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#nova's rare vent posting
thechaoticfanartist · 8 months
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do you ever just grieve even when someone isn't gone? like. this person isn't dead. they could be though. you're so scared they will be. you're so scared they'll die. and you grieve them. you grieve them even though they aren't dead. you don't know if they'll die. but you're scared they will. and that fear turns into something resembling grief.
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BYF / BYI
(because this post is meant to be a road sign and not a solid wall like a DNI post)
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Welcome, potential friends and foes, to my space station of a Tumblr.
You can call me Novafire, or Nova for short.
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I question the effectiveness of long intro posts, so here’s a summary:
My way of navigating life on this site aligns pretty well with True Neutral. But in true neutral fashion, it’s not a strict code I adhere to. It just means:
My own interests take priority, but I try to be kind as it makes things easier for everyone involved.
I have the courage of an ostrich mixed with the wits and confidence of a crow. (i.e. I suffer from a lack of conviction in all but a handful of things, but I’m willing to learn.)
I tend to evaluate things on a case-by-case basis.
I will not bite unless I see the need for preemptive action or if someone bites first. And even then, I’m more likely to ignore stuff since I just can’t be bothered to retaliate.
More details below:
What to expect:
I scan and monitor every Tumblr that follows me until I’ve gotten a good read on them. Blank blogs are fine as long as I can see they’ve either followed other TF accounts or have liked+reblogged TF content recently.
My blog is SFW for the most part, but NSFW accounts are free to follow and interact.
I rarely follow accounts that aren’t primarily Transformers-focused, but I reblog from anywhere and everywhere.
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Communication:
I use tone tags for convenience, but they’re not necessary if someone wants to interact with me.
My inbox is open, but I disable anonymous asks every now and then when I expect issues.
DMs are open, but my response time varies depending on whether or not my proverbial stars have aligned and how well I know someone.
Please, no venting to me without warning. I may know a lot about the human mind and psychological and social dynamics, but I have no desire to play armchair therapist.
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Triggers and how I accomodate:
If you need something tagged, let me know :) Anything asked of me earnestly will be granted.
I have very few triggers myself, and the ones I do have don’t require mentioning since I just scroll past stuff that bothers me.
If I reblog something from someone, it doesn’t mean I’m married to them. 95% of the time I reblog, I don’t consider the source. To me, good content is good content. However, if you alert me to something and respectfully request that I not reblog from a particular user, I will comply since I don’t want issues.
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My relationship with my followers:
I am not responsible for the behavior of my followers. I carefully consider what I say so as not to incite drama or allow for my words to be taken out of context. However, I’m not perfect and my followers have wills of their own.
I am not responsible for anything any of my followers reblog on your posts. Do not expect me to moderate this.
Unlike some around these parts, I do not consider there to be such a thing as “Nova Nation” or anything along those lines. My followers are not my disciples, even jokingly. They are not necessarily a direct reflection of me or my views.
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My relationship with characters:
If you see me kinning a character you’d consider problematic, please don’t jump to conclusions. More than likely, there are just one or several isolated traits I relate to.
I admit I have a fascination with and a love for IDW Prowl. However, please note that I do not consider him to be a “good person.” I just think the way his mind works is really interesting. And no, I’m not a JazzProwl or TaraProwl shipper.
I do not believe in excessive woobification of characters without acknowledgment of their faults, especially those like IDW Prowl. Yes, I want to wrap him in a blanket. No, I’m not blind to the horrors he’s committed.
I avoid character “tribalism” as much as possible. When it comes to any character, I will never shove my opinions down another’s throat, but I will absolutely provide thoroughly considered opinions in a controlled way.
I’m not a hardcore shipper myself, but I have a select few I like. I also respect most other ships out there.
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Miscellaneous:
I make spam posting a habit. I’ll disappear for half a day to three days and then appear out of nowhere to drop 20+ reblogs at once.
I talk in the tags. A lot. :P
Spam likes and reblogs are more than welcome.
Feel free to tag me in stuff at any time! There’s no need to wait until we’re mutuals.
If you tag me in something and I don’t acknowledge it within a couple of days, please DM me. Tumblr is a stupid cat that likes to eat tags and reblogs. >:(
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This is where you’ll find my playlists, moodboards, character ref collection, etc.
last updated: 11/16/23 (section updated: My relationship with characters)
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blurrymango · 2 years
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Blogs they would have:
Blitz: Hard guro + intense porn and hentai + lots of political arguments. Gets banned a lot and keeps coming back. Hated among people he even agrees with. Super edgy and aggressive on purpose. Occasional fandom blogger.
Sydel: Fanfiction writer, specifically of the 'x reader' variety. Has certain fandoms she generally sticks to and most of the time her writing doesn't get too intense, but occasionally comes out of left field with something quite weird. Well respected among others and has a professional attitude.
Apollo: Art blogger. Posts very rarely, doesn't use tags and rarely responds to things. She's just really afraid of getting death threats despite her art being generally unproblematic. Gets tons of notes.
Artimes: Cosplay blogger, mostly. Tons of pictures of her motorcycle and random photos of places she comes across in her drives. Link to her PayPal in her bio. Her cosplays are EXTREMELY high quality.
Maria: Leftist, scenecore and fandom blogger. Draws a lot of fanart for dark fandoms and has an atrocious DNI on every art post. Makes a lot of posts about different concoctions and potions she makes. Will hit you out of nowhere with a bunch of photos of her gun collection.
Natalie: Claims to be an art blog, hasn't posted art in forever. Mostly reblogging cute anime panels and photos of animals. Reblogs so much cutesy stuff but also is so very aggressive and uses an unnecessary amount of cusswords.
Amber: Conspiracy blogger. A lot of them are deranged and completely insane, some of them are believable. Completely sincere and genuine. Not even mean just batshit insane.
Ty: Meme reposter, hates Tumblr. Enough said.
Charlie: A little bit of everything. Mostly runs on a queue. Unless she's drunk then she's doing discourse and venting hardcore.
CC: Aesthetic blogger. Dark acedemia and cottagecore and whatever other bullshit aesthetics these types like. People think she's a tradwife, but she doesn't like the political connotations of that.
Nova: Blocked by most people and keeps getting banned for breaking so many rules. Similar to Blitz except she goes out of her way to doxx and harrass people at random.
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marionluth · 2 months
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Have you ever read a fic so good it gives you super-nova writer's imposter syndrome? That's me today.
I tend not to read much when I write (and because I'm almost always writing I rarely read fanfics anymore) but today I made an exception for something that caught my eye on a discord group.
And even though I enjoyed it SO much as a read I now feel such a freaking bad writer 😭
That's the post. Thanks for coming to my vent-fest!
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ruoxin · 2 years
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**VENT POST** ignore if you don’t like negativity or can’t handle any criticism.
my ults have just been disappointing me in the later half of 2021 and 2022 :c
twice formula of love - i was sooo excited for this since the concept looked so good, esp with the suits in the lab teasers, but the title track was disappointing, and alcohol free is my fav twice title (i’m a rare breed lol, bossa nova is a fav genre of mine) so when they released scientist and formula of love it just felt like a step back for me. i wasn’t too fond of many of the bsides in this album and never reached for any of the tracks after like a few weeks of it released. album as a whole: 3/10.
taeyeon invu - i really liked weekend, and can’t control me was weird at first but then i got OBSESSED with it and played it on repeat. invu was pretty good at first and maybe a fav title track so far in 2022 but the rest of the entire album was super lackluster imo, the only bsides i kind of like is heart and timeless and even then i find them slightly unclimactic. songs like siren, set myself on fire, some nights are different from her usual like her songs in my voice or purpose so overall i never reach of this album besides her titles weekend, can’t control myself, invu :( album as a whole: 4/10.
apink horn - this is kind of the opposite of taeyeon’s invu where the title track was lackluster to me, but i enjoyed quite a few bsides for sure, my top ones were holy moly, my oh my, nothing, free&love, just like this. but overall as an entire album i did not enjoy it as much as look and their other older ones, as there were not any tracks i had on repeat or still reach for. album as a whole: 6/10.
red velvet feel my rhythm - i was super excited for this, but i believe this this is one of their weakest title tracks and i haven’t felt this way about a red velvet title since rookie. most red velvet titles, even zimzalabim, rbb, etc. i was able to eventually appreciate and enjoy after a while even if i did not vibe with them at first but i still never reach for this and it never grew on me like how their other tracks did eventually. for the bsides, it also was one of their weakest minis in a while i believe, the only two tracks i really enjoyed were good bad ugly, and in my dreams and i never reach for them anymore as well. album as a whole: 5/10.
itzy checkmate - it’s only been a day so this may not be a final opinion but i didn’t HATE the title track. the pre-chorus and vocal sections were pretty good actually and bridge, the chorus is just a distracting part. i listened to the rest of the album several times through by now and i think domino is the only good song on the album, but there were a few nice vocal sections in what i want, racer, free fall but it gets really drowned by the rap. we also don’t talk about 365. album as a whole: 2/10.
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golbrocklovely · 2 years
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Aside from the ones that actually make actual content and not just tiktoks dancing or lip-syncing, i am so sick of influencers and the influencer culture. I feel like unless you live in a major city then you’d understand but they literally dont make L.A better, they make it harder and more expensive for the rest of us. One example, fashion nova; yes its great that the owner made it, good for him but those stores were local to the San Fernando Valley in Los Angeles County and were known to be cheap. Suddenly its everywhere, super expensive, and influencer exclusive. They’re taking over the local fairs, restaurants, cinemas, and now Coachella!! You know how pricey and hard it is to get tickets and these “influencers” are getting EVERYTHING for free, its ridiculous. This all blew up in the last 5 years and i know for a fact a lot of locals here in L.A and California in general are over it. We were so happy when so many claimed they were leaving during the lockdown, what a lie that was.
