#Thomas Evenson
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Howzat!
I was saddened the other week to hear of the death of Frank Duckworth, a statistician who found enduring fame by devising, along with Tony Lewis, a method for more equitably settling the result of a limited overs game of cricket interrupted by the weather. Recognising that there were only two factors, or in their terminology resources, that affected the ultimate score of a team, the number of…
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#Frank Duckworth#Joseph McCluskey#the Duckworth-Lewis method#Thomas Evenson#Tony Lewis#Volmari Iso-Hollo
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One day, as Winifred prepared to pay a visit to her husband's resting place, Thomas fervently expressed his desire to accompany her. Seeing an opportunity for him to become acquainted with his grandfather, Winifred welcomed the idea, anticipating a heartfelt conversation during their journey.
Since the passing of her husband a few months prior to Wilhelmina and Edwin's wedding, Winifred had diligently made weekly pilgrimages to his gravesite. She took great care to ensure it was adorned with fresh flowers, each petal a testament to her enduring love and respect.
While at the cemetery, Winifred noticed a familiar figure approaching, someone she identified as the daughter of a late friend. Knowing that her friend's daughter had married, Winifred supposed that the little one cradled in her arms was her daughter. The woman approached a gravestone that seemed relatively new.
Winifred waited for an appropriate moment and then approached to greet her, thinking that she was visiting her mother.
As they began to converse, Winifred realized that the woman wasn't visiting her mother but her husband. Winifred offered her condolences and felt deeply saddened to see such a young woman become a widow. Having experienced the loss of her own beloved husband, she could empathize with the grief. The image of Wilhelmina and Edwin flashed in her mind, and she prayed that such a fate would not befall her daughter.
She explained that her husband fell ill suddenly and after depleting all their savings on a doctor, they discovered he had tuberculosis. He passed away within weeks of falling ill, leaving her alone with a baby.
Winifred asked her what she was going to do to sustain herself and her daughter and the woman replied that she might be able to find work in a factory, but she couldn't leave her daughter alone.
On the other hand, the little girl, seemingly unaware that she had lost her father, couldn't stop looking at Thomas the entire time Winifred was talking to her mother. Thomas, being a shy child, felt a bit self-conscious and didn't want to leave his grandmother's arms.
#ts4#sims 4#ts4 legacy#sims 4 legacy#ts4 decades challenge#sims 4 decades challenge#ts4 historical#1830s#the langley legacy#winifred evenson#thomas langley
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Nine Books to Read in 2025
Thank you @the-cryptographer for the tag >:] I'll be tagging @sunrisetune, @pierogipie, @bandpants, @ladysavannah908, @malatruse, @chipper-daily, @sulky-valkyrie, and @largishcat if y'all want to do it.
Here's nine books I'd like to read this year, 2025, the year that we are in now:
Fatal Revenge; or, the Family of Montorio (1807) by Charles Robert Maturin. Overheated gothic melodrama ft. a revenge-driven supernatural monk called Schemoli, probably a ripoff of the villainous Father Schedoni from Ann Radcliffe's far more famous novel The Italian (1797). Maturin was my favorite new-to-me author of 2024, and this was his first novel.
Sartor Resartus (1833) by Thomas Carlyle. One of those fun rambling fake scholarship things, possibly the first of them.
The Posthumous Memoirs of Brás Cubas (1881) by Joaquim Maria Machado de Assis. Apparently a novel of unusual structure and post-modern flavor and style. Everything I've read about it tells me I'd like it; we'll see.
Jurgen: A Comedy of Justice (1919) by James Branch Cabell. Early fantasy genre that is supposedly also humorous, though if this book genuinely manages to make me laugh, I'll eat something improbable. Gritting my teeth and paying homage here.
The Auctioneer by Joan Samson (1975). Horror set in a small US town. Everybody keeps saying this is good.
How to Suppress Women's Writing (1983) by Joanna Russ. There's no excuse why I haven't read this yet. Well, Russ usually frustrates me, because she's so sharp and funny but also "on the nose," and I end up getting in a bunch of silly arguments with her in my head. I will probably do that when I read this! And share a lot of her good lines!
