#laura whyte
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This was in Manhunt 2 Vienna's cut right?
Also have more random Mh2 crap I made this month
Ok well not everything I'm not sharing the gay stuff here tee hee hee~~
Edit: the sniper one was inspired by this, I forgot to mention it sorry.
#manhunt 2#manhunt 2007#rockstar manhunt#daniel lamb#danny lamb#leo kasper#ben lamb#manhunt game#manhunt 2 memes#rockstar games#fanart#sketches#art#artists on tumblr#laura whyte
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In honor of International Lesbian Day, here are my lesbian Manhunt headcanons
I made lesbian icons, as well as lesbian+asexual icons with both variants of the sunset lesbian pride flag for The Journalist, Dr Whyte and Dr Sender 😁😁
Why? Because I’m a lesbian and I say so!
🧡🤍💖
#on the record 📹#manhunt#manhunt 2003#manhunt 2#manhunt 2007#manhunt the journalist#dr whyte#dr laura whyte#laura whyte#dr sender#dr judy sender#judy sender#lesbian#lesbian pride#lesbian icons#manhunt pride icons
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Manhunt/Bully crossover headcanons:
- The Journalist’s name is Robin.
- Robin was not a part of a clique in Bullworth. She had the potential to be one of the Jocks, as she used to be athletic, but it didn’t interest her.
- She’s not on bad terms with anyone (except Earnest), but she’s on best terms with Gloria Jackson and Judy Sender.
- Her favorite classes were English and Art. Her favorite teacher was Ms Philips.
- Robin would remind Ms Philips of her younger self.
- Laura Whyte was a new biology teacher a Bullworth at the time. She had to step in for Dr Watts for a few weeks, but the kids adored her and found her teaching methods to be a breath of fresh air.
- Back in Laura’s day she was the de facto leader of the Nerds. However, she was never recognized by the rest of the school as such, due to how society was back in the day.
- Judy and Daniel were her favorite students, but she never made that obvious.
#manhunt bully crossover#crossover#bully#bully rockstar#cully cce#bully canis canem edit#bully scholarship edition#bully anniversary edition#manhunt#manhunt 2003#manhunt 2#manhunt 2007#dr laura whyte#laura whyte#dr whyte#judy sender#dr judy sender#manhunt robin#dr sender#manhunt the journalist
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Bad movie I have The Babe 1992
#The Babe#John Goodman#Kelly McGillis#Trini Alvarado#Bruce Boxleitner#Peter Donat#James Cromwell#J.C. Quinn#Joseph Ragno#Richard Tyson#Ralph Marrero#Robert Swan#Bernard Kates#Michael McGrady#Stephen Caffrey#Gene Ross#Danny Goldring#Andy Voils#Dylan Day#Laura Whyte#James Andelin#Guy Barile#Bernie Gigliotti#Michael Nicolosi#W. Earl Brown#Barbara Faye Wallace#Shannon Cochran#Michael Papajohn#Thomas Charles Simmons#Gene Weygandt
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This has got to be one of the best character introductions Rockstar has ever made.
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LEO KASPER SESSION from the manhunt 2 promotional website: manhunt2.com
TRANSCRIPT:
Dr Whyte: Dixmor Studies, we are… we are resuming with session 4-26. Name: Leo Kasper-
Kasper: (chuckling)
Dr Whyte: - Test Case: 412567 Dr Whyte: Leo, can you hear me? Leo? Leo, can you hear me?
Kasper: …yeah. And i can see you too.
Dr Whyte: We are going to continue with-
Kasper: You’re hotter than the last one. What ever happened to good old Dr. Deborah anyway…
Dr Whyte: I will be asking the questions. Leo.
Kasper: Ahhhh that’s right, i killed the bitch. Kasper: Do you have a cigarette?
Dr Whyte: You know i don’t.
Kasper: Yeah. She didn’t have any either.
Dr Whyte: Leo, why did you kill-
Kasper: Come to think of it, i don’t even know if i smoke. These drugs that you puppets pump me with, i don’t know Cain from Abel. Can we stop with the drugs here? I like to party and all but just say fucking no!
Dr Whyte: Do you remember attacking Dr Deborah? Do you remember killing those other people? Before you were caught and sent here?
Kasper: The people you wanted me to kill, or the people i felt should go?
Dr Whyte: I read your dossier i am fully aware of your expertise in assassination. That was your job and you did it exceptionally. But your targets were selected by the government as imminent dangers. They were evil men, terrorists. You must realize that. But to turn on your employers, the people who trained you-
Kasper: Oh, we’re the good guys. Right, i forgot. We’re the good clandestine government agency that slithers it way into every facet of American life, right, right, okay got it. You see, good and evil are for those wage slaves out there that you control. But no one controls me.
Dr Whyte: So the killing of the project scientist, the assassination of the project official at the Plaza, the burning of the files, these were acts of vengeful spite. But Leo, why on earth would you kill-
Kasper: Don’t say one more fucking word. Dr Deborah finished that question and she wasn’t alive to hear the answer. Kasper: Look at me like that one more time and i rip your face off, bitch.
Dr Whyte: You don’t scare me, Leo. In fact, you look pretty pathetic.
Kasper: Uh huh. I feel fucking pathetic. These drugs dull my senses. These fucking chains hurt like hell. These fucking walls are all i ever see. I need to be free, i need to get out of here-
Dr Whyte: To satisfy more homicidal urges?
Kasper: I’m gonna be free.
Dr Whyte: Leo why-
Kasper: Dogs bark, babe. Snakes crawl. Leo kills. This is a surprise to do? You fuckers created me! My head is filled with combat training, ways of escape, stealth tactics.
Kasper: I wanna think about puppy dogs and fucking football but all i see are six things that can be used to kill you right now.
Dr Whyte: Six? Is that all?
Kasper: Sorry, seven. Kasper: I can pierce your eardrum with the temple of your glasses, rip the pin off your earrings and shove it in your systemic artery, wrap that ID pass around your neck and choke the life out of you, yank your high heels off and gouge out your eyes, pierce your cephalic vein with that fucking pen your cheap dad bought you for graduation and inject ink into your bloodstream OR ram that clipboard into septum and fuck your brain through your nose bone.
Dr Whyte: That’s only six, Leo.
Kasper: Ah, I can’t mention number seven-
Dr Whyte: Before the training-
Kasper: Not in front of you.
Dr Whyte: What can you tell me about your life before the training?
Kasper: I don’t have much time for the past.
Dr Whyte: Well, is there any memory you can share? A first kiss, a special vacation-
Kasper: The only thing that matters is the future. The future is where i’m on the outside, the future is where i don’t have to take orders from anyone.
Dr Whyte: How does Daniel Lamb fit into your future, Leo?
Kasper: (chuckles) Danny is the only one in here that got fucked harder than me. I showed him that he doesn’t have to be scared, that he can be a man. I’m here whenever he needs me.
