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Best Books of 2022
And I’m back again with another list of books that I think everyone should read. Or, at least, books I think are halfway decent given the other books I’ve read this year. To be fair, it was a better year than I thought. Anyway, without further ado, the best ten books I read, plus some honorable mentions:
Nona the Ninth - Tamsyn Muir In full disclosure, I knew this book would be on my list before I even read it and I was not disproven in that assumption by the time I finished. Hands down, the best book I read this year and it’s not even that close. Books tend to take me a lot longer to finish as I get older, but this one took me two days. Obviously, if you haven’t read Gideon the Ninth or Harrow the Ninth, you should, but this odd little sequel was probably my favorite one yet. Nona is such a refreshing character–a bombshell of light and love and curiosity–and it is as queer as ever. Bonus, if you have a soft spot for Camilla or Palamedes, as I do, you got blessed this book.
In the Dream House - Carmen Maria Machado I actually read far more nonfiction this year than I usually do, thanks to getting burnt out on fantasy, my staple. This book is the best of the bunch and absolutely incredible. The writing is poignant and lovely and careful and the topic of domestic abuse is tackled by an author who is invested in making you understand what they went through. It’s personal, it’s internal, and it broke me more than once. Definitely worth looking up trigger warnings, but also definitely worth reading.
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Michael Sheen about David Tennant, bonding over working on Good Omens and their kids, Season 2 and suprises in S2, and David’s bad habits. (MCM Comic Con, 30.10.2022)
Q: Now, I’ve watched a youtube video, it was a really strange fan video, it was lovely though, and it was about the bromance between you and David Tennant.
Michael: I’m sorry, I didn’t… I don’t know who you’re referring to.
Q: I mean, what is he like to work with, he seems like a joy to work with and you guys get on really well.
Michael: I mean, it’s like having and an albatros around your neck, really, he sort of does drag you down a lot of time… no, I feel very lucky, you know, David and I were in a film called Bright Young Things together many, many years ago - [applause] thank you very much, thank you, thank you - but we didn’t get to act together in that and we didn’t, you know, we didn’t really know each other from that and we’ve know each other ‘say hello to’ over the years, but it wasn’t until we did Good Omens the first series really that we - [another applause] thank you thank you - that we got to know each other and of course we spent a LOT of time together on that, and people were coming in and out, but it was essentially me and David sitting in the tent all day every day a lot of the time. And so we sort of slowly got to know each other doing that and then, actually it was probably doing the publicity for that and the press for that that we really got to know each other and and then because we both had babies within weeks of each other, you know, me and Anna and David and Georgia, you know, we got very kind of bonded then because of over that. And we say that, so David and Georgia’s little girl Birdie and our little girl Lyra, we say, Lyra’s only got one friend and that’s Birdie. And we sort of got very close but we were very lucky, because you don’t know the chemistry’s gonna be like between you and another actor until you start working together. And, you know, interestingly David and I probably hadn’t work together because a lot of time we were up for the same parts, or you know, there was only one David or Michael shaped hole in the cast and only one of us would fill it, so we didn’t get to work together. And I’ve been a big fan of his work for years and years and really admired, you know, what he did, and so then get into work opposite each other, it just sort of clicked very quickly, and I remember when we did the table read for the first series of Good Omens and we were sitting there next to each other and starting to read the lines together and we’d not really talked about the characters much before then or how we were gonna do it abd you could sort of feel the two of us kind of adapting to each other over the first, you know, few pages and then we just kind of, it just clicked, the characters just clicked and we just sort of without having to talk about it we just instinctively understood how they would be together and I remember Neil Gaiman and Douglas the director saying that watching it was like that as well, you saw these characters sort of circling around each other a little bit and sniffing each other out and then bumph you’re just suddenly dancing and it’s been like that ever since, really. It was such a joy to come back and do the second series together again, and it was like… once we’d put the costumes on again, and we were on the Soho set - we filmed it up in Scotland and they’ve buil like entire block of Soho, on the first one where they only built a small amount of it and it was in a freezing cold carpark ouside Oxfordshire and it was miserable and this time we were in the lovely, warm soundstage with a whole of Soho built, and once we got the costumes on and I remember our first scene together - because David was a bit ill at the very beginning of the filming, so he wasn’t there for the first few days - and then when we did get to our first scene together and it was just a walk across the street or something and it was almost like the costumes were walking for themselves, like they just knew what to do, the characters just sort of took over, weirdly, and we were in that kind of groove again. So it’s an absolutle pleasure working with him and spending time with him and it’s so lovely that we found these two characters, or these two characters found us, to be able to sort of put everything into, you know, and to feel so comfortable with each other. It’s been brilliant and I hope when it comes out next summer I hope everyone really enjoys it, I think there’s gonna be a lot of great surprises for people and I hope you enjoy it.
