Here you'll find: fine art and antiquities, history of all kinds, flora and shiny rocks, fashion and lingerie, writer stuff, ephemera, Asian culture, recipes, architecture. Pretty things plus important things, peppered with sporadic in-jokes and shameless self-promotion.Â
As for me, Iâm a writer by dreaming, training, and devotion â and soon, vocation. Should go without saying, but any original content I put up is mine. Donât use it without my permission. Graduated with First Class Honors in a BA Creative Writing; US-born, UK-raised; currently an embarrassed inhabitant of the Southern US aka the 10th Circle of Hell.
My Book! :
+ The Fruit of War, Book 1: Stone and Flesh is a dark, epic fantasy for adult readers who like their fantasy intelligent, immersive, and simmering with ghosts of the past -- both figurative and literal.
+ Available now in eBook and paperback, either directly from me or at an ever-growing retailer list!
+ My author website is here -- I'd love it if you signed up for my mailing list. You'll get a free prequel novella in exchange, and automatically be the first to hear any news!
+ You can also follow @tamarasharker here on Tumblr, and my other authorly socials can be found at my LinkTree.
+ Spread the word! I track the tags #fruit of war saga, #fow stone and flesh, #tamara s harker, #fow saga, #fow saf, #stone and flesh
Tumblr:
+ My Self-Publishing Masterpost -- learn from my mistakes as I document my haphazard journey into self-publishing my novel.
+ #original poetry
+ #scrapsofbiography, #my face, #fav â more about me, if you really must know.
+ Mercedes Carello â my anime/animation-devoted sideblog.
Elsewhere:
+ @ohtobealady and I are revitalizing our historical fiction epistolary project, Any Port in a Storm, so stay tuned for that as well!
+ Are you a writer of any kind? I have a writer's Discord server -- resources and feedback exchange forums, and just places to chat -- that's open to new members! Reply to this post if interested.
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TERFs and other bigots are exceedingly unwelcome here, as is anyone who generally thrives on belittling or outright persecuting others. I do not knowingly share content made or perpetuated by such people -- if you spot something that got past me, let me know so I can remove it. Similarly, if you see me unknowingly posting AI imagery, tell me.
I'm in my 30s, and while I try to avoid explicit material, this blog is guaranteed to contain some content that's unsuitable for minors.
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Have you ever seen the polka dot wasp moth (Syntomeida epilais)? This insect inhabits neotropical regions in parts of South America, Central America, and North America. It can grow up to 2 in (5.2 cm) long. Males and females both sport striking blue colors, with white spots and red-tipped abdomens. While these insects donât sting like true wasps, they are toxic to predators.Â
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Announced the end of all physical PS game releases
While simultaneously announcing the end of two of their console game stores â ensuring multiple games will die forever
Declared that they are wholly dedicated to (A) leveraging A.I. when making games and (B) creating live-service games above all other game types
Announced that if you bought any movies through their PlayStation Store, over 550 of them will soon be deleted from all users' libraries â with no restitution offered of any kind
Gamers, it is time â to paraphrase Robert Vann â to turn Sony's picture to the wall. Any one of these insults would be bad, and taken alone? Maybe it could be swallowed. But this is an ongoing campaign of disdain towards customers, with each declaration worse than the last.
PlayStation does not deserve your patronage any longer. The PS6 must fail. Leave them behind.
Like, seriously, if a fucking console is breaking the 1K mark, I'm just going to dish out a bit more to upgrade my PC. And the rest of that shit is just more incentive. They dabbled in putting aside console exclusivity on games, but now they're rolling it back and banking on that to help carry them through all the ill-will this is going to generate. Here's hoping it tanks them.
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One hundred years after Virginia Woolf explored the limitations of language in On Being Ill, the Piranesi author reflects on the power of st
One hundred years after Virginia Woolf explored the limitations of language in On Being Ill, the Piranesi author reflects on the power of storytelling to shape our experience of sickness
In October 2016 I was in hospital. I had been ill for 11 years with something I called chronic fatigue syndrome, but in the previous six weeks I had been overtaken by a strange, sudden crisis. I was unable to eat â a day when I managed a couple of biscuits was a good day; at times I trembled so violently that my voice shook; at night I was overwhelmed by dread.
