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#sarah hambly
nellasbookplanet · 9 months
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Book recs: many worlds, portal fantasy edition
A typical portal fantasy follows a human from our world who steps through a portal into a magical land (think of narnia). But there are many fun variations of this trope! Sometimes it's the magical people who come to our world; sometimes we get to follow people who have returned from their adventures and are seeking for new meaning; sometimes our world isn't involved at all. As might be assumed, most portal fantasies are fantasy stories, but some lean more toward magical realism, others toward sci-fi. It's a fun spectrum!
I'm separating portal fantasies from alternate timelines/parallel worlds type stories (which will get their own rec post soon-ish). I also generally do not include stories where the character travels to fairyland/land of the dead/etc as those feel like a genre of their own to me, but the lines between them sometimes blur and this is, obviously, a subjective list.
(Titles marked with * are my personal favorites)
Other book rec posts:
Really cool fantasy worldbuilding, really cool sci-fi worldbuilding, dark sapphic romances, mermaid books, vampire books
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For more detailed info on the books, continue under the cut.
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The Magicians (Magicians trilogy) by Lev Grossman*
You may not have heard of this book, but you have probably heard of the scyfy series of the same name that crashed and burned a few years ago. This is the book it’s based on (pros: it doesn’t end in the same way; cons: it doesn’t feature the juggernaut ship of the show in any major way). For the uninitiated: features what is essentially a (secret) magic university for tormented geniuses. When he finds magic isn't enough to grant him happiness, main character Quentin goes digging into the truth surrounding his favorite childhood books searching for meaning, and finds out that the magical other world they describe might not be so fictional after all.
Stray (Touchstone trilogy) by Andrea K. Höst*
Young adult told through diary entries. Including this as a portal fantasy is a bit of a stretch, but essentially: Cassandra unkowingly walks through a wormhole and lands herself on another planet, where she has to survive on her own until she is rescued. Soon she finds herself embroiled in a war between creatures from dreamlike other dimensions and the people who saved her. Skirts the line between scifi and fantasy (it has psychic space ninjas!), but generally feels mostly like sci-fi. Absolutely fantastic worldbuilding.
In Other Lands by Sarah Rees Brennan*
Young adult. Kids who can walk between our world and a magical one get recruited into a magical school that trains them either to be fighters or sort-of diplomats. Our lead decides that fighting is stupid and that he’s going to peacefully solve every conflict ever, all while being the most delightfully obnoxious little brat possible and getting incolved in the most bisexual love triangle imaginable. Very good, funny, and heart-felt coming of age story.
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NPCs (Spells, Swords, & Stealth series) by Drew Hayes*
This one only counts as a portal fantasy on a technicality and on the fact that I love it and this is my list. Follows a group of DnD players whose characters immediately die, forcing them to make new characters, and, parallel to their adventures, a group of NPCs from the fantasy world who find themselves forced to take the place of a party of recently deceased adventurers. The two parties do cross path on occasion, but there aren't actually any portals involved as all characters (mostly) stay in their respective world. A fun and light-hearted adventure that turns a lot of the expected tropes of the genre and of character archetypes on their heads.
The Time of the Dark (The Darwath series) by Barbara Hambly
1982 classic. Medieval history student Gil and biker Rudy are complete strangers, but when they get mixed up with a wizard from another world the two must work together to survive and get back home. Fairly traditional fantasy with its fair share of issues, but! It has cool swordswomen, creepy lovecraftian monsters and also mammoths!
The Twelve Kingdoms by Fuyumi Ono*
Young adult, light novel. Yoko Nakajima is a regular high school student, or at least she was one until a strange man showed up in her school, swore allegiance to her and whisked her away to another world. As the two get separated, Yoko is stuck on her own in a strange world, hunted by humans and demons alike as she travels in search of a way home. Absolute high point of isekai literature, with an incredible main character and really cool and unique worldbuilding (also available as an anime, however I have yet to watch it and can't speak to its quality just yet).
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Peter Darling by Austin Chant*
Novella. An older Peter Pan returns to Neverland after years spent in our world, only to find that everything is different. Before he knows it, he finds himself working with his lifelong enemy, Captain Hook. Very gay and very trans, with interesting takes on toxic masculinity. Made my heart ache in the best of ways.