Sorry felt like venting, i saw so many post after snc that they were getting vip and everything paid at coachella and i thought it was a crock of shit.
i've never understood why celebs, or someone with the stature of one, gets shit for free when they have the money to afford it.
i understand with brand deals, but otherwise… makes no sense to me.
nonetheless, i can only imagine how annoying it must be to be surrounded by influencers all the time. idk if i've ever come into contact with one irl lol
but as someone who did eight years of theater and has a degree in it, i know an attention seeker when i see one haha
i will say, while i understand getting annoyed at snc getting shit for free when they could easily afford it, i'm kinda happy seeing them succeed and be sponsored in this way. until this year, they very rarely ever got spons. i'm happy to see them get more brand deals.
but at least they actually work hard and make content that is enjoyable so 🤷🏻‍♀️
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70+ disabled, neurodiverse and chronically ill authors COLLAB
This post is in collaboration with several other bloggers whose links are included here:
Artie Carden
Anniek
Hi! It’s been a while since I posted anything, but this post has been a month in the making. I have twenty books by twenty authors for my part in this collaboration, and you can check out the other parts of the collab with the links at the top of the post.
I haven’t read some of these books but almost all of them are on my to be read pile, and I did extensive research to make sure I got this right, but please let me know if there are any mistakes or if anything needs to be corrected.
1. Meet Cute Diary by Emery Lee
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Meet Cute Diary follows Noah Ramirez who thinks he’s an expert on romance. He must be for his blog, the Meet Cute Diary, a collection of trans happily ever afters. There’s just one problem. All the stories are fake. What started off as the fantasies of a trans boy who was afraid to step out of the closet has grown into a beacon of hope for trans readers across the globe. Noah’s world unravels when a troll exposes the blog as fiction, and the only way to save the Diary is to convince everyone that the stories are true, but he doesn’t have any proof. That’s when Drew walks into Noah’s life, and the pieces fall into place. Drew is willing to fake date Noah to save the Diary. But when Noah’s feelings grow beyond their staged romance, he realises that dating in real life isn’t the same as finding love on the page.
The author, Emery Lee, is a kid lit author, artist and YouTuber hailing from a mixed racial background. After graduating with a degree in creative writing, e’s gone on to author novels, short stories and webcomics. When away from reading and writing, you’ll likely find em engaged in art or snuggling with cute dogs.
Emery Lee is nonbinary, and uses e/em pronouns, and e’s debut book, Meet Cute Diary, features a side character who is also nonbinary (and asexual!). Emery is also neurodivergent, and frequently speaks about what its like being a writer with adhd on twitter.
Meet Cute Diary is a book I only discovered last month, when it was published, but I’m excited to read it. It has representation of all kinds, and I love any book that has even a little mention of an asexual character because its so rare to see.
2. Ace of Spades by Faridah Àbíké-Íyímídé
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At Niveus Private Academy money paves the hallways, and the students are never less than perfect. Until now. Because an anonymous texter calling themselves Aces, is bringing two students’ dark secrets to light. Devon, a talented musician, buries himself in rehearsals, but he can’t escape the spotlight when his private photos go public. Chiamaka, head girl, isn’t afraid to get what she wants, but soon everyone will know the price she has paid for power. Someone is out to get them both. Someone who holds all the aces. And they’re planning much more than a high school game.
Faridah Àbíké-Íyímídé, is the author of the instant New York Times and IndieBound bestseller, Ace of Spades, billed as ‘Get out meets Gossip Girl’. Entertainment Weekly has called it “this summer’s hottest YA debut”. She was born and raised in Croydon, South London, and Faridah moved to the Scottish Highlands for her undergraduate degree where she completed a BA in English Literature. She has established and runs and mentorship scheme for unagented writers of colour, helping them on their journey to get published. Faridah has also written for NME, The Bookseller, Readers Digest and gal-dem.
Faridah Àbíké-Íyímídé’s book is one that I pre-ordered months in advance, after discovering that I actually really liked this sub-genre of YA, and although I still haven’t read it yet (sorry!), I’m still super excited to dive into it. From what I hear, it has some gay rep, which we all know by now is something I seek out in my books.
3. Lycanthropy and Other Chronic Illnesses by Kristen O’Neal
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Priya has worked hard to pursue her pre med dreams at Stanford, but a diagnosis of chronic Lyme disease during her sophomore year sends her straight back to her loving but overbearing family in New Jersey and leaves her wondering if she’ll ever be able to return to the way things were. Thankfully she has her online pen pal, Brigid, and the rest of the members of “oof ouch my bones,” a virtual support group that meets on Discord to crack jokes and vent about their own chronic illnesses. When Brigid suddenly goes offline, Priya does something very out of character; she steals the family car and drives to Pennsylvania to check on Brigid. Priya isn’t sure what to expect, but it isn’t the creature that’s shut in the basement. With Brigid nowhere in sight, Priya begins to puzzle together an impossible but obvious truth: the creature might be werewolf – and the werewolf might be Brigid. As Brigid’s unique condition worsens, their friendship will be deepened and challenged in unexpected ways, forcing them to reckon with their own ideas of what it means to be normal.
Kristen O’Neal is a freelance writer who’s written for sites like Buzzfeed Reader, Christianity Today, Birth.Movies.Death, LitHub and Electric Literature. She writes about faith, culture, and unexplained phenomena. Her debut novel, Lycanthropy and Other Chronic Illnesses is based on her own experiences with being chronically ill. Kristen has two autoimmune disorders and “a number of other problems and issues” with her body. According to her website, she is doing much better than she used to, but still has flares somewhat regularly.
I cannot describe the feeling of seeing a published book with the best group chat name I have ever seen. Oof ouch my bones is absolutely something that I would be part of if it really existed, because its just such a mood, and funny at the same time. I pre ordered this book too, but like all the others, I still haven’t gotten around to reading it. I’m super excited about it though and cannot recommend it enough.
4. Only Mostly Devastated by Sophie Gonzales
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Will Tavares is the dream summer fling – he’s fun, affectionate, kind – but just when Ollie thinks he’s found his Happily Ever After, summer vacation ends, and Will stops texting Ollie back. Now Ollie is one prince short of his fairy tale ending, and to complicate the fairy tale further, a family emergency sees Ollie uprooted and enrolled at a new school across the country. Which he minds a little less when he realises it’s the same school Will goes to…except Ollie finds out that the sweet, comfortably queer guy he knew from summer isn’t the same one attending Collinswood High. This Will is a class clown, closeted – and to be honest, a jerk. Ollie has no intention of pining after a guy who clearly isn’t ready for a relationship, especially since this new, bro-y jock version of Will seems to go from hot to cold every other week. But then Will starts “coincidentally” popping up in every area of Ollie’s life, from music class to the lunch table, and Ollie finds his resolve weakening. The last time he gave Will his heart, Will handed it back to him trampled and battered. Ollie would have to be an idiot to trust him with it again. Right? Right.
Sophie Gonzales was born and raised in Whyalla, South Australia, where the Outback Meets the Sea. She now lives in Melbourne, where there’s no outback in sight. Sophie’s been writing since the age of five, when her mother decided to help her type out one of the stories she had come up with in the bathtub. They ran into artistic differences when five-year-old Sophie insisted that everybody die in the end, while her mother wanted the characters to simply go out for a milkshake. Since then, Sophie has been completing her novels without a transcript. Sophie Gonzales tweets about her experiences with ADHD on her twitter.
Only mostly devasted is one of the few books on this list that I’ve read. I read the whole thing in one sitting because I just couldn’t put it down, which is weird because I normally don’t read contemporary at all. I have recommended this book to literally everyone I know, and even bought my best friend a copy to convince her to read it.
5. The Bone Houses by Emily Lloyd Jones
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Seventeen-year-old Aderyn ("Ryn") only cares about two things: her family, and her family's graveyard. And right now, both are in dire straits. Since the death of their parents, Ryn and her siblings have been scraping together a meagre existence as gravediggers in the remote village of Colbren, which sits at the foot of a harsh and deadly mountain range that was once home to the fae. The problem with being a gravedigger in Colbren, though, is that the dead don't always stay dead. The risen corpses are known as "bone houses," and legend says that they're the result of a decades-old curse. When Ellis, an apprentice mapmaker with a mysterious past, arrives in town, the bone houses attack with new ferocity. What is it that draws them near? And more importantly, how can they be stopped for good? Together, Ellis and Ryn embark on a journey that will take them deep into the heart of the mountains, where they will have to face both the curse and the long-hidden truths about themselves.
Emily Lloyd-Jones grew up on a vineyard in rural Oregon, where she played in evergreen forests and learned to fear sheep. After graduating from Western Oregon University with an English degree, she enrolled in the publishing program at Rosemont College just outside of Philadelphia. She currently resides in Northern California.
Another book on my to be read pile that I’m super excited to read, but still haven’t gotten around to. This one features disability rep, but because I haven’t read it, I don’t know much more, sorry guys.
6. Mooncakes by Susanne Walker and Wendy Xu
📷Nova Huang knows more about magic than your average teen witch. She works at her grandmothers' bookshop, where she helps them loan out spell books and investigate any supernatural occurrences in their New England town. One fateful night, she follows reports of a white wolf into the woods, and she comes across the unexpected: her childhood crush, Tam Lang, battling a horse demon in the woods. As a werewolf, Tam has been wandering from place to place for years, unable to call any town home. Pursued by dark forces eager to claim the magic of wolves and out of options, Tam turns to Nova for help. Their latent feelings are rekindled against the backdrop of witchcraft, untested magic, occult rituals, and family ties both new and old in this enchanting tale of self-discovery.
