Tumgik
#wicked fox
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Title: Gumiho
Author: Kat Cho
Series or standalone: series
Publication year: 2019
Genres: fiction, fantasy, romance, mythology, paranormal, contemporary
Blurb: 18-year-old Gu Miyoung has a secret: she's a gumiho, a nine-tailed fox who must devour the energy of men in order to survive. Because so few believe in the old tales anymore, and with so many evil men no one will miss, the modern city of Seoul is the perfect place to hide and hunt...but after feeding one full moon, Miyoung crosses paths with Jihoon, a human boy being attacked by a goblin deep in the forest. Against her better judgement, she violates the rules of survival to rescue the boy, losing her fox bead - her gumiho soul - in the process. Jihoon knows Miyoung is more than just a beautiful girl; he saw her nine tails the night she saved his life. His grandmother used to tell him stories of the gumiho, of their power and the danger they pose to humans. He's drawn to her anyway. With murderous forces lurking in the background, Miyoung and Jihoon develop a tenuous friendship that blossoms into something more...but when a young shaman tries to reunite Miyoung with her bead, the consequences are disastrous, forcing Miyoung to choose between her immortal life and Jihoon's.
2 notes · View notes
owlisdoodles · 3 months
Text
Tumblr media
So I happened to do some more birthday presents in 2020 and this one is my present for Sophia, one of my closest uni friends.
It‘s a bookmark to the book I got her [Gumiho (Wicked Fox) by Kat Cho]
Also one of the first paintings I did with my new colours and I instantly fell in love with how pigmented these are!
Date of origin: 20th of February 2021 | Find me here!  🧡
1 note · View note
wedontburnbookshere · 7 months
Text
Tumblr media
Here I go, pitting two bad bitched against each other, but I have a reason: so I can ramble.
Both Wicked Fox by Kat Cho and The Lost Girls by Sonia Hartl are modern fantasy YA books where the protagonist has to kill humans in order to survive. Both choose to ease their consciences by targeting men they deem dangerous.
In Wicked Fox, Miyoung is a gumiho or fox spirit, who needs to feed on men's gi in order to survive. If she goes too long between feedings, she dies, so Miyoung receives help from a psychic, who helps her find men to kill that have killed others. In the beginning of the book, we see Miyoung kill a man that the ghost of a teenage girl identifies as her killer. The psychic, Nara, says that the girl's death had been violent.
Miyoung still feels guilt over feeding on these men, and later in the book, this guilt only grows when she is forced to see the ghosts of the men she has killed. A major part of her arc is opening herself up enough to get close to others, learning to value lives other than her own, as she had been raised to put herself first by her mother, who has a deep hatred towards humans, particularly men.
In The Lost Girls, Holly is a vampire, who was changed by her boyfriend back in 1987. Vampires kill when they feed, and much to the amusement of the other vampires she meets, Holly's hunting strategy involves her pretending to be helpless or inebriated. If the man she's approached tries to take advantage, she kills him.
Holly feels little guilt about her kills. The times that she does, it's directly after killing, but the feeling doesn't linger. She needs to eat, and while her hunting style has a moralizing aspect to it, Holly says in her narration that it's more for her, to draw lines and give herself rules to follow.
Now, while the genres of these two books are the same, Wicked Fox is played straight, while The Lost Girls has more of a dark comedy edge to it. The dark comedy shows more clearly in scenes with the vampire named Ida, who had been the first girl Holly's boyfriend (now ex) turned into a vampire. Ida is often shown with a body part from her kill, which she uses for crafting, such as a leg that she turns into a lamp stand and a hand she turns into a bird feeder.
There's less emphasis on the girls needing to hide what they are despite the supernatural being secret from the human world, same as in Wicked Fox. But the dark comedy edge and Hartl pushing scenes into the ridiculous ensure that focus stays on the main themes, not the world-building or undead mechanics.
The Lost Girls follows Holly, who is forced to follow her ex-boyfriend, Elton, back to her hometown. In this world, vampires are forced to remain within a certain distance from the vampire that turned them. Vampires are also "stuck" physically in however they looked when they were turned, so Holly's hair is perpetually stuck in a bad crimping job she'd given it the day Elton changed her, and another vampire we meet later has to wear a scarf everywhere to cover a gaping wound in her neck that can never heal.
