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#City of Girls by Elizabeth Gilbert
alasy · 3 months
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imagine asking an old lady "what is the nature of your relationship with my father" and getting, as a response, a 470 pages manuscript that basically tells the story of all the sexual adventures this woman had throughout her life instead, only to introduce the father in question on the last 80 pages. I don't know about you, but I wouldn't exactly appreciate it but maybe that's just me
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diaryoftruequotes · 11 months
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The world ain't straight. You grow up thinking things are a certain way. You think there are rules. You think there's a way that things have to be. You try to live straight. But the world doesn't care about your rules, or what you believe. The world ain't straight, Vivian. Never will be. Our rules, they don't mean a thing. The world just happens to you sometimes, is what I think. And people just gotta keep moving through it, best they can.
Elizabeth Gilbert, City of Girls
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through-gayas-eyes · 1 year
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As we walked back over the Brooklyn Bridge that night, he said to me, “What about you, Vivian? You never got married?”
“Almost. But I was saved by the war.”
“What does that mean?”
“Pearl Harbor came, my guy enlisted, we broke off the engagement.”
“I’m sorry to hear that.”
“Don’t be. He wasn’t right for me, and I would have been a disaster for him. He was a fine person, and he deserved better.”
“And you never found another man?”
I was quiet for a while, trying to think how to answer that. Finally, I decided to just answer it with the truth.
“I’ve found many other men, Frank. More than you could count.”
“Oh,” he said.
He was quiet after that, and I wasn’t sure how that information had landed on him. This was a moment where another sort of woman might have chosen to be discreet. But something stubborn in me insisted that I be even more clear.
“I’ve slept with a lot of men, Frank, is what I’m saying.”
“No, I get it,” he said.
“And I will be sleeping with a lot more men in the future, I expect. Sleeping with men—lots of men—that’s more or less my way of life.”
“Okay,” he said. “I understand.”
He didn’t seem agitated by it. Just thoughtful. But I felt nervous, sharing this truth about myself. And for some reason, I couldn’t stop talking about it.
“I just wanted to tell you this about me,” I said, “because you should know what kind of woman I am. If we’re going to be friends, I don’t want to run into any judgment from you. If this aspect of my life is going to be a problem . . .”
He stopped suddenly in his tracks. “Why would I judge you?”
“Think about where I’m coming from here, Frank. Think about how we first met.”
“Yeah, I see,” he said. “I get it. But you don’t need to worry about that.”
“Good.”
“I’m not that guy, Vivian. I never was.”
“Thank you. I just wanted to be honest.”
“Thank you for the tribute of your honesty,” he said—which I thought then, and still think, was one of the most elegant things I’d ever heard anyone say.
“I’m too old to hide who I am, Frank. And I’m too old to be made to feel ashamed of myself by anyone—do you understand that?”
“I do.”
“But what do you think of it, though?” I asked. I couldn’t believe I was pushing this issue. But I couldn’t help but ask. His poise—his lack of shocked response on the matter—was puzzling.
“What do I think about you sleeping with a lot of men?”
“Yeah.”
He thought for a moment, then said, “There’s something that I know about the world now, Vivian, that I didn’t know when I was young.”
“And what’s that?”
“The world ain’t straight. You grow up thinking things are a certain way. You think there are rules. You think there’s a way that things have to be. You try to live straight. But the world doesn’t care about your rules, or what you believe. The world ain’t straight, Vivian. Never will be. Our rules, they don’t mean a thing. The world just happens to you sometimes, is what I think. And people just gotta keep moving through it, best they can.”
“I don’t think I ever believed that the world was straight,” I said.
“Well, I did. And I was wrong.”
-from City of Girls by Elizabeth Gilbert.
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karabogay · 2 years
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babbling-book · 2 years
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review - "city of girls" by elizabeth gilbert
Every once in a while, I will read a book that will completely change my reading life forever. I will spend the rest of my life rereading it at least once a year and when I'm bored reading a different book I'll be thinking to myself "God I wish I was reading THAT book instead." City of Girls by Elizabeth Gilbert is that book to me.
City of Girls is a love letter to New York City theater and all of the friendships it brings in our main character's life. She moves to live with her aunt in NYC after a failed stint at college, and abandons her privileged, WASPy life to work in her aunt's rundown theater as costume maker. She tells her story with such nostalgia and endearment for all of the women that helped her learn and grow throughout her life in the theater.
This book is in my top 3 favorites of any I've ever read. Any thoughts I try to give about this book feels like it's not doing it justice, so if you were looking for your next read, PLEASE take this as your sign to choose City of Girls. 10/5 stars (which I know isn't a real rating, but it's just THAT good)
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thedreamingsofem · 2 years
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I’m currently reading city of girls by Elizabeth Gilbert and so far I am really loving it!
It’s a glitzy coming of age-esque book focused on Vivian re-telling her time spent in New York City in 1940.
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femmefatalevibe · 1 year
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Hey hope you're well. Do you have any book recs with female characters reinventing themselves, or coming back stronger? Something along those lines, ifykwim.
Also movie recs, if you can.
Have a good day.
Hi love!
Books that come to mind:
Untamed by Glennon Doyle
City of Girls by Elizabeth Gilbert
The Year of Magical Thinking by Joan Didion
Eleanor Oliphant Is Completely Fine by Gail Honeyman
Educated by Tara Westover
Wild by Cheryl Strayed 
Movies that come to mind:
The Devil Wears Prada (also a book but I just love Meryl Streep in the movie too much to not recommend this one!)
Legally Blonde (another classic everyone should be able to reference off-hand!)
The First Wives Club
P.S. I Love You
Easy A
Bridesmaids
** Firefly Lane is a great Netflix show in a similar genre
Hope this helps xx
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book-coffee-stormy · 6 months
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City of Girls by Elizabeth Gilbert 💖💖
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tacosaysroar · 1 year
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I almost didn’t catch this one @busylivinnow!
Again, I could put SO many things on this list, but I’m going to limit myself to books that made a big impression or that I’ve continued to think about over the years.
1) Great Expectations, Charles Dickens. I’ve read it at least four times and I’ve seen most of the movie adaptations (which never measure up). There’s just something about Pip, so desperate to be loved and accepted and going about it in exactly the wrong way. (Also, come on. Miss Havisham and her super toxic influence on Estella is so compelling.)
2) The Long Walk, Stephen King (originally under Richard Bachman). This one I’ve read at least a dozen times. At least. It’s very reminiscent of Shirley Jackson’s “The Lottery,” but we get a much longer, much slower descent into the consequences of that sort of system. It’s so beautifully and horribly accomplished. I don’t think I’ve ever managed to read it without crying.