Suzanne Walker is a Chicago-based writer and editor. She is co-creator of the Hugo-nominated graphic novel Mooncakes (2019, Lion Forge/Oni Press). Her short fiction has been published in Clarkesworld and Uncanny Magazine, and she has published nonfiction articles with Uncanny Magazine, StarTrek.com, Women Write About Comics, and the anthology Barriers and Belonging: Personal Narratives of Disability. She has spoken at numerous conventions on a variety of topics ranging from disability representation in sci-fi/fantasy to comics collaboration.
Wendy Xu is a Brooklyn-based illustrator and comics artist. She is co-creator of and currently draws the webcomic Mooncakes. Her work has been featured on Tor.com, as part of the Chinese American: Exclusion/Inclusion exhibit permanently housed at the Chinese Historical Society of America, and in Shattered: The Asian American Comics Anthology. She occasionally teaches at the Asian American Writers Workshop and currently works as an assistant editor curating young adult and children’s books.
Suzanne Walker suffers from hearing loss, something that she wrote into her graphic novel, Mooncakes, making Nova hard of hearing. I read this in a few years ago as an advance reader copy for Netgalley and it was honestly one of the best graphic novels I have ever read. The main characters are Chinese American, queer AND magic, which is an amazing combination of representation.
7. Six of Crows by Leigh Bardugo
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Ketterdam: a bustling hub of international trade where anything can be had for the right price—and no one knows that better than criminal prodigy Kaz Brekker. Kaz is offered a chance at a deadly heist that could make him rich beyond his wildest dreams. But he can’t pull it off alone… A convict with a thirst for revenge A sharpshooter who can’t walk away from a wager A runaway with a privileged past A spy known as the Wraith A Heartrender using her magic to survive the slums A thief with a gift for unlikely escapes Kaz’s crew is the only thing that might stand between the world and destruction—if they don’t kill each other first.
Leigh Bardugo is a #1 New York Times bestselling author of fantasy novels and the creator of the Grishaverse (now a Netflix original series) which spans the Shadow and Bone Trilogy, the Six of Crows Duology, The Language of Thorns, and King of Scars—with more to come. Her short stories can be found in multiple anthologies, including the Best American Science Fiction & Fantasy. Her other works include Wonder Woman: Warbringer and Ninth House (Goodreads Choice Winner for Best Fantasy 2019) which is being developed for television by Amazon Studios.
Leigh grew up in Southern California and graduated from Yale University. These days she lives and writes in Los Angeles.
In the acknowledgements section of Six of Crows, Bardugo reveals she suffers from osteonecrosis and sometimes needs to use a cane; this was a source of inspiration for one of the story's six protagonists, master thief and gang boss Kaz Brekker, who uses a cane.
I read Six of Crows a few years ago and I really loved it. I’m not going to pretend I managed to finish the whole Grishaverse series, because I haven’t even gotten close yet, but it really showed Kaz’s struggles with his disability, and his mental health. This is part of a duology, and the duology is part of a large series of books with another duology and trilogy, but Six of Crows can be read without reading the others.
8. Hyperbole and A Half by Allie Brosh
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This is a book I wrote. Because I wrote it, I had to figure out what to put on the back cover to explain what it is. I tried to write a long, third-person summary that would imply how great the book is and also sound vaguely authoritative--like maybe someone who isn’t me wrote it--but I soon discovered that I’m not sneaky enough to pull it off convincingly. So, I decided to just make a list of things that are in the book: Pictures Words Stories about things that happened to me Stories about things that happened to other people because of me Eight billion dollars* Stories about dogs The secret to eternal happiness* *These are lies. Perhaps I have underestimated my sneakiness!
Allie is an American blogger, writer and comic artist best known for her blog in the form of a webcomic Hyperbole and a Half. Brosh started Hyperbole in 2009 and told stories from her life in a mix of text and intentionally crude illustrations. She has published two books telling stories in the same style, both of which have been New York Times bestsellers. Brosh lives with severe depression and ADHD, and her comics on depression have won praise from fans and mental health professionals.
Another book on my tbr that I just haven’t gotten around to but really want to.
9. The Rest of Us Just Live Here by Patrick Ness
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What if you aren’t the Chosen One? The one who’s supposed to fight the zombies, or the soul-eating ghosts, or whatever the heck this new thing is, with the blue lights and the death? What if you’re like Mikey? Who just wants to graduate and go to prom and maybe finally work up the courage to ask Henna out before someone goes and blows up the high school. Again. Because sometimes there are problems bigger than this week’s end of the world, and sometimes you just must find the extraordinary in your ordinary life. Even if your best friend is worshipped by mountain lions...
Patrick Ness, an award-winning novelist, has written for England’s Radio 4 and Sunday Telegraph and is a literary critic for The Guardian. He has written many books, including the Chaos Walking Trilogy, The Crash of Hennington, Topics About Which I Know Nothing, and A Monster Calls. He has won numerous awards, including the Guardian Children’s Fiction Prize, the Booktrust Teenage Prize, and the Costa Children’s Book Award. Born in Virginia, he currently lives in London.
Patrick Ness has written about OCD and anxiety in at least two of his books, inspired by his own experiences with the two disorders and how it affects him (The Rest of Us Just Live Here & Release)
10. Every Heart A Doorway by Seanan McGuire
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Eleanor West’s Home for Wayward Children No Solicitations No Visitors No Quests Children have always disappeared under the right conditions; slipping through the shadows under a bed or at the back of a wardrobe, tumbling down rabbit holes and into old wells, and emerging somewhere... else. But magical lands have little need for used-up miracle children. Nancy tumbled once, but now she’s back. The things she’s experienced... they change a person. The children under Miss West’s care understand all too well. And each of them is seeking a way back to their own fantasy world. But Nancy’s arrival marks a change at the Home. There’s a darkness just around each corner, and when tragedy strikes, it’s up to Nancy and her new-found schoolmates to get to the heart of the matter. No matter the cost.
Seanan lives in an idiosyncratically designed labyrinth in the Pacific Northwest, which she shares with her cats, Alice and Thomas, a vast collection of creepy dolls and horror movies, and sufficient books to qualify her as a fire hazard. She has strongly held and oft-expressed beliefs about the origins of the Black Death, the X-Men, and the need for chainsaws in daily life.
Years of writing blurbs for convention program books have fixed Seanan in the habit of writing all her bios in the third person, to sound marginally less dorky. Stress is on the "marginally." It probably doesn't help that she has so many hobbies.
Seanan was the winner of the 2010 John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer, and her novel Feed (as Mira Grant) was named as one of Publishers Weekly's Best Books of 2010. In 2013 she became the first person ever to appear five times on the same Hugo Ballot.
Seanan McGuire has an invisible disability due to herniated disks in her spine. She is slowly coming to terms with this, and talks about it occasionally on her twitter, and about the struggles she faces.
I loved this book, and so did my best friend. We both read it in one sitting and talked nonstop about it afterwards. Although short, its filled with amazing characters, plot, and representation (asexual character!!)
11. Girls of Paper and Fire by Natasha Ngan
Each year, eight beautiful girls are chosen as Paper Girls to serve the king. It's the highest honour they could hope for...and the most demeaning. This year, there's a ninth. And instead 📷of paper, she's made of fire. In this richly developed fantasy, Lei is a member of the Paper caste, the lowest and most persecuted class of people in Ikhara. She lives in a remote village with her father, where the decade-old trauma of watching her mother snatched by royal guards for an unknown fate still haunts her. Now, the guards are back and this time it's Lei they're after -- the girl with the golden eyes whose rumoured beauty has piqued the king's interest. Over weeks of training in the opulent but oppressive palace, Lei and eight other girls learns the skills and charm that befit a king's consort. There, she does the unthinkable -- she falls in love. Her forbidden romance becomes enmeshed with an explosive plot that threatens her world's entire way of life. Lei, still the wide-eyed country girl at heart, must decide how far she's willing to go for justice and revenge.
Natasha Ngan is a writer and yoga teacher. She grew up between Malaysia, where the Chinese side of her family is from, and the UK. This multicultural upbringing continues to influence her writing, and she is passionate about bringing diverse stories to teens. Ngan studied Geography at the University of Cambridge before working as a social media consultant and fashion blogger. She lives in France with her partner, where they recently moved from Paris to be closer to the sea. Her novel Girls of Paper and Fire was a New York Times bestseller. Natasha has a heart condition, and talks about her struggles with her health, and gives updates on her health and her books on twitter.
I’ve heard a lot about this book, but for trigger warning reasons it sadly isn’t on my to be read list. Everything I’ve heard about it says its an amazing book though, and the cover is beautiful.
12. Queens of Geek by Jen Wilde
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Three friends, two love stories, one convention: this fun, feminist love letter to geek culture is all about fandom, friendship, and finding the courage to be yourself. Charlie likes to stand out. She’s a vlogger and actress promoting her first movie at SupaCon, and this is her chance to show fans she’s over her public breakup with co-star Reese Ryan. When internet-famous cool-girl actress Alyssa Huntington arrives as a surprise guest, it seems Charlie’s long-time crush on her isn’t as one-sided as she thought. Taylor likes to blend in. Her brain is wired differently, making her fear change. And there’s one thing in her life she knows will never change: her friendship with her best guy friend Jamie—no matter how much she may secretly want it to. But when she hears about a fan contest for her favourite fandom, she starts to rethink her rules on playing it safe.
