#brittany fichter
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Why does every book Brittany Fichter write make me cry? Because UGH! The Huntsman's Heart is SO GOOD.
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booksandfairytales · 8 months ago
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Rereading Cinders, Stars, and Glass Slippers and be still my heart
[SPOILERS IF YOU HAVEN'T READ IT!!!]
Prince Nicholas realizing his love for Elaina
Him DREAMING ABOUT HER AND WHAT COULD HAVE BEEN
He never stopped thinking about her since he met her, let a line when she went missing
I know what happens, but it's been long enough since I read it that I don't remember how things unfold and I'm getting so into it
This book is amazing and I need more stories with these two
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trickster-kat · 2 years ago
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Every Book/Manga I Read in April 2023
Mistress of All Evil by Serena Valentino (Villains, Book 4)
Blood Lad (Omnibus) Volumes 1-9 by Yuuki Kodama
D•N•Angel Volumes 1-13 by Yukiru Sugisaki
Of Heists and Hexes by S.L. Prater (A Witch's Ever After, Book 1)
Shadow Touched by Becky Moynihan (A Touch of Vampire, Book 1)
Beauty Beheld by Brittany Fichter (Classical Kingdoms Collection, Book 3)
Magic Forged by K.M. Shea (Magiford Supernatural City: Hall of Blood and Mercy, Book 1)
Haunting Adeline by H.D. Carlton (Cat and Mouse Duet, Book 1)
Part of Your World by Liz Braswell (A Twisted Tale, Book 5)
Resident Evil: Caliban Cove by S.D. Perry (Book 2)
Night of Masks and Knives by LJ Andrews (The Broken Kingdoms, Book 4)
Feral as a Cat by Kendra Moreno (Sons of Wonderland, Book 3)
A Prince so Cruel by Ingrid Seymour (Healer of Kingdoms, Book 1)
Golden Braids and Dragon Blades by Melanie Karsak (Steampunk Fairy Tales, Book 4)
The Fae King's Dream by Jamie Schlosser (Between Dawn and Dusk, Book 2)
Bride of the Shadow King by Sylvia Mercedes (Bride of the Shadow King, Book 1)
Wretched by Emily McIntire (Never After Series, Book 3)
Court of Blood and Bindings by Lisette Marshall (Fae Isles, Book 1)
A Tune to Make Them Follow by T.A. Lawrence (The Severed Realms, Book 2)
Curse the Fae by Natalia Jaster (Vicious Faeries: Dark Fables World, Book 3)
The Never King by Nikki St. Crowe (Vicious Lost Boys, Book 1)
Enchanting the Elven Mage by Alisha Klapheke (Kingdoms of Lore, Book 1)
The Titan's Curse by Rick Riordan (Percy Jackson and the Olympians, Book 3)
The Devil's in the Details by Selene Charles (The Grimm Files, Book 4)
Vampire Hunter D by Hideyuki Kikuchi (Vampire Hunter D, Book 1)
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laurahepworth-author · 1 year ago
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I love fairy tales and retellings and, I think, Cinderella is probably near the top of my list of favorites. In fact, I just finished writing a Cinderella retelling that releases next week on Amazon! But, that makes me wonder, what are everyone's favorite versions or retellings of Cinderella? Book or movie. Book wise, mine would probably be "Cinders, Stars, and Glass Slippers" by Brittany Fichter and "Cinderella and the Colonel" by K.M. Shea. As for movies, overall, I really enjoyed Ever After and the Disney live action version. What about you?
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hannahecareyauthor · 2 years ago
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A #bookstack to kick off the week! Pulled together some books with “The” in the title and it turns out I have quite a few!
Books Featured:
⭐️ The Mage’s Daughter by Lynn Kurland
⭐️ The Autumn Fairy by Brittany Fichter
⭐️ The Caller by Juliet Marillier
⭐️ The Betrayer: Tales of Pern Coen
⭐️ The Hunter: Tales of Pern Coen
⭐️ The Successor: Tales of Pern Coen
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fictionadventurer · 3 years ago
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Fairy Tale Retellings
I know that @magpie-trove has been recommended enough books to fill several years, but since fairy tale retellings are my niche, I’m going to throw some more titles out there. (I’m limiting myself to 1) books/short stories 2) that I enjoyed 3) that I haven’t seen mentioned in connection to the original post. I’m also trying not to branch out into too many tales, so I’m going to be leaving out some slightly more obscure ones).
