Stercus Fit
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"Forget your personal tragedy. We are all bitched from the start and you especially have to be hurt like hell before you can write seriously. But when you get the damned hurt, use it - don’t cheat with it."

— Ernest Hemingway
posted 1 week ago with 5 notes
sarahwillsaveyourlife:

Best place :
Photo Sarah Settgast
Antiquariat Weigelt, Proskauer Str. 4, 10247 Berlin

sarahwillsaveyourlife:

Best place :

Photo Sarah Settgast

Antiquariat Weigelt, Proskauer Str. 4, 10247 Berlin

posted 1 month ago with 94 notes | © / via

The Sun Also Rises. It was fantastic. Absolutely fabulous. I know that many people my age (my age being 15) would likely say that it was boring and therefore a bad book, but I digress. The book is not boring, and a few key things keep it from being so. One of these is Hemingway’s writing. It was unlike anything I’d read before. His style contains a subtlety that makes it stand out. This may seem oxymoronic, but I can think of no better way to describe it. Hemingway’s words are almost poetic, but not in the way of Faulkner, with rhythm, nor in the way of Fitzgerald’s writing, which is poetic because of its lyrical beauty. Hemingway’s writing is not bombastic, ostentatious, or even long-winded- it is succinct, and is poetic in it’s austerity and clarity. No, it is not ornate. But nor is it plain. What keeps it from being so is his ability to say so much in such a small space. People always say that there is beauty in simplicity, and Hemingway’s writing is a clear example of this. Perhaps the best example I can think of. The characters, too, are interesting, and they beautifully illustrate what we have come to know as “The Lost Generation.” The Sun Also Rises is a moving, heartbreaking novel, and it leaves you with the feeling of a newly-cleansed soul. In Greek tragedy they call this catharsis. But I believe that this type of purification is Hemingway’s alone.

posted 2 months ago with 3 notes
Ladies and gentlemen, this is James Joyce, amazing author and total BAMF. Lookin’ good too, I might add.

Ladies and gentlemen, this is James Joyce, amazing author and total BAMF. Lookin’ good too, I might add.

posted 2 months ago with 5 notes
posted 2 months ago with 12649 notes | © / via

The ways Sherlock Holmes calls Watson.

posted 4 months ago with 9386 notes | © / via

(Source: teachingliteracy)

posted 5 months ago with 29 notes | © / via
posted 5 months ago with 2009 notes

justinrampage:

Illustrator / writer Kathleen Jennings took a collection of classic book titles and gave each one an awesome Dalek spin. Check out more on her art blog.

Daleks In Book Titles by Kathleen Jennings (Flickr) (Twitter)

Via: The Mary Sue

posted 7 months ago with 5087 notes | © / via
buzzfeed:

(Via @Drelly // By @Jenisue)

buzzfeed:

(Via @Drelly // By @Jenisue)

posted 7 months ago with 1269 notes | © / via
sherlockcat:

One of three photos I’m posting right now.
This is A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens
In 1:12 scale miniature.  Wait till you see the inside.

sherlockcat:

One of three photos I’m posting right now.

This is A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens

In 1:12 scale miniature.  Wait till you see the inside.

posted 8 months ago with 119 notes | © / via
incisio:

Night has taken away the flowers of our windows (by HAMED MASOUMI)

incisio:

Night has taken away the flowers of our windows (by HAMED MASOUMI)

posted 8 months ago with 214 notes | © / via

(Source: geodesical)

posted 8 months ago with notes | © / via

(Source: luvpinkcoklat)

posted 8 months ago with 634 notes | © / via
posted 8 months ago with 288 notes | © / via