#artimis/mari
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Lil Artimie Fowl wants his daddy for money
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Celebration
A Maribat Monday prompt and a kinda late New Years fic!! [it’s still the 1st where I am so it counts ;>]
I plan on doing 2 prompts this week and this is one of them
rare pair hell for me!!
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The team had decided to throw a New Year’s party in the mountain. So here was a group of teens all in civvies hanging out. Almost everyone made it which was rare for a non mission. Robin and Wally had decorated with Connor’s help and M’gann with Ladybug’s she said you could call her Mari help had made the food. The French-Asian had always loved to bake so teaching M'gann was a joy and now almost nothing was burnt.
Music played throughout the night, Atrimis mostly stayed to herself, acting like a wallflower. Her blonde hair was in a loose ponytail held together with something Mari had given her during training. She also wore the cropped jacket the girl had made her, something about the girl always helped her feel like she belonged. Mari was out in the crowd looking to be having the time of her life, she was dancing to the music like she could feel it in her bones. Mari had a single ponytail not unlike Artimis’s own and wore a crop top of her own. It was odd to see her in something so different to her normal outfit but to say she didn’t pull it off amazingly wouldn’t be fair to Mari.
Mari had sent her a few looks throughout the night, maybe it was just because she was standing by the drinks? Yeah that had to be it, definitely not looking at me? Yup, just the drinks… what is she doing coming my way?? The potential panic in Artemis's mind disappeared when a soft smile was sent her way from the girl she had not so secretly been watching all night, “Come one Artie, join me,” not leaving any room for question Mari had grabbed her hand from where it was across her chest pulling her to the dance floor.
Awkward at first Artemis wasn’t quite sure what she should be doing but the encouragement for the girl across from her was all she needed. After a song or two she was enjoying herself, it didn’t even cross her mind how the shorter girl looked at her happy with her work. They spent the next hour dancing like no one else was there, and to be fair in their minds it was just the two of them. Gentle touches to the arm didn’t register in the archers head until she started to return them. Sure it was small but it was a change.
The music turned down slightly and a countdown could be heard.
10...
Both girls slowed and looked each other in the eyes.
8...
Atrimis took a chance and looked at the other girl’s lips, if only…
6…
Mari took the blonde in her arms, she was close, so close now
3…
Mari took a beat, before leaning in
2…
Atrimis didn’t hesitate to lean in to, this was finally happening…
1…
Their lips met as cheers filled the room and confetti fell from the ceiling. It was soft and held a yearning for more. They finally parted, looking each other in the eyes, “How about a round two Atrie?” they didn’t see the camera one Robin held or hear the cheers as their friends saw the two finally get together, all that mattered to them was the girl in their arms.
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@maribat-mondays
alos thanks to @theatreandcomicfreak for beta reading <3
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Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir **MAJOR SPOILERS**
So, this is a first, I've never written a revisit this fast.
I do often read or listen to an especially good book, again, right after I finish it. Usually because I can't get into another book until I do.
I did it with Lamb, and I did it with the Martian.
This one is going to be chock full of spoilers, I really want to analyze the main characters in this book, and I can't do that without going into details. This is why I marked the hell out of this.
Project Hail Mary is even better the second time around. This is often the case. Books are like soup. The leftovers from the fridge are often even better than when you had it the first time.
*SPOILERS* *SERIOUSLY SPOILERS TURN BACK NOW IF YOU HAVEN’T READ THIS BOOK* *SPOILERS* *THE REST OF THIS RAMBLE WILL RUIN THE BOOK* *SPOILERS*
Okay, so run down.
The book opens with our main character waking up to an annoying computer asking him basic math questions. This is detecting cognitive function, that's my guess anyway.
Our character quickly discovers a few things. First, he's in a room with robot arms tending to him, including unhooking him from various life support systems as it figures out that he is awake and functioning. He's not alone in the room, there are two others, but they are long dead. And he has no idea, who he is, where he is, or why he's there.
What follows for a little while is what I would call a psychological screwball comedy. It takes him several days to work out that his name is Ryland Grace and he is a microbiologist PhD who had a falling out with the academic community and found his calling as a Jr. High science teacher. Though exploration, experiments, and memory flashes, he works out that he is on a spaceship, the corpses were his crewmates, and he is on a mission to Tau Ceti to save earth from an alien algae like creature, called Astropgage, that is dimming the sun and setting earth on the course to an ice age that will begin to wipe out humanity in 30 years. Tau Ceti, which is 12 light years away from earth, is resistant to this energy sucking algae.
We get all the backstory of how he became a crew member aboard the ship Hail Mary, in flashbacks as his memories return. A big memory that returns? Project Hail Mary is a suicide mission, he will not be going home.
