Lan ‘I don’t touch people’ Wangji
txt’s cant you see me hits so much harder when you realise none of your friends understand and see that you’re falling apart or maybe they just don’t care anymore
My brother cracked my rib one morning and gave me half of his orange in the evening.
I remember being younger and sometimes wishing to be a single child, to have all the attention and gifts and time but when he was away from home for the first time, I remember crying and stroking his side of the sofa as if blurting out my first wish- for him to be home, without thinking twice, without a shadow of doubt. Even the genie cried. Growing up with a sibling is like being the only people on a stranded boat, constantly figuring out how you can live with them and questioning how you could ever live without them.
One evening, in a fit of anger, I told him how I never wanted him to be my brother and he yelled that he didn't ask for it either. The air smelled like kerosene and my chest was filled with arsenic. I was raging and threw his favorite toy aeroplane down the window, 7 stories of guilt and shame. He cried all night and I wanted to cut off my right hand, the hand that hurt my baby brother. I didn't know if he was ever going to forgive me or even talk to me. The next morning at breakfast, he didn't look at me or say a word, I felt like my chest was about to explode and guilt clouded my vision. But then, I felt a hand quietly holding half of an orange my way.
The only people on a stranded boat. How do you live with them? How could you ever live without them?
-Ritika Jyala, excerpt from The world is a sphere of ice and our hands are made of fire
Edit: I added a visualizer for this on my YouTube channel. Check it out here
hello!! do you have any book recs for historical fiction/ non- fiction or something similar to the palace of illusions? thank you!!
A short list because I'm not well:
Song of Draupadi by Ira Mukhoty
Indian mythology retelling
Mahabharat from Draupadi's POV
Descriptive prose and lush worldbuilding
Everything Mukhoty writes about Indian women is readable
Nefertiti by Michelle Moran
Egyptian history retelling
Nefertiti's reign from her sister's POV
Morally grey central characters
The writing style is so descriptive and nice
She Who Became the Sun by Shelley Parker Chan
Queer Chinese history + fantasy retelling
Breathtaking, immersive worldbuilding
Wlw and mlm hostility; two evil non binary leads
Mulan but with a sapphic romance
The Forest of Enchantments by Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni
Indian mythology retelling
Ramayan from Sita's POV
Exploration of duty vs desire
Not as good as The Palace of Illusions, but still worth a read
The Jasmine Throne by Tasha Suri
Indian inspired fantasy
Sapphic romance between central characters
Cool magical systems
Morally grey female lead
Circe by Madeline Miller
Greek mythology retelling
Morally grey female lead, lyrical prose
Same author as The Song of Achilles
I have heard divisive stuff about it tbh
Sati Series by Koral Dasgupta
Indian mythology retelling
Feminist historization of female figures from Indian myth
Includes Ahalya and Kunti so far
I hope you find something to your liking from this list!
Kofi: papenathys
evening sky, paint exercise.
"wei ying"
“The shortest poem is a name.”
— Unknown (via verynearly)
MAKE ME CHOOSE ─ @baek1nho asked: wenzhou or wangxian
august is for realizing your spotify wrapped is irreversibly fucked
confessions~