Jen Wilde is the YA author of QUEENS OF GEEK, THE BRIGHTSIDERS and GOING OFF SCRIPT. She writes unapologetically queer stories about geeks, rockstars, and fangirls who smash the patriarchy in their own unique ways. Her books have been praised in Teen Vogue, Buzzfeed, Autostraddle, Vulture and Bustle. Originally from Australia, Jen now lives in NYC where she spends her time writing, drinking too much coffee and binging reality TV.
Researching for this collab was the first time this book popped up on my radar as something I might be interested in reading. Jen Wilde, the author, is herself autistic and suffers from anxiety, which gives the narrative “authenticity that is lacking in similar books” according to socialjusticebooks.org.
13. The Upside of Unrequited by Becky Albertalli
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Seventeen-year-old Molly Peskin-Suso knows all about unrequited love—she’s lived through it twenty-six times. She crushes hard and crushes often, but always in secret. Because no matter how many times her twin sister, Cassie, tells her to woman up, Molly can’t stomach the idea of rejection. So, she’s careful. Fat girls always have to be careful. Then a cute new girl enters Cassie’s orbit, and for the first time ever, Molly’s cynical twin is a lovesick mess. Meanwhile, Molly’s totally not dying of loneliness—except for the part where she is. Luckily, Cassie’s new girlfriend comes with a cute hipster-boy sidekick. Will is funny and flirtatious and just might be perfect crush material. Maybe more than crush material. And if Molly can win him over, she’ll get her first kiss and she’ll get her twin back. There’s only one problem: Molly’s co-worker Reid. He’s an awkward Tolkien superfan with a season pass to the Ren Faire, and there’s absolutely no way Molly could fall for him. Right?
Becky Albertalli is the author of the acclaimed novels Simon vs. the Homo Sapiens Agenda (film: Love, Simon), The Upside of Unrequited, and Leah on the Offbeat. She is also the co-author of What If It's Us with Adam Silvera. A former clinical psychologist who specialized in working with children and teens, Becky lives with her family in Atlanta.
Becky Albertalli has generalised anxiety disorder (GAD), and has spoken about it in several interviews, which you can find online. She has also written several characters in her books who also suffer with anxiety. Her first book, Simon vs the Homosapien’s Agenda (or Love, Simon), is the only book of hers that I have read so far, and I loved it. It was the first contemporary book that I read and actually enjoyed.
14. Carve the Mark by Veronica Roth
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Cyra is the sister of the brutal tyrant who rules the Shotet people. Cyra’s current gift gives her pain and power—something her brother exploits, using her to torture his enemies. But Cyra is much more than just a blade in her brother’s hand: she is resilient, quick on her feet, and smarter than he knows. Akos is the son of a farmer and an oracle from the frozen nation-planet of Thuvhe. Protected by his unusual currentgift, Akos is generous in spirit, and his loyalty to his family is limitless. Once Akos and his brother are captured by enemy Shotet soldiers, Akos is desperate to get his brother out alive—no matter what the cost. Then Akos is thrust into Cyra's world, and the enmity between their countries and families seems insurmountable. Will they help each other to survive, or will they destroy one another?
Veronica Roth is the #1 New York Times best-selling author of the Divergent series (Divergent, Insurgent, Allegiant, and Four: A Divergent Collection), the Carve the Mark duology (Carve the Mark, the Fates Divide), The End and Other Beginnings collection of short fiction, and many short stories and essays. Her first book for adult audiences, Chosen Ones, is out now. She lives in Chicago.
Veronica Roth suffers from anxiety, like a lot of the authors on this list, and talks about it in interviews. A quote from one: "I've had an anxiety disorder my whole life, so I've been to therapy on and off throughout, before books and after books. I went back and tried to talk through some of the things I was feeling and experiencing, and it was helpful."
I’ve never read any of her books, not even the hugely famous Divergent trilogy, though they’ve been on my radar for years. I’d love to get into her books at some point, but it might take me a few years.
15. How to be Autistic by Charlotte Amelia Poe
📷An urgent, funny, shocking, and impassioned memoir by the winner of the Spectrum Art Prize 2018, How To Be Autistic by Charlotte Amelia Poe presents the rarely shown point of view of someone living with autism. Poe’s voice is confident, moving and often funny, as they reveal to us a very personal account of autism, mental illness, gender and sexual identity. As we follow Charlotte’s journey through school and college, we become as awestruck by their extraordinary passion for life as by the enormous privations that they must undergo to live it. From food and fandom to body modification and comic conventions, Charlotte’s experiences through the torments of schooldays and young adulthood leave us with a riot of conflicting emotions: horror, empathy, despair, laugh-out-loud amusement and, most of all, respect. For Charlotte, autism is a fundamental aspect of their identity and art. They address the reader in a voice that is direct, sharply clever and ironic. They witness their own behaviour with a wry humour as they sympathise with those who care for them, yet all the while challenging the neurotypical narratives of autism as something to be ‘fixed’. This is an exuberant, inspiring, life-changing insight into autism from a viewpoint almost entirely missing from public discussion. ‘I wanted to show the side of autism that you don’t find in books and on Facebook. My story is about survival, fear and, finally, hope. There will be parts that make you want to cover your eyes, but I beg you to read on, because if I can change just one person’s perceptions, if I can help one person with autism feel like they’re less alone, then this will all be worth it.’ Charlotte Amelia Poe is a self-taught artist and writer living in Lowestoft, Suffolk. They also work with video and won the inaugural Spectrum Art Prize with the film they submitted, 'How to Be Autistic’. Myriad published Charlotte's memoir, How to Be Autistic, in September 2019.
Another book I didn’t know about until researching for this post, but I really want to read it because I haven’t read many books about autism, and practically none of them were actually written by someone who actually is autistic. Charlotte uses they/them pronouns.
16. Ask me about my Uterus by Abby Norman
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For any woman who has experienced illness, chronic pain, or endometriosis comes an inspiring memoir advocating for recognition of women's health issues In the fall of 2010, Abby Norman's strong dancer's body dropped forty pounds and grey hairs began to sprout from her temples. She was repeatedly hospitalized in excruciating pain, but the doctors insisted it was a urinary tract infection and sent her home with antibiotics. Unable to get out of bed, much less attend class, Norman dropped out of college and embarked on what would become a years-long journey to discover what was wrong with her. It wasn't until she took matters into her own hands--securing a job in a hospital and educating herself over lunchtime reading in the medical library--that she found an accurate diagnosis of endometriosis. In Ask Me About My Uterus, Norman describes what it was like to have her pain dismissed, to be told it was all in her head, only to be taken seriously when she was accompanied by a boyfriend who confirmed that her sexual performance was, indeed, compromised. Putting her own trials into a broader historical, sociocultural, and political context, Norman shows that women's bodies have long been the battleground of a never-ending war for power, control, medical knowledge, and truth. It's time to refute the belief that being a woman is a pre-existing condition.
Abby Norman’s debut book, ASK ME ABOUT MY UTERUS: A Quest to Make Doctors Believe in Women’s Pain, was published by Bold Type Books (Hachette Book Group) in 2018, with advance praise from Gillian Anderson, Lindsey Fitzharris, Jenny Lawson, and Padma Lakshmi.
The book was praised by The New York Times Book Review, The Wall Street Journal, New York Magazine, The Washington Post, The Sunday Times, The Irish Times, Literary Review, The Times Literary Supplement, The New Republic, Book Riot, Toronto Star, ELLE, Health Magazine, Undark Magazine, BUST Magazine, Bitch Magazine, Ms. Magazine, BBC Radio 5, and other international media outlets.
​In 2019, the paperback edition was published in the U.S. and the Korean translation in Seoul (Momento Publishing/Duran Kim Agency).
​Her work has been featured in Harper’s, Medium, The Independent, Literary Hub, The Rumpus, Mental Floss, Atlas Obscura, and elsewhere. Interviews and profiles have been seen and heard, including NPR/WNYC, BBC, Anchor.fm, The New York Times, Playboy, Forbes, Glamour, Women’s Health, and Bitch Magazine.
Abby Norman suffers from endometriosis, which was a large part of why she wrote her book, and why she advocates so hard for fellow patients at conferences such as Stanford University’s Stanford Medicine X and the Endometriosis Foundation of America’s medical conference and Patient Day. She is
Abby has served on technical expert panels including the National Partnership for Women and Families’ CORE Network (Yale University), the American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG), the Centres for Medicare and Medicaid, The Society for Women’s Health Research (SWHR), and Health Affairs.
​In 2019, Abby contributed to a paper addressing research gaps and unmet needs in endometriosis published in the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology.
This book is definitely one I will be adding to my to be read list, as someone who (unfortunately) also has a uterus, it is important to be informed. And Abby sounds like such a badass who wrote a whole book about her chronic illness to help others with the same condition.
17. Stim: Autistic Anthology by Lizzie Huxley-Jones
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Around one in one hundred people in the UK are autistic, yet there remains a fundamental misunderstanding of what autism is. It is rare that autistic people get to share their own experiences, show how creative and talented and passionate they are, how different they are from media stereotypes. This insightful and eye-opening collection of essays, fiction and visual art showcases the immense talents of some of the UK's most exciting writers and artists - who just happen to be on the spectrum. Here they reclaim the power to speak for themselves and redefine what it means to be autistic. Stim invites the reader into the lives, experiences, minds of the eighteen contributors, and asks them to recognise the hurdles of being autistic in a non-autistic world and to uncover the empathy and understanding necessary to continue to champion brilliant yet unheard voices.
Lizzie (Hux) Huxley-Jones is an autistic author and editor based in London. They are the editor of Stim, an anthology of autistic authors and artists, which was published by Unbound in April 2020 to coincide with World Autism Awareness Week. They are also the author of the children’s biography Sir David Attenborough: A Life Story. They can be found editing at independent micropublisher 3 of Cups Press, and they also advise writers as a freelance sensitivity reader and consultant. In their past career lives, they have been a research diver, a children’s bookseller and digital communications specialist.
