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#luci faulkner
randomestfandoms-ocs · 7 months
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The Witching Hour: Part 2
[ Part 1 ]
Originally part of the Calaveras, Elias Navarez saw 8 year old Evelia Torres about to die in a witch burning. He killed everyone who was part of it and then adopted her, defecting from the Calaveras and started his own hunting organization. Originally just Calaveras defectors, the group grows to include other hunters, supernatural creatures, and even some ordinary humans, and the group grows into a family.
(extra special thank you to @cecexwrites and @ginevrastilinski-ocs for helping me figure out wtf I was doing with this idea)
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Emmeline “Emmy” Faulkner [ Sabrina Carpenter ] – 14; human. Second youngest of the Faulkner siblings, probable Alastor ship
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Evelia Navarez [ Jenna Ortega ] – 14; witch with an affinity for necromancy, but struggles to control her powers
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Genevieve “Gen” Faulkner [ Kristine Froseth ] – 16; human. Second oldest Faulkner sibling, longtime best friend of Scott and Stiles
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Gwyn Aritza [ Rachel Zegler ] – 15; human, priestess to Artemis. Recently rescued from the same Pagan cult as Alandra & Morana, Scott ship
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Inola Hale [ Katie Douglas ] – 16; werefox (not kitsune). Peter Hale's eldest child and Malia's half sister
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Juniper Summers [ Peyton List ] – 16/23, witch with nature powers. Acacia's older sister, killed by Kate Argent when she was in high school, accidentally revived by Evelia
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Lucille “Luci” Faulkner [ Grace Van Dien ] – 16; human. Gen's younger twin sister, Lydia's best friend until Allison shows up, Stiles ship
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Marcia Otero [ Melissa Barrera ] – 16; human. Her family was all part of the Calaveras, her parents died and Marcia has been raised by her aunt ever since, taken from the Calaveras into the new hunting family before she could be forced into becoming a hunter
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Morana Corvin [ Teagan Croft ] – 14; witch, priestess to Hecate. Part of the same cult as Alandra & Gwyn
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Nadia Alvarez [ Eiza Gonzales ] – 27; succubus
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Nori Adler [ Naomi Scott ] – 16; chimera
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Nyla Barnett [ Anna Diop ] – 25; dragon
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Paloma Otero [ Salma Hayek ] – 56; hunter. Marcia's aunt, long time Calaveras member, defected a year or so after Elias & Darius did
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Rhea Hale [ Kaya Scodelario ] – 16; werewolf. Cora's twin sister, ran from the fire, got kidnapped by hunters and experimented on and eventually rescued by Elias & Darius
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Ryleigh Brice [ Madison Iseman ] – 15; witch
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Samira Acosta [ Isabela Moner ] – 15; fairy
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Saoirse Carlisle [ Alicia Vikander ] – 24; hunter
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Silas Peregrine [ Thomas Doherty ] – 16/unknown; vampire. The other surviving member of Della's coven, the two are now hiding out in Beacon Hills under the guise of being cousins
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andrew3garfield · 1 year
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MARTYRS (2008) || SAW (2004)
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sankta-lucia · 1 year
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Beauty and the Beast' tile panels by Edward Burne-Jones (designer), Lucy Faulkner (artist), Morris, Marshall, Faulkner & Co. (maker), 1863-1864
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Round 2, Match 2
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pink-evilette · 1 year
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♡ my comfort characters ♡
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thank u so much for the tag @cinnamonangel333 ♡ so sorry I'm so late haha 🎀
tagging @lovesickbrat @cloud-and-proud @matrosskoye-sky @m0tel6mxzzy @lunasghost ♡
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sidotherobot · 1 year
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a goat demon and a robot, they are husbands
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jesuisgourde · 1 month
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A list of all the books mentioned in Peter Doherty's journals (and in some interviews/lyrics, too)
Because I just made this list in answer to someone's question on a facebook group, I thought I may as well post it here.
