Venezuelan living in Venezuela INFP, Christian, Writer, Reader, Reluctant Ravenclaw. Fangirl since I was 5 and Backstreet Boys were still big. Isaiah 61
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“I get more compliments on the Lip Sync Battle than I do on any of my actual work.”
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What she says: I’m fine
What she means: Anastasia’s Stay, I Pray You is a remarkable, heart-wrenching piece on multiple levels. First is the fact that it is a quiet yet powerful nod to the Russian tradition of waiting by the door before a long journey; passengers are called to board the train, Vlad murmurs, “We should go,” and yet everyone pauses and looks on, off beyond the stage to the land, the home they’re leaving behind. They stand, some sit, all performing this Russian ritual of waiting before going off on their trip from which there will be no return. In the practical sense, this custom helps the traveler remember if they’ve forgotten an item they need; in this case, it lets these refugees remember their home, lest there come a day when they look back and forget even a single detail of their harsh and sweet and bitter time in Russia.
Secondly, the fact that Constantine Germanacos starts off the song (with nothing but vocals, letting his words and call for a moment be the sole focus at first); this is important because he not only plays the ill-fated Count Ipolitov but also the late Tsar Nicholas II, Anastasia’s father. In the Prologue and Once Upon a December, we see Anastasia/Anya dance with her father, and each time he bends down on one knee while she dances around him. Count Ipolitov gets down on one knee and kisses her hand. This is the prelude to Stay, I Pray You: Anya, in a way, connecting with her father from a lifetime before one final time. This introduction connects her (and us) with the past, ties together Anya’s previous life and current, before she sets out to find her future. Before they all set out to find their futures.
Thirdly is how true Stay, I Pray You is to the experience of leaving home, of leaving Russia. The entire spectrum of emotions is captured in this song. They all wonder, how could they possibly leave, how could they justify to their home that they can’t be there any longer? And so they beg for a minute- not to explain themselves, because they can’t even know where to begin; rather, they ask for a moment to do all that they can do: say goodbye. Goodbye to all of Russia, to the natural and the man-made; Russia’s native rivers and greenery, the bridges constructed to knit together a sweeping land, to a sky that should be the same everywhere but very much isn’t. They can’t ever look up at the sky the same way, because it won’t be from their native land, amongst all they’ve ever known. And though they ask how they can possibly break the tie, that’s all they do- ask, but don’t attempt it in this song, because for now all there is to do is remember and say farewell.
There was joy and sadness, as there is in life; the singers are honest, do not exclude anything negative from their experience in Russia because then they are not saying goodbye to all of Russia, all of their home. And through it all, through scars that won’t ever go away, they will bless and love and thank their home for the rest of their lives.
Anya, Dmitry, and Vlad further this trend of capturing every emotion during this farewell. Anya says “Never to return,” which we know to be a source of sadness for her not just because of the song Stay, I Pray You, but when she insists to Vlad “Russia is more beautiful” than France. She still loves it, it’s always a part of her, and to leave forever is something she has to face as one faces any other heartache. Dmitry, however, sees it as “finally breaking free,” because to him life in Russia is one of hardship; refugees can relate to this, and understand that remorse and fear of the unknown can coexist with an eagerness and readiness to flee a place. Vlad asks “how to close the door,” a nod to the lives they all had in their homeland.
Ultimately, Stay, I Pray You is absolute brilliance. The vocals and instrumental choices were done as such that this is left as music of the heart, and left general enough that anyone faced with this overwhelming event in life can relate, can find themselves somewhere- everywhere- in these lyrics.
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Cardan: The three of you have one solution to every problem. Murder. Someone tries to betray the High King, murder. Someone gives you a harsh look, murder. Someone disrespects you, murder. Someone ruins your laundry, murder.
Jude: *mumbles* some idiot makes me fall in love with him, MURDER!
Cardan: What?
Jude: What?
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A reminder that Hiccup is sassy. Do not forget his sass.
“Yeah, that’s ten seconds of my life I’m never getting back.”
“Roofing material? Didn’t we have that for dinner last night?”
“Sorry. Must have left it in my other pants.”
“Then I accept your surrender.”
“Between you and me, the village could do with a little less feeding.”
“Are you calling your father ridiculous?” “What? No. I would never. I’m calling my chief ridiculous.”
“And make a fool out of me?!” “You don’t really need a lot of help with that, Dagur.”
Got any more sassy quotes? Add them to the list!
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How To Train Your Dragon: The Hidden World | New Scenes
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HTTYD 3 Trailer: *iconic piano notes to Where’s Hiccup start playing* There were dragons, when I was a boy— me:
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Ok. I’m tired of the typical vampire, werewolf and fairy.I’m also tired of the occidental-centrism in mythology. Hence, this list.