Any alterations vampires undergo "undo" soon after. Holly has tried shaving her head, but her hair grew back right into its bad crimping job seconds later, and Elton gets his head torn off in a fight scene, it grows back. When Holly goes back to her old high school to warn Elton's newest target, she feels uneasy being there, like the building itself is trying to push her out.
Rose, Elton's second ex-girlfriend, explains that Time itself doesn't want them there. Vampires stand still against the flow of time, and Time doesn't like that.
All this fits well into the book's theme of being trapped in a cycle, caused by a toxic relationship -- multiple, in Holly's case, who had grown up in an unstable home and was bullied and shunned at school. Holly, Ida, and Rose are even trapped to the point of being forced to follow Elton around, and the only way to move on is to sever their ties to Elton completely, and then kill him.
However, doing that comes with a hefty sacrifice: Forgetting everything from their lives when they were human. It's not a decision that they take likely, and it will only work if all of them work together. Only when they do can they expect to kill Elton and move on.
Back to Wicked Fox, Miyoung and the other protagonist, Jihoon, both need to learn to let others in, though both start off closed off in very different ways. Miyoung is an ice queen that keeps everyone at arm's length, while Jihoon uses charm and an easy-going facade, making him seem like an open book, so people don't think to read too closely.
The two are brought together when Miyoung saves Jihoon from a troll, the fight causing Miyoung to lose her fox bead -- her soul. She needs to find a way to get it back inside her, or else she'll die, and now Jihoon has seen that she's not human.
Similarly to The Lost Girls, Wicked Fox deals with pain and healing. Miyoung's mother is controlling and often insults her, mainly for Miyoung's insistence to only feed once a month, on the full moon -- otherwise, she would have to feed on men by eating their livers. Miyoung decides that her way of sucking out gi without maiming men is more humane, which her mother sees no point of.
With Jihoon, his mother abandoned him, and we meet her for the first time when he delivers food to her, seeing that she has another child now and that her new mother-in-law has no idea that Jihoon is her son. This cuts Jihoon deeply, and we see that his blase attitude is a shield. He interacts with most people only casually, unable to handle the thought of someone else abandoning him.
Things fail a bit when Yena's -- Miyoung's mother -- past gets revealed more, primarily around what had happened with Miyoung's father. The reveal happens pretty late into the book, with hardly anything else shown about Yena despite that she wants to keep Miyoung safe.
It was that scene that made me start to compare Wicked Fox to The Lost Girls. In the latter, when Holly faces her mother again, while we see more of Holly's mother's reasons that led her to acting how she had, it doesn't excuse any of the neglect. By contrast, Yena's arc feels like when the villain gets "redeemed" by sacrificing themself for the hero, so they can defeat the bigger, badder villain.
I do like how complicated the main antagonist of Wicked Fox is and how it ties into Yena's choices, leaving Miyoung to essentially answer for her mother's crimes. I like messy stories, where the threads of multiple stories are overlapping. I just don't feel like Cho did it well in Wicked Fox. The ending tries to be too clean for all that mess that had just happened. (And that last chapter felt like sequel bait, which always makes me groan and does not make me want to read Vicious Spirits at all.)
The Lost Girls also ends cleanly, but the story is much more straight-forward, so the clean and cliche ending works pretty well. The themes are also clearer, but to the point of it feeling like I'm being beaten over the head with it at times. (However, like in my The Black Witch Chronicles ramble, I don't personally count it as a point against the book when the message is made so bluntly and plainly.)
Honestly, I thought that I would enjoy Wicked Fox more. Partway through The Lost Girls, I worried that it would be a mean-spirited "deconstruction" of YA paranormal romance, and I was (and still am) so tired of the disk horse surrounding immortal characters dating high schoolers in YA-aka-teen romances.
Instead, The Lost Girls feels more like... not a love letter to the genre, but a fondness for it. It feels like Hartl knows and enjoys the genre, rather than only wanting to tear it apart. The Lost Girls uses tropes from the genre to sell its message, and it does it well.
