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#millwood field
jaggedwolf · 2 months
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I should have more deep thoughts about pll original sins finale but mostly I remain indignant that they didn't actually go there with tabitha/imogen - the other three's boyfriends are unobjectionable, but the show has less f/f than original pll, a show subject to abc family's shenanigans in an earlier decade
(I must give A style points for their finale setup, very well done)
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gra-sonas · 2 years
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You can't get anything past Pretty Little Liars fans.
In the fourth episode of the HBO Max spin-off Original Sin, Noa (Maia Reficco) finds a bottle of oxycodone in her mother Marjorie's (Elena Goode) purse. Once the label on the bottle comes into focus, it's clear that it's not Marjorie's name on the prescription. Instead, it's a name that means an awful lot to fans of the original series: Caleb Rivers.
Caleb Rivers was played by Tyler Blackburn on Pretty Little Liars, Rosewood's resident rebel who goes on to marry Hanna (Ashley Benson) at the end of the series.
So, what was Caleb's name doing on the pill bottle?
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"If you're going to show a close-up of a pill bottle," Original Sin executive producer Lindsay Calhoon Bring teased to TVLine, "you might as well make it connect to the original series."
As for what that means for Caleb's potential involvement in the series—well, don't get your hopes up.
"It's funny to see the storm of fans guessing that Caleb has moved to Millwood," Bring said. "I pick up prescriptions all over the country, so in my mind, Caleb was passing through and needed to pick up his oxy."
The connection was such a throwaway that co-creator Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa admitted he "forgot about that until the episode aired."
Oh well. At least we know Caleb's alive?
As for the potential for other former Rosewood residents to pop up in Millwood, Shay Mitchell—who played Emily Fields on _Pretty Little Liars—_is open to the idea, telling E!'s Daily Pop last year that she'd "never say never" about participating in the revival.
Here's hoping it's more than just a name on a pill bottle.
Fans hoping for a nostalgia kick are in luck, however, as Aguirre-Sacasa teased on Instagram that the upcoming episodes of the series "go back to where it all began: #Rosewood."
Consider our bags packed.
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gravelydevoted3 · 2 years
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Example:
Farris’s Fun Fest has sat abandoned for years, out in one of the back fields beyond Millwood Grove. Terry and his friends have decided to push back against the local legends that the old carnival grounds are haunted by staying the night in the park, alone, with no cellphones, no car keys, and no clear way out. They’re expecting a whole lot of nothing, and what they get are demons pulling away from the carousel, rust red and rotting metal, looking for the first meal that they’ve had in a long, long time.
another example from the book i’m putting together, about writing in the horror genre! this chapter covers circuses and carnivals <3
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queerhawkeyes · 1 year
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2022 reading recap
of the 68 books I’ve read so far, here are some highlights:
favorite novel: The Mercies by Kiran Millwood Hargrave
I don’t normally go for historical fiction, but I’m glad I made an exception here
favorite nonfiction: All the Living and the Dead by Hayley Campbell
this made me feel a lot of things about death
favorite new (to me) author: Sarah Gailly
I read Just Like Home, The Echo Wife, and Magic for Liars. gailly’s ability to engage in quite different genres is outstanding. Magic for Liars was my least favorite of the three, but reading the afterward of The Echo Wife made me want to start it all over again, and Just Like Home was intense in ways I did not expect. I’m looking forward to their queer anti-fascist western, Upright Women Wanted.
and some superlatives to capture the range of horror/suspense/mystery/thriller that I read this year
creepiest: Sundial and The Last House on Needless Street, both by Catriona Ward
weird, violent children, and talking pets
most unsettling: Just Like Home by Sarah Gailly
this reminded me of a horrible dream I had about my mother returning from the dead and my childhood home being alive, only it was even more unsettling.
worst mystery: The Girls in the Garden by Lisa Jewell
unsatisfying
most suspenseful: the Luc Callanach series by Helen Fields
I’m currently on book 4 and while reading yet another cop-led series makes me feel gross, the suspense picks up so fast in these books I am going through one 400 page book every two days.
most fucked up marriage: As Long as We Both Shall Live by JoAnn Chaney
I got into domestic suspense this year before getting sucked into three different on-going crime series, and there’s something compelling about the interior of a marriage as the setting for a mystery. the couple in this book wins this award by a long shot.
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magical-butterflies · 2 years
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Why does everyone in Millwood have shitty dads? Where are the Wayne Fields of the town
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Clear Vision Starts at Edmonton Eye Clinic: Millwoods Eye Exam Experts
Your vision is a precious gift, and maintaining it should be a top priority. Whether you're experiencing eye discomfort, need a routine check-up, or seeking specialized eye care services, Edmonton Eye Clinic is your trusted partner for all your vision needs. Situated in the heart of Millwoods, this state-of-the-art facility combines cutting-edge technology with a team of experienced optometrists to ensure your eyes receive the best care possible.
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Expertise in Eye Care
Edmonton Eye Clinic boasts a team of highly skilled and compassionate optometrists who are dedicated to preserving and improving your vision. With years of experience in the field, they provide a wide range of services to cater to your unique needs. From comprehensive eye exams to specialized treatments for conditions like glaucoma, cataracts, and diabetic retinopathy, they have you covered.
Convenient Location in Millwoods
Convenience is key when it comes to eye care. Located in the vibrant Millwoods community, Edmonton Eye Clinic is easily accessible, making it a preferred choice for residents in the area. Whether you're coming from Millwoods Town Centre, Daly Grove, or Tawa, you'll find the clinic conveniently situated to serve you.
Cutting-Edge Technology
Edmonton Eye Clinic is committed to staying at the forefront of technological advancements in the field of optometry. The clinic is equipped with state-of-the-art diagnostic and treatment tools, ensuring that you receive the most accurate assessments and effective treatments available. Their commitment to innovation ensures you get the best care possible.
Personalized Care
One size does not fit all when it comes to eye care. Edmonton Eye Clinic takes a personalized approach to each patient, understanding that your vision needs are unique. Whether you require prescription glasses, contact lenses, or have concerns about your eye health, the clinic's optometrists will tailor their services to address your specific requirements.
Comprehensive Eye Exams
Regular eye exams are essential for maintaining good vision and detecting potential problems early. Edmonton Eye Clinic offers comprehensive eye exams that include checking your visual acuity, assessing eye health, and discussing any concerns you may have. They will also provide recommendations for vision correction, if necessary, to ensure you see the world clearly.