Last Days (2009) by Brian Evenson. Horror about a cult. Alex doublemustard mailed me a copy in 2018 after being very impressed with it, the only time he's ever done that, and I just haven't gotten around to it; my coworker who loves horror also recently recommended it.
Piranesi (2020) by Susanna Clarke. Some people on discord mentioned this book too many times and I'm caving.
Thousand Autumns (not sure of original publication date) by Meng Xi Shi. Wuxia danmei novel. Friends have read it, I know sort of what happens, I hear the payoff after you get through the first volume and a ways into the second is immense, and it's only five volumes long... I just have to commit.
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do you have any book recommendations for us :D
MAYBE SO.......!!!! u know i love talkin abt books!!!
well, ok since ive posted about most of the books ive been reading recently MAYBE i can also post about some that i ordered and am waiting to arrive??? because all of these sounded very interesting to me!!!
SO books i have coming in the mail:
surrealist novels:
the woman in the dunes by kobo abe
the hearing trumpet by leonora carrington
the melancholy of resistance by laszlo krasznahorkai:
the third policeman by flann o'brien
nadja by andre breton
(been really into surrealism lately if it isn't apparent. most excited for melancholy of resistance i think)
horror, gothic, etc:
bruges-la-morte by georges rodenbach
the damned (la-bas) by joris-karl huysmans
floating dragon by peter straub
classics, short stories, etc:
french decadent tales (oxford world's classics) by stephen romer
in watermelon sugar by richard brautigan
swann's way (in search of lost time, #1) by marcel proust
selected short stories by balzac
icefields by thomas wharton
some ive picked up recently & stoked to read:
ada, or ardor by nabokov (my most beloved author of all time)
carmilla by le fanu
nightmare alley by william lindsay gresham
a king alone by jean giono
twilight of the idols by nietzsche
transparent things by nabokov
dark water by koji suzuki
selected poems by jorge luis borges (also beloved)
trolled my goodreads for more recs
books ive read & enjoyed so far this year:
the iliac crest by cristina rivera garza
the tenant by roland topor (FAV!!! huge fav)
crimson labyrinth by yusuke kishi
pedro paramo by juan rulfo
carolina ghost woods by judy jordan
death in her hands by ottessa moshfegh
the unbearable lightness of being by milan kundera
in the lake of the woods by tim o'brien
disgrace by j m coetzee
goth by otsuichi
books i enjoyed from last year:
the lottery & other stories by shirley jackson
the vegetarian by han kang
rosemary's baby by ira levin
piercing by ryu murakami (an all time fav)
the bloody chamber by angela carter (fav)
starve acre by andrew michael hurley (also a fav)
the glassy, burning floor of hell by brian evenson
the devil's larder by jim crace
monstrilio by gerardo samano cordova
and as a bonus, literally anything by nabokov. i have a big book of his short fiction that ive been reading slowly for a long while. despair by him is my fav book of all time, hands down. he is a master of absurdism (and a master of every language he writes in).
ALSO!!!! if youre into poetry, anything and every single thing by: t.s. eliot, baudelaire, rimbaud, borges. i also love neruda's poetry but i have heard he was an awful man so keep that in mind
#thotbox#thotmail#talky cherub#library cherub#i buy 95% of my books secondhand#i have something of a problem but i figure books are not the worst addiction one can have.....OOPS
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every book i read in 2024
behave: the biology of humans at our best and worst (2017), robert sapolsky
life of pi (2001), yann martel
if we were villains (2017), m.l. rio
the queen's gambit (1983), walter tevis
the road (2006), cormac mccarthy
the shining (1977), stephen king
doctor sleep (2013), stephen king
red dragon (1981), thomas harris
fight club (1996), chuck palahniuk
the turn of the screw (1898), henry james
gone girl (2012), gillian flynn
cain (2009), josé saramago
frisk (1991), dennis cooper
the silence of the lambs (1988), thomas harris
the bell jar (1963), sylvia plath
the carnivorous lamb (1975), agustín gómez-arcos
junky: the definitive text of junk (1953), william s. borroughs
paradise rot (2009), jenny hval
the myth of sisyphus and other essays (1942), albert camus
dark places (2009), gillian flynn
we have always lived in the castle (1962), shirley jackson
alias grace (1996), margaret atwood
earthlings (2018), sayaka murata
close to the knives: a memoir of disintegration (1991), david wojnarowicz
last days (2009), brian evenson
the goldfinch (2013), donna tartt
#i was going to put stars next to my favorites but i enjoyed almost all of these#my goal for next year is more nonfiction i already have a few picked out#also to finish the hannibal series and the george miles cycle
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got tagged by @librarycards for a book rec list. ærs covered Q2'23; i'm just gonna do my faves from the first half of the year!
