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#&. willa mckay
nightmaresrp · 2 years
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OUR JULY OF THE MONTH WINNERS ARE...
MOST LIKELY TO KILL EACH OTHER:      Phoenix McKay (played by Vix) & Denver Halifax (played by Wishh)
CHARACTER OF THE MONTH:      Casey Markham (played by Phoenix)
MOST MANIPULATIVE:     Atticus Young (played by Penguin)
MOST EPIC FAMILY:     Lucien Bancroft (played by Lexie), Silas Bancroft (played by Lux) & Tiberius Bancroft (played by Vix)
I SHIP IT:     Phoenix McKay (played by Vix) & His Harem Which Include Wren Whitley (played by Hatter), Elenia Del Toro (played by Wishh), Valentina Sanchez (played by Penguin) & Willa Ramsey (played by Lexie)
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Slate TV critic Willa Paskin, introducing the topic of shipping: "When I was a kid, maybe in the sixth grade, I went to a friend's house. Her older sister was watching TV in the living room and I heard something amazing." (Beverly Hills 90210 theme song plays) "Beverly Hills 90210 was a prime time soap opera about the trials and tribulations of well-heeled high school students. I loved it instantly. In the episode I saw, Brenda Walsh, a sassy Minnesota transplant, and her boyfriend, the bad boy Dylan McKay, were spending their summer vacation sneaking around because they had been forbidden from dating by Brenda's overprotective father."
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sea-changed · 5 years
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the second quarter of 2019 in books
27. Portrait of a Woman in Silk: Hidden Histories of the British Atlantic World, Zara Anishanslin 28. A Seditious Affair, K.J. Charles [reread. obvs.] 29. Queer/Early/Modern, Carla Freccero 30, A Lady’s Desire, Lily Maxton [the worst of the f/f cliches, trite and badly written] 31. Imre: A Memorandum, Edward Prime-Stevenson 32. Patient Zero and the Making of the AIDS Epidemic, Richard McKay 33. Tin Man, Sarah Winman 34. A Gentleman’s Position, K.J. Charles [the plot structure only gets weirder upon rereading] 35. Pages for You, Sylvia Brownrigg [academia f/f, obviously appealing, though it ended up leaving me somewhat flat] 36. Darius the Great is Not Okay, Adib Khorram 37. Wanted, a Gentleman, K.J. Charles [reread, but I wasn’t counting novellas last year. Remains a delight.] 38. Proper English, K.J. Charles [alas, disappointing. would love KJC to start writing pairings with interesting interpersonal drama again. also, the sex was boring.] 39. An Unnatural Vice, K.J. Charles [a dnf the first time around, better than I remembered, though as far second-installment opposite-attract pairings go it obviously can’t compete] 40. Release, Patrick Ness [YA books that don’t read as patronizing are so rare, so kudos on that] 41. The Great Believers, Rebecca Makkai [the farther from this I get the less I like it, though the reading itself was compelling] 42. Washington Black, Esi Edugyan 43. Broadway: A History of New York City in Thirteen Miles, Fran Leadon 44. The Line of Beauty, Alan Hollinghurst [I don’t get Hollinghurst, though the man can write an absolutely devastating one-liner] 45. Artful, Ali Smith 46. O Pioneers!, Willa Cather 47. American Histories, John Edgar Wideman 48. American Eden: David Hosack, Botany, and Medicine in the Garden of the Early Republic, Victoria Johnson 49. Murmur, Will Eaves 50. How to Be Both, Ali Smith [I want to like Ali Smith more than I actually do, but this did have its moments] 51. The Faraway Nearby, Rebecca Solnit [possibly my favorite of 2019 so far. Solnit’s prose is hypnotizing] 52. The Age of Innocence, Edith Wharton [reread] 53. Mystery and Manners, Flannery O’Connor 54. Lie With Me, Philippe Besson (trans. Molly Ringwald) 55. Interior States, Meghan O’Gieblyn [disappointingly pedestrian] 56. The Argonauts, Maggie Nelson 57. Astray, Emma Donoghue [can I use the comment “disappointingly pedestrian” twice in one book list?]
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mswyrr · 6 years
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“Whose woods these are, I think I”—whoa! We can’t quote any more of Robert Frost’s “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening,” because it is still under copyright as this magazine goes to press. But come January 1, 2019, we, you, and everyone in America will be able to quote it at length on any platform.
