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Fireflies photograph in trees with long time exposure.
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it's not that I need a quiet day or a day off exactly; it's that I need a pocket of time that exists entirely outside of linear time as we know it that would allow me to get things done without time passing in the real world, and frankly, I don't think that's too much to ask.
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Nice reference Jojo: ‘Let’s Rock,’ Vogue Italia December 1998, photos by Steven Meisel vs. JOJO A-GO!GO! (2000).
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YASS SAVING FOR BOOK RECS
Black Horror Writers
Feeling a sudden desire, for whatever reason, to add some diversity to your bookshelf? Want to put a few bucks in the pockets of authors of color? Here’s a sampler platter to get you started.
Tananarive Due A film historian and a hot name in horror fiction, Due is an outspoken academic and prolific author. Start with The Good House, a 2003 Gothic, if you’re a fan of haunted house stories.
Wrath James White A former athlete, White is a hugely prolific author of hardcore horror. You can start with The Resurrectionist, but honestly, with more than 35 books to choose from, you’ve got plenty of options.
Victor LaValle LaValle has only written four novels so far, but they’re well-regarded and rich narratives. The Changeling is the usual recommendation for a starting place.
Brandon Massey Southern Gothic themes woven through horror, suspense and urban themes - that’s Massey’s brand in a nutshell. He’s plenty prolific, so you’ve got a bunch to choose from. Maybe start with this year’s new release, The Quiet Ones.
Chesya Burke A prolific short story writer, Burke writes speculative fiction and comic books. If you’d like a collection of stories all in one place, try out Let’s Play White. If you’d rather do a novel, read The Strange Crimes of Little Africa.
Jemiah Jefferson Do you like pulpy erotic vampire horror? You don’t have to answer that. Just buy Jefferson’s books if you do. There’s a series, so you’ll want to start at the beginning with Voice of the Blood.
Michael Boatman An actor and screenwriter, Boatman is also a novelist. He writes splatterpunk that Joe Lansdale has praised, which is as fine an accolade as they come. The Revenant Road was his first novel. He also shows up in a ton of anthologies, so keep an eye out.
Helen Oyeyemi Oyeyemi is a rising star, Shirley Jackson Award finalist, scholar, a world traveler, among other things. Her most recent book, Gingerbread, came out in 2019. I think it would not be out of line to compare her to Angela Carter.
Maurice Carlos Ruffin A debut novelist, Ruffin’s work launched with a bang in February. His book We Cast a Shadow was long-listed for a stack of prizes, and as a scathing cultural sci-fi horror, it fits right in with the work of folks like Jordan Peele.
Nnedi Okorafor A Nigerian-American writer, Okorafor writes for both children and adults, and her stories have earned a whole stack of awards. She is, for the record, also disabled. She’s got a whole stack of YA and adult books to choose from, as well as comic books. Binti and its sequel are as good a place as any to start, though.
Jewelle Gomez Philanthropist, playwright, poet, author – Gomez dabbles in a lot of things, and she’s an outspoken voice for LGBTQ women of color. Check out The Gilda Stories if you’ve always wanted to read about a black lesbian vampire (and, let’s be honest, who hasn’t?)
PS: When you order, don’t waste your money on Amazon. Instead, use a service like https://bookshop.org/ that distributes your hard-earned cash to independent booksellers. Keep money in your community.
PPS: I love Toni Morrison and Octavia Butler and also left them off the list because they’re well-known already and because I think it’s really important right now to support living artists, but you should check out their work too.
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Shapeshifter who gets horribly grotesque and mutilated when flustered
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tapes really did have a cool aesthetic. I think it's also bc fashion was so cool then like the power clash btw the stark lines of the 80s and the lived in shiny grime of the 90s just lingers in our minds and we are propelling it forward into whatever dystopia we eventually land in.
I kinda ya know like I'm glad zombies are over as far as pop culture/social motifs go. That whole movement is so early aughts to 2010s. I think vampires are simultaneously 90s & 1900s somehow. theres like a layer of fashionable eccentricities and ease. witty banter and histories long remembered. Werewolves seem 80s and prehistoric to me like evolution gone wrong somehow. complications in genetic mutations leading to different developments in the tendencies and possible combinations nature could take on.
idk how we got to casetre tapes to here but damn of style don't matter. the only things that seem truly timeless to me are witches and wizards. magic exists in any era
When cassettes ruled the world….
Source: Musikkassetten & Tapedeck
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currently watching yellowjackets and actually obsessed w this woman
JULIETTE LEWIS as Faith Justin in STRANGE DAYS (1995) dir. Kathryn Bigelow
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I just came across this radical feminist graffiti from the 70s. I can’t place where it’s from. Does anyone know?
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René Lalique’s 11-eyed blue-glass flacon for Canarina, 1928.
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