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#pauline hawthorne
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Fancasting a Little Fires Everywhere musical!
Everything is under the cut since wow, is this long!
Alison Luff as Elena 
Someone suggested we bring Reese back for a role reprise, but I’m a little dubious as to whether she’ll carry over the show’s Elena or if she’s going to change her portrayal to be this Elena, who’s much truer to the book. That being said, she’s a great actress and I think she can adapt, not to mention that casting her as Elena in an LFE musical would really draw audiences in!
I’ll cast the Warrens as pairs (in no particular order, though if I needed to pick who originates them, I’d say Krysta and Linedy):
Denée Benton and Talia Simone Robinson as Mia and Pearl
Krysta Rodriguez and Linedy Genao as Mia and Pearl
Eva Noblezada and Kaitlyn Santa Juana as Mia and Pearl (Ng mentioned that having an Asian Mia made her too obviously likely to side with Bebe as a factor in leaving Mia’s race ambiguous. That being said, why not have an Asian Mia, specifically a Filipino Mia?)
Back to the Richardsons:
Mallory Bechtel as Lexie
Josh Strobl should be allowed to understudy both Trip and Moody, but I don’t know who would be a good principal Trip or Moody.
Mimi Ryder as Izzy/Eliza Holland Madore as alt Izzy (I think she’s probably the only one who needs an alt because she’s the youngest)
No clue about Bill.
The Ryans:
Robert Ariza as Mr. Ryan
I don’t know who should play Mrs. Ryan alongside Denée as Mia or Krysta as Mia, but I want Arielle Jacobs as Mrs. Ryan with Eva as Mia.
I don’t know who should play Bebe or the McCulloughs. Zachary Noah Piser seems like a good Ed Lim. (What if Ed Lims were also understudy Mr. Ryans and once Robert leaves, he takes over? As much as I’d like him to originate Mr. Ryan, I don’t know who could play Ed Lim other than Zach.)
Roman Banks as Brian
Young Mias/understudy Pearls:
Phoenix Best as Young Mia/understudy Pearl with Denée Benton’s present-day Mia.
Isa Briones as Young Mia/understudy Pearl with Eva’s present-day Mia.
Honestly, by this point, Krystina Alabado feels like she could be a Young Mia/understudy Pearl for Krysta’s present-day Mia, but I’d also like her as Mrs. Ryan for some reason? I feel like she’d be better as Young Mia/understudy Pearl because they’re more uncertain characters and she does well with that type, but at the same time, her Mrs. Ryan would be so heartbreaking and authentic.
Still undecided as to Young Elena or Pauline Hawthorne.
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dotzines · 4 months
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⭐ DOTNOMICON: GRIMOIRE OF WONDERS! RELEASE!!! ⭐
This zine is a digital magic book featuring 85 artists and writers from all over the world. Potions, spells, guides... everything you'll need for your experiments is here! But please don't try them out, it may be dangerous~
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Zmijowka
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grandhotelabyss · 8 months
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What are your favorite essays/collections of literary criticism?