In the meantime, he is slowly trying to figure out how to save earth, while he does this, he sees a very weird spaceship and meets an intelligent alien being. This being (Grace calls him Rocky) comes from a world (Earid) that is in the same situation as Earth. Together, Grace and Rocky have to work out how to save both of their home worlds.
Ryland Grace is a complex character, he’s very very different from Mark Watney (I haven't read Artimis so I can't make comparisons to those characters).
The Martian points out that Astronauts are inherently noble, willing to risk their lives for science and a good cause.
Grace is not an astronaut. That's not to say that he isn't a good person, just that he is an average person. He can be all at once self-sacrificing and selfish.
Early on he is drafted into the research team on what would be called Astropgage as a science expert by Eva Strat, a woman in charge of figuring out what is going on and how to stop it.
Once he was released from his part in this research, he goes back to teaching, only to be struck by the fact that his students would be in their early forties when all hell breaks loose, and that they might die. He then goes back to Strat and demands to be part of the research again.
This back and forth happens a few times in the story. In fact, it becomes a big part of it. See, the crew of the Hail Mary were put into comas to ensure that they would not go nuts and kill each other on the 12 light-year (four years from their perspective) journey, a medical company discovered that 1 in 7000 people have the genes to survive long comas and still function when they wake up. Grace is one of those people, but he is not volunteering for this mission. It's not that he doesn't care, or even that he doesn't want to help, it's that he's scared. And who wouldn't be? But honestly? I think Grace has imposture syndrome and is generally very sensitive. He realized that his kids would suffer, after starting to teach a class, that speed him to become a part of Strat's team again. Events happen that lead him to being the only logical candidate for the science expert aboard the Hail Mary. He refused, Strat basically kidnaps him, sets the computer induce amnesia in only Grace and plunks him on board.
Before she does this, she harshly calls Grace out.
“Do you think I don’t know you, Dr. Grace?!” she yelled. “You’re a coward and you always have been. You abandoned a promising scientific career because people didn’t like a paper you wrote. You retreated to the safety of children who worship you for being the cool teacher. You don’t have a romantic partner in your life because that would mean you might suffer heartbreak. You avoid risk like the plague.” (pg. 392 Kindle Edition)
This all seems to be true, but we don't know Grace's full story. Other than a mention of one girlfriend in college, and brief mentions of friends, There is nothing in the book about his life before he started teaching. This could be because the amnesia has left those things fuzzy, but in my head, it's because he doesn't want to think about it. Maybe he had a bad family life, maybe he had *no* family life, maybe he had an early tragedy. Maybe he realized his short comings and that, no matter his talent, he just didn't have the temperament for acidemia.
He does like being the cool teacher, he does say he likes being looked up to, but this isn't necessarily a bad thing. He's a *good* teacher.
I had cool teachers before I switched to home school. They weren't all good. I had one that would literally just let us mess around during class because they didn't want to actually grade papers. Cool to a kid? Absolutely! Good for education? Not on your life.
Grace isn't like that, he loves science, he loves teaching, and the kids are learning.
He doesn't like animal testing, he's emotional at the fragility of humanity. In short, in his quiet way he loves life.
He leaves his comfort zone to be a part of Strat's team because he knows he's good at what he does and he couldn't look at his students and knowing they could die when he could help prevent it. That doesn't mean he thinks he will be Earth's savior, just that he can help.
He's unwilling to die.
Usually in books and movies, this translates to coward, but really? It's not. Most people wouldn't volunteer for a suicide mission, especially one this pressure filled. "So, we need you to go into a coma, go to a different solar system, save your whole species, and then kill yourselves so you won't starve to death. We good? Cool."
You can't fault a living being for wanting to live. Plus, the other crew members had time to think it through, really decide, make peace with the decision and *then* carry through with the training. Grace? He was given the training, but Strat always said it was for the science of the mission. She was a little like Dumbledore, in that she was training him in case he had to go, but never told him it was a possibility. When it became clear that he was the choice for the vacant spot, he was given less than five hours to decide, and then was told he had no choice.
He makes noble choices throughout the book, but that one choice was not his own, because Strat was given absolute power and used it absolutely.
I can't say that Strat is a villain, either. She was elected to save earth and given the power to cut through any red tape. Handed all this authority, she doesn't become corrupt, she uses this power ruthlessly, but always with the only goal being Save Earth, full stop, that's it. And even as Grace, understandably terrified, yells at her she tells him that she likes him, that she knows that he is a good man, that he will give this his all. She doesn't *want* to send this unwilling and scared man on a suicide mission. She *has* to. Strat is also complex, she is not nonsense and is committed to her role in saving humanity. I like the reason she gives as to why, toward the end of the book. She got her undergrad degree in history. She takes to heart the old saying that those who do not learn from history are doomed to repeat it.