At midnight on New Year’s Eve, all works first published in the United States in 1923 will enter the public domain. It has been 21 years since the last mass expiration of copyright in the U.S.
That deluge of works includes not just “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening,” which appeared first in the New Republic in 1923, but hundreds of thousands of books, musical compositions, paintings, poems, photographs and films. After January 1, any record label can issue a dubstep version of the 1923 hit “Yes! We Have No Bananas,” any middle school can produce Theodore Pratt’s stage adaptation of The Picture of Dorian Gray, and any historian can publish Winston Churchill’s The World Crisis with her own extensive annotations. Any artist can create and sell a feminist response to Marcel Duchamp’s seminal Dadaist piece, The Large Glass (The Bride Stripped Bare by Her Bachelors, Even) and any filmmaker can remake Cecil B. DeMille’s original The Ten Commandments and post it on YouTube.
“The public domain has been frozen in time for 20 years, and we’re reaching the 20-year thaw,” says Jennifer Jenkins, director of Duke Law School’s Center for the Study of the Public Domain. The release is unprecedented, and its impact on culture and creativity could be huge. We have never seen such a mass entry into the public domain in the digital age. The last one—in 1998, when 1922 slipped its copyright bond—predated Google. “We have shortchanged a generation,” said Brewster Kahle, founder of the Internet Archive. “The 20th century is largely missing from the internet.”
For academics fearful of quoting from copyrighted texts, teachers who may be violating the law with every photocopy, and modern-day artists in search of inspiration, the event is a cause for celebration. For those who dread seeing Frost’s immortal ode to winter used in an ad for snow tires, “Public Domain Day,” as it is sometimes known, will be less joyful. Despite that, even fierce advocates for copyright agree that, after 95 years, it is time to release these works. “There comes a point when a creative work belongs to history as much as to its author and her heirs,” said Mary Rasenberger, executive director of the Authors Guild.
* * *
We can blame Mickey Mouse for the long wait. In 1998, Disney was one of the loudest in a choir of corporate voices advocating for longer copyright protections. At the time, all works published before January 1, 1978, were entitled to copyright protection for 75 years; all author’s works published on or after that date were under copyright for the lifetime of the creator, plus 50 years. Steamboat Willie, featuring Mickey Mouse’s first appearance on screen, in 1928, was set to enter the public domain in 2004. At the urging of Disney and others, Congress passed the Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act, named for the late singer, songwriter and California representative, adding 20 years to the copyright term. Mickey would be protected until 2024—and no copyrighted work would enter the public domain again until 2019, creating a bizarre 20-year hiatus between the release of works from 1922 and those from 1923.
This hole in history was accidental, but it occurred at a remarkable moment. The novelist Willa Cather called 1922 the year “the world broke in two,” the start of a great literary, artistic and cultural upheaval. In 1922, Ulysses by James Joyce and T.S. Eliot’s “The Waste Land” were published, and the Harlem Renaissance blossomed with the arrival of Claude McKay’s poetry in Harlem Shadows. For two decades those works have been in the public domain, enabling artists, critics and others to burnish that notable year to a high gloss in our historical memory. In comparison, 1923 can feel dull.
But that was the year Noël Coward staged his first musical, the hit London Calling!, and Jean Toomer came out with his breakthrough novel about African-American life, Cane. Because access to these and other works from the year has been limited, our understanding of the tumultuous 1920s is skewed. That will begin to change January 1, when digital compendia such as the Internet Archive, Google Books and HathiTrust will make tens of thousands of books available, with more to follow. They and others will also add heaps of newspapers, magazines, movies and other materials.
Much the same will happen every January 1 until 2073, revealing long-overlooked works from the Harlem Renaissance, the Great Depression, World War II and beyond. (After 2073, works published by authors who died seven decades earlier will expire each year.) “We’re going to open these time capsules on a yearly basis...and potentially have our understanding of that year and all the contents change,” said Paul Saint-Amour, a professor of English at the University of Pennsylvania and editor of Modernism and Copyright.
