'“Huh,” Sam said. “You’re the ghost.”'
It seems like I'm drawn to gothicky SamBucky lately.
Not sure whether this is my fault or just the way things are... nah, let's be honest: it's my fault. I am trash. 😅
Dora Reads is the book blog of a Bookish Rebel, supporting the Diversity Movement, bringing you Queer views and mental health advocacy, slipping in a lot of non-bookish content, and spreading reading to the goddamn world! :) (All posts may contain Amazon links, which are affiliate, unless marked otherwise. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. USA ONLY - please do not make UK purchases with my links)
'“Huh,” Sam said. “You’re the ghost.”'
It seems like I'm drawn to gothicky SamBucky lately.
Not sure whether this is my fault or just the way things are... nah, let's be honest: it's my fault. I am trash. 😅
It's Thursday, I am peak tired millennial, let's get some comics-y superhero-y goodness!
This poem was first published in the Medium publication The Brain Is A Noodle (TBIAN), for the prompt 'is writing a source of income for you? or more a hobby? or both? How do you balance these roles?' set by Lucy Dan (editor of TBIAN)
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| Image by Artie_Navarre from Pixabay |
Turns out, I can write a whole-a** blogpost in 32 minutes.
...I know - I was surprised too!
OK, so I was kinda brain-foggy this week, and ended up writing both this week's Comics Wrap-Up (CWU) and Friday Fics Fix (F3) posts the day before they were due to go live on the blog.
One day, I will be a blogger that can schedule content well ahead of time, but that day is a long way off 😅
'“That’s incredibly dorky.”
“I learned from the best.”'
Let's get some Loki fluff - just because, really.
(There's also a fair edge of angst, because I have an emo goblin spaghetti brain.)
It's Thursday, I'm tired, let's get some comics-y superhero-y goodness!
I've been writing a lot of poetry lately -
(mainly over on Medium, but don't worry - it all gets cross-posted here on Dora Reads eventually, I promise!)
- And it led to me thinking (as I do,) about the Point of View (POV) in poetry.
See, the 'I' in poetry is called the 'speaker' - because that's the person who's speaking.
But the speaker is not always the same as the poet.