Dr Whyte: Ah. (chuckles) He needs you or do you need him?
Kasper: I think we’ve come to the end of our little session, babe.
Dr Whyte: I don’t believe we have.
Kasper: Let me ask you a little question now, okay? When i broke these chains and strangled the life out of Dr Deborah did they reinforce these chains so that it couldn’t happen again?
Dr Whyte: Uh…
Kasper: Or did they just tell you they were reinforced? Cause i feel they didn’t.
Dr Whyte: Uh.. hang on. Stop it, Leo. Sit down!
Kasper: You better call them, right now. Cause i see another fucking dead doctor in my future!
Dr Whyte: Get back! Get back! Security!
Kasper: (laughs) You want violence? I’ll show you fuckers some violence, COME HERE!
Dr Whyte: Open the door!
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NetGalley Book Review: Secrets of the Vampire by Julie Legere and Elsa Whyte
NetGalley Book Review: Secrets of the Vampire by Julie Legere and Elsa Whyte @NetGalley @QuartoBooksUS #BookReview #BookTwt #Vampire
Step into the shadows and uncover the centuries-old myths and legends that lie beneath the figure of the vampire, with this magical compendium of facts and fiction. Whether rising from a coffin in the dead of night or stalking its prey, hidden in plain sight, the vampire is one of the most alluring beings in world folklore. These undead bloodsuckers are as alive as ever in modern pop culture,…
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#book review#Elsa Whyte#Julie Legere#Laura perez#NetGalley#nonfiction#quatro publishing group#Secrets of the Vampire#vampire#Wide Eyed Editions
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Episode 200 - Library Fiction
It’s episode 200, which means it’s (finally) time for us to discuss Library Fiction! We talk about the stereotypes and tropes of library fiction, unacknowledged work of library workers,and more. Plus: we talk way more about our actual jobs than we usually do.
You can download the podcast directly, find it on Libsyn, or get it through Apple Podcasts or your favourite podcast delivery system.
In this episode
Anna Ferri | Meghan Whyte | Matthew Murray 🦇 | Jam Edwards
Things We Read (or tried to…)
Labyrinths: Selected Stories & Other Writings by Jorge Luis Borges
The Book That Wouldn’t Burn by Mark Lawrence
Ex Libris: Stories of Librarians, Libraries, and Lore by Paula Guran (below are direct links to many of the stories from this collection)
In the House of the Seven Librarians by Ellen Klages
In Libres by Elizabeth Bear
Those Who Watch by Ruthanna Emrys
Paper Cuts Scissors by Holly Black
Summer Reading by Ken Liu
Magic for Beginners by Kelly Link
With Tales in Their Teeth, From the Mountain They Came by A.C. Wise
The Librarian’s Dilemma by E. Saxey
The Green Book by Amal El-Mohtar
A Woman's Best Friend by Robert Reed
If on a Winter's Night a Traveler by Xia Jia, translated by Ken Liu
The Sigma Structure Symphony by Gregory Benford
The Fort Moxie Branch by Jack McDevitt
The Last Librarian: Or a Short Account of the End of the World by Edoardo Albert
How Can I Help You by Laura Sims
Strange the Dreamer by Laini Taylor
Souls in the Great Machine by Sean McMullen
Other Media We Mentioned
The Library of Mount Char by Scott Hawkins
The Empty Crown by Rosemary Edghill
Meghan meant The Abortion by Richard Brautigan (not Trout Fishing in America)
The Midnight Library by Kazuno Kohara
The Invisible Library by Genevieve Cogman
Bookhunter by Jason Shiga
Unshelved by Gene Ambaum and Bill Barnes
Library Comic by Gene Ambaum and Willow Payne
Welcome to Night Vale
Piranesi by Susanna Clarke
Episode 134 - Piranesi by Susanna Clarke
We Have Always Lived in the Castle by Shirley Jackson
Abbott Elementary
Pounded In The Butt By My Handsome Sentient Library Card Who Seems Otherworldly But In Reality Is Just A Natural Part Of The Priceless Resources Our Library System Provides by Chuck Tingle
My Librarian Is A Beautiful Lesbian Ice Cream Cone And She Tastes Amazing by Chuck Tingle
Party Girl
Public Enemy - Fight the Power
Fictional Librarians
50 Fictional Librarians, Ranked
Rupert Giles (Buffy the Vampire Slayer)
Barbara Gordon (DC Comics)
The Librarian (Discworld)
Lucien (The Sandman)
Evelyn Carnahan (The Mummy)
Marian Paroo (The Music Man)
Librarians (Welcome to Night Vale)
“While their description is never fully given, minor details of their physical characteristics have been described:”
yellow, gnarled teeth
sharp claws and pincers
Wings
Tentacles
thousands of spiny legs
rattles (that make noise when they move)
thoraxes
Links, Articles, and Things
Two-Fisted Library Stories zines
North Boulder Library is ready to open (there’s a slide in image 6!)
15 Librarian & Library Fiction by POC Authors
Every month Book Club for Masochists: A Readers’ Advisory Podcasts chooses a genre at random and we read and discuss books from that genre. We also put together book lists for each episode/genre that feature works by BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, & People of Colour) authors. All of the lists can be found here.
The Reading List by Sara Nisha Adams
What You Are Looking for Is in the Library by Michiko Aoyama, translated by Alison Watts
Cora's Kitchen by Kimberly Garrett Brown
The Next Best Fling by Gabriella Gamez
The Woman in the Library by Sulari Gentill
The Library of the Dead by T.L. Huchu
The Library of Fates by Aditi Khorana
The Plotters by Kim Un-Su
The Very Secret Society of Irregular Witches by Sangu Mandanna
The Memory Librarian: And Other Stories of Dirty Computer by Janelle Monáe
Our Missing Hearts by Celeste Ng
The Book of Form and Emptiness by Ruth Ozeki
The Library Thief by Kuchenga Shenjé
The Cartographers by Peng Shepherd
Bookhunter by Jason Shiga
Give us feedback!
Fill out the form to ask for a recommendation or suggest a genre or title for us to read!
Check out our Tumblr, follow us on Instagram, join our Facebook Group or Discord Server, or send us an email!
Join us again on Tuesday, October 1st we’ll be getting ready for spooky season with the Weird West! (That’s Supernatural Horror Westerns)
Then on Tuesday, October 15th it’s time for our “We All Read the Same Book” episode as we discuss A Wizard’s Guide to Defensive Baking by T. Kingfisher.
