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Isabelle Langlois 18k White Gold Moonstone, Pink Sapphire, Pearl, and Diamond Ring
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Other Leitner Reading List
The full list of submissions for the Unaffiliated Leitner bracket. Bold titles are ones which were accepted to appear in the bracket. Synopses and propaganda can be found below the cut. Be warned, however, that these may contain spoilers!
Allende, Isabel: Ripper
Beauregard, Aron: Playground Borges, Jorge Luis: Averroës's Search Borges, Jorge Luis: El Aleph Bosch, Pseudonymous: The Secret Series Breed-Wrisley, Kira and Scott Cawthon: Five Nights At Freddy's: The Silver Eyes Bulgakov, Mikhail: The Master and Margarita Burroughs, William S.: Naked Lunch Byng, Georgia: Molly Moon's Incredible Book of Hypnotism
Carroll, Lewis: The Hunting of the Snark
Denning, G.S.: Warlock Holmes DeTerlizzi, Tony: The Search for WondLa
El-Mohtar, Amal and Max Gladstone: This Is How You Lose the Time War
Fforde, Jasper: Thursday Next series
Gaiman, Neil & Terry Pratchett: Good Omens Grahame-Smith, Seth: How to Survive a Horror Movie: All the Skills to Dodge the Kills Grimm, Brothers: Grimm's Fairy Tales
Holt, Tom: Doughnut Hussie, Andrew: Homestuck
Johnson, Jeremy Robert: We Live Inside You
Langlois, Amelie C.: The Sister Verse Series Lewis, C.S.: The Silver Chair Lovecraft, H.P.: The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath Lubar, David: Weenies series Lyons, Steve: The Crooked World
Nash, Ogden: A Tale of the 13th Floor
Osman, Richard: The Thursday Murder Club
Pinkwater, Daniel: Alan Mendelsohn, the Boy from Mars Pirinçci, Akif: Felidae
Rix, Jamie: Grizzly Tales For Gruesome Kids
Scieszka, Jon: The Stinky Cheese Man Shannon, David: No, David! Sims, Jonathan: Thirteen Storeys Skipp, John: Don't Push the Button Stine, R.L.: Goosebumps
Theis, Jim: The Eye of Argon Tokuda-Hall, Maggie: The Mermaid The Witch and The Sea Traditional (German): Der Struwwelpeter Trumbo, Dalton: Johnny Got His Gun
Van Allsburg, Chris: The Mysteries of Harris Burdick Vasquez, Jhonen: Squee's Wonderful Big Giant Book of Unspeakable Horrors
Allende, Isabel: Ripper
Seventeen-year-old Amanda Martin is fascinated by crime. She is currently obsessed with a game called "Ripper" which she plays online with players from around the world. With the assistance of her beloved grandfather, she guides the group (Sherlock, Esmeralda, Colonel Paddington, and Abatha) in their objective of solve crimes inspired by those of Jack the Ripper. When a series of grisly murders starts taking place in the San Francisco area where she leaves, she is fascinated by then and finds herself steering the group toward solving these real life murders.
But the game stops being fun when her mother, free-spirited Indiana Jackson, goes missing.
Beauregard, Aron: Playground
Three low-income families have been given a handsome retainer to join Geraldine Borden for a day at her cliffside estate. All the parents must do to collect the rest of their money is allow their children to test out the revolutionary playground equipment Geraldine has been working on for decades. But there’s a reason the structures in the bowels of her gothic castle have taken so long to develop—they were never meant to see the light of day.
When a band of dysfunctional children is suddenly thrust into a diabolical realm of violence, they must grow up instantly to have a chance at survival. Will they find a way to put their differences aside, or be swallowed up by the insidious architecture all around them?
Borges, Jorge Luis: Averroës's Search
The story very much reminds me of the domain in MAG183: Monument. "The story imagines the difficulty of Averroës, the famed Islamic philosopher and translator, in translating Aristotle's Poetics because he was not able to understand what a play was, owing to the absence of live theatrical performances from Averroës' cultural milieu, in contrast to that of ancient Greece. In the story, Averroës casually observes some children play-acting, then later hears a traveler ineptly describe an actual theatrical performance he once saw in a distant land, but still fails to understand that the tragedies and comedies of which Aristotle writes are a kind of performance art, rather than merely literature.
The process of writing the story is meant to parallel the events in the story itself; Borges writes in an afterword to the story that his attempt to understand Averroës was as doomed as Averroës's attempt to understand drama. "I felt that the work mocked me, foiled me, thwarted me. I felt that Averroës, trying to imagine what a play is without ever having suspected what a theater is, was no more absurd than I, trying to imagine Averroës yet with no more material than a few snatches from Renan, Lane, and Asín Palacios.""
Borges, Jorge Luis: El Aleph
I am not sure if this counts as it is a collection of short stories, so I will also submit my personal choice that best fits an unaligned Leitner in my opinion. "The title work, "The Aleph", describes a point in space that contains all other spaces at once. The work also presents the idea of infinite time. Borges writes in the original afterword, dated May 3, 1949 (Buenos Aires), that most of the stories belong to the genre of fantasy, mentioning themes such as identity and immortality."
Bosch, Pseudonymous: The Secret Series
The series is about two children who are not named Cass and Max-Ernest. Cass is a survivalist, while Max-Ernest has a condition (though no one knows quite what his condition is). One day, they are swept into the dangerous world of the Terces Society and the Midnight Sun...and the Secret.
Features alchemy, the quest for immortality, time travel, a very Lemony narrator, and the exploration of all five senses.
Breed-Wrisley, Kira and Scott Cawthon: Five Nights At Freddy's: The Silver Eyes
From the creator of the bestselling horror video game series Five Nights at Freddy's.Ten years after the horrific murders at Freddy Fazbear's Pizza that ripped their town apart, Charlie, whose father owned the restaurant, and her childhood friends reunite on the anniversary of the tragedy and find themselves at the old pizza place which had been locked up and abandoned for years. After they discover a way inside, they realize that things are not as they used to be. The four adult-sized animatronic mascots that once entertained patrons have changed. They now have a dark secret . . . and a murderous agenda.
Bulgakov, Mikhail: The Master and Margarita
One hot spring, the devil arrives in Moscow, accompanied by a retinue that includes a beautiful naked witch and an immense talking black cat with a fondness for chess and vodka. The visitors quickly wreak havoc in a city that refuses to believe in either God or Satan. But they also bring peace to two unhappy Muscovites: one is the Master, a writer pilloried for daring to write a novel about Christ and Pontius Pilate; the other is Margarita, who loves the Master so deeply that she is willing literally to go to hell for him.