A Curse so Dark and Lonely by Brigid Kemmerer
Young adult. A retelling of beauty and the beast, where 'beauty' is a girl brought in from our world to a fantastical one and the narrative focuses a lot on what actually happens to the kingdom when the royal family suddenly disappears, and whether it’s even possible to fall in love with someone you know is deliberately trying to seduce you to break a curse. This is part one of a trilogy, however I'm only really recommending the first book as the second did not work for me at all.
The Golden Compass (His Dark Materials trilogy) by Philip Pullman
Young adult/middle grade, fantasy but has a lot of sci-fi aspects as well. Already well-known and for good reason, the His Dark Materials trilogy starts as what seems a pretty typical fantasy with some cool unique aspects (everyone has a soul-bound animal only they can speak to as their best friend!), and soon veers into a truly one of a kind story. It has magical portals, it has strange worlds with equally strange inhuman creatures, it has physics, it has god murder, it has gay angels, it has tragedy, and it’s very much worth your time.
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Every Heart a Doorway (Wayward Children series) by Seanan McGuire*
A tumblr favorite, the Wayward Children novellas feature a school open to children who have returned from adventures in other realms and now have trouble adapting back to regular life. Some installments are set in our world, others follow children as they have their otherworldly adventures. The main characters vary between books, but are generally pretty diverse with among others asexual, trans, intersexual and sapphic leads. Both funny and dark, it takes a closer look at the trauma many endure growing up different.
Otherside Picnic (Otherside Picnic series) by Iori Miyazawa
Sapphic light novel with a surreal and episodic horror vibe. Following the directions of an urban legend, university student Sorawo finds her way to a reality populated by horrifying creatures from ghost stories and modern urban legends (of which I'm sure you'll recognize many). Here she teams up with fellow explorer Toriko, both to both find out more about this strange world and to help Toriko find a missing loved one. Also available as a manga and (one season of) an anime.
Last Bus to Everland by Sophie Cameron
Young adult. Brody is dealing with a lot, but it all gets a little easier when he meets Nico, who shows him how to access Everland, a magical land where he feels less out of place. But when the doors to Everland start disappearing, Brody must choose which world is really home. I'd categorize this less as fantasy and more as coming of age with a fantasy slant. It's also very gay.
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The Starless Sea by Erin Morgenstern
Surreal and fairy tale-esque, The Starless Sea is stories within a story, following graduate student Zachary as he finds a strange book which, in-between other tales, tells a story from his own childhood. Trying to find out how this came to be, Zachary gets involved with a pink-haired woman and a handsome man who are doing their utmost to protect a strange, otherworldly library available only through magical doors. It's a book hard to put in words, but which I once described as "romantic without being a romance while stile having a love story at it's core", and which can be summed up only as "an Experience". It's also quite gay!
The Memory Theater by Karin Tidbeck
Listen, there’s a whole bunch of Swedish portal fantasies I read growing up that I'm dying to include here, but I'm not because they’re not available in English. The Memory Theater however is available, and is very good. Two children who were stolen into an otherworldly realm that wants them dead fight return to earth, and are followed by one of their captors across universes. The story has the feel of a dark fairy tale, and their captors, while not fey, are very reminiscent of them.
The Ten Thousand Doors of January by Alix E. Harrow*
Historical young adult, more magical realism than fantasy. In the early 20th century, January is living under the care of her father's employer while he travels the world searching for valuables and secrets. But both her father and her caretaker are keeping something from her, something about her own family's history. When she one day stumbles upon a strange book, one that speaks of other worlds, she finally sets out to find the truth. However, there are those seeking to stop her and destroy the doors between worlds, no matter what.
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The Hollow Places by T. Kingfisher*
Horror rather than fantasy. After having divorced, Kara moves to stay with her uncle and help him run his museum of curiosities, until one day she discovers a hole in the wall of his house. The hole leads to a strange bunker, and beyond that, a dark and dangerous world beyond her understanding. In the company of a friend, she goes to explore this world, but quickly comes to regret her decision to do so.
The Unspoken Name by A.K. Larkwood*
The sort of portal fantasy you get when all the worlds connected by portals are fantasy worlds, and none of them are ours. The portals themselves become simply a part of the worldbuilding that the characters use to travel between fascinating places, and it's all really cool. It follows Csorwe (lesbian orc assassin whom I love), who grew up in a cult, indoctrinated as a child sacrifice to a god. But on the day she was meant to die, she instead chose to follow a powerful wizard and train to become his loyal servant and sword. Aside from being an excellent fantasy, it's also a close look at the hard path of unlearning indoctrination and the search for love and validation where you'll never find it, and learning to live for yourself.
