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#w: halldor
strangefellows · 5 months
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*holds up microphone to you*
TELL ME ABT UR LOBCORP NUGGETS OR UR PJM HCS ID LOVE TO HEAR EITHER!!!!! :3
(also i 100% get the feeling of not knowing how to interact w/ the fandoms ur apart of ;-;)
OH HELLO THANK YOU FOR THE ASK it really is such a mood isn't it, im just sitting here like I Want To Talk But Howmst-- ;u;
BUT YES! HCS! I don't have fully formed headcanons for all of my nuggets yet but I have a few bits and pieces!
Almost all of the main facility nuggets I have are between 15-21, none of them are adults (except two)
Tybalt is Control captain and i love him, he's a loudmouthed little shit troublemaker who's kind of everyone's friend, everyone trusts him a lot
Anzo in Control and Odelia in Information are siblings (big sis/little bro), and Regina in Records and Khama in Safety are twin sisters
Deva in Control is Tybalt's second, and during the last few days she took over command of Architecture for a bit; she's a sassy deadpan snark machine and really competent
Cecily in Training and Adzo in Extraction are friends from the same Nest, though Adzo is a bit more spoiled brat while Cecily is spoiled sweet
Harriet in Information (is based on a nugget from TQ's LPArchive LP) is weird. Very weird. Probably spent a little too long in Extraction weird. She has cutesy nicknames for all the Abnos
Ania, the Safety Captain, has a bit of a crush on Netzach; Zaph on Safety team is also an Extraction transfer he's a bit cracked but he and Khama are the two most badass fighters outside Disciplinary, they have the Apocabird / Whitenight gifts to prove it
Alban in Command is the youngest agent and everyone kinda babies him; Salome in Command is. Also weird but not because of the facility, she's just always been weird. Do not let her flirt with you. Daud in Command is a former U Corp whaler, he's a bit of a hot mess and very tired, one of the two agents older than 21.
Ryland is the Welfare captain and one of the most trusted and well liked captains besides Tybalt, he's a reliable big brother type. Livia in Welfare is the youngest besides Alban and one of the newest agents, very shy and sweet.
Disciplinary captain Aphra is a LEGEND, she is queen badass lesbian everyone is in awe of her. Her and her whole team have the Apocabird gifts, they took it out the first time it breached. Disc team is almost all girls save for Halldor, who is very quiet and kind of autistic and chill.
Records team is also all girls save one, Gidon, who is also pretty quiet but more because he's just content to let others take the lead; the girls are known as the Records Queens because they're the scariest girl clique ever and pretty on top of shit; their captain Dido is older too, the other one above 21, and she's scariest.
Nieve in Extraction is a sweetie and friends with most everyone; Edda and Raisa down there are the current weirdos, and Max the captain is a nice guy. All of them somehow aren't scared of Binah at all.
WOW OK THAT'S MORE THAN I THOUGHT but i love everyone so much haha...
Some other misc LobCorp hcs: Yesod is from District G, Hod is from District N. Yesod knows (and Hates) Hermann Limbuscompany. Ayin and Hokma are both from District B and grew up next door neighbors. I can't think of more off the top of my head but! That's a good place to start i think THANK YOU FOR ASKING;;;
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Desafio a biblioteca de Marilyn Monroe: você leu no máximo cinco desses 100 livros
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Considerada uma das mulheres mais atraentes do século 20, Marilyn Monroe não é uma figura geralmente associada à literatura. Mas, o que poucos sabem é que a atriz era uma leitora ávida, que adorava livros clássicos e tinha uma biblioteca cheia de grandes obras. Além disso, anos após sua morte, vários textos de sua autoria foram encontrados, revelando que a Marilyn também era uma talentosa escritora. Por meio de fotos, entrevistas e depoimentos de amigos de Marilyn, o site Everlasting Star descobriu quais eram os livros e autores preferidos dela. Com base nessa lista, a Revista Bula reuniu cem obras da biblioteca de Marilyn Monroe e que foram traduzidas para o português. São grandes clássicos, entre eles: “O Vermelho e o Negro”, de Stendhal; “O Homem Invisível”, de Ralph Ellison; e “Madame Bovary”, de Gustave Flaubert. Após a análise das obras, os editores da Bula sugeriram que pouquíssimas pessoas já leram mais de cinco livros presentes na lista. Para participar do desafio, basta contabilizar e nos contar quantos destes você já leu.
