Aight i just sent a question about Lana's ethnicity so here's a follow up sorry lol. If we get a Gone TV show, what are your thought? what do u want/not want, and do you think that a lighter-skinned but still Native American/Hispanic actress could play Lana (related to my last question)? P.S. I love ur blog
(2) This is really late, but I still cant wrap my mind around the fact that Mike literally put the effort into calling her grandpa Chumash and still says he doesn’t see her as Native American. Kind of baffles me tbh, but he retcons so much in his work that I wouldn’t be surprised if he didn’t reread his books after publishing. Anyway, the best case scenario would be a Hispanic/Native American actor, yeah, but knowing him and how firm he is on basically any point he makes ever, she’ll probably just be Hispanic.
I'm confused about Lana's ethnicity (AKA 70% of the Gone fandom). I'm hearing different things from everyone I've asked and i've seen u post about it so here i am lol. Although it says Lana's grandpa is Chumash in Gone, MG says she's hispanic/doesn't think she's Native American, but in the end of Light, she's referred to as white. I think she just has lighter skin, which would make sense b/c I'm about 50% Mexican Native American but quite pale. Srry this question is a mess, gonna submit one more
Do you really hate Michael grant or is that a joke??
i dont hate him but i dont necessarily like him either. he’s pretty sus tbh and id rather not support him, but i do enjoy his books more than id like to. but again, he’s pretty sus for the mary thing and his responses to valid criticisms and the ending of bzrk and the bzrk sex scene with sneezing in the face bc wtf mike
The crest featured ornate letters “C” and “A” in gold thread over a background that showed a golden eagle and a mountain lion. Beneath the crest was the Latin motto of Coates Academy: Ad augusta, per angusta. To high places by narrow roads […] There had always been a rivalry between the kids in town, who thought of themselves as normal kids, and the Coates kids, who tended to be wealthy and, although the Academy tried to disguise the fact, strange. Coates was the place your rich parents sent you when other schools found you “difficult.”