A Commitment to Your Eye Health
Your vision is too important to be left to chance. At Edmonton Eye Clinic in Millwoods, your eye health is their top priority. With a commitment to excellence, cutting-edge technology, and a team of dedicated professionals, they are your trusted partner in maintaining and enhancing your vision.
Conclusion
When it comes to millwoods eye exam, Edmonton Eye Clinic stands out as a beacon of excellence. With their experienced team, convenient location, and commitment to the latest in eye care technology, they ensure you receive the best possible care for your eyes. Schedule your next eye exam at Edmonton Eye Clinic and experience the difference firsthand – because clear vision is a gift worth preserving.
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llovelymoonn · 2 years
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on nature
louise glück sunrise \\ david hettinger landscape \\ mary oliver october \\ john bradley west from narrow neck \\ brian rego millwood field (2013) \\ sylvia plath unpublished poems: “barren woman” \\ anastasia trusova through the walls \\ pieter hendrick koekkoek the woodland track \\ george seferis the garden with its fountains (tr. edmund keeley & philip sherrard) \\ giordanne salley toe dip
kofi
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nellygwyn · 4 years
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BOOK RECS
Okay, so lots of people wanted this and so, I am compiling a list of my favourite books (both fiction and non-fiction), books that I recommend you read as soon as humanly possible. In the meantime, I’ll be pinning this post to the top of my blog (once I work out how to do that lmao) so it will be accessible for old and new followers. I’m going to order this list thematically, I think, just to keep everything tidy and orderly. Of course, a lot of this list will consist of historical fiction and historical non-fiction because that’s what I read primarily and thus, that’s where my bias is, but I promise to try and spice it up just a little bit. 
Favourite fiction books of all time:
The Mermaid and Mrs Hancock // Imogen Hermes Gowar
Sense and Sensibility // Jane Austen
Slammerkin // Emma Donoghue 
Remarkable Creatures // Tracy Chevalier
Life Mask // Emma Donoghue
His Dark Materials // Philip Pullman (this includes the follow-up series The Book of Dust)
Emma // Jane Austen
The Miniaturist // Jessie Burton
Girl, Woman, Other // Bernadine Evaristo 
Jane Eyre // Charlotte Brontë
Persuasion // Jane Austen
Girl with a Pearl Earring // Tracy Chevalier
The Silent Companions // Laura Purcell
Tess of the d’Urbervilles // Thomas Hardy
Northanger Abbey // Jane Austen
The Chronicles of Narnia // C.S. Lewis
Pride and Prejudice // Jane Austen
Goodnight, Mr Tom // Michelle Magorian
The French Lieutenant’s Woman // John Fowles 
The Butcher’s Hook // Janet Ellis 
Mansfield Park // Jane Austen
The All Souls Trilogy // Deborah Harkness
The Railway Children // Edith Nesbit
Favourite non-fiction books of all time
Catherine the Great: Portrait of a Woman // Robert Massie
Love and Louis XIV: The Women in the Life of the Sun King // Antonia Fraser
Madame de Pompadour // Nancy Mitford
The First Iron Lady: A Life of Caroline of Ansbach // Matthew Dennison 
Black and British: A Forgotten History // David Olusoga
Courtiers: The Secret History of the Georgian Court // Lucy Worsley 
Young and Damned and Fair: The Life of Katherine Howard, the Fifth Wife of Henry VIII // Gareth Russell
King Charles II // Antonia Fraser
Casanova’s Women // Judith Summers
Marie Antoinette: The Journey // Antonia Fraser
Mrs. Jordan’s Profession: The Story of a Great Actress and a Future King // Claire Tomalin
Jane Austen at Home // Lucy Worsley
Mudlarking: Lost and Found on the River Thames // Lara Maiklem
The Last Royal Rebel: The Life and Death of James, Duke of Monmouth // Anna Keay
The Marlboroughs: John and Sarah Churchill // Christopher Hibbert
Nell Gwynn: A Biography // Charles Beauclerk
Jurassic Mary: Mary Anning and the Primeval Monsters // Patricia Pierce
Georgian London: Into the Streets // Lucy Inglis
The Prince Who Would Be King: The Life and Death of Henry Stuart // Sarah Fraser
Wedlock: How Georgian Britain’s Worst Husband Met His Match // Wendy Moore
Dead Famous: An Unexpected History of Celebrity from the Stone Age to the Silver Screen // Greg Jenner
Victorians Undone: Tales of the Flesh in the Age of Decorum // Kathryn Hughes
Crown of Blood: The Deadly Inheritance of Lady Jane Grey // Nicola Tallis
Favourite books about the history of sex and/or sex work
The Origins of Sex: A History of First Sexual Revolution // Faramerz Dabhoiwala 
Erotic Exchanges: The World of Elite Prostitution in Eighteenth-Century Paris // Nina Kushner
Peg Plunkett: Memoirs of a Whore // Julie Peakman
Courtesans // Katie Hickman
The Other Victorians: A Study of Sexuality and Pornography in mid-Nineteenth Century England
Madams, Bawds, and Brothel Keepers // Fergus Linnane
The Secret History of Georgian London: How the Wages of Sin Shaped the Capital // Dan Cruickshank 
A Curious History of Sex // Kate Lister
Sex and Punishment: 4000 Years of Judging Desire // Eric Berkowitz
Queen of the Courtesans: Fanny Murray // Barbara White
Rent Boys: A History from Ancient Times to Present // Michael Hone
Celeste // Roland Perry
Sex and the Gender Revolution // Randolph Trumbach
The Pleasure’s All Mine: A History of Perverse Sex // Julie Peakman
LGBT+ fiction I love*
The Confessions of the Fox // Jordy Rosenberg 
As Meat Loves Salt // Maria Mccann
Bone China // Laura Purcell
Brideshead Revisited // Evelyn Waugh
The Confessions of Frannie Langton // Sara Collins
The Intoxicating Mr Lavelle // Neil Blackmore
Orlando // Virginia Woolf
Tipping the Velvet // Sarah Waters
She Rises // Kate Worsley
The Mercies // Kiran Millwood Hargrave
Oranges are Not the Only Fruit // Jeanette Winterson
Maurice // E.M Forster
Frankisstein: A Love Story // Jeanette Winterson