Burroughs, William S.: Naked Lunch
It follows Bill Lee through Interzone: a surreal, orgiastic wasteland of drugs, depravity, political plots, paranoia, sadistic medical experiments and endless, gnawing addiction. The book is structured as a series of loosely connected vignettes, intended by Burroughs to be read in any order, and the main character takes on various aliases as he travels from the U.S. to Mexico, eventually to Tangier and the dreamlike Interzone. Burroughs wrote in his introduction that "The title means exactly what the words say: naked lunch, a frozen moment when everyone sees what is on the end of every fork."
Could this book be considered as being aligned to the Spiral? Could it be Flesh? I don't know, but it is certainly something or other.
Byng, Georgia: Molly Moon's Incredible Book of Hypnotism
Molly Moon is a British preteen living in a terrible orphanage. Just before her only friend is adopted and moves to America without saying goodbye, she finds a rare book on hypnotism, and gains the ability to hypnotize anyone through eye contact and make them do whatever she wants. She heads off to America to find her friend, hypnotizing people all the way. Meanwhile, a sinister wanna-be hypnotist stalks her... and he is willing to do anything to get the book in his hands.
Sequels deal with further developing psychic powers, including body-hopping, weather control, and even time travel.
Carroll, Lewis: The Hunting of the Snark
An epic poem which hits quite a few different fears; the Hunt is an obvious one, and given the author, so is the Spiral. The sea voyage has elements of Vast, and various characters can be read as Flesh, Stranger, and even Web. The poem seems to end with the Lonely; " He had softly and suddenly vanished away — For the Snark was a Boojum, you see."
Denning, G.S.: Warlock Holmes
A Sherlock Holmes parody in which the titular detective is a rather abstracted mage, Watson is the brains of the outfit, and Gregson and Lestrade are an ogre and a vampire, respectively. Together, they investigate supernatural crime in Victorian England.
DeTerlizzi, Tony: The Search for WondLa
The Search for WondLa is the first book in a trilogy about a human girl, Eva Nine, in a strange and unfamiliar world.
She actually spends a lot of this book believing she is the last of her species surrounded by all sorts of strange creatures she can never quite feel close to (lonely, extinction) while being hunted by a trophy hunter who wants to give her to a mysterious queen.
On why it's Lonely: a large portion of the book is spent with someone she cannot communicate with and feels distant from, alongside the general Lonely vibes of "last human" stories.
On why it's Extinction: This is earth. A long-destroyed earth, specifically (she visits the ruins of NYC, I have proof), and these alien races have moved in now that the humans are all "gone" (complicated). It's heavily implied the earth was destroyed in some nuclear war or natural disaster, with the alien species having restored the earth from a wasteland.
On why it's hunt: she spends the entire book being hunted and being afraid because of that, what more do I need to say?
On why it belongs here: quite the fear cocktail for a children's book, isn't it?
El-Mohtar, Amal and Max Gladstone: This Is How You Lose the Time War
The novel is about two agents on rival sides of a time war, Red and Blue, who are both working to ensure that their respective futures — the highly technological Agency and the biological Garden — come to pass. Despite their opposing organizations, Red and Blue begin exchanging letters across time and space, and develop affection for each other that threatens not only them, but the entire time war.
Fforde, Jasper: Thursday Next series
Thursday Next lives in an Alternate History. In her world, Time Travel, cloning and genetic engineering are commonplace; resurrected dodos are the household pet of choice. The obscenely powerful Goliath Corporation, which nearly singlehandedly reconstructed England after World War II, now runs the country as a virtual police state. And literature, particularly classic literature, is very, very, very Serious Business. Writers are revered with nearly spiritual devotion, controversial claims about books and authors can be criminal, and an entire police squad, the LiteraTecs, exist to keep the literary scene in order. Thursday works for just such a unit in Swindon, with her friend and colleague, the exceedingly polite Bowden Cable.
In the course of rescuing her Gadgeteer Genius uncle Mycroft from international arch-criminal Acheron Hades, a gleefully evil individual with supernatural powers, Thursday discovers the Great Library, a sort of pocket dimension that exists 'behind the scenes' of all works of literature, where all literary characters live. They're self-aware, acting out their roles when a person reads a book but chilling out and living their own lives as soon as they close it. The Great Library is governed by the Council of Genres and kept in line by Jurisfiction, another police force whose task it is to make sure the plot of every book stays the same every time someone reads it. (Insofar as they can.)
Such is the universe of Jasper Fforde's meta-fictional masterpiece, the Thursday Next series. The author hangs a lampshade on everything and anything relating to classic literature, the tropes of police fiction and spy fiction, and even the relationship between a work of fiction and its audience. Heavy on wordplay and puns, the series deals with the tireless heroine's adventures balancing her work as an agent of Jurisfiction in the Great Library and LiteraTec in the outside world, to say nothing of her responsibilities as a wife and mother.
Gaiman, Neil & Terry Pratchett: Good Omens
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Grahame-Smith, Seth: How to Survive a Horror Movie: All the Skills to Dodge the Kills
Every month or so, a new horror movie hits #1 at the box office no wonder there are dozens of new fright films slated for release in 2007. But if you find yourself trapped in one of these movies, there's no need to be afraid. How to Survive a Horror Movie teaches readers how to cope with every kind of horror movie obstacle, from ax-wielding psychopaths to haunted Japanese VHS tapes. Chapters include:
-How to Survive a Night of Babysitting -How to Convince the Skeptical Local Sheriff -How to Perform an Exorcism -How to Tell If You've Been Dead Since the Beginning of the Movie -How to Vanquish a Murderous Doll
Full of illustrated instructions on avoiding ghosts, serial killers, haunted cars, murderous pets, telekinetic prom queens, and countless other hazards, How to Survive a Horror Movie is essential reading for movie buffs of all ages!
Grimm, Brothers: Grimm's Fairy Tales
Can't beat the classics, especially when the original versions feature cannibalism, murder, mutilation, and torture!
Holt, Tom: Doughnut
Multiversal travel is made possible through mathematics and fried dough.
Hussie, Andrew: Homestuck
This thing is a tome of madness, chaos, and early 2000s Internet culture (oops, tautology!)
***
you know why
Johnson, Jeremy Robert: We Live Inside You
"We are within you, and we are growing. Watching. Waiting for your empires to fall. It won't be long now. We are the fear of death that drives you and the terrible hunger that reshapes you in its name. We are the vengeance born from senseless slaughter and the pulsing reptile desire that negates your consciousness. We are the lie on your lips, the collapsing star in your heart, and the still-warm gun in your shaking hands. The illusion of control is all we'll allow you, and no matter what you do... WE LIVE INSIDE YOU"
This book is one of those story collections that everybody should read. In turns fascinating, poignant, scary and all too human, Jeremy Robert Johnson taps into the nightmare psyche that threatens to eat you every moment of your life. Each story highlights another gremlin that snacks on your nerves, tells you things you don't want to hear.