3) The Things They Carried, Tim O’Brien. This is a collection of short stories about the Vietnam War, based on his own experiences. (One of several, I think. He had lots to say on this subject.) The Vietnam War is one of those historic events I find so perplexingly awful. The fact that you could sit in front of the news at night with your family waiting to see if your birthday (or your brother’s or your boyfriend’s) was called. That we sent sweet, 18-year-old boys with no life experience to die or be traumatized against their will. That’s so dark and dystopian.
4) The Road, Cormac McCarthy. Speaking of dark and dystopian, this post-apocalyptic quest story crosses my mind often. There’s a scene where he finds a coke while scavenging and lets the boy have it. Because he’s never had one before and likely never will again. Not an uncommon idea for that genre, but the execution was very good and the language of the book is highly stylized, almost like a very long poem. That scene comes back to me sometimes.
5) City of Girls, Elizabeth Gilbert. It’s got 1940s fashion, sex, the New York theater scene, and the very smart, dry humor Elizabeth Gilbert is SO good at. I’ve read this one twice so far, but I’m sure I’ll read it again.
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alasy · 3 months
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is city of girls actually good? i've only seen positive reviews on instagram and that's why i picked it up, but it's been so hard to get through the first 100 pages that i'm actually wondering whether im even reading the right book
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blowflyfag · 3 months
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the Wrestler: Volume 25, 2009
Q & A 
MISSY HYATTT
(Part 2)
“If I didn’t need money, I’d work in this business for free”
WHO WAS WRESTLING’S original diva? There are credible arguments to be made for Miss Elizabeth, Baby Doll, Sunshine, Tammy Sytch, Sable or any number of pioneering women. But, there is one lady in particular who would make any short list: Missy Hyatt.
What has been the key to Hyatt’s success? Her uncanny ability to reinvent herself. Hyatt started out as the self-centered, pampered brat that everyone loved to hate, with every woman wanting to rub her face in the mud and every man wanting to turn her across his knee for a good spanking. She evoked strong emotions during her stints in World Class Championship Wrestling and the Universal Wrestling Federation in the mid-1980s, and often outshined her male counterparts, including “Hollywood” John Tatum and “Hot Stuff” Eddie Gilbert.
Yet  Vince MCMahon wanted her to give up her naughty ways and join WWF as an affluent hist of the “Missy Manor” interview segment. It turned out that “Missy’‘s Manor” was no “Piper’s Pit,” and the WWF and Hyatt parted ways in a matter of weeks. 
So what’s a girl to do? Hyatt returned to Jim Crockett Promotions, where television producer Dusty Rhodes made her backstage interviewer and an occasional color commentator. She was one of the hottest stars of WCW during the early years of Ted Turner’s ownership, managingThe Steiner Brothers and The Nasty Boys, hosting a highly successful 900-line, and appearing on countless pieces of merchandise. Hyatt ended up suing WCW for what she considered her rightful share of the proceeds and all of it landed in court, where she also filed a sexual harassment claim. 
With nowhere left to go, Hyatt accepted Paul Heyman’s offer to appear in ECW, where she flourished as a sultry sex siren, whose conniving ways seemed to be a natural extension of the spoiled Southern Belle she had portrayed a decade earlier. 
Her out-of-the-ring exploits have embroiled her in controversy. In her 2001 tell-all autobiography, Miss Hyatt: First Lady of Wrestling, she detailed her relationships with John Tatum, Eddie Gilbert, Road Warrior Hawk, Jake Roverts, and Wonder Years star Jason Hervey, among others. Today, Hyatt lives in New York City with her two Jack Russell terriers, Milo and Jake. For fans who want to keep Missy Hyatt under minute-by-minute surveillance, her pay website–missyhyatt247.com–offers a webcam that constantly streams video from her apartment. Hyatt’s house website is missyhyatt.net.
“Missy has revealed so many intimate details about her life in her autobiography and on her websites that I felt as if I already knew her,” said Senior Writer Harry Burkett, who spoke with the self-proclaimed “First Lady Of Wrestling” for 90 minutes. “Her real personality is quite different from the ‘vamp’ persona she tries to project. She has a very sweet ‘girl next door’ quality.”
Q: Despite the fact that you began your career 23 years ago, you’ve never stayed very far from the wrestling business. You still make appearances on the indy circuit. What are you up to these days?
A: I still have my websites, missyhyatt.net and missyhyatt247.com, and, yes, I still work the independents and do autograph sessions. I'm really proud of the work I've done with Women Superstars Uncensored over the past year or so. I do color commentary for WSU DVDs and I also host some “Missy’s Manor” interview segments. 
Q: What is your typical day like? 
A: I work with Jack Russell terriers for an organization called Russell Rescue, not to be confused with Dawn Marie’s Wrestlers Rescue [laughs]. She takes in unwanted and abused wrestlers, and I take in unwanted or abused Jack Russells, so I'm sort of a foster mom. I recently took in a dog named Bruno, who had heartworm, and I kept him until that problem was cleared up and he could go to another family. 
I do behavioral assessments on the dogs when they come to my home. Do they go after someone who’s knocking on the door? Is there anything that seems to upset them? So I document all of that behavioral stuff on the paperwork. I also do home checks to make sure that prospective homes have the proper fencing, things like that. Jack Russells are very smart, but they also have so much energy that some people can’t keep up with them. 
[It was then-boyfriend John Tatum who got Missy Hyatt into the wrestling business back in the mid-’80s. Tatum felt he needed a beautiful blonde valet–and the rest is wrestling history.]
Q: The question is, are you able to keep up with them? 
A: My dogs end up adopting my personality, which means they become lazy and sleep in late. Dory Funk Jr. said that he grew up with a bunch of Russells, which are really handy if you have a working ranch with horses and stables. 
Q: That sounds like enough to keep you busy. DO you have time to watch the current wrestling product, such as WWE and TNA?
A: Yes, there’s a lot that I like about WWE and TNA. When I watch Raw or Smackdown, I just think how I'd like to work a big crowd like that. Back in the NWA and WCW in the late-’80s and early-’90s, we did pay-per-views every couple of months and drew decent crowds, but it was nothing compared to what WWE draws on a nearly nightly basis. I just think, Wow. I’d love to see myself on that big TItanTron. 
I have a dream, and it sounds really corny, but I've always wanted to work one WrestleMania dressed as The Gobbledy Gooker. I’d want Kane to give me a tombstone piledriver and then rip off my turkey costume. Of course, I'd still have the beak and big feet, wearing a fur-kinki, and I'd cluck around the ring and get back inside my egg. Some people dream about dollars or fame, but I've had a much simpler aspiration: to be The Gobbledygooker at WrestleMania!
Q: Maybe you weren’t The Gobbledygooker, but you certainly came a long way. How did you break into the wrestling business?
A: I became involved through my boyfriend: John Tatum. He had been wrestling in Georgia and then went to work for the Crocketts for a while. He met Tully Blanchard and Baby Doll while he was there, and that’s when John decided he had to get him a blonde girl who looked like Baby Doll. So, when he went to Texas, he took me along. [World Class referee] David Manning convinced me that I would make a good valet, and David and another referee, Rick Hazzard helped me with that.