Some favorite single essays:
Percy Bysshe Shelley, "A Defence of Poetry"
Ralph Waldo Emerson, "The Poet"
Herman Melville, "Hawthorne and His Mosses"
Matthew Arnold, "The Function of Criticism at the Present Time"
Henry James, "The Art of Fiction"
Sigmund Freud, "The Uncanny"
Walter Benjamin, "Franz Kafka: On the Tenth Anniversary of His Death"
T. S. Eliot, "Tradition and the Individual Talent"
Viktor Shklovsky, "Art as Technique"
Mikhail Bakhtin, "Epic and Novel"
Jun'ichirō Tanizaki, "In Praise of Shadows"
G. Wilson Knight, "The Embassy of Death: An Essay on Hamlet"
Simone Weil, "The Iliad, or, The Poem of Force"
Jorge Luis Borges, "Kafka and His Precursors"
Ralph Ellison, "The World and the Jug"
James Baldwin, "Everybody's Protest Novel"
Leslie Fiedler, "The Middle Against Both Ends"
Iris Murdoch, "The Sublime and the Beautiful Revisited"
Flannery O'Connor, "Some Aspects of the Grotesque in Southern Fiction"
Gilles Deleuze, "On the Superiority of Anglo-American Literature"
George Steiner, "A Reading Against Shakespeare"
Derek Walcott, "The Antilles: Fragments of Epic Memory"
Toni Morrison, "Unspeakable Things Unspoken: The Afro-American Presence in American Literature"
Louise Glück, "Education of a Poet"
Camille Paglia, "Junk Bonds and Corporate Raiders: Academe in the Hour of the Wolf"
Michael W. Clune, "Bernhard's Way"
Some favorite collections:
Samuel Johnson, Selected Essays
Oscar Wilde, Intentions
Virginia Woolf, The Common Reader
D. H. Lawrence, Studies in Classic American Literature
George Orwell, All Art Is Propaganda
Susan Sontag, Against Interpretation
Kenneth Rexroth, Classics Revisited
Guy Davenport, The Geography of the Imagination
Cynthia Ozick, Art and Ardor
V. S. Pritchett, Complete Collected Essays
Gore Vidal, United States
Joyce Carol Oates, The Faith of a Writer
Tom Paulin, Minotaur
J. M. Coetzee, Stranger Shores
Michael Wood, Children of Silence
James Wood, The Broken Estate
Edward Said, Reflections on Exile
Gabriel Josipovici, The Singer on the Shore
Clive James, Cultural Amnesia
William Giraldi, American Audacity
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lacangri21 · 2 years
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The Feminist Library
-7000 Years of Patriarchy by Petra Ioana
-A Deafening Silence by Patrizia Romito
-Against Our Will by Susan Brownmiller
-Against Pornography by Diana E.H. Russell
-Against Sadomasochism by Robin Linden
-Ain’t I a Woman by Bell Hooks
-All Women Are Healers by Diane Stein
-Anti-Porn by Julia Long
-Anticlimax by Sheila Jeffreys
-Are Women Human by Catharine MacKinnon
-Backlash by Susan Faludi
-Bad Feminist by Roxane Gay
-Beauty and Misogyny by Sheila Jeffreys
-Beauty Sick by Renee Engeln
-Beauty Under the Knife by Holly Brubach
-Being and Being Bought by Kasja Ekis Ekman
-Beyond God the Father by Mary Daly
-Big Porn Inc by Melinda Tankard Reist and Abigail Bray
-Blood, Bread, and Roses by Judy Graham
-The Book of Women’s Mysteries by Z Budapest
-Borderlands by Gloria Anzaldua
-Burn it Down by Lilly Dancyger
-Butterfly Politics by Catharine MacKinnon
-Caliban and the Witch by Silvia Federici
-Choosing to Conform by Avelie Stuart
-The Church and the Second Sex by Mary Daly
-Cinderella Ate My Daughter by Peggy Orenstein
-Close to Home by Christine Delphy
-Compulsory Heterosexuality and Lesbian Existence by Adrienne Rich
-Conquest by Andrea Lee Smith
-Damned Whores and God’s Police by Anne Summers
-Daring to Be Bad by Alice Echols
-Dead Blondes and Bad Mothers by Sady Doyle
-Defending Battered Women on Trial by Elizabeth A. Sheehy
-Deliver Us from Love by Brogger
-Delusions of Gender by Cordelia Fine
-Detransition by Max Robinson
-The Disappearing L by Bonnie J. Morris
-Does God Hate Women by Ophelia Benson
-Doing Harm by Maya Dusenbery
-The End of Gender by Debra W. Soh
-The End of Patriarchy by Robert Jensen?
-Female Chauvinist Pigs by Ariel Levy
-Female Erasure by Ruth Barrett
-Female Sexual Slavery by Kathleen Barry
-Femicide by Jill Radford and Diane EH Russell
-Femininity by Susan Brownmiller
-Femininity and Domination by Sandra Lee Bartky
-Feminism Unmodified by Catharine MacKinnon
-Feminist Theory by Bell Hooks
-Firebrand Feminism by Breanne Fahs
-Flesh Wounds by Blum
-Flow by Elissa Stein and Susan Kim
-For Her Own Good by Barbara Ehrenreich
-For Lesbians Only by Sarah Lucia Hoagland
-Freedom Fallacy by Miranda Kiraly
-Gender Hurts by Sheila Jeffreys
-Getting Off by Robert Jensen?
