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#Thomas T Dahl
poemaseletras · 11 months
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xox000xox · 11 months
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250 Hollywood Celebrities Sign Letter Demanding Big Tech Censor Anyone Who Opposes Trans Surgeries On Kids
Here are the names of every celebrity who wants to mutilate children. Remember them & for Gods sake, stop supporting their products, movies, shows etc.
Abby Wambach
Adam Eli
Aitch Alberto
AJ Shively
Alan Cumming
Alejandra Caraballo
Alejandra Ghersi
Alex Clark
Alexandra Gutierrez
Alisa Ramirez
Allie Leonard
Allison Goldfrapp
ALOK Vaid-Menon
Alyssa May Gold
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sufferingwithbooks · 8 hours
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May Reading (Part 2)
A Wizard's Guide to Defensive Baking by T Kingfisher
The Shadow of the Gods by John Gwynne
The Witches by Roald Dahl
Cemetery Boys by Aiden Thomas
Godkiller by Hannah Kaner
The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes by Suzanne Collins
A Wizard's Guide to Defensive Baking was an audio on Libbi.
I found it painfully average and predictable. After reading Legends & Lattes, and attempting to read its sequel, and now this book... I can confidently say that "cozy" fantasy is not for me.
I understand it was trying to tackle the topic of prejudice but... it did feel too "cozy" about it. If you want to do a dark topic, go dark. Show the true grit and horror of it.
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The Shadow of the Gods was a great read and likely the best of the month. Orka is everything I want in a female character. After having so many disappointing fantasy reads that are either sexist, a sausage feast, or nothing but abusive towards female characters, this was such a breath of fresh air.
I can't even talk much about the plot cause I just want to gush over Orka non-stop. I love everything about her.
100% will be throwing myself into this series. I will soon pick up the second book and then will impatiently join my partner in waiting for the third book.
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The Witches is an Libbi audio I picked up after George's Marvellous Medicine.
And I enjoyed myself almost as much as I did with GMM.
The ending is so bleak and yet it tickled my dark sense of humour. I can't wait to pick up another.
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Cemetery Boys is one that started off interesting but very quickly lost me by the halfway mark.
"Yads" (the MC) is a trans boy. Great! I love to have more representations especially in the fantasy genre. Yads is having a difficult time being accepted by his family. They are of Mexican culture and have set roles for females and males.
Females have the ability to heal, males have the ability to "release" trapped spirits. Everyone in the family can see spirits and have to help them pass on.
Yads is granted the ability to release a spirit without the family knowing but the first soul he summons is a male youth who died recently and suddenly.
In the background, there's a plot of a missing cousin who had died.
Now it's clear there's going to be romance. This is advertised as such and is the first in a series.
(SPOILER)
The "mystery" of the plot is answered at the beginning. I don't get why it kept being looked at as a mystery. It was really annoying. It felt like playing a game of Cluedo with idiots. The entire second half of the book, I wanted to smack my head against the wall and scream "IT WAS ____ IN THE ____ WITH THE ____!"
The romance was cute but, once again, it was really clear how it was going to be solved because of the way it was advertised as a romance series.
I won't be picking this up this series. I only finished reading it for the Fantasy Reddit Bingo.
---------------------------------
Godkiller is one that caught my eye for a while because of how stunning the cover is. 10/10 for Tom Roberts (and I just found out he also designed the Library Trilogy covers which I really adore).
I picked it up from an indie bookshop on holiday. And read because of Fantasy Bingo (via reddit).
Overall it was a very average book. There was nothing thought provoking or a puzzle to think about. Nothing jumps out.
That being said, I read this whilst ill in bed. And it was a book I could read because of how simple it was. So I appreciate it for that reason and will likely pick up the second book much later on for another sick day.
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The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes is a book I only read after watching the film (which took me three sittings).
I really enjoy the Hunger Games books & films. I have always gone more for the films however because I really enjoy President Snow who plays a bigger part in the films than he does in the books.
After finally being persuaded to watch the Ballad film, I was confused on how people thought the relationship between Snow & Lucy was romantic. Was I missing something? So I decided to read the book.
I honestly liked the development of the Games. The stark difference between how they were to what they became was interesting.
And I was right. Snow's character was 100% a 'psychopath' (out-dated term now). The relationship between him and Lucy was never healthy and was never going to be healthy. It was very toxic and I'm very happy with how it ended.
It took me by surprise. I enjoyed it a lot more than I thought I would.
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ofallingstar · 3 years
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List of books I read this year
Persuasion by Jane Austen
Red Dragon by Thomas Harris
A Streetcar Named Desire by Tennessee Williams
Little Women by Louisa May Alcott
Morirás Lejos by José Emilio Pacheco
Devotions by Mary Oliver
Imaginary Friend by Stephen Chbosky
Mrs. Dolloway by Virginia Woolf
The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne
Collected Poems by Edna St. Vincent Millay
My Cousin Rachel by Daphne Du Maurier
Sputnik Sweetheart by Haruki Murakami
Twelve Moons by Mary Oliver
The Hunchback of Notre-Dame by Victor Hugo
At Swim-Two-Birds by Flann O’Brien
New Selected Poems 1966-1987 by Seamus Heaney
Ulysses by James Joyce
The Celtic Twilight: Faerie and Folklore by W. B. Yeats
Normal People by Sally Rooney
The Dark by John McGahern
The Yellow Wallpaper by Charlotte Perkins Gilman
Une sirène à Paris by Mathias Malzieu
Atonement by Ian McEwan
The Shipping News by Annie Proulx
After the Quake by Haruki Murakami
Far From the Madding Crowd by Thomas Hardy
Breakfast at Tiffany’s by Truman Capote
A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms by George R. R. Martin
The Silence of the Lambs by Thomas Harris
Leaves of Grass by Walt Whitman
A Room with a View by E. M. Forster
Les Fleurs du Mal by Charles Baudelaire
E. E. Cummings: Complete Poems 1904-1962 by E. E. Cummings
No me preguntes cómo pasa el tiempo: Poemas 1964-1968 by José Emilio Pacheco
Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad
War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy
Mrs. Caliban by Rachel Ingalls
The Importance of Being Earnest by Oscar Wilde
The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes by Suzanne Collins
Beloved by Toni Morrison
After Dark by Haruki Murakami
The Collected Poems of W. B. Yeats by W. B. Yeats
The Collected Poems of Oscar Wilde by Oscar Wilde
Breath, Eyes, Memory of Edwidge Danticat
Marina by Carlos Ruiz Zafón
El Aleph by Jorge Luis Borges
Selected Poems by Marina Tsvetaeva
The Silent Patient by Alex Michaelides
Kiss Kiss by Roald Dahl
Alias Grace by Margaret Atwood
Adonis by Adonis
If Not, Winter by Sappho
Mexican Gothic by Silvia Moreno-García
The Trial by Franz Kafka
The Iliad by Homer
Collected Poems, 1909-1962 by T.S. Eliot
The Selected Poetry of Rainer Maria Rilke by Rainer Maria Rilke
The Odyssey by Homer
The Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri
A Room of One’s Own by Virginia Woolf
Flowers for Algernon by Daniel Keyes
The Complete Poems of Emily Dickinson by Emily Dickinson
The Painted Bird by Jerzy Kosinski
Perfume: The Story of a Murderer by Patrick Süskind
Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine by Gail Honeyman
The Tattoist of Auschwitz by Heather Morris
Fire & Blood by George R.R. Martin
Arráncame la vida by Ángeles Mastretta
The Wonder by Emma Donoghue
32 Candles by Ernessa T. Carter
Blind Willow, Sleeping Woman by Haruki Murakami
Collected Poems, 1912-1944 by H.D.
I Capture the Castle by Dodie Smith
Hannibal by Thomas Harris
The Tell-Tale Heart and Other Writings by Edgar Allan Poe
The Legend of Sleepy Hollow by Washington Irving
The Shining by Stephen King
The Complete Poems by John Keats
The Monk by Matthew Gregory Lewis
The Birds and Other Stories by Daphne du Maurier
Fingersmith by Sarah Waters
Middlesex by Jeffrey Eugenides
Picnic at Hanging Rock by Joan Lindsay
The Hour of the Star by Clarice Lispector
La ciudad de vapor by Carlos Ruiz Zafón
The Collected Poems of Audre Lorde by Audre Lorde
Hiroshima by John Hersey
Selected Poems: 1965-1975 by Margaret Atwood
Selected Poems II: 1976-1986 by Margaret Atwood
Dearly: New Poems by Margaret Atwood
Uncollected Poems by Rainer Maria Rilke
My Dark Vanessa by Kate Elizabeth Russell
The Book of Disquiet by Fernando Pessoa
Circe by Madeline Miller
The Prophet by Kahlil Gibran
The End of Everything (Astrophysically Speaking) by Katie Mack
Before We Were Yours by Lisa Wingate
The Road by Cormac McCarthy
Poems: 1962-2012 by Louise Glück
Lady Windermere’s Fan by Oscar Wilde
You can follow me or add me as a friend on Goodreads.
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In light of the recent thing with the Gatsby and the public domain and all that, I have elected to put together a roadmap of notable works that will enter the public domain per US copyright law in the next few decades, up to 2060.
Each work will enter the domain at the beginning of the year it is listed under.
2022: Winnie-the-Pooh (A.A. Milne); The Sun Also Rises (Ernest Hemingway)
2023: The Colour Out of Space (H.P. Lovecraft)
2025: All Quiet on the Western Front (Erich Maria Remarque)
2026: The Maltese Falcon (Dashiel Hammett); Last and First Men (Olaf Stapledon)
2027: The Whisperer in Darkness (H.P. Lovecraft)
2028: Brave New World (Aldous Huxley)
2030:  Murder on the Orient Express (Agatha Christie); Mary Poppins (P.L. Travers)
2031: Little House on the Prairie (Laura Ingalls Wilder)
2032: Absalom, Absalom! (William Faulkner); Gone with the Wind (Margaret Mitchell); The Story of Ferdinand (Munro Lead); At the Mountains of Madness, The Shadow Over Innsmouth and The Shadow Out of Time (H.P. Lovecraft)
2033: Of Mice and Men (John Steinbeck); The Hobbit (J.R.R. Tolkien)
2034: The Sword in the Stone (T. H. White); Appointment with Death and Hercule Poirot's Christmas (Agatha Christie)
2035: Finnegans Wake (James Joyce); The Grapes of Wrath (John Steinbeck); Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer (Robert L. May); Old Possum’s Book of Practical Cats (T.S. Eliot); Murder Is Easy, And Then There Were None, and The Regatta Mystery (Agatha Christie)
2036: For Whom the Bell Tolls (Ernest Hemingway); Lassie Come-Home (Eric Knight); The Heart is a Lonely Hunter (Carson McCullers)
2037: Curious George (Margret and H.A. Rey)
2039: The Little Prince (Antoine de Saint-Exupéry); The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath (H.P. Lovecraft)
2041: Pippi Longstocking (Astrid Lindgren)
2043: Doctor Faustus (Thomas Mann); A Streetcar Named Desire (Tennessee Williams)
2045: Nineteen Eighty-Four (George Orwell); Death of a Salesman (Arthur Miller)
2046: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe (C.S. Lewis); I, Robot (Isaac Asimov); Gormenghast (Mervyn Peake)
2047: The Catcher in the Rye (J. D. Salinger); Prince Caspian (C.S. Lewis)
2048: The Old Man and the Sea (Ernest Hemingway); Charlotte’s Web (E. B. White); The Borrowers (Mary Norton); The Voyage of the Dawn Treader (C.S. Lewis)
2049: Farenheit 451 (Ray Bradbury); The Silver Chair (C.S. Lewis)
2050: The Fellowship of the Ring and The Two Towers (J.R.R. Tolkien); Lord of the Flies (William Golding); The Horse and His Boy (C.S. Lewis)
2051: The Return of the King (J.R.R. Tolkien); The Magician’s Nephew (C.S. Lewis); Lolita (Vladimir Nabokov)
2052: Old Yeller (Fred Gipson) The Last Battle (C.S. Lewis)
2053: Atlas Shrugged (Ayn Rand); The Cat in the Hat and How the Grinch Stole Christmas! (Dr. Seuss)
2055: A Canticle for Leibowitz (Walter M. Miller, Jr.); Starship Troopers (Robert A. Heinlein)
2056: To Kill a Mockingbird (Harper Lee); One Fish, Two Fish, Red Fish, Blue Fish and Green Eggs and Ham (Dr. Seuss)
2057: Catch-22 (Joseph Heller); Stranger in a Strange Land (Robert A. Heinlein); Solaris (Stanislaw Lem); James and the Giant Peach (Roald Dahl)
2058: One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest (Ken Kesey); A Clockwork Orange (Anthony Burgess); The Man in the High Castle (Philip K. Dick); A Wrinkle in Time (Madeleine L'Engle)
2059: Planet of the Apes (Pierre Boulle); Where the Wild Things Are (Maurice Sendak); Clifford the Big Red Dog (Norman Bridwell)
2060: Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (Roald Dahl); The Giving Tree (Shel Silverstein)
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artificialqueens · 4 years
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The Goode Case, 8/14 (Jaida/Jan) - Juno
Chapter Summary: Jaida, Brita and Jackie, with a little help from Dahlia, separate to look into the history of the guest house, and rendez-vous to discuss the plan to reach Gigi. Jaida is surprised by who else she sees that evening …
(A/N: As ever I’ve been really over the moon to receive such lovely supportive comments! Thank you to everyone!! I hope you enjoy part eight.)