i've been reading a different crop of books since i made last year's list--i've taken a big dive back into sf, especially books by cj cherryh, as well as indie horror (that's... well, you'll find out when you look at the list).
again, they're ordered by when i read them. here we go!!!
Shmutz, Felicia Berliner (contemporary fiction, young hasidic woman comes of age, tries to find a husband, and gets obsessed with porn)
Father of Lies, Brian Evenson (psychological horror centering on a mormon religious leader. if you like books that make you feel gross and bad, this one's for you)
Any Other City, Hazel Jane Plante (fictional memoir of a trans musician. the book is split between her life right before she comes out, and then decades later when she's an established musician)
Camp Concentration, Thomas M. Disch (not even sure how to describe this one. fat, lapsed catholic, conscientous objector Louis Sachetti is imprisoned for refusing to become a US soldier and is sent to a prison where the (mostly black) inmates are being injected with experimental drugs. the author is gay and there's a lot of parallels to hiv/aids despite this being written in '68)
The World Cannot Give, Tara Isabella Burton (what if the secret history was catholic lesbians)
Amygdalatropolis, B.R. Yeager (another "if you like gross books" rec. i don't even know if i liked this one, but it was certainly interesting. chronicles the existence of a 4chan NEET)
Jealousy, Alain Robbe-Grillet (1957 french experientalism, i read this bc dennis cooper referenced it in an interview. believing his wife to be cheating on him, the narrator spies on her through a jalousie window, recording everything in his frame of vision that he can see. v interesting stylistically and could also rly benefit from a postcolonial reading)
The Pride of Chanur, CJ Cherryh (i read the entire trilogy pictured above, plus the first two books of her Foreigner series. it's basically a courtly fantasy/first contact mashup in space, really well developed alien cultures with lots of factions among them. tons of fun)
Frisk, Dennis Cooper (third "if you like gross extremist fiction" on here. this is my fave cooper after The Sluts and the most thematically resonant. if you haven't read the sluts i'd rec starting there. if i was a prof i would assign them together or even do this in a short course if there wasn't time for a longer book)
tagging @thebestestbat @tsubakiscarlet @danishprince @dovebeast @stackslip @eraserheadcrybaby @interstellarhitchhiker @kollapstradixionales @papika & would be happy to see book rec lists of anyone else!! fiction or non fiction or anything else idc whatever you're into ^_^
#currently reading#<- this is my tag for it tho i have finished all of them#catching up on my Tag posts as u can see from the last post as well#also sorry if anyone i've tagged does not have books feel free to make a rec list of [any other type of media] i love to see em & its fun t#do
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Novel Syllabus 2024
This coming year I think I'm going to be on here more often than I am on twitter or elsewhere, and as part of that, I'm going to start documenting the process of writing my novel more actively. I want to return to/resurrect the momentum and energy I had while writing the first draft and be more intentional about setting aside time to work, even when it's difficult. Below are my writing goals for the coming year as well as my reading list of texts for inspiration, genre/background research, comps, etc. Would welcome any suggestions of texts (any genre/discipline) pertaining to Antigone, death & resurrection, Welsh and Cornish myth and folklore, ecology & environmental crisis, and the Gothic.