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2024 olympics Great Britain roster
Archery
Conor Hall (Belfast)
Tom Hall (London)
Alex Wise (Newcastle Upon Tyne)
Megan Havers (Markfield)
Penny Healey (Telford)
Bryony Pitman (Shoreham-By-Sea)
Athletics
Jeremiah Azu (Cardiff)
Louie Hinchliffe (Crosspool)
Zharnel Hughes (The Valley, Anguilla)
Charlie Dobson (Colchester)
Matthew Hudson-Smith (Wolverhampton)
Max Burgin (Halifax)
Elliot Giles (Birmingham)
Ben Pattison (Frimley)
Neil Gourley (Glasgow)
Josh Kerr (Edinburgh)
George Mills (Harrogate)
Sam Atkin (Grimsby)
Patrick Dever (Preston)
Tade Ojora (London)
Alastair Chalmers (Guernsey, Channel Islands)
Richard Kilty (Middlesborough)
Nethaneel Mitchell-Blake (London)
Lewis Davey (Grantham)
Toby Harries (Brighton)
Alex Haydock-Wilson (London)
Sam Reardon (Beckenham)
Emile Cairess (Saltaire)
Mahamed Mahamed (Southampton)
Philip Sesemann (Bromley)
Callum Wilkinson (Moulton)
Jacob Fincham-Dukes (Harrogate)
Scott Lincoln (Northallerton)
Lawrence Okoye (London)
Nick Percy (Glasgow)
Dina Asher-Smith (London)
Imani-Lara Lansiquot (London)
Daryll Neita (London)
Bianca Williams (London)
Amber Anning (Hove)
Laviai Nielsen (London)
Lina Nielsen (London)
Victoria Ohuruogu (London)
Phoebe Gill (St. Albans)
Keely Hodgkinson (Atherton)
Jemma Reekie (Beith)
Georgia Bell (London)
Laura Muir (Milnathort)
Revée Walcott-Nolan (Luton)
Megan Keith (Inverness)
Eilish McColgan (Dundee)
Cynthia Sember (Ypsilanti, Michigan)
Jessie Knight (Epsom)
Lizzie Bird (St. Albans)
Aimee Pratt (Stockport)
Desirèe Henry (London)
Amy Hunt (Nottingham)
Yemi John (London)
Hannah Kelly (Bury)
Jodie Williams (Welwyn Garden City)
Nicole Yeargin (Bowie, Maryland)
Clara Evans (Hereford)
Rose Harvey (London)
Calli Yauger-Thackeray (Flagstaff, Arizona)
Morgan Lake (Reading)
Holly Bradshaw (Preston)
Molly Caudery (Truro)
Katharina Johnson-Thompson (Liverpool)
Jade O'Dowda (Oxford)
Badminton
Ben Lane (Milton Keynes)
Sean Vendy (Milton Keynes)
Kirsty Gilmour (Glasgow)
Boxing
Lewis Richardson (Colchester)
Patrick Brown (Sale)
Delicious Orie (Wolverhampton)
Charley Davison (Lowestoft)
Rosie Eccles (Newport)
Chantelle Reid (Allenton)
Canoeing
Adam Burgess (Stoke-On-Trent)
Joe Clarke (Stoke-On-Trent)
Mallory Franklin (Windsor)
Kimberley Woods (Rugby)
Climbing
Hamish McArthur (York)
Toby Roberts (Elstead)
Erin McNeice (Rodmersham)
Molly Thompson-Smith (London)
Cycling
Tom Pidcock (Leeds)
Josh Tarling (Aberaeron)
Stephen Williams (Aberysthwyth)
Fred Wright (Manchester)
Jack Carlin (Paisley)
Ed Lowe (Stamford)
William Turnbull (Morpeth)
Joe Truman (Petersfield)
Dan Bigham (Newcastle-Under-Lyme)
Ethan Hayter (London)
Ethan Vernon (Bedford)
Oli Wood (Wakefield)
Charlie Tanfield (Great Ayton)
Mark Stewart (Dundee)
Charlie Aldridge (Crieff)
Kieran Reilly (Newcastle Upon Tyne)
Kye Whyte (London)
Ross Cullen (Preston)
Lizzie Deignan (Otley)
Pfeiffer Georgi (Castle Combe)
Anna Henderson (Edlesborough)
Anna Morris (Cardiff)
Sophie Capewell (Lichfield)
Emma Finucane (Carmarthen)
Katy Marchant (Manchester)
Lowri Thomas (Abergavenny)
Elinor Barker (Cardiff)
Neah Evans (Langbank)
Josie Knight (Dingle, Ireland)
Jess Roberts (Carmarthen)
Ella MacLean-Howell (Llantrisant)
Evie Richards (Malvern)
Charlotte Worthington (Chorlton-Cum-Hardy)
Beth Shriever (Braintree)
Emily Hutt (London)
Diving
Jack Laugher (Ripon)
Jordan Houldon (Sheffield)
Noah Williams (London)
Kyle Kothari (London)
Anthony Harding (Ashton-Under-Lyne)
Tom Daley (Plymouth)
Yasmin Harper (Sheffield)
Grace Reid (Edinburgh)
Andrea Spendolini-Sirieix (London)
Lois Toulson (Cleckheaton)
Scarlett Mew-Jensen (London)
Equestrian
Carl Hester (Sark, Channel Islands)
Tom McEwen (London)
Scott Brash (Peebles)
Harry Charles (Alton)
Ben Maher (London)
Lottie Fry (Den Hout, The Netherlands)
Becky Moody (Gunthwaite)
Ros Canter (Louth)
Laura Collett (Royal Leamington Spa)
Field hockey
Tim Nurse (London)
Nick Park (Reading)
Jack Waller (London)
David Ames (Cookstown)
Jacob Draper (Cwmbran)
Zachary Wallace (Kingston-Upon-Thames)
Rupert Shipperley (London)
Sam Ward (Leicester)
James Albery (Cambridge)
Phil Roper (Chester)
David Goodfield (Shrewsbury)
Ollie Payne (Totnes)
Liam Sanford (Wegberg, Germany)
Lee Morton (Glasgow)
Thomas Sorsby (Sheffield)
Conor Williamson (London)
Will Calnan (London)
Gareth Furlong (London)
Laura Unsworth (Sutton Coldfield)
Anna Toman (Derby)
Hannah French (Ipswich)
Sarah Jones (Cardiff)
Amy Costello (Edinburgh)
Sarah Robertson (Melrose)
Charlotte Watson (Dundee)
Tessa Howard (Durham)
Isabelle Petter (Loughborough)
Giselle Ansley (Brixham)
Hollie Pearne-Webb (Duffield)
Fiona Crackles (Kirkby Lonsdale)
Sophie Hamilton (Bruton)
Lily Owsley (Bristol)
Flora Peel (Cheltenham)
Miriam Pritchard (Loughborough)
Golf
Matt Fitzpatrick (Sheffield)
Tommy Fleetwood (Dubai, U.A.E.)
