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See, that’s what the app is perfect for.

Sounds perfect Wahhhh, I don’t wanna
literaryvein-reblogs
literaryvein-reblogs

Another List of "Beautiful" Words

to include in your next poem

  1. Avidulous - somewhat greedy.
  2. Breviloquent - marked by brevity of speech.
  3. Compotation - a drinking or tippling together.
  4. Crimpy - of weather; unpleasant; raw and cold.
  5. Desiderium - an ardent desire or longing; especially, a feeling of loss or grief for something lost.
  6. Dyspathy - lack of sympathy.
  7. Ebriosity - habitual intoxication.
  8. Epitasis - the part of a play developing the main action and leading to the catastrophe.
  9. Fantod - a state of irritability and tension.
  10. Graumangere - a great meal.
  11. Grimoire - a magician's manual for invoking demons and the spirits of the dead.
  12. Hiemal - of or relating to winter.
  13. Illaudable - deserving no praise.
  14. Impluvious - wet with rain.
  15. Innominate - having no name; unnamed; also, “anonymous”.
  16. Juberous - doubtful and hesitating.
  17. Noctilucous - shining at night.
  18. Poetaster - an inferior poet.
  19. Psychrophilic - thriving at a relatively low temperature.
  20. Quiddity - the essential nature or ultimate form of something: what makes something to be the type of thing that it is.
  21. Repullulate - to bud or sprout again.
  22. Retrogradation - a backward movement.
  23. Semiustulate - half burnt or consumed by fire.
  24. Tenebrific - causing gloom or darkness.
  25. Unparadiz’d - brought from joy to miserie.

If any of these words make it into your next poem/story, please tag me. Or leave a link in the replies. I'd love to read them!

Source: merriam-webster.com writers' room booklr writers on tumblr writeblr writing community creative writing words literature wordblr langblr studyblr
queerbookmasterlist

How to Use the Queer Book Master List

queerbookmasterlist

I have created a master list of queer fiction books which can be sorted and filtered by your preferences.  However, many have asked how to use it - so I have created a quick guide below!

This is not like google sheets - any filters you create will only be shown to you and will disappear when you exit that screen. So feel free to mess around! I promise you won’t ruin anything.

Step 1: Open the database

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Step 2: Select the “Create Your Own Filter” view on the left-hand side.

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Step 3: Click “filter” on the top bar.

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Step 4: Input any filters you would like to organize the files by. The screen will automatically update with books that fit into all of your specifications.

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queerbookmasterlist

Link to the master list

Reminder, if you think I am missing a book, there is also a submission link where I can review & add to the main list!

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battyaboutbooksreviews
battyaboutbooksreviews

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🍉 Queer Palestinian Books 🍉

🇵🇸 The algorithm is going to keep silencing my posts, but they're not going to silence me. I grew up with little to no books that made me feel seen as a queer/bisexual Palestinian Arab American. Today, it's still not easy enough to find those books online, even though we have thousands of lists, posts, and directories to guide us. To make your search a little easier, here are a few queer Palestinian books to add to your TBR. Please help me spread this by reblogging. Consider adding these to your least for Read Palestine Week (click for resources)! 💜

🍉 The Skin and Its Girl by Sarah Cypher
🇵🇸 A Map of Home by Randa Jarrar
🍉 Hazardous Spirits by Anbara Salam
🇵🇸 To All the Yellow Flowers by Raya Tuffaha
🍉 You Exist Too Much by Zaina Arafat
🇵🇸 The Specimen's Apology by George Abraham
🍉 Birthright by George Abraham
🇵🇸 Nayra and the Djinn by Iasmin Omar Ata
🍉 Where Black Stars Rise by Nadia Shammas and Marie Enger
🇵🇸 The Twenty-Ninth Year by Hala Alyan
🍉 Guapa by Saleem Haddad
🇵🇸 From Whole Cloth: An Asexual Romance by Sonia Sulaiman