Writing Goals
Reach 50k words in draft 2 overall
Finish a draft of Anna's timeline
Finish a draft of Jo's timeline
Polish & submit an excerpt for the Center for Fiction Prize
Reading
* = reread
Sci-Fi, Fantasy, & The Apocalyptic
The Memory Theater (Karin Tidbeck)
Who Fears Death (Nnedi Okorafor)
Urth of The New Sun (Gene Wolfe)
Slow River (Nicola Griffith)
Dream Snake (Vonda McIntyre)
Black Leopard, Red Wolf (Marlon James)
Notes from the Burning Age (Claire North)
Invisible Cities (Italo Calvino)*
Frankenstein (Mary Shelley)*
The Last Man (Mary Shelley)
The Drowned World (J.G. Ballard)
Strange Beasts of China (Yan Ge, trans. by Jeremy Tiang)
City of Saints and Madmen (Jeff VanderMeer)
Freshwater (Akweke Emezi)
The Glass Hotel (Emily St. John Mandel)
Pattern Master (Octavia Butler)
Sleep Donation (Karen Russell)
How High We Go in the Dark (Sequoia Nagamatsu)
The Magician's Nephew (C.S. Lewis)*
The Golden Compass (Phillip Pullman)*
The Green Witch (Susan Cooper)
The Tombs of Atuan (Ursula K. Le Guin)
Black Sun (Rebecca Roanhorse)
Gideon the Ninth (Tamsyn Muir)
Lives of the Monster Dogs (Kirsten Bakis)
Brian Evenson
Sofia Samatar
Connie Willis
Samuel Delaney
Jo Walton
Tanith Lee
Retellings
A Wild Swan (Michael Cunningham)
Til We Have Faces (C.S. Lewis)
Gingerbread (Helen Oyeyemi)
Circe (Madeline Miller)
The Owl Service (Alan Garner)
Literary Myth-Making, Mystery, and the Gothic
Nights at the Circus (Angela Carter)
Frenchman's Creek (Daphne Du Maurier)
Possession (A.S. Byatt)*
The Game (A.S. Byatt)*
The Essex Serpent (Sarah Perry)
Wuthering Heights (Emily Brontë)
The Secret History (Donna Tartt)*
The Wild Hunt (Emma Seckel)
King Nyx (Kirsten Bakis)
The Name of the Rose (Umberto Eco)
The Lottery and Other Stories (Shirley Jackson)
Beloved (Toni Morrison)
The Night Land (William Hope Hodgson)
Interview with a Vampire (Anne Rice)*
Sexing the Cherry (Jeanette Winterson)*
Night Side of the River (Jeanette Winterson)
Bad Heroines (Emily Danforth)
All the Murmuring Bones (A.G. Slatter)
The Path of Thorns (A.G. Slatter)
Gormenghast (Mervyn Peake)
Prose Work, Perspective, and Stream of Consciousness
The Chandelier (Clarice Lispector)
The Waves (Virginia Woolf)*
The Years (Virginia Woolf)
The Intimate Historical Epic / Court Intrigues
Wolf Hall (Hilary Mantel)*
Menewood (Nicola Griffith)
Dark Earth (Rebecca Stott)
A Place of Greater Safety (Hilary Mantel)
Research
The Mabinogion (trans. Sioned Davies)
Le Morte D'Arthur (Thomas Malory)
The Collected Brothers Grimm (Phillip Pullman)
Angela Carter's Collected Fairytales
Mythology (Edith Hamilton)
Underland (Robert Macfarlane)
The Wild Places (Robert Macfarlane)
Wildwood (Roger Deakin)
Vanishing Cornwall (Daphne Du Maurier)
Lonely Planet: Guide to Devon & Cornwall
A Traveler's Guide to the End of the World (David Gessner)
The Lost Boys of Montauk (Amanda M. Fairbanks)
A Cyborg Manifesto (Donna J. Harraway)
A Treasury of British Folklore (Dee Dee Chainey)*
The First Last Man: Mary Shelley and the Postapocalyptic Imagination (Eileen M. Hunt)
Antigone's Claim (Judith Butler)
Theories of Desire: Antigone Again (Judith Butler)
Ecology of Fear (Mike Davis)
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Submission Window: January 1st – January 7th, 2024 Payment: 3 cents per word for original fiction. 5k words = $150, 20 dollars for artwork chosen as interior content. Negotiable, 100 dollars for cover art. Negotiable. Theme: cosmic horror, Lovecraftian, and weird fiction and non-fiction essays that explore the state of horror as well as philosophies often found in cosmic horror Cosmic Horror Monthly is a horror and weird fiction magazine edited by Charles Tyra. Submission periods are twice yearly from January 1st – January 7th and July 1st – July 7th. January stories accepted will appear in issues July – December July stories accepted will appear in issues January – June SUBMISSION PROCEDURES We are now accepting non-fiction submissions as well as fiction. We would love to see non-fiction essays that explore the state of horror as well as philosophies often found in cosmic horror, i.e. pessimism, nihilism, existentialism, etc. Instructions: All writing must be submitted via email to [email protected]. When submitting, include a little background information about yourself in the body and attach the story in the form of a Microsoft Word file. Please include a word count and a brief synopsis of the work. For artwork, please put a link to the gallery/pieces in the body of the email along with any relevant background information. You may also attach example art. Acceptable file formats for attachments are DOC and DOCX for fiction, JPG, and PNG for art. The subject line of the email should read: “CHM Fiction Submission” for fiction, “CHM Non-Fiction Submission” for non-fiction, and “CHM Art Submission” for art. Guidelines Cosmic Horror Monthly is seeking cosmic horror, Lovecraftian, and weird fiction. If you aren’t sure if your work qualifies, submit it. No subject is off-limits and we do encourage writers to try and push the status quo. Please only submit a single story once and only submit one story per email. Multiple submissions are strongly discouraged. Every email will be checked! We are interested in stories written by human beings only. Simultaneous submissions are allowed. At this time, we are strongly favoring stories with a contemporary narrative style. Lovecraftian themes and mythos works are welcomed but try to avoid Lovecraft pastiche and styles mimicking that of his writer circle from the early 20th century. In terms of style, we are fans of Laird Barron, John Langan, Mike Allen, Hailey Piper, Brian Evenson, Thomas Ligotti, Jon Padgett, Gemma Files, Nicole Cushing, and more. Submit your manuscript in Shunn Standard Manuscript Format (Modern or Classic). Word Count: We are open to stories of 1000-5000 words. Stories in the range of 2500-4000 words are preferred. Art If you are an artist, please submit pieces that you feel might be fitting to appear on the cover or in the interior of the magazine. If it is helpful, the magazine runs at a size of 5.5 x 8.5 inches. We do not publish art that utilizes Artificial Intelligence (AI) in its creation. Payment 3 cents per word for original fiction. 5k words = $150 No reprints at this time. 20 dollars for artwork chosen as interior content. Negotiable. 100 dollars for cover art. Negotiable. To review rights, please request the artist/publisher or the writer/publisher contract. Questions/Problems Email [email protected] for all inquiries. Diversity Statement: We believe that the horror genre’s diversity is its greatest strength, and we wish that viewpoint to be reflected in our story content and our submission queues; we welcome submissions from writers of every race, religion, nationality, gender, and sexual orientation. Sexual themes and stories with strong sexual content are acceptable, but Cosmic Horror Monthly is not a market for erotica. If in doubt, feel free to send your story in and let us decide. Please no fan fiction for existing creative universes not in the public domain. The Cthulhu mythos is fair game but be careful using common or worn-out genre tropes—trust us, we’ve seen it all at this point.
We prefer to be surprised. If you’re not sure if your story is suitable, don’t query; please just go ahead and submit and let us decide. You are welcome to resubmit previously rejected stories if they have been significantly revised. Via: Cosmic Horror Monthly.
