Tumgik
#erin gough
Text
I can't remember who it was I used to shout about Erin Gough's books with but omg omg omg she's written a new one!!! it's called Into the Mouth of the Wolf and it's a thriller that kind of gives me the same vibes as The Girls I've Been by Tess Sharpe?? and holy shittttt it came out today!!! adding it to my shopping list for tomorrow 👀
10 notes · View notes
razreads · 20 days
Text
Give people time to grow and they’ll do the same for you.
Erin Gough, Amelia Westlake Was Never Here
3 notes · View notes
duckielover151 · 1 year
Text
I love coming across a new author who just... gets it.
I just started reading Amelia Westlake Was Never Here, (published as just Amelia Westlake everywhere other than the US, apparently) by Erin Gough.
I've read a lot of books with alternating POVs, but-- only 2 chapters in, one chapter from each main character-- and I can already tell Gough is someone to respect as a writer. Because I've read a lot of alternating POV stories where... obviously the character is a different person and has different interests and opinions and life experiences... but they sound exactly the same as whoever was narrating the last chapter.
Gough has really mastered that two different characters should have two different voices. The edgy, troublemaker character kind of sounds like every cynical YA protag I've ever met... But the well-meaning, teacher's pet character... It's not just the context of her words. She uses a lot of exclamation points. She hardly uses any contractions. It's impossible to read her words and not hear her overly prissy, proper tone.
Also, it's a queer romance! The plot is that the two girls come together to try and expose their gym coach for being inappropriate with his students, creating a fake online identity (Amelia Westlake) to try and get their proof. And they end up falling for each other in the process. Two chapters should be way too early in for me to be recommending it to anyone, but it's made a really great first impression.
0 notes
karnpuffs · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
...how am I supposed to take this show seriously??
14 notes · View notes
cantsayidont · 10 months
Text
Some recentish shows of note, or lack thereof:
COUNT ABDULLA: Charming comedy about a Pakistani doctor who gets turned into a vampire by a white vamp with a fetish for brown men, and the many complications that ensue. Not so much a horror story as a witty parable about the travails of being a person of color in Tory Britain today. (So, a horror story after all, then.) Jaime Winstone needs to dial it back, but the rest of the cast delights.
DEADLOCH: Snarky comedy-mystery by a well-known Australian comedy team, about mismatched cops investigating a gruesome murder in a small town. The mystery is clever; the payoff is blah; and despite the predominantly female, mostly LGBT cast, the humor is awfully reliant on misogynistic and homophobic cracks that frequently cross a line from "laughing with" to "laughing at."
HIJACK: Tense but very contrived seven-part thriller about the hijacking of a British airliner on a seven-hour-flight from Dubai to London, with passenger Idris Elba the wildcard. Gripping, but not terribly plausible, and the many false climaxes become exhausting, especially if you watch the episodes back to back.
THE LAZARUS PROJECT: Convoluted, intermittently fascinating, unpleasantly mean Sky sci-fi thriller about an app developer named George Addo (Paapa Essiedu), who's drawn into a secret organization that can undo world-ending disasters (natural or manmade) by resetting time to a predetermined save point, like a video game, although this has harrowing consequences for the handful of people capable of remembering the repeated resets. At first, this is basically just window dressing for grim espionage procedural nonsense, with some extremely questionable character motivations, but after a relentlessly bleak midsection, the first season finds its dramatic footing in the unexpectedly interesting final episodes, in which the premise is pushed to its breaking point and the grimness gives way to black comedy. This is the note on which the considerably more complicated second season begins, but it again grows uglier and bleaker as it goes on, and any sympathy for George, positioned at the start of the show as a relatable everyman, has long since evaporated. There are some provocative ideas and a number of surprisingly funny moments, but the whole story is predicated on pushing the characters into morally compromised positions (one assumes creator Joe Barton always has a browser tab open to the TV Tropes "Moral Event Horizon" page), and the fact that some of the (many) atrocities the characters perpetrate in hopes of fixing the existential catastrophes they've set in motion are subsequently undone doesn't make them any easier to stomach. Anjli Mohindra (who plays Archie, the veteran agent who initially recruits George into the project) remains frustratingly under-utilized in both seasons.