Charley Hull (Kettering)
Georgia Hall (Bournemouth)
Gymnastics
Joe Fraser (Birmingham)
Harry Hepworth (Leeds)
Jake Jarman (Peterborough)
Luke Whitehouse (Halifax)
Max Whitlock (Hemel Hempstead)
Zak Perzamanos (Liverpool)
Becky Downie (Nottingham)
Ruby Evans (Cardiff)
Georgia-Mae Fenton (Gravesend)
Alice Kinsella (Sutton Coldfield)
Abi Martin (Paignton)
Bryony Page (Sheffield)
Isabelle Songhurst (Poole)
Judo
Chelsie Giles (Coventry)
Lele Naire (Weston-Super-Mare)
Lucy Renshall (St. Helens)
Katie-Jemima Yeats-Brown (Pembury)
Emma Reid (Royston)
Pentathlon
Charlie Brown (Kidderminster)
Joe Choong (London)
Kerenza Bryson (Plymouth)
Kate French (Chapmanslade)
Rowing
James Robson (Oundle)
Ollie Wynne-Griffith (Guildford)
Tom George (Cheltenham)
Oli Wilkes (Matlock)
David Ambler (London)
Matt Aldridge (Christchurch)
Freddie Davidson (London)
Tom Barras (Staines-Upon-Thames)
Callum Dixon (London)
Matt Haywood (Burton Upon Trent)
Graeme Thomas (Burton)
Sholto Carnegie (Oxford)
Rory Gibbs (Street)
Morgan Bolding (Weybridge)
Jacob Dawson (Portsmouth)
Charlie Elwes (Radley)
Tom Digby (Henley-On-Thames)
James Rudkin (Northampton)
Tom Ford (Holmes Chapel)
Harry Brightmore (Chester)
Henry Fieldman (Barnes)
Liv Bates (Nottingham)
Chloe Brew (Plymouth)
Rebecca Edwards (Aughnacloy)
Becky Wilde (Taunton)
Mathilda Hodgkins-Byrne (London)
Emily Craig (Pembury)
Imogen Grant (Cambridge)
Helen Backshall (Truro)
Esme Booth (Stratford-Apon-Avon)
Samantha Redgrave (Frinton)
Rebecca Shorten (Belfast)
Lauren Henry (Lutterworth)
Hannah Scott (Coleraine)
Lola Anderson (London)
Georgina Brayshaw (Leeds)
Heidi Long (London)
Rowan McKellar (Glasgow)
Holly Dunford (Tadworth)
Emily Ford (Holmes Chapel)
Lauren Irwin (Peterlee)
Eve Stewart (Amsterdam, The Netherlands)
Harriet Taylor (Chertsey)
Annie Campbell-Orde (Wells)
Lucy Glover (Warrington)
Rugby
Abi Burton (Wakefield)
Kayleigh Powell (Llantrisant)
Amy Wilson-Hardy (Poole)
Ellie Boatman (Camberley)
Ellie KIldunne (Keighley)
Emma Uren (London)
Grace Crompton (Epsom)
Heather Cowell (Isleworth)
Isla Norman-Bell (Gillingham)
Jade Shekells (Hartpury)
Jasmine Joyce-Butchers (St. Davids)
Lauren Torley (Flackwell Heath)
Lisa Thomson (Hawick)
Megan Jones (Cardiff)
Sailing
Connor Bainbridge (Halifax)
James Peters (Tunbridge Wells)
Fynn Sterritt (Inverness)
Sam Sills (Launceston)
Micky Beckett (Solva)
Chris Grube (Chester)
John Grimson (Leicester)
Emma Wilson (Christchurch)
Ellie Aldridge (Parkstone)
Hannah Snellgrove (Lymington)
Freya Black (Redhill)
Saskia Tidey (Dublin, Ireland)
Vita Heathcote (Southampton)
Anna Burnet (London)
Shooting
Mike Bargeron (Bromley)
Matthew Coward-Holley (Chelmsford)
Nathan Hales (Chatham)
Seonaid McIntosh (Edinburgh)
Lucy Hall (York)
Amber Rutter (Windsor)
Skateboarding
Andy Macdonald (Newton, Massachusetts)
Sky Brown (Takanabe, Japan)
Lola Tambling (Saltash)
Swimming
Ben Proud (London)
Alex Cahoon (Fairford)
Matt Richards (Droitwich Spa)
Jacob Whittle (Alfreton)
Duncan Scott (Glasgow)
Kieran Bird (Street)
Daniel Jervis (Resolven)
Oliver Morgan (Bishops Castle)
Jonathon Marshall (Southend-On-Sea)
Luke Greenbank (Crewe)
Adam Peaty (Uttoxeter)
James Wilby (Glasgow)
Jimmy Guy (Timperley)
Tom Dean (Maidenhead)
Max Litchfield (Chesterfield)
Joe Litchfield (Chesterfield)
Jack McMillan (Belfast)
Hector Pardoe (Wrexham)
Toby Robinson (Wolverhampton)
Kate Shortman (Clifton)
Isabelle Thorpe (Clifton)
Anna Hopkin (Chorley)
Kathleen Dawson (Kirkcaldy)
Medi Harris (Porthmadog)
Honey Osrin (Portsmouth)
Katie Shanahan (Glasgow)
Angharad Evans (Cambridge)
Keanna Macinnes (Edinburgh)
Laura Stephens (London)
Abbie Wood (Buxton)
Freya Colbert (Grantham)
Eva Okaro (Sevenoaks)
Lucy Hope (Melrose)
Freya Anderson (Birkenhead)
Leah Crisp (Wakefield)
Table tennis
Liam Pitchford (Chesterfield)
Anna Hursey (Tianjin, China)
Taekwondo
Bradly Sinden (Doncaster)
Caden Cunningham (Huddersfield)
Jade Jones (Bodelwyddan)
Rebecca McGowan (Dumbarton)
Tennis
Jack Draper (London)
Dan Evans (Dubai, U.A.E.)
Joe Salisbury (London)
Neal Skupski (Liverpool)
Sir Andy Murray (Leatherhead)
Katie Boulter (Woodhouse Eaves)
Heather Watson (St. Peter Port, Channel Islands)
Triathlon
Sam Dickinson (York)
Alex Yee (London)
Beth Potter (Bearsden)
Georgia Taylor-Brown (Leeds)
Kate Waugh (Newcastle Upon Tyne)
Weightlifting
Emily Campbell (Bulwell)
#Sports#National Teams#U.K.#Celebrities#Races#Michigan#Maryland#Fights#Boxing#Boats#Ireland#Animals#The Netherlands#Hockey#Germany#Golf#U.A.E.#Massachusetts#Tennis
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Mum buys £200k dream home miles from locals who 'snubbed her over OnlyFans'
An OnlyFans model has splashed out on a £200,000 dream home, far from the locals she claims had issues over her chosen career. Mum-of-two Laura Whyte transitioned from living on £35 a week in benefits to earning a substantial £5,000 a month through the adult content platform. However, she did get anonymous threats from residents of Aberchirder, Aberdeenshire, warning of police action about her…
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Video
vimeo
Chevrolet — Go Beyond: An Overland Film from Goh Iromoto on Vimeo.