If I Was Your Girl // Meredith Russo 
The Well of Loneliness // Radclyffe Hall 
* fyi, Life Mask and Girl, Woman, Other are also LGBT+ fiction
Classics I haven’t already mentioned (including children’s classics)
Far From the Madding Crowd // Thomas Hardy 
I Capture the Castle // Dodie Smith 
Vanity Fair // William Makepeace Thackeray 
Wuthering Heights // Emily Brontë
The Blazing World // Margaret Cavendish, Duchess of Newcastle
Murder on the Orient Express // Agatha Christie 
Great Expectations // Charles Dickens
North and South // Elizabeth Gaskell
Evelina // Frances Burney
Death on the Nile // Agatha Christie
The Monk // Matthew Lewis
Frankenstein // Mary Shelley
Vilette // Charlotte Brontë
The Mayor of Casterbridge // Thomas Hardy
The Tenant of Wildfell Hall // Anne Brontë
Vile Bodies // Evelyn Waugh
Beloved // Toni Morrison 
The Murder of Roger Ackroyd // Agatha Christie
The History of Tom Jones, A Foundling // Henry Fielding
A Room With a View // E.M. Forster
Silas Marner // George Eliot 
Jude the Obscure // Thomas Hardy
My Man Jeeves // P.G. Wodehouse
Lady Audley’s Secret // Mary Elizabeth Braddon
Middlemarch // George Eliot
Little Women // Louisa May Alcott
Children of the New Forest // Frederick Marryat
I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings // Maya Angelou 
Rebecca // Daphne du Maurier
Alice in Wonderland // Lewis Carroll
The Wind in the Willows // Kenneth Grahame
Anna Karenina // Leo Tolstoy
Howard’s End // E.M. Forster
The Secret Diary of Adrian Mole, Aged 13 3/4 // Sue Townsend
Even more fiction recommendations
The Darling Strumpet // Gillian Bagwell
The Wolf Hall trilogy // Hilary Mantel
The Illumination of Ursula Flight // Anne-Marie Crowhurst
Queenie // Candace Carty-Williams
Forever Amber // Kathleen Winsor
The Corset // Laura Purcell
Love in Colour // Bolu Babalola
Artemisia // Alexandra Lapierre
Blackberry and Wild Rose // Sonia Velton
The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories // Angela Carter
The Languedoc trilogy // Kate Mosse
Longbourn // Jo Baker
A Skinful of Shadows // Frances Hardinge
The Black Moth // Georgette Heyer
The Far Pavilions // M.M Kaye
The Essex Serpent // Sarah Perry
The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo // Taylor Jenkins Reid
Cavalier Queen // Fiona Mountain 
The Winter Palace // Eva Stachniak
Friday’s Child // Georgette Heyer
Falling Angels // Tracy Chevalier
Little // Edward Carey
Chocolat // Joanne Harris 
The Watchmaker of Filigree Street // Natasha Pulley 
My Sister, the Serial Killer // Oyinkan Braithwaite
The Convenient Marriage // Georgette Heyer
Katie Mulholland // Catherine Cookson
Restoration // Rose Tremain
Meat Market // Juno Dawson
Lady on the Coin // Margaret Campbell Bowes
In the Company of the Courtesan // Sarah Dunant
The Crimson Petal and the White // Michel Faber
A Place of Greater Safety // Hilary Mantel 
The Little Shop of Found Things // Paula Brackston
The Improbability of Love // Hannah Rothschild
The Murder Most Unladylike series // Robin Stevens
Dark Angels // Karleen Koen
The Words in My Hand // Guinevere Glasfurd
Time’s Convert // Deborah Harkness
The Collector // John Fowles
Vivaldi’s Virgins // Barbara Quick
The Foundling // Stacey Halls
The Phantom Tree // Nicola Cornick
The Seven Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle // Stuart Turton
Golden Hill // Francis Spufford
Assorted non-fiction not yet mentioned
The Dinosaur Hunters: A True Story of Scientific Rivalry and the Discovery of the Prehistoric World // Deborah Cadbury
The Beauty and the Terror: An Alternative History to the Italian Renaissance // Catherine Fletcher
All the King's Women: Love, Sex, and Politics in the life of Charles II // Derek Jackson
Mozart’s Women // Jane Glover
Scandalous Liaisons: Charles II and His Court // R.E. Pritchard
Matilda: Queen, Empress, Warrior // Catherine Hanley 
Black Tudors // Miranda Kaufman 
To Catch a King: Charles II's Great Escape // Charles Spencer
1666: Plague, War and Hellfire // Rebecca Rideal
Henrietta Maria: Charles I's Indomitable Queen // Alison Plowden
Catherine of Braganza: Charles II's Restoration Queen // Sarah-Beth Watkins
Four Sisters: The Lost Lives of the Romanov Grand Duchesses // Helen Rappaport
Aristocrats: Caroline, Emily, Louisa and Sarah Lennox, 1740-1832 // Stella Tillyard 
The Fortunes of Francis Barber: The True Story of the Jamaican Slave who Became Samuel Johnson’s Heir // Michael Bundock
Black London: Life Before Emancipation // Gretchen Gerzina
In These Times: Living in Britain Through Napoleon’s Wars, 1793-1815
The King’s Mistress: Scandal, Intrigue and the True Story of the Woman who Stole the Heart of George I // Claudia Gold
Perdita: The Life of Mary Robinson // Paula Byrne
The Gentleman’s Daughter: Women’s Lives in Georgian England // Amanda Vickery
Terms and Conditions: Life in Girls’ Boarding School, 1939-1979 // Ysenda Maxtone Graham 
Fanny Burney: A Biography // Claire Harman
Aphra Behn: A Secret Life // Janet Todd
The Imperial Harem: Women and the Sovereignty in the Ottoman Empire // Leslie Peirce
The Fall of the House of Byron // Emily Brand
The Favourite: Sarah, Duchess of Marlborough // Ophelia Field
Night-Walking: A Nocturnal History of London // Matthew Beaumont, Will Self
Jane Austen: A Life // Claire Tomalin
Beloved Emma: The Life of Emma, Lady Hamilton // Flora Fraser
Sentimental Murder: Love and Madness in the 18th Century // John Brewer
Henrietta Howard: King’s Mistress, Queen’s Servant // Tracy Borman
City of Beasts: How Animals Shaped Georgian London // Tom Almeroth-Williams
Queen Anne: The Politics of Passion // Anne Somerset 
Charlotte Brontë: A Life // Claire Harman 
Goddess: The Secret Lives of Marilyn Monroe // Anthony Summers
Queer City: Gay London from the Romans to the Present Day // Peter Ackroyd 
Elizabeth I and Her Circle // Susan Doran
African Europeans: An Untold History // Olivette Otele 
Young Romantics: The Shelleys, Byron, and Other Tangled Lives // Daisy Hay