“We can’t predict what uses people are going to make of the work we make available,” said Mike Furlough, executive director of HathiTrust. “And that’s what makes that so exciting,”
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quakerjoe · 6 years
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We can blame Mickey Mouse for the long wait. In 1998, Disney was one of the loudest in a choir of corporate voices advocating for longer copyright protections. At the time, all works published before January 1, 1978, were entitled to copyright protection for 75 years; all author’s works published on or after that date were under copyright for the lifetime of the creator, plus 50 years. Steamboat Willie, featuring Mickey Mouse’s first appearance on screen, in 1928, was set to enter the public domain in 2004. At the urging of Disney and others, Congress passed the Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act, named for the late singer, songwriter and California representative, adding 20 years to the copyright term. Mickey would be protected until 2024—and no copyrighted work would enter the public domain again until 2019, creating a bizarre 20-year hiatus between the release of works from 1922 and those from 1923.
This hole in history was accidental, but it occurred at a remarkable moment. The novelist Willa Cather called 1922 the year “the world broke in two,” the start of a great literary, artistic and cultural upheaval. In 1922, Ulysses by James Joyce and T.S. Eliot’s “The Waste Land” were published, and the Harlem Renaissance blossomed with the arrival of Claude McKay’s poetry in Harlem Shadows. For two decades those works have been in the public domain, enabling artists, critics and others to burnish that notable year to a high gloss in our historical memory. In comparison, 1923 can feel dull.
Read more: https://www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-culture/first-time-20-years-copyrighted-works-enter-public-domain-180971016/#xHf5c2E7I7cGeO89.99
Give the gift of Smithsonian magazine for only $12! http://bit.ly/1cGUiGv
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swornking · 7 years
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hey! i’m a big fan of the cruel prince and i was wondering if you had any fcs ideas for other characters? i love who you chose for cardan! sorry for bothering you, i just came across your blog and fangirled a little
ahhhhhHHHHhh you and my both , fam !! also first of all don’t feel like you’re bothering me because i actually had a lot of fun putting this together !! and secondly omg thank you so much for that little bit of validation ?? i love ( 1 ) !! anyway below i’ve just attached some options !! i’m sure i could fine more and honestly i will continue to add more but i need to sleep now tbh .
disclaimer: when i personally look for fcs of canon characters i don’t just look at the big obvious physical traits . i like to look at the attitude and how they carry themselves as a whole . so below ( especially considering that they’re fae ) are mostly very loosely based on their book descriptions . anyway , hope this helps !! feel free to ask me any more questions pertaining to this particular post or anything else regarding tcp !!
** words in brackets lead to links !! please click them !!*** in case you haven’t noticed i am one for underused fcs !!
jude / taryn
“ shaggy brown hair and heart-shaped faces ”
odeya rush ( my fave choice tbh )
naomi scott ( attitude-wise )
adele exarchopoulos ( soft , rounder features )
blu hunt ( same as the above tbh )
mai mitchell ( she’s a bit too over-used imo so eh )
madoc
lee pace ( this gif is a mood )
mahershala ali ( love this man )
cillian murphy ( always a good one to consider )
harry lloyd ( there are two looks tbh !! both work !! ) 
oscar isaac ( i mean )
matthew goode ( sure )
vivi
ashley moore ( her eYES her everyth iNg )
riley voelkel ( that fiona goode aesthetic !! )
yvette monreal ( cat eyes and attitude tbh )
hayley law ( she has cat eyes ish ?? )
eleanor tomlinson ( she’s pretty fae looking )
caitlin stasey ( i just uh love her !! how could you not ?? )
penelope mitchell ( idk idk idk )
willa fitzgerald ( she looks kinda like a pixie ?? but also eh )
locke
“ his hair the precise color of fox fur ”
keiynan lonsdale ( not exactly the “fox face” but his aesthetic !! )
josh whitehouse ( honestly this one’s a pretty good one )
rob raco ( them eyes !! i like him for locke tbh ?? )
timothée chalamet ( my son of many months and now he’s growing big ! i think he’s a def locke contender )
dean geyer ( fox eye ish ?? that’s a big ish )
george mckay ( innocent ?? until proven guilty ?? ) 
tobey regbo ( reign aesthetic )
rj king ( foxyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy )
valerian
aneurin barnard ( yOooOOO )
santiago segura ( y EP )
robbie kay ( he’s got the evil fae aesthetic to a T )
amadeus serafini ( distrustful white boy )
logan shroyer ( another white boy i wud not trust )
michael fjordbak ( that random suggestion i throw in )
nicasia
“ hair is the blue-green of the ocean ”
ivana baquero ( seriously my TOP choice !! look !! not only does she got the fae aesthetic bc of the show but also !! gays !! )
chloe bridges ( get it girl )
ana de armas ( uhm hot )
camila mendes ( she’s probs overused be hey )
bianca santos ( gorg )
malese jow ( she could stab me and i’d thank her )
the bomb 