THE MORNING SHOW: Big-budget, all-star TV news drama is all dressed up with nothing to say, undone at every turn by truly spineless whataboutism and a centrist world view so gormless it makes Aaron Sorkin seem like Alexander Berkman. Reese Witherspoon is pretty good as closeted bisexual cohost Bradley Jackson, but costar Jennifer Anniston's limited range becomes a problem, particularly as the quality of the scripts declines noticeably in later seasons. You could always just watch BROADCAST NEWS.
THE OTHER BLACK GIRL: Disjointed adaptation of the 2021 Zakiya Dalila Harris novel scores when it focus on the workplace drama of a young Black woman in a painfully white publishing company, but trips over its own feet in its attempts to also be a paranoid thriller, with plenty of bad vibes that never add up to a coherent sense of threat and a conspiracy plot that doesn't really make any sense.
THE PERIPHERAL: Misfired adaptation of the 2014 William Gibson novel is executive-produced by the same people as the recent WESTWORLD series and has the same problems: big ideas that don't translate into action and an infuriating tendency to consign characters of color to marginal or villainous roles. Worse, it eventually becomes clear that several more compelling characters have been sidelined in favor of the poor white trash leads (Chloë Grace Moretz and Jack Reynor), who are neither very interesting nor especially sympathetic.
WHO IS ERIN CARTER?: Kinetic but preposterous seven-part action thriller with Evin Ahmad as a suburban mom in Barcelona who is secretly an incredible badass with a shady past. Basically a violent Walter Mitty fantasy for soccer moms who love the JOHN WICK movies, with a showy supporting role for Denise Gough from ANDOR.
7 notes · View notes
vintagewarhol · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
7 notes · View notes
geekcavepodcast · 1 year
Text
youtube
Who is Erin Carter? Trailer
Who is Erin Carter? follows Erin, a British woman living in Spain as an expat, teaching children. She is caught up in a supermarket robbery and, when one of the robbers claims to recognize her, her now peaceful life threatens to unravel.
Who is Erin Carter? stars Evin Ahmad, Sean Teale, Denise Gough, Douglas Henshall, Indica Watson, Pep Ambròs, Susannah Fielding, and Charlotte Vega. Jack Lothian serves as showrunner and a writer on the series.
Who is Erin Carter? hits Netflix on August 24, 2023.
3 notes · View notes
buydvdonline · 10 months
Text
Who Is Erin Carter The Complete First Season DVD (2023)
Title : Who Is Erin Carter
Release Year : 2023
Episode : 7
0 notes
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
🌈 Queer Books Coming Out in May 2024 🌈
🌈 Good morning, my bookish bats! Struggling to keep up with all the amazing queer books coming out this month? Here are a FEW of the stunning, diverse queer books you can add to your TBR before the year is over. Remember to #readqueerallyear! Happy reading!