The climate scientists and their models assumed survival based on the idea that all countries will work together for the common goal. However, Strat points out that history shows that that ideal scenario, is not likely to work. She says that most wars, up until very recently, were fought over food, and resulting in famine. As the sun loses energy and crops fail, there will be wars, and they will be over food. And that is what she is desperately trying to avoid – the horror of history brought to the modern day.
I started as a history major, and history is interwoven into anthropology – I understand this perspective.
I am not going to get into politics, but I’ve experienced the agonizing frustration of watching history repeat itself, more than once in the last couple of years. Guessing at how something will probably go due to how something lines up with a similar event in the past and knowing that if someone in power would just listen it might turn out different, or that the eventual problems could at least be prepared for, and watch it happen anyway and everyone act surprised. It’s enough to make you pull your hair out.
Strat has the knowledge and the authority to act on it, I can’t say, that in her position I wouldn’t act the same way.
That is the major difference between Grace and Strat: viewpoint. By necessity of her position and by virtue of her education, she sees the big picture clearly, Grace, however, doesn’t. He’s a microbiologist, his entire career and education is looking closely at the small things and how they would translate to big things. He studies the universe by studying the smallest things in it. It is no surprise that he would need the smaller things to make the bigger things to snap into focus. When he was forced to start research on astrophage, it wasn’t until he was faced with the small scale (his kids could suffer) to make him see his part in the grand scheme of things. Strat is right, he does avoid risk, because he’s avoiding pain, he doesn’t let things in because he feels too much. Yes, the realization about the kids, puts steel in his spine, but not before he narrowly avoids a break down. For Grace, seeing Strat’s point of view, without being able to work it though to his scale, is like yelling at someone standing too close to a mountain for not being able to see the peak. It just can’t be done from where they are.
It makes me wonder, had Strat been up front with Grace, would he have willingly gone? It takes him a while to come around to the idea of helping the project in the first place. If he were told sooner, given some time, had been able to go home, and think, I feel like he would have gone. Something would have set him on the course. Maybe it would have been one of his former students, telling him about their plans for trying out for high school track, or going to college, maybe he would have gone to his usual cafe for breakfast and found out that one of the waitresses had just gotten engaged, maybe he would be told these things and see the fear and desperate need to keep life as normal as possible in the person's eyes, and then he would decide, if, on the off chance no one else could go, he would. Until he remembers his refusal, nearly at the end of the book, he accepts quickly that he volunteered for the mission. Of course, that could have been simply because he couldn't imagine someone forcing someone into something like that, but even as his memories and sense of self come back to him, he doesn't have a sense of terror or blind panic at the fact that he's not going home. I would think that if his unwillingness were something hard wired into his personality, he would know soon after remembering who he is, that he would have never considered being a part of the voyage.
So, I think, had Strat told Grace early on that he had the coma resistant genes and that there was a small possibility that he may have to be the backup for the backup, and then allowed him to come to terms with it, he would have gone without the drama. Don’t get me wrong, there is the possibility that he would have run off and had to have been hunted down, but I think, just like when he went to his class and saw his students, something would have made his conscious kick in, and he would have come back.
That might have been interesting, him running scared for a little while and then coming back? Might have given a little more background into why he is the way he is. But that’s not really what this book is about, I think it’s a forgone about conclusion that Grace would have helped, but what’s really interesting is how Grace and Rocky work together.
Rocky is cool! I love that Weir didn’t go the easy route with the creation of an alien character. Rocky is no Roswell gray with a humanoid form. No no, for our sympathetic alien, we have a spider like creature with liquid mercury for blood who “sees” with echolocation and speaks in musical notes. And it works!!
Rocky is expressive and funny and is great with Grace. It’s hilarious, other than the Russian scientist on Project Hail Mary, he doesn’t get along with anyone as well as he does with Rocky, out of everyone in the book, Grace connects most with a spider shaped rock being, he has to make a computer program to speak with.
Rocky is a tad steadier than Grace, but that makes sense simply because of the two, Rocky knew what he was getting into, and Eridens not only have more time before their star dims to the point of causing a problem, but also, they live a long long time, so, Rocky knows he is going home. But the steadiness is also built into his personality. He and Grace are both analytical problem solvers, but seeing that Rocky is an engineer, his focus is to fix things. A problem arises, and his first reaction is “I will fix that.” He won’t be dissuaded until he has all avenues exhausted.
Grace has a habit, early on, of moping for a little while before rallying and getting to work. His interaction with Rocky brings that pouting time down a bit, and he even pulls Rocky out of a slump a time or two.
