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#atmospheria
catherinewahlen · 3 years
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The palette for this beauty will be showing up on my blog this weekend, just click the link in my bio+sign up so you don’t miss a post! I solemnly swear to never send you any spam, who eats spam anymore? . . . . . . . #illustrator #thedailysketch #procreate #ipadartist #beautifuldestinations #inked #digitalpainter #watercolorist #tonesofart #inkstagram #procreateartist #atmospheria #visualambassador #linework #letsgosomewhere #digitalartist #digitalpainting #traditionalart #passionpassport #exploretocreate #impressionism #gouche #modernart #contemporary #onmyeasel (at Colorado) https://www.instagram.com/p/CQfG7nTgV_w/?utm_medium=tumblr
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missroserose · 3 years
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Wednesday Reading Meme: Atmospheria Edition
Hello, tumblr!  I used to post these over on Dreamwidth, but for the past two and a half years, I’ve been reading almost exclusively fanfiction, with only occasional forays into book-land.  I’ve thought occasionally about writing about the fic I was reading, but frankly, most of it was short-ish works intended for easy gratification.  (Not that I'm knocking easy gratification!  But a 3500-word story about a captive Dean Winchester watching an evil version of himself and Castiel have sex is...entertaining, certainly, just maybe not in a way that lends itself to a lot of deeper analysis.) (Well, other than perhaps a judicious use of the "this better not awaken anything in me" meme.  Ahem.) That said! I've read a lot of fanfiction over the past few years, and plan to continue.  So I think I'm going to add a Fanfiction Spotlight slot to the Wednesday Reading Meme format.  Chances are there'll have been something I've read in any given week that feels like it deserves attention.  And in the meantime, I’ve been reading Actual Paper Books lately, largely as a way to wean myself of the doomscrolling habit...and since I’m low-key boycotting Goodreads these days, I figure I’ll try writing about them here.
So without further ado...
What I've recently finished reading The Starless Sea, by Erin Morgenstern.  I'd previously read The Night Circus on a long-ass plane flight, and it turned out to be almost the perfect book for it—pure escapism so heavily drenched in dreamy poetic atmosphere that I could sink into it like a hot bath, and forget for much of the six-hour flight time that I was crammed into a tiny coach seat.  Sea is definitely in that same vein, but this time around I found the thinness and uncertainty of the plot to be rather more frustrating, in a way that overpowered the richness of the atmosphere.   There was still plenty there to enjoy, including a portal fantasy to any bibliophile's world of pure wish-fulfillment, and some meditations on love and change, and one quote in particular on the nature of love that's stuck with me...but I don't think the whole thing hangs together as well as it promised, at the start.  And while (as a fellow author) I completely understand that things change as you write them, when you reach a point in a story where it feels like the author has as little idea as you do what happens next, I find it a little demoralizing. Morpho Eugenia, by A.S. Byatt.  Now that I think about it, this novella makes for an interesting comparison to Sea, because it's similarly atmospheric, albeit less in the dreamy-imaginative-lovers-and-poets vein than the neo-Victorian highly-organized-and-tightly-laced-household-full-of-dark-undercurrents style.  It also does absolutely nothing surprising, plot-wise; it's 180 pages long and I think I'd identified most of the major themes and guessed the major arcs/big plot reveal by page fifteen.  That's not necessarily a fault in and of itself—there's something comforting about a story that does exactly what you expect, and it does a good job threading the needle of ladling on the foreshadowing without (quite) hitting you over the head with what's going on.  But frankly, the narrative stumbles somewhat in its slavish devotion to form.   As an example:  our protagonist is an entolomologist and atheist, penniless in the wake of a shipwreck that robbed him of his specimens and research, who finds himself living on the largesse of a wealthy family whose patriarch has an interest in natural philosophy.  So there are, of course, extensive passages on the nature and habits of various insects (meant to be excerpts from his work), on the potential space for the existence of God in natural selection (meant to be arguments from the patriarch), and even an extensive semi-allegorical insectoid fairy tale (written by another character entirely), which...certainly is all in keeping with the Victorian style, but none of which really feels particularly necessary to the story, here in this age where encyclopedias are a thing and anyone reading a neo-Victorian novella probably has at least a passing familiarity with the Deist arguments being held in the wake of Darwin's publication of On the Origin of Species.  Some cynical part of me wonders if Byatt was trying to write a whole novel, only to discover that the main thrust of her story was nowhere near substantial enough to support one, and even with all the padding she only managed to reach novella length. What I'm currently reading Technically I haven't started it, but The Conjugial Angel is the other Byatt novella in the collection I picked up, so I'm probably going to power through that just so I won't feel guilty about tossing the book on the "to be donated" pile.  If it's anything like Morpho Eugenia, I expect to feel thoroughly "meh" about it, but hey!  Maybe I'll be surprised! What I plan to read next I have two specific recommended-by-friends books in my queue.  The first is Aleksander Solzhenitsyn's One Day In The Life of Ivan Denisovich, which I'm rather looking forward to despite my somewhat uneven relationship with Russian literature.  