2.50PM
Jaida led Aiden to the lobby to meet Crystal, who was sitting with Jackie, a box of tissues clutched in her lap. Aiden’s stoic expression softened at her friend’s tears, and she rubbed Crystal’s shoulder, while Crystal stood and pulled her into a hug.
Back in the meeting room, once the two students had left, Jackie could barely contain herself.
“Crystal saw that same woman that you described,” Jackie blurted out, as soon as the door was closed. “She gave the exact same description you gave us. And she saw Gigi too, in the same room you did.”
“Did Crystal mention anything about the day they found the anklet?” Jaida pulled out the chair next to Brita and sat down. “I wondered if a statement Aiden gave me corroborated with that.”
Jackie pulled out another chair opposite and sat down too, grabbing the jug of water from the centre of the table. “Yeah, she mentioned it. She said when they found the anklet, a woman appeared to her, and took her hand and started singing her some sort of lullaby. She suddenly realised she’d walked to the top of the stairs, and they both left. Well, ‘ran away’, Crystal said.”
“Who was the woman?”
Jackie looked grave. “She could just remember black hair. You were right, it’s the same woman that keeps coming up.”
“Any clues who she was?” Jaida asked, folding her arms.
Brita pushed the file she’d found to Jaida, who took a look at the yellowing paper and the name typed using an old label printer. “VISAGE, T. & M.”
Jaida opened the first page, and gasped at the picture.
“That’s her, I’m sure.” The woman had wavy black hair in a thick mane around her face, with sculpted cheeks and bright blue eyes. She checked the name in the ID details. Michelle Visage (née Goode).
“Records indicate the Visages bought the guest house in 1972. The wife had a reputation, the sort of thing you’d expect in some bad romance novel – seducing customers, you know – got her in a bit of trouble forty years ago,” Brita explained. “But the whole guest house had things happening. Have a look at the papers. Take one case in 1976. A fire broke out in the kitchen, and the only person to die was her sister-in-law. All the kitchen staff escaped, but her sister-in-law didn’t. And later on in 1978, well, read it for yourself.”
Jaida turned the pages, her eyes falling on another photo, this time of a man, a white shirt and large collar, open at the neck, hair long and swept over his forehead. He looked like –
“Girl, this is getting too strange now, this is the guy who I saw on the stairs!” Jaida pointed. She carried on reading the report, her hand going to her mouth as she did.
“He didn’t have a very happy ending, as you see. They found him hanged from the top of the stairs. It was ruled suicide, but it was suspect at the time, because there was a life insurance policy which had been taken out shortly before his death.” Brita craned her neck. “Have you seen the name?”
Jaida glanced at it. Thomas Visage. “Husband?”
“You got it. And of course there’s the link to the Goodes. We thought Gigi was making it up to impress her friend, but you can see the ID. It looks like she was right. And if both you and Crystal have both seen Michelle and Gigi together …”
“I don’t want to think about that until we find a body,” Jackie shuddered. “There’s still a chance. Just because Jaida saw Gigi, it doesn’t mean she’s dead. She saw you, didn’t she? Last night.”
“Anyway, what happened to this Visage woman?” Jaida asked, trying to keep them on track, leafing through the last few papers.
“Well, the hotel was in decline following Thomas’ death, and it seemed like the money from the life insurance couldn’t make Michelle happy,” Brita sighed. “She died in 1983. Overdose. Barbiturates and lots of vodka. The hotel was closed later that year, and it’s been closed ever since.”
Brita straightened up, adjusting her shirt. “Chief wants the whole street searched again. I’ve sent forensics already, sniffer dogs too, to see what they come up with.”
“Okay, good.” Jaida nodded.
“For the house, I think we need to get Dahlia in again. If Gigi is being sighted there, and as there are no other leads really, there must be some link. But we need a detailed plan this time. Anything can go wrong, especially as I for one don’t quite know how to control … this.” Brita motioned to herself.
“Not only that, I think we need some history of past paranormal investigations at this place,” Jaida suggested. “Dahl said she knew a psychic that won’t go near the place, so there must have been other investigations. Brita, I’d like to go talk to her at the shop this afternoon, if that’s alright?”
“Nice one, Jai, we need all the information we can get.”
Jackie clicked her ballpoint pen on and off. “If we’re going to get the truth about what happened to Gigi from these spirits, we need to use all resources. Including maybe Crystal, if she’ll come.”
“You can start on a plan, while Jaida is at Dahlia’s shop. I need to be available on call for forensics if they do find anything on Westfield. We can meet up from six and discuss the plan. Ideally, we’d need Dahlia to agree to come in tomorrow, preferably during the day.”
“I’ll ask, but she might not get time away from the shop. If her mom can get away from her shift early, then maybe. Where do you want to meet at six then?”
“How about … Vanjie’s? With a wine?” Brita suggested, as casually as she could muster.
Jaida looked at Jackie.
“I don’t even need to read your mind. Have you arranged to meet someone else there?” Jaida raised an eyebrow.
“Maybe, maybe not.” A grin spread across Brita’s face.
3.39PM
By the time Jaida got off the bus, the grey clouds had turned to a thick sheet of rain. Great. The wind hadn’t settled from yesterday either, so she had to jog the two blocks from the bus stop to Syn City, to avoid getting swept away by the New York autumn.
The “Open to demons customers” sign was on the door, which meant either Dahlia or her mom would be around. Jaida pushed the door, and the bell above it tinkled, letting them know someone was entering in case they were in one of the back rooms.
The shop was so narrow that there was barely room to walk past the bookshelves and esoteric wares, but once past them, the space was a little more open, with the checkout on the side and two rooms further back for personal readings. Dahlia had learned Tarot from her mom, which was her main trade, but she was also learning other divination methods, as well as her own studies. One of the rooms was Dahlia’s for reading appointments, along with Shuga and her crystal ball, and now Rock, who had replaced Lady Lemon who’d left for Canada earlier in the year.
Dahlia poked her head out of her room, and smirked when she saw it was Jaida. She leapt the three steps to the room and approached Jaida, slapping her hard on the arm.
“Hey! What was that for?”
“Girl, why didn’t you tell me you were a medium? I’ve known you for, like, two years, and you never thought you’d tell me you can see spirits?” Dahlia put her hands on her hips.
“I – I don’t know!” Jaida cried, a little exasperated. “You never asked!”
“I shouldn’t have to ask! You were seeing spirits at that house all this time, and I had to find that out from Rock!
“From Rock?”
“Yeah, she’s got this thing where if she touches someone, she knows what they’re thinking.” Dahlia rolled her eyes. “I know, that’s crazy, but it’s true.”
“Child,” Jaida muttered. “And let me guess. You can – I don’t know, you can fly or some shit.”
“Girl, I wish,” Dahlia snorted, “I can do cards, boards, but I can’t do anything naturally, like what you can.”
“I wanted to talk to you about last night, anyway,” Jaida whispered, looked around. “You got ten minutes?”
Dahlia led Jaida to her own room at the back of the shop, a tiny alcove just big enough for two people, and perched in one of the chairs, offering the other to Jaida.
“Thanks. I wanted to find out what you knew about the guest house.”
“Don’t you have the stories on files?” Dahlia cocked an eyebrow.
“Well sure, but we don’t log anything, y’know, paranormal or whatever.” Jaida used her fingers to draw quotation marks.
“I know what I’ve read, and it might not be the whole truth, but if that’s what you want to know?”
“Whatever you can give me would be a help.”
“Alright.” Dahlia grabbed her tablet from her bag under the folding table, and tapped into the screen, finally turning it to show Jaida.
“What’s that?”
“Paranormal Database on New York. Paradata, for short. It’s run by some lady in Queens. It’s like,” Dahlia ran a hand through her wavy brown hair, searching for the right words, “it’s kind of like Tripadvisor for the paranormal. People can go on there and report what they’ve done to investigate, and what’s happened.”
“And this website is in public domain?”
“Yeah, but it’s not really well-known outside the community. Keeps things a bit safer. And not everyone can register.” Dahlia shook her head. “You have to be invited by an existing member. I’ll invite you, if you want.”
“Sure, thanks.”
Dahlia found the house on the map, and clicked the link. She gave a low whistle. “Bitch, I’ve never seen this many reviews for somewhere that hasn’t been visited by, like the Ghost Hunters crew or something. There’s so many.”
She turned the tablet towards Jaida, who scanned through the reviews people had left on there, her breath catching in her throat.
“… domineering, territorial female presence, screaming at us to get out …”
“… my boyfriend saw a lady in the kitchen and won’t stop having nightmares …”
“ … tabletop session saw one woman possessed and a man incapacitated in a trance …”
“ … spirit drawing of a woman aged 37, died in a fire, year approx 1970 …”
One of them caught Jaida’s eye, from last year:
“Avoid the upstairs!!! DANGEROUS THREAT TO LIFE. Ghost tried to pull psychic off the stairs!! DO NOT GO HERE”
“Some of them can be a bit dramatic,” Dahlia interrupted Jaida’s reading, “but do any of them sound familiar?”
Jaida nodded. “Definitely some of them.”
“You want me to go back again, don’t you?” Dahlia asked cautiously. “I don’t even need to ask.”
“Would you consider it?”
Dahlia’s hands were trembling, Jaida noticed, but she moved them under the table to hide them.
“I mean, of course it pays well, but, like, I’m scared. And not just for me. For Rock, too. And for you. And for – actually, for all of us. All seven of us who were there last night, none of us came out the same. And Rock said –“ Dahlia gasped, raising a hand to her mouth. “I forgot to tell you! Rock said you saw Brita astrally project?”
“Yeah. But I didn’t know she was going to until she did it.”
With that, Dahlia leapt from her seat and grabbed Jaida’s hand, tugging her down the three steps and to the bookcases.
“She needs to read … this, before she does it again.” Dahlia pulled a paperback off the shelf. “Tell her she owes me fifteen dollars.”
