please, let me be your stupid hoe, rape me amd make my pussy a creampie in the woods.
I want a daddy 🐕
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please, let me be your stupid hoe, rape me amd make my pussy a creampie in the woods.
I want a daddy 🐕

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Reposted from @iamstarringo He’ll step on his brotha to get a buzz It’s a drought in my section we outta LOVE 💔 Super Gremlin (Remix) #SuperGOAT 🐐 🎥 @_candicelashae_ #sodiffrent #R4P https://www.instagram.com/p/CfBVEbSD16V/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
Thank you @runforpalestine_ for holding an awesome event! #r4p #thewoes (at Sir Casimir Gzowski Park Playground)
Reading For Pleasure Assignment
Hello and welcome to my reading for pleasure assignment!
You will find that all 30 titles are tagged with "R4P" and you can access these (or at least, you should be able to) by clicking on the words "Tag Cloud" in the header, and then finding the tag "R4P".
You will notice that there aren't 30 blog posts, and this is on purpose! There are 30 titles listed, 10 from each category (novels, picture books and media) however some of the posts contain multiple items and I've tried to be extremely diligent at including these things in the titles of posts. For example, one post might contain a novel, a media item and a picture book, and these might be labeled "Novels (2 of 10), Picture Books (1 of 10) and Media (3 of 10). Hopefully that isn't too confusing. I sort of ran with the transmedia idea for much of this assignment. Happy reading!

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R4P: Media (10 of 10)
NPR: Diverse Summer Reading List for Kids
http://www.npr.org/blogs/ed/2014/06/05/318539208/a-diverse-summerreading-list-for-kids
This is a great list of diverse children's book titles for summer reading, published just this last summer (2014). Included in the article is a discussion of why diversity in children's books matters and a mention of the #weneeddiversebooks campaign on Twitter.
This is a great resource to bookmark for reader's advisory or collection development purposes. How many of these books are on your shelves?
R4P: Media (9 of 10)
Serial, NPR Podcast
http://serialpodcast.org
Ok. I know everyone and their mother is talking about Serial, and that's why I'm talking about it here. Serial, for the uninitiated, is a weekly radio show and podcast made by the producers of This American Life. Serial tells one story a "season", in regular 40-something minute installments that come out weekly. So, unlike many in-depth radio shows which might tell one long story over an hour, Serial delves DEEP into a story and adds to the storytelling week by week, sort of like they used to do in the olden days.
The first season is currently airing, and it tells the story of a young man convicted of murdering his girlfriend during their senior year of high school. There are numerous questions surrounding the case, and Serial is basically investigating the case methodically using investigative journalism methods and even calling in expert defense attorneys and private investigators.
It is riveting, and millions of people now subscribe to the podcast. So - what's this got to do with school libraries? A teacher at my high school (the one I attended 1,000 years ago) is actually teaching Serial in his classroom, instead of Hamlet, as this article in Slate.com describes:
http://www.slate.com/blogs/schooled/2014/11/20/serial_replaces_shakespeare_in_one_california_english_class.html
To me, using texts like Serial in the classroom is the essence of the CCSS, and I am so thrilled that kids at my alma mater are getting to switch out their Shakespeare for NPR.
R4P: Media (8 of 10)
Ted Talk: Mac Barnett: Why a good book is a secret door
http://www.ted.com/talks/mac_barnett_why_a_good_book_is_a_secret_door?language=en
Mac Barnett discusses the suspension of disbelief; the intersection between fiction and reality, and magic of books. Brings up important ideas about how we think about fiction; we know it isn't real, yet we relate to it, we feel real feelings for characters, and even visit sites featured in fiction (the example 221 B Baker Street was apt).
I really loved this talk - partly because I remember when 826 Valencia opened, and recently visited the 826 Time Travel Mart in LA. I love all things McSweeneys, and believe very much in the type of work they do. For librarians, I think we have a lot to learn about independent culture, and the type of creativity that is fostered in the culture, as well as the innovation.