I wasn’t even aware that there was an anthology out there by an autistic author, about autism, but now that I do I need to read it.
18. Chimera by Jaecyn Bonê
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Creatures unlike you've imagined before! Welcome to a world where myths and legends collide to create a new breed of monster. Savage and soulful, these monstrosities combine to form the mighty Chimera. In this anthology, talented writers weave 10 tales of fantastical beasts. Featuring stories by: Matt Bliss Jaecyn Boné Alexis L. Carroll Chris Durston Dewi Hargreaves Stephen Howard Samuel Logan Vincent Metzo Braden Rohl Michelle Tang
Jaecyn is a queer, non-binary, disabled Asian-American writer and digital artist fascinated by faeries.
Most of their writing involves wlw romance and faery-inspired creatures. Their first novel, Farzana's Spite is a 10-year-old work in progress and the first novel in The Faerth series. Other works include The Killing Song (novel) and Colour Unknown (short), both of which are also part of the Faerth universe.
Jaecyn's art can be described as a neorealistic pop art style with cel shading. They began their digital art journey with a 5-year-old refurbished iPad using their finger as a stylus and immediately fell in love. They do digital download commissions as well as sell prints of their artwork.
Jaecyn is the Co-Editor in Chief of the Limeoncello Magazine, an online Own Voices literary magazine which debuted its first issue on March 21st, 2021.
When not writing, drawing, or chasing after their two children, they can be found either gardening or practicing their ukulele.
None of Jaecyn Boné’s books are published yet as they are still in the stage of querying, but they contributed to the above anthology, along with nine other authors. I had no idea that this anthology existed, and now I’ll be closely following this author to see when their books get published!
19. Forest of Souls by Lori M Lee
Sirscha Ashwyn comes from nothing, but she’s intent on becoming something. After years of training to become the queen’s next royal spy, her plans are derailed when shamans attack 📷and kill her best friend Saengo. And then Sirscha, somehow, restores Saengo to life. Unveiled as the first soul guide in living memory, Sirscha is summoned to the domain of the Spider King. For centuries, he has used his influence over the Dead Wood—an ancient forest possessed by souls—to enforce peace between the kingdoms. Now, with the trees growing wild and untamed, only a soul guide can restrain them. As war looms, Sirscha must master her newly awakened abilities before the trees shatter the brittle peace, or worse, claim Saengo, the friend she would die for.
Lori M. Lee is the author of speculative novels and short stories. Her books include PAHUA AND THE SOUL STEALER (Disney/Rick Riordan Presents), FOREST OF SOULS and the sequel BROKEN WEB (Page Street), and more. She’s also a contributor to the anthologies A THOUSAND BEGINNINGS AND ENDINGS and COLOR OUTSIDE THE LINES. She considers herself a unicorn fan, enjoys marathoning TV shows, and loves to write about magic, manipulation, and family.
Lori struggles with anxiety, and the common symptoms like fatigue but she doesn’t let this stop her writing amazing books. I read Forest of Souls earlier this year, and it was seriously one of the best books I’ve ever read. I loved the magic, the characters, the world building. Everything about it, including the plot twist ending that had me losing my mind at 2am, was just so unlike anything I had read in any other fantasy before.
20. A Song of Wraiths and Ruin by Roseanne A Brown
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For Malik, the Solstasia festival is a chance to escape his war-stricken home and start a new life with his sisters in the prosperous desert city of Ziran. But when a vengeful spirit abducts Malik’s younger sister, Nadia, as payment into the city, Malik strikes a fatal deal—kill Karina, Crown Princess of Ziran, for Nadia’s freedom. But Karina has deadly aspirations of her own. Her mother, the Sultana, has been assassinated; her court threatens mutiny; and Solstasia looms like a knife over her neck. Grief-stricken, Karina decides to resurrect her mother through ancient magic . . . requiring the beating heart of a king. And she knows just how to obtain one: by offering her hand in marriage to the victor of the Solstasia competition. When Malik rigs his way into the contest, they are set on a course to destroy each other. But as attraction flares between them and ancient evils stir, will they be able to see their tasks to the death?
Roseanne “Rosie” A. Brown was born in Kumasi, Ghana and immigrated to the wild jungles of central Maryland as a child. Writing was her first love, and she knew from a young age that she wanted to use the power of writing—creative and otherwise—to connect the different cultures she called home. She graduated from the University of Maryland with a Bachelor’s in Journalism and was also a teaching assistant for the school’s Jiménez-Porter Writers’ House program. Her journalistic work has been featured by Voice of America among other outlets.
On the publishing side of things, she has worked as an editorial intern at Entangled Publishing. Rosie was a 2017 Pitch Wars mentee and 2018 Pitch Wars mentor. Rosie currently lives outside Washington D.C., where in her free time she can usually be found wandering the woods, making memes, or thinking about Star Wars.
Roseanne is another author that struggles with anxiety and wrote one of her two main characters with generalised anxiety disorder (GAD), despite it being a fantasy. I don’t even think I can name a fantasy that had a character with anxiety represented so well. This was a book I read around the same time as Forest of Souls, and I loved it. The cover was beautiful, the characters were brilliant, and I just loved the world building, the magic, and the plot. It was just different to the usual fantasy books I read, and I enjoyed the variation so much I’ve had the sequel pre ordered almost a year in advance.
So, this was my 20 books by 20 chronically ill, disabled or neurodiverse authors list. Blurbs and synopsis were compiled between Goodreads and author websites, and bios were found either on Goodreads, author websites or on amazon author pages. All the information about their chronic illnesses, disabilities or neurodivergence was found online, where they had either explicitly said it or written about it, but if I have something wrong, please let me know so I can fix it!
If you have any other suggestions or know any other books and authors that should be on this list, please let me know and I’ll do my best to add it to the list as soon as possible.
Thanks for reading 😊
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hidekomoon · 3 years
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tagged by @bijespers (inaugurating your new url with this tag game lmao! thanks for tagging me <3)
nickname: my friends call me lussluss and it’s longer than my actual name
pronouns: she/her
star sign: aquarius
height: 1.68m (i think it’s like 5′6?)
time currently: 7:19pm
birthday: february 14
favorite groups/bands: paramore, florence + the machine, nova twins
favorite solo artist: rina sawayama, janelle monáe, the weeknd, dominic fike, NAO, mitski, little simz
song stuck in my head: i always have a song in my head, except when someone asks me apparently sjfhsk
last movie you watched: mean girls
last show you binged: the haunting of hill house
when you created your blog: december 2015
last thing i googled: grimes birth chart
other blogs: @gemini---moon (just for long astrology posts i don’t feel like reblogging on my main) and a very secret private venting blog
why i chose my url: i like the handmaiden. i like the moon
do you get asks: rarely but it’s always appreciated
how many people you are following: 541
average hours of sleep: 8-9 hours
lucky number: 9
instruments: nope
wearing: black and white flannel button down, purple cardigan with huge sleeves, blue skinny jeans
dream job: changes every two weeks but lately i’ve bee thinking editor/interior designer/seer
dream trip: anywhere different from here, the further the better
favorite food: yesterday we made pizzas and one of them had onions pineapple green pepper ham tomato sauce and cheese. it was awesome
favorite song: fireproof by mitski
top 3 fictional worlds to live in: uhhh six of crows so i’m a grisha with cool powers? then, any barbie fictional world because they’re so nice. and finally, the world of on a sunbeam (space!!!)
tagging @suffocateorletgo @hitmewithlghtning and anyone who wants to!
