Hiiii I love your work! Can you do a web weaving post of the feeling that your childhood has died / was stolen? Thank you!
and i'll never go home again
@/grievng (tumblr) / unknown / Mitski Class of 2013 (via @softhe4rted) / Marjane Satrapi Persepolis: The Story of a Childhood / Liana Finck (via @softhe4rted) / @sovereign-suggestion
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it’s my party (i’ll cry if i want to)
John Steinbeck, East of Eden
Lorde, Secrets From a Girl (Who’s Seen It All)
Liana Finck, for The New Yorker
Crywank, Memento Mori
Mary Oliver, Of Power and Time
Raleigh Ritchie, Big & Scared
@gaycommunist (x)
Jesse Ball, How to Set a Fire and Why
Catherynne M. Valente, Deathless
Lucille Clifton, I Am Running Into A New Year
Dean Lewis, Waves
Jenny Slate, Little Weirds
Chaz Hutton (x)
30/90, from Tick, Tick... Boom! (2021)
Nikki Giovanni, Adulthood II
Crystal Caves, Suffocation
Alec Benjamin, Older (Lyric Video)
@angelcommunist (x)
Sandra Cisneros, Eleven
Lorde, Ribs
The Killers, All These Things That I’ve Done
Sue Zhao (x)
Li-Young Lee, A Hymn to Childhood
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Liana finck (@lianafinck)
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books cristina read in 2023: let there be light - liana finck
“But the knife will not budge. (It is God, of course. She grasps the tiny blade between finger and thumb.)”
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Here’s another book rec for y’all!!!
[Image ID: The cover for “Let There Be Light: A Story of Her Creation” by Liana Finck, Author of “Passing for Human.” There is a cartoon of smiling woman in a simple dress wearing a small crown and laying on a cloud with planets in the background. She is also holding a star wand that she’s using to point at the title, the star making the tittle of the i. /.End ID]
Let There Be Light
The Real Story of Her Creation
By Liana Finck
In this ambitious and transcendent graphic novel, Liana Finck turns her keen eye to reimagining the story of Genesis with G-d as a woman, Abraham as a resident of New York City, and Rebekah as a robot, among many other delightful twists. In Finck's retelling, the millennia-old stories of Adam and Eve, Abraham and Isaac, and Jacob and Esau haunt the pages like familiar but partially forgotten nursery rhymes―transmuted by time but still deeply resonant. With her trademark insightfulness, wry humor, and supple, moving visual style, Finck accentuates the latent sweetness and timeless wisdom of the original text, infusing it with wit and whimsy while retaining every ounce of its spiritual heft.
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