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Of Literary Nature

@ofliterarynature / ofliterarynature.tumblr.com

Rebecca/Bec | 30ish | Ohio, USA | 🌈♠️
books, embroidery, literary nonsense!
Est. 2013
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Hi! My name is Bec (Rebecca) and I post about books and reblog anything related - from memes and writing advice to cats, art, and embroidery. I primarily read fantasy, mystery, and science fiction, particularly with a historical, queer, or humanist bent. Not much into YA or booktok.

> TBR TAKEDOWN [about | polls] posted Mondays & Thursdays @ 4 pm EST.

Icon from the webcomic Check, Please!

Happy Reading!
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I've been given an ultimatum to get the giant stack of books I'm unhauling out of my parent's hallway by thanksgiving 😅 and I just saw a post on Facebook that we might be getting snow next week, so guess I'll be going to Half Price Books this weekend!

I'm feeling slightly unhinged!

Bets on how much they'll actually pay me?

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Screw Goodreads: Poetry Recommendations

Since goodreads doesn't think poetry matters, here's a random rec list for anyone who wants to read more poetry. You may find many of these titles on Libby and the Queer Liberation Library @queerliblib

Poetry books I can personally recommend:

  • bone - Yrsa Daley-Ward
  • Wound from the Mouth of a Wound - torrin a. greathouse
  • When I Grow Up I Want to Be a List of Further Possibilities - Chen Chen
  • Troubling the Line: Trans and Genderqueer Poetry and Poetics - Edited by T.C. Tolbert and Trace Peterson
  • Postcolonial Love Poem - Natalie Díaz
  • Thrown in the Throat - Benjamin Garcia
  • The Hurting Kind - Ada Limón
  • Night Sky with Exit Wounds - Ocean Vuong

And here are some of the many poetry books on my tbr (libby, my beloved, please... I'm not above begging) but I figured I'd add them for folks to do their own exploring.

  • Eating the Archive - Yousif M. Qazmiyeh
  • If My Body Could Speak - Blythe Baird
  • Helium - Rudy Francisco
  • There Should Be Flowers - Joshua Jennifer Espinoza
  • Corazón - Yesika Salgado
  • The Orange and Other Poems - Wendy Cope
  • The Collected Poems of Audre Lorde - Audre Lorde
  • I am Schizophrenic: Poetry from a Beautiful Brain - Kerenza Ryan
  • Blood Orange - Yaffa As
  • MARIPOSAS: A Modern Anthology of Queer Latino Poetry - Edited by Emanuel Xavier
  • Why Dust Shall Never Settle Upon This Soul - Ryka Aoki
  • Under Her Skin: A Women in Horror Poetry Showcase, Vol 1 - Edited by Lindy Ryan and Toni Miller
  • Life on Mars - Tracy K. Smith
  • The World Keeps Ending, and the World Goes On - Franny Choi
  • Call Us What We Carry - Amanda Gorman
  • We Will Be Shelter: Poems for Survival - Edited by Andrea Gibson
  • Crush - Richard Siken
  • Bless the Daughter Raised by a Voice in Her Head - Warsan Shire
  • The Tradition - Jericho Brown
  • The End of the Alphabet - Claudia Rankine
  • Beautiful Zero: Poems - Jennifer Willoughby
  • Calling a Wolf a Wolf - Kaveh Akbar

Individual poems:

Appreciating Poetry:

Disclaimer: I do not personally know if any of these authors are scumbags. I'll be doing research on each one soon (but a lot that goes on happens on twitter, and I don't touch twitter so I might miss shit). I encourage you to do your own research as well, and feel free to message me if you know something I don't.

**And as always, make sure you read the blurbs and check content warnings if you need to. Storygraph is great for content warnings if the author doesn't have them on their website**

okay stopping cuz this post is getting too long, but I'll make a part two at some point

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Never Whistle at Night: An Indigenous Dark Fiction anthology was a good Halloween read. It had many genuine scares. I did find myself wishing that editors Shane Hawk and Theodore C. Van Alst Jr. had been stricter with how many stories got into the anthology; the quality went very up and down throughout.