_ _ _ _ _
CLIENT — CHEVROLET Brand Director — James Hodge Ntl Marketing Communications — George Saratlic Marketing Communications — Jenna Abraham Ntl Marketing — Doug Kenzie
AGENCY — COMMONWEALTH//MCCANN CCO — Joshua Stein VP / Creative Director — Michael Katzikowski Copywriter — Sean Pitre Art Director — Vu Song Vu Agency Producer — Sharon Nelson-Bailey Managing Director — Kevin Pfuhl VP / Group Acct Director — Laura Rodriguez Acct Director — Michelle Acosta Acct Supervisor — Shayla Bodnar
CAST — Dean Petty / Casey Vanular
PRODUCTION — STEAM FILMS Director — Goh Iromoto EP — Krista Marshall Line Producer — John Scarth PM — Sharron Toews PC — Erin Tobman PC Asst — Vlad Tarasenko 1st AD — Travis Tetreault 2nd AD — Robbie Flynn
DP — Kris Bonnell DP Agent — MantlReps 1st AC — Ian Beer / Schane Godon 2nd AC — Chelsea Carrick / Dylan Zack Camera Operator — Evan West Key Grip — Jeff Delaney Best Grip — Blair Bourque Grip — Joe Hirsch / Corey Gomez Gaffer — Paul Connolly Best — David Whyte / Kaito Nyunoya DIT — Rick Yuck VTR — Oscar Irwin VTR Assist — Ron Burland / Meghan Cosenzo
Production Designer — Peter Kirkegaard Props Master — Dean Wadella Art Co-ordinator — Niki Kendall Art Asst — Matt Konrad Special FX — Travis Mackenzie Casting — Sonya Bertolozzi (Reel Athletes Agency) Location Mgr — Jason Nolan ALM — Kevin Larsen Stylist — Jayna Mansbridge Stylist Asst — Gabby Coates HMU — Barbara Zazeybida Floatplane Pilot — Rick Henderson Jetboards — James Bailey (Radinn) Stunt Co-Ordinator — Guy Bews Precision Driver — Chad Cosgrave / Peter Bews Car Prep — Clayton Homer Water Safety — Keith Francis / Scott Belton / Jay Hineyman / Maria Cashin PA — Brooke Siebert / Ken Austin / Darjusz Bukowski / Ari Leask / Lisbeth Madiment / Jan Cenon Storyboard Artist — Guy Perez
ARM CAR — BLACKHOUSE CINEMA Flighthead Op — Daniel Tillotson Driver — Brent Callow Tech — Calvin McAlary
DRONE — FLOW MOTION AERIALS Drone Pilot — Rapha Boudrealt-Simard Drone Lead — Jeremy Allen Drone Tech — Ian Dunsmore
EDITORIAL — OUTSIDER EDITORIAL Editor — Chris Murphy Assistant Editor — Kerstin Juby Executive Producer — Kristina Anzlinger Executive Producer — Kayan Choi
COLOUR / ONLINE — STUDIO FEATHER Colourist — Jason Zukowski Colour Assist — Rebecca-Koby Yamanaka Online Artist — Julian Van Mil Online Assist — Dequiera Atherton VFX Artists — Diego Dutra / Sergej Liamin / Matt Dochstader Producer — Sonia Ruffolo Executive Producer — Sara Windram
AUDIO — GRAYSON MATTHEWS Music Director — Tyson Kuteyi Sound Engineer — Vlad Nikolic Executive Producer — Kelly McCluskey Sound Design — Vlad Nikolic / Ben Swarbrick SVAC (Specialized Vehicle Audio Capture) — Vlad Nikolic / Ben Swarbrick Composer — Igor Correia Foley Studio — JRS Productions Inc. Foley Artist — Stefan Fraticelli Foley Engineer — Ron Mellegers Foley Assistant — Kyle Testa Voice Over — Calum J Moore
SHOT ON — Sony Venice 2 / Sony FX3 / Red Gemini / Red Komodo X / Red Komodo / Firefly Ember / GoPro 11 / Panavision Panatar
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A SAD ABOMINATION OF DEFECATION AND DESECRATION: Police Officers Say a Woman by the Name of Laura Miniard Has Been Charged With Desecration at the Good Samaritan Chapel in Cincinnati, Ohio After She Allegedly Defecated on the Chapel Altar and Used the Fabric Runner on the Altar to Wipe Her Behind and Then Smeared Feces on the Table of the Altar. Daniel Whyte III, President of Gospel Light Society International, Says, "No Marvel," Unfortunately, This Kind of Thing Has Happened to Churches, Chapels, and Other Places as Well. Whyte Says Further, Once, After We Ran an Article Against the Sin and Abomination of Sodomy/Homosexuality in One of Our Publications, a Homosexual Man Found Out Where Our Church Was, Jogged Over to the Front Door of the Church, and Defecated in Retaliation. This is a Nasty, Demonic Spirit.
A SAD ABOMINATION OF DEFECATION AND DESECRATION: Police Officers Say a Woman by the Name of Laura Miniard Has Been Charged With Desecration at the Good Samaritan Chapel in Cincinnati, Ohio After She Allegedly Defecated on the Chapel Altar and Used the Fabric Runner on the Altar to Wipe Her Behind and Then Smeared Feces on the Table of the Altar. Daniel Whyte III, President of Gospel Light Society…
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Another thing I really like about Dr Whyte is that her motives for helping Daniel are ambiguous.
After all those years, why is she suddenly turning her back on The Project? I got some ideas:
1) Seeing her former coworker getting tossed aside like disposable lab equipment made the harsh reality sink in for her. That if someone like Daniel is disposable, then so is she. So she helped him out just to save her own skin.
2) Daniel may not have been the first one she's helped out like this. Before 2001, she's been discreetly looking after plenty of patients, ensuring their escape.
3) All of the above. Daniel getting locked up in Dixmor Asylum made her realize that things cannot go on the way they have. So by aiding Daniel, she finally would have the ways and means to shut down The Pickman Project. Pickman being dead would mean that she would have the highest authority.
#on the record 📹#i might make another post about her epilogue#manhunt 2#manhunt 2007#dr whyte#dr laura whyte#laura whyte
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Part Two!
July
Six Of Crows by Leigh Bardugo. 5 stars. this is the book i always turn to when i feel my motivation slip. this was my fourth time reading it. i finished it in three days and immediately moved on to the sequel. it's just so good, it grabs you from the very first page and sets off running and doesn't let go.
Crooked Kingdom by Leigh Bardugo. 5 stars. of course i had to finish the duology. it was amazing as always.