Before I go into the specifics, I’m just going to say, that if you only read three books out of this list, read Entwined by Heather Dixon (12 Dancing Princesses),  Brine and Bone by Kate Stradling (Little Mermaid) and Valiant by Sarah Macguire. (And if you only read one series, make it Regina Doman’s Fairy Tale Novels.)
Cinderella
Before Midnight by Cameron Dokey: Short, sweet, autumny retelling that I like for the atmosphere and the loving relationship between Cinderella and her stepfamily.
Silver Woven In My Hair by Shirley Rousseau Murphy: Extremely short, traditional retelling, starring a mistreated girl who collects Cinderella stories while being in one of her own. Has a sweet charm to it.
Soot and Slipper by Kate Stradling: A short retelling set in a traditional fairy tale kingdom, but with an excellent plot twist. I like it very much until the ending entangles it in a far-too-complicated magic system.
The Reluctant Godfather by Allison Tebo: A sassy retelling starring a grumpy fairy baker who tries to get out of his godfather duties by getting his two charges to fall in love with each other. Gets points for a unique, almost Wodehousish parody element that is an extreme breath of fresh air in a genre dominated by YA romances.
The Spinner and the Slipper by Camryn Lockhart: Mashes up the story with Rumpelstiltskin. Clearly the work of a very young author, but I’m putting it on here for the fun use of the fairies from A Midsummer Night’s Dream.
Beauty and the Beast
Unseen Beauty by Amity Thomsen: Traditional fantasy retelling from the POV of one of the invisible servants. Writing that’s a cut above most self-pubbed books, with extra points for featuring a female friendship that’s just as important as the main romance.
Snow White
Fairest Son by H.S.J. Williams: Gender-flipped version involving the fae. Is the only Snow White retelling that had me uncertain for a while of where the plot was going to go.
Sleeping Beauty
A Long, Long Sleep by Anna Sheehan: A sci-fi retelling involving a girl who was regularly kept in stasis for the convenience of her corporate mogul parents, then was left in stasis for more than 70 years while the apocalypse happened. She wakes up to a world that’s recovered to become a very different place and has to deal with the emotional fallout of everything that’s happened to her. And it’s intense. This book has the distinction of being one of only two books with scenes that made me put the book down so I could sob uncontrollably. (The other is Rapunzel Let Down). There’s a little bit of content (a couple of kissing scenes that veer toward steamy, and use of futuristic swear words that have clear connections to modern swear words) but easily skippable.
The Little Mermaid
Brine and Bone by Kate Stradling: On first read, I appreciated it as a faithful-to-Andersen retelling, but found it otherwise forgettable. I reread it earlier this year and cannot understand how I possibly came to that conclusion. This has beautiful character work in a unique world that, I cannot stress this enough, is loyal to the Andersen version while appreciating the true joy of that ending.
Silent Mermaid by Brittany Fichter: First half had some excellent world-building and interesting conflicts that fell apart in a more cliche second half, but I remember it being enjoyable overall.
The Princess and the Pea
The Bruised Princess by A.G. Marshall: Part of her Once Upon a Short Story collection. They’re all decent-to-great, but this one is my favorite, a sweet little romance that makes the story make a surprising amount of sense.
I need to give a shout-out to my favorite retelling of this tale. I can’t remember the title. It was on Fanfiction.net back in the day. (I tried looking it up, but it wasn’t part of the collection I assumed it was in). It was from the POV of the servant who had to stuff all twenty mattresses. She has allergies and is miserable by the time she’s done, and gets her revenge by stuffing the top mattress with gravel.
The Twelve Dancing Princesses
Entwined by Heather Dixon: One of my very top favorite retellings, a creative and whimsical and touching story focusing on the twelve close-knit sisters and their relationship with their buttoned-up father in the aftermath of their mother’s death.
The Brave Little Tailor
Valiant by Sarah McGuire: The only retelling I’ve ever seen of this tale, starring a girl who has to masquerade as a boy to get work as a tailor, and winds up entangled in a kingdom’s battle against giants. The first act is very boring, but it turns into a very well-done retelling with excellent characters and worldbuilding.
Bonus: Series
These are series that retell several fairy tales in the same universe, and I thought it’d be easier to present them all together than separating them out by fairy tale.
The Fairy Tale Novels by Regina Doman: Catholic retellings set in the modern day. They have their weak points, but they’re my gold standard for how to write a modern retelling and how to write a religious romance.