How to Create the Perfect Wife // Wendy Moore
The Sphinx: The Life of Gladys Deacon, Duchess of Marlborough // Hugo Vickers
The Life and Death of Anne Boleyn // Eric Ives
Dancing in the Streets: A History of Collective Joy // Barbara Ehrenreich
A is for Arsenic: The Poisons of Agatha Christie // Kathryn Harkup 
Mistresses: Sex and Scandal at the Court of Charles II // Linda Porter
Female Husbands: A Trans History // Jen Manion
Ladies in Waiting: From the Tudors to the Present Day // Anne Somerset
Ghostland: In Search of a Haunted Country // Edward Parnell 
A Cheesemonger’s History of the British Isles // Ned Palmer
The Butchering Art: Joseph Lister’s Quest to Transform the Grisly World of Victorian Medicine // Lindsey Fitzharris
Medieval Woman: Village Life in the Middle Ages // Ann Baer
The Husband Hunters: Social Climbing in London and New York // Anne de Courcy
The Voices of Nîmes: Women, Sex, and Marriage in Reformation Languedoc // Suzannah Lipscomb
The Daughters of the Winter Queen // Nancy Goldstone
Mad and Bad: Real Heroines of the Regency // Bea Koch
Bess of Hardwick // Mary S. Lovell
The Royal Art of Poison // Eleanor Herman 
The Strangest Family: The Private Lives of George III, Queen Charlotte, and the Hanoverians // Janice Hadlow
Palaces of Pleasure: From Music Halls to the Seaside to Football; How the Victorians Invented Mass Entertainment // Lee Jackson
Favourite books about current social/political issues (?? for lack of a better term)
Feminism, Interrupted: Disrupting Power // Lola Olufemi
Revolting Prostitutes: The Fight for Sex Worker Rights // Molly Smith, Juno Mac
Why I’m No Longer Talking to White People About Race // Reni Eddo-Lodge
Trans Britain: Our Journey from the Shadows // Christine Burns
Me, Not You: The Trouble with Mainstream Feminism // Alison Phipps
Trans Like Me: A Journey For All Of Us // C.N Lester
Brit(Ish): On Race, Identity, and Belonging // Afua Hirsch 
The Brutish Museums: The Benin Bronzes, Colonial Violence, and Cultural Restitution // Dan Hicks
Things No One Will Tell Fat Girls: A Handbook for Unapologetic Living // Jes M. Baker
Hood Feminism: Notes from the Women White Feminists Forgot // Mikki Kendall
Denial: Holocaust History on Trial // Deborah Lipstadt
Yes Means Yes: Visions of Female Sexual Power and a World Without Rape // Jessica Valenti, Jaclyn Friedman
Don’t Touch My Hair // Emma Dabiri
Sister Outsider // Audre Lorde 
Unicorn: The Memoir of a Muslim Drag Queen // Amrou Al-Kadhi
Trans Power // Juno Roche
Breathe: A Letter to My Sons // Imani Perry
The Windrush Betrayal: Exposing the Hostile Environment // Amelia Gentleman
Happy Fat: Taking Up Space in a World That Wants to Shrink You // Sofie Hagen
Diaries, memoirs & letters
The Diary of a Young Girl // Anne Frank
Renia’s Diary: A Young Girl’s Life in the Shadow of the Holocaust // Renia Spiegel 
Writing Home // Alan Bennett
The Diary of Samuel Pepys // Samuel Pepys
Histoire de Ma Vie // Giacomo Casanova
Toast: The Story of a Boy’s Hunger // Nigel Slater
London Journal, 1762-1763 // James Boswell
The Diary of a Bookseller // Shaun Blythell 
Jane Austen’s Letters // edited by Deidre la Faye
H is for Hawk // Helen Mcdonald 
The Salt Path // Raynor Winn
The Glitter and the Gold // Consuelo Vanderbilt, Duchess of Marlborough
Journals and Letters // Fanny Burney
Educated // Tara Westover
Bookworm: A Memoir of Childhood Reading // Lucy Mangan
Why Be Happy When You Could Be Normal? // Jeanette Winterson
A Dutiful Boy // Mohsin Zaidi
Secrets and Lies: The Trials of Christine Keeler // Christine Keeler
800 Years of Women’s Letters // edited by Olga Kenyon
Istanbul // Orhan Pamuk
Henry and June // Anaïs Nin
Historical romance (this is a short list because I’m still fairly new to this genre)
The Bridgerton series // Julia Quinn
One Good Earl Deserves a Lover // Sarah Mclean
Nine Rules to Break When Romancing a Rake // Sarah Mclean
The Lady’s Guide to Celestial Mechanics // Olivia Waite
That Could Be Enough // Alyssa Cole
Unveiled // Courtney Milan
The Craft of Love // EE Ottoman
The Maiden Lane series // Elizabeth Hoyt
An Extraordinary Union // Alyssa Cole
Slightly Dangerous // Mary Balogh
Dangerous Alliance: An Austentacious Romance // Jennieke Cohen
A Fashionable Indulgence // KJ Charles
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all-drarry-to-me · 3 years
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Queer book recommendations 📚
Okay, so I received this super nice ask, kindly requesting another list of book recommendations, but when I finally got around to answering it, Tumblr (being the hellsite that it is) ate the ask. Emi, I hope you know how thrilled I was to see that in my inbox — not only have you read some of my favorite books based on my recommendation, but you liked them enough to ask for more! I’m happy to put together another list, and please feel free to message me at any time to talk about books!
Without further ado (and in no particular order), here’s part two of some of my favorite queer books:
1. All for the Game trilogy by Nora Sakavic: I could talk about this series for ages. Listen, I know it’s problematic: they’re not the most well-written books, the plot is insane and there’s a whole host of trigger warnings that go with the series. It focuses on college athletes, who come together through Exy, a made-up sport that the mafia is involved in. Somehow, despite all of that, I managed to fall in love with the series quite quickly. It’s like nothing I’ve ever read before, and the characters — even with their numerous flaws — really drew me in. The found family trope is so well executed (I couldn’t help but root for the Foxes throughout the series), then I absolutely love the way they handle consent. Of the core characters, there’s two who are gay and one who’s definitely on the ace spectrum, though it’s not outright stated in the book. And while I said they’re not the most well-written series, which I do stand by, there’s also a handful of BEAUTIFUL lines from the books.
