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#Rachel Reinert
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Reading List
to be updated constantly
Articles:
"Why Women Online Can’t Stop Reading Fairy Porn" by C.T. Jones for Rolling Stone
"They Called 911 for Help. Police and Prosecutors Used a New Junk Science to Decide They Were Liars." by Brett Murphy for ProPublica
"‘I Think My Husband Is Trashing My Novel on Goodreads!’" by Emily Gould for The Cut
"Woman in Retrograde" by Isabel Cristo for The Cut
"The unwanted Spanish soccer kiss is textbook male chauvinism. Don’t excuse it" by Moira Donegan for the Guardian
"I Started the Media Men List" by Moira Donegan for The Cut
"What Moira Donegan Did for Young Women Writers" by Jordana Rosenfeld for The Nation
"The Key Detail Missing From the Narrative About O.J. and Race" by Joel Anderson for Slate
"The Coiled Ferocity of Zendaya" by Matt Zoller Seitz for Vulture
"OJ Simpson died the comfortable death in old age that Nicole Brown should have had" by Moira Donegan for The Guardian
"Norm Macdonald Was the Hater O.J. Simpson Could Never Outrun" by Miles Klee for Rolling Stone
"Trans Stylists and Makeup Artists Are Reshaping Red Carpet Looks. Will They Get the Credit They’re Due?" by James Factora
"The ‘perfect Aryan’ child used in Nazi propaganda was actually Jewish" by Terrence McCoy for The Washington Post
"There Are Too Many Books; Or, Publishing Shouldn’t Be All About Quantity" by Maris Kreizman for Literary Hub
"An O.J. Juror on What The People v. O.J. Simpson Got Right and Wrong" by Ashley Reese for Vulture
"Super Cute Please Like" by Nicole Lipman for N + 1 Magazine
Essays:
Not That Bad: Dispatches from Rape Culture edited by Roxanne Gay
Creep: Accusations and Confessions by Myriam Gurba
"On Chappell Roan and Gen Z Pop" by Miranda Reinert
"In Memory of Nicole Brown Simpson" by Andrea Dworkin
"My Gender Is Dyke" by Alexandria Juarez for Autostraddle
"Columnists and Their Lives of Quiet Desperation" by Hamilton Nolan
Nonfiction:
Belabored: A Vindication of the Rights of Pregnant Women by Lyz Lenz
The Feminine Mystique by Betty Friedan
This American Ex-Wife: How I Ended My Marriage and Started My Life by Lyz Lenz
The Gentrification of the Mind: Witness to a Lost Imagination by Sarah Schulman
Savage Appetites: Four True Stories of Women, Crime, and Obsession by Rachel Monroe
The Sexual Politics of Meat: A Feminist-Vegetarian Critical Theory by Carol J. Adams
Eros the Bittersweet by Anne Carson
Who Owns This Sentence? A History of Copyrights and Wrongs by David Bellos & Alexandre Montagu
The Once and Future Sex: Going Medieval on Women's Roles in Society by Eleanor Janega
Moby Dyke: An Obsessive Quest to Track Down the Last Remaining Lesbian Bars in America by Krista Burton
University of Nike: How Corporate Cash Bought American Higher Education by Joshua Hunt
What it Feels Like for a Girl by Paris Lees
Female Masculinity by J. Jack Halberstam
The Theory of Everything Else: A Voyage Into the World of the Weird by Dan Schreiber
Stiff: The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers by Mary Roach
Better Living Through Birding: Notes from a Black Man in the Natural World by Christian Cooper
Rivermouth: A Chronicle of Language, Faith, and Migration by Alejandra Oliva
Unlikeable Female Characters: The Women Pop Culture Wants You to Hate by Anna Bogutskaya
Born a Crime: Stories From a South African Childhood by Trevor Noah
Caste: The Origins of Our Discontents by Isabel Wilkerson
The Lady from the Black Lagoon: Hollywood Monsters and the Lost Legacy of Milicent Patrick by Mallory O'Meara
Being Mortal: Medicine and What Matters in the End by Atul Gawande
Stone Butch Blues by Leslie Feinberg
Eyeliner: A Cultural History by Zahra Hankir
Against Technoableism: Rethinking Who Needs Improvement by Ashley Shew
The Wager: A Tale of Shipwreck, Mutiny and Murder by David Grann
Know My Name by Chanel Miller
Empire of Pain: The Secret History of the Sackler Dynasty by Patrick Radden Keefe
Novelist as a Vocation by Haruki Murakami
Rape-Revenge Films: A Critical Study by Alexandra Heller-Nicholas
Fiction:
To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf
Middlemarch by George Eliot
Just as You Are by Camille Kellogg
Just Happy to Be Here by Naomi Kanakia
The Misadventures of an Amateur Naturalist by Ceinwen Langley
Family Meal by Bryan Washington
Jurassic Park by Michael Crichton
The Mountain in the Sea by Ray Nayler
Ring Shout by P. Djèlí Clark
My Heart Is a Chainsaw by Stephen Graham Jones
An Island Princess Starts a Scandal by Adriana Herrera
Blackouts by Justin Torres
We Do What We Do in the Dark by Michelle Hart
Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro
Less Is Lost by Andrew Sean Greer
The Faithless by C.L. Clark
Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir
The Poppy War by R.F. Kuang
The Disenchantments by Nina LaCour
Everything Leads to You by Nina LaCour
Bliss Montage by Ling Ma
Pachinko by Min Jin Lee
The Institute by Stephen King
Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell by Susanna Clarke
Frankenstein: Junji Ito Story Collection by Junji Ito
Her Body and Other Parties: Stories by Carmen Maria Machado
Young Mungo by Douglas Stuart
The Dark Forest by Liu Cixin
Snuff by Terry Pratchett
Travelers Along the Way: A Robin Hood Remix by Aminah Mae Safi
Only a Monster by Vanessa Len
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rwisozko · 2 years
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[PDF] Download In Bloom: A Step-by-Step Guide to Drawing Lush Florals BY Rachel Reinert
Download Or Read PDF In Bloom: A Step-by-Step Guide to Drawing Lush Florals - Rachel Reinert Free Full Pages Online With Audiobook.