In the hospital ward a consultant gastroenterologist appeared.
âHow do you feel?â he asked.
âI feel,â I said, âvery ill.â
This, apparently, was not the concise yet comprehensive answer that I had imagined it to be. He seemed to require something more. âCan you describe it?â he asked.
I couldnât. That anguished, pressurised feeling â a sensation somewhere between burning and falling â that extended through my torso, my limbs, my entire body was by now so familiar to me, I was astonished that it didnât have a name and that I didnât know it. How could this be? I was, after all, a prize-winning novelist.
Frustrated I fell back on anger. Was the doctor stupid? Didnât he know what âfeeling very illâ meant?
In her essay On Being Ill, Virginia Woolf says, âlet a sufferer try to describe a pain in his head to a doctor and language at once runs dryâ.
At least I was in good company.
I remember very well what I wanted to say to the doctor: âI feel like I am about to fall off the world.â I had the sense to realise that he would probably not be able to do much with this. What doctors need is a clear description of something physical, but what the sufferer experiences may be as much emotional as it is physical â it may even have a spiritual component. It is very difficult in my experience to separate the different strands.
Nowadays, in the pit of my stomach there is a feeling I call anxiety. But when I ask myself what this sensation actually is, I realise that it consists of almost nothing at all â a very slight pressure. Yet, in spite of its nigh-on non-existence, the emotional weight of it drags at my days, pulls them all askew and makes me feel, despite my best efforts, constantly on edge.
Woolf says, âAll day, all night the body intervenes âŠâ And that is true: all day, all night the body is talking to us; but not necessarily in a language we understand.
Illness brings us up against the limitation of words, reminds us that what we experience will always be greater than the words we have to describe it. Dreams, silent meditations, experiences of God, moments of transcendence, moments we are aware of love, all of these evaporate into thin air, unless we scribble them down. At the age of 30, Julian of Norwich had an illness. Believing she was dying, she experienced a series of visions of God. The visions lasted for only one night, but she spent the rest of her life trying to distil them into a form that could be understood by other people. (She wrote two different versions, to be on the safe side.)
There is hardly any sense of struggle in On Being Ill. Struggle is what the healthy are doing, beyond the invalidâs window pane. Ant-like, they are rushing to and fro, being clerks and bus conductors and widows and lawyers. The shadowy figure at the essayâs centre â the figure who might be Woolf or who might be us â seems almost delighted to have fallen ill. They float like a stick on a stream; they are as gratefully irrelevant as a dead leaf being blown across a lawn; they watch the clouds mutate and form pictures above a London entirely unconscious of the beauty above its head.
This was an insight that I too gained in illness, and it is part of what I tried to write about in Piranesi: that there is a whole world endlessly going on, endlessly being beautiful, regardless of whether anyone is there to see it or not. Where Woolf and I part company is in what this means. For her it was evidence of the stark indifference of the universe to human beings: âDivinely beautiful it is also divinely heartless.â
For Piranesi, the central character of the book, and for me, the sheer profligate abundance of beauty is evidence of a universe intensely bound up with its creations. Piranesi walks through his world, cataloguing its contents, describing its wonders. This he considers his chief task in life. âThe Beauty of the House is immeasurable; its Kindness infinite.â
But perhaps the greatest joy of Woolfâs happy invalid is a sort of intellectual freedom. Cut off from the life of the busy bank-clerks and the bus conductors, widows and lawyers, they are free to read Shakespeare in a new and thrilling way, a way not available to them when they were healthy. Finally they are free from the shackles of other peopleâs opinions; they no longer care what anyone else has said about Shakespeare; they can read him and have their own thoughts.
As an ill person, you have gone down into a sort of underworld, sometimes oppressive, sometimes not; either way, what people say and think in the world above matters less and less. This can be very freeing for a scholar, a saint, a musician or an artist. I remember Kathy Acker saying something similar when talking about her writing process. At least I think it was Kathy Acker; Iâm going back to the 1970s, so I canât be entirely sure. But whoever it was described a nocturnal existence; she wrote at night in order to be free from other peopleâs thoughts.
