#William Albert Andrey
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Cuando el remedio es peor que la enfermedad
#candy candy#candycandy#william albert andrew#william albert ardlay#william albert andley#william albert andrey#mi*ccgif
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@zainiscompletelydone333 asked a question
aah no you misunderstood. i mean, like, when darling announces they're pregnant??
Oh that is my fault, I am so sorry
I’m still assuming it goes with this series, but please correct me if I am wrong
William definitely planned for his darling to get pregnant so it is no surprise when she tells him, in fact he probably already knew before he did, lining up the symptoms before she did. When she breaks the news, telling him how she thinks she is with child he just smiles at her…
“I know, dear.”
He already asked Louis if he could help him to clean up an unused guest room so they can begin working on the nursery. He scheduled for the doctor to visit once a week and list of dieting, healthy foods, taking out foods that have the chance of causing a miscarriage, and so on.
He does his best to take care and be with his darling whenever he can during her pregnancy, of course he will never take her on a mission but in the later months of her pregnancy they will be staying up in Durham for the rest of the pregnancy so it is close to his work when school starts and without the noise and stressing the city which is not good for a pregnant mother and a newborn baby when they come.
When the baby comes it is only natural that they sleep with their parents when they are still a newborn and so during their newborn months they will still be staying in Durham and then after that they will be heading back up to London when they are able to sleep alone in the nursery. William will be holding his little girl in his arms in the train ride back to London, watching his darling as she stares out the window at the countryside they pass.
“You know dear, perhaps in a year or two, our little Eloise may need a sister, I was thinking of names… Madeline perhaps.”
Albert on the other hand would be more surprised by this, but not heavily so since he would be trying for a child since his darling and him got married. When she tells him he will be overjoyed just not surprised. He will practically cling to his darling’s side every free second he has, and perhaps bring her along to some things with work, not everything like things that are classified, but like to his office as he does paperwork or letting her sit in his office while he attends meetings.
“Oh my beautiful wife with my wonderful child.”
Then their home life begins to adjust for their future child, things begins to operate on a schedule, for her at least, right to nine hours of sleep, meals at certain times, afternoon walks, there is not a minute of the day where what she is doing to unaccounted for as when the baby is born she will be taking care of them mostly as he has work he has to attend to that will only pick up after the baby is born.
Unlike William, Albert does not have time to be staying off in the country since his work is in London mostly so they will have to stay in the capital. Then when the baby is born he will spend every single second holding them when he is home since his is at work so much, and I mean that quite literally. He will be holding his child as his darling finally gets the chance to close her eyes to take a nap.
“Hyacinth… Fred grows them in the garden, a flower… I know we have Andrei but that would make a lovely name for a girl… Hyacinth and Marguerite… hm, what do you think?”
#yandere albert moriarty x reader#yandere albert james moriarty x reader#yandere albert james moriarty#yandere moriarty the patriot#yandere yuukoku no moriarty#yandere yuukoku no moriarty x reader#yandere moriarty the patriot x reader#William moriarty x reader#moriarty the patriot x reader#yuukoku no moriarty x reader#yuukoku no moriarty#william james moriarty x reader#yandere william james moriarty
