The King of Flowers, 14th century Tibet. One of the great saints of Vajrayana.
sheepfilms
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#extradirty
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One Nice Bug Per Day
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@adamantine
The King of Flowers, 14th century Tibet. One of the great saints of Vajrayana.

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guy currently hurtling toward a migraine at a rate that would impress most astrophysicists: i wonder wgat is happening in my beautiful telephone
A scrapped illustration for Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s “The Yellow Wallpaper” (1892).
Political Meeting, Yozgat, Turkey, 1990, Nikos Economopoulos

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Reviewers on Reviewing 2! Roseanna Pendlebury asks Vajra Chandrasekera, Arturo Serrano, Jacqueline Nyathi, and Nial Harrison: what makes a review good as a piece of literature itself?
In 2025, ARB contributor Roseanna Pendlebury arranged a series of roundtables with SFF reviewers, originally intended for Nerds of a Feather
In which I think too much about reading and what it means to read, and possibly also to write, and put far too many metaphors into it
hello! ik your post about loving ambiguity in writing is quite old now, so i apologise if you’ve been asked this before, but i was wondering if you have any novel recommendations that follow what you mean? no pressure to answer ofc!! thank you!!
i actually don't remember if i've been asked this before. most of the responses to that post have been people who were more interested in giving me their recs tbh, so thank you for asking!
here's a quick list of ten off the top of my head to get you started:
The Buried Giant by Kazuo Ishiguro is a top contender for my favorite novel. when the dev patel green knight movie came out i would not stop telling everyone who said a word to me about it to read this book asap. it's a flawless example of a novel where you feel in your gut what's going to happen even as you can't really be sure what's happening at all. huge chunks of it are told from the point of view of a character who doesn't even share a language with most of the other characters. i recommend Ishiguro in general for a lot of reasons (and many people have rightfully cited him in the notes of my post about loving ambiguity) but The Buried Giant in particular is my darling when it comes to masterful ambiguity.
The Satanic Verses by Salman Rushdie is actually the book that prompted the original exchange from that post. a classmate of mine in grad school was having a hard time with it when we read it for a postcolonial lit course, meanwhile i was having the time of my life just hanging on tight watching it all come together.
Beloved by Toni Morrison was an honor and a privilege to both read and get to teach to a college class. I had my students do a compare-contrast activity with one particular chapter of Beloved and a poem from Zong! by M. NourbeSe Philip, which i also recommend, and looking back on that is one of the biggest things that makes me miss teaching.
The Lathe of Heaven by Ursula K. Le Guin is less "ambiguous" per se than some of the others listed here, but it has exactly the vibe i look for in a book that grabs me by the throat chokehold style and drags me through a story where the pov character frequently doesn't have a clue what's going on.
The Tiger's Wife by Téa Obreht is a book i just read last year that knocked my socks off. that novel feels absolutely no obligation to tell you which parts of the story are "true" or "real"; that's not the point.
Devil House by John Darnielle pulls a similar trick but almost in reverse. what did or didn't "really" happen is exactly the point (though also hard to pin down); but why does it matter? and what is put at risk in the pursuit of a True Story?
The Spear Cuts Through Water by Simon Jimenez is also fairly unambiguous about the events of what might be considered the "main" story, but the nonlinear, second person frame narrative is where the book really shines and that part leaves some delicious things unsaid.
Moby-Dick by Herman Melville. i'm sorry but i am the moby dick friend. i'm the mutual who's gonna tell you to read moby dick. you have to read moby dick.
What It Means When a Man Falls From the Sky by Lesley Nneka Arimah is a collection of short stories, but a lot of them live in a really gorgeous and unsettling ambiguous space, especially the eponymous one; the short story "What It Means When a Man Falls From the Sky" is high on my list of favorite short stories ever.
Kraken by China Miéville. i spent so fucking much of this book with no damn clue what was going on. by the end you're like OF COURSE but getting there is bonkers.
this post has gotten a few notes lately, so I want to do my due diligence and rec the top ambiguity novel I've read since I originally posted this:
Rakesfall by Vajra Chandrasekera is literally that good. it's baffling and beautiful and trans and after I read it I had to take a james joyce off-ramp before I could remember how to read a normal novel that doesn't unspool you with every sentence.
Kat Lyons (American, 1991) - The Expulsion (2026)
spouse sent me this excellent https://marshdeer.github.io/xkcd2501-generator/ and now I can't stop:
Me chatting about books with my friends like:
@wizardsvslesbians
Ponytail: monstrous children of narcissistic parents are second nature to us wizards vs lesbians fans, so it's easy to forget that the average person only knows Orion Lake, Gideon Nav, and Marceline."
cueball: "and Fetter, of course."
Ponytail: "Of course."
Referenced works under the cut:

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Porte de la Cathédrale Saint-Michel et Gudule à BRUXELLES
Pantone ‘Stained Glass’ door by Italian designer Armin Blasbichler.
it's SO fucked that I can't manifest amvable images for a non-visual medium. if i had the ability to make a saint of bright doors vid to jaipur by the mountain goats it would be over for everyone
earlier today i told an acquaintance in passing that i'll often be in the middle of a novel and think "man i wish this shit were more ambiguous" and had to reiterate twice that i wasn't being sarcastic before they believed me, so this post is to say: i love when writers don't bother to explain everything, i love when stories end uncertain and unsettling, i love being required to think as a reader, i love when stuff makes no damn sense, no i'm not kidding
everyone go read Rakesfall by Vajra Chandrasekera and if you don't love it you're not allowed to reblog this post

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My guest-edited issues of the Deadlands are out and they are beautiful
I was the guest fiction editor for the two most recent issues of The Deadlands, and here is the result! Hope you enjoy the stories, and please do follow the authors and support this wonderful magazine if you can.
These awesome matching covers are by @carlydraws!
Some of the faggots are trashy. In fact, with the inspiration of the outcast women, the faggots developed "trashy" into a high form of disruptive behavior. When the men talk about the freedom of work and dirtiness of sex, the trashiest faggots move fast to the nearest public place where danger from the men is always present and proceed to spend endless amounts of time having glorious sexual pleasure. The men will do anything as long as they don't enjoy it or talk about it. The trashiest faggots love who they do and talk of it often.
from The Faggots and Their Friends Between Revolutions (1977) by Larry Mitchell