I tried to included as many cultural variants as I could find and think of. (Unfortunately, I was restricted by language. Some Russian creatures looked very interesting but I don’t speak Russian…) Please, add creatures from your culture when reblogguing (if not already present). It took me a while to gather all those sites but I know it could be more expansive. I intend on periodically editing this list.
Of note: I did not include specific legendary creatures (Merlin, Pegasus, ect), gods/goddesses/deities and heroes.
Dragons
The Chinese Dragon
The Japanese Dragon
The Korean Dragon
The Vietnamese Dragon
The Greek Dragon
The Indian Dragon
The Polish Dragon
The Austrian Dragon
The British Dragon
The Ancient Dragon (Egypt, Babylon and Sumer)
The Spanish Basque Dragon
Of the Cockatrice (creature with the body of a dragon)
Alphabetical List of Dragons Across Myths (Great way to start)
Little creatures (without wings)
The Legend of the Leprechauns, The Leprechaun
Chanaque /Alux (the equivalent of leprechauns in Aztec/Mayan folklore)
Elves
Elves in Mythology and Fantasy
Elves in Germanic Mythology
Kabeiroi or Cabeiri (Dwarf-like minor gods in Greek mythology)
Norse Dwarves
The Myth of Loki and the Dwarves
Ten Types of Goblins
Goblins
Tengu: Japanese Goblins
Gnomes
More on Gnomes
Pooka: an Irish phantom
Creatures with wings (except dragons)
Fairies
All sorts of Cultural Fairies
Fairies in Old French Mythology
A Fairy List
Bendith Y Mamau (Welsh fairies)
Welsh Fairies
Peri (Persian fairies)
Yü Nü (Chinese fairies)
The Celtic Pixie
Angels in Judaism
Angels in Christianity
Hierarchy of Angels
Angels in Islam
Irish Sylph
Garuda (Bird-like creature in Hindu and Buddhist myths)
Bean Nighe (a Scottish fairy; the equivalent of a banshee in Celtic mythology)
Harpies
Spirited Creatures
Druids
Jinn (Genies in Arabic folklore)
Types of Djinns
Aisha Qandisha and Djinn in Moroccan Folklore
Oni (demons in Japanese folklore)
Nymphs
Spirits in Asturian Mythology
Valkyries
Lesovik
Boggarts: The British Poltergeist
Phantom black dogs (the Grim)
Demons in Babylonian and Assyrian Mythology (list)
Demons in the Americas (list)
European Demons (list)
Middle-East and Asia Demons (list)
Judeo-Christian Demons (list)
Nephilim, more on Nephilim
Mahaha (a demon in Inuit mythology)
Flying Head (a demon in Iroquois mythology)
Ghosts
Toyol (a dead baby ghost in Malay folklore)
Malay Ghosts
Yuki-onna (a ghost in Japanese folklore)
The Pontianak (a ghost in Malay mythology)
Funayurei (a ghost in Japanese folklore)
Zagaz (ghosts in Moroccan folklore)
Japanese Ghosts
Mexican Ghosts
Horse-like mythical creatures
Chinese Unicorns
Unicorns
The Kelpie (Could have also fitted in the sea creatures category)
The Centaur
The Female Centaur
Hippocamps (sea horses in Greek mythology)
Horse-like creatures (a list)
Karkadann, more on the Karkadann (a persian unicorn)
Ceffyl Dwfr (fairy-like water horse creatures in Cymric mythology)
Undead creatures
The Melanesian Vampire
The Ewe Myth : Vampires
The Germanic Alp
The Indonesian Vampire
Asanbosam and Sasabonsam (Vampires from West Africa)
The Aswang: The Filipino Vampire
Folklore Vampires Versus Literary Vampires
Callicantzaros: The Greek Vampire
Vampires in Malaysia
Loogaroo/Socouyant: The Haitian Vampire
Incubi and Sucubi Across Cultures
Varacolaci: The Romanian Vampire
Brahmaparusha: The Indian Vampire
Genesis of the Word “Vampire”
The Ghoul in Middle East Mythology
Slavic Vampires
Vampires A-Z
The Medical Truth Behind the Vampire Myths
Zombies in Haitian Culture
Shape-shifters and half-human creatures (except mermaids)
Satyrs (half-man, half-goat)
Sirens in Greek Mythology (half-woman and half-bird creatures)
The Original Werewolf in Greek Mythology
Werewolves Across Cultures
Werewolf Syndrome: A Medical Explanation to the Myth
Nagas Across Cultures
The Kumiho (half fox and half woman creatures)
The Sphinx
Criosphinx
Scorpion Men (warriors from Babylonian mythology)
Pooka: an Irish changelings
Domovoi (a shape-shifter in Russian folklore)
Aatxe (Basque mythology; red bull that can shift in a human)
Yech (Native American folklore)
Ijiraat (shapeshifters in Inuit mythology)
Sea creatures
Selkies (Norse mermaids)
Mermaids in many cultures
More about mermaids
Mermen
The Kraken (a sea monster)
Nuckelavee (a Scottish elf who mainly lives in the sea)
Lamiak (sea nymphs in Basque mythology)