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bigyack-com · 5 years
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Unable to Retrieve Money, Cryptocurrency Investors Want Dead Executive Exhumed
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After Gerald W. Cotten died last year, his clients at the cryptocurrency exchange Quadriga CX found themselves unable to gain access to at least $250 million in their accounts. The company’s operations were encrypted, and he was the only person who knew the passwords needed to move the funds, the company said. Now, with law enforcement officials in two countries investigating potential wrongdoing at the firm, frustrated investors want definitive proof that Mr. Cotten is actually dead. Lawyers appointed by the Supreme Court of Nova Scotia, where Quadriga is based, to represent its users asked Canadian law enforcement officials in a letter on Friday to exhume his body and conduct an autopsy “to confirm both its identity and the cause of death.” They cited “the questionable circumstances surrounding Mr. Cotten’s death and the significant losses” suffered by his company’s investors, as well as “the need for certainty around the question of whether Mr. Cotten is in fact deceased.”And time is of the essence, they said. The lawyers requested that the exhumation and autopsy be completed “by spring of 2020, given decomposition concerns.”Asim Iqbal, one of the lawyers from the Toronto-based firm Miller Thomson, which is representing the investors, declined to comment on the request on Monday. Caroline Duval, a spokeswoman for the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, which received the letter, also declined to comment. She said an investigation into Quadriga was underway. Mr. Cotten, who was 30 at the time of his death, co-founded the company, whose online exchange enabled trades of Bitcoin and other types of cryptocurrency, in 2013. His death — and Quadriga’s subsequent inability to pay its investors — drew both outrage and suspicion soon after the fallout of his passing became clear. The firm announced his death on Jan. 14 in a Facebook post that said he had died more than a month earlier — on Dec. 9, 2018 — while traveling in India. The company said he died of complications from Crohn’s disease, an inflammatory bowel disease that is rarely fatal.Quadriga’s platform went offline shortly after his death was announced, on Jan. 28, meaning users could no longer access their accounts. That led investors to vent their frustrations on sites like Reddit and Twitter, where a theory soon spread that Mr. Cotten may have faked his own death as part of a scheme. Richard Niedermayer, a lawyer for Mr. Cotten’s widow, Jennifer Robertson, said in an email that she was “heartbroken to learn” of the request for his body to be exhumed. He said Mr. Cotten’s death “should not be in doubt.”Quadriga’s platform had 363,000 users when it went offline, 115,000 of whom had balances in their accounts, according to court documents. Those balances added up to about $180 million in cryptocurrency and $70 million in Canadian currency. The largest single account was valued at roughly $70 million.After Mr. Cotten died, Ms. Robertson, who was appointed a director of Quadriga, wrote in an affidavit that he had run the company from an encrypted laptop. She said Quadriga could not pay its investors because she did not know the password or recovery key to open the laptop or access the funds and could not find them written down anywhere “despite repeated and diligent searches.” She also said she hired an expert to search for the cryptocurrency in the company’s secure offline storage but that the search was unsuccessful.In February, the Supreme Court of Nova Scotia appointed the accounting firm Ernst & Young to examine the company’s finances and explore a possible sale. Mr. Niedermayer pointed to his client’s cooperation with that investigation in his email on Monday.“While Ms. Robertson has assisted the Quadriga Affected Users in the recovery of assets, and has cooperated fully with Ernst & Young’s investigation, it is not clear how the exhumation or an autopsy to confirm the cause of Gerry’s death from complications arising from his Crohn’s disease would assist the asset recovery process further,” he wrote.In early June, the F.B.I. said it was conducting an investigation into the company in conjunction with the Internal Revenue Service, the United States Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia and the Justice Department’s Computer Crime and Intellectual Property Section.A report from Ernst & Young, filed before the court shortly after the F.B.I. announcement, raised further alarm. It said Quadriga did not appear to possess any “basic corporate records,” including accounting records. More troubling, it said the firm had transferred “significant volumes of Cryptocurrency” into personal accounts held by Mr. Cotten on other online exchanges. It also documented the transfer of “substantial funds” to him personally that had no clear business justification. Many of these improprieties appeared to have occurred because Mr. Cotten consolidated authority in himself, the auditors said. With him gone, the full story of Quadriga was difficult to understand.“It appears that Quadriga failed to ensure adequate safeguard procedures were in place to transfer passwords and other critical operating data to other Quadriga representatives should a critical event materialize, (such as the death of key management personnel)” they wrote. Read the full article
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itsworn · 6 years
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12 Design Concepts for a New Generation of Pro Street!
The Pro Street build style has been a staple of Car Craft readers ever since it blew up in the early 1980s. It emerged as hot rodders began emulating the look of NHRA Pro Stock, which used production-based bodies with back-halved rear suspensions and narrowed rearends. Big engines, often with power-adders and trick induction, were paired with “pizza-cutter” skinnies up front and huge slicks in the rear—and for the first time, those big meats were enclosed within the rear bodywork for a sleeker appearance and better aero.
Pro Street has always been about bringing the look and performance of the dragstrip to the street; in other words, going fast in a straight line. Turning is something you do at the end of the track or in to the burger joint. Comfort in a Pro Street car has also traditionally been sacrificed for performance, with race-car interiors and few baubles. With the advent of the Pro Touring style in the 1990s, many enthusiasts flocked to its superior handling, braking, and driveability. With turning in vogue for decades, Pro Street seemed passé. Or so they thought!
Of course, everything old eventually becomes new again, and the Pro Street scene is seeing a revival of sorts with more drag-inspired builds stuffing mile-wide meats in the back. If you’d like to be on the leading edge of the next big thing, we thought we’d provide a little inspiration. A while back, we asked automotive illustrator Ben Hermance to come up with some designs for modern Pro Street builds, and what Hermance delivered makes us want to commission a few of these ourselves. These cars definitely look like a cross between old-school Pro Street with the Pro Touring look that is so hot right now. Gone is the radical rake in the chassis; these cars sit low and menacing. Modern touches like flush window glass and sleek lines certainly help these cars stand out from any Pro Street you’ve ever seen.
With a nod to better braking and handling, the useless Pro Street skinnies up front have been replaced with stickier front rubber and bigger brakes, although Hermance stops short of going to a full-blown wide tire in the front in order to preserve the staggered Pro Street look. And although the renderings don’t show it, the race-car vibe inside, in most cases, is replaced with more comfort and entertainment options. We hope you’ll be inspired to build one!
1961 Pontiac Catalina
Let’s start with the car that’s least likely to be built in the Pro Street mold. Illustrator Ben Hermance explains that he liked the challenge of this car and the way it turned out. “If you are going to do Pro Street, there are some vehicles that look like they are going to resist a little bit, so you have to finesse them more,” he says. “That bubble-top–style car is usually used as customs or street machine-type cars, not Pro Street. So to make it work, I had to change the stance, and I increased the wheel diameter so you don’t have those big, heavy tires. That’s a little bit like having a flamingo upper body and a hippo lower body, it just kind of looked out of proportion. But I like the final result. It’s still a little bit unusual for a Pro Street car, but I think it works.”
1972 GTX
The Plymouth GTX and Road Runner body style is normally associated with 1970s NASCAR racing and is not usually built as a Pro Streeter. But this car can change that, because few automotive shapes were as alluring as Chrysler’s early 1970s “fuselage” styling. Hermance accentuated the low, bulging, aero-inspired shape with Plymouth’s most outrageous color ever: C7 “In Violet” purple. Note how he stretched the C-pillar and the quarter-panels wider to improve the flow over the greenhouse and beefed up the rear tires.
1967 Chevelle
The Chevelle is probably the car here that will be easiest to build. Hermance says he imagined this as a skunkworks factory race car, so it retains much of the factory sheetmetal unmolested. Underneath that big hood bulge, we can easily imagine a big-inch big-block with a single-plane intake and a Dominator carb bolted up top. Rendered with a satin bronze sheen, this illustration reflects recent trends in vehicle wraps and refinishing.
Buick GNX
Hermance might be committing heresy by penning a Buick GNX in anything other than solid black, but we think it works. “I’ve always loved the Grand Nationals,” he says. “They are already evil-looking, and not much needs to be done to them. Everybody has seen a G-body on a dragstrip, so I felt it needed to do something to make it stand out, so I did make a few aerodynamic touches. Really just adding vents to the front end to get more airflow.”
Hermance also lengthened the hood bulge over the stock model. At its best, the GNX’s turbo V6 made 245 hp—not exactly good enough to keep up these days—so the extra room under the hood probably makes room for an upgraded LS (with turbos, of course!).
1974 Laguna S3
If you want to be a real bad hombre, figure out how to keep the Laguna’s swivel bucket seats. But otherwise, do exactly this: “This is the opposite end of the spectrum from the understated Chevelle,” Hermance says. “This build will require a lot of fabrication work. The first thing I did was ditch the bumpers, which we all know in the 1970s were the worst ever. Those bumpers were just gigantic and there was no styling involved. They were just these big chrome bricks. Then, with the rest of the design, I tried to let the good parts of the vehicle dictate where I was going to go with the parts that needed some help. And the end result might be a bit of overkill, but I said, ‘You know what? Nobody’s ever really done a Pro Street Laguna, so let’s try something different. Let’s build a badass car.’”
1969 Camaro
Although it may not be obvious at first glance, there’s actually a lot going on here. There are so many first-gen Camaros out there, to come up with something different, Hermance drew the ’69 as a Nostalgia Funny Car. First, the wheelbase has been stretched by lengthening the front fenders. The iconic Camaro nose has also been raked back. He’s given the car a Lexan windshield (notice the fasteners around the edge of the windshield), and you can even see the rollcage through the windows. The hoodscoop has hints of a Corvette Stingray, and dog-dish hubcaps add a bit of no-frills flair that you couldn’t get with a set of modern wheels.
Ford Falcon
Here’s another car that is rarely seen in Pro Street trim, and that engine makes a pretty obvious statement! Another big statement piece on this car is the greenhouse. “I’ve never really loved the roof line on a lot of these smaller Fords and Chevys from this era,” Hermance explains. “It’s the same thing with the Nova’s. I just thought it was too abrupt. So I thought, This Falcon is roughly the same size as the Mustangs, so what would it look like if you took the roof off of a fastback Mustang and mated it to the body of a Falcon?
“So this was just an experiment to see how that would look, and I think it looks pretty nice. With that big blower sticking out of the hood, this little car should go like a bat out of hell, and I think the look matches the speed.”
1969 Dodge Charger
Hermance admits that he barely touched the body on this 1969 Charger, other than to open up the rear fenders to fit the gigantic rear tires. He says the Coke-bottle silhouette is such a perfect design, there’s really not much to be done other than accentuate it with that green-on-black paint scheme and tuck in the bumpers. Oh, and a giant blower and dual four-barrel carbs help get the point across, too.
1970 Mustang
Here’s another where the original designers got the body just about perfect. Everybody loves the 1970 Mustang fastback, so once again, Hermance simply tried to accentuate those fantastic lines with an aggressive paint job in black, blue, and silver. He did draw in a functioning shaker hoodscoop modeled on the famous Boss design, and LEDs in place of the original headlamps provide an ethereal glow.
1968 GTO
Earlier, Hermance talked about having to work hard to make the Pontiac Catalina work as a Pro Street design. The 1968 GTO is the other side of the coin. “When you are doing something that is a little bit more of a rounded body like the GTO, that body lends itself really well to the Pro Street style,” he says. “It is more rounded. It has hips and curves, so it allows the big rear tires to fit in there naturally. Plus, it is already fast-looking.”