1 — A Arte de Amar, de Erich Fromm
2 — A Balada do Café Triste, de Carson McCullers
3 — A Bondade Nada Tem a Ver com Isso, de Mae West
4 — A Dama das Camélias, de Alexandre Dumas
5 — A Filosofia de Schopenhauer, de Irwin Edman
6 — A Filosofia de Spinoza, de Joseph Ratner
7 — A Gaivota, de Anton Tchekhov
8 — A Inocência e o Pecado, de Graham Greene
9 — A Lei, de Roger Vailland
10 — A Queda, de Albert Camus
11 — A Sétima Cruz, de Anna Seghers
12 — A Última Tentação de Cristo, de Níkos Kazantzákis
13 — Adeus às Armas, de Ernest Hemingway
14 — Advogado do Diabo, de Morris L. West
15 — Alegria de Cozinhar, de Irma S. Rombauer e Marion Rombauer
16 — As Aventuras de Huckleberry Finn, de Mark Twain
17 — Balthazar, de Lawrence Durrell
18 — Boêmios Errantes, de John Steinbeck
19 — Cartas a um Jovem Poeta, de Rainer Maria Rilke
20 — Correspondente de Guerra, de John Steinbeck
21 — Crime e Castigo, de Fiódor Dostoiévski
22 — Da Rússia, Com Amor, de Ian Fleming
23 — Deitada na Escuridão, de William Styron
24 — Diário de um Homem Supérfluo, de Ivan Turguêniev
25 — Dublinenses, de James Joyce
26 — E as Chuvas Chegaram, de Louis Bromfield
27 — Em Busca do Tempo Perdido, de Marcel Proust
28 — Em Roma na Primavera, de Tennessee Williams
29 — Ensaios, de Thomas Mann
30 — Esta Terra é Minha, de Woody Guthrie
31 — Filhos e Amantes, de D.H. Lawrence
32 — Gargântua e Pantagruel, de François Rabelais
33 — Gente Independente, de Halldor Laxness
34 — Havaí, de James A. Michener
35 — Heróis de Barro, de Glendon Swarthout
36 — Irmã Carrie, de Theodore Dreiser
37 — Jesus, de Khalil Gibran
38 — Justine, de Lawrence Durrell
39 — Londres, de Jacques Boussard
40 — Longa Jornada Noite Adentro, de Eugene O’Neill
41 — Lugares Etruscos, de D.H. Lawrence
42 — Madame Bovary, de Gustave Flaubert
43 — Malcolm, de James Purdy
44 — Medea, de Jeffers Robinson
45 — Memórias de um Caçador, de Ivan Turguêniev
46 — Metafísica, de Aristóteles
47 — Minha Antônia, de Willa Cather
48 — Mitologia, de Edith Hamilton
49 — Moisés e o Monoteísmo, de Sigmund Freud
50 — Morte em Veneza, de Thomas Mann
51 — Mulher Pobre, de Leon Bloy
52 — Nana, de Emile Zola
53 — Napoleão, de Emil Ludwig
54 — Noite, de Francis Pollini
55 — Novelas Curtas, de Colette
56 — O Agente Secreto, de Joseph Conrad
57 — O Amante da Guerra, de John Hersey
58 — O Assistente, de Bernard Malamud
59 — O Barril Mágico, de Bernard Malamud
60 — O Fio da Navalha, de W. Somerset Maugham
61 — O Galpão do Jardim, de Graham Greene
62 — O Grande Gatsby, de F. Scott Fitzgerald
63 — O Guia, de R. K. Narayan
64 — O Homem Invisível, de Ralph Ellison
65 — O Homem Revoltado, de Albert Camus
66 — O Menino Perdido, de Thomas Wolfe
67 — O Pequeno Príncipe, de Antoine de Saint-Exupéry
68 — O Profeta, de Khalil Gibran
69 — O Sol Também se Levanta, de Ernest Hemingway
70 — O Som e a Fúria, de William Faulkner
71 — O Trem e a Cidade, de Thomas Wolfe
72 — O Vermelho e o Negro, de Stendhal
73 — Obras Selecionadas, de Alexander Pope
74 — On The Road, de Jack Kerouac
75 — Paris Vive à Noite, de Harold Flender
76 — Pensamento Político e Últimas Conclusões, de Albert Einstein
77 — Poemas e Contos de Fadas, de Oscar Wilde
78 — Poemas Selecionados, de D. H. Lawrence
79 — Poemas Selecionados, de Emily Dickinson
80 — Poemas Selecionados, de Rainer Maria Rilke
81 — Poemas Selecionados, de W. B. Yeats
