June 10th, 2013 around 5:50pm
Permalink | wanna Reblog? | reblogged from: sarahreesbrennan

I Don’t Like My Wife’s Books!

sarahreesbrennan:

thatbadadvice:

Carolyn Hax, 6 May 2013:

Dear Carolyn, My wife is an avid reader and enjoys a lot of different types of books. Among them are series usually geared toward teenagers, like “The Hunger Games” or “Twilight.” Before the premiere of the latest movie, she rereads the series and then goes to the midnight showing with a group of girlfriends. I am not talking about teenagers here, or even people in their 20s. We are in our 30s and both professionals. I think my wife’s interest in these books and movies is juvenile, and I don’t really understand it. I feel mildly embarrassed that she can talk (in detail!) to my nieces about these books at holiday gatherings. My wife thinks that her reading selection is her business only and that these books provide a nice relief from everyday problems. I can see her point, but on the other hand, I’m not sure why she can’t get the same thing from adult literature. Who is the odd one here, me or my wife? Anonymous

Dear Anonymous,

Your wife is an immature, unprofessional dolt who sadly gets along better with teenagers than with smart, classy, well-adjusted adults who rightly ascertain that literally nothing can define a person more than the fact that they occasionally read teen fiction.

There is no way any media directed at one interest group has one iota of an iota of an iota of a speck of anything remotely edifying, pleasant or distracting to offer to another interest group, which is why Harry Potter was such a flop, all kids hate Lord Of The Rings and a woman wrote The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo.

The fact that your wife thinks she’s reading for her own pleasure rather than for yours is deeply disconcerting. The sooner this proletarian nitwit realizes that she has displeased Sir Husband, Arbiter of Taste In This Household Young Lady, the better. Gift her a nice Franzen box set, a fresh copy of Infinite Jest or the complete works of Dave Eggers, so that she may better learn to center her recreational reading around fictional middle-aged white men instead of fictional people who aren’t as important and interesting as they are.

image

June 8th, 2013 around 4:12am
Permalink | wanna Reblog? | reblogged from: kazzapond

o-dysseys:

LITERATURE MEME | 4 tropes/archetypes - (3) magic realism

Magic realism is a trope commonly used in literature where magical elements go hand-in-hand with an otherwise mundane and realistic environment. It is commonly used in fantasy and surrealistic literature. Notable writers of works that include magic realism are Franz Kafka, Gabriel Garcia Marquez, and Salman Rushdie.

May 26th, 2013 around 2:50pm
Permalink | wanna Reblog? | reblogged from: anaspiringreceptionist

(Source: 36319119)

April 26th, 2013 around 7:42pm
Permalink | wanna Reblog? | reblogged from: northstarfan

ladyofthehouse:

Hi guys. So, I’m sure everyone is glued to televisions, news feeds and the like. I certainly am.  Sometimes it’s too much and you need a peaceful distraction. Here is Widget for you. Sometimes you just need a soft fluffy thing to look at to feel a little peace.

If you are stuck wherever you are or need further distraction, here are a few links to some lovely classic reads from Project Gutenberg. These are things that have always made me smile, or at the very least allowed me to escape for a little while. Free and digitized, because that’s how Project Gutenberg works.

I hope everyone is safe and taken care of. I may update and add more titles as I find them. This is all I can think to do.

-TLOTH

ladyofthehouse:

Hi guys. So, I’m sure everyone is glued to televisions, news feeds and the like. I certainly am.  Sometimes it’s too much and you need a peaceful distraction. Here is Widget for you. Sometimes you just need a soft fluffy thing to look at to feel a little peace.
If you are stuck wherever you are or need further distraction, here are a few links to some lovely classic reads from Project Gutenberg. These are things that have always made me smile, or at the very least allowed me to escape for a little while. Free and digitized, because that’s how Project Gutenberg works.
The Importance of Being Earnest, Oscar Wilde
Pride and Prejudice, Jane Austen
The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
Anne of Green Gables, L.M. Montgomery
My Man Jeeves, P.G. Wodehouse
The Secret Garden, Frances Hodgson Burnett
The Time Machine, H.G. Wells
A Room With a View, EM Forster
The Arabian Nights: Their Best Known Tales
Alice’s Adventures In Wonderland, Lewis Carroll
Sketches New and Old, Mark Twain (contains The Notorious Jumping Frog of Calaveras County, which I remember loving)
Treasure Island, Robert Louis Stevenson
Dracula, Bram Stoker (while not cheery, it’s enthralling, a favorite of mine, and people generally benefit from epistolary novels)
I hope everyone is safe and taken care of. I may update and add more titles as I find them. This is all I can think to do.
-TLOTH
April 16th, 2013 around 6:48pm
Permalink | wanna Reblog? | reblogged from: booksrockmyface

(Source: yoinks)

April 3rd, 2013 around 8:57pm
Permalink | wanna Reblog? | reblogged from: anaspiringreceptionist

Jane Austen´s world wasn´t a large one, but she used it to make observations of human behavior that are as true today as they were then. She speaks to  women in a way that perhaps men will never understand fully, which is rather wonderful. She only wrote of her direct experience. And because she used, to a large degree, comic observation it makes her much more accessible than most classic writers.”

March 25th, 2013 around 1:22pm
Permalink | wanna Reblog? | reblogged from: dustgoesinadustbin

dustgoesinadustbin:

likemarshmallows:

excuse me but you can’t get anymore awesome than this

Lunar Chronicles minimalist posters. Wow.

March 18th, 2013 around 3:29pm
Permalink | wanna Reblog? | reblogged from: masterpieceofass

masterpieceofass:

kingthorin:

Richard Armitage reading the proposal scene from North & South

delicious.

(Source: madsmikkelsex)

February 17th, 2013 around 12:35pm
Permalink | wanna Reblog? | reblogged from: ealperin

“Today, Scholastic unveiled an all-new cover for Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone! And better yet, it’s just the first of seven (7!) new covers that will appear on U.S. trade paperback editions coming in September 2013. It’s all part of the upcoming 15th anniversary of the U.S. publication of Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone, the first book in J.K. Rowling’s best-selling Harry Potter series.” [x]

Artwork by: Kazu Kibuishi

(Source: fuckyeahharrypotter)


“Today, Scholastic unveiled an all-new cover for Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone! And better yet, it’s just the first of seven (7!) new covers that will appear on U.S. trade paperback editions coming in September 2013. It’s all part of the upcoming 15th anniversary of the U.S. publication of Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone, the first book in J.K. Rowling’s best-selling Harry Potter series.” [x]
Artwork by: Kazu Kibuishi
January 21st, 2013 around 5:55pm
Permalink | wanna Reblog? | reblogged from: anaspiringreceptionist

(Source: missettamarie)

January 20th, 2013 around 12:53pm
Permalink | wanna Reblog? | reblogged from: maureenjohnsonbooks

sarahreesbrennan:

heatherwpetty:

Virginia Woolf, 1882-1941

…in case anyone thought female author bias was a new thing.

Sadly, ‘lady feelings are dumb’ is still the attitude today, and is why romance novels are so looked down on!

sarahreesbrennan:

heatherwpetty:

Virginia Woolf, 1882-1941
…in case anyone thought female author bias was a new thing.

Sadly, ‘lady feelings are dumb’ is still the attitude today, and is why romance novels are so looked down on!
January 18th, 2013 around 4:36pm
Permalink | wanna Reblog? | reblogged from: anaspiringreceptionist

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