Odin's Child (the Raven Rings trilogy) by Siri Pettersen
Norwegian (vaguely Norse mythology inspired) young adult. Fifteen-year-old Hirka grew up thinking she simply lost her tail to a wolf attack, but one day she finds out she never had one: she's an Odin's child, a human, sent from another world and rumored to spread rot and ruin wherever she goes. To keep her secret safe, she goes on the run, but there are forces hunting for her, wanting to use her in their war. This reads mostly as a fairly typical epic fantasy, with the portal aspect not playing a major role until the second book.
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The Barbed Coil by J.V. Jones
1997 classic. Tessa is a young woman with little going for her, until she stumbles upon a strange ring that transports her to a magical and dangerous other land. Here she meets Ravis, a mercenary who takes it upon himself to protect her, and discover her own special abilities, which she must use against an evil king whose mind has been corrupted and taken over by his crown, the Barbed Coil.
Skeen's Leap (Skeen trilogy) by Jo Clayton
1986 classic. While most portal stories are fantasy, this one has a distinct sci-fi flavour. Skeen is master thief wanted in a myriad solar systems, until her spaceship gets stolen and she's stranded on a backwater planet. Here she hears rumors of ruins leading to a strange other land. Hoping for treasure enough to get her off-planet, Skeen goes in search of this place, but finds herself stuck and unable to get back. This one has a unique, almost stream of consciousness prose that takes a while getting used to, but rewards you with a one of a kind experience.
Inkheart (Inkworld trilogy) by Cornelia Funke
German middle grade/young adult, in which the fantastical other worlds are those told of in books. Young Meggie's father has the ability to, when he reads, bring things and people out of the books, or put other people into said books. However, once having done so, he knows of no way to put anyone back where they belong. Now, years after he accidentally brought the terrible villain Capricorn and his henchmen out of their book, he and his daughter must evade them at all costs or be forced to bring further horrors out of the page and into the world.
Bonus AKA I haven't read these yet but they seem really cool
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An Accident of Stars by Foz Meadows
A teenage girl accidentally follows a worldwalker from her world to a magical realm on the brink of civil war. I believe this on has both a major polyamorous relationship and ace/aro characters?
The Sleeping Dragon (Guardians of the Flame series) by Joel Rosenberg
1983 classic. A group of college dnd players find themselves transported to the magical realm they previously thought just a game.
The Wandering Inn by Pirateaba
Webnovel. After having been transported to a magical world, Erin decides to, rather than become a warrior or a mage, start running an inn.
Honorary mentions AKA these didn't really work for me but maybe you guys will like them: The Marked Girl by Lindsey Klingele, The Summer Tree by Guy Gavriel Kay, Child of a Hidden Sea by A.M. Dellamonica, Spellsinger by Alan Dean Foster, The Shattered Gates by Ginn Hale, The Awakening by Nora Roberts, Daughter of Smoke and Bone by Laini Taylor.
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lurking-latinist · 10 months
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reviving a meme I previously got from @swinging-stars-from-satellites
1. How many works do you have on Ao3?
158 (one currently unrevealed).
2. What’s your total Ao3 word count?
103,185. I cracked 100k recently!
3. How many fandoms have you written for?
All the Doctors Who + Gallifrey + Iris Wildthyme + The Time Travellers + GoR etc.; Ancient Greek Religion & Lore; WtOVPIC; Blake’s 7; Dracula; Discworld; Windrose Chronicles & Sun-Cross series also by Barbara Hambly (one crossover); All Creatures Great and Small; Lost at Christmas, heaven help me. That makes nine as I count it. Most only for one small thing or crossover.
4. Top 5 fics by kudos?
Skipping kudos bot victims:
Ms Smith (13 and Sarah, fun with fake names)
don’t worry, he’s with me (Ten and Donna five-times-fic)
Vicarious (Six & Martha drabble)
Time Flies Like an Arrow (witches fly on a broomstick) (Discworld, Lancre Witches, having a philosophical conversation about time) (I have come to detest this title but I’m glad people enjoyed the fic)
to all our nights and days to come (Seven/Romana Time War AU)
It’s helpful to include extremely popular, well-known characters in your fics. Or, apparently, to write a slightly darker twist on your rarepair OTP and happen to plug it one day on a relevant popular post.