[ Release dates may have changed. ]
❤️ Farzana's Spite - Felix Graves 🧡 Archangels of Funk - Andrea Hairston 💛 How It Works Out - Myriam Lacroix 💚 Queer History A to Z - Robin Stevenson, Vivian Rosas 💙 Queerceañera - Alex Crespo 💜 Second Night Stand - Karelia Stetz-Waters, Fay Stetz-Waters ❤️ You Can Call Me Cooper - Cali Kitsu 🧡 Gooseberry - Robin Gow 💛 Grand Slam Romance - Ollie Hicks, Emma Oosterhous 💙The Witches of Silverlake - Simon Curtis, Stephanie Son 💜 Drawn to the Enemy - Barbara Winkes 🌈 The Truth of Our Past - Heather Leighson
❤️ Infaust - T.D. Cloud, Ambi Sun 🧡 Garner for Gold - Catherine Labadie 💛 The Z Word - Lindsay King-Miller 💚 Snake Charming - Genevieve McCluer 💙 The 7-10 Split - Karmen Lee 💜 Loving Jemima - Sienna Waters ❤️ The Potion Gardener - Arden Powell 🧡 A Swift and Sudden Exit - Nico Vincenty 💛 The Worst Ronin - Maggie Tokuda-Hall, Faith Schaffer 💙 Murray Out of Water -Taylor Tracy 💜 The Guncle Abroad - Steven Rowley 🌈 The Weight of What Was - Pip Landers-Letts
❤️ The Amazing Alpha Tau Pledge Project - Lisa Henry, Sarah Honey 🧡 I Met Death & Sex Through My Friend, Tom Meuley - Thom Vernon 💛 Malicia - Steven dos Santos 💚 The Sins on Their Bones - Laura R. Samotin 💙 SLUTS: Anthology - Michelle Tea 💜 You Should Be So Lucky - Cat Sebastian ❤️ Death's Country - R.M. Romero 🧡 Cinema Love - Jiaming Tang 💛 The Brides of High Hill - Nghi Vo 💙 Emma - Jenna Kent 💜 Wish We Were There - Lionel Hart 🌈 A Troublemaker in Her Eyes - Genta Sebastian
❤️ I Make Envy on Your Disco - Eric Schnall 🧡 Lavash at First Sight - Taleen Voskuni 💛 Queer Power Couples - Hannah Murphy Winter, Billie Winter 💚 In Repair - A.L. Graziadei 💙 A Heart Divided - Angie Williams 💜 Long After We Are Gone - Terah Shelton Harris ❤️ The Queen of Steeplechase Park - David Ciminello 🧡 Lunar Boy - Jes Wibowo, Cin Wibowo 💛 Hot Boy Summer - Joe Jiménez 💙 Sunhead - Alex Assan 💜 The Summer Love Strategy - Ray Stoeve 🌈 Into the Mouth of the Wolf - Erin Gough
❤️ The Girl in Question - Tess Sharpe 🧡 The Lost Erwain - Mariah Stillbrook 💛 Starfire - Naomi Hughes 💚 Adrift - Sam Ledel 💙 Shanghai Murder - Jessie Chandler 💜 April May June July - Alison B. Hart ❤️ A Bone in His Teeth - Kellen Graves 🧡 Cabin Fever - Tagan Shepard 💛 Don't Be a Drag - Skye Quinlan 💙 The Ride of Her Life - Jennifer Dugan 💜 The Redemption of Daya Keane - Gia Gordon 🌈 Nearlywed - Nicolas DiDomizio
❤️ The Sunforge - Sascha Stronach 🧡 The End of Time - Trudie Skies 💛 Silent Ones - Melissa Polk 💚 Prime Time Travelers - Neil Laird 💙 My Darling Dreadful Thing - Johanna van Veen 💜 The Honey Witch - Sydney J. Shields ❤️ Spitting Gold - Carmella Lowkis 🧡 Last Chance - Claire Highton-Stevenson 💛 Road Home - Rex Ogle 💙 Only for Convenience - Shannon O'Connor 💜 Linus and Etta Could Use a Win - Caroline Huntoon 🌈 Finding Molly Parsons - Alyson Root
❤️ Breathe: Journeys to Healthy Binding - Maia Kobabe, Dr. Sarah Peitzmeier 🧡 See You Next Month - Jamey Moody 💛 Until You Say My Name - Tatum Schroeder 💚 Disembark - Jen Currin 💙 True Love and Other Impossible Odds - Christina Li 💜 Flyboy - Kasey LeBlanc ❤️ Thirsty - Jas Hammonds 🧡 Hands Off - N. Slater 💛 Flooded Secrets - Claudie Arseneault 💙 The Deer and the Dragon - Piper C.J. 💜 To Be Loved - Frank G. Anderson 🌈 Snowblooded - Emma Sterner-Radley
❤️ Blood Remains - Cathy Pegau 🧡 Blood on the Tide - Katee Robert 💛 We Were the Universe - Kimberly King Parsons 💚 Loyalty - E.J. Noyes 💙 Spirits and Sirens - Kelly Fireside 💜 Clean Kill - Anne Laughlin ❤️ The Worst Perfect Moment - Shivaun Plozza 🧡 Oye - Melissa Mogollon 💛 Here for the Wrong Reasons - Annabel Paulsen, Lydia Wang 💙 Exhibit - R.O. Kwon 💜 Experienced - Kate Young 🌈 Parenting with Pride - Heather Hester