Q: I mean, Michael, that’s all very well, that’s very sweet, what a lovely story, but I want you to dish some dirt. Tell me, is there something… does he have a bad habit… does he have an annoying habit, that he wouldn’t want us to know about?
Michael: About David?
Q: Yes.
Michael: Oh my goodness. David doesn’t have any bad habits. Em, what can I tell you about him… I mean, he’s a bit good to be true, really. He’s always lovely to everyone… oh! I tell you what his bad habit is. He leaves it to me to… when there’s a problem and we are unhappy about something, because I’m supposedly the grumpy one, he leaves it to me, so he can be the [imitating David:] 'Oh, I’m so sorry, it’s just Michael has a wee problem with this, I don’t know… it’s not me, I’m fine with it, you know…’, but, you know, the two of us have gone, 'Well, that’s a bit out of order, innit?’ and then I’m the attack dog who has to go out.
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Aziraphale is gonna have to do a whole lot of dancing to make this Okay
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Oh my god I just realized: Crowley has the whole thing about angels being like bees, and he dances as an apology… the dots… they are connecting…

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It's incredible funny how Crowley thinks the key to romance is getting wet in the rain together and look at each other because it worked for him 6000 years ago.
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But also i firmly believe crowley knew it was a lost cause when he started confessing but he needed to SAY IT he was fighting DESPERATELY he needed to give it his all. Horrible
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ok so we’ve all been gushing abt Michael Sheen’s acting in That Scene™ (and for good reason, it was amazing) but can we talk for a second about David Tennant’s bcz BRO
like the hurt, the anger, the betrayal, the voice breaks, the love, the emotion. just the way he portrayed him just UGHHHHH it fucking killed me. his acting mugged me behind a back alley and stabbed me to death even after i gave it everything i own
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Quick comic to get out my FEELINGS I want to THROW UP Neil
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girl typing a very specific question into google search bar, scrunching her face as she takes time to make sure she hasn't made any spelling errors, hitting enter, shaking her head as google only presents her with unhelpful websites that don't answer her query at all, moving her cursor back to the search bar and clicking on it so she can carefully write 'reddit' at the end, hitting enter again, sighing with relief as she finds a link to a reddit post asking the exact question she needed answered posted in a subreddit for a very niche topic, finally moving her cursor to click on the link, wondering why she didn't go straight to the subreddit earlier, only to be met with a deleted comment with a reply from the OP stating 'that was very helpful, thanks', sighing with frustration as she moves her cursor back to the search bar so she can copy the link and paste it into the wayback machine,
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claire schwartz, from poetry rx as featured in the paris review
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"Milennials aren't having kids because they're selfish, lazy, emotionally stunted, irresponsible, and refuse to grow up"
Everyone I've met below 35: I work three jobs to pay my half of the rent in the shitty apartment I share with my cousin, it's 200 degrees in the summer and in the winter the ground level is under water. 3 billionaires control my country and everyone in it. I lost my sense of taste when I got covid at work and nothing I do matters. Today a customer threw her iced coffee in my face and my manager said it was my fault. I've never been on a vacation and ill never afford retirement. I bought a $3 box of oreos today and cried about it. My country is on fire. Six children died in a school shooting today. Nazis are back
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