The relationship between these two is interesting because Grace says flat out that he is not a social person, he feels awkward in groups with people. But he easily communicates with his students, and he easily communicates with Rocky. Rocky is not childlike, but he does have something in common with the students, Grace, like any teacher, teaches his students, and learns from them. Grace teaches Rocky and learns from him. Grace is comfortable with this sort of interaction; with his students this is where the relationship stops. With Rocky, it doesn’t have that boundary. By virtue of the fact that both are alone in space and crave interaction, they talk a lot. Also, activities that Grace is use to doing alone, Rocky’s culture requires to be done in pairs. The biggest: Sleeping.
Eridens do not sleep without another person watching them. So, he insists that he watch Grace sleep and that Grace watches him. It is not expressly said what other things Eridens don’t do alone, but it is implied (at least to me) that they work better in pairs or in groups. This is true of humans as well, but Grace in particular is a loner, even as he complains that science doesn’t happen with one scientist doing the work (and he’s right) but he does work alone even when the astrophage project opened up to more people, the feeling I get is that he still does most of his work alone unless asked to teach others, or forced to come along by Strat.
Grace quickly becomes acclimated to Rocky’s way of doing things, in an odd way, Grace is more comfortable being Eriden, than he is being human. And I really think that this is the crux of their relationship.
I read somewhere recently that family isn’t necessarily blood, but who you would bleed for.
I feel that Rocky and Grace would sacrifice themselves for their respective home worlds, but they will bleed for each other. Grace must go to a different star system to find family, which is actually really cool to me, because the story manages to have Grace have a story of growth and even a quiet redemption arc all with the background noise of a potential double Armageddon, and we manage not to lose sight of any of these elements. Add to this that the book will make you laugh, cry and think all at once. I love the Martian, but I honestly think this one is better!
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"You won't be able to put it down!" THE HIGHER YOU'RE BRED, THE FARTHER YOU FALL An artist pledged to serve his planet …
The author Mary Flint's "Red Star" trilogy was inspired by her love of reading and her enthusiasm for science fiction. Sixteen-year-old Mary, a year older than Christopher Paolini was when he began writing his first book, "Eragon," thought, "he did it, I can succeed as well." Mary wanted to make her own world inspired by George Lucas's "Star Wars" sagas, where he made his own universe with his won planets and cultures. This made her want to create her own universe as well.
In addition to "Star Wars," she also loves Richard Paul Evans' "Michael Vey" series, Eoin Colfer's "Artimis Fowl" series, and Susanne Collins' "Hunger Games" trilogy. Mary writes from her South Texas home in the United States.
ℹRed Star participates on this round of Battle of the Books.
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Voltron As: Greek Mythology Group Chat
Shiro: I think I relate to Hera more than anyone. I mean, If my husband cheated, got a girl pregnant, tried to get it to live with me, and turned out it was an ugly baby I would kick it into a volcano too.
Lance: Headcannon that Poseidon and Hades aren’t really brothers but are homosexual lovers but because homosexuality was a sin they just made them Two Bros Chilling In A Hot Tub Five Feet Apart Because They’re Not Gay.
Hunk: Maybe Persephone wanted to stay in Hell. It’s warmer down there anyways. There is a cute dog.
Pidge: Petition to change Dionysus from the God of Wine to the God of Tequila.
Keith: Sweet Sweet Mother Mary is that an exact replica of Helena’s Blade?
Allura: I think boys suck. Artimis was right.
Coran: Are the Aphrodite because your face changes every week and your personality is as shallow as the waters you came out of. Lotor: I condition my hair with the tears of Demigods and the willpower of Zeus
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I am just so used to blanket black and white morality being applied to fiction on this site that I wouldnt be surprised if I log on tomorrow to see people talking about how the story of Jesus is problematic because Mary was(probably) barely a teenager when she got pregnant and married Joseph.
Like all ancient stories are problematic. All of them. But we really need to stop ourselves from taking them too litterally or applying modern standards of morality to them becuase I really don't want to see someone get canceled because they thought Oedipus was a good play.
Granted as these stories are open to interpretation I dont think there is anything wrong with more modern retellings where Persephone was the willing queen of Hades or Medusa was the protector of abused women and Artimis was the patron of lesbians and asexuals but when we start saying you can't like a mythical god becuase they married their sister I think maybe we might be going a bit too far.
Reimagine things sure, but don't take them so far put of their original context that we start tearing eachother apart over them. I've seen a bit too much of that already for my liking and I can only see it going downhill from here.
I am seeing more and more people trying to apply modern morality to ancient Greek myths and plays and it is....concerning, to say the least.
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marinette X artemis? sign me the fuck up! they would be so good for each other omg
I know right?! I love them!
I got another fic of them in the works, been working on it for a bit
Originally it was going to be out awhile ago but I got cought up in other stuff
So look out for that if you want more, it'll be called I'm more than just my past
Catch me with all the rare pairs or things people weren't thinking about
#ask response#human rambles#artimis/mari#i swear i got progress on it#not putting it off fo much longer
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