❤️ Road to Ruin - Hana Lee 🧡 Meet Me in Berlin - Samantha L. Valentine 💛 The Advice Columnist - Cade Haddock Strong 💚 where lost & hopeless things go - Bryony Rosehurst 💙 Pit Stop - Ellis Mae 💜 The Switchboard - Christina K. Glover ❤️ In the Shallows - Tanya Byrne 🧡 Have You Seen This Girl - Nita Tyndall 💛 Another First Chance - Robbie Couch 💙 The Only Light Left Burning - Erik J. Brown 💜 Keepers of the Stones and Stars - Michael Barakiva 🌈 A Little Kissing Between Friends - Chencia C. Higgins
41 notes · View notes
Tumblr media
JOMP BPC - July 25th - Feminist Character
loved the feminism in Amelia Westlake by Erin Gough, a brilliant Australian YA novel about two girls taking on misogyny at their elite private school (that was published in the US and would be a perfect backlog read for #Booklr Reads Australian 👀)
21 notes · View notes
razreads · 5 months
Text
Knowledge is a form of power – a tool you can use to change the status quo.
Erin Gough, Amelia Westlake Was Never Here
1 note · View note
dear-indies · 3 months
Note
hey cat! i need a little help with a fc replacement for my oc vampire slayer. i originally used katheryn winnick for her, but with her past of supporting isntreal and her current silence, i'm no longer comfortable using her. she's in her early 40s and has the same kind of alt-ish vibe that katheryn did in wu assassins, if that helps. thank you so much for your time and energy! 🍉🍉🍉
Gwendoline Christie (1978)
Rosamund Pike (1979)
Natasha Lyonne (1979) Hungarian Jewish.
Denise Gough (1980) - Who is Erin Carter?
Angelica Ross (1980) African-American - is trans - in AHS: Double Feature - has spoken up for Palestine!
Katee Sackhoff (1980)
Elodie Yung (1981) Cambodian / White - The Cleaning Lady.
Stephanie Beatriz (1981) Bolivian [Spanish, Indigenous, Basque, possibly other] / Colombian [German, one quarter Sephardi Jewish, Dutch, Spanish, Basque, possibly other].
Natalie Dormer (1982)
Abbie Cornish (1982) - Jack Ryan.
Billie Piper (1982)
Dichen Lachman (1982) Tibetan / White.
Levy Tran (1983) Vietnamese.
Diane Guerrero (1986) Colombian - is a little younger but has the role in Doom Patrol and has spoken up for Palestine!
JuJu Chan (1989) Hongkonger - is younger but has the vibes in Wu Assassins.
Hey anon! I was so hard to find people with the similar look/vibe but I hope these suggestions help you out.
5 notes · View notes
if-you-fan-a-fire · 9 months
Text
Tumblr media
BOOKS I READ IN 2023 Here's what I read in 2023. What has now become an annual tradition of sorts!
An unusual year in reading for me. The first half of the year was very slow, and I mostly finished two long books I've been trying to finish for years by William Morris and Robert Musil. Then the PSAC strike, and more time to read. After that, I made a reading plan and stuck to it, trying to read every day at least a chapter of a book on the list. I also ended up re-reading several books this year - transcribing notes at first, I ended up going over the entire book a second time. I also tried to take extensive notes on every new book. I also snuck a few theses I read onto the list - it feels weird not to include a several hundred page work I went over with a fine-toothed comb. Mostly academic books, germane to my own research and writing, but some strong forays into topics I don't normally think about much. Plus some genuinely good 'amateur' history, too.
