Managed to fit all the (currently) unlocked pin art on a single page :D It’s cool to see them all in one place!
Click here to check out the Tiny Pantheon campaign’s progress :D
If you see a design(/s??) you like here, you can back the Kickstarter RIGHT NOW to help make it happen!! I mean..it’s already happening tbh but you can help make it happen more!!
I’ve still got to finish up the sticker art (screams) so look forward to that update soon I guess!! And I’ve got some things up my sleeves for the final week push too weheheh
Cultural Dark Academia
After my last post about the lack of representation in academia, I felt it neccessary to provide some examples of what I’m talking about. Obviously there are more countries in the world than I can list and provide books for, so for a quick list this is what I got. !! Keep researching !! If you have any more books by POC please reply them !! If a country isn’t listed, that doesn’t mean it’s not important, this is just what I could get together real quick. If I made any mistakes, please let me know, we’re all learning. We need to help each other end eurocentrism in academia, so value representation and educate yourselves 💓💓💓
Chinese:
The Art of War by Sun Tzu
The Dream of the Red Chamber
The Water Margin
Romance of the Three Kingdoms
The Journey to the West
The Scholars
The Peony Pavilion
Border Town by Congwen Shen
Half of Man is Woman by Zhang Xianliang
To Live by Yu Hua
Ten Years of Madness by agent Jicai
The Field of Life and Death & Tales of Hulan River by Xiao Hong
Japanese:
A Personal Matter by Kenzaburo Oë
Pakistani:
Moth Smoke by Mohsin Hamid
How to Get Filthy Rich in Rising Asia by Mohsin Hamid
Ghulam Bagh by Mirza Athar Baig
Masterpieces of Urdu Nazm by K. C. Kanda
Irani/Persian:
Rooftops of Tehran by Mahbod Seraji
Savushun by Simin Daneshvar
Anything by Rumi
The Book of Kings by Ferdowsi
The Rubiyat by Omar Khayyam
Shahnameh (translation by Dick Davis)
Afghan:
Earth and Ashes by Atiq Rahimi
A Thousand Splendid Suns by Khaled Hosseini
Indian:
The God of Small Things by Arundhati Roy
Aithihyamala, Garland of Legends by Kottarathil Sankunni
The Gameworld Trilogy by Samir Basu
Filipino:
Twice Blessed by Ninotchka Rosca
The Last Time I Saw Mother by Arlene J. Chai
Brazilian:
Night at the Tavern by Álvares de Azevedo
The Seven by André Vianco
Don Casmurro by Machado de Assis
Colombian:
Chronicle of a Death Foretold by Gabriel Garcia Marquez
Delirio by Laura Restrepo
¡Que viva la música! by Andrés Caicedo
The Sound of Things Falling by Jim Gabriel Vásquez
Mexican:
Bless Me, Ultima by Rudolf Anaya
Adonis Garcia/El Vampiro de la Colonia Roma by Luis Zapata
El Complot Mongol by Rafael Bernal
Egyptian:
The Cairo Trilogy by Nahuib Mahfouz
The Book of the Dead
Nigerian:
Rosewater by Tade Thompson
Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe
Malian:
The Epic of Sundiata
Senegalese:
Poetry of Senghor
Native American:
The Inconvenient Indian by Thomas King
Starlight by Richard Wagamese
Almanac of the Dead by L. Silko
Fools Crow by James Welch
Australian Aborigine:
Dark Emu by Bruce Pascoe
First Footprints by Scott Cane
My Place by Sally Morgan
American//Modern:
Real Life by Brandon Taylor
Namesake by Jhumpa Lahiri
The Hate U Give by Angie Thomas
The Poet X by Elizabeth Acevedo
Internment by Samir’s Ahmed
Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurtson
Rivers of London Series by Ben Aaronovitch
And like all lovers and sad people, I am a poet.
This book in Hannibal’s kitchen is Mastering the Art of French Cooking by Julia Child, Louisette Bertholle and Simone Beck, volume 1.
Mastering the Art of French Cooking is the result of a collaboration among Julia Child , Simone Beck, Louisette Bertholle, illustrator Sidonie Coryn, and Paul Cushing Child (Child’s husband), and was the impetus for Child’s long and successful career as a pioneering television chef.
Julia Child’s goal was to adapt classic French cuisine for mainstream Americans. The collaboration of this cookbook proved groundbreaking and has since become a standard guide for the culinary community. Mastering Volume 1 was originally published in 1961 after some early difficulties. Volume 1 was a broad survey of French flavors and techniques, and grew out of the work the three women had done for their Paris cooking school, “L'École des trois gourmandes”. Mastering Volume 2, released in 1970, again a collaboration between Julia Child and Simone Beck but not Louisette Bertholle with whom the professional relationship had ended, expanded on certain topics of interest that had not been covered as completely as the three had planned to in the first volume (particularly baking and charcuterie).
Taken together, the two volumes are considered one of the most influential works in American cookbook history. Julia Child has long been accorded near-universal respect in the cooking world, in part due to the influence of these books.
Sending love and puppies to xshiromorix for identifying the book. :-)
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All books in Hannibal are here.
The most under-appreciated film in history has to be The Prince of Egypt. I mean, I don’t care if you follow the religion, this a good fucking movie.
I mean, look at the love they put into the Egyptian culture and hieroglyphics:
Everybody is actually a realistic color of where they live:
ThE MOTHERFUCKING ART THEY PUT INTO THIS MOVIE
The fucking music alone won a fucking oscar people:
The fucking cast like have you seen this line-up???:
Strong female characters:
And last but not least - THE. MOTHER. FUCKING. BEAUTIFUL. HAIR:
and best of all, even though it’s based off of a bible story, it isn’t trying to ram god down your throat. legit the whole movie is about loving yourself and others
Some Hollywood hotties – past and present – reading books.
1) Marlon Brando.
2) Benedict Cumberbatch reading Love’s Labour’s Lost.
3) Tony Perkins reading Look Homeward Angel.
4) Charlie Hunnam reading… anything.
5) Joseph Gordan-Levitt reading Kenneth Anger’s Hollywood Babylon.
6) Paul Newman reading The Garrick Year, by Margaret Drabble.
7) Gregory Peck, not surprisingly, posed with To Kill a Mockingbird.
8) Farley Granger reading The Edge of Doom, by Leo Grady. (Farley starred in the 1950 film.)
9) River Phoenix reading War and Peace.
10) James Dean reading poetry by James Whitcomb Riley.
Russian fairy tales :
Tale of the Dead Tsarevna and the Seven Bogatyrs (1951)
The Scarlet Flower (1952)
The Snow Maiden (1952)
Sister Alenushka and Brother Ivanushka (1953)
The Magic Bird (1953)
The Twelve Months (1956)
The Snow Queen (1957)
Vasilisa the Beautiful (1977)
Yoni and lingam yantra by Mukti Singh Thapa, Nepal
Dear Gaiman, I'm not a huge fan of Sandman (I'm more into good omens and American gods and anansi boys) but my dad read it few years ago. He once told me that he was friends with cinamon,the girl who death was based off of. My dad says they met through being among with the other homeless kids in the area. Is cinamon a real person and if so, did you know her? P.S. my dad still has an autographed poster where you wrote "eat something" because he was so skinny at the time
Yes, her name was Cinamon Hadley, and she was a friend of Mike Dringenberg, the artist, who borrowed her face and look for Death.
I didn’t know her, although we sent messages to each other from time to time, but I wish I had. She died in 2016.
Another Country (1984) | Maurice (1987) | The History Boys (2006) | Brideshead Revisited (1981) | Dead Poets Society (1989)