-Global Woman by Barbara Ehrenreich
-Going Out of Our Minds by Sonia Johnson
-Going Too Far by Robin Morgan
-The Great Cosmic Mother by Monica Sjoo and Barbara Mor
-Gyn/Ecology by Mary Daly
-Gynocide by Mariarosa Dalta Costa
-Handbook of Feminist Therapy by Lynne Bravo Rosewater and Leonore E.A. Walker
-Heartbreak by Andrea Dworkin
-Her Body and Other Parties by Carmen Maria Machado
-The Hidden Malpractice by Gena Corea
-How to Suppress Women’s Writing by Joanna Russ
-I Am Your Sister by Audre Lorde
-I Hate Men by Pauline Harmange
-Ice and Fire by Andrea Dworkin
-In Defense of Separatism by Susan Hawthorne
-In Harm’s Way by Catharine MacKinnon
-In Search of Our Mothers’ Gardens by Alice Walker
-The Industrial Vagina by Sheila Jeffreys
-Inferior by Angela Saini
-Intercourse by Andrea Dworkin
-Invisible No More by Andrea J. Ritchie
-Invisible Women by Caroline Criado Perez
-Jewish Radical Feminism by Joyce Antler
-Kill All Normies by Angela Nagle
-The Laugh of Medusa by Helene Cixous
-Laughing with Medusa by Vanda Zajko and Miriam Leonard
-The Lesbian Heresy by Sheila Jeffreys
-Lesbian Nation by Jill Johnston
-Letters from a War Zone by Andrea Dworkin
-Love and Politics by Carol Anne Douglas
-Loving to Survive by Dee Graham
-Making Violence Sexy by Diana E.H. Russell
-Man Made Language by Dale Spender
-Man’s Dominion by Sheila Jeffreys
-Medical Bondage by Deirdre Cooper Owens
-Men Explain Things to Me by Rebecca Solnit
-Men Who Buy Sex by Melissa Farley
-Men Who Hate Women by Laura Bates
-Men Who Hate Women and the Women Who Love Them by Susan Forward
-Milk and Honey by Rupi Kaur
-Misogyny by Jack Holland?
-The New Handbook for a Post-Roe America by Robin Marty
-Nobody’s Victim by Carrie Goldberg
-Not a Job, Not a Choice by Janice Raymond
-Not for Sale by Rebecca Whisnant
-Nothing Matters by Somer Brodribb
-Objectification Theory by Barbara I. Fredrickson
-Of Woman Born by Adrienne Rich
-Only Words by Catharine MacKinnon
-Our Blood by Andrea Dworkin
-Our Bodies, Ourselves by Boston Women’s Health Book Collective
-Overcoming Violence Against Women and Girls by Michael L. Penn and Rahel Nardos?
-Paid For by Rachel Moran
-The Pimping of Prostitution by Julie Bindel
-Pimp State by Kat Banyard
-Policing the Womb by Michelle Goodwin
-Pornified by Pamela Paul
-Pornland by Gail Dines
-Pornography by Gail Dines
-Pornography: Men Possessing Women by Andrea Dworkin
-Pornography and Civil Rights by Andrea Dworkin and Catharine MacKinnon
-Pornography and Violence by Susan Griffith
-Pornography Values by Robert Jensen?
-Pure Lust by Mary Daly
-The Purify Myth by Jessica Valenti
-Quiverfull by Kathryn Joyce
-Radical Feminism Today by Denise Thompson
-Radical Feminist Therapy by Bonnie Burstow
-Radical Reckonings by Renate Klein
-Radically Speaking by Diane Bell...
-Rape by Susan Griffiths
-Rape in Marriage by Diana E.H. Russell
-Rape of the Wild by Ann Jones
-Refusing to Be a Man by John Stoltenberg?