The Shadow of the Bear: Snow White and Rose Red. Fun and adventurous. Gets points for introducing me to Chesterton.
Black as Night: Snow White, focusing on the Snow White character from the first book. Darker and more intense, but with some deep themes.
Waking Rose: Sleeping Beauty, focusing on the Rose Red character’s adventures in college. By far the most popular book in the series, it’s overlong, but extremely good.
The Midnight Dancers: The Twelve Dancing Princesses, focusing on mostly new characters with a side character from Waking Rose in the soldier role. A slighter story with a pricklier main character, but it’s a strong contender for my favorite in the series, exploring the connections between beauty and truth and goodness.
Alex O’Donnell and the 40 Cyberthieves: Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves, starring Waking Rose side characters. This is a lighter adventure tale. All the stuff surrounding the hacking subplot is slightly ridiculous, but it’s one of the only YA novels I’ve ever seen that explores the realistic nuances of considering marriage with someone very different from you.
Rapunzel Let Down: Rapunzel. By far the darkest themes (it’s classified as an adult book). All new characters with some cameos. I thought it was decent on first read, but on reread, it blew me away with some of its themes (Except for a very melodramatic fifth act).
The Andari Chronicles by Kenley Davidson: Retellings set in a very mildly magical fantasy world, mostly focused on political intrigue.
Traitor’s Masque: Cinderella. 60% longer than it needs to be because of the extremely wordy writing style, and it makes me tear my hair out every time I try rereading, but the core conflict between the two brothers is compelling.
The Countess and the Frog: The Frog Prince. A short prequel novella focusing on a side character from the first book. I think it’s only available as a freebie on the author’s site but may be one of my favorite romances because the leads are so cute and sensible together.
Goldheart: Rumpelstiltskin. My favorite in the series, focused on a shy painter given an impossible task and the friends who help her get through it. The writing style’s much more concise here.
Pirouette: The Twelve Dancing Princesses. Political-intrigue focused. Also much wordier than it needs to be, though not as much as the first book. Twists the fairy tale in extremely interesting ways and has some great characters. (Prologue and epilogue are some of my favorite bits of writing in the series).
Shadow and Thorn: Beauty and the Beast. The most magical book in the series, and the most confusing because of that. There was one really cool moment with Beauty’s father, but otherwise I didn’t care for it all that much.
Daughter of Lies: Snow White with spies. Short, but fun. Reminds me of a Georgette Heyer farce.
Path of Secrets: Red Riding Hood with spies. I remember nothing about this story, which may tell you all you need to know.
Once: Six Historically Inspired Fairy Tales: What I think of as a kind of spin-off to the Rooglewood collections, this novella collection by six different authors retells six different fairy tales. My favorites are a dark but beautiful “Little Match Girl” retelling set in WWII, a steampunkish Rumpelstiltskin, and With Blossoms Gold, a Rapunzel retelling set in the Renaissance. (The only one I didn’t like at all was the Sleeping Beauty story).
Destined series by Kaylin Lee: Includes retellings of Cinderella, Rapunzel, Beauty and the Beast, Red Riding Hood, Snow White and Sleeping Beauty in one interconnected storyline. I’ve only read the first four; they’re okay-to-decent books whose main strength is the unique world they’re set in (think magical steampunky 1930s, which seems like a work of genius after you’ve been reading through a million retellings set in generically fairy tale kingdoms). My favorite is the fourth, Betrayed, which retells Little Red Riding Hood and mostly stands alone (until the last act veers it into a really complicated overarching plot).
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thrina-thrina-on-the-wall · 3 years ago
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The Sentinel Song was good.
I kinda love Brittany Fichter's books. Very culture. Much fairytale. Goodness.
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Might I recommend The Legacy of the Time Stones trilogy by Brittany Fichter? Honestly anything she writes is amazing, but this series in particular is really good
Any of you have recommendations for fantasy or sci-fi without much sexual content?
Self-published or Christian works welcome but only if they're high quality (i.e. not worse than general market fiction).
And, of course, I have to add I've read everything by Tolkien and Lewis.