5. Do you respond to comments? Why/why not?
I do, because I love getting comments and I am always genuinely grateful to hear that someone has enjoyed my work!
6. A fic you’ve written with the angstiest ending?
Wow, last time I did this meme I said it was That Which We Call. That’s changed. It might actually be to all our nights and days to come, or else one of the Six-post-Trial ones.
7. Do you write crossovers?
Apparently! But not much, and not well.
8. Ever received hate on a fic?
Nope, touch wood.
9, Do you write smut?
Not my thing.
10. Have you ever had a fic stolen?
Not that I know of.
11. Ever had a fic translated?
Yes!! @sci-firenegade translated Making History into Portuguese! It is so cool.
12. Have you ever co-written a fic?
Sort of, with Moki! We more tend to write sequels to each other’s stuff, but we also have listed ourselves as co-authors on a couple of things.
13. All time fav ship?
Seven/Romana.
14. WIP you want to finish but don’t think you ever will?
Never say die! Probably the Eight/Charley babyfic AU, though. If I go back to it it’ll be as a very different writer and I’ll probably want to rework what exists and it’ll be technically a different fic.
15. Writing strengths?
Character voices & dialogue. Also, focalization. I always know what A thinks of B and what B notices about A, which is hilarious as I absolutely do not know any of this in real life.
16. Writing weaknesses?
Used to be length; I’m still very brief but I feel like I have more control over the length of a fic now. Like it comes out more or less the length I expect it to; I can tell what size something’s gonna be. Probably now I would just say plot. I’m not great at Things Occurring. And like everybody else I get hung up on how to describe basic actions like walking across a room.
17. Thoughts on writing dialogue in another language in a fic?
Don’t do it if you can’t get the other language right (as well as how code-switching actually tends to work). Also, translation convention exists for a reason. Probably don’t pull an ‘opening lines of War and Peace’ unless you are in fact Tolstoy, in which case you don’t need my writing advice. Nothing inherently wrong with it though.
18. First fandom you wrote for?
Officially, DW. Unofficially, probably something as a kid before I knew fandom existed. Redwall or something.
19. What’s your fav fic you’ve written so far?
to all our nights and days to come, probably.
Not tagging anyone, but memes are for stealing!
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bikepackinguk · 7 months
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Day One Hundred and Five
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It's been 15 weeks on the road!
Whilst it doesn't manifest too often, I am a sufferer of hereditary Restless Leg Sybdrome, and last night it decided to be its wonderful self and do what it could to prevent much sleep from being had.
So, may as well get up and at 'em! It's an easy start today, extricating myself from a patch of trees by Hythe Bypass and rolling down around town to the pier at Hythe, where I don't have long to wait for my first ferry of the day.
The Hythe ferry is a catamaran style vessel, and it's a short cruise over the water to land at the docks by the city centre of Southampton.
Ruah Hour is in full swing right now, so it's some careful maneuvering to navigate around town and over the bridge across the River Itchen, before heading through the streets of Woolston to get back to the waterside.
There's a nice run along the water's edge here, before heading up through the grounds of Royal Victoria Country Park and into the nice little village of Hamble-le-Rice, which is still and quiet in the early morning.
Down to the docks and it's onto ferry #2 of the day, a tiny little pink boat that I share with a few ramblers to get across the River Hamble to reach Warsash.
Around the trails I go and it's up into some rough pathways along cornfields above the sea.
The paths meander around the fields before turning down to Hill Head, before a nice long run looking over the water through Lee-on-the-Solent.
As the road turns inland a little, the busy roads have a good few cycle paths along them, so I have a good charge down the main streets to speed my way through to the town of Gosport, where awaits my third and final ferry if today's river-hopping.
It's only a short journey across the harbour to land in the historic docks of Portsmouth, beside the famous HMS Warrior.
I'm on a bit of a schedule currently so I hit the road once more, rising through Old Portsmouth and missing a turn to take me through aome of the busier urban stretches of town, before zigging down to hit the edge of the Solent once more for a ride down past Eastney Beach.