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Drfudge, I remember you have some book recs posts but I can't find any, so I'd like to ask you what are your all time fave books, if it's okay. Thank you <3
you should check out my "books", and "book rec" tags on my blogs, but here is an updated list of some of my favorites (including essays and short stories):
what a carve up, by jonathan coe
excellent women, by barbara pym
restoration, by rose tremain
invitation to the waltz, by rosamond lehmann
journal d'hirondelle, by amelie nothomb
oblomov, by ivan goncharov
kiss me first, by lottie moggach
the idiot & demons, by dostoevsky
the idiot, by elif batuman
revolutionary road, by richard yates
the girl in the flammable skirt, by aimee bender
out of the woods, by chris offutt
hygiene de l'assassin, by amelie nothomb
memoirs of a dutiful daughter, by simone de beauvoir
chevengur, by andrei platonov
the master and margarita, by bulgakov
the corrections, by jonathan franzen
hamlet & king lear by shakespeare
richard iii & henry vi, part 1, by shakespeare
a midsummer night's dream, the taming of the shrew & as you like it by shakespeare
i capture the castle, by dodie smith
point counter point, by aldous huxley
arcadia, by tom stoppard
stoner, by john williams
eugene onegin, by pushkin
paradise lost & samson agonistes, by john milton
the age of innocence, by edith wharton
katherine mansfield's diaries & short stories
axel's castle, by edmund wilson
the dead, by james joyce
the heat of the day, by elizabeth bowen
pride and prejudice, by jane austen
franny and zooey, by salinger
the stranger, by albert camus
seduction and betrayal, by elizabeth hardwick
the beguiled, by cullinan thomas
girl with a pearl earring, by tracy chevalier
the wine of solitude, by irene nemirovsky
dark entries, by robert aickman
capitalist realism, by mark fisher
the blizzard, by vladimir sorokin
karate chop, dorothe nors
go, went, gone, by jenny erpenbeck
the blind firman, by ismail kadare
actress, by anne enright
genius and ink, by virginia woolf
real life, by brandon taylor
the world of yesterday, by stefan zweig
doce cuentos peregrinos, by gabriel garcia marquez
selected stories by anton chekhov
stories of your life, by ted chiang
ornament and silence, by kennedy fraser
the accompanist, by nina berberova
there are many others, including some romanian faves that i won't mention in this list, but this should give you a good overview!
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SERIAL KILLER INFORMATION MASTERLIST
A
RODNEY ALCALA SUMMARY
B
VELMA BARFIELD SUMMARY
MARY BELL SUMMARY
DAVID BERKOWITZ SUMMARY
KENNETH BIANCHI SUMMARY
WILLIAM BONIN SUMMARY
IAN BRADY SUMMARY
JERRY BRUDOS SUMMARY
TED BUNDY SUMMARY
C
RICHARD CHASE SUMMARY
ANDREI CHIKATILO SUMMARY
DEAN CORLL SUMMARY
CHARLES CULLEN SUMMARY
D
JEFFREY DAHMER SUMMARY
ALBERT DESALVO SUMMARY
E
F
LONNIE DAVID FRANKLIN JR SUMMARY
G
JOHN WAYNE GACY SUMMARY
ED GEIN SUMMARY
H
ROBERT HANSON SUMMARY
DONALD HARVEY SUMMARY
MYRA HINDLEY SUMMARY
H.H. HOLMES SUMMARY
I
J
K
PATRICK KEARNEY SUMMARY
ED KEMPER SUMMARY
RANDY KRAFT SUMMARY
L
DERRICK TODD LEE SUMMARY
PEDRO LOPEZ SUMMARY
HENRY LEE LUCAS SUMMARY
M
PATRICK MACKAY SUMMARY
CHARLES MANSON SUMMARY
IVAN MILAT SUMMARY
N
DENNIS NILSEN SUMMARY
O
P
ANDRAS PANDY SUMMARY
CARL PANZRAM SUMMARY
ROBERT PICKTON SUMMARY
STEPHEN PORT SUMMARY
DOROTHEEA PUENTE SUMMARY
Q
R
DENNIS RADER SUMMARY
RICHARD RAMIREZ SUMMARY
GARY RIDGWAY SUMMARY
S
ARTHUR SHAWCROSS SUMMARY
HAROLD SHIPMAN SUMMARY
PETER SUTCLIFFE SUMMARY
T
OTTIS TOOLE SUMMARY
U
V
W
WAYNE WILLIAMS SUMMARY
AILEEN WUORNOS SUMMARY
X
Y
Z
