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#the mysterious disappearance of leon (i mean noel)
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frenchifries · 2 years
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you could just write whatever in the 70s
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russolaw · 4 months
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All the books i read this year
Under Wildwood
Scream Street: Fang of the Vampire
Mortal Engines
Scream Street: Blood of the Witch
Scream Street: Heart of the Mummy
Wildwood Imperium
Mortal Engines: Predator's Gold
Scream Street: Flesh of the Zombie
Scream Street: Skull of the Skeleton
Mortal Engines: Infernal Devices
Scream Street: Claw of the Werewolf
Scream Street: Invasion of the Normals
Mortal Engines: A Darkling Plain
Scream Street: Attack of the Trolls
Scream Street: Terror of the Nightwatchman
Uzumaki (reread)
Scream Street: Rampage of the Goblins
Scream Street: Hunger of the Yeti
Tombs
Scream Street: Secret of the Changeling
Scream Street: Flame of the Dragon
The Anti-Book
Treasure Island
Nimona
The Key to Extraordinary
Confessions of an Ugly Stepsister
Kaleidoscope
Under the Egg
Fade to Blue
The Tattooed Potato and Other Clues
Figgs and Phantoms
The Mysterious Disappearance of Leon (I Mean Noel)
The Cricket in Times Square (reread)
Tucker's Countryside
The Problim Children
Harry Cat's Pet Puppy
The Problim Children: Carnival Catastrophe
Harry Kitten and Tucker Mouse
Chester Cricket's Pigeon Ride
Soichi
Hunter x Hunter vol 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11
The Problim Children: Island in the Stars
Chester Cricket's New Home
Skunk and Badger
The Old Meadow
Skunk and Badger: Egg Marks the Spot
The Rag and Bone Shop
Lockwood and Co.: The Screaming Staircase
The Outsiders (reread)
I Am the Cheese
Lockwood and Co: The Whispering Skull
Monsterious: Escape from Grimstone Manor
Mortal Engines: Fever Crumb
Lockwood and Co: The Hollow Boy
Monsterious: The Snatcher of Raven Hollow
Monsterious: Terror at Shadow Canyon
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dritatt · 2 years
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Dicebox comic facebook
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#Dicebox comic facebook full
Once you’re old enough to read chapter books, much less mystery books with complicated word puzzles embedded within, you’re certainly old enough to understand that the facts of daily life were different in the past. I wondered for a moment how much this would mystify the children of today, but I dismissed the thought as patronizing. In the Facebook era, it’s almost easier to find acquaintances than it is to lose them. Much of the story hinges on the search for a missing person, and the techniques employed in that search are, while inherently ridiculous, also very much of their time. The flip side of this is the effect the time period has on the plot. The lovely text-as-picture illustrations, which Ellen Raskin herself provided, are rendered in classic late sixties typography and line art.
#Dicebox comic facebook full
First published in 1971, it’s full of tongue-in-cheek period references (the grape workers strike, hippie art communes) that I blithely read past as a child. The Mysterious Disappearance of Leon (I Mean Noel) by Ellen Raskin is one of those. Some are a delightful surprise, as I get to revisit everything I found wonderful about them as a kid while catching some of the more grown-up jokes and references – like suddenly realizing that funny skit from Sesame Street was a send-up of Saturday Night Live. (…not that I don’t still own all the ones that came after, too. Friends, I only wear three pairs of shoes, but I still own just about every book I cared about before my 18th birthday. I’ve been re-reading a few favorite books from childhood and adolescence recently, trying to remember what made them so engaging and important to my younger self.
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keepitdreamin · 3 years
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trying to remember a book i read in like 5th or 6th grade and i think it's the westing game although i mostly just remember the vibe of reading this mystery book as a class and theorizing about who did it. i also remember at the time really liking the writing style so i guess i'll have to read it now and see if it rings any more bells.
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Today’s Queer Headcanon of the Day is: Mrs. Carillon is an acespec demigirl.
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suchabadtush · 4 years
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what's your favourite colour? top 5 favourite songs atm? favourite book(s)? favourite foods? how was your day?
Wow, so many great questions, thank you! Sorry it’s taken me so long to answer! 
My favorite color is teal, or anything really between blue and green.
Top five songs right now aah really difficult, I should go with my gut
The Only Living Boy in New York - Simon & Garfunkel
MISS TAKE~僕はミス・テイク~ - Buck-Tick
Things Behind the Sun - Nick Drake
Romeo Had Juliette - Lou Reed
Court and Spark - Joni Mitchell
(clearly I’m all over the place lately, but mostly wanting some soft stuff)
Favorite books! My all-time favorite is probably The Mysterious Disappearance of Leon (I Mean Noel) by Ellen Raskin. The Moomin books are all really good. I like Poirot books? Radiance by Cat Valente really kinda freaked me out and I think about it a lot. I also like Shakespeare, I dunno, I can’t think of things when I’m trying to, sorry!
Favorite foods are sushi aaand my mama’s enchiladas. And Yumm bowls/wraps from Cafe Yumm.
