tim drake huh
Hello,
I hope you and your family are well and in good healthš.
I am writing to kindly ask for your support in reblogging my pinned post on my pageā¤š.
It details my struggle and the hardships we face in Gazaš„, especially the dire conditions we are enduring in the hospital where I work as a doctorš£š.
Your assistance in spreading this message is crucial to raise awareness and garner support for our causeāš.
I sincerely appreciate your help and look forward to your continued supportš„ŗā¤š.
Thank you very much.
Dr.mohammed aldeeb from gaza
help however you can!
If I read this out of context I'd cry
Cried anyways while reading it with context
whats your all time favorite book? you may give me other recs too if you'd likee! š
I don't have an all time favourite because different books have made me lose my mind in different ways <3 but I CAN give you a breakdown based on some of my own personal categories:
Books I Would Take Into a Bunker For 9 Months (aka Absolutely No One Talk to Me)
The Brothers Karamazov, Dostoevsky
Ich und Du, Martin Buber
The Waves, Virginia Woolf
The Snake, Stig Dagerman
The Myth of Sisyphus and Other Essays, Albert Camus
The Hitchiker's Guide to the Galaxy
An Inventory of Losses, Judith Schalansky
Invisible Man, Ralph Ellison
We, Yevgeny Zamyatin
Books That Did Thatā¢ļø
Secondhand-Time, Svetlana Alexievich
We Love Glenda So Much & Other Tales, Julio CortƔzar
The Memory Police, Yoko Ogawa
At Swim-Two-Birds, Flann O'Brien
Deaf Republic, Ilya Kaminsky
Tess of the d'Urbervilles, Thomas Hardy
A Thousand Splendid Suns, Khaled Mattawa
The Chaos Walking Trilogy, Patrick Ness
Ways of Seeing, John Berger
German Autumn, Stig Dagerman
A Lover's Discourse: Fragments, Roland Barthes
A Girl Is A Half-Formed Thing, Eimear McBride
Night Watch, Terry Pratchett
Wuthering Heights, Emily Bronte
Women in Love, D.H. Lawrence
Bluets, Maggie Nelson
Antigone, Jean Anouilh
They: A Sequence of Unease, Kay Dick
A Doll's House, Henrik Ibsen
The Condemned, Stig Dagerman
Books That If I Could Erase My Memory and Read Again for the First Time I Would 100% Erase My Memory and Read Again for the First Time
The God of Small Things, Arundhati Roy
Ćgua Viva, Clarice Lispector
The Bloody Chamber & Other Stories, Angela Carter
A Moth to a Flame, Stig Dagerman
Paris, When It's Naked, Etel Adnan
Without an Alphabet, Without a Face, Saadi Youssef
A Field Guide to Getting Lost, Rebecca Solnit
One Hundred Years of Solitude, Gabriel GarcĆa Marquez
View with a Grain of Sand, Wislawa Szymborska
Possession, A.S. Byatt
Four Bare Legs in a Bed: Stories, Helen Simpson
The Unbearable Lightness of Being, Milan Kundera
Not to Read: Essays, Alejandro Zambra
The Princess Bride, William Goldman
āfish donāt even know theyre wetā and? you donāt even know youre luft (air equivalent of wet)
no because do you ever think about the apollo cabin?
they were one of the biggest cabins, probably second only to hermesā. as the healers and the archers, they were key players in the battle of manhattan. without will solace, annabeth would be dead, and without the cabin as a whole, so many other campers would be, too.
Ā the archers had to go fight on the front lines, which we literally see in the book. think of how many monsters and demigods they probably fought off- think of what wouldāve happened if they hadnāt been there. would camp half blood still have won the war? how many other demigods were on the bridge with michael yew, defending it? how many of them died when it collapsed? did they get confused in the midst of the battle field and shoot eachother?
and the healers. gods. not only were they working in the building, but itās likely that they were in the midst of battle, too. many of them were probably sent out to try and save and revive campers all across the city, or offer ambrosia and what little supplies they had left. healers are made to protect, and so that is what they did. think of how many demigods they must have saved, and then think of how many healers probably died saving the lives of their friends.
but the apollo cabin was full of dreamers. they prioritize art and poetry and music. they were dancers, mediators, idealists. they were creators and lovers. the apollo cabin was a light around camp, and kept camp half blood together. they were the glue. they saved olympus and all demigods in the war, and held them together all throughout it, until the end.
the apollo cabin lost the most campers of any cabin, because they were there. they were present. so many of them died with a bow in hand, defending olympus and camp half blood. so many of them died while pushing campers out of the way from attacks, while giving stitches or ambrosia.Ā think of how terrified they must have been, knowing that they wouldnāt return back to their cabin. think of all the bodies that littered manhattan in the aftermath, and then think of how many of those bodies belonged to the apollo cabin. think of apollo, when he saw his children, his beautiful, lovely children, radiating light in death. his beloved children, who knew the risks and chose to save, to heal, to love, to hope.
without the apollo cabin, kronos would have won the war. the apollo cabin went from one of the biggest cabins to one of the smallest. they were, undoubtedly, some of the bravest demigods alive. they gave their lives saving those who couldnāt save themselves, and i think that it is tragic.
there are so many backlit scenes in this show! it is heaven for Me!!!
one of my fav things about Robin 1993 is Tims occasional murderous thoughts