#little ash
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skelligiri · 7 months ago
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I wanna call this the 'Ineffable niblings' AU. Little Ash and Uriel from 'When the angels left the old country' would have so much to talk about with the ineffables! Thought I'd do a little crossover for passover, featuring an orange on a seder plate because I love the idea.
Chag Pesach Sameach!
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queereads-bracket · 2 months ago
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Queer Fantasy Books Bracket: Round 2
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Book summaries below:
The Masquerade Series (The Traitor Baru Cormorant, The Monster Baru Cormorant, The Tyrant Baru Cormorant) by Seth Dickinson
Tomorrow, on the beach, Baru Cormorant will look up from the sand of her home and see red sails on the horizon. The Empire of Masks is coming, armed with coin and ink, doctrine and compass, soap and lies. They'll conquer Baru’s island, rewrite her culture, criminalize her customs, and dispose of one of her fathers. But Baru is patient. She'll swallow her hate, prove her talent, and join the Masquerade. She will learn the secrets of empire. She’ll be exactly what they need. And she'll claw her way high enough up the rungs of power to set her people free. In a final test of her loyalty, the Masquerade will send Baru to bring order to distant Aurdwynn, a snakepit of rebels, informants, and seditious dukes. Aurdwynn kills everyone who tries to rule it. To survive, Baru will need to untangle this land’s intricate web of treachery - and conceal her attraction to the dangerously fascinating Duchess Tain Hu. But Baru is a savant in games of power, as ruthless in her tactics as she is fixated on her goals. In the calculus of her schemes, all ledgers must be balanced, and the price of liberation paid in full. Fantasy, epic fantasy, secondary world, politics, series
When the Angels Left the Old Country by Sacha Lamb
A queer immigrant fairytale about individual purpose, the fluid nature of identity, and the power of love to change and endure. Uriel the angel and Little Ash (short for Ashmedai) are the only two supernatural creatures in their shtetl (which is so tiny, it doesn't have a name other than Shtetl). The angel and the demon have been studying together for centuries, but pogroms and the search for a new life have drawn all the young people from their village to America. When one of those young emigrants goes missing, Uriel and Little Ash set off to find her. Along the way the angel and demon encounter humans in need of their help, including Rose Cohen, whose best friend (and the love of her life) has abandoned her to marry a man, and Malke Shulman, whose father died mysteriously on his way to America. But there are obstacles ahead of them as difficult as what they’ve left behind. Medical exams (and demons) at Ellis Island. Corrupt officials, cruel mob bosses, murderers, poverty. The streets are far from paved with gold. Fantasy, historical fiction, young adult, folklore
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flameraven · 1 year ago
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Finally getting some fanart done for When the Angels Left the Old Country. I love these two.
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Book names + authors under the cut
Balthamos/Baruch- His Dark Materials by Philip Pullman
Chloe Green/Shara Wheeler- I Kissed Shara Wheeler by Casey McQuiston
Jack Wolcott/Alexis Chopper- Wayward Children Series by Seanan McGuire
Uriel/Ashmedai "Little Ash"- When the Angels Left the Old Country by Sacha Lamb
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ashmedai aka little ash from when the angels left the old country is jewish (canon), queer (canon), and genderqueer (headcanon)
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submitted by @yell-hound
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anonymousdandelion · 1 year ago
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Thinking about language, and identity, and community, and Jewish history, and of course When the Angels Left the Old Country...
And how, to me, the characters' relationships to language feel reflective of their relationships, identities, and experiences in the context of Jewish history.
Sit down. Have some tea.
Per the book:
[Little Ash] had come from Babylon and the angel, perhaps, from the Garden of Eden.
Uriel (under one name or another) has presumably been around since the beginning, or at least something like it.
And the angel's first — and, for a very long time, only — language is Hebrew. The original language, the Holy Tongue, the language of Torah, the language of Creation, the language of a people in their homeland.