“Dahl, I’ll just – settle that …” Jaida took her card from her purse. She turned the book over. Astral Projection For Beginners: A Complete Guide. “I’m sure she’ll put this on top of her pile.” Jaida rolled her eyes.
“I’m not joking, Jai. Being able to project naturally is really fucking unusual. Most people learn it. So if she can do it without even trying, she needs to know the risks. Like, now. Especially if she can’t control it.”
“Risks?” Jaida flicked through the book. “What sorts of things?”
“Mainly just other spirits wanting a free ride, or a free body to hop into.” Dahlia shuddered. “Not everyone you meet on the astral planes will be friendly.”
“Have you ever projected?”
“I’ve tried, but not so far.” Dahlia shook her head. “It’s really hard to master.”
The door tinkled, and Dahlia leapt from her seat, Jaida following her, but it was only Rock, her blue hair soaking wet with the rain which was still coming down in a sheet. She held two Starbucks takeouts in cardboard cup holders.
“Oh, hi again,” she waved to Jaida with her free hand. “I’d have bought you a mocha as well, if I’d known you were coming.”
“Thanks, baby,” Dahlia took her cup from Rock and planted a kiss on her lips. “You know just what I need on a Monday afternoon. And I was telling Jai about the projection book you recommended.”
“Yeah, you need to make sure your friend reads it straight away,” Rock’s expression turned grave again. “And tell her to train herself to control it.”
6.05PM
Jackie had met Jaida outside Vanjie’s, telling her that Brita had been called away by forensics to a potential lead on Northfield at about four thirty and hadn’t come back. Jaida had felt her heart sink a little, hoping it was not bad news, but Brita had stumbled in only five minutes after they had arrived.
“Was it serious?” Jaida asked quietly.
“Oh, no, it turned out to be a false alarm,” Brita laughed her infectious laugh, waving her hand. “Everything is fine. Wine?”
A glass of wine later, this time the three of them squeezed together on one side of the six-seater booth, somehow feeling much more comfortable and cosy than they had at any time previous. Jaida was on the end, always preferring an escape route, with Jackie sandwiched in the middle and Brita at the window, looking down at her phone and sometimes glancing outside at the street around them.
They’d forgotten it was student night when they had arrived, expecting it to be quiet like most places on Mondays, but the bar was getting busier and busier, and they had one of the last free booths. Lots of the students elected to stand, leaning on the bars and tables, and there was enough chatter in the air to drown out most of the music.
“What have you got so far, Jackie?” Jaida asked.
“The only person we’ve seen so far who’d led us to Gigi is … well, Thomas. And the only one of us who’s seen him is … well, you, Jai.” Jackie clicked her pen on and off, before Brita irritably snatched it from her hand. “Ow! Anyway, could he be responsible?”
“But he wanted to show me that Gigi was there,” Jaida said, the realisation dawning on her as she said the words. “Wait, why didn’t I get that before? He was trying to help us. Maybe he wanted to show -”
“I don’t think that’s right,” Brita interrupted suddenly. “He would have helped you get to Gigi, if that was the case. You said he just stood there.”
“That’s true,” murmured Jackie.
“Well, we’ve established that Gigi is stuck on the same plane that Thomas is on,” Jaida said, swirling her glass. “Can’t I just – link with him again? Persuade him to help? Maybe you two can connect too?”
“But we can���t see him,” Jackie whispered. She drummed on the notebook with her fingers. “Can we just link physically with you?”
“That won’t work, because it should have worked today if it did!”
“Maybe if Brita can project –“
“I don’t think that will work,” Brita interrupted again, wine obviously going straight to her head, “because I can’t control this fucking thing! There’s no point trying.”
“Can Dahlia come in the daytime tomorrow at all?” Jackie asked. “That would be the ideal, rather than waiting until the evening. And it depends on Crystal being free, too, but it’s been four days since anyone saw Gigi,” she added.  
“I’ll ask Dahlia, but she works days in her shop.” Jaida pulled out her phone.
Jaida:Dahl, can u do tomorrow at all? Day time possible? X
Dahlia:girl u know I cant just close the shop! If I can get mom to watch it then yeh x
Jaida:Cool cool let me know x
“I’ll see if I can call Crystal,” Jackie said, and Jaida let her step out of the booth and walk to the door for better signal. Jaida’s phone buzzed in her hand as she left.
Heidi: Jai!! im french kissin in the USA lol xx
Jaida: LOL!! Are u with Nicky?? Xx
Heidi:yeah her student cancelled so we havin a night in xx
Heidi:her housemate has a big Farsi dictionary
Heidi: and a french one too
Heidi:Jai do u wanna know the french word for bitch?? Xx
Jaida laughed at the selfie Heidi sent over, in the apartment she recognised as Jackie’s. Wait until she mentioned to Jackie that her housemate was Heidi’s date.
“Left her a voicemail. Also, when this case is over, I’m not drinking for a month,” Jackie declared, coming back over. “I swear we’ve been out to a bar all week. Saturday, Sunday, and now today. I don’t wanna be drinking on weeknights!”
“Speaking of which, it’s your round Jai,” Brita sang, nudging her empty glass towards Jaida and pointing to the bar at Vanjie’s. It was still quiet, but people were starting to filter in and it wouldn’t be long until they were engulfed in people, queueing at the bar.
Jaida got up and grabbed the tray, going to the bar to order. Vanessa was way at the other end of the bar with someone else, and Brooke was nowhere to be seen, so Jaida was all alone, with her thoughts.
“Well, hey there!”
Jaida spun round at the voice, and the familiar peach shampoo, to the radiance that was Jan. Her brown eyes were crinkled as she smiled, her blonde hair slightly damp from the rain. Jaida felt her heart jump at the sight of her, the very last person she’d been expecting to see.
“Hey, Jan.” Jaida wasn’t sure what else to say, but she smiled widely, and turned to look for Vanessa, who was still on the other side of the bar. It wasn’t like Jaida to feel tongue-tied, but she couldn’t find any clever words to say for once.
“I uh, will try not to spill stuff on your shirt today, looks too smart to ruin!” Jan laughed at her own comment.
“Your shirt is nice too,” Jaida said, taking in Jan’s lavender blouse and the black knee-length skirt. Jaida silently admired how the material fell.
“Thanks! I had an audition this afternoon. Another ‘don’t call us, we’ll call you’ moment!” Jan laughed again, this time a little bitter. “Getting a break is hard anywhere, but here in NYC? It’s impossible. I was just on my way back, and a little birdie told me you’d be here.”
“Which little birdie might that be?” Jaida chuckled, looking over at Brita and Jackie, who went from watching them to snapping their necks the other direction, in the blink of an eye. “Or do I need to ask?”
“I don’t think you do!” Jan sniggered.
“So,” Jaida rested her arm on the bar, “you sing?”
“Sure!”
“What’s your favourite song to sing? Because I can’t sing a note!” Jaida cringed at her awful conversational skills. When did she become this corny?
“That’s just modest! I bet you can sing Christina with me.”
Jaida’s jaw fell wide open in shock. “The Christina? I’m not even sure I can sing one octave, let alone five!”
“I’ll teach you,” Jan winked, “just follow my lead.”
She tossed her hair, rolled her shoulders back, and opened her mouth.
I am beautiful, no matter what they say / Words can’t bring me down!
Jaida listened to the slow, emphatic lyrics, the perfect pitch that came from that throat, the way Jan’s face twisted with the emotion, and Jaida’s whole body tingled for a couple of seconds, feeling a spread of goose pimples down her arms.
“Now you try,” Jan took one of Jaida’s hands, her shoulders twitching with excitement. “Just relax, look at me, take a deep breath …”
The peach shampoo swirled round them both, and Jaida started to feel like she was in some sort of dream, and not wanting to wake up; as she took a sharp breath in to knock Jan flat with her dreadful voice …
You are beautiful, in every single way / Words can’t bring you down / So don’t you bring me down today!
Jaida realised that she wasn’t singing the words; it was Jan’s voice, while Jaida just mouthed the lyrics along, the glorious sound filling up every pore of her skin, every empty space in her mind. Jan’s thumb was rubbing her palm, and Jaida found she could focus on nothing else but the slight pressure, feeling herself being pulled slowly into Jan’s eyes as they came closer to her …
“WAIT, who’s singing? Does this bar say KARAOKE on the sign? Monday nights are for SINGING are they?” Vanessa had come out of nowhere, breaking the spell, Jaida dropping Jan’s hand and turning to face Vanessa.
“Sorry, V!”
But Vanessa was smirking, raising her eyebrows knowingly at the pair of them, before disappearing to the other end of the bar. Jan waited until Vanessa was busying herself serving before resting a hand on Jaida’s forearm.
“Well, it was nice seeing you again,” she said, her eyes darting around Jaida’s face. “My shift starts at seven, I have to get back. See you soon.”
Jaida was hit with a little bit of courage. She put her hand on Jan’s, holding her to her forearm. “Jan, give me your phone number. And on Friday, get the night off your shift.”
“What?” Jan looked stunned.
“Well … if you want, we can go somewhere nice. Quiet. Have a coffee or something. If you want, that is? I clock off at four thirty if I can get round Brita.”
Jan was silent for a second, blinking. Then she leaned in towards Jaida, and kissed her on the cheek, right next to her lips. Jaida momentarily lost herself in the heady scent of Jan’s perfume, the tender  sensation of Jan’s lips against her skin, and as Jan reclined, smiling gently, Jaida had to blink to get her eyes to focus again.
“That sounds perfect.”
She was gone before Jaida could even think, a whoosh of blonde hair, closing the door of the bar and putting up her hood before walking off into the evening. Jaida exhaled slowly, not realising she’d been holding her breath.
Jaida glanced at her own booth, where Brita and Jackie hurriedly turned away from her again, like nothing had just happened.
“Child,” Jaida muttered to herself as she came back with the tray and three wines on it. Jackie looked at Jaida through her eyelashes, while Brita smirked triumphantly.
“You weren’t actually messaging Aiden, were you?” Jaida realised, tilting her head at Brita.
“Maybe I was and maybe I wasn’t,” Brita teased.
“Maybe you had a message from Jan, asking you to get me here tonight so she could drop in before her shift!”
Brita looked far too pleased with herself. She picked up her wine from the tray and chuckled.
“Have you got any more single friends?” Jackie asked Brita with a laugh.
Jaida ignored them both for a few minutes, busying herself with her phone, sending another urgent message.
Jaida: Heidi Almighty x
Jaida:My lovely ride or die
Jaida: The Bonnie to my Clyde xx
Heidi: Jai how many times have I told u, I got no bail money xx
Jaida: I got a fashion emergency, need date outfit help for Friday night! Xx
Heidi: oh really, where have I heard that before lol x
Jaida: Please!!!!!! :(
Heidi:ok hang on
[Heidi has added Nicky to the chat]
Nicky: bonsoir
Heidi:Jaida needs ur help with fashion cherie xx
Nicky: bien sûr
Jaida: LOL have you been teaching Heidi french? X
Heidi: merde!!