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#recommended reading#reading list#book list#book recs#organization#revolution#anarchism#daily posts#communism#anti capitalist#anti capitalism#late stage capitalism#anarchy#anarchists#libraries#leftism#social issues#economy#economics#climate change#anarchy works#environmentalism#environment#solarpunk#anti colonialism#acab
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Continuing Literary Canon
100. Federico Garcia Lorca, Blood Wedding
101. Jean-Paul Sartre, No Exit
102. Albert Camus, The Stranger
103. Eugene Ionesco, The Bald Soprano
104. William Butler Yeats
105. George Bernard Shaw, Pygmalion
106. Thomas Hardy, The Return of the Native
107. Joseph Conrad
108. D.H. Lawrence
109. Virginia Woolf
110. James Joyce
111. Samuel Beckett, Waiting for Godot
112. Aldous Huxley, Brave New World
113. W. H. Auden
114. George Orwell, 1984
115. Franz Kafka - Metamorphosis
116. The Trial
117. Bertolt Brecht, Mother Courage
118. Thomas Mann
119. Andrei Bely, Petersburg
120. Mikhail Bulgakov, The Master and Margarita
121. Boris Pasternak, Dr. Zhivago
122. Edwin Arlington Robinson
123. Robert Frost
124. Edith Wharton
125. Willa Cather
126. Gertrude Stein
127. Wallace Stevens, "Sunday Morning"
128. Theodore Dreiser, Sister Carrie
129. Sherwood Anderson
130. T.S. Eliot - "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock"
131. "The Waste Land"
132. "The Hollow Men"
133. "The Journey of the Magi"
134. Katherine Anne Porter
135. Eugene O'Neill, Long Day's Journey into Night
136. F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby
137. William Faulkner - The Sound and the Fury
138. Ernest Hemingway -The Old Man and the Sea
139. A Farewell to Arms
140. John Steinbeck, The Grapes of Wrath
141. Zora Neale Hurston, Their Eyes Were Watching God
142. Eudora Welty
143. Flannery O'Connor
144. Vladimir Nabokov, Lolita
145. J. D. Salinger, The Catcher in the Rye
146. Tennessee Williams - A Streetcar Named Desire
147. The Glass Menagerie
148. Arthur Miller, Death of a Salesman
149. Toni Morrison, Song of Solomon
150. Joyce Carol Oates
151. Philip Roth, Portnoy's Complaint
152. John Updike - A&P
153. The Witches of Eastwick
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The Missiles of October - ABC - December 18, 1974
Docudrama
Running Time: 150 minutes
Stars:
Ralph Bellamy as Adlai Stevenson
Howard da Silva as Nikita Khrushchev
John Dehner as Dean Acheson
William Devane as John F. Kennedy
Andrew Duggan as General Maxwell Taylor
Dana Elcar as Robert McNamara
Larry Gates as Dean Rusk
James Olson as McGeorge Bundy
Nehemiah Persoff as Andrei Gromyko
William Prince as C. Douglas Dillon
John Randolph as George Ball
Martin Sheen as Robert F. Kennedy
Michael Lerner as Pierre Salinger
Clifford David as Theodore Sorensen
Albert Paulsen as Anatoly Dobrynin
Keene Curtis as John McCone,
Robert P. Lieb as Curtis LeMay
#The Missiles of October#TV#ABC#Docudrama#1974#Ralph Bellamy#Howard da Silva#John Dehner#William Devane#Andrew Duggan#Dana Elcar#Larry Gates#James Olson#Nehemiah APersoff#William Prince#John Randolph#Martin Sheen
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Events 11.22 (before 1960)
498 – After the death of Anastasius II, Symmachus is elected Pope in the Lateran Palace, while Laurentius is elected Pope in Santa Maria Maggiore. 845 – The first duke of Brittany, Nominoe, defeats the Frankish king Charles the Bald at the Battle of Ballon near Redon. 1307 – Pope Clement V issues the papal bull Pastoralis Praeeminentiae which instructed all Christian monarchs in Europe to arrest all Templars and seize their assets. 1574 – Spanish navigator Juan Fernández discovers islands now known as the Juan Fernández Islands off Chile. 1635 – Dutch colonial forces on Taiwan launch a pacification campaign against native villages, resulting in Dutch control of the middle and south of the island. 