To return to illness and language. If, in one sense, language âruns dryâ in the face of illness, in another sense it is desperately needed. I remember in a discussion group long, long ago (I think about the importance of story) a young woman saying that she had once been ill and that she couldnât get better until she was able to tell herself a story about what had happened to her. This struck me at the time as an important truth.
To take the simplest of examples: an elderly woman I knew used to suffer from neck aches. Whenever this happened, she would tell herself the same story: âI have this pain because I was silly and I sat in a draught from an open window.â She might have been aware of the draught at the time or she might not. It didnât really matter; the existence of the draught could always be deduced from the existence of the pain, and as long as she was vigilant against draughts in the future, the pain wouldnât be able to return.
A narrative makes illness seem rational â and it gives the sufferer a measure of control â or at any rate the illusion of it. This is particularly true of the sort of chronic illness in the face of which poor doctors are often at a loss. There is no obvious course of treatment for fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue, chronic pain, long Covid and all the myriad forms of chronic illness. There is no drug to take that will restore you to who you once were. There is only narrative.
I know very well how grateful you feel to the doctor or therapist who provides a narrative to explain what has happened. And how upset and angry you feel when a different, perfectly well-meaning, doctor says something else or offers a theory that seems to threaten that narrative.
Of course one of the problems with being a writer with a long illness is that one can produce narratives without number. What would you like?
I can do you a revengeful, blame-apportioning narrative.
âShe became ill after months of book tours, during which she crossed and recrossed the Atlantic on numerous occasions, all the result of her wicked publishers spending large sums of money on promoting her first novel â presumably out of sheer vindictiveness.â (A journalist once spent a surprising amount of time and energy trying to get me to say this.)
I can do you a zoological narrative.
âShe was bitten by a blood-feeding tick and caught Lyme disease.â
I can do you a fairytale narrative.
âShe wrote about fairies and now they have exacted their revenge and she lies ill of something mysterious and Lady-of-Shallot-adjacent.â
I can do you a childhood-adversity narrative.
âShe was told as a child that she would never succeed and indeed did not deserve success. Having achieved success, she promptly fell ill in order to comply with her upbringing.â
I pause here. The narrative of being told I did not deserve success pulls at my heart, not only for myself, but for others too. Because, of course, I wasnât the only girl of my generation to be told that. My school â a comprehensive on a run-down Bradford council estate â produced, as far as I know, only one other writer, Andrea Dunbar, a playwright of extraordinary talent. I donât think I ever met her, but she must have been a year or two below me. She died at the age of 29 of a brain haemorrhage, possibly related to alcoholism. My best friend during the same period was a ridiculously talented musician who went on to have a hit record. She died before the age of 40.
You see, from one point of view, I got off lightly.
But if illness can be a story, so perhaps can the cure.
There is a bunch of interrelated therapies, all fairly recent, that share an interest in narrative. They are pain reprocessing, somatic tracking, polyvagal theory and others. The underlying idea is that in some people â and I stress some people â chronic illness might look like this: a very ancient and primitive part of the brain and nervous system believes it has detected danger, possibly a tiger or something like that, and so it produces pain or a whole range of symptoms in an effort to get the sufferer to close down and protect herself. The nervous system does this very effectively and it can carry on doing it for decades. It is really very inventive. I feel that mine ought to be eligible for some sort of prize.
It comes to this. A story you have on some level believed â that the world is fraught with danger â can be countered by a different story. Yes, the world is fraught with danger, but not everywhere, and not always, not here in this place and not now in this moment. You are safe.
So this is my narrative now, the story of how I got ill â and perhaps, if I pay careful attention to it, I will be able to retrace my steps through the labyrinth of my own body and return to safety.
This essay was originally commissioned for Charleston festival.
A narrative makes illness seem rational â and it gives the sufferer a measure of control â or at any rate the illusion of it. This is particularly true of the sort of chronic illness in the face of which poor doctors are often at a loss.
I know that one so well. Iâm oddly overjoyed at the discovery in recent years that Neanderthal is linked to several autoimmune diseases. I wait eagerly for confirmation that the disease I was born with is linked to Neanderthal heritage, that thereâs a reason for everything Iâve been through.
