
A place for things that make me happy (or teach me things). Favorite things: books and tea.
1323 posts
X-Men Advent Calendar Day 24:Shadowcat And Wolverine

X-Men Advent Calendar Day 24:Shadowcat and Wolverine
-
phoenix liked this · 1 year ago
-
captainaspie1218 liked this · 1 year ago
-
reddredpanda liked this · 1 year ago
-
dannybagpipesarecalling reblogged this · 1 year ago
-
heckcareoxytwit liked this · 1 year ago
-
fanartsgalore reblogged this · 2 years ago
-
radically-groovy liked this · 2 years ago
-
edgymuses-a liked this · 3 years ago
-
mojoworlddotcom liked this · 3 years ago
-
solarchuus reblogged this · 4 years ago
-
solarchuus liked this · 4 years ago
-
momorikoz liked this · 4 years ago
-
gladly-be-the-good liked this · 4 years ago
-
clashingmelodies liked this · 4 years ago
-
jadamae1-blog liked this · 4 years ago
-
innersuperhero liked this · 4 years ago
-
obsidian-prime liked this · 5 years ago
-
thrakaboom reblogged this · 5 years ago
-
goforchampions liked this · 5 years ago
-
spacesuitsforemergency liked this · 5 years ago
-
vampire24 liked this · 5 years ago
-
doomguy2000 liked this · 5 years ago
-
macyduke liked this · 5 years ago
-
utt-archived liked this · 5 years ago
-
tempest-burns liked this · 5 years ago
-
techie6 liked this · 5 years ago
-
extralegallyblonde liked this · 5 years ago
-
britishgold liked this · 5 years ago
-
khakisandtakis liked this · 6 years ago
-
fireincarnated liked this · 6 years ago
-
supermoosethings liked this · 6 years ago
-
miss-galaxy-turtle reblogged this · 6 years ago
-
risen-sunset liked this · 6 years ago
-
guitz7 liked this · 6 years ago
-
got2bfamous liked this · 6 years ago
-
actuallywlccan liked this · 6 years ago
-
funtystuffhunty liked this · 6 years ago
-
ldyenki reblogged this · 6 years ago
-
blackpandaops reblogged this · 6 years ago
-
bolognafreezer liked this · 6 years ago
-
marvelousxmen reblogged this · 6 years ago
-
scarlet-silverweaver liked this · 6 years ago
More Posts from Ldyenki
I just want to remind everybody
Leverage gave us a middle-aged couple who impetuously fell into bed and had hot passionate sex, then cleaned up their acts emotionally before committing to each other in marriage.
Leverage gave us a young black man gently, wisely courting a non-neurotypical blonde white woman.
Leverage gave us a young black man whose two white male best friends both describe him as the smartest man they’ve ever known.
Leverage gave us a guitar-playing country boy, an ex-hitman and army vet, who puts his life in the hands of a geeky black man and his blonde girlfriend (till death do them part).
Leverage gave us Parker, Sophie, Maggie, and Tara; it also gave us female villains with as much cunning, ruthlessness, and agency as any man’s.
Leverage gave us villains who were rich, powerful, greedy white people who had to have just a little bit more, and a clever, cunning, usually compassionate, occasionally terrifying white guy who beat them at their own game and robbed the rich to help the poor.
Leverage, gentlefolx.
@ladyaster3 You need this.

REEM ACRA Fall/Winter 2018
Adam: Why is your room always so messy?
Jesse:So that if someone comes in and tries to kill me, they’ll trip over something and die.
Boys, Frida Kahlo and Other Things the Fairies Stole.

I’m still laughing with mine XD
via Drunk Austen on Facebook
As a librarian, I would like to second what @aeliad is saying.
Supporting libraries supports authors. Libraries buy books (and audiobooks). When books are popular they often buy multiple copies to meet the demand and as books wear out they check the circulation record and buy replacements if they are popular enough. (I can not even tell you how many copies I have bought for my library of the Harry Potter books just in the past few years - so many, so so many)
The other thing librarians do is recommend books and made displays. So tell your librarian all about your favorite books, trust me we want to know. Tell us why the book is great and we are more likely to recommend it to other patrons looking for a new author or put it on display where people are more likely to see it and pick it up.
And you can support your local library just by visiting and checking out books. We keep those statistics and use them to defend our existence.
Sometimes I feel guilty because all of my books come from the library. Even books I really love, like yours. I just read so fast and so much that buying books isn't a good financial choice. Do authors receive any benefit from library readers?
Oh my gosh, honey*, no. No no no. Please, please don’t feel guilty for using the library, or for going to the used book store, or for borrowing from a friend. All these things are built into the literary ecosystem, and publishers have had literally centuries to get used to them.
Do authors receive any benefit from library readers? Absolutely. We receive readers. Maybe you will never personally buy a book in your life. But. You have friends who will. You can leave reviews on places like Amazon and Goodreads. You can make sure the world knows which books you enjoyed, and that our publishers know that you want to see more.
Libraries pay for the books they loan out. With physical books, they pay for an object, which will stay in circulation for X number of loans before it gets purged due to wear and tear. With electronic books, they pay for a license, which allows the book to be loaned a certain number of times before it needs to be licensed again. Yes, this means a single sale can represent dozens of patrons, but there is still, at the root, a sale.
Piracy is a problem because there is no root sale; because the e-book “license” doesn’t exist and hence never expires, meaning our publishers have no way of measuring a book’s popularity; because it’s outside the feedback loop. But the loop is large, and meant to accommodate those of us who can’t buy alongside those of us who can. I promise.
(*We do not know each other and I am not trying to offend: this is just where my speech patterns go when I am worried I have hurt someone accidentally. If you dislike “honey” from a parasocial acquaintance, please substitute the respectful term of your choice. I suggest “High Inquisitor Sugarbat.”)