1718 – Royal Navy Lieutenant Robert Maynard attacks and boards the vessels of the British pirate Edward Teach (best known as "Blackbeard") off the coast of North Carolina. The casualties on both sides include Maynard's first officer Mister Hyde and Teach himself. 1837 – Canadian journalist and politician William Lyon Mackenzie calls for a rebellion against the United Kingdom in his essay "To the People of Upper Canada", published in his newspaper The Constitution. 1855 – In Birmingham, England, Albert, Prince Consort lays the foundation stone of the Birmingham and Midland Institute. 1869 – In Dumbarton, Scotland, the clipper Cutty Sark is launched. 1873 – The French steamer SS Ville du Havre sinks in 12 minutes after colliding with the Scottish iron clipper Loch Earn in the Atlantic, with a loss of 226 lives. 1908 – The Congress of Manastir establishes the Albanian alphabet. 1921 – During The Troubles in Northern Ireland (1920–1922), 22 Irish Nationalists are killed in Belfast in one day. 1935 – The China Clipper inaugurates the first commercial transpacific air service, connecting Alameda, California with Manila. 1940 – World War II: Following the initial Italian invasion, Greek troops counterattack into Italian-occupied Albania and capture Korytsa. 1942 – World War II: Battle of Stalingrad: General Friedrich Paulus sends Adolf Hitler a telegram saying that the German 6th Army is surrounded. 1943 – World War II: Cairo Conference: U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill, and Chinese Premier Chiang Kai-shek meet in Cairo, Egypt, to discuss ways to defeat Japan. 1943 – Lebanon gains independence from France, nearly two years after it was first announced by the Free French government. 1952 – A Douglas C-124 Globemaster II crashes into Mount Gannet, Alaska, killing all 52 aboard. 1955 – The Soviet Union launches RDS-37, a 1.6 megaton two stage hydrogen bomb designed by Andrei Sakharov. The bomb was dropped over Semipalatinsk.
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A reading list
Mostly to feed my own obsession with lists, but also to be used as a book recommendations list. Enjoy!
Το καπλάνι της βιτρίνας, Άλκη Ζέη- Tiger in the glass, by Alke Zei
Παραμύθι χωρίς όνομα, Πηνελόπη Δέλτα - Fairytale without a name, by Penelope Delta
Ο Μάγκας, Πηνελόπη Δέλτα - The cool kid, by Penelope Delta
Ένα παιδί μετράει τ’ άστρα, Μενέλαος Λουντέμης - A child counts the stars, by Menelaos Loudemis
Sophie’s World, by Jostein Gaarder
The Phantom of the Opera, by Gaston Leroux
Robinson Crusoe, by Daniel Defoe
Jonathan Livingston seagull, by Richard Bach
The Catcher in the Rye, by J. D. Salinger
To Kill a Mockingbird, by Harper Lee
The orange girl, by Jostein Gaarder
Anna: a fable about the Earth’s climate and environment, by Jostein Gaarder
The Picture of Dorian Gray, by Oscar Wilde
A Tale of Two Cities, by Charles Dickens
Pride and Prejudice, by Jane Austen
The Book Thief, by Markus Zusak
The Hobbit, by J. R. R. Tolkien
The Lord of the Rings (The Felowship of the Ring - Two Towers - The return of the King), by J. R. R. Tolkien
Demian, by Herman Hesse
Anna of Green Gables, by L.M. Montgomery
Anne of Avonlea, by L.M. Montgomery
Anne of the Island, by L.M. Montgomery
The ones that walk away from Omelas, by Ursula Le Guin
Howl’s Moving Castle, by Diana Wynne Jones
A wizard of Earthsea (Earthsea Cycle #1), by Ursula Le Guin
The Worlds of Chrestomanci, by Diana Wynne Jones (heptalogy: Charmed Life - The Magicians of Caprona - Witch Week - The Lives of Christopher Chant - Mixed Magics - Conrad’s Fate - The Pinhoe Egg)
Ακυβέρνητες Πολιτείες, Στρατής Τσίρκας (τριλογία: Η Λέσχη - Αριάδνη - Νυχτερίδα) - Drifitng Cities, by Stratis Tsirkas (a trilogy : The Club - Ariagne - The Bat)
Η Φόνισσα, Αλέξανδρος Παπαδιαμάντης - The Murderess, by Alexandros Papadiamantis
Emma, by Jane Austen
The Name of the Rose, by Umberto Eco
Kafka on the Shore, by Haraki Murakami
The Plague, by Albert Camus