I double back for a ride up through Eastney and along the easterly edge of Portsmouth and roll up to a hearty greeting with my lovely cousin Sarah!
The last time I was in Portsmouth was for her wedding to her lovely wife Charlotte and riding through has brought back many happy memories of the occasion, so it's all the more joyful to be able to interrupt her busy schedule as I'm treated to a beer and slap-up steak lunch. Thank you so much again and look forward to seeing you again soon cuz!
Farewells said and bellies full, I'm off along the road north as the cycle route hits some major road junctions around the north of Portsmouth, but the cycle paths track around alongside a good ways yet ao I'm spared the heavy traffic as I track around the A27 past Havant.
The route drops on to the A259 here, so it's time to put that hearty lunch to good use as I stretch the legs for a long run along the busy road awhile.
The cycle pathing here is spotty at best, and I end up just staying in the road to get some miles cranked out, and as the miles and small towns drop away it feels like practically no time at all before I hitnthe edges of Chichester.
With some twisting through town, I drop on to the towpath at the Chichester Canal to follow the cycle route down the water to Hunston, where I tack on to the B2166 as it curves around the expansive farmlands.
Along the road and jostling with plenty of tractors and school-run drivers, I keep in peddling away the miles and charge my way down through the growing suburbs and push on through to arrive at the beach at Pagham.
I have a brief pause to appreciate the view up the coast, but I've energy yet in the legs and light in the day, so am eager to keep at it.
Around through the roads of Pagham, it takes a good bit of routefinding to work my way around, but eventually ride around to hook up once morenwith NCN 2 as it restarts once more at the promenade of Bognor Regis.
My eagerness hasn't done me a great deal of favours here as I had been thinking of stopping a little short of Bognor, as it's a long urban stretch ahead with little opportunity for stealthy camping.
A bit of thinking and checking of the maps has me riding up and through the seaside town to head to the northern end of town where there look to be more possibilities to hole up for the night. I'll let you know how the scouting goes in the morrow!
TTFN!
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kellycrawford93 · 7 months
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rottenpear · 2 years
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Sarah Hambly
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genius-species · 4 months
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What I Read in 2023
I read 54 books in 2023, the lowest amount in a long while. Mostly nonfiction (20) followed by romance (15). And while 2023 isn't over yet, I doubt I'll finish another complete book before the end of the year (no energy, little time).
Goals for 2024
Reviving a 2023 goal I did not accomplish: to improve my (very rudimentary) Spanish language skills by reading picture books en español.
Read more poetry. @allthefoolmine is a connoisseur of the genre. Poetry's such good stuff for packing maximal emotional devastation into minimal verbiage.
Read books about areas of the world in conflict or by authors from those areas - specifically Palestine, Ukraine, and Sudan.
Read more books in translation. Specifically, I intend read more by South American authors, particularly writers from Mexico and Columbia.
Highlights of 2023
The concluding novel in Freya Marske's Last Binding trilogy. Jack and Alan's book delighted, both from the romance perspective (snarky! steamy!) and from the plot perspective (an elegant conclusion, ripe with potential - hint, hint - for fanfic writers to develop the universe further).
Vincent and Theo: The Van Gogh Brothers - as someone who has written letters for nearly three quarters of their life, I love a good epistolary novel or nonfiction anthology. This YA nonfiction book collects and contextualizes Vincent Van Gogh's letters to his beloved younger brother, Theo, and includes Theo's letters to Vincent. Added bonus: I finished it a month or so before visiting The Netherlands for the first time.
Traveling with the Dead has a marvelous, creepy vampire character in Don Ysidro. I do love when writers actually reckon with the ways immortality warps a character's priorities and perspective on the world. I definitely want to read more novels by Barbara Hambly in 2024.
I'm looking forward to reading KJ Charles's A Nobleman's Guide to Seducing a Scoundrel - I thought it wasn't out until spring, but it was released this September. Huzzah!
Translation State, the latest in Ann Leckie's Imperial Radch novels, was a marvel. Way to make aliens properly alien. If I say too much more I'll spoil the thrill of it but - if you liked Provenance and the Ancillary trilogy, run - do not walk - to your local bookshop.
My full reading list is below. What did you read and enjoy this year?
