sometimes i just love a character so much that i can’t physically describe how happy they make me so instead i call them pretty and leave it at that
Xuebing Du
Monterey Bay Aquarium
h
almost home
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Janaina Medeiros
dirt enthusiast

Origami Around
we're not kids anymore.


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One Nice Bug Per Day

blake kathryn

JVL
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

JBB: An Artblog!
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
NASA

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@singingcrowwriting
sometimes i just love a character so much that i can’t physically describe how happy they make me so instead i call them pretty and leave it at that

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bitches be like “im a writer” and then don’t write anything for 8 months
everyday i wake up and attempt my silly little tasks while daydreaming about fictional characters
just some of the the changes in design for the Penguin Symbol on old Penguin Paperbacks
he did a little dance and for this crime he was imprisoned in a bubble
They liked his little dance so much they gave him a spotlight
okay friends I need a book list for 2021 💀 because I only read 9 books in 2020 and that makes me very sad 💀 could anyone throw me some suggestions?
likes:
sci fi
horror
gay shit
gender shit
character-focused books
MANGA!!
stuff from a million years ago that makes you go “hang on, people were having these thought in the 70′s??? then why are we so fucked today??”
dislikes (no judgement, just not my preference)
non-fiction
young adult fiction
stuff from a million years ago that you can acknowledge is pretty good and worth consuming, but that is still depressingly misogynistic/racist/etc
-Does not know if I’m allowed to put this here or if it needs to go into the tags-
Hiya! I am an author, been writing for years but did not publish (Amazon KDP) until January 2020. That said, I’m revamping my author self and how I am publishing, so... I don’t have books of mine that I think you’d like published at the moment.
That said, one of my pieces in particular is:
-Sci-fi
-Gay (well just kinda LGBTQ+ if that works too?)
-Gender stuff
While I do not yet have the entire series of novels ready, I do have a single “book” which is the “condensed version” and I am wondering if you’d want a copy?
I have four poetry books that I put together and am re-working into “The Epics Collection” before turning each piece into 1-2 book/s in a series. Granted, that is not sci-fi. However, the people who seem attracted to the series (just blanked on the actual term for that) seems to be... not what I expected?
I thought, for sure, it would resonate with Warriors/ Warrior Cats fans, but... it hasn’t. XD I mean, I didn’t aim for them when writing, I write for myself first and foremost tbh, but when I had to market, I looked to Cat Hell (Which I’ve been a part of since...2006?)...
Anyway... let me know if you’d like a copy of the Condensed Sci-Fi piece!
(It is titled: The Alternate) ((There will eventually be a sequel/sequel series titled: The Singular // The Singularity ; need to figure out which works better when I go back to it))