-The Picture of Dorian Gray/The Ballad Of Reading Gaol/Salome/The Happy Prince/The Duchess of Padua, all by Oscar Wilde -The Thief's Journal/Our Lady Of The Flowers/Miracle Of The Rose, all by Jean Genet -A Diamond Guitar by Truman Capote -Mixed Essays by Matthew Arnold -Venus In Furs by Leopold Sacher-Masoch -The Ministry Of Fear by Graham Greene -Brighton Rock by Graham Green -A Season in Hell by Arthur Rimbaud -The Street Of Crocodiles (aka Cinnamon Shops) by Bruno Schulz -Opium: The Diary Of His Cure by Jean Cocteau -The Lost Weekend by Charles Jackson -Howl by Allen Ginsberg -Women In Love by DH Lawrence -The Tempest by William Shakespeare -Trilby by George du Maurier -The Vision Of Jean Genet by Richard Coe -"Literature And The Crisis" by Isaiah Berlin -Le Cid by Pierre Corneille -The Paris Peasant by Louis Aragon -Junky by William S Burroughs -Absolute Beginners by Colin MacInnes -Futz by Rochelle Owens -They Shoot Horses Don't They? by Horace McCoy -"An Inquiry On Love" by La revolution surrealiste magazine -Idea by Michael Drayton -"The Nymph's Reply to The Shepherd" by Sir Walter Raleigh -Hamlet by William Shakespeare -The Silver Shilling/The Old Church Bell/The Snail And The Rose Tree all by Hans Christian Andersen -120 Days Of Sodom by Marquis de Sade -Letters To A Young Poet by Rainer Maria Rilke -Poetics Of Space by Gaston Bachelard -In Favor Of The Sensitive Man and Other Essays by Anais Nin -La Batarde by Violette LeDuc -Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov -Intimate Journals by Charles Baudelaire -Juno And The Paycock by Sean O'Casey -England Is Mine by Michael Bracewell -"The Prelude" by William Wordsworth -Noise: The Political Economy of Music by Jacques Atalli -"Elm" by Sylvia Plath -"I am pleased with my sight..." by Rumi -She Stoops To Conquer by Oliver Goldsmith -Amphitryon by John Dryden -Oscar Wilde by Richard Ellman -The Song Of The South by James Rennell Rodd -In Her Praise by Robert Graves -"For That He Looked Not Upon Her" by George Gascoigne -"Order And Disorder" by Lucy Hutchinson -Man Crazy by Joyce Carol Oates -A Pictorial History Of Sex In The Movies by Jeremy Pascall and Clyde Jeavons -Anarchy State & Utopia by Robert Nozick -"Limbo" by Samuel Taylor Coleridge -Men In Love: Masculinity and Sexuality in the Eighteenth Century by George Haggerty
[arbitrary line break because tumble hates lists apparently]
-Crime And Punishment by Fyodor Dostoevsky -Innocent When You Dream: the Tom Waits Reader -"Identity Card" by Mahmoud Darwish -Ulysses by James Joyce -The Four Quartets poems by TS Eliot -Julius Caesar by William Shakespeare -A'Rebours/Against The Grain by Joris-Karl Huysmans -Prisoner Of Love by Jean Genet -Down And Out In Paris And London by George Orwell -The Man With The Golden Arm by Nelson Algren -Revolutionary Road by Richard Yates -"Epitaph To A Dog" by Lord Byron -Cocaine Nights by JG Ballard -"Not By Bread Alone" by James Terry White -Anecdotes Of The Late Samuel Johnson by Hester Thrale -"The Owl And The Pussycat" by Edward Lear -"Chevaux de bois" by Paul Verlaine -A Strong Song Tows Us: The Life of Basil Bunting by Richard Burton -Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes -The Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri -The Jungle Book by Rudyard Kipling -The Man Who Would Be King by Rudyard Kipling -Ask The Dust by John Frante -On The Trans-Siberian Railways by Blaise Cendrars -The 39 Steps by John Buchan -The Overcoat by Nikolai Gogol -The Government Inspector by Nikolai Gogol -The Iliad by Homer -Heart Of Darkness by Joseph Conrad -The Volunteer by Shane O'Doherty -Twenty Love Poems and A Song Of Despair by Pablo Neruda -"May Banners" by Arthur Rimbaud -Literary Outlaw: The life and times of William S Burroughs by Ted Morgan -The Penguin Dorothy Parker -Smoke by William Faulkner -Hero And Leander by Christopher Marlowe -My Lady Nicotine by JM Barrie -All I Ever Wrote by Ronnie Barker -The Libertine by Stephen Jeffreys -On Murder Considered As One Of The Fine Arts by Thomas de Quincey -The Void Ratio by Shane Levene and Karolina Urbaniak -The Remains Of The Day by Kazuo Ishiguro -Dead Fingers Talk by William S Burroughs -The England's Dreaming Tapes by Jon Savage -London Underworld by Henry Mayhew
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Highwaymen, Rapparees, and Gentlemen of the Road.
Cover is a painting, c.1860, of Claude Duval by William Powell Frith.
The Newry Highwayman- Malinky
Turpin Hero- Ewan MacColl
Allan Tyne of Harrow- Dolores Keene & John Faulkner
The Female Highwayman- Lucy Ward
Brennan on the Moor- Tom Kines
Whiskey in the Jar- The Dubliners
The Jolly Highwayman- Joan Mills & Michael Raven
The Naked Highwayman- Fairport Convention
The Highwayman Outwitted- Magpie Lane
Dick Turpin's Ride to York- John Graham Donaldson
The Wild 'Prentice Boy- Fred Gosbee
Redmond O'Hanlon- Irish Bastards
The Outlaw Rapparee- The Rapparees
Fairfax County- Joan Baez
Sovay- Pentangle
Turpin Hero- Eliza Carthy
16 tracks; 55 mins. [Spotify]
[my other playlists]
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little-earthquakes-rp · 3 months
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Bio
Name: Skye Faulkner
Age: 35
Occupation: Therapist & Hypnotist 
F/C: Ricky Whittle
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TW: Murder
Skye practically came out of the womb practicing magic; born on Samhain his mother knew immediately her bouncing baby boy was bestowed with magical abilities. The nurses and hospital staff were quick to come when the little boy let out a cry or even a  gurgle, all practically falling over one another to soothe him. The moment he was born his mother’s world changed completely.
Life was rather simple for the pair as Skye spent his childhood living rather nomadically. Lucy his mother never could stay in a place too long, and the small boy would scoot from small towns to large cities throughout the US on nothing more than a whim, or at least it seemed. The truth was that Lucy had a rather bad habit of falling in love, only to have the feelings quickly extinguished. It was only later in his adolescence that he picked up on the nuance, and felt slightly resentful by his mother's unrelenting quest.