Re-reads are marked by a plus sign and my most enjoyable or interesting reads are marked with an asterisk.
First Row:
Jesper Vaczy Kragh, Lobotomy Nation: The History of Psychosurgery and Psychiatry in Denmark (2021)
William Morris, The Well at the World's End (1896, Ballantine edition 1975)
Robert Musil, translated by Sophie Wilkins, The Man Without Qualities (1930, Picador edition 2017)*
Gavin Walker, ed., The Red Years: Theory, Politics, and Aesthetics in the Japanese ’68 (2020)*
Garrett Felber, Those Who Know Don't Say: The Nation of Islam, the Black Freedom Movement, and the Carceral State (2020) *
Robin Jarvis Brownlie, A Fatherly Eye: Indian Agents, Government Power, and Aboriginal Resistance in Ontario, 1918-1939 (2003)
Second Row:
Steve Hewitt, Riding to the Rescue: The Transformation of the RCMP in Alberta and Saskatchewan, 1914-1939 (2006)
Maeve McMahon, The Persistent Prison?: Rethinking Decarceration and Penal Reform (1989)+
Rebecca McLennan, The Crisis of Imprisonment: Protest, Politics, and the Making of the American Penal State, 1776–1941 (2007)+
Anne Guérin, Prisonniers en révolte: Quotidien carcéral, mutineries et politique pénitentiaire en France (2013)+
Anson Rabinbach, The Eclipse of the Utopias of Labor (2018)
Scott Thompson & Gary Genosko, Punched Drunk: Alcohol, Surveillance and the LCBO, 1927-1975 (2009)
Third Row:
Erin Durham, "In Pursuit of Reform, Whether Convict or Free: Prison Labor Reform in Maryland in the early Twentieth Century." (2018 thesis)
Chester Himes, Yesterday Will Make You Cry (1998)*
Harvey Swados, Standing Fast: A Novel (1971, 2013 Open Road edition)
Charles Upchurch, "Beyond the Law": The Politics of Ending the Death Penalty for Sodomy in Britain (2021)
Barry Godfrey, David J. Cox & Helen Johnston, Penal Servitude: Convicts and Long-Term Imprisonment, 1853–1948 (2022)
W.J. Forsythe, Penal Discipline, Reformatory Projects And The English Prison Commission, 1895-1939 (1991)
Fourth Row:
Neal A. Palmer, To the Dark Cells: Prisoner Resistance and Protest in Nineteenth-Century Britain (2008)
Frances H. Simon, Prisoners' Work and Vocational Training (1999)
Meera Nanda, Science In Saffron: Skeptical Essays On History of Science (2016)*
Gene Wolfe, The Book of the New Sun (four volumes, 1980-1983, Folio Society edition 2021)+
David J. Rothman, Conscience and Convenience: The Asylum and Its Alternatives in Progressive America (2002)+
Kathryn Cooper, "The Infamous Convict Museum Ship Success : an Archaeological Investigation of Material Culture and Identity Formation Processes." (2014 thesis)
Fifth row:
Barry M. Gough, Gunboat Frontier: British Maritime Authority and Northwest Coast Indians, 1846-1890 (1984)
Edward Jones-Imhotep, The Unreliable Nation: Hostile Nature and Technological Failure in the Cold War (2017)*
Larry A. Glassford, Reaction and Reform: The Politics of the Conservative Party under R.B. Bennett, 1927-1938 (1992)
Don Nerbas, Dominion of Capital: The Politics of Big Business and the Crisis of the Canadian Bourgeoisie, 1914-1947 (2013)
James Naylor, The Fate of Labour Socialism: The Co-operative Commonwealth Federation and the Dream of a Working-Class Future (2016)
Michael Martin, The Red Patch: Political imprisonment in Hull, Quebec during World War 2 (2007)
Sixth Row:
Ruán O'Donnell, Special Category: The IRA in English Prisons, Vol. 1: 1968-1978 (2012)*