-Right-Wing Woman by Andrea Dworkin
-A Room of One’s Own by Virginia Woolf
-Runaway Wives and Rogue Feminists by Margo Goodhand
-SCUM Manifesto by Valerie Solanas
-Selling Feminism by Amanda M. Gengler
-Sex Matters by Alyson J. McGregor
-Sexual Harassment of Working Women by Catharine MacKinnon
-Sexual Politics by Kate Millett
-Sexy but Psycho by Jessica Taylor
-She Dreams When She Bleeds by Nikki Taraji
-Sister Outrider by Audre Lorde
-Sisterhood is Forever by Robin Morgan
-Sisterhood is Global by Robin Morgan
-Sisterhood is Powerful by Robin Morgan
-Slavery Inc by Lydia Cacho
-Spinning and Weaving by Elizabeth Miller
-Surrogacy by Renate Klein
-Sweetening the Pill by Holly Grigg-Spall
-Taking Back the Night by Laura Lederer
-Talking Back by Bell Hooks
-Testosterone Rex by Cordelia Fine
-The Beauty Myth by Naomi Wolf
-The Creation of Patriarchy by Gerda Lerner
-The Dialectic of Sex by Shulamith Firestone
-The Feminine Mystique by Betty Friedan
-The First Sex by Elizabeth Gould
-The Legacy of Mothers: Matriarchies and the Gift Economy as Post-Capitalist Alternatives by Erella Shadmi
-The Lolita Effect by Gigi Durham
-The Man-Made World by Charlotte Perkins Gilman
The Porn Trap by Wendy Maltz
-The Prostitution of Sexuality by Kathleen Barry
-The Second Sex by Simone de Beauvoir
-The Sexual Liberals and the Attack on Feminism by Janice Raymond...
-The Spinster and Her Enemies by Sheila Jeffreys
-The Transsexual Empire by Janice Raymond
-The Women’s History of the World by Rosalind Miles
-This Bridge Called My Back by Gloria Anzaldua
-This is Your Brain on Birth Control by Sarah Hill
-Toward a Feminist Theory of the State by Catharine MacKinnon
-The Traffic in Women and Other Essays by Emma Goldman
-Trans by Helen Joyce
-Unbearable Weight by Susan Bordo
-Unpacking Queer Politics by Sheila Jeffreys
-Unscrewed by Jaclyn Friedman
-Unwell Women by Elinor Cleghorn
-The Unwomanly Face of War by Svetlana Alexievich
-The Vagina Bible by Jennifer Gunter
-A Vindication of the Rights of Woman by Mary Wollstonecraft
-The War Against Women by Marilyn French
-We Were Feminists Once by Andi Zeisler
-What Do We Need Men For by E. Jean Carroll
-When God was a Woman by Merlin Stone
-Who Cooked the Last Supper by Rosalind Miles
-Why Does He Do That by Lundy Bancroft
-Why Women Are Blamed for Everything by Jessica Taylor
-Why Women Need the Goddess by Carol P. Christ
-Wildfire by Sonia Johnson
-Witches, Midwives, and Nurses by Barbara Ehrenreich
-Witches, Witch Hunting, and Women by Silvia Federici
-Woman and Nature by Susan Griffith
-Woman Hating by Andrea Dworkin
-Woman-Identified Woman by Trudy Darty
-Women v. Religion by Karen L. Garst
-Women’s Lives, Men’s Laws by Catharine MacKinnon
-The Women’s Room by Marilyn French
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keendaanmaa · 1 year
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my old/beautiful book collection
the pretty books shelves
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my Tolkien collection
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vintage fiction
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antique and vintage Bible study books
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I have very few truly old books, but more than I remembered are from the early 20th century. List of titles and more details under the cut
pretty books shelves
Reader’s Digest editions: Little Women (Alcott), Tales from the Arabian Nights, Emma & Pride and Prejudice (Austen), Jane Eyre (Brontë), The Last of the Mohicans (Cooper), The Adventures of Robin Hood (Creswick), Two Years Before the Mast (Dana), David Copperfield, Oliver Twist & A Tale of Two Cities (Dickens), The Robe (Douglas), The Adventures, The Further Adventures, The Memoirs, & The Return of Sherlock Holmes (Doyle), A Passage to India (Forster), The House of the Seven Gables, The Scarlet Letter & Twice-Told Tales (Hawthorne), Kim (Kipling), The Sea Wolf (London), The Song of Hiawatha and other poems (Longfellow), Anne of Green Gables (Montgomery), A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (Smith), Kidnapped (Stevenson), Uncle Tom’s Cabin (Stowe), A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court & Innocents Abroad (Twain), A Journey to the Centre of the Earth & Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea (Verne)
The Confessions of Saint Augustine—E. B. Pusey translation, Franklin Library edition. This was a Christmas gift from my parents and @bluesidedown​ has the same one
The Pilgrim’s Progress (Bunyan)—CBN University Press Christian Classics. I don’t actually remember where I got this one but most likely from my dad.