While his mother knew from the moment of his birth he’d been blessed it wasn't until Skye was six before discovering it as well.  It had been Christmas Eve and after filling the boy with chatter about Santa Claus he excitingly lay in bed wanting to catch the man. Despite the words of warning from his mother, he shot out of bed the moment he heard a noise coming from downstairs. The little boy silently tip-toed from the room and down the hall careful not to make a sound. Peeking his head around the corner he caught his mother affixing a bow to a brand new bike. There was a feeling of elation over getting a bike, but also disappointment that the myth of Santa was a farce. 
Suddenly, his mother sensed him peeking from around the corner and scowled,  "Skye climb back in bed at this instant, and don't be afraid."  The little boy was confused by what she meant but turned on his heel feeling guilty he disappointed his mother. He walked the small distance back to his room.
When he turned the corner confusion swept over him when he saw himself lying in bed already, and yet he stood in the doorway. It didn't make any sense, and he cried out to his mom.  Comforting the child she explained he slipped his soul out from his body, and he only needed to climb back into bed to return.  She assured him it was normal– for him anyway, but must keep it secret from others.
Other things came quickly to the boy, and his mother was always rather impressed by his innate skill; knowing he was going to be powerful was something that scared her a bit. In time, he caught curiosity over why his gift was so different from his mother’s, but she was quick to squash any questions about his paternity. It was something which lingered and bothers him still to this day.
The single mother and her son continued to put miles on moving across the US. Settling in a small town outside of Oklahoma City where Lucy met a rather mysterious man and became smitten.  Like with all his mother's relationships, things transgressed rather quickly, and the man moved into the small rental property with them. Within days Skye figured out what was so enigmatic about the man–as he two was a witch. For a very short time, the boy was happy to have a magical male presence, but things took a turn rather quickly.  A dark mood set in over the house. His mother didn’t want to leave and had become withdrawn. She seemed lost in infinite sadness, and despite his best attempts he could not raise a smile or bring her any joy. Even his own mood had soured, and he spent his time angry even having a few outbursts at school. Their life seemed to be coming apart at the seams, and Skye was desperate to figure out why. 
It was then he happened upon her boyfriend standing out in a clearing out back of the home casting a conversion spell; the man was slowly draining his mother of her life force. The threat of his mother’s life brought a rage over the young boy, and without even a second thought Skye grabbed the man’s wrist. He let out a terrible scream as his eyes rolled into the back of his head. The abhorrent smell of burning flesh filled the area and was swept up by the wind. Eventually, the man collapsed on the ground lifeless. Lucy stumbled upon the scene, and after questioning her son everything slid into place. While she hurried to hide the incident– she was struck at just how powerful and deadly her eleven-year-old son could be.
Within the year the pair wandered into New Orleans, and while Skye was convinced it was going to be like any other home: temporary. He couldn't have been more wrong. Lucy’s move to the Big Easy was nothing if calculated, and perhaps for the first time put her son's needs ahead of her own. It was no secret that the community was a haven for most witches, and once there the two were quickly swept up by the Wardell Coven.  Lucy thought to wipe the memory of the burning from her son's mind, but it served too important of a lesson. Instead, she insisted it be kept a secret.  After a year Lucy felt the itch to keep on moving and made the weighted decision to leave Skye in the care of the coven; figuring they would be able to provide better care for the powerful witch. The child only thrived under their watchful eye, and he found a certain peace by putting down roots.  
As Skye grew into adolescences he grappled with the knowledge of his past. He made a point of underselling his capabilities and preferred not garner too much attention of others. The last thing he wanted was to be challenged and run the risk of falling into an uncontrollable rage.  Instead, he slid into a lowkey life, and is known throughout the community as friendly.  Despite his affiliation, he thinks one day the covens will unify, and believes calls other witches either sister or brother, and is known for being rather passive. 
Once he completed secondary school he wanted to put his gift to use. In time he earned degrees in psychology and counseling.  Currently, he rents a small office out of a larger psychotherapist firm. While he tends to use his scholastic training mainly; magic does slip in from time to time. In the past, he’s been able to help others who weren’t improving by conventional methods by dream leaping. He’ll engineer a safe environment where his patients can interact at a higher level. This would be achieved while the patient is either in their bed sleeping peacefully or in his office under the influence of hypnosis. 
Gifts & Talents
Astral Projection:  The very first attribute which showed itself all those years ago on Christmas Eve. The ability to project the consciousness into an astral form outside of the body has served him well.
Cloaking: The ability to make himself, or anyone invisible and undetected. Astral projection will only get you so far, and sometimes he needs to physically interact with objects while at work.
Dream Leaping:  This was discovered totally by accident during a routine astral projection; however, it served him well when he was giving a passing mark in trigonometry. The ability to project and manipulate others via their dreams.
Touch of Death: The ability to kill other beings through touch by burning and boiling them from the inside. This power is triggered by intense emotions of hate. The others don't know of the gift with the exception of his mother, but he wonders if some that are skilled are able to detect. Skye puts a lot of effort into staying calm and wants to keep this dark gift quiet.
Vortex Creation: The ability to create vortexes to other dimensions, planes, or parallel worlds. This was something he worked with intensely while traveling and alongside others from his coven. It takes an insurmountable amount of effort, and the moment his concentration is interrupted the vortex dissipates.