A Curious History Of Sex by Kate Lister. 4.5 stars, super interesting and really funny, my only issue is that it was mostly focused on middle ages and victorian England. a wider scope would have been even more interesting to compare different places and times.
August
Women & Power: A Manifesto by Mary Beard. 4 stars, a short but enlightening read. really made me stop and go "damn every woman on the planet has dealt with deeply shitty men haven't we? shits fucked."
Salt Slow by Julia Armfield. 4.5 stars, a series of short stories so i liked some more than others, but they were all really atmospheric and fun. also as an aside i counted three references to greek mythology, miss Armfield please write a sapphic horror novel set in the classical world next.
Pride: The Unlikely Story Of The Unsung Heroes Of The Miner's Strike by Tim Tate with LGSM. 5 stars, if you follow me you may know it read this as research for a fic, but honestly i couldn't put it down. i learned a lot, laughed a lot, cried a lot. wouod highly recommend.
September
Murder In The Family by Cara Hunter. 3 stars. read it in 2 days, most of it in one night in just over 3 hours. the amount of twists in such rapid succession had me so invested, but the ending was a bit of a letdown.
Liberated: The Radical Art And Life Of Claude Cahun by Kaz Rowe. 4 stars, a quick read but very interesting, i really wish we'd learned this kind of history in school!
October
The Ancient Guide To Modern Life by Natalie Haynes. 2 stars, there's absolutely nothing wrong with this book, it's just that i knew a lot of the information already so it dragged for me. would probably be better for someone who hasn't already listened to her podcast multiple times, as it's a lot of the same info.
The Thursday Murder Club by Richard Osman. 4 stars. i actually consumed this as an audiobook and regret not getting into them sooner. anyway, a really good mystery and i loved all the characters. i was suspicious of people who did turn out to be suspicious but for non murder reasons, everyone just has secrets in this book. and it managed to finally make me cry in the very last chapter. i'll definitely be reading the next book soon!
Secrets Of The Vampire: A Supernatural Sourcebook Of Our Legend And Lore by Julie Légère, Elsa Whyte and Laura Pérez. 3 stars, enjoyable but short. i really liked the illustrations.
November
The Man Who Died Twice (Thursday Murder Club 2) by Richard Osman. 5 stars, even better than the first one! super exciting and very sweet and touching at times.
Dracula by Bram Stoker. 4 stars. yeah i did Dracula Daily this year. actually i did Re: Dracula but that's basically an audiobook, right? it started in May, ended in November, so i've included it here. honestly, i liked it way more than i'd thought i would. obviously there are parts that make you cringe and remember this book was written in the 1890s, but so long as you read it critically it's really enjoyable.
The First Ladies Of Rome by Annelise Freisenbruch. 5 stars, supplemented the knowledge i already had while also having loads of things i hadn't known before, especially about the later empire which i never studied. overall was super interesting. i want more than ever to go back in time and befriend Julia The Elder, she sounds like an absolute riot. also tv show about Galla Placidia when??
The Bullet That Missed (Thursday Murder Club 3) by Richard Osman. 5 stars. another banger. stayed up all night to finish it, i just couldn't put it down. i'm really attached to these characters now. i fear for Stephen in the last book.
The Last Devil To Die (Thursday Murder Club 4) by Richard Osman. 5 stars. i hate being right. RIP Stephen. bawled my eyes out. but i finished the series!! i felt the mystery wasn't quite as interesting in this one, but the character development was absolutely top tier.
December
The Deathless Girls by Kiran Millwood Hargrave. 3.5 stars. started off strong, was a fairly easy read so i got through the whole 300 page book in a couple of hours (with a break in between for work), but i felt the ending was rushed and dissatisfying. all the setup was there for Mira to become the third vampire, and then at the very end she just leaves and it's some random Countess a single line is devoted to? i can't even tell if it was supposed to be a surprise twist, but it just fell flat and made the ending basically a defeat for the heroine.
Heartstopper Vol 5 by Alice Oseman. 3.5 stars. a quick read but cute. i definitely can feel that this comic meant more to me when i first read it at 17 than it does at 22.
Weak Heart by Ban Gilmartin. 5 stars. this is my third or maybe fourth reread, such a comfort book. the characters feel like old friends at this point.
A Lady For A Duke by Alexis Hall. 5 stars. i was really surprised by how much i enjoyed this book, as i don't typically go for book where the romance is most of the plot, and i especially don't tend to like Regency historical fiction. but it was just really fun and sweet, and it kept me interested all the way through despite being quite long. multiple moments elicited actual shouting. the romance was excellent, i was really rooting for the characters and so happy for them at the end.
Elektra by Jennifer Saint. 2.5 stars. very hit or miss. Clytemnestra's point of view is really good. her compassion, her complexity, and the way she tries to justify her actions are all so well done. Cassandra's was pretty average. i personally wasn't interested in another rehash of the trojan war, and i felt her chapters just slowed the story down, but i can see how they would benefit someone less well versed in the myths. Elektra's point of view just made me angry. her motivation is never really explained in a satisfying way, and the author clearly felt that she has to address the Electra complex, but knowing the history behind it just makes me angrier. it was a badly thought out psychological theory used to gaslight and victim blame victims of sexual abuse, and while i don't believe that the author knew that, seeing it be treated as in any way valid and applicable to the real Electra boiled my blood.
Country by Michael Hughes. 4 stars. the book i chose to spend all christmas day reading this year. a really good story, and knowing the iliad made it even better as i could recognise characters and interactions map onto the original story! it felt like playing a game while reading, picking up all the little references.
Did Not Finish
Helen Of Troy by Margaret George. i did read some more of this but just keep dropping off and gravitating to other things. maybe i'll have finished it by next year.
Bitch by Lucy Cooke. another book that has done nothing wrong, it is a me problem. i will try to finish it.
Dykes To Watch Out For by Alison Bechdel. again, working on it.
In The Vanisher's Palace by Aliette Du Bodard. read three chapters (it's only ten chapters long so a decent chunk) and decided it wasn't for me.
The Menelaid by John Barth. it's not even very long but it's just really meandering and boring. i really tried but just couldn't focus.
and finally, top picks in no particular order that i think i would recommend to anyone who wants to read something new in 2024:
Books I Read In 2023, Part One
In January I decided I wanted to track my reading, as I usually don't really have a sense of how much I read per month or year. I don't like things like Goodreads, so I just jotted down the books I read and what I thought of them in my notes app. Now that we're halfway through the year, I thought I might share what I've read, and then in December I can add part 2. So, without further ado,
January
The Girl From The Sea by Molly Knox Ostertag. 3 stars, a bit slow but generally sweet and fun.
Jackalope Wives And Other Stories by T Kingfisher. 5 stars, every story slapped. would highly recommend if you like dark fairytales with a sense of humour.