But the highlights made it well worth reading. In Mathilda Zeller's "Kashtuka," the main character is warned of violent doubles who can impersonate you; in Cherie Dimaline's "Tick Talk," a terrifying tick grows on a body in a play on resentment and grief. Characters wrestle with traumatic histories and real-life monstrousness (from residential schools to sexual assault to missing women) and with the horrors of indigenous folklore and belief, from the Weshtigo to ancient curses to uncanny doubles to creatures whose eyes flash red. They deal with Get Out–like monsters as well, whether in Rebecca Roanhorse's story about a woman willing to do near-anything to be accepted into a rich, white family, to people who collect indigenous bodies like trophies in stories by Conley Lyons and Amber Blaeser-Wardzala.

Content warnings for forced abortion, neglect/abuse, sexual assault/rape, violence/gore.

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rattsin
"You'll have to fight him in the end."
"I know, sir."
"Alan, he's taller and heavier than you! He'll kill you!"
Alanna put her orange aside, "Then I fight him till he lets me alone or till I get big enough to beat him. I can't let him walk all over me, Sir Myles! When you're--" She stopped, horrified. She had almost admitted she was a girl! She rushed on. When you're little, like me, you either quit and get picked on all the time, or you stick it out. I have to stick it out."

I'm not taking requests exactly but I'm quite suggestable as to what part of the book to draw next

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Books of 2024: BLACK TIDE by KC Jones.

Space-adjacent horror featuring "masses of menacing monsters" and "parasitic vines"?? Sign me TF up!! We're calling this NaNo prep, too, for space, and parasites, and scary (I hope!).

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sidras-tak

stuart hill’s Icemark Chronicles series is a really great series for beginner fantasy readers. it’s like Baby’s First LOTR in that it’s a trilogy of long, middle-grade fantasy novels (each book is about 500 pages), mainly about war, that juggles multiple viewpoints and tons of characters. but it’s written in a way to support and scaffold understanding of such complex stories and make them accessible to new readers. for example:

  • each character who has a long title and name, which are used repeatedly and interchangeably, and written in a way that the reader understands who the character is even if they don’t remember exactly. Thirrin Freer Strong-in-the-arm-Lindenshield, Wildcat of the North? no confusion whatsoever that she’s the fierce, strong warrior queen the series is based around. 
  • each character who does not have a long title or name is given a descriptor to remind the reader who they are (Maggiore Totus is the tutor of the royal children)
  • hill uses signal words and theme words, or, if you want to get technical, epithets, to draw your memory to other moments in the story. Thirrin has her fiery halo of hair, which is mentioned multiple times when she is particularly passionate during diplomatic meetings. during battle, the story always notes the “strange coughing bark” of the Snow Leopards. the villain always rides his horse into battle with “arrogant hand on arrogant hip”
  • each species/people have their own battle cries that serve as a quick reminder of who is fighting and for what. i can’t tell you how many times Thirrin and her army have shouted the battle cry of the Icemark (“the enemy is upon us! they kill our children, they burn our houses! BLOOD! BLAST! AND FIRE! BLOOD! BLAST! AND FIRE!) and how it legitimately sends shivers up my spine every time. in contrast, the main enemies, the Polypontians, cry “Veni, vidi, vici!” (I came, I saw, I conquered).
  • deaths of characters are frequent but almost never a surprise. in the second book, Their Vampiric Majesties mention at least five times that they could not bear to face the endless centuries without the other, making it very, very clear to the reader that one of them will die before the end. and he does and it is not a surprise. 
  • for that matter, you can go into a battle scene knowing who will survive. a character will mention that they feel strangely certain the Mother Goddess has other plans for them, comment on how calm/strong/ready they feel, or make plans for a drinking contest with their friend after the battle, and you can be sure they will come out alive. 
  • the plots are pretty simple overall, but enough events get added to keep the pace moving and interesting. here’s how the first book goes: Icemark gets attacked -> Thirrin becomes queen -> Thirrin searches for allies -> the Icemark defends its home. that’s it! but there’s so much more going on with character development and some really delicious writing that never once in the 500 pages did i feel bored or that it could be shorter.
  • this is not so much an accessibility thing, but i think it’s extremely cool how hill meshes barbarity and nobility. the icemark is a “barbaric” country and Thirrin is often referred to as “the barbarian queen”. it’s true the people of the icemark are loud, passionate, rowdy, and even violent, drinking and eating to excess and enjoying fighting almost too much. they ally themselves with monsters: werewolves, vampires, Snow Leopards, the Holly and Oak kings, Oskan Witchfather and his White Witches, anything from the Land-of-the-Ghosts that will listen to them. but they are also shown to be noble people who defend fiercely because they have people they want to protect. each species of the alliance has leaders who are kind, just, wise, powerful, or just plain nice, and each species’ culture is shown as complex and interesting. they fight with honor and avoid unnecessary cruelty. contrasted to that, the polypontians are called “civilized”, running their empire with science and rational thought and employing much more advanced technology, but they are cruel, dishonorable, and arrogant.
  • if i had a criticism for the series (actually i have several dont worry) i would say that hill buys in too strongly to the idea of “the divine right of kings” (or in this case, queens and monarchs) as every monarch on Thirrin’s side is a good ruler, a good person, and exceptionally talented/strong/powerful/beautiful as compared to the rest of the characters. many of the characters are given epithets like “beloved of the One” (Sharley, Mekhmet) or shown that the Goddess loves them more than other, less important characters (Thirrin, Oskan). 
  • oh! also cool that the “barbaric” society has no problem with a queen instead of a king (even after Thirrin gets married, she’s the leader, not her consort) and Thirrin’s mother was from a matriarchal tribe, the Hypolitan, led by a female Basilea, that allies itself with the Icemark at various points. they also worship the Mother Goddess, though religion is based around magic and nature rather than churches. i don’t think there is a religious leader in the story at all. (Other species worship other gods: the werewolves worship the Blessed Moon and the Desert Kingdom worships a male god called the One)
  • i think i lost the plot of why i wanted to write this post but this is a good book series, okay? it’s written for middle schoolers but it’s still good to an adult. please read it.
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TBR Takedown: Goodreads Week 2a (Nov 11)

The Final Descent (The Monstrumologist #4) by Rick Yancey

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I hate the trend of just describing books with what minorities the main characters represent and nothing else. not only does it feel weird + exploitative to me it's also such a shoddy ineffective marketing technique. "this is my book with queer polyam disabled vampires you should buy it" ok great but what is it like. about. what are the themes. why should I read it

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fandom-blahs

Love how tumblr pushed this marketing tactic but we're all blaming it on booktok

For years it was "this show/book is good because POC/Gay/Woman" without any further elaboration and if you poked at the hype people accused you of being Problematic and Bad.

But it's all booktok now

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October reads!

Bit of a mix this month, couple of comedic books, a bedtime story read to my daughter, a comic about pregnancy, the latest in my Robin Hobb journey (this one desperately in need of an editor) and the new Elizabeth Strout, which I’m unsurprised to find is fantastic.

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teleportzz

hey guys do the allos know that they can have qprs too? like do they know that being alloromantic doesn't mean they can't choose to be in a qpr anyway? because qprs aren't "romance-lite" for aros, they're an entirely separate kind of relationship that anyone can have. you can do this with fictional characters too. you can put characters that aren't aroace or are even canonically dating in qprs with each other just because you think that would be a cool way to play with their dynamic. it's actually very cool and you totally should.

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greyishbobbi

Mr. Griffles, the playful griffon! I enjoyed doing a little indoors scene, I thought of this guy as a housecat honestly. Do you like the rug tufts? I had a lot of fun with this one.. if you want to as well, pattern can be found on my kofi!

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