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Tag Archives: Forest Rogers
Magpie Monthly — December 2015
Welcome to the final Magpie Monthly of 2015!
Posted in Magpie Monday
Tagged Atelier Kastelic Buffey, Batman, Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice, Ben Affleck, Benedict Cumberbatch, book collecting, book hoarding, book repair, breakfast, Christopher Claremont, Christopher Reeve, Daniel Titz, Doctor Strange, Dorian Lebherz, ElfQuest, Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them, Forest Rogers, Gal Gadot, Gerry Turnbull, Henry Cavill, Jesse Eisenberg, John Byrne, Johnnie Walker, Juan Santapau, Michael Zee, Paul Smith, Peter Hooten, Renato Garza Cervera, snow gl, Starbucks, Superman, sushi, The Morrigan, The New Teen Titans, The Secret Knots, The Story Pod, The Uncanny X-Men, Trina Merry, Twin Peaks, Won't someone please think of the polar bears?, Wonder Woman
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Magpie Monday
“There is no season when such pleasant and sunny spots may be lighted on, and produce so pleasant an effect on the feelings, as now in October.” ~Nathaniel Hawthorne Here are some shiny things that caught my eye recently: ♦ All Hallow’s Read. … Continue reading
Posted in About Writing, Magpie Monday
Tagged All Hallow's Read, AlphaBooks, anatomy, astronomy, Banshee, Bean Sidhe, Bell Witch of Tennessee, Ben Towle, Benedict Cumberbatch, Blue Sand by Caroline M. Yoachim, book edit, Book Mania!, book shelves, bookcases, Cameron Cook, cannibalism, Captain Marvel, Captain Marvel #9 (cover), Caput Mortuum by Andrew Kaye, Cat Burglar Black, chapters in novels (writing), Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Christian Sager, Chuck Wendig, coma, Coraline, costumes, Daily Science Fiction, David Aja, Day of the Dead, Dead Alive (aka Braindead), death, depression, Doctor Strange, ducks (physics), Edgar Allan Poe, Elizabeth Spann Craig, Elsa Lanchester, Erin Morgenstern, Event Horizon, Farmer's Daughter by Brian Luong, film trailers, flax-golden tales, folklore, forensics, Forest Rogers, Gail Carriger, Geoffrey of Monmouth, Goblin Fruit, Halloween (2007), Hawkeye #7 (cover), heterochromia, History of the Kings of Britain, horror fiction, Invisible Woman, IQ tests, Ivan Ewert, James Whale, Jamie McKelvie, John Keats, Jordie Bellaire, Judy Drood, Leah Palmer Preiss, Lemony Snicket, literary foundation, Lost and Found by Jamie Todd Rubin, Macdonald Triad, Mad Night, Marc Basile, Margaret Atwood, Marie Brennan, medieval weapons, memory, microbial ecosystem, Mike Bell, Mike Walton, monsters (African), Natasha Hawley, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Neil Gaiman, nightmares, Ode to a Nightingale, organ regeneration, Peculia, poetry, postcards, prison slang, production plan, Psycho (1998), PTSD, pumpkins, Rachelle Gardner, RescueTime, Richard Sala, Roald Dahl, Rosemary's Baby, Scenting the Dark by Mary Robinette Kowal, sculpture, Shimmer by Amanda C. Davis, Sigmund Freud, Sinister, Su Blackwell, Superman, suspending disbelief, Tansy Rayner Roberts, The Baskerville Effect, The Bride (1985), The Bride of Frankenstein, The Chuckling Whatsit, The Emperor's Soul (excerpt) by Brandon Sanderson, The Ghastly Ones and Other Fiendish Frolics, The Hidden, The Nightmare Before Christmas, The Ring (2002), The Super Team Family Blog, The Velveteen Rabbit, Theodora Goss, tongue twisters, Tor.com, Twitter fiction, vampires, Violet Beauregarde, Vortigern, Vulcan, wedding invitations, weddings (Hallowe'en-themed), werewolves (historic), Where the Wonder Women Are, Wonder Woman, Wreck-It Ralph
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Magpie Monday
Here are some shiny things that caught my eye recently: ♦ This week’s Postcard Story by my friend Will Ludwigsen is one of my favorites so far, and I’m not just saying that because he was inspired by a photograph … Continue reading
Posted in About Writing, Magpie Monday
Tagged Baba Yaga, Daniel Clowes, Drive, fantasy, Forest Rogers, Kat Howard, Lev Grossman, National Student Poets program, Peter Orullian, Petrograd, Philip Gelatt, Rasputin, Ryan Gosling, Scott Musgrove, The Daily Superpower, The Snow Maiden, Theodora Goss, Tyler Crook, Will Ludwigsen
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