Langlois, Amelie C.: The Sister Verse Series
John, an unstable detective living in an alternate future, is plagued by hallucinations of a malevolent, shapeshifting entity, known as the Lord in White, that haunted his childhood. While he struggles to maintain his grip on reality, he soon discovers that his world is a terrifying illusion designed to make him suffer. Surreal, horrifying, and unflinchingly brutal – enter a world of blood and fear. Enter the Sister Verse.
The series reads like a fever dream. The world reflects the fears of all the characters in the most bizarre way possible, and things continue to unravel the further they go, typically ending in a forest made of liquid meat that surrounds a black hole shaped like a willow with teeth. It is revealed in the first book that the whole reality John and the rest of the cast of characters live in and themselves was created by the Lord in White for his own amusement. The Lord in White is completely aware that it’s in a fictional universe, and is implied to have the power to rewrite parts of the story, being the avatar of the Sister Verse. It often refers to the reader directly, as well as real world occurrences and future in-universe events, to the point that it literally recites lines from the book. And that's just the first book in the series, with the Lovecraftian horror continuing further in the sequels as the past of the Dreadlands is revealed, along with the past of its characters.
Lewis, C.S.: The Silver Chair
"Eustace and Jill escape from the bullies at school through a strange door in the wall, which, for once, is unlocked. It leads to the open moor...or does it? Once again Aslan has a task for the children, and Narnia needs them. Through dangers untold and caverns deep and dark, they pursue the quest that brings them face to face with the evil Witch. She must be defeated if Prince Rillian is to be saved."
Lovecraft, H.P.: The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath
Uncelebrated writer and illustrious dreamer Randolph Carter dreams three times of a majestic sunset city, but each time he is abruptly snatched away before he can see it up close. When he prays to the gods of dream to reveal the whereabouts of the phantasmal city, they do not answer, and his dreams of the city stop altogether. Undaunted, Carter decides to use all his talents in the dream-world to find the legendary mountain Kadath, where the wiser Earth Gods live, in order to ask them for the location of his beloved sunset city. He initiates a quest through the depths of the Dreamlands, finding the weirdest things and meeting the strangest friends and foes.
Unknowingly to Carter, a powerful entity is bent on making him desist of his quest...
Lubar, David: Weenies series
A series of horror story collections for kids which range from the funny to the weird to the outright twisted.
Lyons, Steve: The Crooked World
Synopsis: The people of the Crooked World lead an idyllic existence.
Take Streaky Bacon, for example. This jovial farmer wants nothing more from life than a huge blunderbuss, with which he can blast away at his crop-stealing nemesis. And then there's Angel Falls, a racing driver with a string of victories to her name. Sure, her trusted guardian might occasionally put on a mask and menace her for her prize money, but that's just life, right? And for Jasper the cat, nothing could be more pleasant than a nice, long nap in his kitchen — so long as that darn mouse doesn't jam his tail into the plug socket again.
But somebody is about to shatter all those lives. Somebody is about to change everything — and it's possible that no one on the Crooked World will ever be happy again.
The Doctor's TARDIS is about to arrive. And when it does... That's all folks!
Propaganda: okay. okay okayokayokkay. I can be normal about this book (a lie). The TARDIS lands on a planet that operates on cartoon logic. The Doctor immediately gets shot in the chest and everyone is very confused when he doesn't immediately heal. The travelers have inadvertently introduced the real world into this Saturday Morning fantasyland, with concepts like death and sex and social inequality. For the first time, people can die permanently. The two-bit villains unite to nuke the heroic characters. The Scooby gang actually do discover the flayed corpse of God. In the middle of it all is the Doctor at maximum Nyarlathotep, fomenting revolution and drastic metaphysical upheaval in his strange, too-real clothes. If nothing else, vote for this book for actually making me cry over the death of Scrappy Fuckin' Doo!
Nash, Ogden: A Tale of the 13th Floor
A poem which warns against murderous retribution and illustrates the hellish fate of killers tied forever to their victims in the afterlife. Link: https://allpoetry.com/A-Tale-Of-The-Thirteenth-Floor
Osman, Richard: The Thursday Murder Club
“In a peaceful retirement village, four unlikely friends meet up once a week to investigate unsolved murders. But when a brutal killing takes place on their very doorstep, the Thursday Murder Club find themselves in the middle of their first live case. Elizabeth, Joyce, Ibrahim and Ron might be pushing eighty but they still have a few tricks up their sleeves. Can our unorthodox but brilliant gang catch the killer before it's too late?”
While it seems like a shoe-in for the Hunt with tracking down who did the crime, the book goes in areas that could consider being touched by the Lonely, the End, and the Eye. After all, this does take place in a retirement village — people die, people are lonely and these four senior citizens want to get to the bottom of this mystery.
Pinkwater, Daniel: Alan Mendelsohn, the Boy from Mars
Leonard Neeble has been unhappy since his parents moved from the big city to suburban Kangaroo Park, New Jersey. His new school, Bat Masterson Jr. High, is terrible, and he has no friends since his classmates are snobbish louts who won't be friends with him because he's portly.
Things change once a new student shows up from The Bronx: Alan Mendelsohn, a trollish student who shuts the school down by telling everyone he's from Mars. After they both get suspended for acting out, the two boys journey to Downtown Hogboro, where they start a Mind Control course that teaches them telekinesis and, eventually, how to travel between dimensions.
Pirinçci, Akif: Felidae
Francis is a cat who has moved with his owner to a city in Germany. There, he comes across a mystery involving the murders of several neighborhood cats. Think Warriors, but it is a murder mystery written for adults. It has a lot of Slaughter and Hunt going on, but the killer's motives and backstory would honestly make him a prime Avatar for the Extinction.
The serial killer, Claudandus aka Pascal, is purely motivated by a deep hatred of humans after a traumatic past as the victim of some truly sadistic animal experiments in which he and other cats were used as lab rats, which leads him to try to create a race of "genetically perfect" cats while murdering those he considers to be inferior. He dreams of a future in which humans have been replaced as the dominant species by this future breed of cats, the narration even including an imaginary scenerio of the very last human trying to hide in the ruins of civilization before being hunted down like prey.
Rix, Jamie: Grizzly Tales For Gruesome Kids
A series of cautionary tales for lovers of screams! Getting a haircut? eating spaghetti? Having a birthday party? You may think these all sound like very ordinary things to do. But read on and see just how grizzly they can be!