Theres been times drs have asked me for a pain number from 1-10 and I wish I could try write them a poem about it instead. Im not even sure I know how to tell the differrence between pain and discomfort anymore. Sometimes I know theres pain because I start twitching.
I can be at a loss for the type of descriptive words that medical professionals know how to make sense of. Thats not the same as being at a loss for words.
my futile wish is for people to understand that "sex scenes in movies/TV don't have to serve the plot and can genuinely just be for pleasure" and "sex-repulsed people are allowed to complain about how rare it is for media made for adults like them to be something they can enjoy completely" are both true statements. unfortunately society hates both sex and people who don't like sex, so everyone gets far too defensive about any sex or lack thereof in fiction to actually have this conversation
Al-Idrisi's world map made for Roger II of Sicily in 1154 CE (Kitab Rujar or Tabula Rogeriana), from 'Alß ibn Hasan al-Hûfß al-Qùsimß's 1456 copy. Note: South is at the top of the map.
Al-IdrÄ«sÄ«âalso rendered as Al Idrissi, Edrisi, or Sharif Al Idrissi Sebtiâwhose full name was Abu ÊżAbd AllÄh Muáž„ammad ibn Muáž„ammad ibn ÊżAbd AllÄh ibn IdrÄ«s al-QuráčubÄ« al-កasanÄ« al-SabtÄ« (Arabic: ŰŁŰšÙ Űčۚۯ ۧÙÙÙ Ù ŰÙ ŰŻ Ű§ŰšÙ Ù ŰÙ ŰŻ Ű§ŰšÙ Űčۚۯ ۧÙÙÙ Ű§ŰšÙ Ű§ŰŻŰ±ÙŰł ۧÙÙŰ±Ű·ŰšÙ Ű§ÙŰŰłÙÙ), and also known as Dreses, sometimes nicknamed âthe Arab of Nubia,â was an Andalusian Arab explorer, geographer, botanist, and physician, born around the year 1100 in Ceuta, then part of the Almoravid Empire.
He was raised in Morocco and al-Andalus, studied in CĂłrdoba under Almoravid rule, explored much of the Mediterranean, and also travelled in Europe. He is believed to have died around 1165 or 1175, either in Sicily or in Ceuta. He belonged to the Idrisid sharifian lineage.
Al-IdrÄ«sÄ« owes his renown to the creation of one of the earliest known geographical maps and planispheres of the world, as well as to his authorship of a descriptive geographical work entitled KitÄb Nuzhat al-MushtÄq (âThe Book of Pleasant Journeys for Those Who Long to Traverse the Worldâ), also known as KitÄb RujÄr (âThe Book of Rogerâ). Composed at the request of Roger II, the Norman king of Sicily, this work illustrates and comments upon a great silver planisphere constructed by al-IdrÄ«sÄ«. It was commissioned by Roger II, who sought a comprehensive representation of the known world of his time.
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Persian columns were a distinctive architectural feature of the Achaemenid Persian Empire (c. 500â330 BCE), most famously seen at the ancient city of Persepolis. They were used to support vast ceremonial halls called apadanas, such as the Hall of a Hundred Columns, which could accommodate thousands of people.
Key characteristics include:
Tall, fluted shafts that could reach up to 20 meters in height.
Double-animal capitals, usually featuring bulls, lions, griffins, or human-headed bulls placed back-to-back. These animals acted as structural brackets supporting roof beams.
The style emerged from a blend of influences from Mesopotamia, Egypt, Lydia, Elam, and Greece, brought together by craftsmen from across the Persian Empire. Despite these influences, the result was uniquely Persian.
Some scholars believe the animal capitals symbolized the cosmic struggle between the lion (Sun) and bull (Moon), linked to Nowruz, the Persian New Year celebration.
The tradition ended abruptly after Alexander the Great conquered Persia and burned Persepolis in 330 BCE. However, Persian column designs influenced later architecture, especially in India, including the pillars of Ashoka and other Mauryan monuments, as well as Buddhist architecture in Gandhara and western India. Elements of the style continued to appear in later Persian architecture even after the Achaemenid period.