“ tiny, delicate girl, her skin the dappled brown of a doe, her hair a cloud of white around her head, and a minature pair of blu-gray butterfly wings on her back. she’s got at least some pixie in her, if not imp. ”
rosa salazar ( she got that pixie look )
zoe kravitz ( AIN’ T THIS THE LOOK )
sophia lillis ( cute !! perf !! )
pom klementieff ( the hair , and she looks pixie !! )
the ghost
james paxton ( that hair tho )
prince balekin
andrew lees ( do you trust this face ?? i don’t )
dan stevens ( specifically from the guest , a diff vibe / he could also work for prince dain tbh )
riz ahmed ( MY MAN / he could work for dain too tbh )
prince dain
bradley james ( i didn’t even try with this one i was la zy )
older oak
lucas jade zumann ( cute )
orianna
“ her skin is the bluish colour of skim milk, and her hair is as white as fresh-fallen snow. she is beautiful but unnerving to look at, like a ghost ”
kirsten kruek ( not that description at all but i trust her ?? and her eyes ?? )
queen orlagh
katie mcgrath ( she’s great okay ?? damn this look tho )
heather
asami zdrenka ( need i say more ?? )
princess elowyn
jodie comer ( period piece )
other random semi underused fcs that i didn’t place initially but you might want to look into them:
seychelle gabriel
diego luna
saoirse ronan
sarah gadon
jessican barden
alexandra ship
brianna hilde
sydney park
courtney eaton
bella heathcote
logan browning ( cat eyes )
lauren german ( cat eyes )
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paperbackd · 8 years
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Here’s a masterpost of YA books (and a few crossover MG titles) to be released in February 2017. Check out this month’s new releases below. Feel free to use this as a guide to this month’s releases, but please do not repost it in its entirety elsewhere. If you found this masterpost helpful, a like, reblog, or link back to Paperback’d would be much appreciated!
February 1st
Unconventional by Maggie Harcourt ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
Wipeout (The Seven Signs #3) by Michael Adams ✤ Goodreads
February 2nd
All About Mia by Lisa Williamson ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
February 7th
At the Edge of the Universe by Shaun David Hutchinson ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
The Burning World (Warm Bodies #2) by Isaac Marion ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
Denton Little's Still Not Dead (Denton Little #2) by Lance Rubin ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
Disruptor (Seeker #3) by Arwen Elys Dayton ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
Empress of a Thousand Skies by Rhoda Belleza ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
Guardian of Secrets (Library Jumpers #2) by Brenda Drake ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
King's Cage (Red Queen #3) by Victoria Aveyard ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
Lessons in Falling by Diana Gallagher ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
Nowhere Near You by Leah Thomas ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
Returned (Forbidden #3) by Kimberley Griffiths Little ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
Rise of Fire (Reign of Shadows #2) by Sophie Jordan ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
Romeo & What's Her Name by Shani Petroff ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
Starfall (Starflight #2) by Melissa Landers ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
To Catch a Killer by Sheryl Scarborough ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
A Tragic Kind of Wonderful by Eric Lindstrom ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
Traveller by L.E. DeLano ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
Wintersong by S. Jae Jones ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
February 9th
Ariadnis (Erthe #1) by Josh Martin ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
We Come Apart by Sarah Crossan & Brian Conaghan ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
February 13th
Any Boy But You (North Pole Minnesota #1) by Julie Hammerle ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
There's Something About Nik by Sara Hantz ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
Weddings, Crushes and Other Dramas (Willa and Finn #2) by Emily McKay ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
February 14th
American Street by Ibi Zoboi ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
Dare You (Nikki Kill #2) by Jennifer Brown ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
The Last of August (Charlotte Holmes #2) by Brittany Cavallaro ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
Piecing Me Together by Renée Watson ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
The Release (The Prey #3) by Tom Isbell ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
A Season of Daring Greatly by Ellen Emerson White ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
Stranger than Fanfiction by Chris Colfer ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
Switching Gears by Chantele Sedgwick ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
The Valiant by Lesley Livingston ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
We Are Okay by Nina LaCour ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
The Wish Granter by C.J. Redwine ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
February 15th
When Morning Comes by Arushi Raina ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