Through the Looking Glass (Carroll)—Heritage Press edition with slipcover and illustrations by John Tenniel. Again, probably from my dad but not 100% sure (he gives me a LOT of books).
The Complete Canterbury Tales (Chaucer)—F. H. Hill translation, Arcturus books with slipcover and illustrations by Edward Burne-Jones and William Morris. Another Christmas gift where Blue and I got matching copies from our parents.
Heretics & Orthodoxy (Chesterton)—Hendrickson Christian Classics. Again, a Christmas gift from my parents.
Nemesis & The Mirror Crack’d From Side to Side (Christie)—Heron Books. Another one I can’t remember the origin of.
The Prairie (Cooper)—Easton Press collector’s edition. From my parents, Christmas this year. This is pretty much the handsomest book I own.
Great Expectations (Dickens)—Chatham River Press. Based on the inscription on the flyleaf this belonged to my dad first. Probably I got it as a gift or in his thinning of his collection.
The Scarlet Pimpernel (Orczy)—International Collector’s Library. Another of unknown origin.
Quo Vadis (Sienkiewicz)—International Collector’s Library. It amuses me that in organizing these books alphabetical by author’s last name, these two matching editions still ended up side by side.
Treasure Island (Stevenson)—Children’s Classics, illustrated by Milo Winter.
Treasure Island–Prince Otto–Strange Case of Dr. Jekyl and Mr. Hyde–Kidnapped–The Black Arrow–The Master of Ballantrae–David Balfour (Stevenson)—Canterbury Classics omnibus. I actually have most of these in other editions, but I keep this for the ones I don’t have elsewhere.....and keep the other editions too because I am a book-dragon.
The Prince and the Pauper (Twain)—Portland House Illustrated Classics, illustrated by Franklin Booth. Not sure where I got this one.
The Greek Myths (Graves)—Folio Society, two volumes in slipcover. These were a Christmas gift from my parents a couple years ago, because I collect fairy tales and folk tales and suchlike.
Tolkien
These are mostly newer Houghton Mifflin or HarperCollins editions. The Silmarillion has Ted Naismith illustrations; Children of Húrin has Alan Lee illustrations, as do the covers of LotR; The Hobbit and LotR have Tolkien’s original illustrations and maps, and Roverandom has cover art by him as well; and Bilbo’s Last Song, Farmer Giles of Ham, The Adventures of Tom Bombadill, and Smith of Wooton Major are all illustrated by Pauline Baynes.
vintage fiction (top down, left column first)
Malory’s Le Morte d’Arthur—Norwood Press, 1911
Stalky & Co. (Kipling)—Macmillan and Co, 1927. Completely leatherbound with gilt spine and seal on the front cover
The Master of Ballantrae & The Black Arrow (Stevenson)—Everyman’s Library, 1938
Popular Fairy Tales (Andersen)—Blackie and Son. No date, but google tells me it’s from sometime in the 30s/40s/50s based on the binding style
Jo’s Boys (Alcott)—The Children’s Press, 1965
Around the World in Eighty Days (Verne)—Dean and Son. No date, but I’m guessing mid-twentieth century
Three Cheers Secret Seven (Blyton)—Brockhampton Press, 1960
The Burgess Animal Book for Children—Little, Brown, and Company. Copyright 1948, though likely printed later
At the Back of the North Wind (MacDonald), The Little Lame Prince (Mulock), King Arthur and his Knights (Frith), All the Mowgli Stories (Kipling)—Junior Deluxe Edtions. Illustrations are copyright 1956, no print dates
The Door in the Wall (de Angeli)—Doubleday. Copyright 1949, no print date
Freckles (Porter)—Grosset & Dunlap, 1916. Very beat up and mostly held together by packing tape on the spine
The Call of the Wild (London)—Grosset & Dunlap, 1910. It has a very faded picture glued to the front cover as part of the original binding, as well as illustrations throughout. Quite worn, with many pages about to or falling out
Kilmeny of the Orchard (Montgomery)—Ryerson, 1947. This was actually printed before the Anne series was entirely published, as the list of Montgomery’s works in the front only includes the first three books in the series
Captains Courageous (Kipling)—Thrushwood Books. Date uncertain, but google tells me probably 1950s
Heidi (Spyri)—Collins, 1958. While this did originally belong to my dad, it’s the copy I read as a kid and has been on my shelf for a long time
The Mark of the Horse Lord (Sutcliff)—Oxford University Press, 1965. I learned in making this list that my copy is probably a first edition, albeit rather beat up from being a school library copy.
