Max Gladstone & Ada Palmer are my two main "Any excuse to loudly fan at people til they read their stuff" authors atm
Though Anne Leckie is certainly up there too, she's fab
Yay, dead-tree copies of Jacques the Fatalist and This Is How You Lose The Time War arrived today
Mainly curious about Jacques the Fatalist because of Ada Palmer talking about the weird narrator stuff it does and complete disregard for narrative/novel-format conventions generally.
grabbed This Is How You Lose The Time War cuz I will read everything Max Gladstone puts out there and it seems like a cool concept
re: Content warning PSA
@LexYeen@snouts.online Tangential-but-Adjacent: I think we do need some sort of.. Special character/keyword system for this stuff.
(Or tags? Why don't we have tags, really)
Not to make CWs incomprehensible, but like
If I just have to filter out ''pol'' or 'ice' or whatever people have settled on as a shorthand for a given topic
Then Half my friends entirely-unrelated posts vanish too
Which is a hoot
By which I mean it is definitely not a hoot
TLDR: The filter system needs an overhaul
@theoutrider the cover of Transartica has always made me really really want to try the game
But I also don't want to ruin my rose-tinted idea of what it must be like
Jorge Luis Borges, "Mutations"
"I saw in a hall an arrow pointing the way and I thought that this inoffensive symbol had once been a thing of iron, an inescapable and fatal projectile that pierced the flesh of men and of lions and clouded the sun at Thermopolae and gave Harald Sigurdarson six feet of English earth forever.
Some days later someone showed me a photograph of a Magyar horseman. A coiled lasso circled the breast of his mount. I learned that the lasso, which once whipped through the air and brought down the bulls of the prairie, was now nothing more than a haughty trapping of Sunday harness.
In the west cemetery I saw a runic cross, chiseled in red marble. The arms curved as they widened out, and a circle encompassed them. That limited, circumscribed cross represented the other one, the free-armed cross, which in its turn represents the gallows where a god suffered, the “vile machine” railed at by Lucian of Samosata.
Cross, lasso, and arrow–former tools of man, debased or exalted now to the status of symbols. Why should I marvel at them, when there is not a single thing on earth that oblivion does not erase or memory change, and when no one knows into what images he himself will be transmuted by the future."
@cryptovexillologist ahhh, that's really great! congratulations!
@g mlemrose stairs
@pup_hime what manga is this?
This is a graffiti-free zone.
Vandals will be ~PASTELBAT~