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movienized-com · 8 months
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Boudica: Queen of War (2023)
Boudica: Queen of War (2023) #JesseVJohnson #OlgaKurylenko #CliveStanden #PeterFranzen #RitaTushingham #LeoGregory Mehr auf:
Boudica – Aufstand gegen RomJahr: 2023 (Oktober) Genre: Action / Drama / History Regie: Jesse V. Johnson Hauptrollen: Olga Kurylenko, Clive Standen, Peter Franzén, Rita Tushingham, Leo Gregory, Nick Moran, James Faulkner, Lucy Martin, Harry Kirton, Andy Beckwith, Yarden Toussia-Cohen, Rachel Wilde, Dominique Vandenberg, James G. Nunn, Kris Johnson … Filmbeschreibung: Die keltische Königin…
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sidicecheilibri · 1 year
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I libri nominati da Rory Gilmore
1 – 1984, George Orwell
2 – Le Avventure di Huckelberry Finn, Mark Twain
3 – Alice nel Paese delle Meraviglie, Lewis Carrol
4 – Le Fantastiche Avventure di Kavalier e Clay, Michael Chabon
5 – Una Tragedia Americana, Theodore Dreiser
6 – Le Ceneri di Angela, Frank McCourt
7 – Anna Karenina, Lev Tolstoj
8 – Il Diario di Anna Frank
9 – La Guerra Archidamica, Donald Kagan
10 – L’Arte del Romanzo, Henry James
11 – L’Arte della Guerra, Sun Tzu
12 – Mentre Morivo, William Faulkner
13 – Espiazione, Ian McEvan
14 – Autobiografia di un Volto, Lucy Grealy
15 – Il Risveglio, Kate Chopin
16 – Babe, Dick King-Smith
17 – Contrattacco. La Guerra non Dichiarata Contro le Donne, Susan Faludi
18 – Balzac e la Piccola Sarta Cinese, Dai Sijie
19 – Bel Canto, Anne Pachett
20 – La Campana di Vetro, Sylvia Plath
21 – Amatissima, Toni Morrison
22 – Beowulf: una Nuova Traduzione, Seamus Heaney
23 – La Bhagavad Gita
24 – Il Piccolo Villaggio dei Sopravvissuti, Peter Duffy
25 – Bitch Rules. Consigli di Comune Buonsenso per donne Fuori dal Comune, Elizabeth Wurtzel
26 – Un Fulmine a Ciel Sereno ed altri Saggi, Mary McCarthy
27 – Il Mondo Nuovo, Adolf Huxley
28 – Brick Lane, Monica Ali
29 – Brigadoon, Alan Jay Lerner
30 – Candido, Voltaire
31 – I Racconti di Canterbury, Geoffrey Chaucer
32 – Carrie, Stephen King
33 – Catch-22, Joseph Heller
34 – Il Giovane Holden, J.D.Salinger
35 – La Tela di Carlotta, E.B.White
36 – Quelle Due, Lillian Hellman
37 – Christine, Stephen King
38 – Il Canto di Natale, Charles Dickens
39 – Arancia Meccanica, Anthony Burgess
40 – Il Codice dei Wooster, P.G.Wodehouse
41 – The Collected Stories, Eudora Welty
42 – La Commedia degli Errori, William Shakespeare
43 – Novelle, Dawn Powell
44 – Tutte le Poesie, Anne Sexton
45 – Racconti, Dorothy Parker
46 – Una Banda di Idioti, John Kennedy Toole
47 – Il03 al 09/03 Conte di Montecristo, Alexandre Dumas
48 – La Cugina Bette, Honore de Balzac
49 – Delitto e Castigo, Fedor Dostoevskij
50 – Il Petalo Cremisi e il Bianco, Michel Faber
51 – Il Crogiuolo, Arthur Miller
52 – Cujo, Stephen King
53 – Il Curioso Caso del Cane Ucciso a Mezzanotte, Mark Haddon
54 – La Figlia della Fortuna, Isabel Allende
55 – David e Lisa, Dr.Theodore Issac Rubin M.D
56 – David Copperfield, Charles Dickens
57 – Il Codice Da Vinci, Dan Brown
58 – Le Anime Morte, Nikolaj Gogol
59 – I Demoni, Fedor Dostoevskij
60 – Morte di un Commesso Viaggiatore, Arthur Miller
61 – Deenie, Judy Blume
62 – La Città Bianca e il Diavolo, Erik Larson
63 – The Dirt. Confessioni della Band più Oltraggiosa del Rock, Tommy Lee – Vince Neil – Mick Mars – Nikki Sixx
64 – La Divina Commedia, Dante Alighieri
65 – I Sublimi Segreti delle Ya-Ya Sisters, Rebecca Wells
66 – Don Chischiotte, Miguel de Cervantes
67 – A Spasso con Daisy, Alfred Uhvr
68 – Dr. Jeckill e Mr.Hide, Robert Louis Stevenson
69 – Tutti i Racconti e le Poesie, Edgar Allan Poe
70 – Eleanor Roosevelt, Blanche Wiesen Cook
71 – Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test, Tom Wolfe
72 – Lettere, Mark Dunn
73 – Eloise, Kay Thompson
74 – Emily The Strange, Roger Reger
75 – Emma, Jane Austen
76 – Il Declino dell’Impero Whiting, Richard Russo
77 – Encyclopedia Brown: Boy Detective, Donald J.Sobol
78 – Ethan Frome, Edith Wharton
79 – Etica, Spinoza
80 – Europe Through the back door, 2003, Rick Steves
81 – Eva Luna, Isabel Allende
82 – Ogni cosa è Illuminata, Jonathan Safran Foer
83 – Stravaganza, Gary Krist
84 – Farhenheit 451, Ray Bradbury
85 – Farhenheit 9/11, Michael Moore