2. “Running with Lions” by Julien Winters: This is the only other sports-themed book on the list, I promise! Some of my love for this book likely stems from my own years running around the soccer field — this takes place at a summer training camp, but that’s definitely not the only reason it’s on this list. I’m a big fan of enemies to lovers, and while this is more ex-friends to lovers, there’s definitely some animosity to be worked through when Emir unexpectedly shows up at the soccer camp. I love the way he and Sebastian bond, and the way their friendship evolves before becoming a more romantic relationship. There’s some standard coming-of-age vibes within the book, but the plot and the characters are interesting enough to help set it apart from others in the genre.
3. “Orlando: A Biography” by Virginia Woolf: This one is a little different than the others on the list, but I wouldn’t recommend it any less. I feel a little in love with Virginia Woolf over the past year and, of her books that I’ve read, this one really stands out. It’s from the 1920s and features a main character who lives for 300+ years — and who’s trans (Orlando is born male, then wakes up one day as female). With the way time works and the plot itself, it’s a bit strange, but I found it captivating, and the whole thing is a love letter to Vita Sackville-West, another writer with whom Woolf was in a relationship with. (Don’t get me started on their relationship — there’s a book of love letters between the two of them that’s achingly beautiful, but the book is hard to find.)
4. “Upside Down” by N. R. Walker: This is trope-y and wonderful and I would highly recommend. It has issues with pacing, but it made me genuinely happy as I was reading it. I finished it in a day, maybe two, because I couldn’t put it down — and I have two of the author’s other books in my Barnes & Noble cart as I’m typing this. In “Upside Down,” both of the main characters are ace; one is sure of his identity and the other is just starting to figure it out, and they work to navigate that together. It’s sweet and a quick read if you’re looking for something fairly fluffy.
5. Iron Breakers trilogy by Zaya Feli: If you take the plot from Captive Prince and mix it with the writing of All for the Game, that’s a close approximation of Iron Breakers. The main character is hard to like at times (he has a lot of growing up to do) and the plot isn’t groundbreaking — there’s a lot of similarities to Captive Prince — but there’s also a lot of positives the series has going for it. The world building is really interesting, the love interest is wonderful and the series has some compelling twists. The first book is free through Nook and I bought the second two immediately after finishing it, then could not put those down until I was done!
6. “Olivia” by Dorothy Strachey: There’s not enough wlw romance on here, which is one of the reasons I wanted to add “Olivia.” It’s another one that’s slightly different than the others on the list; it was originally published in the 1940s and is loosely based on the author’s own life, telling the story of a girl who goes to finishing school and falls in love with her teacher. It’s the story of first love, and forbidden love at that.
7. “Cemetery Boys” by Aiden Thomas: This book absolutely worth a read — Yadriel is trans, and is trying to prove to his family that he’s a “real” man by summoning a ghost to help solve his cousin’s murder. Instead, he summons Julien, then proceeds to fall for the ghost while trying to help Julien figure out how he died. Thomas creates such an interesting world within the book and the three main characters (Yadriel, Julien and Yadriel’s cousin/best friend Maritza) are so much fun together.
8. “Simon vs. the Homo Sapiens Agenda” by Becky Albertalli: Look, I think most people have heard of, if not read, this book but I’d be remiss if I didn’t include it on my list. It was actually recommended to me last time I made a queer rec list and it didn’t disappoint. In some ways, it’s a relatively standard coming out novel, but it has some really interesting differences. The way in which Simon is forced to come out makes the plot unique, and I love how supportive Simon’s family is — there are so many books where the character comes out and is subsequently kicked out, and it was nice to see a different take (I may have cried a little at that point, but that’s neither here nor there). If you haven’t read it, I’d definitely recommend.
9. Six of Crows duology by Leigh Bardugo: This is like, “Ocean’s Eleven,” but with teenagers. I liked the first book slightly better than the second, but they’re both great — they focus on a group of six planning an elaborate heist, with Kaz as the leader of their little gang. Each character is really well-developed, and both the plot and the world-building are first class. There’s a mlm romance on the side, so this one’s a bit more subtly queer than some of the other recs, but they’re still great books.
10. “The House in the Cerulean Sea” by T.J. Klune: This book is wonderful in so many ways. It’s focused on Linus Baker, who’s sent on a classified mission to a magical orphanage, where six “dangerous” children live with their caretaker, Arthur Parnassus. The characters — all of them, big and small — are compelling and interesting; they’re well-thought out and unique, which I think is a huge strength of Klune’s, visible in this book and the others I’ve read by him. Linus and Arthur are a bit older (in their 40s) and I love the way that contributes to their relationship and their character development, then the plot is somewhat simple, but the characters and the world are compelling enough that you don’t need any major twists or turns.
Next on my to-read list is “The Mercies” by Kiran Millwood Hargrave, which I’m absolutely psyched about, and I’m counting down the days until “One Last Stop” by Casey McQuiston is released.
(You asked if I've read anything by Seanan McGuire — I haven't; any recs for what to start with?)
Please let me know if you ever want more recs and I’ll be happy to throw some titles out there, and I'd love to know what you think if you end up reading any of these!
17 notes · View notes
inclineto · 3 years
Text
Books, November - December 2020
The Relentless Moon - Mary Robinette Kowal [I...was not prepared for an eating disorder to drive as much of the plot as it does; maybe you should be]
How to Read Water: Clues and Patterns from Puddles to the Sea - Tristan Gooley
Spoiler Alert - Olivia Dade [This could have gone so wrong; honestly, I expected to ditch it in the first two chapters, because usually I HATE giddy novels about fandom...and yet! it turned out to be wish fulfillment in the best possible way, somehow despite the inclusion of multiple tropes that I also dislike (least spoilery: “I betrayed your trust by not telling you my terrible secret that involves you when I had the opportunity, and now you can never know,” when that will obviously only make the eventual inevitable reveal much worse). Anyway: if you wanted actor RPF/fandom AU for a canon that doesn’t exist, here you go.]