🍉 The Philistine by Leila Marshy
🇵🇸 Love Is an Ex-Country by Randa Jarrar
🍉 Shell Houses by Rasha Abdulhadi
🇵🇸 Queer Palestine and the Empire of Critique by Sa'ed Atshan
🍉 Belladonna by Anbara Salam
🇵🇸 Confetti Realms by Nadia Shammas, Karnessa, Hackto Oshiro
🍉 Blood Orange by Yaffa As
🇵🇸 The ordeal of being known by Malia Rose
🍉 Decolonial Queering in Palestine by Walaa Alqaisiya
🇵🇸 Are You This? Or Are You This?: A Story of Identity and Worth by Madian Al Jazerah, Ellen Georgiou
🍉 This Arab Is Queer: An Anthology by LGBTQ+ Arab Writers
🇵🇸 My Mama's Magic by Amina Awad

reading room reading recs queer reading recs queer palestinian reading recs palestinian books queer books queer fiction queer books queer book recs book recs book recommendation booklr sapphic books sapphic romance TBR
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Writer Spotlight: Rose Sutherland

Rose Sutherland @rosesutherlandwrites is a Toronto-based writer who grew up a voracious reader with an overactive imagination in Nova Scotia (where she once fell off a roof trying to re-enact Anne of Green Gables!). She’s been to theatre school in NYC, apprenticed at a pâtisserie in rural France, and currently moonlights as an usher and bartender—in between writing queer folktales, practicing yoga, dancing, singing, searching out amazing coffee and croissants, and making niche jokes about Victor Hugo on the internet. She’s mildly obsessed with the idea of one day owning a large dog, several chickens, and maybe a goat. A Sweet Sting of Salt is her debut novel.

Keep reading for more about character arcs in A Sweet Sting of Salt, Rose’s favorite fanfic tropes, and some excellent reading recs 👀

Can you tell us about A Sweet Sting of Salt and how you came to write it?

A Sweet Sting of Salt is a queer (f/f) historical reimagining of the classic folktale of the selkie wife, set in 1830’s Nova Scotia. I call it a “reimagining” because while it draws on the folktale, it’s not a retelling of that tale so much as a story playing out in relation to that mythology. I’d wanted to write something centering a love story between two women for a while, but the initial spark came from a Tumblr post! It suggested the idea of selkies testifying before the UN as victims of human trafficking, which reminded me of all the things I disliked about the original folktale and its inherent darkness that is generally glossed over, starting me down the rabbit hole toward finding my own story.

How did you approach research for A Sweet Sting of Salt, and what is a favorite historical fact you learned?

I joke that I did a lot of research by osmosis: I already had a lot of base knowledge about the location, having grown up in Nova Scotia, and then set the story in a period that I’ve been absorbing information about in a low-key way for ages—1832 is also the year of the student rebellion in Les Mis, so I’ve been gleaning tidbits about this era since I first got into the musical and book back in high school. However, I had to do more specific research into things like British divorce law, period midwifery, and animal husbandry. I also visited some small, hyper-local museums on the South Shore that gave me an invaluable glimpse into daily life. I also did some fun practical research into things like “How long does it take to walk from x to y?” and “How cold IS a plunge into this body of water in March?” (Spoiler: Very.) 

A fact that fascinated me but didn’t make it into the book was that some early European settlers in the area were granted lands by luck of the draw, pulling from a deck of playing cards: Each card was assigned to a specific 50-acre lot, and whatever you pulled, you were stuck with it.

When we meet them, Jean and Muirin are isolated for different reasons. What do you hope readers still searching for their people take away from A Sweet Sting of Salt?

That there’s always hope. It’s valuable and important to keep reaching out to the world around you, to be open, and not cut yourself off—the biggest reason for Jean’s loneliness at the beginning of this story is the way she has come to keep everyone around her at arm’s length, shutting herself away out of fear, and refusing to let anyone truly get to know her because she thinks that’s the best way to protect herself from being hurt again. Reaching out to others can take a real act of courage, especially if you’ve had bad experiences in the past, but “your people” will reach back to you.

Keep reading

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