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  [*] Download PDF Here => In Bloom: A Step-by-Step Guide to Drawing Lush Florals
[*] Read PDF Here => In Bloom: A Step-by-Step Guide to Drawing Lush Florals
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tgrahamn · 2 years
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Download Color Workshop: A Step-by-Step Guide to Creating Artistic Effects PDF BY Rachel Reinert
Download Or Read PDF Color Workshop: A Step-by-Step Guide to Creating Artistic Effects - Rachel Reinert Free Full Pages Online With Audiobook.
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  [*] Download PDF Here => Color Workshop: A Step-by-Step Guide to Creating Artistic Effects
[*] Read PDF Here => Color Workshop: A Step-by-Step Guide to Creating Artistic Effects
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thefrogholler · 3 years
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Musical Birthday Notes - March 10th
Musical Birthday Notes – March 10th
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goldenmusicmoments · 3 years
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Top 10 Albums Of 2020:
Hailey Whitters - The Dream.
Alina Baraz - It Was Divine.
Taylor Swift - Folklore & Evermore.
Echosmith - Lonely Generation.
Gordi - Our Two Skins.
Ruston Kelly - Shape & Destroy.
Lennon Stella - Three.Two.One.
Charley Crockett - Welcome To Hard Times.
Rachel Reinert - Into The Blue.
070 Shake - Modus Vivendi.
Okay so again it is was really difficult selecting just 10 albums out of 103 albums released this year that I listened to. I had marked 30 of those albums as potential contenders for my top 10 list. From there I managed to get down to just 15 albums and here is where it became even more difficult. I really didn't want to eliminate any of them, however after going over them again and again I managed to finalise a top 10 list. I had finalised the list and then just before I was about to post this list I came across another new album released this year that I hadn't yet come across. I listened to it and it guaranteed itself a place in this list, thus sadly I had to eliminate an album that had made the list. These were the albums that stood out the most to me, from what they did as albums, the journeys they took me on and the atmosphere these records created. These were the ones that impacted me the most and left an impression that was memorable. 
The list isn’t arranged in any particular order, however the first album listed which is ‘The Dream’ by Hailey Whitters for me is the album of the year. Also I placed both ‘Folklore’ & ‘Evermore’ by Taylor Swift in this list, yet I have counted them as one due to them being sibling records. 
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Highly recommend Who I Am Right Now by Rachel Reinert especially if you are healing from something it’s so perfect
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soundslikenashville · 4 years
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like-a-perfectrhyme · 5 years
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new rachel reinert on the same day as new taylor swift? i mean, im not complaining
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whitecriminalcastle · 6 years
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ivanerikb-blog · 5 years
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Sketchbook tour - part II - I drew these roses on Valentines day... I guess that's a really 'introverted artist' thing, drawing roses for yourself on feb 14...😅😆 Again, I followed Rachel Reinert's A+ tutorial in her book 'In bloom' 🤩
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alwayssummerblog · 6 years
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New Artist Spotlight: Rachel Reinert - Exclusive Interview
Rachel Reinert is breaking through as a solo artist and “Dark Star” in country music. The former lead singer of Gloriana already has tours with Taylor Swift, Rascal Flatts, and more under her belt from her tenure in the band. Now paving a name for herself as an artist, her new single, “Dark Star,” chronicles her story of moving to Nashville, joining a band, leaving a band, and chasing her dream. Reinert told us all about the song and much more. Read the interview below.