86 – La Caduta dell’Impero di Atene, Donald Kagan
87 – Fat Land, il Paese dei Ciccioni, Greg Critser
88 – Paura e Delirio a Las Vegas, Hunter S.Thompson
89 – La Compagnia dell’Anello, J.R.R.Tolkien
90 – Il Violinista sul Tetto, Joseph Stein
91 – Le Cinque Persone che Incontri in Cielo, Mitch Albom
92 – Finnegan’s Wake, James Joyce
93 – Fletch, Gregory McDonald
94 – Fiori per Algernon, Daniel Keyes
95 – La Fortezza della Solitudine, Jonathan Lethem
96 – La Fonte Meravigliosa, Ayn Rand
97 – Frankenstein, Mary Shelley
98 – Franny e Zooeey, J.D.Salinger
99 – Quel Pazzo Venerdì, Mary Rodgers
100 – Galapagos, Kurt Vonnegut
101 – Questioni di Genere, Judith Butler
102 – George W.Bushism: The Slate Book of Accidental Wit and Wisdom of our 43rd President, Jacob Weisberg
103 – Gidget, Fredrick Kohner
104 – Ragazze Interrotte, Susanna Kaysen
105 – The Gnostic Gospels, Elaine Pagels
106 – Il Padrino, Parte I, Mario Puzo
107 – Il Dio delle Piccole Cose, Arundhati Roy
108 – La Storia dei Tre Orsi, Alvin Granowsky
109 – Via Col Vento, Margaret Mitchell
110 – Il Buon Soldato, Ford Maddox Ford
111 – Il Gospel secondo Judy Bloom
112 – Il Laureato, Charles Webb
113 – Furore, John Steinbeck
114 – Il Grande Gatsby, F.Scott Fitzgerald
115 – Grandi Speranze, Charles Dickens
116 – Il Gruppo, Mary McCarthy
117 – Amleto, William Shakespeare
118 – Harry Potter e il Calice di Fuoco, J.K.Rowling
119 – Harry Potter e la Pietra Filosofale, J.K.Rowling
120 – L’Opera Struggente di un Formidabile Genio, Dave Eggers
121 – Cuore di Tenebra, Joseph Conrad
122 – Helter Skelter: La vera storia del Caso Charles Manson, Vincent Bugliosi e Curt Gentry
123 – Enrico IV, Parte Prima, William Shakespeare
124 – Enrico IV, Parte Seconda, William Shakespeare
125 – Enrico V, William Shakespeare
126 – Alta Fedeltà, Nick Hornby
127 – La Storia del Declino e della Caduta dell’Impero Romano, Edward Gibbon
128 – Holidays on Ice: Storie, David Sedaris
129 – The Holy Barbarians, Lawrence Lipton
130 – La Casa di Sabbia e Nebbia, Andre Dubus III
131 – La Casa degli Spiriti, Isabel Allende
132 – Come Respirare Sott’acqua, Julie Orringer
133 – Come il Grinch Rubò il Natale, Dr.Seuss
134 – How the Light Gets In, M.J.Hyland
135 – Urlo, Allen Ginsberg
136 – Il Gobbo di Notre Dame, Victor Hugo
137 – Iliade, Omero
138 – Sono con la Band, Pamela des Barres
139 – A Sangue Freddo, Truman Capote
140 – Inferno, Dante
141 – …e l’Uomo Creò Satana, Jerome Lawrence e Robert E.Lee
142 – Ironweed, William J.Kennedy
143 – It takes a Village, Hilary Clinton
144 – Jane Eyre, Charlotte Bronte
145 – Il Circolo della Fortuna e della Felicità, Amy tan
146 – Giulio Cesare, William Shakespeare
147 – Il Celebre Ranocchio Saltatore della Contea di Calaveras, Mark Twain
148 – La Giungla, Upton Sinclair
149 – Just a Couple of Days, Tony Vigorito
150 – The Kitchen Boy, Robert Alexander
151 – Kitchen Confidential: Avventure Gastronomiche a New York, Anthony Bourdain
152 – Il Cacciatore di Aquiloni, Khaled Hosseini
153 – L’amante di Lady Chatterley, D.H.Lawrence
154 – L’Ultimo Impero: Saggi 1992-2000, Gore Vidal
155 – Foglie d’Erba, Walt Whitman
156 – La Leggenda di Bagger Vance, Steven Pressfield
157 – Meno di Zero, Bret Easton Ellis
158 – Lettere a un Giovane Poeta, Rainer Maria Rilke
159 – Balle! E tutti i Ballisti che Ce Le Stanno Raccontando, Al Franken
160 – Vita di Pi, Yann Martell
161 – La piccola Dorrit, Charles Dickens
162 – The little Locksmith, Katharine Butler Hathaway
163 – La piccola fiammiferaia, Hans Christian Andersen
164 – Piccole Donne, Louisa May Alcott
165 – Living History, Hilary Clinton
166 – Il signore delle Mosche, William Golding
167 – La Lotteria, ed altre storie, Shirley Jackson
168 – Amabili Resti, Alice Sebold
169 – Love Story, Eric Segal
170 – Macbeth, William Shakespeare
171 – Madame Bovary, Gustave Flaubert
172 – The Manticore, Robertson Davies
173 – Marathon Man, William Goldman
174 – Il Maestro e Margherita, Michail Bulgakov
175 – Memorie di una figlia per bene, Simone de Beauvoir
176 – Memorie del Generale W.T. Sherman, William Tecumseh Sherman
177 – L’uomo più divertente del mondo, David Sedaris
178 – The meaning of Consuelo, Judith Ortiz Cofer
179 – Mencken’s Chrestomathy, H.R. Mencken
180 – Le Allegre Comari di Windsor, William Shakespeare
181 – La Metamorfosi, Franz Kafka
182 – Middlesex, Jeoffrey Eugenides
183 – Anna dei Miracoli, William Gibson