Q: What were you doing when John met you? A: I was working as a cocktail waitress at a bar, the Hyatt Hotel–as a matter of fact–in downtown Atlanta. I also worked at the pool bar during the summer there. 
Q: Where did you grow up?
A: Tallahassee, Florida.
Q: Had John been in the wrestling business very long when you met him?
A: No, no. He was from Pensacola, Florida, and he’d been in the business for only about six months, if that. He worked in Georgia and then the Caroolinas for about 10 months. Then we went to Texas in ‘85.
[Although Missy Hyatt and Sunshine were in-ring rivals in World Class Championship Wrestling (above), they were good friends outside the ring (right). Hyatt says Sunshine was a patient mentor during her early days. 
“When I first started working, I was really nervous and scared. The first big thing I did was a catfight with Sunshine where we pulled hair and rolled around the thing, and I couldn't help laughing. When we got in the back, Sunshine yelled at me, “You can't laugh out there!”]
Q: Had John always been a wrestling fan, or did he fall into it some other way?
A: John and Michael Hayes are cousins. Michael is from Pensacola, too. As for me, I fell in love with wrestling when I was 17. I was over at my parents’ house, and I was upstairs with my dad, who was flipping channels. I saw Michael Hayes and Buddy Roberts putting a baby bonnet on Terry Gordy’s head and a pacifier in his mouth, and they were all running around the ring. It was Georgia Championship Wrestling. I was amazed by what I was watching. What was this? I thought it was the coolest thing. I knew I didn't want to wrestle, but it seemed like a real hoot and something I wanted to do. 
Q: Wow, that must have been when The Freebirds were feuding amongst each other. What was the first challenge you had to face as a valet in Texas?
A: Trying to figure out what my name would be! My last name is “Hiatt” with an “i,” so I changed it to “Hyatt” with a “y.” Also, my first name is Melissa, but my parents called me “Missy” and John caught on to that. That’s how I became “Missy Hyatt.”
When I first started working, I was really nervous and scared. The first big thing I did was a catfight with Sunshine where we pulled hair and rolled around the ring, and I couldn't help laughing. When we got in the back, Sunshine yelled at me, “You can't laugh out there!” But I was having so much fun. During my career, I've been paid a lot of money for what I love to do. If I didn't need money, I'd work in this business for free. 
Q: I suppose World Class was ahead of its time as far as divas are concerned.
A: Let me tell you, we sure were! Looking back on it, I'm surprised that I got paid the same as the guys. They didn't just look at me as a female, but someone who helped draw people to the shows. My pay depended on where I was on the card and how many people were there. So I was paid extremely well, even though I was a woman. I think of all the people who helped me–Fritz Von Erich, David Manning, Bronco Lubich–and realize it was a great time. If Texas had been the only place where I had worked, and John and I had gone back to Florida right afterward, i’d still consider it the highlight of my life. 
[Was it Hyatt and Hot Stuff International or vice versa? Either way, Hyatt and Eddie Gilbert made an effective and entertaining team in the Ultimate Wrestling Federation.]
Q: Did it occur to you that women could add a whole new dimension to wrestling?
A: Sex and violence sell in movies and on TV, so why not wrestling? Even ultimate fighting has the octagon babes and boxing has the ring card girls in their little outfits.
Q: Your catfights with Sunshine must have gotten a huge response, considering the audience was definitely male-dominated at the time.
A: Because we did the same buildings each week, we had to come up with something new each week. For over a year, I'd do bad stuff to her on TV and then she’d beat my fanny all week at the house shows. I’d lie, or come up with a new way to insult her, and she’d be ready to tear into me again. It was so easy–and so fun to get a reaction. We nearly started a riot in Abilene, Texas.
Q: What was the road schedule like for World Class?
A: We did TV tapings every Friday night in Dallas and then we’d run a show on Monday night in Fort Worth. Every three weeks, we’d go to the outskirts, such as Lubbock, Amarillo, and El Paso. For the most part, though, most of the shows were in smaller towns within a couple hours of Dallas-Fort Worth. Football was really big in Texas, so there were plenty of large high school stadiums where we drew a lot of people–usually within 60 miles of Dallas.
Wrestlers and divas are so much like movie stars now because there’s so much glamor. The outfits are so fancy and everybody’s so polished. That’s a big difference between now and the territorial days. Even WCW was much glitzier toward the end of my time there.
Q: Was Sunshine helpful when you first went to World Class?
A: She was the best. She taught me everything. And, trust me, I was a handful. You may remember that World Class had a two-hour show on Christian network for a while. 
Q: Yes, the Christian Broadcasting Network.
A: That’s  right. [World Classbooker] Ken Mantell gave me a line to use against Sunshine. It went something like, “Sunshine’s butt is so big that when she has to haul ass, she’s got to make 10 trips.” I said it verbatim. When I got backstage, poor Ken looked like he was having a heart attack, red in the face with his blood pressure going up. He told me that I shouldn't have said the word “ass.” I said, “Yeah, but you told me to say that.” I was so young at the time. I was surprised that CBN didn’t even bleep it out. 
[“Sex and violence sell in movies and on TV, so why not wrestling? Even ultimate fighting has the octagon babes and boxing has the ring card girls in their little outfits.”]
Q: Well, the word “ass” was used in the Bible.
A: That’s true. I felt sorry for Ken because he had to deal with these girls all of a sudden. But Sunshine and I were good friends. I’d have friends over at my apartment, and Sunshine would have to sneak through a window. Back in the kayfabe days, I couldn’t party with the babyfaces, you know.
Q: Was there anybody else you looked up to? Or were you and Sunshine the only women around at that time?
A: There was Baby Doll with the Crocketts, and Miss Elizabeth had just started in the WWF. Here’s one funny story: George Scott, who worked for Vince McMahon, had heard about Baby Doll at about the same time I sent pictures to the WWF. He contacted World Class, thinking I was Baby Doll. That’s why David Manning and Fritz Von Erich wanted to keep John and me there. I’m glad John and I had that run in World Class, because I think we were great working together. 
[While working in the UWF, Hyatt often interacted with a young Jim Ross. According to Missy, nobody can match Good Ol’ J.R. on the microphone.]
Q: I thought so, too. How did you meet Eddie Gilbert?
A: I met him when we went to the UWF.
Q: When you first met him, did you think you’d ever marry the guy?
A: No! It was another case of life imitating art. That time was wild. We did the Hot Stuff & Hyatt International angle, and Ken Mantell was there … it was such a blur because we were traveling so much. I enjoyed that time very much. 