My day today was sort of a bust. I meant to get up early and Do Things, but it was hot and I felt sad and I didn’t get much done. Maybe that’s most days lately. And now it’s like 6 am and I should have gone to bed hours ago. That’s also most days. Thank you for asking me questions. I hope you’re having a lovely day xoxo
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likeamadonnau2 · 6 years
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I was tagged by @bonos-grindcore-sideproject, my sister in bedge and card-carrying genius, to do this writer thing. Your wish is my command, beautiful Grindcore Woman!
1) How many works in progress do you currently have? Just The White Room, and I’ve been working on that for about a year. 73,000 words so far, and I’m pretty sure it’ll get to 100,000. 
2) Do you/would you write fanfiction? Yes, twelve year break notwithstanding.
3) Do you prefer paper books or ebooks?
 Both, but it is nice to have a device that allows me to look up words on the fly and read in the dark without disturbing my husband.
4) When did you start writing? I’ve been writing in one way or another ever since I was a child. Little illustrated stories and jokes for my friends, poetry, diaries, college publications, so much writing in school and at my job, technical writing, on and on.
5) Do you have someone you trust that you share your work with?
 Non-fic: if I need another set of eyes on it, I trust my husband. Fic: before I post it, if I have a question, I’ll ask PJ or Carina for an opinion, but for the most part I’m self-sufficient. Occasionally I will ask for my husband’s take on topics where he has more experience than I do. There have been times when he wants to read my fic, but right now is not one of those times, and I totally understand this because admittedly my little hobby is weird. Except he read Chapter 12 of TWR a few weeks ago because it was such a beast for me to write, and he was curious. Arrrrgh it makes me so uncomfortable when he cherry-picks! He teases me about my fic (”why do they always have to fuck?”), but he tells people I’m an “astonishingly good” writer. I love him so much.
6) Where is your favorite place to write?
 I write at my desk at home, and if I’m working on something that might be upsetting, I usually move to the most remote room in the house. I also have been known to set up camp for a day in a beloved public library.
7) Favorite childhood book?
 Charlotte’s Web, probably. I was weirdly obsessed with The Mysterious Disappearance of Leon (I Mean Noel) by Ellen Raskin when I was in 4th grade. Also Judy Blume books because they were my sole source of information about sex when I was in junior high.
8) Writing for fun or publication? The fic is 100% for fun and because I feel overwhelmingly compelled to write it. I’ve published a couple of nonfiction things, though.
9) Pen and paper or computer?
 Both. My outlines are written with pen in a notebook that fits in my purse and travels well. If I have no other choice, I’ll write a chapter in the notebook, but otherwise I love working on my computer.
10) Have you ever taken any writing classes? Self-taught, baby, but I had some world-class English teachers in high school, and I wrote SO MUCH in college/grad school for classes and other things.
11) What inspires you to write? As far as Ye Olde Bedge Ficce goes, they do. The chapter I just wrote where Edge talks about subroutines: THAT IS ME. Bono and Edge are my subroutines, and if I go to sleep trying to figure out some fic issue, they will wake me up during the wee hours and hand me an answer. I literally ask them, “What have you got for me?” And they bring it, and sometimes they demonstrate it, heee, and I write it down and try to go back to sleep. 
I am fascinated by the connections my mind can make, and as I get older, the connections come to me more easily. When I’m between stories, some image that no one else has written about will occur to me, and the urge to write that one thing and claim it as mine is so overwhelming that I’ll wrap a giant fic around it. With The White Room, I was looking at a photo of their house in Eze, and I focused on that one cupcake-like room perched on top and thought, “What goes on up there?” BOOM. I’m writing fic for a year. With Close it was the shaving scene (the fake Anton photos came to me almost immediately after that). With Fetish it was the hood scene. With Verse Two it was the callouses. 
So once I have a topic and a semi-coherent plan for how to write it, I’ll decorate it with things I notice in my everyday life, my own memories, art, science, LOVE, the compulsion to create, the beauty of nature, FOOD (ha), sex, friendship, sexy friendships, jokes, the thousands of things Bono and Edge do and say and their general gorgeousness and goodness, and all my research. I write for the BELOVED people who comment regularly and tell me what they like (hi PJ, Carina, Inchy). I don’t know how you can read a fic and not comment. But most of all I am writing for me. It is so much work, but nothing is as fun or as satisfying. 
Okay, anyone who wants to do this can! 
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nunopds · 6 years
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Inteligente, simples e agradável para muitas idades.
No final do ano de 2017 a editora Bruaá lançou “Nunca se passa nada no meu bairro” de Ellen Raskin. Somos levados ao bairro de Carlos Alberto, um bairro onde segundo ele nunca acontecia nada mas na realidade muitas coisas excitantes e estranhas estão acontecendo ao mesmo tempo. Usando o mesmo plano fixo frontal ao longo de todo o livro, as ilustrações de Ellen Raskin dão a sensação cinematográfica de um plano-sequência ou de uma peça de teatro com cenário fixo.
O livro aborda de uma forma simples que não nos devemos acomodar, que a vida é uma grande aventura e senão estivermos atentos ela passa por nós sem darmos por isso.