Scieszka, Jon: The Stinky Cheese Man
it scared the FUCK out of me as a child, I have no idea why and I don't remember what it was about, and just its art style still creeps me out and I'm in my thirties now. That's got to count for something, yeah? ...okay this prolly isn't a great one for the tournament, but if you're struggling to fill in the brackets.
Shannon, David: No, David!
When David Shannon was five years old, he wrote and illustrated his first book. On every page were these words: NO, DAVID! . . . and a picture of David doing things he was not supposed to do.Now David is all grown up. But some things never change. . . .Twenty years after its initial publication, No, David! remains a perennial household favorite, delighting children, parents, and teachers alike. David is a beloved character, whose unabashed good humor, mischievous smile, and laughter-inducing antics underline the love parents have for their children -- even when they misbehave.
Sims, Jonathan: Thirteen Storeys
"You're cordially invited to dinner. Penthouse access is available via the broken freight elevator. Black tie optional.
A dinner party is held in the penthouse of a multimillion-pound development. All the guests are strangers - even to their host, the billionaire owner of the building. None of them know why they were selected to receive his invitation. Whether privileged or deprived, besides a postcode, they share only one thing in common - they've all experienced a shocking disturbance within the building's walls.
By the end of the night, their host is dead, and none of the guests ever said what happened. His death remains one of the biggest unsolved mysteries - until now.
But are you ready for their stories?"
Skipp, John: Don't Push the Button
We all know horror. It's in our face every day. You can try to negotiate the nightmare but total chaos and destruction is just one button-push away.
In this intensely personal collection of short stories, screenplays, and essays, the author walks you through the light and the dark with an unflinching eye. Revealing both the best and worst of us, one laugh and scream at a time.
It ain't pretty. But it's beautiful. Once you go all the way.
Stine, R.L.: Goosebumps
It is a series of horror novels written for very young audiences. The protagonists in these stories are teens or pre-teens who find themselves in frightening circumstances, often involving the supernatural, the paranormal or the occult. The best way to describe these books is that they are The Twilight Zone for pre-adolescents, with a twist at the end of every book (sometimes cruel, sometimes not, sometimes non-existent, which is a twist in and of itself given the series). It has spawned a pair of television series, a video games series, a comic series and merchandise, as well as a pair of feature films.
While the books are written for children and so they might not be that scary, they can still get quite creepy, and you might find one book for every Entity if you search hard enough. The book covers can also get really creepy to look at, too.
Theis, Jim: The Eye of Argon
Described as "the worst fantasy novella ever", The Eye of Argon is a story by then 16 year-old Jim Theis. It's the tale of Grignr, a foul-mouthed barbarian warrior who is trying to escape the dungeons of Evil Overlord Agaphim and rescue a young woman named Carthena from a pagan cult who want to sacrifice her to their idol — a statue with one eye called "The Eye of Argon". (A "scarlet emerald", complete with some interesting plumbing.)
Published in the fanzine OSFAN 7 in 1970, the story is well known for its abundant cliches, shoddy spelling, flat characters, wooden dialogue and overly colourful writing. Every woman is a "wench", eyes are "emerald orbs". Almost nothing is ever "said" — instead it is "queried" or "ejaculated" or "husked" or "stated whimsicoracally". There's an extended scene involving elderly cult priests groping Carthena, and she is described earlier as a "half-naked harlot… with a lithe, opaque nose".
The most widely-known and circulated copy of the story comes to an abrupt and unsatisfactory halt, and for many years it was believed that the ending was lost forever (or even, in some quarters, that the story was never completed). Recent years have seen the separate discoveries of two intact copies of the fanzine in which The Eye of Argon debuted, so it is now known how the tale ends. (With multiple exclamation marks, it turns out.)
At science fiction conventions, The Eye of Argon is now a sort of parlor game. All participants sit in a circle with a hard copy of the story, and the first one starts reading aloud — pronouncing every word as it's misspelled, and including every adjective. When they finally burst into laughter, the copy is passed to the next person. If a person manages to make it through more than a page, the copy is sometimes passed anyway, on the grounds that the reader must have special training as a news anchor.
Tokuda-Hall, Maggie: The Mermaid The Witch and The Sea
Follows mainly two characters – Evelyn, the daughter of a wealthy family, sent off on a ship to an arranged marriage, and Flora, known by the alias Florian, a pirate on said ship. This ship is a conship, as it takes people on long travels only to sell them as slaves. Themes of the vast, stranger, the end, the slaughter, and the desolation are commonly present throughout the book
Traditional (German): Der Struwwelpeter
1845 German children's book filled with cautionary tales. These cautionary tales are more grim than others, however — they often end in death or dismemberment for the child. They are a source of plenty of nightmare fuel, too.
Notable examples: The Dreadful Story of Harriet/Pauline and the Matches - Desolation, she plays with matches and burns to death. The Story of the Wild Huntsman - Hunt, a hare steals a hunter's rifle and eyeglasses and hunts him. The Story of Little Suck-a-Thumb - Flesh(?), Conrad is warned by his mother not to suck his thumbs, but he does anyway. So a tailor appears and snips them off. The Story of Flying Robert - Vast, Robert goes outside during a storm and the wind picks up his umbrella, carrying him off never to be seen again.
Trumbo, Dalton: Johnny Got His Gun
It follows a young man named Joe Bonham, who, after becoming grievously injured during World War I, is left deaf, blind, dumb, and without any limbs. Throughout the novel, Joe reminisces about the life that he's lost, waxes philosophical about war and conscription, and tries desperately to communicate with the doctors keeping him alive.
The novel is heavily about the horrors of war, which would make it Slaughter, but in Joe's plight there's also another sort of horror: He can't move, he can't see, he can't speak. He is effectively trapped in his own body, a torment that could be but it's not quite Buried. There's also some argument for the Spiral to be there as well, as his condition makes it hard for him and the reader to know when he's awake or when he's dreaming, to say nothing on how the horrible situation he's in affects his sanity.
"I don't know whether I'm alive and dreaming or dead and remembering."
Van Allsburg, Chris: The Mysteries of Harris Burdick
Downloadable PDF: https://mrsgraveswebsite.weebly.com/uploads/1/2/6/8/12686140/the_mysteries_of_harris_burdick.pdf
The Mysteries of Harris Burdick consists of a series of images, ostensibly created by Harris Burdick, a man who has mysteriously disappeared. Each image is accompanied by a title and a single line of text, which encourage readers to create their own stories.