Nicky:that one was from my housemate’s dictionary……
12 notes · View notes
via-whitmore · 3 years
Text
Cross out what you’ve read. 6 is average
Pride and Prejudice - Jane Austen
The Lord of the Rings - JRR Tolkien
Jane Eyre - Charlotte Bronte
Harry Potter series - JK Rowling
To Kill a Mockingbird - Harper Lee
The Bible - Council of Nicea
Wuthering Heights - Emily Bronte 
Nineteen Eighty Four - George Orwell
His Dark Materials - Philip Pullman
Great Expectations - Charles Dickens
Little Women - Louisa M Alcott
Tess of the D’Urbervilles - Thomas Hardy
Catch 22 - Joseph Heller
Rebecca - Daphne Du Maurier
The Hobbit - JRR Tolkien 
Birdsong - Sebastian Faulk
Catcher in the Rye - JD Salinger
The Time Traveller’s Wife - Audrey Niffenegger
Middlemarch - George Eliot
Gone With The Wind - Margaret Mitchell
The Great Gatsby - F Scott Fitzgerald
Bleak House - Charles Dickens
War and Peace - Leo Tolstoy
The Hitch Hiker’s Guide to the Galaxy - Douglas Adams
Brideshead Revisited - Evelyn Waugh
Crime and Punishment - Fyodor Dostoyevsky
Grapes of Wrath - John Steinbeck
Alice in Wonderland - Lewis Carroll
The Wind in the Willows - Kenneth Grahame
Anna Karenina - Leo Tolstoy
David Copperfield - Charles Dickens
Chronicles of Narnia - CS Lewis
Emma - Jane Austen
Persuasion - Jane Austen
The Kite Runner - Khaled Hosseini
Captain Corelli’s Mandolin - Louis De Bernieres
Memoirs of a Geisha - Arthur Golden
Winnie the Pooh - AA Milne
Animal Farm - George Orwell
The Da Vinci Code - Dan Brown
One Hundred Years of Solitude - Gabriel Garcia Marquez
A Prayer for Owen Meaney - John Irving
The Woman in White - Wilkie Collins
Anne of Green Gables - LM Montgomery
Far From The Madding Crowd - Thomas Hardy
The Handmaid’s Tale - Margaret Atwood
Lord of the Flies - William Golding
Atonement - Ian McEwan 
Life of Pi - Yann Martel 
Dune - Frank Herbert
Cold Comfort Farm - Stella Gibbons
Sense and Sensibility - Jane Austen
A Suitable Boy - Vikram Seth
The Shadow of the Wind - Carlos Ruiz Zafon 
A Tale Of Two Cities - Charles Dickens
Brave New World - Aldous Huxley
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time - Mark Haddon 
Love In The Time Of Cholera - Gabriel Garcia Marquez
Of Mice and Men - John Steinbeck
Lolita - Vladimir Nabokov 
The Secret History - Donna Tartt
The Lovely Bones - Alice Sebold
Count of Monte Cristo - Alexandre Dumas
On The Road - Jack Kerouac
Jude the Obscure - Thomas Hardy
Bridget Jones’s Diary - Helen Fielding
Midnight’s Children - Salman Rushdie 
Moby Dick - Herman Melville
Oliver Twist - Charles Dickens
Dracula - Bram Stoker
The Secret Garden - Frances Hodgson Burnett
Notes From A Small Island - Bill Bryson
Ulysses - James Joyce 
The Bell Jar - Sylvia Plath
Swallows and Amazons - Arthur Ransome
Germinal - Emile Zola
Vanity Fair - William Makepeace Thackeray
Possession - AS Byatt
A Christmas Carol - Charles Dickens
Cloud Atlas - David Mitchell
The Color Purple - Alice Walker
The Remains of the Day - Kazuo Ishiguro
Madame Bovary - Gustave Flaubert
A Fine Balance - Rohinton Mistry
Charlotte’s Web - EB White
The Five People You Meet In Heaven - Mitch Albom
Adventures of Sherlock Holmes - Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
The Faraway Tree Collection - Enid Blyton
Heart of Darkness - Joseph Conrad
The Little Prince - Antoine De Saint-Exupery 
The Wasp Factory - Iain Banks
Watership Down - Richard Adams
A Confederacy of Dunces - John Kennedy Toole 
A Town Like Alice - Nevil Shute
The Three Musketeers - Alexandre Dumas
Hamlet - William Shakespeare
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory - Roald Dahl
Les Miserables - Victor Hugo
4 notes · View notes
Text
A guide to SNL cast members who guest-starred on Drunk History
1.1 "Washington, D.C."
Will Forte as Edwin Booth
1.3 "Atlanta"
Jenny Slate as herself
Bill Hader as John Pemberton
Rob Riggle as J. Edgar Hoover
Kevin Nealon as the Grand Dragon
1.4 "Boston"
Chris Parnell as Charles II of England
1.5 "San Francisco"
Kristen Wiig as Patty Hearst
1.7 "Nashville"
Taran Killam as William Clark
Casey Wilson as Dolly Parton
1.8 "The Wild West"
Chris Parnell as James Bowie
Horatio Sanz as Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna
2.2 "New York City"
Michaela Watkins as nurse
Taran Killam as Frederic Auguste Bartholdi
2.8 "Philadelphia"
Chris Parnell as Benedict Arnold
2.10 "First Ladies"
Bobby Moynihan as Grover Cleaveland
Casey Wilson as Dolley Madison
3.1 "New Jersey"
Jenny Slate as herself
3.2 "Miami"
David Koechner as Diego Columbus
Horatio Sanz as Alberto Bravo
Maya Rudolph as Griselda Blanco
3.4 "Spies"
Will Ferrell as Roald Dahl
3.6 "Games"
Taran Killam as Bobby Fischer
3.11 "Inventors"
Chris Parnell as Thomas Edison
4.1 "Great Escapes"
Chris Parnell as Charles Joughin
4.2 "Legends"
Kyle Mooney as Sam Patch
4.3 "Bar Fights"
Vanessa Bayer as Carrie Nation
4.4 "The Roosevelts"
Rob Riggle as Theodore Roosevelt
4.5 "Scoundrels"
Taran Killam as Lord Gordon Gordon
4.8 "Food"
Michael McKean as Arthur Jell
Michaela Watkins as Julia Child
4.10 "Shit Shows"
Jenny Slate as herself
David Koechner as Edwin Forrest
5.2 "Dangerous Minds"
Taran Killam as Jack Parsons
5.6 "Underdogs"
David Koechner as John Pastore
5.7 "Drunk Mystery"
Kyle Mooney as himself
Taran Killam as D.B. Cooper
Vanessa Bayer as Mary Gillespie
6.1 "Are You Afraid of the Drunk?"
Will Ferrell as Frankenstein's Monster
6.2 "National Parks"
David Koechner as Theodore Roosevelt
6.6 "Drugs"
Chris Parnell as Carl Sagan
6.8 "Drunk Mystery Pt. 2"
Taran Killam as himself
Bobby Moynihan as James T. Callender
6.9 "Derek Waters Believe It Or Not"
Taran Killam as John Alfred Preston
6.13 "Whistleblowers"
Vanessa Bayer as Martha Mitchell
25 notes · View notes
voyagedansla-lune · 4 years
Text
In other words, a list of books almost everyone pretend to have read:
1. Pride and Prejudice – Jane Austen
2. The Lord of the Rings
3. Jane Eyre – Charlotte Bronte
4. Harry Potter Series – JK Rowling (All)
5. To Kill a Mockingbird (Harper Lee)
6. The Bible
7. Wuthering Heights - Emily Brontë
8. 1984 (George Orwell)
9. His Dark Materials – Philip Pullman
10. Great Expectations – Charles Dickens
11. Little Women (Louisa May Alcott)
12. Tess of the D'urbervilles - Thomas Hardy
13. Catch-22 (Joseph Heller)
14. Complete Works of Shakespeare
15. Rebecca – Daphne Du Maurier
16. The Hobbit – JRR Tolkien
17. Birdsong – Sebastian Faulks
18. The Catcher in the Rye
19. The Time Traveler's Wife – Audrey Niffenegger
20. Middlemarch – George Eliot
21. Gone With the Wind – Margaret Mitchell
22. The Great Gatsby (F. Scott Fitzgerald)
23. Bleak House – Charles Dickens
24. War and Peace – Leo Tolstoy
25. The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy (Douglas Adams)
26. Brideshead Revisited – Evelyn Waugh
27. Crime and Punishment – Fyodor Dostoyevsky
28. The Grapes of Wrath (John Steinbeck)
29. Alice in Wonderland – Lewis Carroll
30. The Wind in the Willows (Kenneth Grahame)
31. Anna Karenina
32. David Copperfield – Charles Dickens
33. Chronicles of Narnia – CS Lewis
34. Emma – Jane Austen
35. Persuasion (Jane Austen)
36. The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe (C.S.Lewis)
37. Kite Runner (Khaled Hosseini)
38. Captain Corelli'S Mandolin – Louis De Berniere
39. Memoirs of a Geisha - Arthur Golden
40. Winnie-The-Pooh (A. A. Milne)
41. Animal Farm – George Orwell
42. The Da Vinci Code - Dan Brown
43. One Hundred Years of Solitude - Gabriel Garcia Marquez
44. A Prayer for Owen Meany – John Irving
45. The Woman in White (Wilkie Collins)
46. Anne of Green Gables – LM Montgomery
47. Far From the Madding Crowd - Thomas Hardy
48. The Handmaid's Tale (Margaret Atwood)
49. Lord of the Flies (William Golding)
50. Atonement (Ian Mcewan)
51. Life of Pi - Yann Martel
52. Dune (Frank Herbert)
53. Cold Comfort Farm - Stella Gibbons
54. Sense and Sensibility (Jane Austen)
55. A Suitable Boy – Vikram Seth
56. The Shadow of the Wind – Carlos Ruiz Zafon
57. A Tale of Two Cities (Charles Dickens)
58. Brave New World (Aldous Huxley)
59. The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time – Mark Haddon
60. Love in the Time of Cholera
61. Of Mice and Men – John Steinbeck
62. Lolita (Vladimir Nabokov)
63. The Secret History - Donna Tartt
64. The Lovely Bones - Alice Sebold
65. Count of Monte Cristo – Alexandre Dumas
66. On the Road (Jack Kerouac)
67. Jude the Obscure – Thomas Hardy
68. Bridget Jones's Diary (Helen Fielding)
69. Midnight'S Children – Salman Rushdie
70. Moby Dick – Herman Melville
71. Oliver Twist - Charles Dickens
72. Dracula – Bram Stoker
73. The Secret Garden - Frances Hodgson
74. Notes From a Small Island - Bill Bryson
75. Ulysses - James Joyce
76. The Bell Jar (Sylvia Plath)
77. Swallows and Amazons – Arthur Ransome
78. Germinal – Emile Zola
79. Vanity Fair – William Makepeace Thackeray
80. Possession (Byatt)
81. A Christmas Carol – Charles Dickens
82. Cloud Atlas (David Mitchell)
83. The Colour Purple - Alice Walker
84. The Remains of the Day (Kazuo Ishiguro)
85. Madame Bovary
86. A Fine Balance – Rohinton Mistry
87. Charlotte's Web - EB White (E.B. White)
88. The Five People You Meet in Heaven – Mitch Albom
89. Adventures of Sherlock Holmes – Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
90. The Faraway Tree Collection - Enid Blyton
91. Heart of Darkness – Joseph Conrad
92. The Little Prince - Antoine De Saint Exupery
93. The Wasp Factory - Iain Banks
94. Watership Down - Richard Adams
95. A Confederacy of Dunces – John Kennedy Toole
96. A Town Like Alice – Nevil Shute
97. The Three Musketeers - Alexandre Dumas
98. Hamlet (William Shakespeare)
99. Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (Roald Dahl)
100. Les Miserables – Victor Hugo
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diaspora9ja · 4 years
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2020 AAAS Fellows approved by the AAAS Council
In October 2020, the Council of the American Affiliation for the Development of Science elected 489 members as Fellows of AAAS. These people can be acknowledged for his or her contributions to science and know-how in the course of the 2021 AAAS Annual Assembly. Introduced by part affiliation, they’re:
Part on Agriculture, Meals, and Renewable Sources
Ann M. Bartuska, Sources for the Future
Carl Bernacchi, U.S. Division of Agriculture – Agricultural Analysis Service
Amy O. Charkowski, Colorado State Univ.