Q: You mentioned that life imitates art. As we know, you left John and eventually married Eddie. Leading into that, John and Eddie were vying for your affections on UWF TV, with Eddie outsmarting John each week. The vignettes from that time were very funny. I remember a limousine pulling up to take you and John to lunch, and somehow Eddie elbowed his way into the limo so he could sit beside you. It was really funny stuff. 
A: I remember that! Jim Ross was interviewing John, who was waiting for me to arrive in the limo. Eddie came out, noticed there was a TV in the limo, and squeezed himself into the car between John and me. I think we left Jim Rossjust standing there. At that time, Eddie and I liked each other, so I guess it was happening and I didnt realize it. 
[Life  imitates art. To John Tatum’s chagrin, a UWF storyline romance between Hyatt and Gilbert evolved into an off-screen attraction and eventually marriage.]
Q: Wrestling is weird in that way, as far as life imitating art. It seems that every man and woman that are put together in a storyline end up as a couple in real life. 
A: It may be terrible to mention this, but look at what happened to Chris and Nancy Benoit. There was also Steve Austin and Jeannie Clarke, and Steve and Debra McMichael.
Q: So you would say that love triangle among you, John, and Eddie mirrored reality?
A: On TV, Eddie and I always said it was “strictly business.” But there was a lot of playing around and joking. Once when we were at the hotel in Tulsa, John had left with Jack [Victory], and Eddie got really drunk. Eddie came in from the pool, down the hallway, and passed out in my hotel room. I had to get Carl Fergie to get him out of there. The next day, I teased him all day. Something just sparked, I guess.
Q: You certainly demonstrated a sexual tension on TV. I remember that Eddie would refer to your group as “Hot Stuff & Hyatt International,” but you would always refer to it as “Hyatt & Hot Stuff International.”
A: Right. Bruce Prochard worked out of the Houston office at the time, and he had blue satin jackets made. Mine said “Hyatt & Hot Stuff” and Eddie’s said “Hot Stuff & Hyatt.” I don’t know what happened to that jacket, but I wish I still had it. It would bring back good memories.
Q: Eddie was often credited for having a great wrestling mind. Did you learn things from him that you didn’t learn from John or anyone else?
A: I learned more about wrestling as a business, from how it works to how to handle money. I learned what worked with a wrestling crowd and what did not. Eddie loved wrestling since he was a boy. His mom showed me how he would make up characters, book matches, lay out TV shows, and create whole storlines in his black-and-white composition books. He was really elaborate. He was the Anges Dixon of wrestling.
Q: No wonder the CWF seemed like All my Children! Seriously, though, I know Eddie wrote for some fanzines and magazines in the late-1970s.
A: And he took pictures! He showed me a tape of a match where he and Jim Cornette were at ringside taking pictures.
Q: Cornette, Paul Heyman, and even Tammy Stych got their start by taking pictures and sending them to our magazines. You never took pictures for us, but you sure posed for a lot. Tell me, how was the UWF different from World Class?
A: The traveling. I think they would sit there with a map of the United States and then throw darts to see how far they could make us drive. We’d be in Tulsa one night, and then have to drive to New Orleans, and then drive to Houston, and then to Memphi. It never made sense. We’d leave at 2:00 in the afternoon and not get back until 4:00 in the morning.
[“You could see how hot and intense the crowd was on UWF TV shows. It was like a fever. The craziness was contagious. To me, it was more exciting in those days.”
Q: I think the most common complaint I've heard about the UWF, or the Mid-South promotion that preceded it, was that it was  really big territory.
A: That’s for sure. But you also made a lot of friendships when you’re traveling together so much. I remember we’d all be in a can with One Man Gang driving–just a lot of camaraderie because we were working together every night. We were more like a family. 
Q: At the time, the WWF was expanding nation-wide. Frit Von Erich and Bill Watts certainly entertained the thought of challenging Vince McMahon. Did World Class or the UWF have a chance?
A: If either World Class or the UWF had gotten a better foothold on cable, maybe so. The UWF was the hottest wrestling show on TV at the time, in terms of pure action. THe show had enormous talent, in addition to Jim Ross as the announcer. And nobody can compare to Jim Ross as an announcer before or since. When we would tape shows in Tulsa, everything would break down at the end of the episode, so fans always wanted more. We didn’t give away main events in those days. 
Q: That’s what I hated about the UWF! Hacksaw Duggan wouldn’t tear into One Man Gang until one minute before the show went off the air. I would be screaming at the TV!
A: Yes, Jim Ross would be yelling, “We’ve got to go!” The whole idea was to get people to buy tickets. We didn’t have pay-per-view yet, so the TV show was like an ad to sell tickets to the arena. We would do the TV tapings in Tulsa every two weeks. We never had to give away tickets for free because the arena was always packed. You could see how hot and intense the crowd was on  UWF TV shows. It was like a fever. The craziness was contagious. To me, it was more exciting in those days. 
Q: I suppose that’s the price you pay when wrestling goes mainstream. Nowadays, you get more of a mainstream crowd, the same people who would come out to see the Harlem Globetrotters if they came to town. 
The UWF must have had wide syndications back then, because I remember the UWF running its TV show in my home state of Maryland. That was a long way from Tulsa. 
A: The UWF had really good syndication, but World Class was even more impressive. If I remember correctly, World Class had 223 stations–including stations in the Middle East–while the WWF had only 30 stations here in the United States.
Q: World Class even tried to run house shows in Massachusetts. 
A: As well as Georgia and California while it was expanding toward the end. You knew one of these companies was going to become a true national company, but you didn't know which one would get there first. 
Q: Who contacted you about going to the WWF?
A: Eddie and I just mailed in some pictures, and Vince called.
Q: Did he call for both of you?
A: Yes. It was a complicated time. There were rumors that Crockett was going to buy the UWF. We didn’t know whether Crockett was going to swallow up the UWF or keep it separate. Some said he would honor the UWF contracts and others said he wouldn't. Eddie sent out stuff to the WWF just as back-up. But I wanted to go to the WWF because I wanted to be a big star and get me a doll. It still hasn’t happened. 
[After a short stint with the WWF and some indy appearances, Hyatt made a move to WCW, where she made her name as a ring announcer (left), color commentator (above), and valet.]
Q: Did Eddie ever wrestle for the WWF in the late-’80s?
A: He had first gone to the WWF in ‘81, but he didn’t go in the late-’80s. He was helping Ken Mantell book for the UWF. When the buyout came, Crockett wanted Eddie to do all the booking for the UWF and Ken left. Eddie told Vince that he’d rather book for the UWF than just wrestle for the WWF. I was very pigheaded, though, and I wanted to go to the WWF and become a superstar. 
Q: I remember “Miss Manor.”
A: Oh, gosh. 
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through-gayas-eyes · 1 year
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Of course I fell in love with your father, Angela.
I fell in love with him, and it made no sense for me to fall in love with him. We could not possibly have been more different. But maybe that’s where love grows best—in the deep space that exists between polarities.