That is the language the angel speaks; the only language whose words comes naturally to its tongue; and for most of its existence the angel has never felt either the need or the ability to try to pick up another.
The angel used a certain vague sense of superiority to excuse to itself its failure to communicate with humans. What did anyone need to speak of, it sometimes thought, that could not be said in holy words?
In times gone by, speaking only Hebrew might well have been sufficient. And maybe, the angel is not ready for those times to be gone. (Can you blame it? Who would be ready — to accept that you are no longer at home, and your people are no longer at home, and even the language from which the whole world was built is no longer enough to get by?)
So, somehow, it manages to spend centuries as the Angel of Shtetl, a place where everything is Yiddish... all without speaking a single word in that language.
...Well, no, that's not quite true. The angel speaks exactly one, single word in Yiddish, but it does speak that one quite frequently. If a name counts as a word, anyway.
Ashel.
The only thing the angel says in Yiddish is its chevrusa's name.
(Yiddish to call its chevrusa by name; Aramaic to study Talmud with its chevrusa; English, later, to come to its chevrusa's rescue. Talk about love languages, hm?)
~ ~ ~
Which, of course, brings us to Ashel. To recap, here's what we know about about the when and where of his birth:
The demon king Ashmedai, over the course of several centuries of the Babylonian Exile, had taken two hundred and fifty bird-footed babies from their mothers’ arms...
And it was also mentioned in the quote cited at the beginning of this post that he comes from Babylon.
So... in stark contrast to Uriel, Little Ash was born into exile. He was the last of his father's sons, which means that by the time he came along they must have been far, far into those several hundred years.
(And from the fact that the "Babylonian Exile" is described here in terms of centuries, it seems clear that the term is being used in a broader sense than the relatively narrow, maximum-seventy-year era to which it usually refers.
Maybe, even when the Second Temple was built and the people had a temporary respite from dispersion, Ashmedai and his family never went back home. Maybe, for them, that first exile — which, for all the people, would not be the last — never ended at all.)
In any case, Little Ash was born in exile, and so the Jewish world as he knows it has always been one of diaspora. And not only does he have a demon's gift for languages, by the time that we meet him he has very specifically claimed Yiddish as his primary language. And he's gone much further than can be explained by simply wanting to be able to communicate:
Little Ash, for reasons known only to himself, had adopted a Yiddish accent in all languages, around the time of the false messiah.
As the Jewish world struggles to recover in the wake of the devastating blow of Shabbetai Tzvi (the false messiah), as they grappled with crushed hopes and deep turmoil and sorely damaged community... what does Little Ash do?
I'm Yiddish, he says now, Yiddish meaning Jewish. And he makes sure to say it with every word he speaks, no matter what language he's using at any given moment.
Yiddish: the language of exile, the language of home. For Little Ash, as for so many of us also born in diaspora, these concepts are intertwined and hard to separate, in a way that someone of Uriel's background would find very difficult to understand.
Even so, Uriel calls him Ashel.
~ ~ ~
...Oops, I didn't make to turn this post into a half-formed essay. Hope your tea is still warm.
But, one last thought: together, in learning and conversation alike, Little Ash and Uriel both know Aramaic. Judeo-Aramaic, to be precise.
An ancient language of the Jews... but, more specifically, somewhat like Yiddish, an ancient diaspora language of Jews. And the language of the Talmud, which among many other things served as a sort of bridge; a way of holding some amount of continuity from the era of Temple Judaism to the Rabbinic Judaism of diaspora.
They speak Aramaic, they study Aramaic, and they share Aramaic.
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enchantress-emily · 1 year ago
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I first read When the Angels Left the Old Country last fall, but @anonymousdandelion's and @flameraven's recent enthusiastic posts made me want to read it again, and now there's art! Uriel, Little Ash, Essie, and Rose are heading off to cause some kind of trouble together.
(This also gave me a chance to illustrate a headcanon I haven't seen in fan art yet: that Uriel, who's described as having a round, soft face, is soft in the rest of its build as well.)