Warrior Scarlet (Sutcliff)—Oxford University Press, 1966. I also have a 1973 copy that still has its dust jacket.
Robinson Crusoe (Defoe)—Dent/Dutton, 1966. A beloved favourite copy that I read many times
Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea (Verne)—Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1953. Another beloved copy that I read many times, I flatly refuse to part with this one despite having a less faded and beat-up edition because 1) I am dreadfully sentimental and 2) the illustrations in this edition are much better than in the RD edition.
King Arthur and His Knights of the Round Table (Lanier)—Illustrated Junior LIbrary. Illustrations copyright 1950, no print date
antique and vintage Bible study books
Young’s Analytical Concordance—per a pencil note on the title page this was published circa. 1937, and it definitely looks the part
The Bible as History in Pictures (Keller)—Published in 1964, this is definitely outdated in terms of archaeological evidence of Bible events but it still fascinates me to see
The New English Bible: New Testament—as a Library Edition, I don’t think this strictly counts as a first edition, but it is definitely an early edition as it was printed in 1961 when the NT translation was completed (OT translation of this version wasn’t completed until 1970)
Exposition of Genesis (Leupold)—Wartburg Press, 1942
The Epistle to the Hebrews (Brown)—Banner of Truth, 1961
Luke the Physician (Ramsay)—Baker Book House, 1956
The Gospel in Ezekiel (Guthrie)—Adam and Charles Black, 1857 (or MDCCCLVII if you prefer). This is the oldest book I own, and while is is now quite beat up - the spine is 80% tape and the front cover has come off completely and been replaced with cardboard - I can tell it was a very handsome book when it was new. The spine is bound in dark blue and brown leather, with gilt lettering and decoration, and the edges of the pages have beautiful multicolour marbling on them.
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Recommendations for Content
I don’t know if you have them, but my mom was watching Little Fires Everywhere, so here’s Pearl (Lexi Underwood) and Mia (Kerry Washington, obviously)
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I actually do have Little Fires Everywhere! Not very much, but, I can always try to circulate more. Pearl Warren | Mia Warren | Pauline Hawthorne (Anika Noni Rose’s character |  Madeline Ryan (Nicole Beharie’s character)
Sidenote: Lexi Warren can SING. The first time I ever saw her, she and Shahadi Wright Joseph were singing Suddenly Seymour on Instagram. AMAZING VOCALS, and you know I love some Black Girl Magic. 
You have probably suggested more content to me than anyone else, and I wish that I could find more of some of those, but I will be diving back into some of the past ones to see if more content has made it to the site since then.
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isfeed · 2 years
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Elon Musk’s first Hyperloop tunnel in California is gone
Elon Musk’s first Hyperloop tunnel in California is gone
The Hyperloop tube hosted student competitions in 2018 and 2019. | Photo by Pauline Acalin for The Verge Elon Musk’s first prototype Hyperloop tunnel is no more. Bloomberg reports that the roughly one-mile-long white steel tunnel running along Jack Northrop Avenue near SpaceX headquarters in Hawthorne, California, has been removed and will be replaced with parking spaces for employees. Perhaps…
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phptonki · 2 years
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Little fire everywhere
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LITTLE FIRE EVERYWHERE SERIES
Spoiler alert: The rest of this post contains spoilers from Little Fires Everywhere Episode 6, "The Uncanny." In the flashback episode, a young Mia began a romantic relationship with her photography professor Pauline Hawthorne. In an early episode, Pearl described her mother's carefree attitude towards sex, telling Moody that Mia sleeps with "whoever she wants, whenever she wants." And Episode 6 reveals Mia had an epic love story in her past. Putting Mia's race front and center is only one of the major changes to her character in the series, though. In the book, Mia's race as well as the race of her daughter Pearl is left undefined, but Mia, who is black in the show, often points out how her race complicates her life in Shaker Heights - challenging Elena's offer of a maid job and urging Pearl to be extra careful around cops, for example.
