as well. A very simple example is in a lot of my fiction I've delved very deeply into people's heads, into their consciousness and tried to take out every detail, and the older I get and the more that I meet people and realize I don't know them. My own husband is a stranger to me, really, fundamentally at the end you don't know these people. That should be reflected in what you write, that total knowledge is impossible."
Rules such as ‘Write what you know,’ and ‘Show, don’t tell,’ while doubtlessly grounded in good sense, can be ignored with impunity by any novelist nimble enough to get away with it. There is, in fact, only one rule in writing fiction: Whatever works, works.
Tom Robbins
To a great mind, nothing is little.
Arthur Conan Doyle, A Study In Scarlet
The Disquieting Muses read by Sylvia Plath
Happy Birthday Sylvia!