Eroica, Κοσμάς Πολίτης (Kosmas Politis)
The Name of the Wind, by Patrick Rothfuss
Gone With the Wind, by Margaret Mitchell
The Gambler, by Fyodor Dostoyevsky
Little Women, by Louisa May Alcott
Anna Karenina, by Leo Tolstoy
Swann’s Way, by Marcel Proust
Wuthering Heights, by Emily Bronte
The Great Gatsby, by F. Scott Fitzgerald
This Side of Paradise, by F. Scott Fitzgerald
Six of Crows, by Leigh Bardugo
Crooked Kingdom, by Leigh Bardugo
The Owl Service, by Alan Garner
Διακοπές στον Καύκασο, Μαρία Ιορδανίδου - Holidays in Caucasus, by Maria Iordanidou
Fire and Hemlock, by Diana Wynne Jones
A Tale of Time City, by Dianna Wynne Jones
The Pursuit of Love, by Nancy Mitford
The Princess Bride, by William Goldman
Love in a cold climate, by Nancy Mitford
The Sun Also Rises, Ernest Hemingway
The turn of the screw, by Henry James
The Dark Lord of Derkholm, by Diana Wynne Jones
The game, by Diana Wynne Jones
The last wish, by Andrzej Sapkwosky
A darker shade of magic, by V.E. Schwab
Sense and Sensibility, by Jane Auaten
Sculpting in time, by Andrei Tarkovski
Persuasion, by Jane Austen
Winter Rose, by Patricia A. McKillip
Swallows and amazons, by Arthur Ransome
What is literature?, by Jean-Paul Sartre
Hexwood, by Diana Wynne Jones
Deep Secret, by Diana Wynne Jones
The hatred of literature, by William Marx
Year of the Griffin, by Diana Wynne Jones
Castle in the air, by Diana Wynne Jones
Home of the Gentry, by Ivan Turgeniev
Archer’s Goon, by Diana Wynne Jones
The Homeward Bounders, by Diana Wynne Jones
Wilkin’s tooth, by Diana Wynne Jones
A wizard’s guide to defensive baking, by T. Kingfisher
Equal Rites, by Terry Pratchett
The Tombs of Atuan (Earthsea Cycle #2), by Ursula Le Guin
Tehanu, (Earthsea Cycle #4), by Ursula Le Guin
Mort, by Terry Pratchett
Μπουμπουλίνας 18, Κίττυ Αρσένη (Bouboylinas 18, by Kitty Arseni)
Ανθρωποφύλακες, Περικλής Κοροβέσης (The Method, by Pericles Korovesis)
Vita Nostra, Sergey & Marina Dyachenko
Lexicon, Max Bary
Dune, Frank Herbert
Why You Should Read Children's Books, Even Though You Are So Old and Wise, Katherine Rundell
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This edit says for birthdays and deaths of May 19th 20th and 21st and Jesus is our only holy God just like our father God who healed and lifted them up to be our Angels
Star Hobson, Peggy Cass, Andrea Helton, Emmett Goins, Gavin Lane Morris, Evelyn Ward, Robert White Creeley, Alexander Dale Oen, Biggie Smalls, Philip II, Aurelia Cotta, Alexander Pope, Elizabeth Fry, Mary Anning, Henry VI Of England, Albert David Hedison Jr., Albert Hay Malotte, Sir Michael Elias Balcon, Anthony Arnatt Bushell, Albrecht Dürer, Eleonore Maria Josefa of Austria, Gaspard-Gustave de Coriolis, Joseph Fouché, 1st Duc d'Otrante, 1st Comte Fouché, LUCIEN BONAPARTE (PRINCE OF CANINO), 1775-1840, MINISTER, Dabney Herndon Maury, Reverdy Johnson, JOHN F. LOUDON, Konstantin Petrovich Pobedonostsev, Brigadier-General Mosby Monroe Parsons, George Lafayette Beal, William Peter Sprague, Elizabeth Storrs Mead, Newton Martin Curtis, Louis Renault, Joseph Parry, Charles Albert Gobat, Léon Victor Auguste Bourgeois, Henri Julien Félix Rousseau, Giuseppe Mercalli, Princess Stéphanie Clotilde Louise Herminie Marie Charlotte of Belgium (21 May 1864 – 23 August 1945) was a Belgian princess who became Crown Princess of Austria through marriage to Crown Prince Rudolf, heir to the throne of the Austro-Hungarian Empire.Stéphanie of Belgium, Émile Adolphe Gustave Verhaeren, Jacques Marie Eugène Godefroy Cavaignac, Princess Sophie Helene Cecilie of Schönburg-Waldenburg, Maybelle Evelyn Taliaferro, May Frances Aufderheide Kaufman, John Peale Bishop, Baroness Suzanne Lilar, Raymond William Stacy Burr, Marcel Lajos Breuer, Manly Wade Wellman, Harold Robbins, Andrei Sakharov, Doris Mae Akers, Justine Kay Kendall McCarthy, Alice Elizabeth Drummond, Malcolm Fraser, Hernando de Soto, Archibald Primrose, Jane Addams, Sammy Davis Sr., Rajiv Gandhi, William Russell Hardie, John Emery, James Stewart, John Gielgud, Otto Waldis, Ion Dumitrescu, Peter Copley, George Leslie Goebel, Edith Marilyn Fellows, Elizabeth May "Betty" Driver, Alfred Moore, and so many more names I probably can't add but I got names on my paper list of Angels