It was recommended to me by @coffeeandchemicals, and the bits and pieces of Solzhenitsyn I've encountered in the wild make me suspect I'll find his perspective interesting.  And even if I end up hating it, well...it's short. The second is Margo Lanagan's book Tender Morsels, which I know very little about other than it's a dark fairy tale.  But it was sent by @introvertia, who's become quite dear to me, and the theme of it (the jacket cover promises an Edenic tale of three women turned out of their personal Heaven and having to deal with the harsh realities of the outside world) certainly feels appropriate to 2020. Fanfiction Spotlight I was particularly taken with the premise of @zoemathemata's Supernatural/Supernatural RPF story "Folie a Deux".  Sam and Dean Winchester are held captive in Lofty Pines Mental Institution for unknown reasons, slowly being brainwashed into thinking that they're two run-of-the-mill dudes named Jensen Ackles and Jared Padalecki...or are Jensen Ackles and Jared Padalecki two men suffering from the delusion that they're supernatural-creature hunter brothers named Sam and Dean Winchester?  And if they're brothers, how do they square that with the fact that they can't seem to keep their hands off each other...? It's a clever idea, with the sort of meta-analytical flavor that's very in keeping with the show itself, and zoemathemata makes full use of the opportunity to break down the many inconsistencies and flaws that any long-running serialized story accumulates but that we, the audience, overlook for the sake of the Plot of the Week.  My one personal complaint about it is that it ends too soon—the most immediate plot threads are resolved but there's a distinct sense that this is the beginning rather than the ending.  The author says in the comments that they didn't continue it in part because they couldn't decide which was the reality—and I totally get not wanting to spend months or years writing a novel-length fic out of what's supposed to be a quick bit of fun—but there's just so much you could do with this idea.  Even without picking sides, it could be a Total Recall-style ambiguously-themed case fic, or a "Frame of Mind"-esque dark psychological thriller, or any number of other options...
What can I say?  I have a weakness for unreliable narrators.
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why-i-love-comics · 5 years
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Fearless #4 - “Atmospheria” (2019)
written by Tini Howard art by Rosi Kampe & Muntsa Vicente
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comicwaren · 5 years
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From Fearless #004, “Atmospheria”
Art by Rosi Kämpe and Muntsa Vicente
Written by Tini Howard
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artmusicchannel · 4 years
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♫ Elektronik, Club Müzik, Atmospheria, Francis Preve, Electronic Music, ...
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arantele5-blog · 6 years
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astral-obscura · 7 years
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My Tumblr account is only to read, ask and learn. I don't post anything, but i follow, like and draft a lot of things from astrology blogs. I dont know if i would be accepted in the network because of my empty blog!! Is it only for astro blogs?
Anyone can join! Pretty much the whole point of the network is the Skype chats, so it doesn’t matter what kind of blog you run -- as long as you’re interested in astrology, you’re welcome in the Atmospheria Network
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why-i-love-comics · 5 years
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Fearless #4 - “Atmospheria” (2019)
written by Tini Howard art by Rosi Kampe & Muntsa Vicente
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pierreqies · 4 years
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The Tony Hawk remake is filled with so many nice little details…like how the bulls*** makes a wet fart noise when you ride over it
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The post The Tony Hawk remake is filled with so many nice little details…like how the bulls*** makes a wet fart noise when you ride over it appeared first on Hammers and Steel.
from WordPress https://hammersandsteel.com/index.php/2020/09/12/the-tony-hawk-remake-is-filled-with-so-many-nice-little-details-like-how-the-bulls-makes-a-wet-fart-noise-when-you-ride-over-it/
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Atmospheria - Francis Preve [Vlog No Copyright Music] Dance & Electronic...
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eu201cc-blog · 4 years
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(Royalty Free Music) Atmospheria — Francis Preve 🎧🎸🎵🎵 Tom Royalty Free Music https://youtu.be/kTKN2P7fSNg https://www.instagram.com/p/B-p4e-MnXjR/?igshid=6og9am4tdyoe
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britishvr · 5 years
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VR has the incredible ability to deliver “anonymity without being anonymous” as this brilliant kid puts it. by atmospheria #vr #oculus #rift https://t.co/nMCXWoTd0N
VR has the incredible ability to deliver “anonymity without being anonymous” as this brilliant kid puts it. by atmospheria #vr #oculus #rift https://t.co/nMCXWoTd0N
— British VR 🇬🇧 (@BritishVR) January 21, 2019
from Twitter https://twitter.com/BritishVR January 21, 2019 at 10:11AM via IFTTT
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arantele5-blog · 6 years
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why-i-love-comics · 5 years
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Fearless #4 - “Atmospheria” (2019)
written by Tini Howard art by Rosi Kampe & Muntsa Vicente
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