Who We Are Instead by Kyla Stone ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
February 17th
Frogkisser! by Garth Nix ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
February 21st
Beautiful Broken Girls by Kim Savage ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
A Conjuring of Light (Shades of Magic #3) by V.E. Schwab ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
Day of Ice (A Crusoe Adventure #2) by Andrew Lane ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
The Dragon's Price (Transference #1) by Bethany Wiggins ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
Dreamland Burning by Jennifer Latham ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
The Education of Margot Sanchez by Lilliam Rivera ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
Everything Beautiful Is Not Ruined by Danielle Younge-Ullman ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
Long May She Reign by Rhiannon Thomas ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
Making Faces by Amy Harmon ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
Optimists Die First by Susin Nielsen ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
Ronit & Jamil by Pamela L. Laskin ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
February 22nd
The Eleventh Hour (Agent Nomad #1) by Skye Melki-Wegner ✤ Goodreads
The Things We Promise by J.C. Burke ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
February 23rd
In Your Light by A.J. Grainger ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
Close Your Eyes by Nicci Cloke ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
February 28th
10 Things I Can See from Here by Carrie Mac ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
Avenged (The Arnaud Legacy #3) by Lynn Carthage ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
The Beast Is an Animal by Peternelle van Arsdale ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
Daughter of the Pirate King by Tricia Levenseller ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
The Free by Lauren McLaughlin ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
Gardenia by Kelsey Sutton ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
A Good Idea by Cristina Moracho ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
The Hate U Give by Angie Thomas ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
Heels, Heartache and Headlines (Hollywood High #5) by Ni-Ni Simone & Amir Abrams ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
Here We Are: Feminism for the Real World by Kelly Jensen ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
A Lie for a Lie by Robin Merrow MacCready ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
Lifeblood (Everlife #2) by Gena Showalter ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
Off the Ice (Juniper Falls #1) by Julie Cross ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
One Blood Ruby (Seven Black Diamonds #2) by Melissa Marr ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
Rebels Like Us by Liz Reinhardt ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
Sad Perfect by Stephanie Elliot ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
Velocity by Chris Wooding ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
Well, That Was Awkward by Rachel Vail ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
Wild Lily by K.M. Peyton ✤ Goodreads | Amazon
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micaramel · 5 years
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Our selections from NADA Miami 2019 can be viewed as a slideshow including individual works and booths from throughout the fair or by using the links to documentation of full booths below:
Mattea Perrotta at Et al. 
Masanori Tomita, Yu Nishimura, Yutaka Nozawa at KAYOKOYUKI
Ben Echeverria at Parisa Kind
Cassidy Toner, Elliott Jamal Robbins, Steffani Jemison, Ben Morgan-Cleveland at Kai Matsumiya
Emily Ludwig Shaffer at L’INCONNUE
Elise Ferguson at Halsey McKay
Lila de Magalhaes at Deli Gallery
Kathia St.Hilaire at Derek Eller
James Castle at Adams and Ollman 
Zach Meisner, Michael Madrigali, Chloe Seibert at MICKEY
Max Frintrop, Benoit Platéus at Berthold Pott
Mira Dancy, Samara Golden, Wanda Koop, Robert Nava at Night Gallery
Michelle Grabner, Mari Eastman, Sky Hopinka at The Green Gallery 
Anna Schachinger at Sophie Tappeiner
Max Brand, Markus Ebner, Lin May Saeed, Lea von Wintzingerode at Jacky Strenz
Martin Soto Climent, Gina Beavers, Dona Nelson, Anthony Burdin at Michael Benevento
Glendalys Medina, Kenny Rivero, Dalton Gata, Daniel Lind Ramos, Manuel Mendoza Sánchez, Claudia Peña Salinas, José Luis Vargas at Charles Moffett with Embajada
Steven Baldi at Koenig & Clinton
Nanami Hori, Naoki Sutter-Shudo, COBRA at XYZcollective
Al Freeman, Anna Weyant, Cynthia Talmadge, Kunle Martins, LaKela Brown, Richard Tinkler at 56 Henry
Willa Wasserman at Downs & Ross
Shikeith at ltd los angeles
Leilah Babirye at Gordon Robichaux
Raque Ford, Alexandria Smith at Martos
Farley Aguilar at Lyles & King
Mark Barrow, Sarah Parke, Shino Takeda at JDJ
Takashi Yasumura, Miki Mochizuka, Richard Aldrich, J. Parker Valentine, Naotaka Hiro, Shimon Minamikawa at MISAKO & ROSEN
Aaron Gilbert at Lulu
  Contemporary Art Daily is produced by Contemporary Art Group, a not-for-profit organization. We rely on our audience to help fund the publication of exhibitions that show up in this RSS feed. Please consider supporting us by making a donation today.