Clarice J. Coyne, U.S. Division of Agriculture – Agricultural Analysis Service
Geoffrey E. Dahl, Univ. of Florida
Roch E. Gaussoin, Univ. of Nebraska-Lincoln
Patrick M. Hayes, Oregon State Univ.
Thomas J. (TJ) Higgins, CSIRO Agriculture and Meals (Australia)
Nancy Collins Johnson, Northern Arizona Univ.
Shibu Jose, Univ. of Missouri
Daniel Kliebenstein, Univ. of California, Davis
Rosemary Loria, Univ. of Florida
Shailaja Okay. Mani, Baylor Faculty of Drugs
Rafael Muñoz-Carpena, Univ. of Florida
David D. Myrold, Oregon State Univ.
Okay. Raja Reddy, Mississippi State Univ.
Jean Ristaino, North Carolina State Univ.
Jeanne Romero-Severson, Univ. of Notre Dame
Pablo Juan Ross, Univ. of California, Davis
Jennifer L. Tank, Univ. of Notre Dame
William F. Tracy, Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison
Part on Anthropology
Margaret W. Conkey, Univ. of California, Berkeley
Anne Grauer, Loyola Univ. Chicago
Debbie Guatelli-Steinberg, The Ohio State Univ.
Edward B. Liebow, American Anthropological Affiliation
J. Terrence McCabe, Univ. of Colorado Boulder
Denise Fay-Shen Su, Cleveland Museum of Pure Historical past
Part on Astronomy
Nancy Susan Brickhouse, Harvard-Smithsonian Middle for Astrophysics
John E. Carlstrom, Univ. of Chicago
Sean Carroll, California Institute of Expertise
Timothy Heckman, Johns Hopkins Univ.
Paul Martini, The Ohio State Univ.
Norman Murray, Canadian Institute for Theoretical Astrophysics
Joan R. Najita, Nationwide Science Basis’s NOIRLab
Liese van Zee, Indiana Univ.
Risa Wechsler, Stanford Univ.
Ellen G. Zweibel, Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison
Part on Atmospheric and Hydrospheric Science
Ghassem R. Asrar, Universities House Analysis Affiliation
Elizabeth Boyer, Pennsylvania State
Deborah Bronk, Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences
Rong Fu, Univ. of California, Los Angeles
Isaac Held, Princeton Univ. Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences Program
Forrest M. Hoffman, Oak Ridge Nationwide Laboratory
William Okay. M. Lau, Univ. of Maryland
Zhengyu Liu, The Ohio State Univ.
Natalie Mahowald, Cornell Univ.
Sally McFarlane, U.S. Division of Power
Jerry Schubel, Aquarium of the Pacific (Retired)
Patricia L. Wiberg, Univ. of Virginia
Part on Organic Sciences
Mary Catherine Aime, Purdue Univ.
Suresh Okay. Alahari, Louisiana State Univ. Well being Sciences Middle Faculty of Drugs
Gladys Alexandre, Univ. of Tennessee, Knoxville
Craig Reece Allen, Univ. of Nebraska-Lincoln
Sonia M. Altizer, Univ. of Georgia
Swathi Arur, The Univ. of Texas MD Anderson Most cancers Middle
Alison M. Bell, Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Elizabeth T. Borer, Univ. of Minnesota
Lisa Brooks, Nationwide Human Genome Analysis Institute
John Michael Burke, Univ. of Georgia
George A. Calin, The Univ. of Texas MD Anderson Most cancers Middle
Andrew G. Campbell, Brown Univ.
Alice Y. Cheung, Univ. of Massachusetts Amherst
Anita S. Chong, Univ. of Chicago
Gregory P. Copenhaver, Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Leah E. Cowen, Univ. of Toronto (Canada)
Dana Crawford, Case Western Reserve Univ.
Charles F. Delwiche, Univ. of Maryland, Faculty Park
Diana M. Downs, Univ. of Georgia
Jeffrey Dukes, Purdue Univ.
Peter Dunn, Univ. of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
Jonathan Eisen, Univ. of California, Davis
Eva Engvall, Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Institute
Valerie Eviner, Univ. of California, Davis
Philip Martin Fearnside, INPA – Nationwide Institute of Amazonian Analysis (Brazil)
Gloria Cruz Ferreira, Univ. of South Florida
J. Patrick Fitch, Los Alamos Nationwide Laboratory
John W. Fitzpatrick, Cornell Univ.
Christopher Francklyn, Univ. of Vermont
Serita Frey, Univ. of New Hampshire
Andrea L. Graham, Princeton Univ.
Michael William Grey, Dalhousie Univ. (Canada)
Karen Jeanne Guillemin, Univ. of Oregon
Paul Hardin, Texas A&M Univ.
Stacey Lynn Harmer, Univ. of California, Davis
Jessica Hellmann, Univ. of Minnesota
Nancy Marie Hollingsworth, Stony Brook Univ.
Charles Hong, Univ. of Maryland Faculty of Drugs
Laura Foster Huenneke, Northern Arizona Univ.
Mark O. Huising, Univ. of California, Davis
Travis Huxman, Univ. of California, Irvine
Kenneth D. Irvine, Rutgers, The State Univ. of New Jersey
Ursula Jakob, Univ. of Michigan
Janet Okay. Jansson, Pacific Northwest Nationwide Laboratory
Susan Kaech, Salk Institute for Organic Research
Patricia Kiley, Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison
Joan Kobori, Agouron Institute
Barbara N. Kunkel, Washington Univ. in St. Louis
Armand Michael Kuris, Univ. of California, Santa Barbara
Pui-Yan Kwok, Univ. of California, San Francisco
Douglas Landis, Michigan State Univ.
Samuel J. Landry, Tulane Univ. Faculty of Drugs
Eaton Edwards Lattman, Univ. at Buffalo, the State Univ. of New York (Retired)
Rodney L. Levine, Nationwide Coronary heart, Lung, and Blood Institute/NIH
Han Liang, The Univ. of Texas MD Anderson Most cancers Middle
Senjie Lin, Univ. of Connecticut
Hiten D. Madhani, Univ. of California, San Francisco
Jennifer B. H. Martiny, Univ. of California, Irvine
John McCutcheon, Arizona State Univ.
Rima McLeod, Univ. of Chicago
Paula McSteen, Univ. of Missouri-Columbia
Matthew Meyerson, Dana-Farber Most cancers Institute/Harvard Medical Faculty
Constance Millar, U.S. Forest Service
Lisa A. Miller, Univ. of California, Davis
Beronda L. Montgomery, Michigan State Univ.
Tuli Mukhopadhyay, Indiana Univ.
Katsuhiko (Katsu) Murakami. Pennsylvania State Univ.
William J. Murphy, Texas A&M Univ.
Rama Natarajan, Metropolis of Hope Nationwide Medical Middle
Nicholas E. Navin, The Univ. of Texas MD Anderson Most cancers Middle
Anthony V. Nicola, Washington State Univ.
Basil Nikolau, Iowa State Univ.
E. Michael Ostap, Univ. of Pennsylvania Perelman Faculty of Drugs
Franklin Wayne Outten, Univ. of South Carolina
Abraham Palmer, Univ. of California, San Diego
Maria C. Pellegrini, W. M. Keck Basis
Len Pennacchio, Lawrence Berkeley Nationwide Laboratory
Philip S. Perlman, Howard Hughes Medical Institute.
James Pinckney, Univ. of South Carolina
Judith A. Potashkin, Rosalind Franklin Univ. of Drugs and Science
P. Hemachandra Reddy, Texas Tech Univ. Well being Sciences Middle
William S. Reznikoff, Marine Organic Laboratory
Joan T. Richtsmeier, Pennsylvania State Univ.
Isidore Rigoutsos, Thomas Jefferson Univ.
Charles Rock, St. Jude Kids’s Analysis Hospital
Antonis Rokas, Vanderbilt Univ.
Jeffrey Ross-Ibarra, Univ. of California, Davis
James A. Roth, Iowa State Univ.
Daniel Schaid, Mayo Clinic
G. Eric Schaller, Dartmouth Univ.
Jeremiah Scharf, Massachusetts Basic Hospital
Karen Sears, Univ. of California, Los Angeles
Mark Seielstad, Univ. of California, San Francisco
Peter Setlow, UConn Well being
Sally Shaywitz, Yale Univ.
Alan Shuldiner, Univ. of Maryland Faculty of Drugs
Nathan Michael Springer, Univ. of Minnesota
Jason E. Stajich, Univ. of California, Riverside
James V. Staros, Univ. of Massachusetts Amherst
David Johnston Stewart, Chilly Spring Harbor Laboratory
Joel A. Swanson, Univ. of Michigan Medical Faculty
Rick L. Tarleton, Univ. of Georgia
Nektarios Tavernarakis, Basis for Analysis and Expertise-Hellas/Univ. of Crete Medical (Greece)
Eric W. Triplett, Univ. of Florida
Geoffrey C. Trussell, Northeastern Univ.
Walter Reinhart Tschinkel, Florida State Univ.
Kan Wang, Iowa State Univ.
Pleasure Ward, Univ. of Kansas
Vassie Ware, Lehigh Univ.
Stephen T. Warren, Emory Univ. Faculty of Drugs
Wyeth W. Wasserman, BC Kids’s Hospital/Univ. of British Columbia (Canada)
Daniel J. Wozniak, The Ohio State Univ.
Jin-Rong Xu, Purdue Univ.
Soojin Yi, Georgia Institute of Expertise
Havva Fitnat Yildiz, Univ. of California, Santa Cruz
Fanxiu Zhu, Florida State Univ.
Lee Zou, Massachusetts Basic Hospital Most cancers Middle/Harvard Medical Faculty
Part on Chemistry
José R. Almirall, Florida Worldwide Univ.
Rohit Bhargava, Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Paul V. Braun, Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Joan Blanchette Broderick, Montana State Univ.
Felix (Phil) N. Castellano, North Carolina State Univ.
David E. Chavez, Los Alamos Nationwide Laboratory
Kelsey D. Prepare dinner, Nationwide Science Basis
Yi Cui, Stanford Univ.
Wibe A. de Jong, Lawrence Berkeley Nationwide Laboratory
William Dichtel, Northwestern Univ.
Vishva Dixit, Genentech, Inc.
Paul J. Dyson, Swiss Federal Institute of Expertise Lausanne
Laura Gagliardi, Univ. of Chicago
Jiaxing Huang, Northwestern Univ.
Prashant Okay. Jain, Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Phillip E. Klebba, Kansas State Univ.
Kenneth L. Knappenberger, Pennsylvania State Univ.
Yamuna Krishnan, Univ. of Chicago
Jason S. Lewis, Memorial Sloan Kettering Most cancers Middle
Hongbin Li, Univ. of British Columbia (Canada)
David R. Liu, Harvard Univ.
Tianbo Liu, Univ. of Akron
Tadeusz (Ted) Franciszek Molinski, Univ. of California, San Diego
Janet R. Morrow, Univ. at Buffalo, the State Univ. of New York
John W. Olesik, The Ohio State Univ.
Nicola Pohl, Indiana Univ.
Daniel Raftery, Univ. of Washington
Michael D. Sevilla, Oakland Univ.
David S. Sholl, Georgia Institute of Expertise
Sara E. Skrabalak, Indiana Univ.
Brian House, North Carolina State Univ.