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monsters-and-villains · 6 years ago
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BatB BOOKS
Beauty and the Beast themed books:
Bryony and Roses by T. Kingfisher
Beauty by Robin McKinley
Chalice by Robin McKinley
Sunshine by Robin McKinley
Heart's Blood by Juliet Marillier
The Fire Rose by Mercedes Lackey
Fire and Hemlock by Diana Wynne Jones
Wintersong by S. Jae-Jones
Cruel Beauty by Rosamund Hodge
Uprooted by Naomi Novik
Spinning Silver by Naomi Novik
Land of the Beautiful Dead by R. Lee Smith
A Court of Thorns and Roses by Sarah J. Maas
Radiance by Grace Draven
The Hollow Kingdom by Clare B. Dunkle
The Darkangel Trilogy by Meredith Ann Pierce
Science Fiction setting:
Beauty (part of the short story collection Red as Blood, or Tales from the Sisters Grimmer) by Tanith Lee
Breath of Life by Christine Pope
Of Beast and Beauty by Stacy Jay
Books I haven't read yet but sound interesting:
Beauty and the Werewolf by Mercedes Lackey
Rose Daughter by Robin McKinley
Masque by W.R. Gingell
Beauty by Susan Wilson
Entreat Me by Grace Draven
Beast by Donna Jo Napoli
Other people´s recommendations:
Truth in the Dark by Amy Lane – recommended by @gailcarriger
Spellbound by Sara Celi – recommended by @bebe-benzenheimer
The Fire Rose by Mercedes Lackey –  @nerdberd
The Rakshasa´s Bride by Suzannah Rowntree – recommended by @kecharitomene
The Star-Touched Queen by Roshani Choksi – recommended by @kecharitomene
The Bloody Chamber by Angela Carter – recommended by @kecharitomene
Hunted by Megan Spooner – recommended by @kecharitomene
The Beast´s Heart by Leife Shallcross – recommended by @kecharitomene
Beauty and the Clockwork Beast by Nancy Campbell Allen – recommended by @kecharitomene
The Beauty´s Beastby E.D. Walker – recommended by @kecharitomene
Roses in Amber by C.E. Murphy – recommended by @kecharitomene
A Curse so Dark and Lonely by Brigid Kemmerer – recommended by @kecharitomene
Echo North by Joanna Ruth Meyer – recommended by @kecharitomene
Before Beauty by Brittany Fichter – recommended by @kecharitomene
East by Edith Pattou – recommended by @kecharitomene, @bookbeastfeast
Beast by Donna Jo Napoli – recommended by @momolady, @girlfrien3
Before Beauty by Brittany Fichter – recommended by @darkladyreylo
Five Enchanted Roses – short story collection – recommended by @darkladyreylo
Beastly by Alex Finn –  recommended by @abandoned-as-mustard, @tamynightmerz, @thelilessisters
A Curse so Dark and Lonely by Brigid Kimmerer – recommended by @thelilessisters
In the Vanisher´s Palace by Aliette Bodard – recommended by @mlwangbooks
Goddess of the Rose by P.C. Cast –  recommended by @the-lady-mienshao
The Tigers Bride by Angela Carter – recommended by @missnargaluna
The beast´s Garden by Kate Forsyth – recommended by @fluffycakesistainted
Rozalia by Magdalena Wala – recommended by @neoma2
Also a big thank you to the MULTIPLE people who recommended Of Beast and Beauty by Stacy Jay :)
DNF (books I´ve tried to read but do not personally recommend):
Eye of the Beholder by Elizabeth Darcy, Depravity by M.J. Haag
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blogthebooklover · 6 years ago
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My small, but always growing, collection of Beauty and the Beast retellings.
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Photo #1: the ones I've read.
Photo #2: the ones to-be read.
I'm slowly collecting a little library of various fairy tale retellings, BATB being the most as of now.
On my Kindle:
Sleeping Beauty and the Beast by Melissa Lemon
Enchant: Beauty and the Beast Retold by Demelza Carlton
The Merchant's Daughter by Melanie Dickerson
Before Beauty: Becoming Beauty and the Beast by Brittany Fichter
Depravity: A Beastly Tale by M.J. Haag
A Tale of Beauty and the Beast by Melanie Cellier
Beast by Christine Pope
Dragon Rose by Christine Pope
Beauty and the Beast by Vivienne Savage
Beauty and the Beast by K.M. Shea
The Eye of the Beholder by Nicole Ciacchella (pseudonym Elizabeth Darcy)
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dreamersdrivel · 5 years ago
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Ebook Freebies - 11/27
Ebook Freebies – 11/27
Currently free ebooks.