Vasquez, Jhonen: Squee's Wonderful Big Giant Book of Unspeakable Horrors
Squee (named after the sound he makes when he's afraid) is a little boy whose short life is an unending parade of horrors. His parents outwardly detest him to the point where his father watches footage of his birth played in reverse for amusement, and the only kid in school who likes him is the Antichrist, who Squee is terrified of. He has never, ever, ever, had a good dream. Through the course of the book, he is visited by aliens, ghosts, zombies, time travelers and the serial killer next door.
Though Squee is as frightened by all this as anyone else might be, he takes it in his stride with a passive resilience that only a child could possess and the help of Shmee, his teddy bear and 'trauma-sponge.' He gets through the horrors just by being a simple-minded kid. Adults dwell on the past and the future. Kids live squarely in the present, daydream about flying and drink Tang until they forget it all. He takes for granted that the world is scary and just goes to school each day, provided he hasn't been abducted by aliens.
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Isabelle Huppert et Lisa Langlois dans “Violette Nozière” biopic de Claude Chabrol (1978) - librement adapté du roman éponyme de Jean-Marie Fitère (1975) et inspiré du patricide de Violette Nozière (1915-1966) par empoisonnement et de son procès à Paris (circa 1930) - janvier 2025.
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Multi Colored Gemstone and Feather High Jewelry Cocktail Ring by Isabelle Langlois
#isabelle langlois#colored gemstones#multi colored gemstones#feathers#precious gemstones#multi colored gemstone cocktail ring#multi colored gemstone jewelry#multi colored gemstone and feather cocktail ring#multi colored gemstone and feather jewelry#high jewelry#fine jewelry#fine jewelry pieces#luxury jewelry
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SOTW (pt 5!) Vinny/Tony, Carmens; spoiled rotten
It takes no effort to make Vinny soft. Tony, however...well, that usually just takes Vinny, and, in this case...Sandro...? (well, incidentally.)
Thomas did not expect to love retirement as much as he does. He misses the team, though he still sees them all the time, and he misses Tony when he travels, though he doesn’t miss the travel itself at all, and he misses playing, of course, but he’d rather be retired in Montreal than playing anywhere else, so it was an easy choice.
The free time is great: he gets to do all sorts of fun things for charities and to hang out with lots of little hockey players who still think he’s cool — a few more years and they’ll probably be too young to remember him as a Hab, but right now it’s awesome.
Plus, he’s turned into basically everyone’s first call as babysitter, from the Habs, to former Habs, to friends of friends, and that’s the best. Especially when it’s Sandro and Sylvie. They have to go to visit Sandro’s dad in the hospital for a few days, didn’t want to bring Izzy down to Boston for that, so it’s Vinny and Tony and Izzy time.
The door flies open when he knocks with an “Uncle Vinny!”, which are probably his favourite words in English or French. English this time, but Izzy bounces between the languages as much as Thomas and Sylvie do. Sandro’s gotten pretty good at French because of that, even though he still butchers the pronunciation.
“Hi, Izzy Belle,” Thomas says, and scoops her right up. She’s getting heavy for it, and his hip isn’t doing great, but if he hurts a little later it’s worth it. “Ready to spend a couple days with me and your uncle Anton?”
“Is he there?” Izzy asks, delighted. Tony’s her favourite. She’s Tony’s favourite too. Anton’s a lot more tolerant of Sandro lately, and Thomas would like to think it’s him mellowing out, but it’s probably just him sucking it up because he likes Sylvie and loves Izzy more than probably anyone in the world except Thomas. Possibly more than he loves Thomas.
Thomas doesn’t mind. Izzy’s perfect. An angel. Thomas can’t compete with an angel, and he wouldn’t want to anyway.
“Not yet,” Thomas says, and her face falls. He knows the feeling. “But he’s going to be back by the time you wake up tomorrow. He says he got you a present in Nashville.”
“Please don’t spoil her rotten while we’re gone,” Carms says, leaning in the doorway.
“I can’t promise that,” Thomas says, and shifts Izzy from his bad hip to the other. If he did promise, Anton would just do it behind his back.
Tony gets in late that night, and Thomas wakes up to the sound of his rolling suitcase in the front hall, drifts for awhile, half asleep, waiting for Anton to come into their room, and when he doesn’t he wraps the comforter around himself and goes to find him. He’s in the guest room, carefully placing a stuffed penguin under Izzy’s arm, which doesn’t exactly seem Nashville-y, and cowboy hat at the foot of her bed, which does.
“Sandro said not to spoil her rotten,” Thomas says through a yawn.
“Carmen can fuck off,” Anton says, then walks over and kisses Thomas, tugging at the comforter. “Hi blanket monster.”
“Come sleep,” Thomas says. “You know she’s going to wake us up in four hours.”
“Yeah,” Tony says with a smile, and when Thomas tilts his chin up, he kisses him again before leading him by the comforter back to their room, Thomas contentedly shuffling behind him.
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Protesters at a march in downtown Montreal Saturday afternoon said the biting cold was little match for what anti-government demonstrators in Iran have been enduring for months.
“This is the least we can do, really,” said Saba Shahcheraghi, a volunteer with the Woman Life Freedom movement, the group which organized the event.
Hundreds marched along Park Avenue to Place des Festival in support of protests in Iran, which started September 2022, sparked by the death of Mahsa Amini, who died in police custody.
“We want everybody, the international community to recognize that people of Iran are fighting day after day for their freedom, and that this is not something isolated to a geographical area,” Shahcheraghi told Global News. [...]
“You can be arrested and put in jail and condemed to the death penalty for just sayin that you are not ii agreement with the government or the regime, or for not wearing a veil correctly,” France-Isabelle Langlois, executive director for Amnesty International Canada Francophone, pointed out.
In February, a couple in Iran was sentenced to ten years in prison after they posted video online of themselves dancing in public. [...]
Continue Reading.
Tagging: @politicsofcanada
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Vaguely art Related Research

Image from “MISSION ARCHÉOLOGIQUE DE MARI”, the “stele of Ninhursag”
If people are interested, I have included a summary of the research I did for my latest piece under the cut. (outside of the source myth) Though, to be honest, describing it here is mostly for my own sanity.
I came across the paper Texts, art, and archeology: An archaic plague from Mari and the Sumerian birth-goddess Ninhursag. (Gregory Chambon, Michael Guichard, Anne-Isabelle Langlois) which is entirely about trying to prove that the above plague could be Ninhursag. The paper makes a pretty convincing argument (to me anyway, I’m still a novice in reading this kind of analysis) so I thought I would try doing a rendition on it.