LITTLE FIRE EVERYWHERE SERIES
It was apparent from very early on in the Hulu series that the miniseries' version of Mia would be different from the book's version. Mia's sexuality in Little Fires Everywhere added a complicated new element to her backstory. The most visible change to Mia's character is her race, which added a whole new, complex layer to her contentious relationship with Elena, but the show also made a very important change to her love life as well. Many of the changes Hulu's Little Fires Everywhere made from the 2017 novel are pretty subtle, but one character stands out as by far the most different from her book version: Mia Warren.
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polniaczek · 4 years
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Look at this. What do you see? A monster. I see power. Beauty. Ugliness. Gods and mothers. Virgins. I see the monsters too. And I love them, fiercely.
Little Fires Everywhere  |  1.06  “The Uncanny”
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padmaddean · 4 years
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Young Mia & Pauline
Little Fires Everywhere s01e06
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anyabantikvids · 2 years
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Multicouples | Dancing With Your Ghoust
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Anika Noni Rose as Pauline Hawthorne
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The Tony-winning actress guests on Hulu’s Little Fires Everywhere. 
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dotzines · 6 months
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Magic Book - Contributors list
Be sure to check their links in the thread and follow them all~ ♥
🧙‍♂️ Cover Art
Zmijowka - @/zmijowka (IG)
🧙‍♂️ Artists & Writers
_spacekitten__ - @/_spacekitten__ (IG) Abby - @/wht.ablum (IG) AlyKuro - @/Aly_Kuro (Twitter) amorpheus-blob - @amorpheus-blob Anjell-O - @/kaleidoscopoliscomic (Twitter) ardett - @ardett Aruudlay - linktr.ee/aruudlay Beartie - beartiexiansheng.wixsite.com Bee - @/hivemindmoshpit (IG) belinhainha - @/semideias_yet (Twitter) Blehcado - @blehcado Bridget - @/awfulartsassin (Twitter) Bubbles - @/Bubblesdoodles (Twitter) calatarii - @calatarii CentaurWorks - centaurworks.crd.co CJ - crackerjackalope64.itch.io Clow - pearlrose.uwu.ai Confused Alpaca - @confusedalpacart crowstrel - @crowstrel crystowl - @crystowl Deceit - @/DeceitDeception (Twitter) Diane Ramic - @dianeramic Doc Crowley - @/homlonk (IG) DOL Ay - @/dolay999 (ArtStation) Doppio Hearn - @doppiohearn Durotos - @durotoswrites Echoing_melody - @/echoing_melody (IG) Emmy - @/art_emsi (Twitter) Erin O'Connor - @/erins_easel (IG) Eros - @/emperor_taiga (Twitter) Etteee - @/Etteee (AO3) Feiyu - @/_feiyu (Twitter) Flaire - @/FlairesArt (Twitter) flea - @/nlg734 (AO3) Gala_xicbun - @/cynnamynbun (IG) ghostqueennotmean - @/sovreignspecter (Twitter) Gina - @/Kamado_Gi (Twitter) girlpire - mariishome.carrd.co gleamiarts - @gleamiarts GoblinsAndTea - goblinsandtea.carrd.co Hazel Hawthorne - @hazel-drawthorne Hiinatsu - @/Hiinatsu_ (Twitter) Hisairen - @/hisairen (IG) HopeStoryteller - @/HopeStoryteller (AO3) Iced_Lemon - @/Iced_Lemon_Draw (Twitter) ierlix - @/_ierlix_ (IG) ItssaMeMari - @/ItssaMeMari (Twitter) J.D. Harlock - @/JD_Harlock (Twitter) Jasper Y. Grace - @jasperygrace JBreadcrumbss - @/bread.crumbss (IG) Jing - @/sipsteaandbleach (IG) justrainysunshines - @/justrainysunshines (IG) Kacie Clarke - @/kc_animation (IG) Karla Jones - @/robokarla (IG) KeaneArts - @keanearts Keldan - @/KeldanCon (Twitter) KittyMagicite - kittymagicite.carrd.co kyaurum - kyaurum.carrd.co Linkyu - @linkyu Lora B - @lorablackmane LumieArtz - @/lumieartz (IG) Lunarials - @/lunarials_ (IG) Mace Klein - @/peahead (IG) magiician_hero - @/magiician_hero (Twitter) Mangetsu - @mangetsuame Mango Gummi - @/mango.gummi (IG) Max HP Art - @maxhpart MaxieMatsu - @/maxiematsu (IG) MelloWammy - @/mellowammy (IG) Memento Moray - @/memento_moray (Twitter) Mnemonic Mew - @mnemonicmew Mori no Majou - @majouartings Nate - @/nnateywriting (Twitter9 Nerd_enough - @/nerd_enough (IG) Noll Griffin - @nollthere nowlbowl - @/nowlbowl (IG) oliversaurus.ink - @/oliversaurus.ink (IG) Pana - @fruityrats Partysol - @/reymazingart (IG) Pauline Reinacher - paulinereinacher.wixsite.com/portfolio Pepperly - pepperly.art Phenylart - @/phenylart (IG) pnwmango - @/pnw.mango (IG) PoppyMori - @/poppymori (IG) PropertyOfHog - @/PropertyOfHog (Twitter) Rainier Wall - @/reymazingart (IG) RaptorKizzie - @kizzness ReactorCoreArt - @reactorcoreart saan-vi - @saan-vi-art Sbeve Arts - @/sbev._e (IG) Sidewalkleaf - @/sidewalkleaf (Twitter) Skunkoon - @/_skunkoon_ (IG) Sophia - @carelessapples soulzerofever - @/soulzerofever (Twitter) Sunfloral Chaos - @/SunfloralChaos (Twitter) The Rabbit Follower - @/RabbitFo11ower (Twitter) TheArtArmature - theartarmature.carrd.co Tina Huynh - @charitet TOR WAR - @/torwar_ (IG) trash VForce - @/vforce_8 (IG) XilaXena - @/xilaxena (IG) ZeraScout - @/zerascout (IG) *Image by archjoe on Freepik
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gdvasarchive · 4 years
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i love these actual girlfriends with my whole heart.
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pyranoskope · 7 years
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Pyranoskope: Legacy  ★ Names Meaning (Part XVII)
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the-paintrist · 4 years
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Gerrit Beneker at his easel 1915 painting "Sure! We'll finish the job"
Gerrit Albertus Beneker (January 26, 1882 – October 23, 1934) was an American painter and illustrator best known for his paintings of industrial scenes and for his poster work in World War I.
Beneker was born on January 26, 1882 in Grand Rapids, Michigan, the son of Bartel Albertus Beneker, who had immigrated from Serooskerke in the Netherlands, and Pauline Catherine Steketee. He first studied at the Chicago Art Institute, where his teachers included John Vanderpoel and Frederick Richardson; later he transferred to the Art Students League in New York. In September 1907 he married Flora Judd Van Vranken from Marcellus, New York, with whom he would have four children.
After working as an illustrator in New York, he became a student of Charles Webster Hawthorne in 1912 at the Cape Cod School of Art; although his work brought about frequent moves, he returned to the area in the summers and in 1920 bought a summer house in Truro, Massachusetts.
In July 1918, Beneker was hired, under the title of "Expert Aid, Navy Department", to create posters and illustrations for the war effort. It was in this period that he painted his most familiar work, "Sure We'll Finish the Job", which sold over three million copies.
Later Beneker spent four years painting workers of the Hydraulic Pressed Steel Company in Cleveland, Ohio as part of a labor-management relations improvement project; similar projects were carried out at the General Electric plant in Schenectady, New York and at the Rohm and Haas plant in Philadelphia.
He died on 23 October 1934 in Truro.
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