184 – Moby Dick, Hermann Melville
185 – The Mojo Collection: The Ultimate Music Companion, Jim Irvin
186 – Moliere: la biografia, Hobart Chatfield Taylor
187 – A monetary history of the United States, Milton Friedman
188 – Monsieur Proust, Celeste Albaret
189 – A Month of Sundays: searching for the spirit and my sister, Julie Mars
190 – Festa Mobile, Ernest Hemingway
191 – Mrs Dalloway, Virginia Woolf
192 – Gli ammutinati del Bounty, Charles Nordhoff e James Norman Hall
193 – My Lai 4: A Report on the Massacre and Its Aftermath, Seymour M.Hersh
194 – My Life as Author and Editor, H.R.Mencken
195 – My life in orange: growing up with the guru, Tim Guest
196 – Myra Waldo’s Travel and Motoring Guide to Europe, 1978, Myra Waldo
197 – La custode di mia sorella, Jodi Picoult
198 – Il Nudo e il Morto, Norman Mailer
199 – Il Nome della Rosa, Umberto Eco
200 – The Namesake, Jhumpa Lahiri
201 – Il Diario di una Tata, Emma McLaughlin
202 – Nervous System: Or, Losing my Mind in Literature, Jan Lars Jensen
203 – Nuove Poesie, Emily Dickinson
204 – The New Way Things Work, David Macaulay
205 – Nickel and Dimed, Barbara Ehrenreich
206 – Notte, Elie Wiesel
207 – Northanger Abbey, Jane Austen
208 – The Norton Anthology of Theory and Criticism, William E.Cain, Laurie A.Finke, Barbara E.Johnson, John P.McGowan
209 – Racconti 1930-1942, Dawn Powell
210 – Taccuino di un Vecchio Porco, Charles Bukowski
211 – Uomini e Topi, John Steinbeck
212 – Old School, Tobias Wolff
213 – Sulla Strada, Jack Kerouac
214 – Qualcuno Volò sul Nido del Cuculo, Ken Kesey
215 – Cent’Anni di Solitudine, Gabriel Garcia Marquez
216 – The Opposite of Fate: Memories of a Writing Life, Amy Tan
217 – La Notte dell’Oracolo, Paul Auster
218 – L’Ultimo degli Uomini, Margaret Atwood
219 – Otello, William Shakespeare
220 – Il Nostro Comune Amico, Charles Dickens
221 – The Outbreak of the Peloponnesian War, Donald Kagan
222 – La Mia Africa, Karen Blixen
223 – The Outsiders, S.E. Hinton
224 – Passaggio in India, E.M.Forster
225 – The Peace of Nicias and the Sicilian Expedition, Donald Kagan
226 – Noi Siamo Infinito, Stephen Chbosky
227 – Peyton Place, Grace Metalious
228 – Il Ritratto di Dorian Gray, Oscar Wilde
229 – Pigs at the Trough, Arianna Huffington
230 – Le Avventure di Pinocchio, Carlo Collodi
231 – Please Kill Me: Il Punk nelle Parole dei Suoi Protagonisti, Legs McNeil e Gillian McCain
232 – Una Vita da Lettore, Nick Hornby
233 – The Portable Dorothy Parker, Dorothy Parker
234 – The Portable Nietzche, Fredrich Nietzche
235 – The Price of Loyalty: George W.Bush, the White House, and the Education on Paul O’Neil, Ron Suskind
236 – Orgoglio e Pregiudizio, Jane Austen
237 – Property, Valerie Martin
238 – Pushkin, La Biografia, T.J.Binyon
239 – Pigmallione, G.B.Shaw
240 – Quattrocento, James Mckean
241 – A Quiet Storm, Rachel Howzell Hall
242 – Rapunzel, I Fratelli Grimm
243 – Il Corvo ed Altre Poesie, Edgar Allan Poe
244 – Il Filo del Rasoio, W.Somerset Maugham
245 – Leggere Lolita a Teheran, Azar Nafisi
246 – Rebecca, Daphne du Maurier
247 – Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm, Kate Douglas Wiggin
248 – The Red Tent, Anita Diamant
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hazelfaulkner · 2 years
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closed starter to @arscn​
Os passeios matinais era como uma rotina, quase sagrados para Hazel e Lucy. Um dos poucos momentos onde o silêncio era total, sem alunos barulhentos para todos os lados, sem a briga de hormônios dos mais novos, ou até mesmo de seus egos. Apenas ela e seu familiar desfrutando de um momento juntos. Ao menos era para ser. Lucy, como um lynx, conservava parte do seu instinto selvagem, a coisa territorialista, protetiva, estar sempre a espreita de algo e a caça. Hazel já estava tão acostumada com o comportamento do bichano, que sequer notou que ele estava pronto para atacar um corvo, quando este já estava entre os dentes do felino. Tinha algo em particular naquele corvo, algo que Hazel poderia considerar um tanto... familiar. Os olhos se arregalaram ao reconhecê-lo, e a mulher correu em direção aos dois, ordenando que o lynx soltasse o pobre animal. “Lúcifer Haines Faulkner, solte agora mesmo essa pobre criatura”, o tom firme da voz, o dedo apontado ao familiar, tão tomada que mal notou a aproximação de uma segunda pessoa. 