My design of her overall is based more off of the reliefs that have been conclusively identified as her, such as a pre-Sargonic plaque the paper also mentions, where she has long chaotic braids and a sort of muffin-top shaped crown.
I did some digging as to the plants that Enki eats in Enki and Ninhursag as well, but could not find anything conclusive. @yamayuandadu replied about this subject (I suppose I’m outing myself as the anon that asked about the plants a while ago) was helpful in illuminating that identifying specific plants in ancient Mesopotamian texts can be difficult. I decided to make exaggerated versions of real plants in the region, and did some reading about Mesopotamian gardens (Ancient Mesopotamian Gardens and the Identification of the Hanging Gardens of Babylon Resolved by Stephanie Dalley was a great read, but it didn’t help me that much) and culinary plants, and made the final version based on those.
All considered I spent like a week researching these plants that don’t even take up a full third of the page. Maybe I will do a piece involving Babylonian gardens at some point, since I’ve got some knowledge on that now.
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Help a disabled queer youth get a wheelchair:
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Os Sonhadores (2003)
The Dreamers
Direção: Bernardo Bertolucci;
Roteiro: Gilbert Adair, baseado em seu próprio romance The Holy Innocents;
Gênero: Drama; Romance;
País: Reino Unido, França, Itália e EUA.
Uma declaração de amor ao cinema e um trágico e cruel retrato da juventude contracultural do final dos anos 1960. Enquanto a maior parte da crítica especializada destacou exageradamente o controverso teor erótico-sexual do filme, procurando fazer dele uma atualização do igualmente controverso Último Tango em Paris (1972), outras dimensões significativas, sobretudo as políticas, passaram ao largo. Tendo como mote o triângulo amoroso erigido em torno dos irmãos gêmeos Théo (Louis Garrel) e Isabelle (Eva Green), e seu amigo americano Matthew (Michael Pitt), a narrativa questiona incisivamente a postura contestatória de jovens utopistas filhos da pequena-burguesia parisiense, que apesar do espírito revolucionário, refugiavam-se no interior de suas casas afastados dos rumores das ruas. Neste sentido, o filme dialoga muito com o nosso tempo presente, possibilitando a coincidência daquela juventude com a da atualidade.
Narrada em primeira pessoa por Matthew, a narrativa tem início na Cinemateca Francesa com um comentário muito perspicaz sobre a importância da cinematografia para a França: “só os franceses podem ter um cinema num palácio”. Na sequência, em 1968, após a demissão de Henri Langlois da direção da cinemateca, durante uma manifestação organizada por jovens cineclubistas, Matthew conhece os gêmeos Théo e Isabelle e prontamente tornam-se amigos. Pouco depois, os três passam a morar juntos na casa dos gêmeos, enquanto seus pais estão em viagem. Durante o tempo em que vivem juntos, um relacionamento afetivo-sexual frutificará entre os três, no entremeio de discussões e jogos sobre cinema, cultura, arte, filosofia e política. Todos os paradigmas burgueses são contestados - sobretudo os sentidos tradicionais de família - sem, no entanto, que eles tomem parte efetivamente de qualquer movimento revolucionário. Dentre os três, Matthew parece ser o mais consciente, questionando criticamente a incoerência de todas aquelas contestações.
O ponto alto do filme é o momento em que a revolução estudantil de 1968 adentra o espaço doméstico - materialmente na forma de uma pedra atirada pelos manifestantes. Neste ponto, o filme se encerra metaforicamente evidenciando o limiar existente entre o infrutífero pacifismo contracultural e a potência revolucionante de um coquetel molotov acesso.
⭐ 4.2 / 5.0




#Filme#Movie#Drama#Romance#Drama Movie#Romance Movie#Os Sonhadores#The Dreamers#Bernardo Bertolucci#Michael Pitt#Louis Garrel#Eva Green
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Nous l'avons tant aimé 😢😢😢 Au revoir à notre "Beau Bizarre" aujourd'hui c'est "Comm'si la terre penchait" dans un "Les Vestiges du chaos" Christophe ne nous dira plus jamais " Des mots bleus Les mots qu'on dit avec les yeux" Il a tiré sa dernière révérence à notre monde pour retrouver espérons-le un bien Monde meilleur 🙏🙏🙏 Quelle tristesse cette sale période 😢Sincères Condoléances à sa Familles et à ses Amis et Paix à son âme 😢 maintenant qu’il retrouve le Paradis des Saltimbanques où tous ses prestigieux prédécesseurs l’attendent avec une mélodie du bonheur infini C'était Christophe : Monsieur Daniel Bevilacqua, dit Christophe, né le 13 octobre 1945 à Juvisy-sur-Orge et nous a quittés le 16 avril 2020 à Brest, Christophe descend d'immigrés italiens originaires du Frioul. En 1891, son arrière-grand-père, le maçon-fumiste Baptiste Bevilacqua, s'installe à Juvisy et fait venir de nombreux compatriotes pour travailler dans l'entreprise familiale1. Plusieurs décennies après, le père de Christophe, Georges Jacques Bevilacqua, tient une entreprise d'installation de chauffage central — qui prospère assez pour s'étendre à la vente d'électroménager —, tandis que la mère est couturière2. Vers l'âge de 8 ans, Édith Piaf et Gilbert Bécaud sont ses premières idoles, puis il découvre le blues, Robert Johnson et John Lee Hooker. Fasciné très jeune par l'American way of life, tel qu'il est dépeint dans les films qu'il va souvent voir au cinéma.À la fin des années 1950, comme bien des jeunes de sa génération (celle du baby boom de l'après-guerre), il est marqué par Elvis Presley et James Dean, tout en développant une passion sincère pour le rock des pionniers de la maison Sun et le blues (il reconnaîtra avoir également été influencé par Georges Brassens). Ayant trouvé sa vocation, il apprend la guitare et l'harmonica. En 1961, il fonde Danny Baby et les Hooligans (« Danny » étant une référence à son prénom Daniel) un groupe amateur. Il chante le plus souvent en yaourt (du faux anglais) tout en s'accompagnant à la guitare et toujours en play-back car il n'aime pas apprendre par cœur. Au début des années 1970, sa popularité fléchit pendant une courte période, durant laquelle il se laisse pousser une moustache qui, avec sa longue chevelure blonde, signera son image de latin lover. En 1971, Francis Dreyfus crée le label Les Disques Motors où vont sortir désormais les albums de Christophe. Il revient dans les classements avec respectivement Mal et Mes Passagères, la même année, et Oh mon Amour, Main dans la main, Belle et Rock Monsieur en 1972. Le déclic se produit à nouveau pour Christophe lorsque son producteur Francis Dreyfus lui adjoint les services du jeune parolier Jean Michel Jarre, avec qui il écrit l'album Les Paradis perdus6, très influencé par le rock anglo-saxon de l'époque (Pink Floyd, Lou Reed). Le succès est à nouveau au rendez-vous, la réussite de leur association concrétisée, en 1974, par l'album Les Mots bleus ainsi que le 45 tours de la chanson titre, un des sommets de la carrière de Christophe, qui lui permet de renouveler son public. Il se produit alors à l'Olympia pour deux soirs à guichets fermés. Dans un moment de dépression, il tombe pour une courte période dans la drogue[réf. nécessaire]. En 1976 il collabore avec Boris Bergman pour Samourai, qui contient