February
started Helen Of Troy by Margaret George. I still haven't finished it (she is LONG) but i'm really enjoying it!
I Was Born For This by Alice Oseman. 4.5 stars, it was entertaining and emotional like all of Alice Oseman's books but i have to deduct a half a star for the main character (who is from the south) briefly assuming with no basis that being from north = transphobic and the narrative treating this as a rational assumption and not super bigoted and classist, like what the hell was that about? also via this interaction Alice Oseman managed to find yet another way to mention Durham in her books but this time i couldn't even go "yay i'm from there!" because now have this sense that she thinks i'm predisposed to transphobia because of where i'm from. i cannot stress this enough: what the fuck.
The Prince And The Dressmaker by Jen Wang. 5 stars, so heartwarming and i loved the art! I'm trying to get one of my friends to read it because I just know he'll relate.
March
The Lives Of The Saints by Leigh Bardugo. 3 stars, not really my jam but it adds another layer to her other books, which I really enjoy.
Fun Home by Alison Bechdel. 3 stars, made my head hurt at times because it's kinda convoluted, but still super interesting. the musical is great too. and before you mention it, yes, i am reading Dykes To Watch Out For, but it's not on the list because I just started it, and I will probably read the bulk of it and finish it in July so it will fall under there.
April
Lies We Sing To The Sea by Sarah Underwood. 3.5 stars, i'll be honest, i read this out of morbid curiosity and spite. it was a pretty average for a YA book really, not worth all the drama it stirred up in the classics community, but the end surprised me so it gets an extra half star.
A Fatal Thing Happened On The Way To The Forum: Murder In Ancient Rome by Emma Southon. 4 stars, really interesting and quite funny at times but i just don't really like the author's vibe. she's weirdly defensive of Caligula, just as she was in her book on Agrippina that i read last year. like yeah people make fun of him and exaggerate stories about him but he literally killed people, maybe he deserves it.
May
Messalina: A Story Of Empire, Slander And Adultery by Honor Cargill-Martin. 5 stars, super interesting and engaging, i never wanted to put it down! Messalina really did just girlboss too close to the sun.
I travelled this month so didn't have time for any other books, but I bought my own weight in them and will try to work through them.
June
Rain Hare by Anna Barker. 4 stars, a collection of short stories so a mixed bag. I really liked most of them, some even made me cry (to be precise, How Do I Feel About Lentils?, which does an excellent job of blending past and present to help the reader get into the confused mind of the narrator, who has Alzheimer's, and Tunny, wherein the twist hit me like a sack of bricks and all I could do was break down) but there was just one i didn't really like (Sea Glass, i just don't really vibe with the mentally ill narrator dying at the end and this being presented as what she wanted.)
Through The Woods by Emily Carroll. 3.5 stars, good horror, the art was great and the stories interesting, but they all felt like they ended just a bit too soon and therefore lost some of their impact.
Our Wives Under The Sea by Julia Armfield. 6 stars, yes, i'm straight up giving this 6 out of 5 stars because it was so so good! i devoured it in one day flat and loved it. the horror was atmospheric and gripping, the romance made my chest ache, and the ending absolutely devastated me, but in a good way.
so yeah, hopefully i can continue to get through my massive TBR pile in the coming months! and if you've read any of these books, please let me know what you think, I would love to talk about them!!
#bookblr#six of crows#crooked kingdom#the thursday murder club#dracula#dracula daily#a lady for a duke#only tagging the books i've already posted about this time
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youtube
DANIEL LAMB SESSION from the manhunt 2 promotional site: manhunt2.com
TRANSCRIPT:
Dr Whyte: Dixmor studies we are resuming - we are resuming with Daniel Lamb - we are Dr Whyte: For Dixmor Studies, we are resuming with session 5-26. Name: Daniel Lamb. Test Case - 412566. Cortexa serum has been administered
Dr Whyte: Danny, can you hear me?
Lamb: Yes. Where am i?
Dr Whyte: You’re in a safe place, Danny. A place where we can help you.
Lamb: Ah. Thank You. Who are you?
Dr Whyte: My name is Dr Whyte
Lamb: Whyte… Whyte… wait wait wait. you’re new. You’re new! My Doctor, my uh.. my doctor is uh.. Deb…
Dr Whyte: Dr Deborah, yes. Dr Deborah had to take a leave of absence. I’ll be continuing her progress.
Lamb: I’m afraid i can’t bring you up to speed. I ah - I don’t remember much
Dr Whyte: That’s okay, Danny. As one of America’s leaders in neuroscience you had to remember a lot. It’s ok to get a little confused.
Lamb: I uh, i think i have extreme anterograde amnesia, with bursts of dissociative fugue states due to trauma, probably memory distrusts..
Dr Whyte: That’s one way to put it, yes. Very impressive, Danny.
Lamb: I’ve been taking notes. In my head. I’ve been here a long time, i think, but as soon as i grasp something it slips right back out. Ah, i… i do recognize that perfume though.
Dr Whyte: You were the only one that liked it.
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Lamb: Laura! Oh my god, Laura Whyte! I worked with you!
Dr Whyte: The drug i injected into you is taking effect.
Lamb: Why… Why am i restrained? What’s going on? Tell me!
Dr Whyte: You have only a few minutes of clear cognitive processing before your amnesia returns. And i need to ask you a question.
Lamb: Hm No, this is crazy. Where’s Pickman? Where’s Michael, i wanna speak to Michael!
Dr Whyte: Michael is dead. Now listen carefully,
Lamb: Wait no… Wait. He is dead. Oh my god, oh you shot me with Cortexa. I invent the goddamn thing and you stick it in me!
Dr Whyte: Danny, it takes a week for your mind to recover from this drug. Time is precious. Now, what do you remember about Michael’s death?
Lamb: Uh, it was uh, a set up. I thought he was my friend but he betrayed us. The project was gonna kill us!
Dr Whyte: Danny, you were a top scientist for the project, why would they kill you?
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Lamb: You’re telling me they wouldn’t? Leo was sure of it.
Dr Whyte: Was Leo responsible for the murderous rampage across the city that night?
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Lamb: They all deserved to die! My whole life was dedicated to the project. I thought i was appreciated, i thought i was doing the right thing but it all funnels down to defense stuff and weapons. Defending America! And god knows fucking what! I was creating killing machines! My family deteriorated before my very eyes!
Dr Whyte: Danny please, take a deep breath-
Lamb: For what? A fucking job!
Lamb: I’m sorry… I just wanna see my family again. Please?
Dr Whyte: I’m afraid there’s some memories the drug cannot bring back.
Lamb: What do you mean? What am i forgetting? Please! I wanna know! Tell me! Please, Lindsey, i beg you! Lo- No… Oh my god no i’m forgetting your name. Please! Inject me with more Cortexa! I have to remember, please!