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Your single “Dark Star” will is available today. Tell us about the new single. What’s the backstory behind the song?
Most people might recognize me from my former band, Gloriana. I decided after 8 years and three albums to walk away from everything-the band, label, team, management, tour bus, income, etc. in order to pursue my initial dreams of being a solo artist. That was almost three years ago, and since then I’ve had to face a lot of hard times, struggles, and challenges.
I wrote “Dark Star” with KS Rhoades and Joe Pisapia about a year and a half ago, and at the time I was really struggling with feeling like I was falling behind and everybody else was just passing me by. I was genuinely afraid of being forgotten or that people would remember me for these pieces of my life that just don’t truly define who I am.
I had also heard these false rumors about myself, mainly that I had given up on music, which was even more frustrating. In reality, I was putting the work in quietly, hiding out from the spotlight, and taking my time. This song was my reminder to myself that I still have this light within me that people just haven’t seen or heard yet. It’s really filled with more hope and optimism than anything.
“Dark Star” is a follow-up to your single, “Cool.” What motivated you to release “Cool” as your debut single as a solo artist?
I really wanted people to get a sense of my musical direction as a solo artist, and I think “Cool” really defines my Laurel Canyon, 70s inspired, California-Country sound. I wanted to come out with something that I thought would surprise people about where I am musically today...and its just a special song that came from a very real and personal place for me.
You originally were a part of the group Gloriana, where you earned an award for "Breakthrough Artist of the Year," at the American Music Awards. What inspired you to start a solo career?
I first moved to Nashville when I was 16 after signing my first publishing deal. My dream, first and foremost, was to be a solo artist. I put that dream on hold when I was given the opportunity to join Gloriana at just 18 years old. I’m so thankful for the amazing experiences I had in my 8 years with the band, but I was really starting to feel a bit creatively stuck and that my journey with Gloriana had come to an end. I needed to walk away from it all in order to find myself-not only as an artist, but as a person. So really, that was the inspiration. To get back to my original dreams, challenge myself, and grow.
How has your musical style changed since going solo?
In every sense. Being in a band that has a very specific sound requires a lot of compromise. So, now, being in complete creative control has allowed me to really explore and experiment and push myself outside of any limitations or boundaries. My music is reflective of me in every sense - where I’m from (originally a Southern California girl), the kind of music my parents raised me on (Fleetwood Mac, Neil Young, Tom Petty, Jackson Browne), and my personal experiences. There has been a lot of trial and error over the past three years getting the sound right... but I’m so happy with it and it feels/sounds like ME.
What’s the best musical advice you have ever received?
Be yourself. Don’t try to copy anyone else or keep up with what’s musically trending. You only wind up feeling like you’re chasing the dragon.
I think it’s better to fail at being yourself than to succeed being phony.
Who would be your dream collaboration and why?
Stevie Nicks. Because she’s fiercely feminine, badass, and a creative genius and I’m so insanely inspired by everything about her.
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Listen to Reinert’s powerful new single, “Dark Star,” everywhere now: https://onerpm.lnk.to/DarkStar.
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colourmanic · 3 years
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#EzRepost @aileen.chew with @ezrepostapp I am indeed very very very pleased and satisfied with this piece... and I gotta tell myself - Stop doing too many reels on this !! 😂😂 Goshh, I tell you... these cactuses from Botanical Wonderland by Rachel Reinert is so therapeutic to colour and you can add in whatever colour combo you want - her drawings are versatile and flexible for your mind to explore ❤️ #botanicalwonderland #botanicgarden #rachelreinert #rachelreinertcoloringbook #rachelreinertstudio #prismacolorpencils #prismacolors #prismacolor #prisma #creativelycoloring #wonderfulcolouring #colouringforadults #coloriage #coloringhobby #colortherapy #colorinspiration #lapisdecor #colourmanic #easycolouring #mycreativelife #mygreatescape #coloriagepouradultes #adultcolouringpages #adultcoloringclub #artecomoterapia #fangcolourfulworld https://www.instagram.com/p/CWlppi2MOTs/?utm_medium=tumblr
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onecountrycom-blog · 6 years
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Gloriana's Rachel Reinert Discusses Her Long Journey to Going Solo & New Single "Cool"— "This is Who I Am"
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For eight years, Rachel Reinert traveled the world as part of country trio Gloriana. The band saw success with hit singles "(Kissed You) Good Night" and "Wild At Heart," and won an ACM Award for Top New Vocal Group. Rachel, who moved to Nashville at 16 with the dream of being a solo artist, knew her chance at a solo career was getting slimmer. So in 2015, she decided it was time to leave the band. While she says the decision was difficult, as Gloriana was like family to her, she knew the moment to pursue a career on her own had come. "I had moved to Nashville at a pretty young age, wanting to be a solo artist," Rachel tells One Country over the phone. "I knew there would be a day that would come that I would feel like I needed to hang my hat up with the Gloriana thing and pursue that. It wasn't any specific event. There was no dramatic thing that went on or anything like that. It really came down to me feeling like my journey was over with that. I'd given it three albums and eight years of my life. It just felt like the right thing, at the right time." While Rachel is uncertain if her former bandmates, brothers Tom and Mike Gossin, have heard her new single, "Cool," she says they have been in touch over the years and tried their best to keep things amicable.