la chanson Merci John d'être venu dédiée à John Lennon. En 1978, il publie l'album Le Beau Bizarre, aux textes signés de Bob Decout, qui n'a pas le succès des précédents mais lui vaut les louanges de la critique. C'est un album résolument pop-rock, que Libération place parmi les cent meilleurs albums de l'histoire du rock 'n' roll. En 1980 il collabore avec son beau-frère Alan Z Kan pour Pas vu, pas pris et, à la demande de son épouse Véronique, Christophe ressort le 45 tours Aline : la réédition dépasse alors le million de copies en France.En 1983, son troisième plus gros succès en simple est à nouveau une ballade, Succès Fou, dont il vend quelque 600 000 copies et qui achève de le cataloguer comme chanteur pour midinettes. En 1984 il sort Voix sans issue en yaourt. Christophe se consacre aussi dans les années 1980 à débattre sur les plateaux télé contre le fléau de la faim dans le monde, montrant qu’il est aussi un homme d’engagement. Par la suite, son rythme de travail se ralentit : il compose la musique du premier tube de Corynne Charby, Boule de flipper8. Il publie un album d'adaptations de standards anglo-saxons des années 1940-1950 (Clichés d'amour), des 45 tours (Ne raccroche pas en 1985, qui se veut un clin-d'œil à l'adresse de la jeune Stéphanie de Monaco), mais ne fait plus de scène.Il se consacre alors essentiellement à ses collections de juke-boxes, de disques rares et de grands films — sa cinéphilie était bien connue du directeur de la Cinémathèque française, Henri Langlois, à qui il prêta une copie originale de La Strada de Federico Fellini. Mélomane averti, il se tient toujours au courant des dernières nouveautés, afin notamment d'actualiser sa propre musique. Perfectionniste jusqu'à la maniaquerie, il peut passer un an à travailler sur le son d'une partie de batterie.Après un 45 tours passé à peu près inaperçu Chiqué chiqué en 1988, Christophe change de maison de disques en 1995. De Motors, il passe chez Epic, une division de Sony9.En 1996, il publie Bevilacqua, un album ambitieux qui ne fera guère parler de lui où on l'entend en duo avec son idole Alan Vega du groupe américain Suicide.Véritable disque d'ambiance, Bevilacqua surprend par sa modernité : Christophe ne ressemble plus au dandy crooner des années 1970. Il a travaillé durant plusieurs mois sur l'album dans le studio installé chez lui.Cinq ans plus tard, le 5 juin 2001, l'album d'avant-garde Comme si la terre penchait, produit par Philippe Paradis, connaît un meilleur accueil, même si on est encore loin des résultats de vente passés.Il annonce alors son retour sur scène (où il ne s'était pas produit depuis 26 ans) et donne une série de concerts à l'Olympia.Il a fait appel à des éclairagistes du théâtre et de la danse pour mettre en valeur son spectacle. Il chante, assis sur un tabouret, la lumière centrée sur lui, pendant que des danseurs se produisent sur une chorégraphie de Marie-Claude Pietragalla, des images de rock'n'roll sont projetées sur le décor. Les CD et DVD Christophe: Olympia 2002 paraissent l'année suivante. En 2004, il chante en duo avec Alain Bashung sur la scène de l'Élysée Montmartre Les Mots bleus et Amsterdam. En mars 2005, sur la scène de l'Opéra-Comique il reprend la chanson Hollywood de Brigitte Fontaine composée par Areski Belkacem.En 2007, Christophe chante L'un dans l'autre sur l'album Arkhangelsk du trompettiste Erik Truffaz, morceau dont il a écrit les paroles10. Le 30 juin 2008, il sort, chez AZ, Aimer ce que nous sommes : une œuvre large sur laquelle il travaille depuis 2004. Plusieurs artistes, comme Isabelle Adjani, Daniel Filipacchi, Florian Zeller, Murcof, Jac Berrocal, Carmine Appice et son ancien producteur Francis Dreyfus, ont collaboré à cet album, enregistré essentiellement de nuit, entre Paris, Séville, Londres et réalisé par Christophe Van Huffel (du groupe Tanger). En 2009, il donne un concert spectacle dans le parc du château de Versailles, avec Carmine Appice à la batterie. À la fin de cette année, il entame la tournée Aimer ce que nous sommes.En 2011, il participe à l'album de reprises de chansons d'Alain Bashung Tels Alain Bashung en interprétant de manière remarquée Alcaline et reprend en duo avec Brigitte Fontaine Hollywood sur l'album L'un n'empêche pas l'autre. Il ressort cette même année l'album Bevilacqua Dans le cadre de la tournée « Aimer ce que nous sommes », qui a déjà emmené Christophe dans toute la France, en Suisse, en Belgique et au Liban, le 18 juin 2011, il revient dans sa ville natale, Juvisy-sur-Orge, où il se produit pour un spectacle de trois heures et demie devant près de trois mille personnes En octobre 2011, il est invité par Julien Doré sur la scène de l'Olympia13,[source insuffisante] et, en novembre, il chante en duo Boby avec Loane.Après une tournée de plus de cent dates, début 2013, Christophe choisit de donner sept concerts en France, sous le titre Intime Tour, avec une formation épurée (piano, synthés, guitare). Le 18 mars 2013, Christophe sort un album d'inédits Paradis retrouvé (BMG), à cette occasion, le journaliste Bayon considère qu'en tant que « yéyé minet rockab electro dandy beauf bouliste à pin-up, Christophe serait ce chaînon manquant elvisien entre Adamo et Vega via Juvet À la suite du succès des premiers concerts de l'Intime Tour, la tournée se poursuit en France et à l'étranger, donnant lieu, le 31 mars 2014, à la sortie de l'album Intime En 2016 il collabore avec Jean-Michel Jarre à l'occasion de l'album Electronica 2: The Heart of Noise pour le morceau Walking The Mile. Christophe sort un nouvel album le 8 avril 2016, Les Vestiges du chaos, qui reçoit un accueil critique enthousiaste. L'album comprend un duo avec Alan Vega, l'une des idoles du chanteur[réf. nécessaire]. En 2019, Christophe est invité par les curateurs Martin Widmer et Marie Villemin du centre d'art de Neuchâtel (CAN) en Suisse à mettre en musique des entretiens qu'ils ont réalisés et montés de l'artiste Suisse Olivier Mosset. Pendant plus d'une année Christophe et Martin Widmer collaborent sur la réalisation de ce morceau qui sortira finalement sous forme d'un maxi 45t en juin 2019. Ce disque étonnant et inclassable restera comme l'une des publications les plus originales mêlant musique et art contemporain. Quelques mois plus tard, à l'occasion du vernissage de la grand rétrospective d'Olivier Mosset au MAMCO de Genève le 25 février 2020, son curateur Paul Bernard invite Martin Widmer a penser avec Christophe le projet de la version live du disque
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Joaillerie Isabelle Langlois – Moi aussi, je veux être un ange
Joaillerie Isabelle Langlois – Moi aussi, je veux être un ange
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#Ange#Bijoux#Cadeaux pour les amoureux#Chérubin#Isabelle Langlois#Joaillerie#Paris#Pendentif « Ange Zachariel »#Saint Valentin
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“Violette Nozière” biopic de Claude Chabrol (1978) - librement adapté du roman éponyme de Jean-Marie Fitère (1975) et inspiré du patricide de Violette Nozière (1915-1966) par empoisonnement et de son procès à Paris (circa 1930) - avec Isabelle Huppert, Stéphane Audran, Jean Carmet, Jean-François Garreaud, Lisa Langlois, Greg Germain, Jean Dalmain et les participations de Fabrice Luchini et Bernadette Lafont, janvier 2025.