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renatarenatah · 2 years
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Eu li todos livros que Rory leu!
Por acaso, eu leio muito rápido e terminei esses livros por dias e semanas. Amei esses livros! Rory é estudiosa, tem boas escolhas para ler.
Listona com os 339 livros que Rory leu em ‘Gilmore Girls’:
1. 1 984 – George Orwell
2. As Aventuras de Huckleberry Finn – Mark Twain
3. Alice no País das Maravilhas – Lewis Carroll
4. As Incríveis Aventuras de Kavalier & Clay – Michael Chabon
5. Uma Tragédia Americana – Theodore Dreiser
6. As Cinzas de Ângela – Frank McCourt
7. Anna Karenina – Leon Tolstoy
8. O Diário de Anne Frank – Anne Frank
9. The Archidamian War – Donald Kagan
10. A Arte da Ficção – Henry James
11. A Arte da Guerra – Sun Tzu
12. Enquanto Agonizo – William Faulkner
13. Reparação – Ian McEwan
14. Autobiography of a Face – Lucy Grealy
15. The Awakening – Kate Chopin
16. Babe – Dick King-Smith
17. Backlash: The Undeclared War Against American Women – Susan Faludi
18. Balzac e a Costureirinha Chinesa – Dai Sijie
19. Bel Canto – Ann Patchett
20. A Redoma de Vidro – Sylvia Plath
21. Amada – Toni Morrison
22. Beowulf: A New Verse Translation – Seamus Heaney
23. Bagavadguitá
24. Os Irmãos Bielski – Peter Duffy
25. Bitch in Praise of Difficult Women – Elizabeth Wurtzel
26. A Bolt from the Blue and Other Essays – Mary McCarthy
27. Admirável Mundo Novo – Aldous Huxley
28. Um Lugar Chamado Brick Lane – Monica Ali
29. Brigadoon – Alan Jay Lerner
30. Cândido – Voltaire
31. Os Cantos de Cantuária – Chaucer
32. Carrie, A Estranha – Stephen King
33. Ardil 22 – Joseph Heller
34. O Apanhador no Campo de Centeio – J. D. Salinger
35. A Teia de Charlotte – E. B. White
36. The Children’s Hour – Lillian Hellman
37. Christine – Stephen King
38. Um Conto de Natal – Charles Dickens
39. Laranja Mecânica – Anthony Burgess
40. The Code of the Woosters – P.G. Wodehouse
41. The Collected Stories – Eudora Welty
42. A Comédia dos Erros – William Shakespeare
43. Complete Novels – Dawn Powell
44. The Complete Poems – Anne Sexton
45. Complete Stories – Dorothy Parker
46. Uma Confraria de Tolos – John Kennedy Toole
47. O Conde de Monte Cristo – Alexandre Dumas
48. A Vingança de Bette – Honoré de Balzac
49. Crime e Castigo – Fiodor Dostoievski
50. Pétala Escarlate, Flor Branca – Michel Faber
51. As Bruxas de Salém – Arthur Miller
52. Cão Raivoso – Stephen King
53. O Estranho Caso do Cão Morto – Mark Haddon
54. Filha da Fortuna – Isabel Allende
55. David e Lisa – Dr Theodore Issac Rubin M.D
56. David Copperfield – Charles Dickens
57. O Código da Vinci – Dan Brown
58. Almas Mortas – Nikolai Gogol
59. Os Demônios – Fiodor Dostoievski
60. A Morte de Um Caixeiro-Viajante – Arthur Miller
61. Deenie – Judy Blume
62. The Devil in the White City: Murder, Magic, and Madness at the Fair that Changed America – Erik Larson
63. The Dirt: Confessions of the World’s Most Notorious Rock Band – Tommy Lee, Vince Neil, Mick Mars e Nikki Sixx
64. A Divina Comédia – Dante Alighieri
65. Divinos Segredos – Rebecca Wells
66. Dom Quixote de La Mancha – Miguel Cervantes
67. Conduzindo Miss Daisy – Alfred Uhry
68. O Médico e o Monstro – Robert Louis Stevenson
69. Edgar Allan Poe: Complete Tales & Poems – Edgar Allan Poe
70. Eleanor Roosevelt – Blanche Wiesen Cook
71. O Teste do Ácido do Refresco Elétrico – Tom Wolfe
72. Ella Minnow Pea: A Novel in Letters – Mark Dunn
73. Eloise – Kay Thompson
74. Emily, the Strange: Os Dias Perdidos – Roger Reger
75. Emma – Jane Austen
76. Empire Falls – Richard Russo
77. Encyclopedia Brown: Boy Detective – Donald J. Sobol
78. Ethan Frome – Edith Wharton
79. Ética – Spinoza
80. Europe through the Back Door, 2003 – Rick Steves
81. Eva Luna – Isabel Allende
82. Tudo se Ilumina – Jonathan Safran Foer
83. Extravagance – Gary Krist
84. Fahrenheit 451 – Ray Bradbury
85. Fahrenheit 9/11 – Michael Moore
86. The Fall of the Athenian Empire – Donald Kagan
87. Fat Land: How Americans Became the Fattest People in the World – Greg Critser
88. Medo e Delírio em Las Vegas – Hunter S. Thompson
89. A Sociedade do Anel – J. R. R. Tolkien
90. Um Violinista no Telhado – Joseph Stein
91. As Cinco Pessoas que Você Encontra no Céu – Mitch Albom
92. Finnegan’s Wake – James Joyce
93. Fletch Venceu – Gregory McDonald
94. Flowers for Algernon – Daniel Keyes
95. The Fortress of Solitude – Jonathan Lethem
96. A Nascente – Ayn Rand
97. Frankenstein – Mary Shelley
98. Franny e Zooey – J. D. Salinger
99. Sexta-Feira Muito Louca – Mary Rodgers
100. Galápagos – Kurt Vonnegut
101. Gender Trouble – Judith Butler
102. George W. Bushism: The Slate Book of the Accidental Wit and Wisdom of our 43rd President – Jacob Weisberg