Clique nas imagens para as visualizar em toda a sua extensão:
Eis a sinopse da editora:
O seu nome era Carlos Alberto e, tanto quanto ele conseguia ver, nunca se passava nada no seu bairro. Ele sonhava com desfiles de bandas, casas assombradas, leões e tigres ferozes e até fogo de artifício. Mas o que é que ele tinha? Nada. Nada que ele visse. Mas se olharmos bem, talvez vejamos algumas coisas que escaparam ao Carlos Alberto: um fogo que começa, um homem que escava um tesouro enterrado, um carteiro azarado, um paraquedista, uma ambulância que é chamada e outras cenas que se vão acumulando e oferecendo um contraponto colorido que irá oferecer horas de diversão aos leitores.
Ellen Raskin nasceu em Milwaukee, EUA, foi uma escritora, ilustradora e designer gráfica. Habitava em muitos mundos: no mundo dos livros, dos sonhos e na cidade de Nova Iorque, onde escreveu e ilustrou numa casa assombrada de 1820. Como designer gráfica, criou capas para mais de 1.000 livros, incluindo a primeira edição do clássico A Wrinkle in Time de Madeleine L’Engle. Foi autora de vários romances, incluindo “The Westing Game”, “Figgs & Phantoms”, “The Tattooed Potato and Other Clues” e “The Mysterious Disappearance of Leon (I Mean Noel) “. Depois de anos a ilustrar as ideias dos outros, Ellen Raskin publica em 1966 o seu primeiro álbum ilustrado: “Nunca se passa nada no meu bairro”. Foi o primeiro de muitos. Raskin morreria aos 56 anos, a 8 de agosto de 1984, na cidade de Nova Iorque.
Nunca se passa nada no meu bairro Ellen Raskin Editora: Bruaá Páginas: 36 Encadernação: capa dura Dimensões: 20 x 16,5 cm ISBN: 978-989-8166-35-7 PVP: 12,50€
nota: agradecimento especial à editora pela oferta de um exemplar.
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Nunca se passa nada no meu bairro #bandasdesenhadas #ellenraskin Inteligente, simples e agradável para muitas idades. No final do ano de 2017 a editora Bruaá lançou "Nunca se passa nada no meu bairro" de Ellen Raskin.
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suchabadtush · 5 years
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cozy asks! apple picking, bookstore, melt, cozy
Thank you!!
apple picking: dream destination?
Let’s see, umm somewhere I want to go. Osaka, so I can go to USJ and concerts and see beautiful things? Or somewhere in Scotland where it’s rainy and green? Or anywhere quiet where I don’t have to see people I don’t want to see and I can spend the time comfortably with someone I really like.
bookstore: favorite childhood book?
My favorite book from my childhood it probably still my favorite book, called The Mysterious Disappearance of Leon (I Mean Noel) by Ellen Raskin. But of course I also grew up with Harry Potter and I was pretty into the Bailey School Kids books about various mythological creatures showing up in the neighborhood, etc when I was in elementary school. Phantom Tollbooth is really good, too.
melt: five ingredients/things that would be in a recipe to make you?
Hmm, I feel like this would be easier for someone who knows me to answer. I guess there’d be some stationery or colored paper in there, some music obviously… maybe crayons or pens (this recipe would be a frickin mess), something soft like socks. And I dunno, something to make it shimmer. Stardust or just straight glitter (if you can’t find your own stardust, store-bought is fine…).
cozy: favorite gift you’ve ever received?
That’s difficult. My sister gave me a shuffle once, which was the first ipod I ever had, and it served me for ten years. It went across the country and the world with me and didn’t give me any trouble, and I was very fond of it. My ex gave me my ukulele which is also great, ‘cause it’s not a crappy one, and I like playing it a lot. I dunno, though. I’m happy when people give me a new journal to write in, or take me to karaoke, or anything. I am very easy to please, and I don’t want to pit gifts against each other because anything at all is generous.
Thanks for asking me things! xoxo!
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suchabadtush · 7 years
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rosehip tea, turkish tea, hot chocolate
Ooh tea questions okay, thank you!!
1. Rosehip tea: Which book did you love when you were younger? Honestly, mostly the same books I love now. Harry Potter was very important, The Mysterious Disappearance of Leon (I Mean Noel) and the Usagi books. They’re all just so good.19. Turkish tea: What is your favourite cake? Not that big on cake most of the time. Cheesecake though, I can get behind some pretty good cheesecakes, definitely.24. Hot chocolate: Do you have (a) stuffed animal(s) sitting in your room? Which one(s)?I’m sure I do... *looks around* Dakin, my teddy bear, is around here somewhere. And there’s that mike wazowski puppet, does that count? Maybe that’s all at the moment...?
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suchabadtush · 7 years
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Cassiopeia: Favourite book?
I feel like I’ve answered this question probably many times and usually in the same way. The Mysterious Disappearance of Leon (I Mean Noel) is almost weirdly near and dear to my heart. I love all the Usagi Yojimbo books, but most profoundly impactful for me was probably The Brink of Life and Death. I love a lot of other books too, like Harry Potter and Moomin books, and Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Universe. *shrug* I don’t really know.
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