#films#biopic#spirit#Paris#Noziere#Dabin#Debize#Chabrol#Fitere#Huppert#Audran#Carmet#Luchini#Garreaud#Lafont#Langlois#Germain#Dalmain
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Multi Colored Gemstone and Feather High Jewelry Cocktail Rings by Isabelle Langlois
#isabelle langlois#colored gemstones#multi colored gemstones#feathers#precious gemstones#high jewelry#multi colored gemstone cocktail rings#multi colored gemstone jewelry#fine jewelry#fine jewelry pieces#feather cocktail ring#feather jewelry#multi colored gemstone and feather cocktail rings#multi colored gemstone and feather jewelry#luxury jewelry
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New series by Isabelle Langlois | Catherine Chabot moved to be The candidate
New series by Isabelle Langlois | Catherine Chabot moved to be The candidate
Comedian Catherine Chabot had tears in her eyes on Wednesday when the details surrounding The candidate, the new series by Isabelle Langlois. Not because of the technical glitches that plagued Radio-Canada’s Zoom conference, but because this is the first main role she lands on the small screen. Posted at 12:04 p.m. Updated at 2:46 p.m. In this unpublished comedy from the author of Rumors, bad…

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Attendez-Vous Avec Impatience Le Noël Disney De Cette Année
Le pourrait aller sur et sur . La quatrième édition de la Foire Internationale de Heifei de hotel entrée parc disneyland en or et pierres précieuses enregistré environ 130 millions de RMB (environ 21,3 millions ) d'une valeur de commandes par rapport à 69 millions de RMB (environ 11,3 millions ) l'année dernière, des nouvelles chinoise locale portail anhuinews rapporté recently. Issu d'une longue lignée de tailleurs de pierres précieuses, Isabelle Langlois est devenu un créateur de sejour disney vente privée 2016 et a fondé sa propre compagnie, en imaginant des collections pour femmes et jongler avec les couleurs, les coupes et les tailles des pierres et les couleurs d'or, tirant son inspiration de nombreuses sources y compris la nature, climats lointains, le monde sous-marin ou les immenses ciels, les arts.We croire que d'entrer dans le commerce de détail en aval ne sera pas seulement nous aider à diversifier nos canaux de revenu, mais permettra également d'améliorer la rentabilité des groupes. Gemfields Londres va ainsi contribuer à assurer un approvisionnement constant de. Chers lecteurs, Meilleurs voeux mousseux pour Noël etla nouvelle année et je vous remercie pour votre Disney Déguisements soutien tout au long international vente privée eurodisney 2021. Tout au long des années, 'la Grande Maison' a met son inventivité au service d'une meilleure intégration des personnes et de l'environnement dans son développement. Notre collection Diwali spécial est conçu pour refléter la joie et l'éclat de la fête. la ligne comprend des boucles d'oreilles serties de marie disney baby convertibles, poignets de disney princess jeux et des anneaux fixés autour de semi pierres précieuses et précieuses, et leur Pocahontas Disney pièce maîtresse, le bracelet à la main, qui enveloppe le dos de la main de mickey disney et d'or dans différents modèles et couleurs royal Asscher Diamond Company ont annoncé leur dernier ajout à leur distribution ;. Il est de mon honneur de faire partie de la tradition continue.Ce collection de hotel dans disney sophistiqués d'icônes de style parisien Hélène Rochas a attiré l'intérêt de nombreux collectionneurs internationaux et vendu à 100 pour cent, réalisant un total de 2,3 million. Platinum Guild international USA, l'marketingarm US pour l'industrie des bijoux en platine dans le monde entier, et Bridalare de David partenariat pour lancer les «Moments de platine du concours» sur Bridal Facebook IlNovember. reduction hotel disney est déterminé à aider ces élèves à devenir les leaders de demain de l'industrie.131, la vente de 89 pour cent par lot et 96 pour cent en valeur des mickey minnie disney exceptionnels autrefois partie de la collection de Simón Itturi Patiño, connu sous le nom des Andes Rockefeller, vendus bien au-dessus de leurs estimations pré-vente totalisant 14,7 million.A directeur général de Jasun magasin de Disney Ensemble De 6 Pailles Souples Mickey Mouse Un choix intelligent dans Guangbai Shopping Mall a déclaré que son magasin a vendu plus de 50 anneaux pendant le week-end avant Singles Day, qui était plus que doubler le nombre de sonneries que l'entreprise aurait vendus sur un week-end normale sale. Kleins hotel dans le parc disney a été spécialement créé pour le musée et affiché dans quatre scènes différentes conçues par Dámaso Randulfe. la consommation de tour de lit bébé disney en or a atteint 164 tonnes au troisième trimestre de 2013, en hausse de 29 pour cent par rapport à la même période l'an dernier. Ce Comité de suivi de diamant naturel travaillera avec Disney Jouets diverses associations professionnelles.
www.soldedisney.com/

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