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"When you're with people for that long and one person decided that they want to go in a different direction, it's hard to keep those bonds the way that they once were," she admits. The path to a solo career wasn't as easy as Rachel had anticipated. Once people in the industry learned she left Gloriana, phone calls and writing appointments with songwriters were few and far between. People she thought were her friends were nowhere to be found and she had to sell her house to make ends meet. "When you feel like you are just stuck and people are ghosting you left and right and they're not responding to you, or they're falsely promising you things and then there's no follow through, that wears on you," she says softly. "I spent pretty much all of 2016 going through an endless loop of that and it wore me down. It was probably the hardest year of my life." Despite these hardships, Rachel refused to give up on her dream. She remained positive, hit the reset button and kept listening to an internal voice that told her, "You've gotta keep going." Piece by piece, she built her solo career from the ground up and Rachel says she's more grateful now for every success that has come her way. "Going through the difficult times and getting really pissed off at people treating me like s--t, I think that motivated me more than anything. It was like, 'Okay, I'm going to not prove these people wrong but I'm going to prove myself right,'" she explains. Rachel has most of the songs written for her forthcoming solo album, likely due out in 2019. She has co-written each one and says songwriting was a very cathartic outlet for her throughout the ups and downs 2016 brought. Her debut single, "Cool," is an introduction to her solo project with a distinct Laurel Canyon influence. The California native says her roots will be heard in the new music. This sweeping Laurel Canyon sound can be heard throughout the laidback "Cool," which Rachel penned with producer David Naish and Melissa Fuller. She went into the session wanting to write about her first love and it evolved into a song that discussed their relationship and how it changed into a lifelong friendship. "It's all true to me because it is a unique situation where I had my first love and was crazy about this guy, we were crazy about each other. Then, we had this huge falling out and this really messy break up and over the span of almost 15 years, we've managed to develop this friendship," she explains. "'Cool' is] looking back on it and going, 'This is what made me who I am today.'"  Completely invested in her solo career, Rachel says she has total ownership over the project this time around. She adds that "Cool" sets up the music she'll be releasing in the future and hopes that listeners will have a better understanding of who she is through her solo work. "It really is such a pillar to this California country sound that I've been working on for so long and I also wanted to come out with something that people weren't expecting me to come out with," she admits. "I know that it is a very different song, it's a different sounding song. It's also a huge piece of my heart and so, I just wanted people to know from the get-go what this sound is. This is the California country sound that I'm going with and this is me, this is who I am."  Read the full article
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thefrogholler · 2 years
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Happy Birthday Rachel Reinert! – #countrymusic singer – solo artist – best known with – #Gloriana – group hits include – Wild At Heart – (Kissed You) Good Night – 3/10/1989
See more #musicalbirthdaynotes at TheFrogHoller.com
#RachelReinert #thefrogholler
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freedownloadpdf · 3 years
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{DOWNLOAD} In Bloom A Step-by-Step Guide to Drawing Lush Florals EBook
{DOWNLOAD} In Bloom: A Step-by-Step Guide to Drawing Lush Florals EBook
In Bloom: A Step-by-Step Guide to Drawing Lush Florals
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[PDF] Download In Bloom: A Step-by-Step Guide to Drawing Lush Florals Ebook | READ ONLINEhttp://read.ebookcollection.space/?book=1640210202
Author : Rachel Reinert Publisher : Get Creative 6 ISBN : 1640210202 Publication Date : 2018-10-2 Language : Pages : 144
To Download or Read this book, click link below:
http://read.ebookcollection.space/?book=1640210202
Ebook | READ ONLINE
Synopsis : {DOWNLOAD} In Bloom: A Step-by-Step Guide to Drawing Lush Florals EBook
From the author of adult-coloring sensations Botanical Wonderland and Desert Wonderland, as well as the bestselling Color Workshop, comes a stunning guide to drawing a garden full of flowers.   Rachel Reinert is the perfect artist to explain the intricacies of drawing flowers. With the straightforward, step-by step instructions that are the hallmark of her teaching style, In Bloom covers more than 30 flowers from around the world, from beloved tulips, roses, violets, and tiger lilies to the more exotic proteas, kangaroo paws, and birds of paradise. Featuring matte paper stock and instructions on coloring your drawings, this is an exceptionally beautiful book with a decidedly modern feel.
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soundslikenashville · 5 years
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