1970 Oldsmobile
Like the GTO, which is also a GM intermediate A-body, the Oldsmobile Cutlass 4-4-2 simply works as a Pro Street car. Tuck the bumpers, paint it a great shade of gold (what else for an Olds?), and drop in an old-school, big-inch, blown V8 and you’re ready to go.
1970 Ford Torino
“This design I really love. My intention with this one is to build an absolute rocket ship. A high-end race car,” Hermance says. “If there is a future for Pro Street styling, this is my candidate for what it should look like. I tried to incorporate what we have now in all the vehicles you see that have aerodynamic advantages. This has got all kinds of aero goodies all over it. Brake cooling, venting for heat extractors, a wing that can articulate to take advantage of aerodynamics, all that stuff.” This would be a more difficult build because practically nothing has been left stock, but boy, would we love to see this one in real life!
The post 12 Design Concepts for a New Generation of Pro Street! appeared first on Hot Rod Network.
from Hot Rod Network https://www.hotrod.com/articles/12-design-concepts-for-new-generation-of-pro-street/ via IFTTT
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fastmusclecar123 · 7 years
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New Post has been published on http://fastmusclecar.com/best-muscle-cars/find-day-1967-chevrolet-nova-ss-prostreet/
Find Of The Day: 1967 Chevrolet Nova SS ProStreet
By David Ashton
Engine: 406 Fuel Injected Supercharged Transmission: 5 Speed Lenco Mileage: 150 Exterior Color: Agent Orange Price: $125,000.00
BUY NOW ON EBAY.
Most daily finds on the site are project muscle cars or rare high end muscle car, but sometimes it good to feature customized pro Street, built from the ground up. Today this is in the form of a 1967 Chevrolet Nova SS ProStreet an incredible looking Agent Orange.
If nothing else, this is a great example of why classic muscle cars turned into custom vehicles are some of the best looking in the world. this build apparently cost over 250,000 with a paint and artwork alone costing $40,000.
The Nova has a 900HP fuel injected Chevy 406 small block with a 871 B&M Blower, 5 speed street version Lenco transmission and 16 fuel injectors. In the back there is a Mark Williams Pro 9 aluminum 9″ rear with 4.11 gears, Wilwood brakes all round, Budnik wheels with Hoosier street slicks and a NASCAR aluminized oval exhaust out back.
There’s tons of customization on this ride, such as the shaved door handles and removed side vent windows, along with the fantastic looking interior.
This right may not come cheap hundred $25,000, but it’s probably one of the best looking Novas I have ever seen. Check it out from the link below.
BUY NOW ON EBAY.
For all muscle car parts – http://fastmusclecar.com/muscle-car-parts/
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thechaoticfanartist · 8 months
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> Has the most medical knowledge out of the contacts listed
> Has a literal lifetime experience talking with doctors
> Knows a lot more medical terms than most people
> Hospital refuses to talk to me about medical information
> I'm the only "girl" listed in the contacts
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itsworn · 6 years
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Check Out These 11-Second Muscle Cars at the 2018 Pure Stock Drags
It has been 24 years since Dan Jensen, Dennis Jensen, Lyndon Hughes, and a few other loyalists banded together to pull vintage muscle cars off the show field and shove them down the dragstrip. The Pure Stock Muscle Car Drag Race quickly grew into a must-attend event for owners and enthusiasts across the U.S. and Canada, a throwback kaleidoscope of color, horsepower, and tire smoke.
“The goal from the very beginning was to give owners a place to enjoy their cars the way they were always intended,” says Dan Jensen, who also notes his trio gets about four hours of sleep for the entire month of September. They and a few volunteers organize and stage the event at Mid-Michigan Motorplex, a rural dragstrip in, yes, the middle of Michigan.
The format for the event is simple and straightforward. After a day of qualifying runs, Jensen and his crew pair up the competitors by the quickest e.t.’s, followed the next day by three-race heads-up shootouts. The best two out of three wins.
“The cars are as evenly matched as we can make them for heads-up racing,” says Jensen. “It makes for some great matchups that often come down to a hundredth or thousandth at the finish line.”
The numbers-based pairings for the 2018 event produced a first: twin brothers competing against each other. They were John and James Kryta, the founders of restoration parts supplier Inline Tube. John ran a GTO and James a 4-4-2. Before the shootouts there was plenty of good-natured sibling rivalry in their side-by-side pit stalls.
“Whatever the outcome, he cheated,” joked James.
“And I’ll be lodging a formal complaint if he wins,” quipped John.
For the record, James took the series win, and the brothers are still on speaking terms.
With Scott Tiemann at the wheel, Rick Mahoney’s 1968 Hemi/four-speed Super Bee, running 4.56 gears, continues to be one of the quickest at the Pure Stock Drags. He had the quickest qualifying time, at 11.565, and kept ahead of perennial Pure Stock racer Jimmy Johnston’s 427 Corvette in the shootout, despite Johnston’s blistering 122-mph trap speeds.
Event rules are pretty simple. Participant cars must have been originally offered with a 12-month/12,000-mile warranty (to weed out the factory race cars). They must also have been equipped with at least a single four-barrel carb, dual exhaust, and other factory performance components.
There is some flexibility with the engine specs to accommodate rebuilds, such as a 1.5-point allowance for compression, but the spirit of factory-stock performance trumps all. Ringer cars are politely shown the exit, while sandbaggers who amazingly run three-tenths and/or 3 mph or quicker in the shootout than they did in qualifying are also disqualified.
The cars must also run on tires no more than one size larger than stock, with 60-series rubber being the widest. And believe us, those repro bias-ply tires hook amazingly well.
We’ve seen Bob Witt in his A-paint-scheme AMC SC/Rambler and Jim Bowman in his real-deal 1969 A12 440+6/four-speed Super Bee both run in the 12s previously, but they were both logging bottom 13s this year. Bowman’s Mopar edged the AMC in the shootout.
The 2018 event was the first that included a wider range of eligible cars, which expanded the model-year cutoff from 1974 to 1979, provided they adhere to the general rules, including four-barrel carburetion. That turns away two-barrel-fed cars such as Cobra IIs and Volare Road Runners, but welcomes the second-gen Trans Ams and even the early turbo V-6 Buicks. In fact, Starc Traxler ran his 1979 Century Turbo Coupe at Mid-Michigan, throwing down the gauntlet for other late-1970s performers.
“Performance is relative, and expanding the model years allows more owners to participate,” explains Jensen. “Even if you’re not running a Max Wedge or Super Cobra Jet, the qualifying times will pair you with another car of comparable performance.”
There were about 50 shootout matchups for the 2018 event, with the quickest pairing between veteran participants Scott Tiemann and Jim Johnston. Tiemann piloted Rick Mahoney’s 1968 Hemi Super Bee, running as quick as 11.565, against Johnston’s L88 427 Corvette and its best 11.586 run. Those cars put on a hell of a show.
Canadian competitor Owen Simpson’s small-block-powered Yenko Deuce is a big-block slayer, running low 12s to the surprise and delight of those who watch the four-speed/4.56-geared featherweight pick up and fly down the 1,320. But in the shootout, he could not get around the oh-so-quicker 1969 440 Road Runner of Mike Marple.
As always, the trophy for a shootout win was the satisfaction of conquering a Brand X rival, while the fun and camaraderie of a weekend of gear-banging with dozens of other muscle cars was its own reward, regardless of the outcome. Go to psmcdr.com for all the rules and details on the next event.
Kevin Ross ran his 1970 455 GTO in the mid-13s and was paired against Chris Jones’ 1970 Torino Cobra in the shootout. Despite losing the first round, Ross came back to eclipse the Cobra in rounds two and three for the shootout victory.
Blue Oval muscle is somewhat rare at the Pure Stock Drags, but Curt Alspaugh’s 4.10-geared, 351-powered 1969 Cougar Eliminator ran hard against Devin Conlee’s 1969 Hurst/Olds. They ran high 14s in the shootout, and the win went to Conlee.
The big-block Buicks are always good for a show, and the tire-lifting launch from Kent Gardner’s 1971 GS (also seen in the story’s opening photos) is a perfect example. He runs the car hard, often producing sub-2-second short times on the bias-plies, and charges into the 12s. He faced off against fellow Buick pilot Jeremy McNichol, whose 1970 GS-455 was a couple hundredths quicker. Gardner treed him in the shootout and cut quicker short times, helping him trip the win light in front of McNichol’s quicker e.t.’s.
Joe Cass brought his 440-powered 1971 Charger R/T up from South Bend, Indiana, to compete and went back to the Hoosier State with a shootout win, driving around Carl Straub’s 440 Challenger. Both were automatics, running in the low 14s.
A sentimental favorite at the event, which occurred the week Burt Reynolds died, was Paul and Heather Panczuk’s exquisite Bandit Trans Am. The “6.6 Litre” designation on the shaker scoop denotes the standard 180hp Pontiac 400; “T/A 6.6” that year denoted the optional 200hp engine. With Heather behind the wheel, it ran mid 15s and looked great doing so, even if the runs didn’t include mowing down mailboxes and follow-up car chases.
Dan Kruger’s 1972 340-powered Dodge Demon was a new competitor at the race. Unfortunately, his shootout partner couldn’t make it to the line on race day, handing him a bye win. The well-tuned small-block Mopar ran as quick as 12.396 in qualifying.
Talk about sibling rivalry. John Kryta squared off in his 1969 GTO against twin brother James and his 1972 4-4-2. Despite running as quick as 12.104 in qualifying, the Goat fell to the Olds, which took the first two of three races.
Jim Keyes was the third-quickest qualifier at the race, with an 11.680 e.t. in his Hemi-powered/automatic-backed 1967 Plymouth GTX. It hooked, too, with sub-1.9-second short times, which helped out-muscle Tim Clary’s Chevelle SS396 in the shootout.
