gabbia:
“Update :D
”

gabbia:

Update :D

image
shared 17 hours ago, with 1,159 notes » via junkyardcamaro / source + reblog


tinyshe:

omniscient-omniromantic-deactiv:

killingmoon:

image

this is so upsetting, PLEASE rb to spread awareness

PLEASE, PLEASE REBLOG THIS, WHETHER YOURE JEWISH OR NOT.

THIS IS A SUPER IMPORTANT PART OF OUR HISTORY, DONT LET IT GET DESTROYED.

perhaps help take steps to stop them now from future attempts…

shared 18 hours ago, with 86,684 notes » via rainbowdracula / source + reblog


himbofisher:

image
shared 18 hours ago, with 51,921 notes » via ittlebitz / source + reblog


hoegrove:

Stranger Things ╳ Until Dawn (2015)
Season 2 → Season 3: Billy Hargrove

My name is Death and the end is here.”

shared 18 hours ago, with 2,277 notes » via passivenovember / source + reblog


theblehthatbloos:

tredlocity:

funnytwittertweets:

image

just because someone is from a country obsessed with baseball doesn’t mean they themselves are obsessed with baseball. i hate when people make assumptions like that.

Hold on a second

shared 18 hours ago, with 43,375 notes » via iinfernal / source + reblog


dispatchesfromtheclasswar:

Angry Lisa Simpsons presentation meme, where the screen says NONE OF YOUR PROBLEMS ARE BECAUSE SOMEONE IS ON WELFAREALT
shared 19 hours ago, with 11,482 notes » via ittlebitz / source + reblog


homosexualasstransbian:

amisonist:

image

is this both a pun and also fucking loss

shared 19 hours ago, with 18,495 notes » via ittlebitz / source + reblog


vintageandroid:

mierac:

prismatic-bell:

fairy-anon-godmother:

fairy-anon-godmother:

Casually asks ‘who domesticated grain in your fantasy world?’ but while ripping her shirt off with a WWE stage and a roaring crowd just behind and slightly to the left. 

So the thing about this is that, the grain is a metaphor*. Like, the grain is very much a metaphor. I don’t need a fantasy author to look me in the eye and say it was a guy named Tim. But the everything around food usually forms an enormous part of a society’s structure and culture. What are your fantasy world/kingdom/culture’s food sources? What internal myths do they have around the production of food? Customs? How do people share meals? What’s the etiquette? What are the differences between regions, ethnic groups, or social classes? Who spends their time making meals, and how much time is it? How many people can the food sources you create support? If someone breaks bread with a stranger, is that stranger now their friend? Who disagrees? What does your protagonist think? Why does your protagonist think?

An author doesn’t have to info dump all of this in the first chapter. But there’s a helluva difference between a small agrarian village one bad harvest away from starvation, and Picard ordering ‘Earl Gray, Hot’. (Although the local blacksmith and the annoyed personnel in Engineering being asked to fix another replicator after an irate captain kicked it may share a certain common spirit lol.)

And again, the grain is a metaphor. Except for when you very much should figure out the design of your fictional country. I find designing societies from their food source up interesting. Others won’t. But there should be something that a writer finds interesting about their fantasy that they want to explore. Find your grain.

Terry Pratchett read an interesting fact about clowns and eggs once, and decided to make that everyone’s problem. He famously read constantly, always looking for interesting things to put in his books and in some cases build his plots around. Your writing would benefit from the same mentality. The reader doesn’t need an entire encyclopedia thrown at them. But you should put thought into your setting and how it interacts with your culture, history, and society. If you don’t, or even worse if you aren’t sure how all of these interact, then it doesn’t matter how interesting you make your characters or plot. Readers will identify situations in your story where the characters and plot are in conflict with the setting you didn’t pay attention to. 

It’s not that you need to fill out a hundred page questionnaire on your worldbuilding. It’s that your intellectual curiosity and eagerness to explore how things work will enrich your story for the reader. GRRM is absurdly good at the things he’s good at, a list that includes great character arcs, deftly controlling the reader’s sympathy, and intricate plots. His worldbuilding though is abysmal.** In contrast, elements of Anne Mccaffrey’s writing didn’t age well. Her first published book looks like a debut novel, her prose and characterization could have been improved on, and the pacing has issues. But she thought about how her world worked in ways that GRRM simply never bothered to. The effort she put into designing a society that would incorporate dragons into it’s structure, and the consideration she put into the needs of these dragons and their riders and how those would put stress on the social and political systems, is phenomenal. I do genuinely enjoy GRRM’s books lol. But if you wanted to read a novel that had dragons as a feature then Anne Mccaffrey’s Dragonflight is what I’ll recommend every time. Her characters actively use the clues given in how their society is designed to figure out their response to the overall plot, in a way that’s so much more rewarding then having GRRM pencil in years-long winter and then just ignore the implications. 

Absolutely get invested in your characters and your plot! The reader will enjoy them all the more for the passion you bring. But your writing will always benefit from your curiosity in how the world you design works, and in how the characters and plot are actively informed by the setting. That’s the larger point. Cultivate that curiosity and willingness to explore and experiment, because that’s what will keep your plot, characters and setting from coming into conflict with each other. 


*No it’s not, figure this out lol. Get Tim’s number. Has he figured out grain can be fermented yet. Is he free on Saturday. 

**For more, the blog A Collection of Unmitigated Pedantry is fantastic reading! 

Did you know the Inca never invented the wheel?


Okay, that’s not entirely true. They did have wheeled toys for their children, like tiny little oxen you could roll along the floor. But they never invented the wheel as a means of transport.

You might think this is odd. The Inca were a very advanced people with cities, elaborate art, temples, and a “writing” system that actually involved using knotted cords and has changed our entire definition of “recorded language.”

But now I’m gonna show you something, and ask…


image

Does it make a little more sense now why they never bothered with the wheel?


If you were writing a book about people who lived in steep, inhospitable mountains, would it have occurred to you that “a series of terraces, via which things can be manually lowered or raised” would make more sense than wheels?


Who invented your grain?

this post is a lot of pressure but also useful

I encourage folks to look into The Belgariad by David and Leigh Eddings. It’s not perfect by any means, and David and Leigh were problematic as hell irl but they’re dead so whatever. Not only were they pretty revolutionary fantasy stories for the time (the women are extremely active, which was a comparatively new concept in the early 80s when they were released, and pretty well-rounded, even sometimes daring to be unpleasant and heavily flawed) but the world building has a lot of thought put into it, including cultural differences between the different nations the characters travel through, and the notes and thought process to world building were released in The Rivan Codex some time later.

shared 19 hours ago, with 6,333 notes » via darciartlett / source + reblog


ariesbilly:

shieldofiron:

ariesbilly:

Men smoking is so hot like what else you suck on boy

image

I was hoping someone would do this thank you for seeing my vision 🙏🏻

shared 19 hours ago, with 57 notes » via ariesbilly / source + reblog


somethingsosimple:

image

Dacre Montgomery

shared 20 hours ago, with 115 notes » via lovebillyhargrove / source + reblog