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Sorry if you've talked about this before but do you have any horror book reccs? Your post made me wonder what horror books you do like, and I trust you enough to have good taste. Thank you <3
i honestly haven't read a ton of straight-up horror novels: the two kinds of books i love most are compilations of horror short stories and horror film theory/analysis, so thats more of what i tend to read!! if u dont mind the horror books being anthologies or short story compilations, then i really recommend clive barker's "books of blood" and stuff by brian evenson (specifically his short stories, ive heard mixed things abt his full-length novels), thomas ligotti, robert c mccammon, stephen king (most of his books are messy or straight up bad, but his batting average is much higher with his short stories, i can think of several that are legit great), carmen maria machado. u cant go wrong with the classics by shirley jackson and ira levin. eric larocca and nick cutter's work never did much for me, but those are at least competent writers u can try out if ur looking for more disturbing and, in cutter's case, straight up gory stories. ive always had trouble finding horror books that seem interesting or effective To Me (which is the main reason "playground" initially caught my eye lol) so i unfortunately dont have a ton of book recs, but i think these are some decent (short-form) launchpads!! also never underestimate the power of a good horror film theory book, especially if ur pretty familiar with the foundational horror movies and have an interest in critical analysis
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Here's everything I read in 2024. I did not include anything outside of authors and titles. If anyone wants to talk about this list, feel free to do so.