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theravenmuse · 1 year ago
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The entire ineffable family piles into the Bentley for a road trip. Crowley and Azi in the front, Muriel, Uriel, and Little Ash in the back. Crowley looks over his shoulder. “Angel we CANNOT adopt anymore kids. I refuse to be seen in a minivan.”
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aroaceblackhole · 1 year ago
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EVERYONE NEEDS to read When the Angels Left the Old Country, by Sacha Lamb. It is so fucking good, and relatively Good Omens coded. I read it a while ago, was organizing my books(finally), and re-read it. IT'S SO HALALFLDSHFDJALFHJ. The main characters are Little Ash(a demon) and Uriel(an angel), and it's so!!!! READ IT NOW PLEASE AND THANK YOU(tell me what you think if you do)
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closetcellist · 2 years ago
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I finished a new book about angels and demons and now it’s everyone’s problem
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skelligiri · 9 months ago
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I thought I'd try my hand at drawing my own interpretations of Little Ash and Uriel from 'When the angels left the old country'! May use it for a little crossover picture later. Something tells me little Ash would really get along with Crowley and Uriel and Aziraphale would have a lot to talk about.
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the-autism-on-this-gal · 1 year ago
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is Hozier as popular with wtaltoc fans as he is with gomens fans?? bc if not I really need y’all to listen to unreal unearth
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some of these lyrics… this man is gonna kill me a swear…
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flameraven · 1 year ago
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He laid his head on the angel's shoulder, and dropped the gun onto the cobbles. He closed his eyes and sighed. "I thought you would have bled to death without me. Why did you have to go and take a human name, you wretched creature?" "I don't know," said Uriel. "I don't know. For the same reason you needed me to come to America with you, I think." "What reason?" said Little Ash, without opening his eyes. "Because," said Uriel. "You are the friend of my soul. I needed a name so I could stay with you. I have decided something. If you are going to get yourself into trouble, you need to bring me with you. It feels right, like a mitzvah. You don't have to protect me. I'll protect you, if you like." Little Ash was quiet for some time. He couldn't think of anything he could say that would mean as much as those three words, like a mitzvah, from the mouth of an angel. He loved his chevrusa with all of his heart: he'd known it by a hundred names, and he'd loved it always. He could not ask it to give up a name it liked having, not even to keep it safe. "All right," he said. He laced their fingers together and lifted its hand to his lips, kissing its bruised knuckles. "All right. You can be Uriel forever, and save a hundred rebbes. Be an angel or a demon or anything you like. Just don't leave me."
--- When the Angels Left the Old Country, p376
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Character, book, and author names under the cut
Chester Sibley- Holly and Oak by R. Cooper
Wei Wuxian- Mo Dao Zu Shi/Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation by Mo Xiang Tong Xiu
Little Ash- When The Angels Left The Old Country by Sacha Lamb
Wu Xi- Lord Seventh / Qi Ye by Priest
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shtetlcore · 2 years ago
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Little Ash (short for Ashmedai) is a demon who lives in a shtetl and studies with his chevruta Uriel, and angel. But the times are changing, and the two of them find themselves on their way to America.
Are you sick? Better head to the feldsher. Is she a witch? Is she a doctor? Either way, she’ll have just what you need.
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anonymousdandelion · 1 year ago
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My love for When the Angels Left the Old Country has lead to the inevitable consequence: soft fanfiction. (The first in the AO3 tag for the book!)
This first foray is a 500-word ficlet, featuring nothing but fluff.
“Ashel,” Uriel murmured, though they’d been sitting in comfortable silence for a few minutes now and it had not quite realized that it was about to speak. “Ashel, do you remember the dance hall?” “The dance hall? What dance hall?” Little Ash looked at Uriel. “You mean, the one where we went spying?” “Yes,” said the angel, only it had not been thinking about the spying at all. “We never got to dance, that night.”
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