One of the new, “later-model” entries this year was Starc Traxler’s rare 1979 Buick Century Turbo Coupe. With a qualifying time of 16.026, it wasn’t the quickest car at the race, but it added diversity and a new generation of cars to the mix. We hope to see more of these “newer” cars at the next race.
Steve Johns’ 1969 Firebird Comanche is an original, Ram Air III dealer special from Grant Hamilton Pontiac in Montreal, Quebec. In addition to the high-performance powerplant, the dealer replaced the 400 badges with Comanche badges, added white accent trim to the front fender vents and taillight panel, chromed the hood vents, and added hoodpins and Marchal driving lights, among other items. It ran hard, too, posting a best 13.901 e.t.
Chris Jones’ 429 SCJ Torino Cobra, complete with 4.30 gears, a four-speed, and ram air, ran strong 13.6s all weekend, but could not get past Kevin Ross’ 455 GTO in the shootout.
It was H/O versus H/O in this matchup of 1968 and 1969 Hurst/Olds, a matchup that neatly coincided with the 50th anniversary of the cars’ introduction. Joe Zielinski’s silver 1968 Hurst raced against Rusty Small’s white 1969 model. Both 455-powered cars ran high 13s, but it was Zielinski who claimed the shootout crown.
Bob Telep was on his game, driving his 1969 Camaro SS396 to the shootout win over George Krem’s surprisingly quick Studebaker Challenger. They were 12-second cars, with Telep running as quick as 12.591.
Tyler Mesman ran his 1972 Trans Am deep into the 12s, with hard launches and 1.9-second 60-foot times. But it wasn’t enough to overcome Victoria Waligoria and her hard-charging big-block Camaro in the shootout.
Big-block A-Bodies square off: Steve Arp’s LS6 Chevelle and Jim Robertson’s 455 Buick GS ran high 12s, but it was the Buick that edged the Bowtie in the shootout, including a red light for Arp in the third round.
With a comparatively low curb weight and the 375hp 396 under the hood, Jeff Ancil’s 1969 Nova SS epitomized the muscle car ethos. Its low-13-second runs proved too much for Eddie George’s Hemi Challenger in the shootout.
Luke Krooswyck put up a valiant effort in his 1970 ’Cuda 440+6, qualifying with a 13.810 e.t., but it wasn’t enough to stave off Dick Cash’s 429 Torino Cobra, which edged the Mopar in the shootout.
A strong Poncho versus Mopar shootout developed with Ted Lewis and his 1969 GTO and Sharon Fowler driving a 440-powered 1970 Challenger. They were mid-14-second cars, with Lewis heading home with the win.
Joe Pinsoneault qualified at 13.587 in his 1970 AMX against the 1970 GSX of Roberta Vasilow, which qualified at 13.564. The 390-powered AMC just couldn’t squeak around the 455 Buick, however, but it was fun watching him try.
Joe Pinsoneault qualified at 13.587 in his 1970 AMX against the 1970 GSX of Roberta Vasilow, which qualified at 13.564. The 390-powered AMC just couldn’t squeak around the 455 Buick, however, but it was fun watching him try.
The post Check Out These 11-Second Muscle Cars at the 2018 Pure Stock Drags appeared first on Hot Rod Network.
from Hot Rod Network https://www.hotrod.com/articles/11-second-muscle-cars-2018-pure-stock-drags/ via IFTTT
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fastmusclecar123 · 7 years
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New Post has been published on http://fastmusclecar.com/best-muscle-cars/find-day-1967-chevrolet-nova-ss-prostreet/
Find Of The Day: 1967 Chevrolet Nova SS ProStreet
By David Ashton
Engine: 406 Fuel Injected Supercharged Transmission: 5 Speed Lenco Mileage: 150 Exterior Color: Agent Orange Price: $125,000.00
BUY NOW ON EBAY.
Most daily finds on the site are project muscle cars or rare high end muscle car, but sometimes it good to feature customized pro Street, built from the ground up. Today this is in the form of a 1967 Chevrolet Nova SS ProStreet an incredible looking Agent Orange.
If nothing else, this is a great example of why classic muscle cars turned into custom vehicles are some of the best looking in the world. this build apparently cost over 250,000 with a paint and artwork alone costing $40,000.
The Nova has a 900HP fuel injected Chevy 406 small block with a 871 B&M Blower, 5 speed street version Lenco transmission and 16 fuel injectors. In the back there is a Mark Williams Pro 9 aluminum 9″ rear with 4.11 gears, Wilwood brakes all round, Budnik wheels with Hoosier street slicks and a NASCAR aluminized oval exhaust out back.
There’s tons of customization on this ride, such as the shaved door handles and removed side vent windows, along with the fantastic looking interior.
This right may not come cheap hundred $25,000, but it’s probably one of the best looking Novas I have ever seen. Check it out from the link below.
BUY NOW ON EBAY.
For all muscle car parts – http://fastmusclecar.com/muscle-car-parts/
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fastmusclecar123 · 7 years
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New Post has been published on http://fastmusclecar.com/best-muscle-cars/find-day-1967-chevrolet-nova-ss-prostreet/
Find Of The Day: 1967 Chevrolet Nova SS ProStreet
By David Ashton
Engine: 406 Fuel Injected Supercharged Transmission: 5 Speed Lenco Mileage: 150 Exterior Color: Agent Orange Price: $125,000.00
BUY NOW ON EBAY.
Most daily finds on the site are project muscle cars or rare high end muscle car, but sometimes it good to feature customized pro Street, built from the ground up. Today this is in the form of a 1967 Chevrolet Nova SS ProStreet an incredible looking Agent Orange.
If nothing else, this is a great example of why classic muscle cars turned into custom vehicles are some of the best looking in the world. this build apparently cost over 250,000 with a paint and artwork alone costing $40,000.
The Nova has a 900HP fuel injected Chevy 406 small block with a 871 B&M Blower, 5 speed street version Lenco transmission and 16 fuel injectors. In the back there is a Mark Williams Pro 9 aluminum 9″ rear with 4.11 gears, Wilwood brakes all round, Budnik wheels with Hoosier street slicks and a NASCAR aluminized oval exhaust out back.
There’s tons of customization on this ride, such as the shaved door handles and removed side vent windows, along with the fantastic looking interior.
This right may not come cheap hundred $25,000, but it’s probably one of the best looking Novas I have ever seen. Check it out from the link below.
BUY NOW ON EBAY.
For all muscle car parts – http://fastmusclecar.com/muscle-car-parts/
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itsworn · 8 years
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The 1948 Ford Sedan That Brought A Sports Car Buff Back Into Street Rodding
After 36 years as a diehard Austin-Healey enthusiast, Jerry Wall has returned to the street rod scene, behind the wheel of this 1948 Ford Fordor. Jerry was a street rodder in high school in the ’50s when he drove a $350 1940 Ford DeLuxe business coupe.
After selling his last Austin-Healey in 2014, he decided to jump back into the street rod hobby, picking up where he’d left off with another 1940 Ford. Unfortunately, prices had risen since his high school days. He shifted his focus and found a Hemmings ad for this 1948 Ford Super DeLuxe Fordor sedan. The car was a finished street rod with fewer than 1,500 miles on the odometer since its rebuild and was, in Jerry’s words, “absolutely gorgeous.” He says it was the beautiful Aztec Green pearl metallic base/clear paintjob that sealed the deal. The Fordor was shipped from New Hampshire to Jerry’s home in Rowlett, Texas, and came with a complete record of all of the modifications done during the buildup 16 years earlier.
The car is powered by a 350 Chevy. Jerry made a few aesthetic changes to the engine, including finned aluminum valve covers and a matching air cleaner. The alternator, A/C compressor, and brackets have been chromed. The engine is tied to a TH350 transmission.
On the outside, Jerry added parking lights, foglights, flashers, and bumper guards. A pair of 1950 Pontiac taillights with Blue Dots enhance the existing relocated lights. A backup camera on the rear license plate frame improves visibility. The frontend retains the transverse leafs, but the front brakes were converted to discs. A Nova rearend is suspended by parallel leaf springs.
Late-model power bucket seats are upholstered in leather. The power window switches are located in the door panels. A Sun tach mounted on top of the dash supplements Classic Instruments gauges. Air conditioning controls and vents were installed underneath. A banjo wheel tops the tilt column.
Jerry has been enjoying his return to street rodding. He says that he and his rare 1948 Fordor, which he calls “The Hornet,” are a match made in heaven.
Classic Instruments Tech Tip
How to test a three-wire pulse signal generator
Three-wire signal generators produce a square wave–type signal. The pulses alternate between the sensor’s power (usually 12 V) and ground (0 V). The faster you travel, the higher the frequency of your signal. To test the signal without having an instrument to measure frequency, you can use a DC voltmeter. Leave the sensor connected to power and ground but disconnect the signal wire. Measure DC voltage between the signal wire and ground. You should see either 12 V (or whatever voltage you have connected to the power wire of the sensor) or 0 V when you are not moving. When you move (spin the shaft of the sensor using a drill to make it easier to test), the voltage of the signal should change to 6 V (or half the voltage you have on the sensor power wire). The voltage will NOT change when you are moving, but when you stop moving (or spinning) the voltage should return to 12 V or 0 V. If the voltage doesn’t change when you are moving, there is a problem with the sensor.
The post The 1948 Ford Sedan That Brought A Sports Car Buff Back Into Street Rodding appeared first on Hot Rod Network.
from Hot Rod Network http://www.hotrod.com/articles/1948-ford-sedan-brought-sports-car-buff-back-street-rodding/ via IFTTT
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