Floating Coast: An Environmental History of the Bering Strait - Bathsheba Demuth
Desire and the Deep Blue Sea - Olivia Dade
The Way Past Winter - Kiran Millwood Hargrave [dnf]
Sisters in Hate: American Women on the Front Lines of White Nationalism - Seyward Darby
Swordspoint - Ellen Kushner
Jeoffry: The Poet’s Cat: A Biography - Oliver Soden
Gaudy Night - Dorothy L. Sayers *
Yes, I’m Hot in This: The Hilarious Truth About Life in a Hijab - Huda Fahmy [I introduced this artist to a former boss, whose reaction was to immediately purchase and lend me every book she’s published; I’m overdue to mail this one back (and if your thought was “that book exchange sounds backwards,” well, ...yes)]
One by One - Ruth Ware [it’s fine, I didn’t have anywhere to go the next morning, I didn’t mind staying up until 2:30 to finish this, it’s fine]
A Deadly Education - Naomi Novik
Solutions and Other Problems - Allie Brosh
The House of the Four Winds - Mercedes Lackey and James Mallory
There Is No Good Card for This: What To Say and Do When Life Is Scary, Awful, and Unfair to People - Emily McDowell and Kelsey Crowe [self-help is not usually my genre, but given that I’ve written so many condolence cards this year that I’ve run out of condolence card-appropriate stationary - archives love using scenes from Hamlet on their exhibition giveaway cards, and they’re absolutely not okay to use for...really any occasion, but especially death - and am utterly unable to tell whether anything I’m writing is any good, and that my standard How To Be A Better Person manual is an etiquette book from the 1930s, what could it hurt?]
Orlando - Virginia Woolf
Around My French Table: 300 Recipes from My Home to Yours - Dorie Greenspan
Return of the Thief - Megan Whalen Turner
Spectred Isle - KJ Charles [still really fond of this one; still really want the lesbian ghost sequel]
Division Bells - Iona Datt Sharma [there’s one scene that threw me out of the world, and I’d kind of love to see whether it got editorial notes and if so, what...but on the other hand, I wasn’t expecting this to make me cry, and it did]
Serpentine - Philip Pullman, illustrated by Tom Duxbury [the story is slight; what you want to read this for are the illustrations, which are delightful]
The Rakess - Scarlet Peckham
The Midnight Bargain - C. L. Polk
The House of Green Turf - Ellis Peters
Beach Read - Emily Henry
Not the End of the World - Kate Atkinson
World of Wonders: In Praise of Fireflies, Whale Sharks, and Other Astonishments - Aimee Nezhukumatathil
Eleventh Hour - Elin Gregory
Ahab’s Rolling Sea: A Natural History of Moby-Dick - Richard J. King [Let’s get this right out there: “Cetology” is my favorite chapter in the entire novel; I think it’s brilliant and fabulously funny and I loathe the lazy “everybody hates ‘Cetology’” trope that shows up everywhere - looking at you, Dave Malloy! - (although my mother tells me that her students did, indeed, universally despise it, which I find incomprehensible), so I’m always a little salty on approaching any Melville criticism: will they disrespect ‘Cetology”??? Sure enough, it’s there, but at least it’s on the way to explaining why you ought to appreciate it.]
Rereadings: Seventeen Writers Revisit Books They Love - ed. Anne Fadiman [the essay to read is Diana Kappel-Smith on the Peterson Field Guide to Wildflowers of Northeastern and North-Central North America]
Why Birds Sing - Nina Berkhout
Books and Islands in Ojibwe Country - Louise Erdrich
Barn 8 - Deb Olin Unferth
Black Sun - Rebecca Roanhorse
Where the Wild Ladies Are - Aoko Matsuda, translated by Polly Barton * [completely won over by this linked collection of present-day yōkai stories]
Ammonite - Nicola Griffith
Or What You Will - Jo Walton
Vesper Flights - Helen Macdonald
La Belle Sauvage - Philip Pullman [I’m fascinated to discover that the sequence I remember from reading this the first time doesn’t start until more than halfway through! He can tell a riveting story, so I wish I trusted Pullman even a tiny bit...but I don’t.]
Written in the Stars - Alexandria Bellefleur
A Libertarian Walks Into a Bear: The Utopian Plot to Liberate an American Town (and Some Bears) - Matthew Hongoltz-Hetling [some of this would never be funny; it’s possible I’d find parts of it funnier if libertarians didn’t make me so damn angry]
The Glass Magician - Caroline Stevermer
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retromaisie · 4 years
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Millett Family through the years (2014-2032)

Norma and Merrill with their only child, Grant. He married Leah, and together they had three children, Hadley, Julia, and Simon. 

The family owns Northern Moose, an outdoor adventure gear shop in Millwood. 

They’ve been raising Julia’s son, Nolan since he was born. She was fifteen when she got pregnant by the youngest Gavigan son.

Norma passed in 2027, and for the first time, Merrill is rolling romantic wants, so he might rejoin the dating field at 77 years old. 

Hadley is in her final months of her residency to be a surgeon; she already has a position at South Metro.

Julia recently married Elias and they have a son, Grady together. She’s a party planner married to a farmer. 

Simon is a senior at EU, where he’ll graduate in the spring; he intends to be a science teacher at Jefferson High.
Nolan is in eighth grade, he’s struggling with wanting to meet his bio Dad, and he intends to be a veterinary when he grows up. He much prefers animals to people.
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Tips on Garage Door Repair
Many of us feel very lethargic to repair the garage door that has become tougher to operate. There are great tips that are available to sort out this problem. Most of the times, it is sufficient to repair the garage door instead of replacing the entire garage door. These tips will surely help the person to fix the problem in an easy and simple manner. Garage door repair require proper understanding of the working of the doors and also the identification of the areas in which there is a greater possibility for the problem to occur.
Diagnosis of roller and tracks
The most important thing that has to be done to repair the door is to check the condition of the tracks and also the rollers. A roller of good quality working efficiently will help the garage doors to move smoothly. But it is common for the rollers to undergo wear and tear action after specific point of time. Replacing the rollers periodically will help in proper action of the garage doors. The next step in the repair process is to clean any kind of dirt that is present inside the garage doors. The cleaning process will help in clearing any obstruction to the sliding action of the doors. There is also a tendency for the formation of sticky substance around the rollers and tracks after continuous usage. The removal of this substance will facilitate better working of the garage doors. Hence proper diagnosis of the system to identify the malfunctioning component will quickly resolve the problem.
Repairing Garage door springs
The problems that were associated with the rollers and tracks can be manually fixed. But when it comes to the replacement of the door springs, it is well advised that people use the expert service to solve the problem. Since the springs are in a state of high tension, there is a great risk being involved in the replacement of the part. Hence the person should be sensible in repairing the Garage Door Repair and act according to the situation. Manually repairing the garage doors will help in great saving compared to replacement of the door.