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ok but like. space shanties.
there’s a thing that should definitely be a thing in sci-fi.
my brain went straight to the ‘put him in the airlock ‘till he’s sober’ part of ‘what can you do with a drunken spacer’ and i never want to look back from this.
THIS IS 100% A THING. It’s usually considered a subset of filk, so naturally a lot of prolific filk artists like Leslie Fish have a selection. Sci-fi filk is possibly my favorite genre of music.
Most of these are actually ballads, not true shanties, but still:
The Senate - Space Shanty
Kristoph Klover - Fire in the Sky
Duane Elms - Dawson’s Christian
Catherine Faber - Providence Skies
Julia Ecklar - Ballad of a Spaceman
Leslie Fish & Ann Prather - Hanrahan’s Bar
Julia Ecklar & Ann Prather - Pushin’ the Speed of Light
Leslie Fish - Ship of Stone
Leslie Fish - Guardians
Leslie Fish - Sam Jones
Vic Tyler - Space Hero
Vic Tyler & Duane Elms - Spacer’s Home
You can probably just google “sci-fi filk” and get a zillion more. It’s a surprisingly rich genre for one so unknown to most people.
I don’t normally reblog this kind of post, but this seems so perfect as background music for a dark matter game, I had to share it with you all. SPACE SHANTIES HO!
For those unaware reblogging this post, “What Shall We Do With A Drunk Space Pirate” was the close out song for the Mechanisms concerts. Their entire discography was taking folk songs and making them sci-fi epic concept albums.
Some of my favorite songs include:
Matty Groves, now with electric violin, about a lute that controls the dead.
Pump Me Boys, now a shanty about keeping the life support systems running on a dying ship.
Gently Johnny, now about sirens in a neo-noir sci-fi city lulling people into complacency.
Rising of the Moon, now about a doomed manager of a space station that descends into chaos and mutiny, left abandoned.
So I’m married to a person who grew up in Canada’s folk scene, and we often talk about folk music as a genre. I was cranky about the way that people tend to slap an “alt-folk” label on folk because they assume true folk is a dead genre, and I got thinking and went: what is a dead genre, anyway?
T chirped “sea shanties!” and then added “not that you can’t compose a new one, but it’s not in conversation with other songs that are being published at the same time, it’s only in conversation with other songs that have been written long before.” It’s important to know, in this conversation, that Tay grew up around Stan Rogers’ family and therefore knows damn well that you can write a song in the modern era that everyone assumes is a hoary old traditional: Rogers wrote “Barrett’s Privateers” in 1976 because he wanted to sing lead in a sea shanty and there weren’t any in existence that had a baritone singing lead.
No, seriously. And now there are lots and lots of people, less than fifty years later, who think that Barrett’s Privateers is a couple hundred years old and has Always Been Here.
So I started thinking about dead genres, and it occurs to me to ask: why is the sea shanty largely dead? Or rather, actually, why is the work song, which is the larger category of music that sea shanties are a subset of, largely dead? Why don’t we sing work songs anymore when we’re working? Stan Rogers wrote the “White Collar Holler,” of course, and the premise of that song is indeed the notion of making a work song for office work, but I can’t imagine anyone actually signing it at the office as they go about their work. For one thing, I code quite a bit at my day job, and the speed at which I code doesn’t depend at all on what the people around me are doing; indeed, trying to match my speed to theirs would probably make us all less efficient.
Tay’s theory is that industrialization killed the work song in the West (they pointed out to me very explicitly that the idea isn’t actually dead world-wide), especially as work became more cognitive for many people and less reliant on keeping time with the people you’re working alongside. After all, work songs are most popular when the most efficient way to work is to keep pace with everyone at the same time, so you’re neither too fast nor too slow, and you’re all working at parts of the same tasks that rely on other people’s tasks to keep going without building up too much of a deadlock at any one part of the process. So much of work for so many people today is more like piecework than making things on an assembly line, and like piecework, it’s so much easier for our employers to encourage us to take the work home and keep making as many pieces as we can before we fall over and collapse… or else it’s service work, and you can’t be singing at service work, you won’t be free to quickly respond to clients and adjust your tasks to their needs.
I suspect that’s not entirely it, though, because assembly line manufacturing work isn’t actually dead in the West, not even close, and the work song is still gone from our halls. Tay pointed out that OSHA and hearing protection make it more difficult in many of those jobs to be connected to other workers and keep time on the song, and I think there’s definitely an element of truth to that, too.
But I think the death of the work songs go even deeper than that. See, work songs didn’t completely vanish as work became less dependent on keeping time together. They just turned into songs about the condition of working, and from there they turned into songs about unionization, workers’ rights songs, like the ones the Wobblies used to great effect in the 20s. And that happened in response to managers and bosses who see singing and talking and responded by trying to control workers and make that shit stop. Some of that is about controlling unionization but some of it is about control, full stop: pretending to oneself that workers only really exist while you pay them as cogs that produce labor, and anything else they do is a distraction from the labor you pay for.
Why is it that we don’t have modern work songs for Amazon workers? There are enough of them, after all, their very boring and physically demanding jobs depend on keeping time together, and everyone’s working together in a relatively quiet environment. I’ll tell you: it’s because Amazon views interactions among its workers as a threat and bans workers from talking to one another or listening to music while they execute their shifts.
We lost the work song, I think, because we gained bosses that see the work song as a threat instead of an intrinsic part of keeping the work force from getting bored and stale and tired and making mistakes. In a real way, killing the work song is a decision you make if you don’t understand the value of the work song to the workers themselves: it makes the work less boring, so you stall out less, and it reminds you you’re all doing this together, and it keeps you all in time. The action of singing is valuable. But if you’ve never sung while you worked collectively on a project, you might not know that, and if you think in terms of zero-sum losses, the song becomes a waste of good breath you’re paying for at best and a threat of insurrection at worst.
And it’s very interesting thinking about the labor conditions on a spaceship that might bring such songs back again as useful aids to coordinating the labor of monitoring and running the ship. Or even, for that matter, coordinating the labor of other tasks in a spacefaring economy. Warframe’s “We All Lift Together” is one of these, of course. Surely there have to be others?
You know what is the worst? Being a reader trying to catch up on fics WHILE bring a writer who is behind on writing their own fics.
Celibacy Pollen
It is increasingly obvious that most people have no idea how to indicate an illness is slowly killing someone without making them cough up blood. Doesn’t matter what it is or if it has anything to do with your respiratory system, if you’re dying, you’re coughing up blood.
Writers found out about tuberculosis and were like “damn this slaps” and we’ve been stuck with it ever since