103. Gidget – Frederick Kohner
104. Garota, Interrompida – Susanna Kaysen
105. Os Evangelhos Gnósticos – Elaine Pagels
106. O Poderoso Chefão: Livro 1 – Mario Puzo
107. O Deus das Pequenas Coisas – Arundhati Roy
108. Cachinhos Dourados e os Três Ursos – Alvin Granowsky
109. E o Vento Levou – Margaret Mitchell
110. O Bom Soldado – Ford Maddox Ford
111. The Gospel According to Judy Bloom – Judy Bloom
112. A Primeira Noite de um Homem – Charles Webb
113. As Vinhas da Ira – John Steinbeck
114. O Grande Gatsby – F. Scott Fitzgerald
115. Grandes Esperanças – Charles Dickens
116. O Grupo – Mary McCarthy
117. Hamlet – William Shakespeare
118. Harry Potter e o Cálice de Fogo – J. K. Rowling
119. Harry Potter e a Pedra Filosofal – J. K. Rowling
120. A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius – Dave Eggers
121. O Coração das Trevas – Joseph Conrad
122. Helter Skelter: The True Story of the Manson Murders – Vincent Bugliosi e Curt Gentry
123. Henry IV, parte I – William Shakespeare
124. Henry IV, parte II – William Shakespeare
125. Henry V – William Shakespeare
126. Alta Fidelidade – Nick Hornby
127. A História do Declínio e Queda do Império Romano – Edward Gibbon
128. Holidays on Ice: Stories – David Sedaris
129. The Holy Barbarians – Lawrence Lipton
130. Casa de Areia e Névoa – Andre Dubus III
131. A Casa dos Espíritos – Isabel Allende
132. Como Respirar Debaixo D’Água – Julie Orringer
133. Como o Grinch Roubou o Natal – Dr. Seuss
134. How the Light Gets In – M. J. Hyland
135. Uivo – Allen Ginsberg
136. O Corcunda de Notre Dame – Victor Hugo
137. A Ilíada – Homero
138. Confissões de uma Groupie: I’m With the Band – Pamela des Barres
139. A Sangue Frio – Truman Capote
140. Inferno – Dante Alighieri
141. O Vento Será tua Herança – Jerome Lawrence e Robert E. Lee
142. Ironweed – William J. Kennedy
143. It Takes a Village – Hillary Rodham Clinton
144. Jane Eyre – Charlotte Bronte
145. O Clube da Sorte da Alegria – Amy Tan
146. Júlio César – William Shakespeare
147. A Célebre Rã Saltadora do Condado de Cavaleras – Mark Twain
148. A Selva – Upton Sinclair
149. Just a Couple of Days – Tony Vigorito
150. Os Últimos Dias dos Romanov – Robert Alexander
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In Memoriam
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Barb Coard came in 32nd with a total of 82 votes after beating Helen Shivers but losing to Beverly Katz and Dewey Riley.
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Eddie Kaspbrak came in 31st with a total of 121 votes after beating Maud from Saint Maud but losing to Beverly Katz and Jaws from Jaws.
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Clear Rivers came in 30th with a total of 124 votes after beating Wayne from Scarlet Hollow but losing to Ginger Fitzgerald and Rolan Deep.
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Violet Harmon came in 29th with a total of 137 votes after beating Windows from The Thing and Brian from American Psycho 2, but losing to Tatum Riley and Seok-woo from Train to Busan.
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Ben from Night of the Living Dead came in 28th with a total of 156 votes after beating Tommy Ross and Josh from Midsommar but losing to Stan Uris and Ginger Fitzgerald.
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Anna from Possession came in 27th with a total of 164 votes after beating Anika Kayoko and Aaron from Creep but losing to Billy Loomis and Kian Stone.
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Stu Macher came in 26th with a total of 219 votes after beating Becky Jones and Esther Coleman but losing to Eleanor Vance and Rachel Rand.
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Lucy Westenra came in 25th with a total of 299 votes after beating Brian from American Psycho 2 and Windows from The Thing but losing to Adam Faulkner-Stanheight and Peter "Parker" Yang.
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murderballadeer · 1 year
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waynelvslcy · 2 years
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When Lucy visited Jamestown in February 1956, she stopped by her former childhood home, then owned by the Faulkner family. Here's a peak inside along with a few side by side photos from when Lucy visited and from my visit when I was a guest in 2019. #lucilleball #desiarnaz #jamestownny #59lucylane #houseguest #celebrityhomes #sidebysides #waynelvslcy #ilovelucy #homecoming #childhoodhome https://www.instagram.com/p/CoVLLkJPo72/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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