âHeâs so damned nice and heâs so awful. Heâs my sort of thing.â
â Ernest Hemingway, from The Sun Also Rises (via bebemoon)
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@fatedbravery
âHeâs so damned nice and heâs so awful. Heâs my sort of thing.â
â Ernest Hemingway, from The Sun Also Rises (via bebemoon)

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âPoetry is a political action undertaken for the sake of information, the faith, the exorcism, and the lyrical invention, that telling the truth makes possible. Poetry means taking control of the language of your life. Good poems can interdict a suicide, rescue a love affair, and build a revolution in which speaking and listening to somebody becomes the first and last purpose of every social encounter.â
â June Jordan, from the introduction to Poetry for the People: A Revolutionary Blueprint
Biogeodes, also known as Flesh Stones, are organisms that live encased in a rock deep underground. It is thought that they survive for millennia in this stable environment.
Breaking the rock and exposing the creature to outside air invariably kills it, making its study difficult.
Inconclusive genetic studies have suggested biogeodes descend from an ancient clade of sea urchins.
How they arrived underground, how they manage to survive and their method of reproduction remain a complete mystery to science.
Anne Sexton, in a letter to Anne Clarke dated 3 July 1964
âI donât know if I believe in rage as something always acting in opposition to tenderness. I believe, more often, in the two as braided together. Two elements of trying to survive in a world once you have an understanding of that worldâs capacity for violence.â
â Hanif Abdurraqib, from âBoard Up the Doors, Tear Down the Walls,â in A Little Devil in America

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Fady Joudah, on his new poetry collection "[ ... ]", in an interview with Aria Aber for The Yale Review [ID'd]
Harder than you'd think, this letting go of language. How to understand the body without wrist or ribcage.
Kristy Bowen, from The Fever Almanac: âAnna Burns the Dictionaryâ
In the first poetry workshop I ever took my professor said we could write about anything we wanted except for two things: our grandparents and our dogs. She said she had never read a good poem about a dog. I could only remember ever reading one poem about a dog before that pointâa poem by Pablo Neruda, from which I only remembered the lines âWe walked together on the shores of the sea/ In the lonely winter of Isla Negra.â Four years later I wrote a poem about how when I was a little girl I secretly baptized my dog in the bathtub because I was afraid she wouldnât get into heaven. âIs this a good poem?â I wondered. The second poetry workshop, our professor made us put a bird in each one of our poems. I thought this was unbelievably stupid. This professor also hated when we wrote about hearts, she said no poet had ever written a good poem in which they mentioned a heart. I started collecting poems about hearts, first to spite her, but then because it became a habit I couldnât break. The workshop after that, our professor would tell us the same story over and over about how his son had died during a blizzard. He would cry in front of us. He never told us we couldnât write about anything, but I wrote a lot of poems about snow. At the end of the year he called me into his office and said, âlooking at you, one wouldnât think youâd be a very good writerâ and I could feel all the pity inside of me curdling like milk. The fourth poetry workshop I ever took my professor made it clear that poets should not try to engage with popular culture. I noticed that the only poets he assigned were men. I wrote a poem about that scene in Grease 2 where a boy takes his girlfriend to a fallout shelter and tries to get her to have sex with him by tricking her into believing that nuclear war had begun. It was the first poem I ever published. The fifth poetry workshop I ever took our professor railed against the word blood. She thought that no poem should ever have the word âbloodâ in it, they were bloody enough already. She returned a draft of my poem with the word blood crossed out so hard the paper had torn. When I started teaching poetry workshops I promised myself I would never give my students any rules about what could or couldnât be in their poems. They all wrote about basketball. I used to tally these poems when Iâd go through the stack I had collected at the end of each class. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 poems about basketball. This was Indiana. Eventually I couldnât take it anymore. I told the class, âfor the next assignment no one can write about basketball, please for the love of god choose another topic. Challenge yourselves.â Next time I collected their poems there was one student who had turned in another poem about basketball. I donât know if he had been absent on the day I told them to choose another topic or if he had just done it to spite me. Itâs the only student poem I can still really remember. At the time I wrote down the last lines of that poem in a notebook. âHe threw the basketball and it came towards me like the sunâ
âThere is no nation smaller than its poem But weapons make words too big for the living and the dead who inhabit the living.â
â Mahmoud Darwish, from âMuralâ, Mural (trans. John Berger & Rema Hammami)
âThe bottom line is this: You write in order to change the world, knowing perfectly well that you probably canât, but also knowing that literature is indispensable to the world. The world changes according to the way people see it, and if you alter, even by a millimeter, the way people look at reality, then you can change itâŠIf there is no moral question, there is no reason to write. Iâm an old-fashioned writer and, despite the odds, I want to change the worldâ
â James Baldwin
from an interview given in Berkeley and published in the NYT

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©Elise Wouters
Photographed by Cécile Smetana Baudier for Roisin Pierce
Maureen Medved, The Tracey Fragments
Hannibal 2.13 Mizumono
Bryan Fuller: What I love about this moment is that Hannibal gives Will the opportunity to come clean and be forgiven.
David Slade: Yeah for me in a way it is almost like the couple where one of them has an affair but that could be forgiven if only they would admit it and start anew - thereâs time to cast off the other woman, if you can call Jack that. And uh - the greater betrayal is the denial not the act.
Bryan Fuller: Yes, like the act up until this point is justifiable but Hannibal is giving Will the opportunity to tell the truth and he doesnât take it.