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pinturasdeguerra · 5 years
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1862 11 04 Millwood, Virginia - Shenandoah Autumn - Mort Künstler
By late 1862, General Thomas J. Jackson and General J.E.B. Stuart were giants in gray — revered in the South and reluctantly respected in the North. Only General Robert E. Lee was held in higher esteem. “Stonewall” Jackson and “Jeb” Stuart had bequeathed heart and hope to the embattled people of the South, while repeatedly frustrating Northern strategies for conquering the Southern homeland. Stuart had literally ridden circles around the enemy, while providing invaluable intelligence as the “eyes” of General Robert E. Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia. Jackson had turned the tide at First Manassas where he emerged from obscurity to become the mighty “Stonewall” and then had thoroughly humiliated his foes in the Shenandoah Valley and at Second Manassas. A daring attempt by Lee to capitalize on the Southern victories had been thwarted weeks earlier on the bloody fields of Antietam. Now, the Army of Northern Virginia was regrouping and preparing to repel another Northern assault — which they knew would surely come soon. In early November, Jackson and his troops were encamped east of Winchester, Virginia, and the General established temporary headquarters on the grounds of Carter Hall Plantation. It was there on November 4, 1862, that Jackson received a visit from General Stuart, who was fresh from battle and a hard night’s ride. Jackson promptly ordered his headquarters cooks to feed the weary warriors. “Nothing was better calculated to restore our good spirits than the summons to the General’s large breakfast-table,” recalled Major Heros von Borcke. Within hours, Stuart and his staff were back in the saddle and bidding goodbye to their host. They left Carter Hall much better for their time spent as General Jackson’s guests. “The good cheer had the happiest effect on Stuart, who enlivened our repast with abundant anecdote and the recital of many a joke,” recalled von Borcke. The laughter and cheer would prove fleeting — ahead lay hard days, heavy fighting and tragic ends for both Jackson and Stuart. Within months, mighty “Stonewall” would be dead, followed in 1864 by the dashing General Stuart. For the moment, however, Jackson and Stuart — like General Lee — were giants of heroic stature in the South this Shenandoah autumn
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nwbeerguide · 5 years
Text
Volunteers needed at this year's Inland NW Craft Beer Festival. Presented by the Washington Beer Commission.
Press Release
Buy Online Tickets & Save
The Inland NW Craft Beer Festival, produced by the Washington Beer Commission, is proud to announce the 40 breweries participating in its 10th annual craft beer tasting event in Spokane. The Inland NW Craft Beer Festival will take place on Friday, September 20th, 4pm to 9pm, and Saturday, September 21st, from noon to 6pm.
This will be the event's sixth straight year at Avista Stadium, home of the Spokane Indians minor league baseball team. Friday night will be for 21 years and older only, followed by a family friendly Saturday session that features a kids play area on the lush green grass in right field.
In addition to the 40+ breweries and 150+ craft beer selections lined up along the outfield warning track, there will be live music from the second base stage and a number great food truck selections as well.
Tickets are just $20 in advance and $25 at the door. Admission includes a commemorative tasting glass and eight 4oz. sample tastes. Additional tastes are just $2 each. Online tickets and complete event details at washingtonbeer.com. Tickets are also available at the Avista Stadium Box Office.
Here are the Washington State Craft Breweries scheduled to pour at Avista Stadium:
509 Bierwerks - Wenatchee
Badass Backyard Brewing – Spokane Valley
Bale Breaker Brewing Co. - Yakima
Bardic Brewing – Spokane Valley
Benneditos Brew Pub - Spokane
Big Barn Brewing Co. - Mead
Black Label Brewing Company - Spokane
Bottle Bay Brewing-Spokane
Dru Bru - Snoqualmie Pass
Fremont Brewing - Seattle
Ghostfish Brewing Company - Seattle
The Hidden Mother Brewery-Spokane
Hop Capital Brewing - Yakima
Hopped Up Brewing – Spokane Valley
Humble Abode Brewing - Spokane
Icicle Brewing Company – Leavenworth
Iron Goat Brewing - Spokane
Laht Neppur Brewing Co. - Waitsburg
Millwood Brewing Company - Millwood
Mountain Lakes Brewing Company - Spokane
No-Li Brewhouse - Spokane
Paradise Creek Brewery - Pullman
Republic Brewing Company - Republic
Reuben's Brews – Seattle
Riverport Brewing - Clarkston
Silver City Brewery - Bremerton
Single Hill Brewing Company - Yakima
Steam Plant Brewing Company - Spokane
Stoup Brewing - Seattle
Ten Pin Brewing – Moses Lake
Three Magnets Brewing - Olympia
Top Frog Brewery - Newport
TT’s Old Iron Brewery - Spokane
Twelve String Brewing Co. – Spokane Valley
Two Beers Brewing Company - Seattle
V Twin Brewing Company – Spokane Valley
Waddell's Brewing Co - Spokane
Wenatchee Valley Brewing - Wenatchee
White Bluffs Brewing - Richland
Whipsaw Brewing-Ellensburg
YaYa Brewing Company – Spokane Valley
Complete event details are available at washingtonbeer.co
Get your tickets today!
VOLUNTEER!
The Inland NW Craft Beer Festival is seeking a select number of volunteers to assist with the event throughout the weekend. The following volunteer shifts are available:
Day 1 Friday, September 20, 2019
Shift 1 10:00am - 1:00pm
Shift 2 1:00pm - 5:00pm
Shift 3 5:00pm - 9:00pm
Day 2 Saturday, September 21, 2019
Shift 1 11:00am – 3:00pm
Shift 2 3:00pm - 7:00pm
Volunteers must be 21 years of age or older. Volunteers receive complimentary admission after their shift. Volunteer jobs may vary depending on demand, but may include any of the following: ticket admission, kids area, token stuffing or working at the merchandise/WABL table. If you’re interested in volunteering, please email us with your preferred 1st and 2nd shift choices.
from Northwest Beer Guide - News - The Northwest Beer Guide http://bit.ly/2NpuRX2
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acupuncture88 · 3 years
Text
Different Ways an Edmonton Massage Therapist Can Help You
Pain is a natural part of life, but sometimes, it can become unmanageable and consistently painful. From illness to injury-related damage, there are several ways pain can become a chronic element in your life. Beyond the usual possibilities of prevention and care, you should turn to a professional therapist who can help manage your illness and treat the chronic health condition.