Raymond C. Stevens, Univ. of Southern California
James M. Takacs, Univ. of Nebraska-Lincoln
Chuanbing Tang, Univ. of South Carolina
H. Holden Thorp, Science household of journals
Gregory Tschumper, Univ. of Mississippi
Christopher D. Vanderwal, Univ. of California, Irvine
Nathalie A. Wall, Univ. of Florida
Rory Waterman, Univ. of Vermont
Charles Weschler, Rutgers, The State Univ. of New Jersey
Robert F. Williams, Los Alamos Nationwide Laboratory
Frankie Wooden-Black, Northern Oklahoma Faculty
Karen Wooley, Texas A&M Univ.
Peidong Yang, Univ. of California, Berkeley
Part on Dentistry and Oral Well being Sciences
Renny Theodore Franceschi, Univ. of Michigan
Dennis F. Mangan, Chalk Discuss Science Challenge
Frank C. Nichols, Univ. of Connecticut Faculty of Dental Drugs
Stefan Hans-Klaus Ruhl, Univ. at Buffalo, the State Univ. of New York
Part on Training
James Bell, Middle for Advancing of Casual Science Training.
Michael J. Dougherty, GenomEducation Consulting/Univ. of Colorado Faculty of Drugs
John Kermit Haynes, Morehouse Faculty
Henry Vincent Jakubowski, Faculty of St. Benedict/St. John’s Univ.
Stacey Kiser, Lane Group Faculty
Richard L. Kopec, St. Edward’s Univ.
Xiufeng Liu, Univ. at Buffalo, the State Univ. of New York
David J. Marcey, California Lutheran Univ.
Marsha Lakes Matyas, Analysis for Excellence
Linda Nicholas-Figueroa, Iḷisaġvik Faculty
Dee Unglaub Silverthorn, The Univ. of Texas at Austin Dell Medical Faculty
Edward J. Smith, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State Univ.
David W. Szymanski, Bentley Univ.
Edna Tan, Univ. of North Carolina at Greensboro
Stephen Younger, TriCore Reference Laboratories
Hinda Zlotnik, Retired
Part on Engineering
Mohammad S. Alam, Texas A&M Univ.
Laura Albert, College of Wisconsin-Madison
William R. Bickford, L’Oréal, Inc.
L. Catherine Brinson, Duke Univ.
Ruben G. Carbonell, North Carolina State Univ.
Michael L. Chabinyc, Univ. of California, Santa Barbara
Manish Chhowalla, Univ. of Cambridge (U.Okay.)
Edwin Okay. P. Chong, Colorado State Univ.
Kristen P. Fixed, Iowa State Univ.
Susan Daniel, Cornell Univ.
Angela Phillips Diaz, Univ. of California, San Diego
Elizabeth C. Dickey, North Carolina State Univ.
Peter S. Fedkiw, North Carolina State Univ.
Eric M. Furst, Univ. of Delaware
Sharon Gerecht, Johns Hopkins Univ.
Richard D. Gitlin, Univ. of South Florida
Michael C. Jewett, Northwestern Univ.
Vistasp M. Karbhari, The Univ. of Texas at Arlington
Michael R. Kessler, North Dakota State Univ.
Behrokh Khoshnevis, Univ. of Southern California
Kristi L. Kiick, Univ. of Delaware
Catherine Klapperich, Boston Univ.
Gerhard Klimeck, Purdue Univ.
Sanjay Kumar, Univ. of California, Berkeley
Ju Li, Massachusetts Institute of Expertise
JoAnn Slama Lighty, Boise State Univ.
Ivan M. Lorković, Raytheon Imaginative and prescient Techniques
Laura Marcu, Univ. of California, Davis
Sudip Okay. Mazumder, Univ. of Illinois at Chicago
Triantafillos (Lakis) Mountziaris, Univ. of Massachusetts Amherst
Uday B. Pal, Boston Univ.
Ah-Hyung (Alissa) Park, Columbia Univ.
Hridesh Rajan, Iowa State Univ.
Gintaras Reklaitis, Purdue Univ.
Robert Oliver Ritchie, Univ. of California, Berkeley
J. Paul Robinson, Purdue Univ.
Nancy R. Sottos, Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Georgia (Gina) D. Tourassi, Oak Ridge Nationwide Laboratory
Paul J. Turinsky, North Carolina State Univ.
John L. Volakis, Florida Worldwide Univ.
Qing Wang, Pennsylvania State Univ.
Lan Yang, Washington Univ. in St. Louis
Part on Basic Curiosity in Science and Engineering
Nan Broadbent, Seismological Society of America
Tinsley Davis, Nationwide Affiliation of Science Writers
Linda D. Harrar, WGBH Instructional Basis
James H. Lambert, Univ. of Virginia
Andrew D. Maynard, Arizona State Univ.
Jeremy B. Searle, Cornell Univ.
Ronald M. Thom, Pacific Northwest Nationwide Laboratory (Emeritus)
Cliff Wang, U.S. Military Analysis Workplace/North Carolina State Univ.
Nan Yao, Princeton Univ.
Part on Geology and Geography
Li An, San Diego State Univ.
David Cairns, Texas A&M Univ.
Richard Walter Carlson, Carnegie Establishment for Science
Charles B. (Chuck) Connor, Univ. of South Florida
Peter B. de Menocal, Woods Gap Oceanographic Establishment
Andrea Donnellan, NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory
Joshua S. Fu, Univ. of Tennessee, Knoxville
George Helz, Univ. of Maryland, Faculty Park
Tessa M. Hill, Univ. of California, Davis
David A. Hodell, Univ. of Cambridge (U.Okay.)
(Max) Qinhong Hu, The Univ. of Texas at Arlington
Hitoshi Kawakatsu, The Univ. of Tokyo (Japan)
Sheryl Luzzadder-Seashore, The Univ. of Texas at Austin
Vicki McConnell, Geological Society of America
Carolyn Olson, U.S. Geological Survey
Lewis A. Owen, North Carolina State Univ.
David Sandwell, Scripps Establishment of Oceanography
Nathan Dale Sheldon, Univ. of Michigan
Could Yuan, The Univ. of Texas at Dallas
Part on Historical past and Philosophy of Science
Colin Allen, Univ. of Pittsburgh
Rachel Ankeny, Univ. of Adelaide (Australia)
David Cassidy, Hofstra Univ.
Marsha L. Richmond, Wayne State Univ.
Part on Industrial Science and Expertise
Suresh Okay. Bhargava, RMIT Univ. (Australia)
Aaron Dominguez, Catholic Univ. of America
Johney B. Inexperienced, Nationwide Renewable Power Laboratory
James D. Kindscher, Univ. of Kansas Medical Middle
Daniela Rus, Massachusetts Institute of Expertise
Steven Suib, Univ. of Connecticut
Erik B. Svedberg, Nationwide Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Drugs
Part on Data, Computing, and Communication
James Allen, Univ. of Rochester/Institute for Human and Machine Cognition
James Hampton Anderson, Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Carla Brodley, Northeastern Univ.
Lorrie Cranor, Carnegie Mellon Univ.
Pedro Domingos, Univ. of Washington
Kenneth D. Forbus, Northwestern Univ.
Yolanda Gil, Univ. of Southern California
Leana Golubchik, Univ. of Southern California
Yuri Gurevich, Univ. of Michigan
Murat Kantarcioglu, The Univ. of Texas at Dallas
Maria Klawe, Harvey Mudd Faculty
Peter M. Kogge, Univ. of Notre Dame
Patrick Drew McDaniel, Pennsylvania State Univ.
Debasis Mitra, Columbia Univ.
John Douglas Owens, Univ. of California, Davis
Timothy Mark Pinkston, Univ. of Southern California
William C. Regli, Univ. of Maryland, Faculty Park
Munindar P. Singh, North Carolina State Univ.
Anuj Srivastava, Florida State Univ.
David Touretzky, Carnegie Mellon Univ.
Jeffrey S. Vetter, Oak Ridge Nationwide Laboratory
Toby Walsh, Univ. of New South Wales – Sydney and CSIRO Data61 (Australia)
Daniel S. Weld, Univ. of Washington/Allen Institute for Synthetic Intelligence
Hui Xiong, Rutgers, The State Univ. of New Jersey
Part on Linguistics and Language Sciences
John Baugh, Washington Univ. in St. Louis
Bryan Gick, Univ. of British Columbia (Canada)
Colin Phillips, Univ. of Maryland
Joan A. Sereno, Univ. of Kansas
Matthew W. Wagers, Univ. of California, Santa Cruz
Part on Arithmetic
Harold P. Boas, Texas A&M Univ.
Leslie Hogben, Iowa State Univ./American Institute of Arithmetic
Kristin Lauter, Microsoft Analysis
Paul Okay. Newton, Univ. of Southern California
Esmond G. Ng, Lawrence Berkeley Nationwide Laboratory
Karen Starvation Parshall, Univ. of Virginia
Malgorzata Peszynska, Oregon State Univ.
Jack Xin, Univ. of California, Irvine
Part on Medical Sciences
Stephen B. Baylin, Johns Hopkins Univ. Faculty of Drugs
Barbara D. Beck, Gradient
Yasmine Belkaid, Nationwide Institute of Allergy and Infectious Ailments/NIH
Barry B. Bercu, Univ. of South Florida
Keith C. Cheng, Pennsylvania State Univ. Faculty of Drugs
Shi-Yuan Cheng, Northwestern Univ. Feinberg Faculty of Drugs
Ronald W. Davis, Stanford Univ.
Catherine Drennan, Massachusetts Institute of Expertise
Dongsheng Duan, Univ. of Missouri
Carol Fuzeti Elias, Univ. of Michigan
Hudson Freeze, Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Institute
Marcia B. Goldberg, Massachusetts Basic Hospital/Harvard T. H. Chan Faculty of Public Well being
David H. Gutmann, Washington Univ. Faculty of Drugs in St. Louis
Thomas H. Haines, Metropolis Faculty of New York (Retired)
Raymond C. Harris, Vanderbilt Univ. Faculty of Drugs
Jeffrey P. Krischer, Univ. of South Florida
Thomas E. Lane, Univ. of California, Irvine
W. Jonathan Lederer, Univ. of Maryland Faculty of Drugs
Bruce T. Liang, Univ. of Connecticut Faculty of Drugs
Jeffrey D. Lifson, Frederick Nationwide Laboratory for Most cancers Analysis
Faina Linkov, Duquesne Univ.
Shan-Lu Liu, The Ohio State Univ.
Karl L. Magleby, Univ. of Miami, Faculty of Drugs
Sendurai Mani, The Univ. of Texas MD Anderson Most cancers Middle
Douglas L. Mann, Washington Univ. Faculty of Drugs in St. Louis
Rodger P. McEver, Oklahoma Medical Analysis Basis
Ross Erwin McKinney Jr., Affiliation of American Medical Schools
Hiroyoshi Nishikawa, Nationwide Most cancers Middle/Nagoya Univ. (Japan)
Richard M. Peek, Vanderbilt Univ. Medical Middle
Sallie R. Permar, Duke Univ.
W. Kimryn Rathmell, Vanderbilt Univ. Medical Middle
D. Nageshwar Reddy, Asian Institute of Gastroenterology (India)
John Jeffrey Reese, Vanderbilt Univ. Medical Middle
Alan Saghatelian, Salk Institute for Organic Research
Suzanne Scarlata, Worcester Polytechnic Institute
Brian Leslie Strom, Rutgers, The State Univ. of New Jersey
Jie Tian, Chinese language Academy of Sciences (China)
Jerrold Ross Turner, Brigham and Ladies’s Hospital/Harvard Medical Faculty
Matthew Bret Weinger, Vanderbilt Univ. Medical Middle
Part on Neuroscience
Patrick Aebischer, Swiss Federal Institute of Expertise Lausanne
Michel Baudry, Western Univ. of Well being Sciences
Nicole Calakos, Duke Univ.
Gabriel Corfas, Univ. of Michigan
Aaron DiAntonio, Washington Univ. Faculty of Drugs in St. Louis
Nita A. Farahany, Duke Univ.