Bunyip (sea monster in Aboriginal mythology)
Apkallu/abgal (Sumerian mermen)
An assemblage of myths and legends on water and water creatures
Slavic Water Creatures
The Encantado (water spirits in Ancient Amazon River mythology)
Zin (water spirit in Nigerian folklore)
Qallupilluk (sea creatures in Inuit mythology)
Monsters That Don’t Fit in Any Other Category
Aigamuxa, more details on Aigamuxa
Amphisabaena
Abere
Bonnacon
Myrmidons (ant warriors)
Troll, More on Trolls
Golems
Golems in Judaism
Giants: The Mystery and the Myth (50 min long documentary)
Inupasugjuk (giants in Inuit mythology)
Fomorians (an Irish divine race of giants)
The Minotaur
The Manticore, The Manticore and The Leucrouta
The Ogre
The Orthus (two-headed serpent-tailed dog)
The Windigo
The Windigo Psychosis
Rakshasa (humanoids in Hindu and Buddhist mythology)
Yakshas (warriors in Hindu mythology)
Taqriaqsuit (“Shadow people” in Inuit mythology)
References on Folklore and Mythology Across the Globe
Creatures of Irish Folklore
Folklore and Fairytales
An Overview of Persian Folklore
Filipino Folklore
Myths, Creatures and Folklore
Alaska Folklore
Spanish (Spain) Mythology
Mythical Archive
Mythology Dictionary
List of Medieval and Ancient Monsters
Native American Animals of Myth and Legends
Native American Myths
Bestiary of Ancient Greek Mythology
Mythology, Legend, Folklore and Ghosts
Angels and Demons
List of Sea Creatures
Yoruba Mythology
Ghosts Around the World, Ghosts From A to Z
Strange (Fantastic) Animals of Ancient Egypt
Egyptian Mythology
Creatures from West Africa
On the Legendary Creatures of Africa
Myths, Creatures and Folklore
References on writing a myth or mythical creatures
Writing a MYTHology in your novel?
How to Write a Myth
10 Steps to Creating Realistic Fantasy Creatures
Creating Fantasy Creatures or Alien Species
Legendary Creature Generator
Book Recommendations With Underrated Mythical Creatures
(I have stumbled upon web sites that believed some of these mythical creatures exist today… Especially dragons, in fact. I just had to share the love and scepticism.)
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If you want to watch this scene for hours here is a gif for you ♥
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I had the Slider Sony Ericson in pink, the LG exactly like the one in the picture, and the BB in black, and then another BB before I got an iphone haha
I can solve this millennial or gen z confusion
If you had any of the following phones as a teenager you’re a millennial. If you started teenage years with an iPhone you’re gen z.
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Dorian smiled. And found himself, for the first time in a while, looking forward to tomorrow.
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Friendship is unnecessary, like philosophy, like art…. It has no survival value; rather it is one of those things which give value to survival.
C.S. Lewis, The Four Loves (via books-n-quotes)
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OFFICIAL LOGO FOR ‘SPIDER-MAN: FAR FROM HOME’!
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#BoostMyBio 2018
Hello, Pitch Wars!
My name is Maria José Morillo (but my Friends call me Majo, so feel free to call me that), and this is my first time doing Pitch Wars. Let’s go!
I’m currently revising my YA Fantasy novel THE REIGN OF A RIGHTEOUS PRINCE, which follows reluctant Crown Prince Asa, his twin brother Acel, and very poor decisión making on both their parts.
The fragile peace the kingdom of Thysia—a rich and desirable nation the rest of the world only knows through legends and whispered bedtime stories—has maintained for thousands of years begins to crumble when prince Asa bargains for the throne for the chance to discover who he is away from the confinement of the palace and the burden that comes with being a prince. The charade is simple: his twin brother, Acel becomes Asa, and Asa becomes whoever he wants.
But it’s not as easy as that. Away from the Palace exists a world he’d never seen before, with witches, invisible doors, and a side of Thysia braver than he’d ever known. In order to preserve it, Asa is going to have to overcome his great fear, which is to be a leader to a country that has never wanted him on the throne, while discovering a whole world he thought long extinguished.