Nonfiction
Hints on Household Taste: The Classic Handbook of Victorian Interior Decoration by Charles L. Eastlake
Running While Black by Alison Mariella Desir
How She Did It by Molly Huddle and Sarah Slattery
Invisible Women: Exposing Data Bias in a World Designed for Men by Caroline Criado Perez
Vincent and Theo: The Van Gogh Brothers by Deborah Heiligman
Women in Science by Rachel Ignotofsky
Run Like a Pro (Even if You're Slow) by Matt Fitzgerald and Ben Rosario
Until I Meet My Husband by Ryuosuke Nanasaki, translated by Molly Lee
A Cat Called Birmingham by Chris Pascoe
Beneath My Feet: Writers on Walking edited by Duncan Minshull
Samuel Pepys: The Man in the Making by Arthur Bryant
The Paper Solution by Lisa Woodruff
Organizing Solutions for People with ADHD by Susan Pinsky
Fair Play by Eve Rodsky
Nineteen Reservoirs by Lucy Santee
Fires in the Middle School Bathroom by Kathleen Cushman and Laura Rogers
Real Queer America by Samantha Allen
Wired for Love by Stephanie Cacioppo
The Fixed Stars by Molly Wizenberg
Unraveled by Maxine Bedant
Poetry
The Tiny Journalist by Naomi Shihab Nye
Fiction
Memoirs of Hadrian by Marguerite Yourcenar
Letters to Alice on first reading Jane Austen by Fay Weldon
The Way Spring Arrives and Other Stories edited by You Chen and Regina Kanyu Wang
The New Life by Tom Crewe
SciFi / Fantasy
Traveling with the Dead by Barbara Hambly
Hard To Be a God by Arkady and Boris Strugatsky
The Stars My Destination by Alfred Bester
A Restless Truth by Freya Marske
The Wizard's Guide to Defensive Baking by T. Kingfisher
Aurora by Kim Stanley Robinson
Translation State by Ann Leckie
The Grief of Stones by Katherine Addison
Good Omens by Terry Pratchett and Neil Gaiman
Komarr by Lois McMaster Bujold
A Power Unbound by Freya Marske
Childrens / YA
Midnight is a Place by Joan Aiken
Lost in the Never Woods by Aiden Thomas
I Like Me Better by Robby Webber
Romance
The Wisteria Society of Lady Scoundrels by India Holton
The League of Gentlewomen Witches by India Holton
The Secret Service of Tea and Treason by India Holton
The Secret Lives of Country Gentlemen by KJ Charles
How to Find a Princess by Alyssa Cole
The Princess Trap by Talia Hibbert
The Ruin of a Rake by Cat Sebastian
The Soldier's Scoundrel by Cat Sebastian
The Siren of Sussex by Mimi Matthews
The Belle of Belgrave Square by Mimi Matthews
The Romance Recipe by Ruby Barrett
Pack of Lies by Charlie Adhara
A Thief in the Night by KJ Charles
Unmasked by the Marquess by Cat Sebastian
A Duke in Disguise by Cat Sebastian
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biglisbonnews · 1 year
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Sarah Lucas Delves Into Her Rebellious New Exhibition of Women Artists “It aspires to be thought-provoking, funny, serious, attractive and fun,” says Lucas of her new all-women exhibition in Colchester, which includes work by Gillian Wearing, Maggi Hambling and Sue Webster https://www.anothermag.com/art-photography/14672/sarah-lucas-big-women-exhibition-firstsite-gillian-wearing-maggi-hambling
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velvetcloak · 3 years
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houses of hogwarts inspired dresses by sarah hambly
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lavendertitties · 4 years
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Let’s talk about Sarah Hambly and the fact that she recreated Ariana’s Giambattista Valli custom Grammy dress and how beautiful it is and how much hard work was put into it
From her instagram post about the dress linked above
She took 41hours from start to finish, most of that was spent on hand gathering tulle layers.
I spent a little over 150$ in materials to make her, including materials I already had. I spent over $2,000 in labor to assemble her tho, mostly due to gather tulle layers.
I installed an interior corset and used grommets in the back. The dress she wore was custom fit to her, so it has a zipper. I wanted more flexibility with this dress so I went with a lace up back. 
I chose black because the grey she had was a custom made material. I also wanted to have some artistic freedom to this dress and black seemed the way to go with that.
