Flying Cinder & Flickering - 1.1 Bolivian holdbacks (Boa c. amarali)
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HIGH SCHOOL AU where the school's drama club is going to make Cinderella and Kai is of course the Prince and Cinder is the stage technician but something happen to the female protagonist and for some reason Cinder find herself in the Cinderella role.
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Working on a Thing, don't mind me.
Out of context panel edit:
It's a srs Thing I swear
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Question for you, if your okay with it
Question: which LU boy is your favorite???
This is very polite <3 Of course i'm okay with questions <33
hmm...idk i'd say its a tie between Twilight and Wild/Cal/Sage
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Closed for @youngwolfastrid
Cinder was finding herself enjoying her meal. It was just a bunch or tourists no one would miss them. She bit into the heart savoring the flavor. The siren paused when she noticed another prescence. Eyes glinted as she noticed the new person.
"Want some?"
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Unable to complete my silly bedtime routine of playing nonogram until the melatonin kicks in bc I'm thinking about this post with gltas Guy @ Citrus whos about to explode into tears internally
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i change profile pictures more than cinder fall changes outfits bdhshdha
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Ruby, her arms folding over her chest, tapping her foot impatiently: You promised we would go out tonight at seven thirty.
Vampire!Cinder, hissing from beneath the bed: It's still too light out! Tell your friends to wait! You know how I get in this kind of sunlight, it's embarrassing!
Ruby, spinning around and taking steps towards the door: Hmph. Fine. And I was gonna let you feed tonight.
~~~~~~~~~~
Ruby, sitting at a small restaurant's outdoor patio, swirling a wine glass in her hand, chuckling with a bit of a blush: Sorry about her, she uhh...she had a bit too much to drink.
Velvet, raising an eyebrow: You're the only one who's had any wine though.
Ruby: Aheh...yeah, uhh, before we came here. She's got...social anxiety...
Coco, absolutely buying it: No that makes total sense I had a shot before we came here too, girl I like your style.
Vampire!Cinder, wearing a wide brimmed black hat, having been basically draping herself over Ruby for this entire conversation, basically pawing at her face: Ishent scheee sho ccccccyyyyuuuuute! I luv her, luv luv luv luv. Shuch preetty, pretty face. Pretty pretty eyyyyyeeeeeeeees. Pretty blooooood~
Ruby, panicking for a cover story: Uhhhh....we're kinky?
Coco, slamming her hands to the table: I! LOVE! IT!
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‘22 Bolivian amarali holdbacks.
Flying Cinder & Flickering.
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Giana: Lizzy, would you do me the honor of becoming my sister-in-law?
Darren: Did you just propose to her FOR ME?
Giana: Someone had to do it, Darren!
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JOMP BPC September 2022: Day 20 Simple Cover
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Alt!
@ofviolentdeath || Send me “alt!” and I’ll introduce you to a character I’ve rped in the past, want to play in the future or are currently playing somewhere else!
"Listen, there's a lot of dope monk shit I can do, but punching ghosts is probably my favorite. Is it useful? Almost never. Is it really fuckin cool when it does come up? Absolutely."
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Two Very Different Books That I Read Overnight
I adore fairy tales. Since my present of Andrew Lang's The Blue Fairy Book at about age 5, I have always enjoyed them, and I enjoy equally those who rewrite them and inject new life into them, from Marissa Meyer's Cinder to Robert Munsch's The Paper-Bag Princess, Amanda Lovelace's the princess saves herself in this one and my beloved Patricia Wrede's Enchanted Forest Chronicles to Jane Yolen's grim Briar Rose and Charles deLint's Jack the Giant-Killer - oh, I could go on and on. Oddly, a number of "princess saves herself" narratives appear in The Blue Fairy Book, though I suppose they're Mulan-esque: she has to disguise herself, either her cleverness or her beauty or both in order to be badass, and the resolution DOES involve a man. In Thornhedge, T. Kingfisher (Ursula Vernon) takes another angle altogether: the traditional villain of Sleeping Beauty IS the sleeping beauty. Narrated by Toadling, the "evil" fairy godmother of the usual story, Kingfisher's story takes us into faerie, giving us Toadling's history, but Maleficent this isn't. The author herself calls it a "sweet" novella, and that's a good description. Both hero and heroine are flawed, basically gentle characters, and the tearing down of the briars is a dubious prospect that both engage in, finally, as if they must finish the fairy tale rather than because the "prince" desires the "princess". For those who enjoy new interpretations, Thornhedge is a little gem.
How can I resist a book entitled The Book No One Wanted to Read? I spied this one on the "to be shelved" cart and grabbed it. It's a quick read, but fun. Author Richard Ayoade is a British comedian, director and actor, and his acerbic sense of humor showed throughout the book. The illustrations are lovely pen and ink images of a library and multiple "fig. 1" images that relate tangentially to the dialogue taking place between the narrator and the book who has written this book - that's not a typo. It's very meta - children who enjoy Mo Willems' Elephant and Piggie series might enjoy this later in their reading careers. I specifically refer to We Are In A Book!, one of the most delightful examples of breaking the fourth wall I have ever seen, children's lit or otherwise. Deadpool might have been raised on such literature. While the dialogue (and pictures) feature a high degree of snarky humor, the ultimate result of the conversation is almost cliche. Like all children's books, the ending inspires readers to go out and create their own works of art, yet Ayoade never lets it get sappy. This reader smiled, picturing the narrator tucking the grumpy, prickly book under her arm and quietly leaving the library to find a coffee shop to write in. This is probably a terrific book to read aloud with a kid who's a bit too old to be read aloud to.
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