82 — Que o Fogo Consuma Esta Casa, de William Styron
83 — Recordações da Casa dos Mortos, de Fiódor Dostoiévski
84 — Renoir, de Albert Skira
85 — Retrato do Artista Quando Jovem Cão, de Dylan Thomas
86 — Servidão Humana, de W. Somerset Maugham
87 — Smoke, de Ivan Turguêniev
88 — Sobre a Natureza das Coisas, de Lucrécio
89 — Sonetos, de William Shakespeare
90 — Spartacus, de Howard Fast
91 — Suave é a Noite, de F. Scott Fitzgerald
92 — Ulysses, de James Joyce
93 — Um Bonde Chamado Desejo, de Tennessee Williams
94 — Um Ciclone na Jamaica, de Richard Hughes
95 — Um Poeta em Nova York, de Federico García Lorca
96 — Uma Tragédia Americana, de Theodore Dreiser
97 — Verdes Moradas, de Green Mansions
98 — Wake Up, Stupid, de Mark Harris
99 — Winesburg, Ohio, de Sherwood Anderson
100 — Wordsworth, de Richard Wilbur
Desafio a biblioteca de Marilyn Monroe: você leu no máximo cinco desses 100 livros publicado primeiro em https://www.revistabula.com
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10171710 · 6 years
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06/16
home all day
going to bank to deposit soon
gonna pick up Mediterranean w mom later
still reading “Independent People” by Halldor Laxness. Really wanna finish it before I start class on Wednesday.
Taking Italian at PCC :-)
I need structure! I need to do things!
Also need new movie suggestions. Preferably ones that will inspire me.
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findmyfreelance · 7 years
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How To Photograph The Eclipse On Your Phone
How To Photograph The Eclipse On Your Phone
Halldor Kolbeins / AFP / Getty Images If you want to capture a full eclipse, make your way to the “path of totality.” The first thing you want to do is make sure you’re in the right place. Across 12 states from Oregon to South Carolina, a 70-mile-wide strip called the path of totality will experience a total solar eclipse on Monday Aug. 21, with the moon almost fully blocking the sun. If you’re…
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allbestnet · 8 years
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Top Books 1930-1940
Brave New World (1932) by Aldous Huxley
The Grapes of Wrath (1939) by John Steinbeck
Gone with the Wind (1936) by Margaret Mitchell
The Hobbit (1937) by J.R.R. Tolkien
Native Son (1940) by Richard Wright
For Whom the Bell Tolls (1940) by Ernest Hemingway
And Then There Were None (1939) by Agatha Christie
Rebecca (1938) by Daphne du Maurier
Journey to the End of the Night (1932) by Louis-Ferdinand Celine
Of Mice and Men (1937) by John Steinbeck
Absalom, Absalom! (1936) by William Faulkner
As I Lay Dying (1930) by William Faulkner
Heart Is a Lonely Hunter (1940) by Carson McCullers
Tropic of Cancer (1934) by Henry Miller
Their Eyes Were Watching God (1937) by Zora Neale Hurston
Tender Is the Night (1934) by F. Scott Fitzgerald
Finnegans Wake (1939) by James Joyce
I, Claudius (1934) by Robert Graves
The Maltese Falcon (1930) by Dashiell Hammett
Light in August (1932) by William Faulkner
The Day of the Locust (1939) by Nathanael West
How to Win Friends and Influence People (1936) by Dale Carnegie
Darkness at Noon (1940) by Arthur Koestler
Story of Ferdinand (1936) by Munro Leaf
The Big Sleep (1939) by Raymond Chandler
Little House in the Big Woods (1932) by Laura Ingalls Wilder
