@guumboots GIRL HAVE I EVER GOT YOU COVERED. Here’s some of my fave horror I’ve read in the last 3ish years!
A Certain Hunger by Chelsea G. Summers
Her Body and Other Parties by Carmen Maria Machado
My Best Friend’s Exorcism, The Southern Book Club’s Guide to Vampire Slaying, and The Final Girl Support Group by Grady Hendrix
Mary: An Awakening of Terror by Nat Cassidy
The Loop by Jeremy Robert Johnson
Mexican Gothic by Silvia Moreno-Garcia
Plain Bad Heroines by Emily M. Danforth
The Return by Rachel Harrison
Bones & All by Camille DeAngelis
It's okay if it takes a little longer than you thought.
imagine how it is to touch the stove.
La Belle Noiseuse (Jacques Rivette, 1991)
Sometimes I think about lesbian icon renée vivien lauging so hard she had to leave a lecture bc the man was talking about how a book of anonymously published love poetry was the pinnacle depiction of a young man’s desire towards women…… but it was her book. She wrote it. About her girlfriend.
i really like the new tumblr trend(tm) of reblogging a post multiple times when ur Really Feeling It
here's a random word generator--whatever word it gives you is now the thing you are the deity of
lucky
I had a few new things come across my feed, so I thought I'd put together a list.
If you have more, please share!
iNaturalist is the big one, of course. Best used if you already know your local flora and fauna
And it's child Seek is perfect for if you are trying to learn. It will identify stuff for you and you can share your observations to iNat to add to the resource pool there.
Wildflowers Search has a bunch of area-specific apps for the Americas. (Like, I have 'Pennsylvania Wildflowers' app. I don't know if it has all of the Americas covered, but it has specific apps for th Canadian provinces and Patagonia for sure). It gives you multiple choice options for color, type of plant, location of leaves, etc, and gives you a list of plants you might be looking at. Covers trees, grass, and other stuff, in addition to wildflowers. Pairs well with iNaturalist, IMO. And gives better 'about this plant' info than Seek.
Merlin is like a mix of Seek and Wildflower Search specifically for birds.
Owls Near Me is a website that runs off of iNat, and lets you see what owls have been spotted near you recently.
Falling Fruit is for urban forages. It lets people list locals of edible plants that can be found in a city. (Or, I assume, a town.) If you do ediable guerilla gardening or have a tree you don't mind folks eating from, you can add it to the map. Or add stuff you find in other places around you. Philly and NYC both have over 6,000 locations tagged. (There are other urban foraging tools, but falling fruit is the only one I've seen that maps worldwide.)
Anyone have other apps to add to the list?
existential whore sharing art and feelings and love and inspirationsOR 25 she/her
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