Eva Lucille Feldman, Univ. of Michigan
Eberhard Erich Fetz, Univ. of Washington
Alan L. Goldin, Univ. of California, Irvine
Steve A. N. Goldstein, Univ. of California, Irvine Faculty of Drugs
John Krystal, Yale Univ.
Debomoy (Deb) Okay. Lahiri, Indiana Univ.
Stephen G. Lisberger, Duke Univ.
Wendy Blair Macklin, Univ. of Colorado Denver
Stefan M. Pulst, Univ. of Utah
Nirao M. Shah, Stanford Univ.
Steven L. Small, The Univ. of Texas at Dallas
Paul Taghert, Washington Univ. Faculty of Drugs in St. Louis
Rachel Tyndale, Univ. of Toronto (Canada)/Centre for Dependancy and Psychological Well being
Linda Jo Van Eldik, Univ. of Kentucky Faculty of Drugs
Part on Pharmaceutical Sciences
Patricia Babbitt, Univ. of California, San Francisco
Joseph R. Haywood, Michigan State Univ.
Julie A. Johnson, Univ. of Florida
Lyn H. Jones, Dana-Farber Most cancers Institute
M. N. V. Ravi Kumar, Texas A&M Univ.
Susan L. Mooberry, Univ. of Texas Well being Science Middle at San Antonio
Walter H. Moos, Univ. of California, San Francisco
Raymond Felix Schinazi, Emory Univ. Faculty of Drugs
Thomas D. Schmittgen, Univ. of Florida
Part on Physics
Charles H. Bennett, IBM Thomas J. Watson Analysis Middle
Eberhard Bodenschatz, Max Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self Group (Germany)
Steven E. Boggs, Univ. of California, San Diego
Jesse Brewer, Univ. of British Columbia (Canada)
Bulbul Chakraborty, Brandeis Univ.
Andre De Gouvea, Northwestern Univ.
Peter Fisher, Massachusetts Institute of Expertise
Chris L. Fryer, Los Alamos Nationwide Laboratory
Alexandra Gade, Michigan State Univ.
Graciela Gelmini, Univ. of California, Los Angeles
Neil Gershenfeld, Massachusetts Institute of Expertise
Tony Gherghetta, Univ. of Minnesota
Marcelo Jaime, Los Alamos Nationwide Laboratory
Spencer R. Klein, Lawrence Berkeley Nationwide Laboratory/Univ. of California, Berkeley Nationwide Laboratory/Univ. of California, Berkeley
Yuri V. Kovchegov, The Ohio State Univ.
Ying-Cheng Lai, Arizona State Univ.
Konrad W. Lehnert, Nationwide Institute of Requirements and Expertise/Univ. of Colorado Boulder
Manfred Lindner, Max Planck Institute for Nuclear Physics (Germany)
Eric Mazur, Harvard Univ.
Michael A. McGuire, Oak Ridge Nationwide Laboratory
Roberto Morandotti, INRS – Nationwide Institute of Scientif c Analysis (Canada)
Jason Petta, Princeton Univ.
Thomas Proffen, Oak Ridge Nationwide Laboratory
Laura J. Pyrak-Nolte, Purdue Univ.
Talat Shahnaz Rahman, Univ. of Central Florida
Susan Seestrom, Sandia Nationwide Laboratories
Jonathan V. Selinger, Kent State Univ.
Arthur John Stewart Smith, Princeton Univ.
Christopher Stubbs, Harvard Univ.
Nandini Trivedi, The Ohio State Univ.
Yuhai Tu, IBM Thomas J. Watson Analysis Middle
Clare Yu, Univ. of California, Irvine
Anvar A. Zakhidov, The Univ. of Texas at Dallas
Part on Psychology
Tammy D. Allen, Univ. of South Florida
Peter R. Finn, Indiana Univ.
Howard Goldstein, Univ. of South Florida
William (Invoice) P. Hetrick, Indiana Univ.
Stefan Hofmann, Boston Univ.
Elaine Hull, Florida State Univ.
Blair T. Johnson, Univ. of Connecticut
Angeline S. Lillard, Univ. of Virginia
Raymond G. Miltenberger, Univ. of South Florida
Jay Myung, The Ohio State Univ.
Steven L. Neuberg, Arizona State Univ.
Barbara A. Wanchisen, Nationwide Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Drugs
Cathy Spatz Widom, John Jay Faculty of Legal Justice
Part on Social, Financial, and Political Sciences
John Maron Abowd, U.S. Census Bureau/Cornell Univ.
Melissa S. Anderson, Univ. of Minnesota
Janet Field-Steffensmeier, The Ohio State Univ.
R. Alta Charo, Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison
Nazli Choucri, Massachusetts Institute of Expertise
Elizabeth Cooksey, The Ohio State Univ.
Paul Allen David, Stanford Univ.
Joane P. Nagel, Univ. of Kansas
Kristen Olson, Univ. of Nebraska-Lincoln
Susan E. Quick, Brown Univ.
Part on Societal Impacts of Science and Engineering
Gregg M. Garfin, Univ. of Arizona
Leah Gerber, Arizona State Univ.
Ramanan Laxminarayan, Middle for Illness Dynamics, Economics & Coverage/Princeton Univ.
Mary E. Maxon, Lawrence Berkeley Nationwide Laboratory
James Bradley Miller, Smithsonian Nationwide Museum of Pure Historical past
Oladele (Dele) A. Ogunseitan, Univ. of California, Irvine
Lawrence J. Satkowiak, Oak Ridge Nationwide Laboratory
Vaughan Charles Turekian, Nationwide Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Drugs
Part on Statistics
Sudipto Banerjee, Univ. of California, Los Angeles
David L. Banks, Duke Univ.
Deborah J. Donnell, Fred Hutchinson Most cancers Analysis Middle
Timothy C. Hesterberg, Google, Inc.
Qi Lengthy, Univ. of Pennsylvania
Ying Lu, Stanford Univ. Faculty of Drugs
Richard L. Smith, Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Elizabeth A. Stuart, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg Faculty of Public Well being
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lastloversarc · 4 years
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17 questions
Nickname: Moony
Zodiac Sign: Leo ascendant Virgo (I'm very much a Virgo)
Height: 1.68m
Hogwarts house: proud Hufflepuff
Last thing I googled: 'Ring cycle Valhalla'
Song stuck in my head: 'That time of year' from Olaf's Frozen Adventure
Following and followers: following 23, followers 49
Amount I sleep: varies wildly due to the fact I have a young child who likes to summon me to her beside at various times of the night
Lucky Numbers: I don't have any
Dream Job: eternal student
Wearing: black t-shirt and trackies
Favourite song(s): 'Just like heaven' by The Cure
Favourite instruments: strings, especially the cello (not that I can play it) and the electric guitar
Random Fact: I have recently taken up watercolour painting.
Favourite Authors: the Bronte sisters, Jane Austen, Victor Hugo, Patrick Gale, Adam Silvera, Becky Albertalli, Rainbow Rowell, Daphne du Maurier, Casey McQuiston, JK Rowling, Patrick Ness, Philip Pullman, Angie Thomas, Nicola Yoon, Stewart O'Nan, PG Wodehouse, Alan Hollinghurst, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Armistead Maupin, Stieg Larrson, Emily St John Mandel, Neil Gaiman, Melvin Burgess, Cassandra Clare, Roald Dahl and so many others.
Favourite Animal Noises: birdsong
Aesthetic: tired, bookwormish hobbit mum who dresses only for comfort
tagging: anyone who wants to do this
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eleonoregustafsson · 4 years
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Böcker jag läst 2016-2019
På den här bloggen har jag varje år lagt ut en lista på alla böcker jag läst ut från pärm till pärm under året som gått. Men 2016 blev det inte av, inte heller 2017 eller 2018. Framförallt för att listan inte kändes representativ. Under dessa år har olika jobbprojekt gjort att jag behövt ägna mig åt research där jag tvingats läsa utvalda delar i olika böcker istället för enskild bok i sin helhet. Under 2016-2017 läste jag t.ex. mycket om anabaptismen, men det är inget som märks i listan. Men nu har jag ändå bestämt mig för att lägga ut den. Kolla gärna in taggen #aureliaguläser på Instagram, där lägger jag ibland ut boktips och små recensioner (och där syns även de böcker jag inte läst från pärm till pärm utan bara utvalda delar). 