https://www.amazon.com/Curses-Crowns-Vampires-Crescent-Cape-ebook/dp/B07KP3B5NP/ref=zg_bs_3511261011_f_30?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1&refRID=1TXH4B4V20YDCV42VZKN https://www.amazon.com/Before-Beauty-Retelling-Becoming-Trilogy-ebook/dp/B00UI2Q3VK/ref=zg_bs_3511261011_f_34?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1&refRID=1TXH4B4V20YDCV42VZKN
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tannie-bell · 5 years ago
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🌺🌷🌸
tagged by @yooyonqha! (thank you puppy~! 💕💕)
rules ― answer the questions and tag eight (8) people.
name: constance (i go by tannie/cel/cael on the interwebs lol)
birthday: october 16 🍃🍂🍁
zodiac sign: libra 
height: 5′1 3/4 (approx. 157cm)
hobbies: reading, singing, dancing (rather haphazardly lolol), baking/cooking, daydreaming, fangirling, music-related stuff, holding/taking care of little babies, using "lol"
favorite colors: black, greens & blues & blue-greens, dark and/or blue purples, ivory, warm dark brown, and berry/magenta
favorite books: nigh impossible to actually answer um the selection by kiera cass, unblemished by sara ella, & king's folly by jill williamson (only read the first in each series lol); brandon mull's beyonders trilogy; girl in the red hood by brittany fichter; and fawkes by nadine brandes
last song i listened to: placebo ~ 3racha
last film i watched: sing
inspiration for muse: emotional music & lyrics and experiences; landscapes and nature; antique accessories and weapons; my own inner musings lol
dream job: stay-at-home mom w/ some sort of work-from-home gig (preferrably something like writing or baking--i can be a very domestic person at times lol)
meaning behind your url: basic description of me lol
tagging @swagaliciousswagger @multitrashz @sundropsoo @iamtrappedinsideasnowglobe @d3lta65 @kaeleers-heart @vicwantstreats @flightlesswren02 if y’all want to ^_^  💕💕
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chocolate-mintdromeda · 4 years ago
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Before Beauty by Brittany Fichter is one of my top favorite retellings! First in a series of three, which kick off the universe of other retold fairy tales, all her work is spectacular. There isn't a book I don't like (including her two part retelling of Peter Pan, which I'm usually really wary about b/c writers never seem to do it justice.)
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Top 9 Beauty and the Beast retellings
Survive the wait for Disney’s Beauty and the Beast (2017) by reading some of the best BatB retellings out there!
• Beauty and the Beast by K. M. Shea Short, simple and sweet. I loved that the “Beauty” character actually knew the conditions of the curse and worked with the knowledge. This book is also a part of a series of fairytale retellings that all take place in the same world. Aside from this one, Cinderella and the Colonel is also nice.
• Beastly by Alex Flinn Not a very popular book in the fairytale fandom, but I admit that I enjoyed it quite a bit and reread it several times. Sure, compared to some of the others, Beastly is pretty simple and superficial retelling, but it has its charm and some bits are hilarious. Also, don’t judge it on the basis of the movie.
• A Court of Thorns and Roses by Sarah J. Maas Ok, I cheated a bit with this one because ACoTaR isn’t a straight retelling of BatB, more like a faerie fantasy with elements from Beauty and the Beast, East of the Sun & West of the Moon and Tamlin. But can you blame me? This series is AMAZING!
• Cruel Beauty by Rosamund Hodge This surpringly controversial book is a retelling of Beauty and the Beast with references to Rumplestiltskin, Tamlin and Greek mythology. The beginning is not great but it gets better as the story progresses and the ending is very strong. You either love it or hate it. 
• Beauty by Robin McKinley Are you new to fairytale retellings? This is where you start your reading journey. McKinley’s take on the classic story is an evergreen that – according to some people – inspired the Disney’s 1991 animated film. Whether it’s true or not, I do not know. I will tell you this though: every single time I reread Beauty I find something new and fascinating about it and it makes me love it even more.
• Entreat Me by Grace Draven It has TWO couples and lots of smut ;). Very refreshing take on BatB from the author of the Radiance series.
• Rose Daughter by Robin McKinley Very different than McKinley’s first retelling of Beauty and the Beast – though just as good. It’s more lyrical and poetic than other retellings and I admit that I didn’t like it that much when I read it for the first time. But it grew on me and when I reread it several years later it was like discovering a whole new amazing book.