from Contemporary Art Daily http://bit.ly/2PJFgN1
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bookishthingsmore · 7 years
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Genre Showcase: YA Contemporary Romance
Genre Showcase: YA Contemporary Romance
[genre_showcase] Every once in a while we’ll put up a genre showcase highlight some of our favorite genres. Today we are talking about YA Contemporary Romance [list icon=”icon: heart” icon_color=”#2bb0d1″] Tell Me Three Things by Julie Buxbaum How Willa Got Her Groove Back by Emily McKay The Fine Art of Pretending by Rachel Harris Romancing the Nerd by Leah Rae Miller The Secret Life of a Dream…
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Weddings, Crushes, and Other Dramas by Emily McKay
Weddings, Crushes, and Other Dramas by Emily McKay
Weddings, Crushes, and Other Dramas by Emily McKay Publication Date: February 13th 2017 by Entangled Crush Source: ARC from Netgalley Rating: ★★★ Amazon
Synopsis
Falling in love with the best man wasn’t on the program.
Willa is happy to be the maid of honor in her dad’s upcoming wedding to uber-celeb Mia McCain. Not as happy about the best man being her soon-to-be stepbrother, the infuriating—and…
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thepageunbound · 8 years
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Weddings, Crushes, and Other Dramas Promo and Giveaway
Weddings, Crushes, and Other Dramas Promo and Giveaway @Emily_Mc_Kay @chapterxchapter
Weddings, Crushes, and Other Dramas (Creative HeArts #6, Willa & Finn #2) by Emily McKay Publication Date: February 13, 2017 Publisher:  Entangled Teen Crush Book Summary: Falling in love with the best man wasn’t on the program. Willa is happy to be the maid of honor in her dad’s upcoming wedding to uber-celeb Mia McCain. Not as happy about the best man being her soon-to-be stepbrother, the…
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Arc Review – Weddings, Crushes and other dramas by Emily McKay
Arc Review – Weddings, Crushes and other dramas by Emily McKay
  Weddings, Crushes and other dramas by Emily McKay
Book 6 in Creative HeArts Series and book 2 in Willa and Finn duology
Publisher: Entangled Teen
Publication date: February 13th, 2017
Source: eArc from the publisher
Rating: 3 hearts
  Synopsis
Falling in love with the best man wasn’t on the program.
Willa is happy to be the maid of honor in her dad’s upcoming wedding to uber-celeb Mia McCain.…
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zerinablossom · 8 years
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Review: How Willa Got Her Groove Back by Emily McKay
Review: How Willa Got Her Groove Back by Emily McKay
This last post of mine is a review of How Willa Got Her Groove Back by Emily McKay. I will be reviewing the second book in this series on Valentine’s Day, so stay tuned.
  Review
How Willa Got Her Groove Back (Willa and Finn #1)
by Emily McKay
  Synopsis from Goodreads:
Disclaimer: This Entangled Teen Crush book contains an unbelievably hot bad boy, an unbelievably famous actress, and all the…
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bookishthingsmore · 8 years
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Weddings, Crushes and Other Dramas by Emily McKay
Weddings, Crushes and Other Dramas by Emily McKay
Review Weddings, Crushes and Other Dramas is one of those feel good books.  You know, the ones that you go into and know you’re going to smile, or laugh, or get little butterflies.   I missed Willa so much. She’s such an amazing character. She may be a bit naive at times, but she’s also loyal, geeky, and full of awkwardness.  Basically, I can relate to her on so many levels. Finn is guarded, as…
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