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Cuando estás hecho para brillar de principio a fin
#candy candy#candycandy#william albert andrew#william albert ardlay#william albert andley#william albert andrey#mi*ccgif
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TW// depression, suicide attempt, implied overdose
Father Like Daughter (Yandere William James Moriarty and his darling having a genius daughter)
Hyacinth always thought that her illness and weak health would be the ones to take her not anything else due to her family’s constant coddling and overprotective nature, especially now that her father was home along with her Uncle as well…
But suppose you spend your entire life stuck inside with no nothing to do and no one to see, the constant coddling not changing since you were a child, always being treated like porcelain that would crack at any second.
The three years she lived with Andrei were the best of her life, sure sometimes her sickness made things difficult but she was not a little fragile doll anymore, she was allowed to move about without her wheelchair since after all she did not need it all the time, she didn’t have to go through endless doctor’s visits, she was allowed to be her age. Then when her father returned, everything resumed as it did before, the doctor appointments, the coddling, everything, and Hyacinth despised it all.
It was after a doctor’s appointment and they suggested a vaccine based treatment of some sort, and honestly she just couldn’t anymore, even if her father agreed to it, she didn’t, she never agreed to any of it, he would just do anything to try to cure her condition…
That’s a funny notion, cure a chronic condition…
It would never kill her, but other things might, even if they weren’t an illness.
Albert was coming to check in on Hyacinth since she did not come to dinner. When he knocks on the door there is no response and that scared him since she was almost always in her room and she normally never was asleep at this time. Albert opened the door, and he was immediately horrified by the sight before him.
Hyacinth with a bottle of her medication in her hand, and the pills, all of them.
“Hyacinth!”
There was not a moment before Albert grabbed both of her wrists, making her drop everything in her hands, the pills scattering on the ground and the bottle shattering against the wood floor. All she can process is the ringing in her ears as her father yells at her, demanding to know what the hell she was trying to do.
“I-I can’t- I can’t do this anymore.”
The words were simple enough to describe what she was about to do, and if it wasn’t Albert noticed the letter that rested on her lap…
She is never allowed to anything, just like a child with their overbearing parent, she isn’t even allowed to die.
#yandere moriarty the patriot#yandere yuukoku no moriarty#yandere albert james moriarty#yandere albert james moriarty x reader#albert moriarty x reader#albert james moriarty x reader
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Albert Williams.
¡ALBERT ES EL TÍO ABUELO WILLIAMS! OMG
#mi*ccgif#candycandy.#candycandy#william albert andrey#william albert andley#william albert andrew#william albert ardlay
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*photo, William Claxton circa 1998
Joni Mitchell, New York Magazine, 2005 Interview.
☞ One of my favorite interviews from Joni, because she name drops a lot of the artists, film makers, musicians, philosophers, and writers she’s admired.