I was a woman who had always lived in privilege and comfort, and thus I had always been fortunate enough to skate quite lightly across life. During the most violent century of human history, I had never really suffered any harm—aside from the small troubles that I brought down upon my own head through my own carelessness. (Lucky is the soul whose only troubles are self-inflicted.) Yes, I had worked hard, but so do a lot of people—and my job was the relatively inconsequential task of sewing pretty dresses for pretty girls. And in addition to all that, I was a freethinking, unbridled sensualist who had made the pursuit of sexual pleasure one of the guiding forces in her life.
And then there was Frank.
He was such a weighty person—by which I mean, heavy in his very essence. He was a person whose life had been hard from the beginning. He was a man who did nothing casually, thoughtlessly, or carelessly. He was from a poor immigrant family; he couldn’t afford to make mistakes. He was a devout Catholic, a police officer, and a veteran who had been through hell in service to his country. There was nothing of the sensualist about him. He could not bear to be touched, yes—but it was not only that. He had no hedonic traces within him whatsoever. He dressed in clothing that was purely utilitarian. He ate food merely in order to fuel his body. He didn’t socialize; he didn’t go out for entertainment; he had never been to a play in his life. He didn’t drink. He didn’t dance. He didn’t smoke. He’d never been in a fight. He was frugal and responsible. He didn’t engage in irony, teasing, or tomfoolery. He only ever told the truth.
And, of course, he was faithfully married—with a beautiful daughter whom he’d named after God’s angels.
In a sane or reasonable world, how would a serious man like Frank Grecco ever have crossed paths with a lightweight individual like me? What had brought us together? Aside from our shared connection to my brother, Walter—a person who had made both of us feel intimidated and minimized—we had no other commonalities. And our only shared history was a sad one. We had spent one dreadful day together, back in 1941—a day that had left the both of us shamed and scarred.
Why would that day have led us to falling in love, twenty years later?
I don’t know.
I only know that we don’t live in a sane or reasonable world, Angela.
-from City of Girls by Elizabeth Gilbert
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callofthxvoid · 3 months
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Please welcome IMOGEN GRIFFITHS (SHE/THEY) to Huntsville, WV. They are a 39-year-old VISITOR who lives in TOWN. You may see them around working as a CERAMIC ARTIST. Poor unfortunate soul. We'll see if they survive.
quick facts
Title: The Liberated
Name: Imogen Isolde Griffiths
Nickname: Griff (only by close friends)
Date of Birth: February 2, 1985
Age: 39
Place of Birth: Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
Hometown: Edmond, Oklahoma
Languages: English, French, Italian
Faceclaim: Natalie Dormer
Pronouns: She/They
Sexuality: Polyamorous Bisexual
Relationship Status: Divorced
personality
Myers-Briggs: ESFJ - The Consul
Enneagram: Type Two - The Helper (2w3)
Moral Alignment: Neutral Good
Occupation: Ceramic Artist
Role: Hunter
[+] affable, entrepreneurial, imaginative, generous [-] forceful, unpredictable, uninhibited, bourgeois
Character Inspirations: Astrid Leong-Teo (Crazy Rich Asians), Elizabeth 'Liz' Gilbert (Eat Pray Love), Emily Nelson (A Simple Favor)
background
TW: Infidelity
Growing up, there was nothing extraordinary about Imogen. She was an average girl next door, born into an average nuclear family, living in an average house with a white picket fence in an average suburban neighbourhood. Their parents were loving if a little old-fashioned, raising them to become someone who married into wealth, as opposed to someone who acquired their own wealth. They planned for her to attend college, but it was less about getting an education for a career, and more about finding a husband.
At college, she met a man from a prominent family and fell in love, marrying him after he graduated and dropping out of her own degree to become a full-time corporate wife. Their job was to support him, and they did that by keeping their home, by being in charge of their staff, and by planning their social calendar, making sure he went to the right events and met the right people there to network with. As a partnership, it worked well at first, but with time it became evident that was all it was—a business arrangement. She didn't mind that, but what she did mind was that she failed to feel as fulfilled by the life of a wife as she had been led to believe she would be, and the fact that he didn't seem to care how unhappy she was only made her feel more trapped. The handful of times that they tried to broach the topic of separation, they were met with adamant refusal, their husband's main concern being with the optics of divorce.
Things came to a head when she discovered that her husband was having an affair. At that point, Imogen knew that their marriage was over, but it was not because he had cheated on her—it was because she had felt relieved when she found out about it. Walking away with a small fortune due to the infidelity clause in their prenup, they were in the middle of starting over and figuring out what they wanted to do with their life when they met Ven Rawlins, joining him and his cameraperson Utena on the road.
She wound up putting her unfinished joint degree in Business Management and Communications to good use, becoming a mixture of a manager and a production assistant—handling the financial side of their operation and helping Ven build his channel into a sustainable business. Ironically, the same skills that had made them a good professional wife also made them a good networker and salesperson, allowing the three of them to take on bigger, more ambitious projects with higher risks.
They were on their way to their next adventure when they wound up in Huntsville. Imogen knows that Ven feels responsible, and while she doesn't love being trapped in a hell town, she can't find it in herself to regret how they got here. They know what it's like to simply exist without truly living—and they never, ever want to go back to that.