January
1. Heiner Müller: Germania.
2. Roland Schimmelpfennig: Anthropolis. Ungeheuer. Stadt. Theben.
3. Werner Schwab: Offene Gruben Offene Fenster.
4. Werner Schwab: Hochschwab.
5. Boston Teran: God is a Bullet.
6. Stephen Konkolly: Black Flagged 2: Redux.
7. Eugene Ionesco: Die kahle Sängerin.
8. T.J. Payne: Intercepts.
9. Thomas Bernhard: Midland in Stilfs.
February
1. Thomas Bernhard: Ritter, Dene, Voß.
2. Thomas Bernhard: Frost.
3. T.J. Payne: In my Father's Basement.
4. Werner Schwab: Messaliance aber wir ficken uns prächtig.
5. William Gibson: Neuromancer.
6. Brian Evenson: Song for the Unraveling of the World.
7. Adam Nevill: Some will not Sleep.
8. Alex Michaelides: The Silent Patient.
March
1. Thomas Bernhard: Alte Meister
2. Thomas Bernhard: In der Höhe.
3. Hiron Ennes: Leech.
4. Thomas Bernhard: Holzfällen.
5. Jonathan Sims: Family Business.
6. Thomas Bernhard: Watten.
7. Jason Rekulak: Hidden Pictures.
8. Craig DiLouie: Episode 13.
9. J.G. Ballard: The Atrocity Exhibition.
10. J.G. Ballard: Crash.
April
1. Riley Sager: Home Before Dark.
2. Philip K. Dick: VALIS.
3. Philip K. Dick: The Divine Invasion.
4. Taylor Adams: No Exit.
5. Thomas Bernhard: Der deutsche Mittagstisch.
6. Grant Morrison: Doom Patrol.
7. John M. Ford: The Scholars of Night.
8. Laird Barron: The Imago Sequence.
May
1. Mick Herron: Real Tigers.
2. Mick Herron: Spook Street.
3. Mick Herron: London Rules.
4. Heiner Müller: Krieg ohne Schlacht.
5. Steve Kavanagh: Thirteen.
6. Ben Macintyre: A Spy among Friends.
7. James Swallow: Nomad.
8. Thomas Bernhard: Beton.
9. A.M. Shine: The Watchers.
June
1. Sammy Scott: BETA.
2. Theodor W. Adorno: Minima Moralia.
3. Chuck Palahniuk: Lullaby.
4. CJ Tudor: The Drift.
July
1. M.T. Edvardsson: The Woman Inside
2. Heiner Müller: Philoktet.
3. Bertolt Brecht: Furcht und Elend des 3. Reiches
4. Bertolt Brecht: Das Leben des Galilei.
5. F.X. Kroetz: Ich bin das Volk.
6. Darcy Coats: The Carrow Haunt.
7. Sammy Scott: At Home with the Horrors.
8. Kuno Raeber: Das Ei.
9. Kuno Raeber: Bocksweg.
10. Jason Arnapp: The Last Days of Jack Sparks.
11. Jason Arnapp: Ghoster.
12. Grabbe: Gothland.
August
1. Mark Haber: St Sebastian's Abyss.
2. Laird Barron: Occultation.
3. S.T. Edvardsson: A Nearly Normal Family.
4. Paul Tremblay: Horror Movie.
5. R. Scott Bakker: The Darkness that Comes Before.
6. Heinrich v. Kleist: Die Marquise von O....
September
1. Friedrich Dürrenmatt/Charlotte Kerr: Achterloo I/Rollenspiele/Achterloo IV.
2. R. Scott Bakker: The Warrior-Prophet.
3. Friedrich Dürrenmatt: Die Panne. Erzählung, Hörspiel, Komödie.
4. Friedrich Dürrenmatt: Der Mitmacher.
5. R. Scott Bakker: The Thousandfold Thought.
6. Christa Wolf: Kein Ort. Nirgends.
7. Simon Strantza: Burnt Black Suns.
8. Todd Keisling: Devil's Creek.
October
1. Willi Winkler: Die Geschichte der RAF.
2. Rolf Hochhuth: Der Stellvertreter.
3. Adam Neville: House of Small Shadows.
4. John Hornor Jacobs: The Sea Dreams it is the Sky.
5. Steven Konkoly: Black Flagged 3: Apex.
6. Werner Schwab: Fäkaliendramen (vier Stücke).
7. Steven Konkoly: Black Flagged 4: Vektor.
8. Mark Haber: St Sebastian's Abyss (re-read).
November
1. Steven Erikson: Gardens of the Moon.
2. Steven Erikson: Deadhouse Gates.
3. Gedichte von Celan + Hölderlin.
December
1. Peter Weiß: Hölderlin.
2. Steven Erikson: Memories of Ice.