#Joni Mitchell#Interview#2005#Claude Debussy#Igor Stravinsky#Tchaikovsky#Friedrich Nietzsche#Vincent van Gogh#Pablo Picasso#William Shakespeare#Albert Camus#Federico García Lorca#Leonard Cohen#Bob Dylan#Charlie Parker#Federico Fellini#Andrei Tarkovsky#Duke Ellington#Miles Davis#Bob Dylan n Joni Mitchell#Influence & Interests#1998#Leonard n Joni
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i’m sure this has been done before but i’m doing a study on what are some similar aspects/aspects that can point to murderous/violent behaviors (i’m using serial killers & their chart info to study these aspects) & wanted to ask if anyone has any serial killers they know of that have their correct birth time & info, please comment!
here is a list of serial killers I have already included by far: ted bundy, jeffery dahmer, john wayne-gacy, gary ridgeway, edmund kemper, richard ramirez, dennis rader, ed gein, david berkowitz, william bonin, andrei chikatilo, randy kraft, jack the ripper (birth chart of aaron kosminski?), charles manson, albert desalvo, harold shipman, fritz haarmann, the menendez brothers & richard speck
i’m personally really interested in what some correlations are between serial killers. i am doing this study by myself & would love to keep you updated as i go along.
p.s. i’m using the birth data for someone that was assumed to be jack the ripper 😬
#astrology learning#astrology help#astrology observations#astrology notes#astro observations#astro notes#astrology#birth chart#astrology of serial killers
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What movies and books do you rec for people (I'm people lol) going stir crazy during the Succession hiatus?
This is a loaded question because my shit idiot brain can, should, must, and will connect Everything in a nightmarish Pepe Silvia-style conspiracy corkboard. Instead of the nice @kendallroy style reclist you expect and deserve, I basically just free-associated for 5 minutes and came up with some movies and books that are thematically connected to family, trauma, power, wealth, crumbling empires, and/or failsons—props to @emmabovvary for pointing out the Comedy of Manners connection all those months ago.
Movies:
American Psycho
Dogstar
Wall Street
The Wolf of Wall Street
The Royal Tenenbaums
The House of Yes
The Age of Innocence
The Lion in Winter
Death at a Funeral
L'Argent
Ordinary People
El Angel Exterminador
Glengarry Glen Ross
The Queen of Versailles
The Big Short
The Talented Mr. Ripley
Parasite
Gosford Park
Addams Family Values
Best in Show
Citizen Kane
Books:
The Brothers Karamazov by Fyodor Dostoevsky
Petersburg by Andrei Bely
One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel García Marquez
The Custom of the Country and The Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton
Brideshead Revisited by Evelyn Waugh
Ada, or Ardor by Vladimir Nabokov
The Nest by Cynthia D'Aprix Sweeney
The Myth of Sisyphus and The Fall by Albert Camus
Rules of Civility by Amor Towles
The Sound and the Fury by William Faulkner
The Takeover by Muriel Spark
The Black Prince by Iris Murdoch
The Bonfire of the Vanities by Tom Wolfe
Howards End by E.M. Forster
The Darlings by Christina Alger
The Power Broker by Robert Caro
Everything I Never Told You by Celeste Ng
Crazy Rich: Power, Scandal and Tragedy Inside the Johnson & Johnson Dynasty by Jerry Oppenheimer
The King of Content: Sumner Redstone’s Battle for Viacom, CBS, and Everlasting Control of His Media Empire by Keach Hagey
An Oresteia: Agamemnon by Aiskhylos; Elektra by Sophokles; Orestes by Euripides tr. Anne Carson
The Importance of Being Earnest and Lady Windermere's Fan by Oscar Wilde
She Stoops to Conquer by Oliver Goldsmith
The School for Scandal and The Rivals by Richard Brinsley Sheridan
Uncle Vanya and The Cherry Orchard by Anton Chekov
Heartbreak House: A Fantasia in the Russian Manner on English Themes by George Bernard Shaw
#no shakespeare because we have neither the time nor blood sugar to unpack all that now#no gatsby because we unpacked it already#no john cheever's “the swimmer” because i could do a whole anthology of short stories and i really am VERY hungry#no brideshead because—okay i added brideshead#what else? hm. do also check out the satires of horace and persius and juvenal#PLEASE hmu if you can't find something or want more details about one#i might not reply right away but i am very excitable and better at yelling about books and movies 1-on-1#weird that i couldn't find murdoch or sparks...watch this space for more i guess#succession#bookrecs#i read much of the night and go south in the winter#kenstar-gregco#assbox#i love how overrepresented the russians are i am absolutely predictable
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