• Heart’s Blood by Juliet Marillier Two words: Juliet Marillier. This lady is such an amazing storyteller. If you don’t know her, she is the author of Daughter of the Forest (aka the best “Six Swans” retelling out there) and Wildwood Dancing (one of my favorite “Twelve Dancing Princesses” retellings). I would say that Heart’s Blood is more mature than most of the retellings I featured in this list, but it is not as depressing as e.g. Daughter of the Forest. In short, you WON’T REGRET reading this book.
• The Fire Rose by Mercedes Lackey This one is a part of Elemental Masters series by Mercedes Lackey. I admit it wasn’t exactly my cup of tea but I enjoyed the historical setting (dawn of 20th century) and the series seems to be quite popular in the fairytale fandom.
What are your favorite Beauty and the Beast retellings you would recommend? Let me know in the comments!
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thrina-thrina-on-the-wall · 3 years ago
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Pinching the tag game from @lady-merian. Thanks!
Last song: When I Care for You by JJ Heller
Last show: I don't really watch shoes, but The Chosen. That, I love.
Currently watching: Sewing vids from Bernadette Banner and Elin Abrahamsson
Currently reading:
The Sentinel Song by Brittany Fichter (St George and the Dragon retelling, but I don't know how yet)
The Green Ember by S. D. Smith on audio (this is for book club and I'm enjoying it)
The library has informed that I can borrow the Dune audiobook again, but this isn't the best time to pick it up again.
I try to always be reading a non fiction book.
I'm partway though Love Thy Body by Nancy Pearcey, but it got interrupted The Battle for English by David Crystal (fascinating linguistic history book).
I now have a growing suspicion that I never finished my philosophy overview book. I should pick it up sometime.
I'm going to take the time to tag a few people who I interact with but could certainly know better. @taleweaver-ramblings @fairytale-lights @fairytalearista
Ignore me if you've already been tagged. Steal this, if you want.
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janesmythishomesick-blog · 7 years ago
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Doctor Who Fan-Fiction Homesick Episode Nine "Answers Lead To More Quest...
Answers Lead To More Questions
Starring: Lia Rose Dugal as Jane Smyth Nick Walker as Justin Walker Michael Meyer as Mr. E Lala Jahn Peterson as Lala Daniels
Coffee Shop Customers: Quinn Graham James Grimes Sherry Grimes Zachary Sutton
Directed by: Stephanie Desiree Huebner Written by: Lia Rose Dugal Assistant Director: Asela Lee Kemper Director of Photography: Nicholas James Madtson Best Boy: Jimmy G Humphreys Script Supervisor: Brittany Hreha Costume Designer: Kira Herdklotz-Yasutake Soundtrack & Music FX: Brittany Hreha Editing by: Lia Rose Dugal FX Editing: Cosmo Tigato
Special thank you to: Cafe 116, DMC, Sylvestor McCoy, Tom Baker, Sophie Aldred, David Tennant, & Lalla Ward
Dedicated to Elisabeth Sladen, Mary Tamm, & Robyn Fichter
Follow Cafe-Girl on Facebook! https://www.facebook.com/cafegrrrrl/
Follow us on Patreon! https://www.patreon.com/cafegirlproductions
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liarosedugal-blog · 7 years ago
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Doctor Who Fan-Fiction Homesick Episode Nine "Answers Lead To More Quest...
Answers Lead To More Questions
Starring: Lia Rose Dugal as Jane Smyth Nick Walker as Justin Walker Michael Meyer as Mr. E Lala Jahn Peterson as Lala Daniels
Coffee Shop Customers: Quinn Graham James Grimes Sherry Grimes Zachary Sutton
Directed by: Stephanie Desiree Huebner Written by: Lia Rose Dugal Assistant Director: Asela Lee Kemper Director of Photography: Nicholas James Madtson Best Boy: Jimmy G Humphreys Script Supervisor: Brittany Hreha Costume Designer: Kira Herdklotz-Yasutake Soundtrack & Music FX: Brittany Hreha Editing by: Lia Rose Dugal FX Editing: Cosmo Tigato
Special thank you to: Cafe 116, DMC, Sylvestor McCoy, Tom Baker, Sophie Aldred, David Tennant, & Lalla Ward
Dedicated to Elisabeth Sladen, Mary Tamm, & Robyn Fichter
Follow Cafe-Girl on Facebook! https://www.facebook.com/cafegrrrrl/
Follow us on Patreon! https://www.patreon.com/cafegirlproductions
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