3. Junji Ito: Uzumaki.
4. Cornelius Ryan: The Longest Day.
5. Paul Celan: Von der Dunkelheit des Dichterischen/Der Meridian.
6. Friedrich Nietzsche: Götzen-Dämmerung.
7. Hans-Peter Kunisch: Todtnauberg.
Honorable Mentions
(Books I read sizable chunks of and spent time with but didn't actually finish)
1. Adorno/Horkheimer: Dialektik der Aufklärung
2. Barbara Wiedemann: Die Goll-Affäre.
3. Elfriede Jelinek: Ulrike Maria Stuart.
4. Francesca Stavrakopoulou: God: An Anatomy.
5. Jon Fosse: Septology. (Vol.01 finished in December so I don't want to tag the whole novel).
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Harold C. Goddard - The Meaning of Shakespeare, Volume 2 (Phoenix Books) (1951).pdf Honor Matthews - Character and Symbol in Shakespeare’s Plays_ A Study of Certain Christian and Pre-Christian Elements in Their Structure and .pdf Hugh Craig, Arthur F. Kinney - Shakespeare, Computers, and the Mystery of Authorship (2009).pdf Ivo Kamps, Karen L. Raber, Thomas Hallock - Early Modern Ecostudies_ From the Florentine Codex to Shakespeare (2008).pdf J. M. Evenson - Shakespeare for Screenwriters_ Timeless Writing Tips from the Master of Drama-Michael Wiese Productions (2013).epub James A. Knapp (auth.) - Image Ethics in Shakespeare and Spenser-Palgrave Macmillan US (2011).pdf James C. Bulman - Shakespeare, Theory and Performance-Routledge (1995).pdf
James Shapiro - A Year in the Life of William Shakespeare_ 1599-HarperCollins (2005).pdf Jan H. Blits - The Soul of Athens_ Shakespeare's 'A Midsummer Night's Dream'-Lexington Books (2003).pdf Jeffrey Knapp - Shakespeare Only (2009).pdf Jennifer Hulbert, Robert York, Kevin J. Wetmore - Shakespeare and Youth Culture-Palgrave Macmillan (2006).pdf John D. Cox - Seeming Knowledge_ Shakespeare and Skeptical Faith (Studies in Christianity and Literature) (2007).pdf John Drakakis, Dale Townshend - Gothic Shakespeares (Accents on Shakespeare) (2008).pdf John Elsom - Is Shakespeare Still Our Contemporary_ (1990).pdf John Joughin - Philosophical Shakespeares -Routledge (2000).pdf John Michael Archer - Citizen Shakespeare_ Freemen and Aliens in the Language of the Plays -Palgrave Macmillan (2005).pdf
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PRISMS
Prisms (co-edited by Darren Speegle and yours truly) is now available by PS Publishing. Available in trade hardcover or limited signed / numbered hardback (only 100, signed by all). Instruments, mirrors, metaphors, gateways humankind must pass through in order to achieve, to overcome, to realize, to become. Contained herein are nineteen transformative tales from some of speculative fiction’s…
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#A.C. Wise#B.E. Scully#Brian Evenson#Chaz Brenchley#Damien Angelica Walters#Darren Speegle#E. Catherine Tobler#Erinn L. Kemper#Ian Watson#J. Lincoln Fenn#Kristi DeMeester#Lynda E. Rucker#Michael Bailey#Michael Marshall Smith#Nadia Bulkin#Paul Di Filippo#Paul Meloy#Prisms#PS Publishing#Richard Thomas#Roberta Lannes#Scott Edelman#Tlotlo Tsamaase
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As winter wrapped its chilly embrace around Henford-On-Bagley once more, the town's landscape bathed in the serene frost. With a break from the farm, Edwin found himself relishing the luxury of extra time with his family.