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movies I watched in 2023
(taking a cue from @stenka-razin)
-January
The Power of the Dog (2021, dir. Jane Campion)
Love, Simon (2018, dir. Greg Berlant)
Gamer (2009, dir. Brian Taylor & Mark Neveldine)
Men (2022, dir. Alex Garland)
The Menu (2022, dir. Mark Mylod)
Only Lovers Left Alive (2013, dir. Jim Jarmusch)
The Dead Don’t Die (2019, dir. Jim Jarmusch)
-February
A Touch of Sin (2013, dir. Jia Zhangke)
Lost Girls & Love Hotels (2020, dir. William Olsson)
Nick & Norah’s Infinite Playlist (2008, dir. Peter Sollett)
In the Mood for Love (2000, dir. Wong Kar-Wai)
The Woman King (2022, dir. Gina Prince-Bythewood)
Charlie’s Angels (2000, dir. McG)
Goodbye, Dragon Inn (2003, dir. Tsai Ming-Liang)
Nope (2022, dir. Jordan Peele)
-March
Ash is Purest White (2018, dir. Jia Zhangke)
Shoplifters (2018, dir. Hirokazu Kore-eda)
Three (2016, dir. Johnnie To)
Nobody (2021, dir. Ilya Naishuller)
Charlie’s Angels (2019, dir. Elizabeth Banks)
The Wonderland (2019, dir. Keiichi Hara)
-April
Rebels of the Neon God (1992, dir. Tsai Ming-Liang)
Tetris (2023, dir. Jon S. Baird)
There’s Something About Mary (1998, dir. Bobby and Peter Farrely)
The Whale (2022, dir. Darren Aronofsky)
The Fabelmans (2022, dir. Steven Spielberg)
Throw Down (2004, dir. Johnnie To)
Tár (2022, dir. Todd Field)
Yi Yi (2000, dir. Edward Yang)
Black Panther: Wakanda Forever (2022, dir. Ryan Coogler)
Catch .44 (2011, dir. Aaron Harvey)
-May
Spaceballs (1987, dir. Mel Brooks)
Bottle Rocket (1996, dir. Wes Anderson)
An Autumn Afternoon (1962, dir. Yasujiro Ozu)
Ant Man & The Wasp: Quantumania (2023, dir. Peyton Reed)
Flight of the Red Balloon (2007, dir. Hou Hsiao-hsien)
Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves (2023, dir. Jonathan Goldstein & John Francis Daley)
-June
Inside Llewyn Davis (2013, dir. Joel and Ethan Coen)
Good Morning (1959, dir. Yasujiro Ozu)
Casino Royale (2006, dir. Martin Campbell)
Quantum of Solace (2008, dir. Marc Forster)
Skyfall (2012, dir. Sam Mendes)
Spectre 2015, dir. Sam Mendes)
No Time To Die (2021, dir. Cary Joji Fukunaga)
Octopussy (1983, dir. John Glen)
GoldenEye (1995, dir. Martin Campbell)
First Reformed (2017, dir. Paul Schrader)
-July
Zoolander (2001, dir. Ben Stiller)
The Quintessential Quintuplets Movie (2022, dir. Masato Jinbo)
Mainstream (2020, dir. Gia Coppola)
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (2005, dir. Tim Burton)
Equinox Flower (1958, dir. Yasujiro Ozu)
You Only Live Twice (1967, dir. Lewis Gilbert)
-August
Guardians of the Galaxy, Vol. 3 (2023, dir. James Gunn)
The Gangster, the Cop, the Devil (2019, dir. Lee Won-tae)
Leap Year (2010, dir. Anand Tucker)
The Worst Person in the World (2021, dir. Joachim Trier)
Palm Springs (2020, dir. Max Barbakow)
Days (2020, dir. Tsai Ming-liang)
Kindergarten Cop (1990, dir. Ivan Reitman)
Barbie (2023, dir. Greta Gerwig)
Babylon (2022, dir. Damien Chazelle)
Shin Godzilla (2016, dir. Hideaki Anno and Shinji Higuchi)
The Flash (2023, dir. Andy Muschietti)
-September
Asteroid City (2023, dir. Wes Anderson)
The Super Mario Bros. Movie (2023, dir. Aaron Horvath and Michael Jelenic)
The Little Mermaid (2023, dir. Rob Marshall)
Mulan (2020, dir. Niki Caro)
A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984, dir. Wes Craven)
Fitzcarraldo (1982, dir. Werner Herzog)
Bodies Bodies Bodies (2022, dir. Halina Reijn)
Frances Ha (2012, dir. Noah Baumbach)
Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World (2003, dir. Peter Weir)
A Nightmare on Elm Street, Part 2: Freddy’s Revenge (1985, dir. Jack Sholder)
A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors (1987, dir. Chuck Russell)
A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master (1988, dir. Renny Harlin)
A Nightmare on Elm Street 5: The Dream Child (1989, dir. Stephen Hopkins)
Freddy’s Dead: The Final Nightmare (1991, dir. Rachel Talalay)
Wes Craven’s New Nightmare (1994, dir. Wes Craven)
Renfield (2023, dir. Chris McKay)
Theater Camp (2023, dir. Molly Gordon and Nick Lieberman)
Shiva Baby (2020, dir. Emma Seligman)
-October
Friday the 13th (1980, dir. Sean S. Cunningham)
Friday the 13th Part 2 (1981, dir. Steve Miner)
Friday the 13th - Part III (1982, dir. Steve Miner)
Friday the 13th: The Final Chapter (1984, dir. Joseph Zito)
Friday the 13th: A New Beginning (1985, dir. Danny Steinmann)
Friday the 13th Part VI: Jason Lives (1986, dir. Tom McLoughlin)
Friday the 13th Part VII: The New Blood (1988, dir. John Carl Beuchler)
Friday the 13th Part VIII: Jason Takes Manhattan (1989, dir. Rob Hedden)
Jason Goes to Hell: The Final Friday (1993, dir. Adam Marcus)
Jason X (2001, dir. James Isaac)
Freddy vs. Jason (2003, dir. Ronny Yu)
Friday the 13th (2009, dir. Marcus Nispel)
A Nightmare on Elm Street (2010, dir. Samuel Bayer)
Easy A (2010, dir. Will Gluck)
Saw (2004, dir. James Wan)
Saw II (2005, dir. Darren Lynn Bousman)
Saw III (2006, dir. Darren Lynn Bousman)
Saw IV (2007, dir. Darren Lynn Bousman)
Saw V (2008, dir. David Hackl)
Saw VI (2009, dir. Kevin Greutert)
Saw: The Final Chapter (2010, dir. Kevin Greutert)
A History of Violence (2005, dir. David Cronenberg)
Infinity Pool (2023, dir. Brandon Cronenberg)
Dracula 2000 (2000, dir. Patrick Lussier)
Mean Girls (2004, dir. Mark Waters)
Jennifer’s Body (2009, dir. Karyn Kusama)
Aguirre, the Wrath of God (1972, dir. Werner Herzog)
Nosferatu the Vampyre (1979, dir. Werner Herzog)
-November
Murder on the Orient Express (2017, dir. Kenneth Branagh)
Death on the Nile (2022, dir. Kenneth Branagh)
A Haunting in Venice (2023, dir. Kenneth Branagh)
The Last Voyage of the Demeter (2023, dir. André Øvredal)
Samurai Reincarnation (1981, dir. Kinji Fukasaku)
Legally Blonde (2001, dir. Robert Luketic)
Nancy Drew and the Hidden Staircase (2019, dir. Katt Shea)
The Last Duel (2021, dir. Ridley Scott)
Paint Your Wagon (1969, dir. Joshua Logan)
Thanksgiving (2023, dir. Eli Roth)
The Devil Wears Prada (2006, dir. David Frankel)
Shogun’s Shadow (1989, dir. Yasuo Furuhata)
The Conjuring (2013, dir. James Wan)
Win A Date With Tad Hamilton (2004, dir. Robert Luketic)
The Conjuring 2 (2016, dir. James Wan)
The Nun (2018, dir. Corin Hardy)
Le Samouraï (1967, dir. Jean-Pierre Melville)
-December
The Nun II (2023, dir. Michael Chaves)
Bottoms (2023, dir. Emma Seligman)
Annabelle (2014, dir. John R. Leonetti)
Gran Turismo (2023, dir. Neill Blomkamp)
Battles Without Honor And Humanity (1973, dir. Kinji Fukasaku)
Jigsaw (2017, dir. The Spierig Brothers)
Spiral: From the Book of Saw (2021, dir. Darren Lynn Bousman)
Saw X (2023, dir. Kevin Greutert)
Spider-Man: Across The Spider-Verse (2023, dir. Joaquim Dos Santos, et. al.)