Good Earth (1931) by Pearl S. Buck
Power and the Glory (1940) by Graham Greene
The Postman Always Rings Twice (1934) by James M Cain
Joy of Cooking (1931) by Irma Rombauer
At-Swim-Two-Birds (1939) by Flann O'Brien
Cold Comfort Farm (1932) by Stella Gibbons
Think and Grow Rich (1937) by Napoleon Hill
On the Banks of Plum Creek (1937) by Laura Ingalls Wilder
A Handful of Dust (1934) by Evelyn Waugh
Narziss and Goldmund (1930) by Hermann Hesse
Little House on the Prairie (1935) by Laura Ingalls Wilder
The Code of the Woosters (1938) by PG Wodehouse
Scoop (1938) by Evelyn Waugh
La Condition Humaine (1934) by Andre Malraux
Nightwood (1936) by Djuna Barnes
Down and Out in Paris and London (1933) by George Orwell
Out of Africa (1937) by Isak Dinesen
The Death of the Heart (1938) by Elizabeth Bowen
Sanctuary (1931) by William Faulkner
The Cost of Discipleship (1937) by Dietrich Bonhoeffer
Murder on the Orient Express (1934) by Agatha Christie
How Green was My Valley (1939) by Richard Llewellyn
Farner Boy (1933) by Laura Ingalls Wilder
Homage to Catalonia (1938) by George Orwell
Swallows and Amazons (1930) by Arthur Ransome
Good-bye Mr. Chips (1934) by James Hilton
The Sword in the Stone (1938) by T.H. White
Ask the Dust (1939) by John Fante
Tortilla Flat (1935) by John Steinbeck
Malice Aforethought (1931) by Francis Iles
Nausea (1938) by Jean-Paul Sartre
We the Living (1936) by Ayn Rand
The Murder at the Vicarage (1930) by Agatha Christie
Appointment in Samarra (1934) by John O'Hara
Sunset Song (1932) by Lewis Grassic Gibbon
Arrowsmith (1931) by Sinclair Lewis
The Problem of Pain (1940) by C.S. Lewis
Ballet Shoes (1936) by Noel Streatfield
Star Maker (1937) by Olaf Stapledon
Goodbye to Berlin (1939) by Christopher Isherwood
Vile Bodies (1930) by Evelyn Waugh
Musashi (1935) by Eiji Yoshikawa
Yearling (1938) by Marjorie Rawlings
Gadsby (1939) by Ernest Vincent Wright
The Waves (1931) by Virginia Woolf
Lost Horizon (1933) by James Hilton
Untouchable (1935) by Mulk Raj Anand
The Glass Key (1931) by Dashiell Hammett
Cakes and Ale - Or, the Skeleton in the Cupboard (1930) by W Somerset Maugham
Red Pony (1937) by John Steinbeck
Independent People (1935) by Halldor Laxness
The Radetzky March (1932) by Joseph Roth
The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money (1936) by John Maynard Keynes
Alamut (1938) by Vladimir Bartol
Mr. Popper's Penguins (1938) by Richard
The Hollow Man (1935) by John Dickson Carr
Civilization and Its Discontents (1930) by Sigmund Freud
Burmese Days (1934) by George Orwell
Death on the Nile (1937) by Agatha Christie
Call It Courage (1940) by Armstrong Sperry
The Shadow Over Innsmouth (1936) by H.P. Lovecraft
Who Goes There? (1938) by John W. Campbell
Out of the Silent Planet (1938) by C.S. Lewis
Thank You Jeeves (1934) by PG Wodehouse
Love on the Dole (1933) by Walter Greenwood
Roller Skates (1936) by Ruth Sawyer
A Gun for Sale (1936) by Graham Greene
Murder Must Advertise (1933) by Dorothy Le Sayers
War Is a Racket (1935) by Smedley Butler
The Man Who Loved Children (1940) by Christina Stead
Black Mischief (1932) by Evelyn Waugh
Madhushala (1935) by Harivansh Rai Bachchan
Mr Norris Changes Trains (1935) by Christopher Isherwood
Tlon, Uqbar, Orbis Tertius (1940) by Jorge Luis Borges
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