AnEdmonton Massage Therapist can help you cope with chronic health condition and all its aspects, alleviating pain through physical and mental therapy. Because of new technologies and more advanced studies, professionals now understand the nature of pain better than ever before. They can help you find comfort in living life again.
Your therapist may recommend a management plan that can vary, depending on the type of pain you suffer. The specialist will help you create such a plan after initial meetings. They can help you with different kinds of pain, including:
1. Chronic Pain
When a pain sensation reoccurs regularly or remains for more than 12 weeks, know that it's chronic pain. Root causes of chronic health condition are usually nerve-related. It includes nerve trauma, a pinched nerve, arthritis, infections, certain ailments, and more.
Because of the several causes of chronic pain and the numerous forms that it can take, each case of this suffering needs a thorough investigation and personalized care.
A professional Edmonton Massage Therapist can help determine the cause of your suffering. They can help relieve your discomfort in the best and least invasive way.
Although pain management is known for the usage of potent medications like opiates, these substances can be harmful and dangerous due to their addictiveness. Instead, therapists offer alternative treatments such as acupuncture, massage therapy, spinal decompression, and more.
2. Joint Pain
This type of suffering is common in the elderly. The joints are mainly susceptible due to their constant usage and their role in storing excessive uric acid. Although all joints worsen with time, some do faster than others. It can be due to stress, injury, poor diet, or inflammation from an aging immune system.
AEdmonton Massage Therapist can help address the causes of your joint pain. They can perform treatments to reduce and control swelling and inflammation.
Over-the-counter painkillers and medications can reduce swelling and inflammation acutely. However, they are not an ideal long-term solution.
You can introduce anti-inflammatory food into your diet that can help your body address swelling in the joints, as well as general discomfort. For instance, ginger is an efficient supplemental food.
Stretching the ligaments and regular exercise can help your body to cope with joint pain. Specific workouts can massively lessen the pain and stiffness introduced by arthritis. However, without proper guidance and supervision, working out can make the pain much worse.
AnEdmonton Massage Therapistcan recommend some exercises that would help you deal with your plan.
3. Sports Injuries
If you suffer from a sports injury, you should have it professionally diagnosed and treated so that you can heal from it quickly. The management therapist can monitor your healing to address problems like pain and limited mobility, helping you get back to the field, track or court faster.
Pain management requires more than a traditional approach. When suffering from acute suffering, chronic discomfort, joint ache, or sports injuries, you should have it examined by a professional to determine the root cause and its ideal solution.
The treatment can be simple or complex based upon the cause of the ache. When recommending a treatment option, the pain management therapist will consider a few points like the longevity of the suffering, the potential side-effects of specific therapies, and much more. So, be sure to choose the best therapist when looking for help regarding pain management.
Massage Centre in Edmonton: Chinese Massage Therapy Clinic- Millwoods Acupuncture & Massage Centre One of The Leading Massage Centre in Edmonton. Relaxation Massage Therapy with Cupping & Hot Stone. Book a Session with Our Registered Chinese Massage Therapist Today.
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janicecpitts · 5 years
Text
Painters Richmond Va
Contents
House painters wallpapering
Finish local company
Native americans’ point
Metal deck ceilings
Artists painting
RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — A mystery donor has given the Virginia Museum … While VMFA hasn’t released the value of the painting, the Richmond Times-Dispatch reports it was sold to an unidentified buyer fo…
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H. J. Holtz & Son, Inc. Interior Exterior house painters wallpapering, Faux finish local company three … Top Professional Painting Company in Richmond VA.
RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — An iconic masterpiece painted to celebrate U.S. expansion across the American continent has a new home, one that promises to add historical context and the native americans’ point …
Scotts Addition Historic District, National Register, Richmond City, Independent Cities, Richmond VA 23230
CertaPro Painters of Midlothian & NW Richmond provides timely and professional service for all of your Richmond house painting needs. Call For Free Estimate.
Mtg Card Maker Legendary Creature – Goblin Warrior (2/2, red and green) All legendary basic lands gain “R, Discard a card: put a speed counter on target permanent”
124 reviews of Moxie Movers “I really couldn’t believe how many good reviews they had. But after using them I get it. These guys were awesome. Polite, efficient, awesome. They finished packing my house in about 30 minutes. Granted I wanted to make…
Jacob’s Ladder is the best choice for interior and exterior painting, as well as carpentry. We are a professional Richmond painting contractor.
Need a painter or carpenter in Richmond? Call James River Painters for painting and capentry services. Serving Richmond, Chesterfield, Herico Virginia and …
Remember, we are painters specializing in industrial painting or commercial painting, repainting, recoating, and restoring: metal deck ceilings, vinyl ceilings, wood deck ceilings and interior walls for commercial buildings, commercial warehouses, Industrial factories, plants plus manufacturing facilities operating at full production.
Deck Building Details In short, our Slay the Spire Guide details everything that you need to know about playing Slay the Spire. Since this is a card deck
Here is the definitive list of Richmond’s painting contractors as rated by the Richmond, VA community. Want to see who made the cut?
RICHMOND, Va. (WRIC) — There’s approximately 38,000 pieces of artwork inside the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, but a brand new acquisition is elevating the museum’s playing field. For the first time …
For metropolitan and nonmetropolitan area definitions used by the OES survey, see the Metropolitan and nonmetropolitan area definitions page. These estimates are calculated with data collected from employers in all industry sectors in Richmond, VA, a metropolitan statistical area in Virginia …
Need a painter or carpenter in Richmond? Call James River Painters for painting and capentry services. Serving Richmond, Chesterfield, Herico Virginia and more.
RICHMOND, VA (WWBT) – If you’re driving along the Libbie, Patterson and Grove Avenue area, you’ll several local artists painting outside, capturing the community as Autumn arrives. “We’re going to be …
Mo Deck The Millwood and Competitive pools are popular places to be during the summer. The heated pool and deck areas are spacious and comfortable and the
2 reviews of Astyra "I have been working with a lead recruiter at Astyra for a couple of months trying to find a position that fits my skill set and have been very pleased with the communication and level of professionalism shown by the recruiter.…
Supply Warehouse Each store will bring approximately 70 new jobs to their respective areas when they open in the fall of this year. Runnings was founded in
BBB Directory of Painting Contractors near Richmond, VA. BBB Start with Trust ®. Your guide to trusted BBB Ratings, customer reviews and BBB Accredited …
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