Dr Whyte: We will, Danny, we will. Next week. I’m sorry.
Lamb: No! Now! Just… just… I’m so sick of forgetting…
Dr Whyte: We will help you, Danny. I will help you, no matter what.
Lamb: Help, uh, help me with what? Where am i?
Dr Whyte: You’re in a safe place, Daniel. A place where we can help you.
Lamb: Thank you. Who are you?
Dr Whyte: My name is Dr Whyte.
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Manhunt 2 if The Project won
#manhunt 2#daniel lamb#leo kasper#dr whyte#laura whyte#dr laura whyte#dr sender#judy sender#dr judy sender#dr pickman#watchdogs#manhunt 2 watchdogs
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Episode 192 - Non-Fiction Graphic Novels & Comics
This episode we’re discussing the format of Non-Fiction Graphic Novels & Comics! We talk about what we even mean when we say “non-fiction,” comics vs. graphic novels, art vs. writing, memoirs vs. other stuff, and more. Plus: It’s been over 365 days since our last gorilla attack!
You can download the podcast directly, find it on Libsyn, or get it through Apple Podcasts or your favourite podcast delivery system.
In this episode
Anna Ferri | Meghan Whyte | Matthew Murray | Jam Edwards
Join our Discord Server!
Things We Read (or tried to…)
Moi aussi je voulais l'emporter by Julie Delporte
This Woman's Work by Julie Delporte, translated by Helge Dascher and Aleshia Jensen
Sông by Hài-Anh and Pauline Guitton
Kimiko Does Cancer by Kimiko Tobimatsu and Keet Geniza
Why I Adopted by Husband by Yuta Yagi
The Art and Life of Hilma af Klint by Ylva Hillström, translated by Karin Eklund
Go to Sleep (I Miss You): Cartoons from the Fog of New Parenthood by Lucy Knisley
Nuking Alaska: Notes of an Atomic Fugitive by Peter Dunlap-Shohl
My Brain is Different: Stories of ADHD and Other Developmental Disorders by Monzusu, translated by Ben Trethewey
The Comic Book Guide to Growing Food: Step-by-Step Vegetable Gardening for Everyone by Joseph Tychonievich and Liz Kozik
Other Media We Mentioned
Fun Home by Alison Bechdel
Fun Home (musical) (Wikipedia)
Maus by Art Spiegelman
Persepolis by Marjane Satrapi, translated by Mattias Ripa
Ducks: Two Years in the Oil Sands by Kate Beaton
Understanding Comics by Scott McCloud
The Essential Dykes To Watch Out For by Alison Bechdel
Displacement by Lucy Knisley
Pedro and Me: Friendship, Loss, and What I Learned and Judd Winick
Melody: Story of a Nude Dancer by Sylvie Rancourt, translated by Helge Dascher
Kid Gloves by Lucy Knisley
The Mental Load by Emma
The Secret to Superhuman Strength by Alison Bechdel
What Is Obscenity?: The Story of a Good for Nothing Artist and Her Pussy by Rokudenashiko
Homestar Runner
Button Pusher by Tyler Page
Last of the Sandwalkers by Jay Hosler
Clan Apis by Jay Hosler
Ping-pong by Zviane
Dumb: Living Without a Voice by Georgia Webber
When David Lost His Voice by Judith Vanistendael
Blankets by Craig Thompson
Smile by Raina Telegmeier
Dog Man by Dav Pilkey
Sensible Footwear: A Girl's Guide by Kate Charlesworth
Links, Articles, and Things
Harvey Pekar (Wikipedia)
Joe Sacco (Wikipedia)
Japanese adult adoption (Wikipedia)
In the name of the queer: Sailor Moon's LGBTQ legacy
The Spectre of Orientalism in Craig Thompson’s Habibi
Cultural Appropriation in Craig Thompson’s Graphic Novel Habibi
35 Non-fiction Graphic Novels by BIPOC Authors
Every month Book Club for Masochists: A Readers’ Advisory Podcasts chooses a genre at random and we read and discuss books from that genre. We also put together book lists for each episode/genre that feature works by BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, & People of Colour) authors. All of the lists can be found here.
This Place: 150 Years Retold
Zodiac: A Graphic Memoir by Ai Weiwei with Elettra Stamboulis & Gianluca Costantini
Nat Turner by Kyle Baker
The Talk by Darrin Bell
The Best We Could Do by Thi Bui
I’m a Wild Seed by Sharon Lee De la Cruz
Messy Roots: A Graphic Memoir of a Wuhanese American by Laura Gao
Stamped from the Beginning: A Graphic History of Racist Ideas in America by Joel Christian Gill and Ibram X. Kendi
Wake: The Hidden History of Women-Led Slave Revolts by Rebecca Hall and Hugo Martinez
The 500 Years of Resistance Comic Book by Gord Hill
Good Talk: A Memoir in Conversations by Mira Jacob
The American Dream? A Journey on Route 66 Discovering Dinosaur Statues, Muffler Man, and the Perfect Breakfast Burrito: a Graphic Memoir by Shing Yin Khor
Banned Book Club by Kim Hyun Sook, Ryan Estrada, and Ko Hyung-Ju
In Limbo by Deb J.J. Lee
This Country: Searching for Home in (Very) Rural America by Navied Mahdavian
Mexikid: A Graphic Memoir by Pedro Martín
Monstrous: A Transracial Adoption Story by Sarah Myer
Steady Rollin': Preacher Kid, Black Punk and Pedaling Papa by Fred Noland
Citizen 13660 by Mine Okubo
Your Black Friend and Other Strangers by Ben Passmore
Kwändǖr by Cole Pauls
Worm: A Cuban American Odyssey by Edel Rodriguez
Power Born of Dreams: My Story is Palestine by Mohammad Sabaaneh
A First Time for Everything by Dan Santat
Persepolis: The Story of a Childhood by Marjane Satrapi
Grandmothers, Our Grandmothers: Remembering the "Comfort Women" of World War II by Han Seong-Won
Death Threat by Vivek Shraya and Ness Lee
Palimpsest: Documents From A Korean Adoption by Lisa Wool-Rim Sjöblom
Big Black: Stand at Attica by Frank "Big Black" Smith, Jared Reinmuth, and Améziane
Victory. Stand!: Raising My Fist for Justice by Tommie Smith, Dawud Anyabwile, and Derrick Barnes
The High Desert by James Spooner
They Called Us Enemy by George Takei, Justin Eisinger, Steven Scott, and Harmony Becker
Feelings by Manjit Thapp
The Black Panther Party: A Graphic Novel History by David F. Walker and Marcus Kwame Anderson
Now Let Me Fly: A Portrait of Eugene Bullard by Ronald Wimberly and Braham Revel
Bonus list: 21 Non-Fiction Manga
Give us feedback!
Fill out the form to ask for a recommendation or suggest a genre or title for us to read!
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