Artist is Richard Claremont: (website) (instagram)

Discoholic 🪩
wallacepolsom
Sweet Seals For You, Always
taylor price
DEAR READER
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Kiana Khansmith
Today's Document

tannertan36
Jules of Nature
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
Misplaced Lens Cap

if i look back, i am lost
Keni
noise dept.
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
Claire Keane

⁂

★

ellievsbear
seen from United States

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seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Germany
seen from United States
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seen from United States

seen from Singapore

seen from Denmark

seen from Maldives
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@thecallofthevoidstillsounds
Artist is Richard Claremont: (website) (instagram)
The Secret of Moonacre (2008)
BILLY SHOULD HAVE KILLED KRISTA
Billy should have killed Krista
BILLY SHOULD HAVE KILLED KRISTA
BILLY SHOULD HAVE KILLED KRISTA
Billy should have killed Krista
Billy should have killed Krista
Billy should have killed Krista because she had a massive saviour complex and took a volatile, paranoid, violent man into her home who was violent towards her multiple times but she still kept trying and letting him in because “everyone deserves it”.
Billy should have killed Krista as a lesson that shit like that doesn’t work
Billy should have killed Krista
The Polar Star (1920)
by William Shackleton
Death of Sappho (1881)
Miguel Carbonell y Selva (1854 - 1896)
The Dance of the Rats (circa 1690)
Attributed to Ferdinand van Kessel
Foxes disguised as monks. On the left from Japan and on the right from Denmark.
It was a global problem
i’ve warmed up significantly towards the concept of small talk ever since i learned that its sole purpose is to make friendly noises.
as long as you smile and nod, people are satisfied. it’s just to show that you are nice and there with good intentions. we’re small in a big world and have to rely on other people to be decent to us. so we do our little human dance to each other to say, “i’m not here to hurt you. here’s something we have in common, like the weather or sports or itchy sweaters, so we both know we’re on the same team. we both agree on a basic fact, like that it is rainy or that being itchy is uncomfortable, and this proves we can get along. i’m being light-hearted and non-threatening right now.”
small talk isn’t to get to know a person. it’s just a greeting to affirm you’re buddies in the universe.
i am motivated by wanting the other person to know i am friendly, so i have gotten pretty decent at small talk when i used to hate it.
But also the thing is, if you DO take anything Amy narrates to us, the audience, at face value...Desi was a grade-A creep and it was only a matter of time before he DID do or try to do something fucked up to Amy.
And if you take Nick at his own damn word, it was only a matter of time before he snapped and killed Amy anyway.
psst. "feminist" retelling writers. yes, i'm talking to you. i have a gift for you: here are some interesting women from greek mythology that you can write about that are NOT medusa, persephone or clytemnestra! there ARE other women, shocking i know!
-medea: she literally killed her brother and her children, i thought "female rage" girlies would be all over her
-danae: her life is so crazy, imagine being imprisoned by you father, getting impregnated by a god, being locked in a box and left to die at sea and then basically becoming a hostage to a king while your son is sent to kill a monster. and she's one of the only ones who, to my knowledge, actually gets a happy ending!
-atalanta: basically the only female hero in greek mythology!! and she was an argonaut!! c'mon now there is so much potential here, why does nobody care for atalanta
-the amazons: penthesilea! hippolyta! literally any of them! you're telling me there is a whole society of female warriors and so called feminist writers aren't jumping at the opportunity??
-hecuba: such a tragic and interesting figure, being the queen of troy, she lost her whole family in the war, i wish more people explored her relationship with her children (especially paris) and apollo
-andromache: i'm shocked andromache isn't more popular with the "tragic female characters" people, she literally lost everything basically because of men
-cassandra: i know cassandra is fairly popular, but i love her so much and i want more people to explore her relationship with her family, every dynamic has the possibility to be SO interesting
-electra: this whole family is a MESS and yet i see people mainly focusing on clytemnestra (with iphigenia), but not exploring the relationship between electra and clytemnestra is such a missed opportunity
-helen: i just want the focus of her story to be shifted from paris to the other people in her life, like her daughter hermione! how did they rebuild their relationship after troy? or her sister clytemnestra! what happened to her bond after the murder of agamemnon? or her brothers, castor and pollux! there is so much untapped potential
-demeter: there is a story about a mother's grief for her daughter, her journey looking for her, her anger, and yet every retelling of the homeric hymn to DEMETER focuses HADES to make him a dark romance mafia boss?? come on
and more!
conclusion: i'm tired of seeing the same stories being retold over and over again when there are so many characters to explore
You got to feel for Warren, man. The only normal one in the band, having the time of his life, and then the messy bitches around him up and ruin e-very-thing.
on enduring
A Reaper at the Gates, Sabaa Tahir // Clockwork Princess, Cassandra Clare // The Night Circus, Erin Morgenstern // Deathless, Catherynne M. Valente
starling house, the night circus, edgewood, and house of hollow all make me feel the same way on the inside. in case anyone cares
We're all stories, in the end.
The Night Circus, by Erin Morgenstern / The Haunting of Hill House (2018), created by Mike Flanagan / House of Leaves, by Mark Z. Danielewski / The Shadow of the Wind (La sombra del viento), by Carlos Ruiz Zafón / A Monster Calls: Inspired by an Idea from Siobhan Dowd, by Patrick Ness / Book of the Dead for the Chantress of Amun Nauny, Third Intermediate Period, ca. 1050 B.C. (The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York) / Betty, by Tiffany McDaniel / Doctor Who (season 5, episode 13).
i think every fantasy lover should read the starless sea or the night circus at least once in their life. or just all people in general should.
erin morgenstern is the best weaver of words that i’ve ever had the honour of reading and i think everyone needs to experience her vivid storytelling at least once. cannot recommend her books enough.
if anyone knows any books like hers PLEASE recommend them to me^^