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem (2023, dir. Jeff Rowe)
Indiana Jones and The Dial of Destiny (2023, dir. James Mangold)
Air Doll (2009, dir. Hirokazu Kore-eda)
The End of Summer (1961, dir. Yasujiro Ozu)
Air (2023, dir. Ben Affleck)
No Hard Feelings (2023, dir. Gene Stupnitsky)
Oppenheimer (2023, dir. Christopher Nolan)
Yakuza Wolf (1972, dir. Ryuichi Takamori)
Yakuza: Like A Dragon (2007, dir. Takashi Miike)
Spencer (2021, dir. Pablo Larraín)
Moneyball (2011, dir. Bennett Miller)
Transformers: Rise of the Beasts (2023, dir. Steve Caple, Jr.)
Knights of the Zodiac (2023, dir. Tomek Baginski)
Dragonball Evolution (2009, dir. James Wong)
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fantomette22 · 2 years
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Bloodborne characters names meaning & signification
A few weeks ago, I looked at the meanings/origins of some of the characters names. Some were quite interesting! So, I’ve wanted to do a big post with ALL the names we know to share with everyone.
There are already some great posts about the translations of the original Japanese names and winch countries these names originated from (so I won’t go in details on that). 
I won’t detailed either how the dev might have chosen this or this name because it’s also the name of an important history/religious figure either. And I won’t be talking about the great ones names, the locations names or the item/weapon names (except a few). But this post on reddit explained it well. 
A lot of names have European roots. Latin (central& west), but also Slavic (north & east) and there’s a lot of old French names too. I hope this post could provide some insight or just be a reference if someone is looking for something. If you know something else let me know ! 
Let’s begin then! (I classified them by alphabetical order):
Adeline: Meaning noble, nobility, noble one.
Adella: Meaning noble too, kind…
Alfred: “elf/magical counsel”, wise counsellor, wise, sage…
Amelia: work, hard work / (Emilia (it might be the original intended name: rival, laborious, eager).
Annalise: Grace of/by God & similar sentences, or even graceful light.
Antal: break of day, inestimable worth/priceless one/beyond price.
Archibald: genuine, bold, brave.
Arianna: most holy, silver.
Brador is not a name that exist so the closet thing that exist is “Bardot/Bardeau”, it seems to be a location name to a family coming from Perigord (west France, actual department/county of Dordogne).
Caryll means “man” and seems to come from the name Carroll (man) or Charles (free man). 
Damian: to tame, subdue. In Greek Damianos means master, overcome, conquer; Saint Damien was the patron of the physicians (another Christian martyr).
Djura is not a name that exist. It would be a variant of Georges/Jorge apparently (farmer).
Dores: Came from “doré”, golden in French. It was given to people with blonde hair apparently. But it seems to mean pain, suffering, (lady of) sorrows. Came from Dolores meaning “pain”. That same latin word give “douleur” (pain) in French as well.
Edgar (/Edgard): means rich/ prosperous and spear.
Eileen: (little) bird, strength, desired, bright one, shining light in Greek, (derived from Evelyn it seems it could come from Irene/Helen… too)
Evelyn: desired, whished for (fit with the description of weapon?), beauty, water, island (fit with Cainhurst) and “whished for child” too… (it’s not the only one like you will see a bit later…it’s a bit weird that it’s another person of Cainhurst who share this meaning too).
Gascoigne: Like the origin of “Brador” it’s a French surname, meaning someone who came from Gascony/pays de Gascogne, actual department/county of “des Landes” & “Hauts Pyrénées”, southwest of France.
Gehrman:
Russian/Slavic origin and means spear, spear bearer/user or something related to it. And he indeed does have a scythe so… It’s also the alternative name of a Caloian/Bulgarian ritual. In it, a “clay doll/effigy” is broken or buried (funeral?) to fertilize the earth (circle of life & death too etc…)  So, it’s really interesting and intriguing. And “German” means Warrior.
Gilbert: bright promise, pledge, hostage, bright/famous (the feels T_T)
Gratia: favor, blessing, grace
Gremia: doesn’t exist too; the closet is Geremia who means “god is high/the lord exalts (Jeremiah, Jeremy…)
Henriett/(Henriette): home leader/ruler, keeper of the hearth
Henryk: home leader too
Iosefka: “god will provide”? it’s not really a real name. Jozefka/Jozefina see Jozef
Izzy: god’s promise, (gift of Isis/god). Could be another variant of Georges/ Isidore/ Isabel-Isaac…even Elizabeth perhaps…
Jozef: “Jehovah (he should)increases” (Joseph)
Laurence:  boy & girl name meaning “from Laurentum” (city in Italy). That came from Laurel (Laurier) too (the crown wear by the Roman emperor).
Saint Laurence is also a christian martyr figure during the end of the roman empire who was burned alive. When asked where he hid the treasures of the church, he says the true treasures where the people, the poors.
Leo (cut Vileblood hunter): in latin it means lion, so “lion hearted, brave” as well
Logarius: it doesn’t’ exist. This one is really complicated but from what I found the first half could be “reason, judgment…”+ Christians figure. From a retranslation we can find something close to “Roger” meaning “famous spearman”. 
Ludwig: it means “famous fighter/warrior/in battle” it fit well indeed.
Madaras: Is a surname, it seems to mean “impure, bald, humid, wet, spots…” it depends on the language too.
Maria:
I saw a lot of different meaning for this one. I tried to put everything I could here but there’s a lot. What’s sure is that I personally think that all this meaning perfectly describes our dear lady of the Astral Clocktower! It’s actually crazy how some of these seems to characterize her so well. (Well done fromsoftware)
So, we got: star/drop/lady of the sea, (sea of) bitter, “” sorrow (sometimes these meanings are mixed), rebellious, beloved/loved and “wished for child”.
A common 18-19th century name. (A lot of important figures had that name. The more known is Saint Maria/Mary the mother of Jesus.
Micolash: monkey/primate it seems but “Nicholas” means “victory of the people/people of victory”. St Nicholas is the patron of children, scholars, sailors…
Norbert (cut content, originally the name of the cleric beast: “northern brightness”. It was the name of a saint too.
Olek: “defender of men/humankind/people, protector of – “
Paarl: not really a name (or an African one at least) and means pearl & perhaps the Japanese name is closer to “Paul” that means small or humble. Name of a saint too.
Patches: Well, our dear spider… comes from “Peter” means rock/stone, fight, patch (Patch seems to signify “noble” too?). under this form it’s more a female name as well?