Ruán O'Donnell, Special Category: The IRA in English Prisons, Vol. 2: 1978-1985 (2015)*
Cheryl D. Hicks, Talk with You Like a Woman: African American Women, Justice, and Reform in New York, 1890-1935 (2010)*
Clarence Jefferson Hall, A Prison in the Woods: Environment and Incarceration in New York's North Country (2020)
Scott Thompson, "Consequences of Categorization: National Registration, Surveillance and Social Control in Wartime Canada, 1939-1946." (2013 thesis)
H.V. Nelles, The Politics of Development: Forests, Mines, and Hydro-Electric Power in Ontario, 1849-1941 (2005)+
Seventh row:
Chief Thomas Fiddler & James R. Stevens, Killing the Shamen (1985)
Ashley Johnson Bavery, Bootlegged Aliens: Immigration Politics on America's Northern Border (2020)
Patrick Brode, Dying for a Drink: How a Prohibition Preacher Got Away with Murder (2018)
Hamish Maxwell-Stewart & Michael Quinlan, Unfree Workers: Insubordination and Resistance in Convict Australia, 1788-1860 (2022)*
Victor Serge, translated by Ralph Manheim, Last Times (1946, 2022 NYRB edition)
Christopher Cauldwell, Studies in a Dying Culture (1938)
8 notes · View notes
lgbtqreads · 2 years
Note
Hi there, I hope you're well!! Do you think you could direct me to f/f books where the romance is still positive, but one or both of the characters is kinda fucked up? Like strange, or abrasive, or antisocial, or obsessive, or haunted by her demons, etc. Bonus points for strong characterization and plot overall 🥲 Gideon the Ninth is an example on the extreme end, with how Harrowhark is!
I always recommend The Unspoken Name by AK Larkwood for fans of Gideon, and I stand by that here! On the other end of the spectrum, in light YA, I'd say Hani and Ishu's Guide to Fake Dating by Adiba Jaigirdar, Amelia Westlake by Erin Gough, and the upcoming Margo Zimmerman Gets Her Girl by Brianna Shrum and Sara Waxelbaum all have elements of this, with a more Type A character in the couple.
You might like "Ice queens" as a trope, too; here are a bunch of those:
Just a Touch Away by Jae
Thaw by Elyse Springer
Breaking Character by Lee Winter
Hotel Queens by Lee Winter
The Red Files by Lee Winter
House of Agnes by Fiona Zedde
Ditto hurt/comfort; here are a couple:
Razor Wire by Lauren Gallagher
Such a Pretty Face by Gabrielle Goldsby
36 notes · View notes
hegodamask · 1 year
Text
Watched some of Denise Gough’s scenes in Who is Erin Carter last night. It’s bad. I couldn’t stomach whole episodes.
But there is a scene where she kills a man with her bare hands, so it was worth it in the end.
12 notes · View notes
sapphicreadsdb · 1 year
Note
Do you know of books where the protagonist and deuteragonist are rivals and have known each other mostly their whole life and they become lovers when they reach their adulthood (not necessarily adulthood, any other age is fine too)
Sorta like childhood friends who are also rivals and become lovers
i don't have any childhood friends/rivals to lovers but i do have rivals to lovers
night tide by anna burke
i kissed shara wheeler by casey mcquiston
amelia westlake by erin gough
cow girl by kirsty eyre
future leaders of nowhere by emily o'beirne
tell me how you really feel by aminah mae safi
i kissed alice by anna birch
mangos and mistletoe by adriana herrera
i think i love you by auriane desombre
hani and ishu's guide to fake dating by adiba jaigirdar
#q
20 notes · View notes