There were times when the material was ‘too thick’ to fit through my home sewing machine. If my industrial were up and running that would have been the perfect time to break it out, bc I ended up hand sewing the bodice to the waist.
insta and tiktok @officalhambly 
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pichingueros · 4 years
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Her Universe x Wonder Woman 1984: ganadoras del concurso de diseño y desfile de modas Her Universe, Adria Renee y Sarah Hambly, revelarán sus galardonadas colecciones de moda inspirada en la cultura pop de Wonder Woman 1984, disponibles el 15 de septiembre en Hot Topic y HerUniverse.com. Los artículos estarán disponibles para la preventa en la tienda DC FanDome.
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arsenicinshell · 2 years
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Faery dresses by Sarah Hambly
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the-costume-closet · 3 years
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Costume Design #248
By Sarah Hambly
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florelia12 · 3 years
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We were robbed!
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We could've gotten Helia singing to Flora!
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^Guitarist Helia confirmed!
Slshdksks he probably writes songs for her and serenades her! Also I love specialists/winx friendships, so what if Helia and Musa are songwriting buddies…
Like i read this post about someone’s headcanon that for the two of them their respective s/o’s are their muses which is just so sweet! Flora/Helia theme song ‘crazy in love with you’ has to play at my future wedding or im not walking down the aisle (also another song with the same name is by beyonce and features in fifty shades, just saying 👀)
Also imagine Stella asking his help for designs and they turn his art into textiles prints (i’m a fashion design student so damn i get excited when I talk about Helia/Stella dynamics). Stella loves to make Flora her model so imagine the two creating collections all inspired by nature and flowers after her. Them casually throwing compliments at Flora while they are seriously working on designing and she’s just sitting there blushing like 🥰
Stella: What about pink?
Helia: No, Red brings out her eyes more.
Stella: Ah Right! And, I want that waist a little tight, you know so it’s hugs her figure a bit better.
Helia: I agree.
Flora: *standing on the model platform blushing furiously*
Like this design is one of my favourites by Sarah Hambly and I can totally see Flora wearing it:
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delphina2k · 2 years
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Was super inspired by Sarah Hambly’s dresses in her 2021 recap and had to draw my girls in them~⁠
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thecosmicminds-blog · 3 years
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I just wanna wear these dresses and run through an empty field as if I am Alice and on the run from the Red Queen in Wonderland.
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These beautiful dresses are made by Sarah Hambly. Link to her instagram^^
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e-b-reads · 2 years
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22 in 2022
Rules! Choose 22 books you want to read or goals you want to achieve in  2022. That’s it! It can be a mix of books and goals, or 22 books, or 22 goals…. it’s up to you. Then tag some friends to play along.  
I was tagged by @agardenandlibrary and I just think that’s neat (thank you!).
goal: get rid of books that I don’t need to keep! this will involve some re-reading of said books just to make sure that I really don’t need/want to hold onto them, which leads to...
book: Anne of Green Gables, L.M. Montgomery
book: The Country of the Pointed Firs, Sarah Orne Jewett
book: The Whole Thing Together, Ann Brashares
book: Carry On, Rainbow Rowell
book: My Dear I Wanted to Tell You, Louisa Young
book: The Summer of the Swans, Betsy Byars
book: The Book of Night With Moon, Diane Duane (actually I already re-read this, but it was in 2022, so it counts)
goal/book: read my Christmas gifts, Maidens’ Trip (Emma Smith) and...
book: Diet for a Small Planet, Frances Moore Lappé
goal/book: read the transient books recently passed onto me by a friend and also my mom, including The Kite Runner (Khaled Hosseini) and...
book: Mrs. Dalloway, Virginia Woolf
book: Random Harvest, James Hilton
book: Memoirs of a Geisha, Arthur Golden (I also read this one already, but again, it was in 2022)
book: In the Name of Salome, Julia Alvarez
OK the rest of these will just be some books that I am interested for no particular reason, starting with book: Blood Maidens, Barbara Hambly (and more of her James Asher series)
book: His Majesty’s Dragon, Naomi Novik
book: The Witness for the Dead, Katherine Addison
book: The Ten Thousand Doors of January, Alix E. Harrow
book: The Various, Steven Augarde
book: River of Teeth, Sarah Gailey
book: Death and Hard Cider, Barbara Hambly (coming June 2022!)
tagging @wearethekat and/or anyone else who wants to do this! I am still slowly amassing mutuals (key word: slowly).
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