Rom (Roma in Japanese): Our other dear spider. Reference Roma/Rome the city and Roman (empire). It’s also another name of the goddess Lakshmi (Hindu)…
 Simon: to (be) hear/listen, reputation
Valtr: easily upset, unstable, unsteady but also to rule, army, warrior
Viola: purple; violet (the flower)
Vitus: “lively, life giving, life”; came from the latin “vitae” who give “vie” in French, who means life. Could come from Vitu/widu which signifies woods, forest.
 Wallar: wallfahrer, pilmgrim (family name) it’s in the theme or the chalice dungeon enemies. And Waller means “wall maker, powerful one”
 Willem: means “resolute/determined protector”, defender, guardian, helmet
(The Defender of knowledge/ eldritch truth? The protector of humans from it? It’s quite interesting as well).
 Yamamura: “mountain village” a Japanese name of course
Yurie (Julie): grace of the lily (Japanese) Depends of the 3 kanji used but could signified: reason, logic, blessing, friend, lily, branch… Julie would be a more appropriate translation, it means “youthful”
Bonus:
Mergo: related to water and hide, “flood, swallow, hide, conceal, bury »; the latin name gives submerged & immerged…
Flora: What a surprise, flowers
Lucen: it’s the name I give to my hunter; I wanted to named him “Lucien” but I needed something unique too, so I come up with this. It means “light”.
Byrgenwerth or the college of the grave, surround by water
Byrgen: burial place, grave, tomb, 
Werth : surrounded by water  
Cainhurst -> Cain. Son of Adam & Eve, killed his brother Able, sins etc… but I saw something relating it to some woods too?
Rakuyo: fallen leaf
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💜 Books for Women's Day 2024 💜
🦇 Welcome to March, my beloved bookish bats. It's Women's History Month AND Women's Day! To celebrate, here are a few books that highlight powerful, courageous women -- both throughout history and across our favorite fictional realms. These women have contributed to our history, shaping contemporary society with bold, outspoken, badass moves. Let's celebrate and champion these voices by adding more female-focused stories to our TBRs!
❓QOTD Who is your favorite female fictional character AND real-life heroine?
❤️ Fiction ❤️ 💜 The Power - Naomi Alderman 💜 The Handmaid's Tale - Margaret Atwood 💜 The Vibrant Years - Sonali Dev 💜 Red Clocks - Leni Zumas 💜 Conjure Women - Afia Atakora 💜 City of Girls - Elizabeth Gilbert 💜 A Woman is No Man - Etaf Rum 💜 Of Women and Salt - Gabriela Garcia 💜 Circe - Madeline Miller 💜 Song of a Captive Bird - Jasmin Darznik 💜 The Women - Kristin Hannah 💜 The Love Songs of W.E.B. Dubois - Honorée Fanonne Jeffers 💜 The Bluest Eye - Toni Morrison 💜 Women Talking - Miriam Toews 💜 Hidden Figures - Margot Lee Shetterly 💜 The Vanishing Half by Brit Bennett
💜 Young/New Adult 💜 ❤️ Loveboat Reunion - Abigail Hing Wen ❤️ Realm Breaker - Victoria Aveyard ❤️ Only a Monster - Vanessa Len ❤️ This Woven Kingdom - Tahereh Mafi ❤️ Serpent & Dove - Shelby Mahurin ❤️ I’ll Be The One - Lyla Lee ❤️ Squad - Maggie Tokuda-Hall and illustrated by Lisa Sterle ❤️ These Violent Delights - Chloe Gong ❤️ The Box in the Woods - Maureen Johnson ❤️ The Wrath & the Dawn - Renee Ahdieh ❤️ You Should See Me in a Crown - Leah Johnson ❤️ A Sky Beyond the Storm - Sabaa Tahir ❤️ Nimona - N.D. Stevenson ❤️ Legendborn - Tracy Deonn ❤️ Blood Scion - Deborah Falaye ❤️ Not Here to Be Liked - Michelle Quach
❤️ Queer ❤️ 💜 Imogen, Obviously - Becky Albertalli 💜 The Fiancée Farce - Alexandria Bellefleur 💜 One Last Stop - Casey McQuiston 💜 The Henna Wars - Adiba Jaigirdar 💜 Girls of Paper and Fire - Natasha Ngan 💜 Delilah Green Doesn't Care - Ashley Herring Blake 💜 A Guide to the Dark - Meriam Metoui 💜 She Who Became the Sun - Shelley Parker-Chan 💜 Written in the Stars- Alexandria Bellefleur 💜 Gideon the Ninth - Tamsyn Muir 💜 Gearbreakers - Zoe Hana Mikuta 💜 You Exist Too Much - Zaina Arafat 💜 Mooncakes by Suzanne Walker 💜 The Priory of the Orange Tree - Samantha Shannon 💜 She Gets the Girl - Rachael Lippincott and Alyson Derrick 💜 The Jasmine Throne - Tasha Suri
💜 Non-Fiction 💜 ❤️ The Secret History of Wonder Woman - Jill Lepore ❤️ Girlhood - Melissa Febos ❤️ Our Bodies, Their Battlefields - Christina Lamb ❤️ The Radium Girls - Kate Moore ❤️ Twice As Hard - Jasmine Brown ❤️ Women of Myth - Jenny Williamson and Genn McMenemy ❤️ Nobody Ever Asked Me About the Girls - Lisa Robinson ❤️ Text Me When You Get Home: The Evolution and Triumph of Modern Female Friendship - Kayleen Schaefer ❤️ The Book of Gutsy Women - Hillary Rodham Clinton and Chelsea Clinton ❤️ The Underground Girls of Kabul - Jenny Nordberg ❤️ Feminism Is for Everybody - Bell Hooks ❤️ Invisible Women - Caroline Criado Perez ❤️ The Women of NOW - Katherine Turk ❤️ Eve - Cat Bohannon ❤️ We Should All Be Feminists - Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie ❤️ Bad Feminist - Roxane Gay
❤️ Memoirs ❤️ 💜 Mom & Me & Mom - Maya Angelou 💜 Crazy Brave - Joy Harjo 💜 Reading Lolita in Theran - Azar Nafisi 💜 I'm Glad My Mom Died - Jennette McCurdy 💜 Crying in H Mart - Michelle Zauner 💜 The Soul of a Woman - Isabel Allende 💜 See No Stranger - Valarie Kaur 💜 They Call Me a Lioness - Ahed Tamimi and Dena Takruri 💜 Becoming - Michelle Obama 💜 Bossypants - Tina Fey 💜 My Own Words - Ruth Bader Ginsburg 💜 I Am Malala Malala Yousafzai 💜 Finding Me - Viola Davis 💜 Return - Ghada Karmi 💜 Good for a Girl - Lauren Fleshman 💜 The Woman in Me - Britney Spears
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