Throughout most of the winter, their days unfolded cozily around the fireplace. Thanks to their thoughtful preparation in collecting firewood, worries about the cold took a back seat.
On a different note, this time around Wilhelmina's pregnancy was progressing smoothly, her health resilient amidst the usual ups and downs. Entering the last trimester brought a sense of relief, especially with winter's arrival, a welcomed pause. The thought of tackling farm tasks with a growing belly was a concern, and the winter season provided a comforting backdrop to navigate this phase with ease.
Luckily, young Thomas turned out to be more of a delight than a handful, showing a surprising awareness of his mother's occasional weariness despite his tender age. Whether it was the winter air or just his nature, on days when he wasn't busy playing with Edwin or Winifred, he chose to spend most of his time peacefully dozing in his cot, bringing a calm and natural flow to the daily routine.
#ts4#sims 4#ts4 decades challenge#sims 4 decades challenge#ts4 legacy#sims 4 legacy#1830s#ts4 historical#the langley legacy#wilhelmina langley#edwin langley#winifred evenson#thomas langley
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oc sketch dump post, because i forget to post things here sometimes
#some of these are older than others#nicole draws stuff#friend oc: michael (freddie) cooper#oc: eileen evenson#oc: thomas bennett#oc: sabrina bennett#oc ship: mileen#my oc
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Leah Looks At - Looming Low: Vol. II
Leah Looks At – Looming Low: Vol. II
Looming Low: Vol. IIEdited by: Justin Steele and Max CowanPublisher: Dim Shores Publication Year: October, 2022ISBN: 9798985828214 Format: Hardcover and First Paperback editions limited to 150 hand-numbered copies. At the time of this post, I have seen that number now in question for First Paperback. An e-book version is promised to arrive, but timing remains uncertain.The award-winning anthology…
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#A. C. Wise#Alvaro Zinos-Amaro#anya martin#Brian Evenson#Brooke Warra#Clint Smith#Cody Goodfellow#Craig Laurance Gidney#David Peak#Dim Shores#Erica Ruppert#Gemma Files#Gwendolyn Kiste#Jeffrey Thomas#Justin Steele#Kaaron Warren#kurt Fawver#Looming Low Vol II#matthew m bartlett#max cowan#Michael Griffin#Michael Kelly#Nadia Bulkin#Richard Gavin#S. P. Miskowski#Simon Strantzas#Weird Fiction
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In His House, by Richard Thomas
In His House, by Richard Thomas
“It’s not hard.I just need you to listen.And keep listening.That part is essential.I need you to recite a few strange words the morning sun, or the afternoon doldrums, or the long, ever-expanding night. Wherever you are, whenever you are, whoever you are.In his house, he waits dreaming.”—Richard Thomas, “In His House” Is there a better way to round out the year of reviews than with the big “C”…
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#brian evenson#clark ashton smith#cosmic horror#devora gray#forbidden tomes#in his house#justin burnett#k.a. opperman#king in yellow#lovecraft#lovecraftian#nadia bulkin#necronomicon#richard thomas#robert e. howard#robert w. chambers#s.e. casey#silent motorist media#stephen graham jones#The Nightside Codex#unwritten texts
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