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Thinking about how beautiful the contemporary English verb “waslike” is. (As in: “She waslike, yeah he did, and I waslike, oh my god.”) “Waslike” means both “to be” and “to say,” so it’s a term that implicitly acknowledges the entangled ontology of being and speaking. When “I waslike ohmygod,” it means both that I said something like “Oh my god” and that my being was infused with ohmygodness. Also, “waslike” is an inherently contingent verb: it implies that what is being said is not exactly what happened but is close to it. Whereas “She said, ‘yeah he did’” purports to be accurate reported speech, “She waslike ‘yeah he did’” admits the speaker is approximating. ~ @HarryGiles
Being broke is like
*wants pizza* *wants pizza* *wants pizza* *wants pizza*
But not being able to afford it.
So, lol, I’ll write ppl fanfic $3 for 500 words, until I got $72? USD? (This is all for food I promise)
Idk. I just want food. I want to feed the household.
Uh. PayPal will be in a reblog if you wanna just... give money?
https://www.paypal.me/drakonnightengale donate here to buy the household pizza
Go to paypal.me/drakonnightengale and type in the amount. Since it’s PayPal, it's easy and secure. Don’t have a PayPal account? No worries.
Character development doesn't refer to character improvement in a moral or ethical respect. It refers to broadening the audience's understanding of that character, giving the character a deeper background, clearer motivations, a unique voice.
Developing a character is about making them seem more like a real person, and real people are flawed. Real people make mistakes. They repeat mistakes. They do things other people don't agree with. Real people are more than just 'good' or 'bad' and character development is about showing all of those other aspects of them.
Their interests and hobbies. The song that gets stuck in their head. The fact that their vacuum broke 3 months ago and they haven't gotten it fixed yet. All of those details help build out the character and develop them more.
And yes, characters change as stories progress but that doesn't mean they get 'better' in a strict moral sense. It means that their experiences change the way they interact in the world you've written for them. Just like real people do.
how other people see my enthusiasm in writing fics: passion
how it really is:

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Someone: hey, if you’re a writer, why don’t I ever see you writing?
Me, a writer who’s been daydreaming about three characters, two unwritten chapters, some scraps of dialogue, and a partial plot that still needs to be heated up in the microwave before it’s usable:
actually @ every fanfiction writer whether you wrote something that got thousands of reblogs and comments and became a staple in your fandom, or you wrote one fic and deleted it, or you write mutilchaptered fics that never get a final update, or write short fics, or long fics, or used to write and now you don’t, or you deleted/orphaned your works, or you only share with friends:
thank you.
sharing your writing is hard. and sometimes it’s thankless. sometimes it’s such a negative experience that I wonder how anyone does it at all. but you are needed; you are wanted. whether or not we properly acknowledge it, you are a vital part of fandom culture. thanks for sharing.
Thank you fic writers 😭😭😭 especially to my recently(ish)-discovered skz faves @jeonqqin @moonlit-han and @mikoto-ica-fics 🤧🤧🤧 you guys are the best!!
Thank you so much. Definitely didn’t tear up. 👀😣❤