2019: 40 böcker
Böcker om Bibeln Sitting at the feet of Rabbi Jesus av Ann Spangler och Lois Tverberg A Life that’s good av Glenn Pemberton (om Ordspråksboken) Phoebe – a Story av Paula Gooder Hebrews av Mary Healy Priscilla av Ben Witherington III The Torah’s Vision of Worship av Samuel E. Balentine Reading Backwards av Richard B Hays
 Kristen ledarskapslitteratur If You Love Me av Matthw The Poor (på arabiska Matta-Al-Miskin) A Pastoral Rule for Today av Burgess, Andrews & Small
 Kristen uppbyggelselitteratur The Arena av Ignatius Brianchaninov How to be a Sinner av Peter Bouteneff 
Teologisk litteratur Paradiset åter av Tomas Einarsson Journyes of the Muslim Nation and the Christian Church av David W Shenk 
Kyrkohistoria The Patient Ferment of the Early Church av Alan Kreider 
Reportageböcker och dylikt Med Guds hjälp av Gabriel Byström Skärmhjärna av Anders Hansen Bön för Tjernobyl av Svetlana Aleksijevitj En piga bland pigor av Esther Blenda Nordström Tidens second hand av Svetlana Aleksijevitj A Time to Die av Nicolas Diat
 Romaner Beckomberga av Sara Stridsberg Bränn alla mina brev av Alex Schulman De kommer drunkna i sina mödrars tårar av Johannes Anyuru Vända hem av Yaa Gyasin Din stund på jorden av Vilhelm Moberg Den svalgula himlen av Kjell Westö Längtans flöde av Alva Dahl Pappaklausulen av Jonas Hassen Khemiri Sveas son av Lena Andersson Arv och miljö av Vigdis Hjort En dag i Ivan Deniosovitjs liv av Alexander Solsjenitsyn Konturer av Rachel Cusk Testamente av Nina Wähä Jag for ner till bror av Karin Smirnoff
 Biografier och självbiografisk litteratur Utan nåd – en rannsakan av Fredrik Virtanen Allt jag fått lära mig av Tara Westover Konsten att feja arabiska av Lina Liman Löparens hjärta av Markus Torgeby Vilket jävla solsken av Fatima Bremer En bokhandlares dagbok av Shaun Bythel
2018: 28 böcker
Romaner Never let me go av Kauzo Ishiguro Min kamp 3 av Karl-Ove Knausgård Mitt liv och ditt av Majgull Axelsson Min kamp 4 av Karl-Ove Knausgård Min kamp 5 av Karl-Ove Knausgård Min kamp 6 av Karl-Ove Knausgård Sågspån och led av Vibecke Olsson Amerikauret av Vibecke Olsson Själasörjaren av Christine Falkenland
 Kristen uppbyggelselitteratur Helig rot av Peter Halldorf (för 3e gången?) Hädanefter blir vägen väglös av Peter Halldorf  (för 4e gången?) Bottenkänning av Fredrik Lignell Through, with and in him av Shane Kapler 
Teologisk litteratur Välkomna varandra av red. Tomas Poletti Lundström 
Böcker om Bibeln Korsets mysterium av Agne Nordlander 
Kyrkohistoria The Forgotten Desert Mothers av Laura Swan Biskop Lewi Pethrus av Joel Halldof
 Självbiografisk litteratur Sorgens gåva är en vidgad blick av Patrik Hagman När livets stramas åt skärps blicken av Sofia Camerin När träden avlövas ser man längre från vårt kök av Tomas Sjödin (för 2a gången) Välkommen in i min garderob av Anton Lundholm Kristunge av Malin Aronsson En shetel i Stockholm av Kenneth Hermele Hur jag lärde mig att förstå världen av Hans Rosling Katolska läror av Gunnel Vallquist Livets ord: mina tio orimliga år som frälst. Del två, Förnyad & befriad av Tomas Arnroth 
2017: 32 böcker
Romaner Ta itu av Kristina Sandberg Den döende detektiven av Leif GW Persson Gilead av Marilyone Robinson De polygotta älskarna av Lina Wolff Tystnaden av Shusaku Endo Utvandrarna av Vilhelm Moberg (för 2a gången) Invandrarna av Vilhelm Moberg (för 2a gången) Nybyggarna av Vilhelm Moberg (för 2a gången) Bricken på Svartvik av Vibecke Olsson Min kamp 1 av Karl-Ove Knausgård Sista brevet till Sverige av Vilhelm Moberg (för 2a gången) Hemma av Marilynne Robinson Min kamp 2 av Karl-Ove Knausgård
 Reportageböcker och facklitteratur Halleluja Brasilien av Kajsa Norell Två systrar av Åsne Seiersdal Rom – en stads historia av Eskil Fagerström
 Självbiografiska böcker och biografier Letters from the Desert av Carlo Carreto Bonhoeffer av Eric Metaxas Det finns annan frukt än apelsiner av Jeanette Wintersson Livets ord: mina tio orimliga år som frälst. Del ett: de första åren av Tomas Arnroth Brev från en klostercell av Hans Gunnar Adén Århundrades kärlekshistoria av Märtha Tikanen
 Ledarskapslitteratur När du leder av Josefin Arenius Ledarens hantverk av Lennarth Hambre
 Kristen uppbyggelselitteratur Klostret av James Martin SJ (egentligen en roman) Kristliga råd och betraktelser av Fénelon Becoming Who You Are av James Martin SJ
 Teologisk litteratur Inte allena av Patrik Hagman & Joel Halldorf Martin Luther – hans liv, lära och influytande 500 år senare av Stephen J Nicholas Att älska sin nästas kyrka som sin egen av Peter Halldorf 
Böcker om Bibeln The Theology of the Letter to the Hebrews av Barnabas Lindars SSF
 2016: 38 böcker
Romaner Torka aldrig tårar utan handskar: Sjukdomen av Jonas Gardell Torka aldrig tårar utan handskar: Döden av Jonas Gardell Levande och döda i Winstord av Håkan Nesser Innan floden tar oss av Helena Thorfin Århundrades kärlekskrig av Ebba Witt-Brattström  Drömmen om Elim av Vibecke Olsson De ensamma av Håkan Nesser Flickvännen av Karolina Ramquist En mörderska bland oss av Hanna Kent Flykten av Jesús Carrasco De oroliga av Linn Ullman Glöm mig av Alex Schulman
 Facklitteratur Kunskapens frukt av Liv Strömquist
Reportageböcker Det heliga berget av William Dalrymple 
Självbiografisk litteratur, biografier, memoarer eller dylikt Brännpunkter av Thomas Merton  Jag sökte Allah och fann Jesus av Nabell Quresh Cigaretten efteråt av Horace Engdahl 96 lampor – om oss som brann och försvann av Jacob Langvik Min pappa Ann-Christine av Ester Roxberg Den sista grisen av Horace Engdahl Älskade terrorist av Anna Svadberg och Jesper Huor Och i Winerwald står träden kvar av Elisabeth Åsbrink Halvvägs av Fredrik Reinfeldt
 Kristen uppbyggelselitteratur Mellan skymning och mörker av Peter Halldorf Den brinnande busken av Lev Gillet Spår av den osynlige av Mikael Hallenius Den helige Ande i den kristnes personliga liv av Kallistos Ware Tron Allena av Bo Giertz (för 2a gången) Gud och intet mer av red. Ulrika Ljungman Contemplating the Trinity av Raniero Cantalamessa Du brinnande kärlekslåga av Peter Halldorf Den som hittar sin plats tar ingen annans av Tomas Sjödin
Kyrkohistoria Following in the Footsteps av Christ av Arnold Snyder Vindarna från väster av Per-Eive Berndtsson A Brief History of Spirituality av Pilip Sheldrake
Teologisk litteratur Som om allt förvandlats – Ekologi, ekonomi och eukaristi av William T Cavanaugh
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bountyman · 5 years
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ROLEPLAY HISTORY
The rules are simple! Post ten characters you’d like to role play as, have role played as, and might bring back. Then tag ten people to do the same (if you can’t think of ten characters, just write down however many you can and tag the same amount of people). Aside from that, please repost instead of reblogging!
CURRENTLY PLAYING:
*laughs and sweats nervously*
Solo blogs: Josh Randall (this blog, Wanted: Dead or Alive), Thomas Crown (The Thomas Crown Affair), Capt. Virgil Hilts (The Great Escape), Capt. Buzz Rickson (The War Lover), Lt. Frank Bullitt (Bullitt), Patrick Jane (The Mentalist), Agent Grace Van Pelt (The Mentalist), Nurse Christine Chapel (Star Trek), Sarah Miller (The Last of Us), Hercules (Hercules), Cinderella (Cinderella), Wendy Corduroy (Gravity Falls)
On multi (greatreverie): Adrian Monk (Monk), Arthur Shappey (Cabin Pressure), Capt. Martin Crieff (Cabin Pressure), Applejack (My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic), Fluttershy (My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic), Astrid Peth (Doctor Who), Aloy (Horizon: Zero Dawn), Bill Everett / Martian invader (Alfred Hitchcock Presents), “The Gambler” / Norman Dahl (Alfred Hitchcock Presents), Eustis Clay (Soldier In the Rain), George Fowler (The Great St. Louis Bank Robbery), Tom Horn (Tom Horn), Dr. Tomas Stockmann (An Enemy of the People), Steve Andrews (The Blob), Max Sand (Nevada Smith), Henry Thomas (Baby the Rain Must Fall), Henri Charrière (Papillon), David “Dave” Katz (The Umbrella Academy), Diego Hargreeves (The Umbrella Academy), Irene Moretti (OC for Klaus’ mother, The Umbrella Academy), Dick Grayson / Robin (Batman), Mr. Death (The Twilight Zone), The Narrator (The Twilight Zone), Mrs. Brisby (The Secret of NIMH), Karen Smith (Mean Girls), Luke Crain (The Haunting of Hill House), Maria Robotnik (Sonic Adventure 2: Battle), Starfire (Teen Titans), Pazu (Laputa: Castle in the Sky)
WANT TO PLAY:
This is such dangerous territory for me because I’m always tempted to write so many characters but...
Tommy Miller (The Last of Us) 
Terra Markov (Teen Titans)
Robin (but specifically Apprentice!Robin?, Teen Titans)
Beast Boy (Teen Titans)
A Zootopia OC of mine
An android OC of mine
Leo Valdez (The Heroes of Olympus)
Tohru Honda (Fruits Basket)
Sheeta (Laputa: Castle In the Sky)
One day I’d really love to develop and write some sort of cryptid oc... a vampire, werewolf, or honestly even just Mothman??? I’m very endeared by Mothman
HAVE PLAYED:
Aya Drevis (Mad Father)
Judy Hopps (Zootopia; deleted)
Molly Hooper (Sherlock)
Velvet Scarlatina (RWBY; deleted)
Tadashi Hamada (Big Hero 6; indefinite hiatus)
Adrien Agreste / Chat Noir (Miraculous Ladybug)
Ochako Urararka (Boku no Hero Academia / My Hero Academia)
The Tenth Doctor (Doctor Who)
The Meta-Crisis Doctor / Tentoo (Doctor Who; deleted)
Rose Tyler (Doctor Who; deleted)
WILL/WOULD PLAY AGAIN:
Oh, gosh, honestly, I could probably be encouraged into writing any of the ten, minus maybe Ochako just because I’m so far behind in BnHA. I first started writing her when the manga was starting to get translated by scan-sites so at the time I could count the number of people in the RPC on 1 hand... I’m glad it’s grown, but now I’m thoroughly intimidated! LOL
tagged by: @survivcl
tagging: gosh anyone who’d like to!
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diyeipetea · 6 years
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HDO 409. Splashgirl, Slagr, SkyDive Trio (HUBRO) [Podcast]
HDO 409. Splashgirl, Slagr, SkyDive Trio (HUBRO) [Podcast]
  Tres de las últimas novedades del interesante sello HUBRO son las protagonistas de la entrega 409 de HDO. Tal y como es costumbre en las propuestas de este catálogo, que forman una categoría musical en sí mismas, son habituales la diversidad de influencias (que pueden ir del folk al rock, tal y como ocurre con con las propuestas del programa), pasadas siempre, en mayor o menor medida, por la…
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enby-angel · 5 years
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Some lil self-care things I’ve found
Have a nice warm shower. You’ll feel nice and cleeaannnn
Brush your teeth. It’s amazing how much better you feel with minty fresh breath.
Listen to your fave upbeat songs. Dance around your room a lil, it’s fun!
Go for a walk if you can!
If you can’t, sit outside in the sunshiiiine for a bit
However if it is cold, snuggle up in a soft hoodie and pyjamas and a blanket and a hot chocolate and a good book
Speaking of books, read an easy book! I go back to Roald Dahl books all the time bc they’re easy and fun to read.
Or listen to an audiobook, you can get free trials for Audible from YouTubers or you can see if you can find an audiobook on YouTube!
Hot chocolate. Yummmmmmmmm
If you’re a person who shaves your legs, shave your legs! Smooooooth legs
Fluffy pillows. Fluffy blankets. Fluffy jumpers. Fluffy pants. s o f t
I play piano and that helps me chillax because you focus on that 
Grab a pen or a texta/marker/pen that’s non-toxic and doodle little things on your arm and hand. Flowers, butterflies, planets, stars, leaves, the Mona Lisa, it’s up to you~
Find some funny YouTubers to giggle at. (I recommend Get Good Gaming, they’re a LAN Party Gaming Channel and their GTAV and Golf It! videos are hilarious)
Find some stupid online games and play them. Go on Friv or Kizi or even fuckin Club Penguin. GET THOSE CARD JITSU BELTS
Mobile games work too, I’ve been playing “Empires & Puzzles”, “Legendary: Game of Heroes” and “Merge Dragons” heaps lately
Colour by Number games are also fun af
If you’re into ASMR, go do that
If you’re a makeup person, muck around with themed makeup or character-inspired makeup (a la the Sanders Sides themed makeup video on Thomas Sanders’s channel)
Remember to smile at least once every day! Smiling releases them Happy Chemicals in your brain, it’s true!
Remember that you are loved, even if you don’t think you are <3
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morethanaprincess-a · 5 years
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♩  URL SONG CHALLENGE  ♩
REPOST, DO NOT REBLOG
M Midnight Waltz - David Garrett
O Over the Love - Florence + The Machine
R Ready to Start - Arcade Fire
E Electric Feel - MGMT
T That's What You Get - Paramore
H Heads Will Roll- Yeah Yeah Yeahs
A All We Do - Oh Wonder
N Natural's Not In It - Gang of Four
A Aeon - Nick Murray
P Problem - Natalia Kills
R Rock You Like a Hurricane - Scorpions
I Iris - The Goo Goo Dolls
N Nero - Thomas Bergersen
C Castles in the Sky - Ian van Dahl
E Erase / Rewind - The Cardigans
S Save Tonight - Eagle-Eye Cherry
S Speechless (full) - Naomi Scott
Tagged: @kazouda
Tagging: You!
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