I’ve been wrking on this story for almost three years now.
*SHOUT OUT TO MY WONDERFUL, BEAUTIFUL, SUPRA TALENTED, PATIENT CP/SOUL SISTER NESSA FOR PUTTING UP WITH IT*
One of the things I love most about it is Thysia, the kingdom Asa is about to inherit. It is a hidden kingdom, á la Wakanda, but heavily inspired in my own country, Venezuela, and the beautiful landscape and culture of Ireland and Scotland.
Another thing I love are the characters.
Asa, my beloved prince son person.
Darda, my half-dorcha warrior girl
Iris, my dagger-wielder dorcha hunter.
Zetham, my half-dorcha warrior clown (and Darda’s bro)
Mathis, my half-dorcha brooding warrior (you guessed it, they’re triplets!)
Cedric, my royal guard and Asa’s bestie (also Iris’ bro)
Chrissie, Asa’s betrothed and the love of Acel’s life
Acel, my beautiful boy and Asa’s twin/changeling/actual heir to the Dorcha throne. (But don’t tell Asa because he doesn’t know yet)
YOU CAN ALSO EXPECT
Drama!
Magic!
Blood!
Family!
Ugly flying creatures!
Sarcasm courtesy of Asa!
Maybe some tears?
A slow-burn romance?
Similar in tone to Jennifer A. Nielsen’s THE FALSE PRINCE, but targeted to a YA audience, I think it might appeal to fans of V.E Schawbs A DARKER SHADE OF MAGIC.
It is the child of my heart, and I’m willing to work as hard and long as possible to make it the absolute best it can be.
The story first came to me as a simple idea of a King named Asa. And then a guidebook on how to be a good King (which he wasn’t, the early drafts are really something). I’ve loved Asa from day one, he’s the only thing that hasn’t changed about this book in the past 3 years of writing, rewriting, rewriting, rewriting, and now revising. I’m so incredibly excited to be doing Pitch Wars because, apart from giving us the chance to get a mentor and possibly an agent later on, it has giving me the chance to share little bits of Asa with the Pitch Wars community, and I’m super grateful for that.
A LITTLE ABOUT ME.
I’m a 25 year old venezuelan girl, still living in Venezuela.
I’m a Christian.
Architecture student (No, I don’t like it very much *sobs*)
Singer, guitar player, bass player, and hopefully soon-to-be drums player *crosses fingers*
I taught myself how to speak english when I was 14 because the Jonas Brothers didn’t speak spanish, and I really, really, really wanted to be able to talk to them. Now I can, but don’t really want to.
Conspiracy theories fan.
Accidental spoiler.
SOME OF MY FAVORITE BOOKS INCLUDE:
The Chronicles of Narnia by C.S Lewis
Every book in The Grishaverse by Leigh Bardugo (CAN JANUARY COME SOONER?!)
Anything by Colleen Hoover
Anything by Sarah J. Maas
The Cruel Prince by Holly Black
Anything by Kasie West
Thank you for making it this far down. The Pitch Wars community has been so great! I can’t wait to read all your books.
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Editing Tips
Hello again! Yesterday, we posted about our writing tips but today, it’s all about editing! Check out some of our tips below!
How to Edit (Via an Editor’s POV)
Line Edits
First Draft Revisions
Second + Third Draft Revisions
How to Edit (Via a Writer’s POV)
Editing Process I
Editing Process II
Editing Process III
Editing Process IV
Editing Process V
Different Genres, Different Approaches
Horror
Fantasy
Miscellaneous
How to Proofread/Revise
Proofreading/Revising Process I
Proofreading/Revising Process II
Proofreading/Revising Process III
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I have dieeeeed!
Aelin has risked everything to save her people―but at a tremendous cost. Locked within an iron coffin by the Queen of the Fae, Aelin must draw upon her fiery will as she endures months of torture. Aware that yielding to Maeve will doom those she loves keeps her from breaking, though her resolve begins to unravel with each passing day…
With Aelin captured, Aedion and Lysandra remain the last line of defense to protect Terrasen from utter destruction. Yet they soon realize that the many allies they’ve gathered to battle Erawan’s hordes might not be enough to save them. Scattered across the continent and racing against time, Chaol, Manon, and Dorian are forced to forge their own paths to meet their fates. Hanging in the balance is any hope of salvation―and a better world.
And across the sea, his companions unwavering beside him, Rowan hunts to find his captured wife and queen―before she is lost to him forever.
As the threads of fate weave together at last, all must fight, if they are to have a chance at a future. Some bonds will grow even deeper, while others will be severed forever in the explosive final chapter of the Throne of Glass series.
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