Wicked Fox falls more in line with the genre, though with the switch of the boy character being human while it's the girl who is the immortal supernatural creature. It doesn't feel like Cho is trying to deconstruct or subvert the genre but rather tell a story within the genre in a way she wanted, which I enjoyed, setting aside what I already mentioned about Yena's arc. There were a few parts where it lulled, but it was overall a fun book that kept me engaged and reading when I should have been packing for my move.
Back to the protagonists' killing natures, maybe if I did read Vicious Spirits, I would change my mind, but I preferred the depiction in The Lost Girls over Wicked Fox. While both only want to go over dangerous men (and it can be argued that Holly's victims are being killed for what they might do, not what they've actually done), it reads better in The Lost Girls.
Miyoung is half-human. She feels tremendous gilt for killing men to live, and she chooses a less bloody way of feeding. She also keeps everyone at arm's length at the closest. She has to move around often with her mother, which is often said by Yena to be Miyoung's fault for not controlling herself better.
We only see Miyoung feed once before she loses her fox bead, starting the countdown before she needs to feed again (and needs her bead back inside her body). We're told she feels all this guilt, but we don't see much of it, until later when she starts seeing the ghosts of the men she's killed. The book focuses more on her tenuous relationship with Yena and the growing relationship between her and Jihoon.
It would have helped to see more of that guilt, more of the (metaphorical, considering how she kills) blood on her hands. It could have made the villain (and their motive) reveal hit much harder, especially when we learn more about what happened with Miyoung's father.
It does have many more moving parts compared to The Lost Girls, which is probably why things fall flat more. I'd be interested to see Cho write modern fantasy again when she's gotten more storytelling experience, and I'd be interested to see how Hartl writes other monsters, since in The Lost Girls, the mechanics behind how vampires work is tied so closely to the book's theme. I'd like to see how she's written vampires or other monsters in different stories, if she has any out or planned.
0 notes
Text
everytime the most recent post in a tag i wanna look at is my own post a fairy dies !!!!
1 note · View note
queenofinys · 6 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
i know i'm who i am today because i knew you 20 YEARS OF WICKED: FOR GOOD idina menzel & kristin chenoweth • ana gasteyer & kate reinders • alyssa fox & mckenzie kurtz • christine dwyer & jenni barber • idina menzel & kristin chenoweth • stephanie j block & kendra kassebaum • alyssa fox & mckenzie kurtz • lindsay heather pearce & brittney johnson • idina menzel & kristin chenoweth • idina menzel, kristin chenoweth, & various elphabas and glindas of broadway
2K notes · View notes
steviereads · 1 year
Text
instagram
0 notes
shhhhimwatchingthis · 15 days
Text
just started the X-Files after years of Pop Culture osmosis, parody, references and memes
But holy shit did none of you prepare me for the pathetic wet cat rizz of Fox Mulder. Puppy dog eyes every other scene. He loses every stand off with every other government agent, military op, co-worker he bumps into. Sassy little quips in between getting his ass kicked and the puppy dog eyes. he's deeply traumatized. he has no social life. he never knows whats going on. he's one of the smartest people in any room he's in and knows more than most what's going on.
This guy is just sopping wet vibes, desperate need to believe, and love for Scully. Character of all time.
1K notes · View notes
gelphiegifs · 5 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Gelphie + shitposts
942 notes · View notes
chappellrroan · 6 months
Text
when the sexual tension between the two characters who hate each other starts building
Tumblr media
850 notes · View notes
wickedelphaba · 2 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
GELPHIE HIVE RISE 💗💚
259 notes · View notes
cascadeoceanwave · 2 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
mckenzie kurtz & alyssa fox perform for good
355 notes · View notes
temiree · 8 months
Text
Tumblr media
Commission for @altairey, featuring their characters Wicke (top) and Vincent getting a little distracted while toasting some marshmallows. :3
639 notes · View notes
hollowinmyheart · 5 months
Text
Cardan and Jacks falling in love with the mortal girls whom once they thought silly in front of immortals is the best mortal x immortal love stories.
Jurdan & Evajacks hook ups are so passionate , their opinion differences couldn't even be able to control them from touching each other.
348 notes · View notes
katherinemckay · 5 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
am now considering these the canon photos glinda and elphaba take in the emerald city (x)
197 notes · View notes
persi-person · 3 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Something Wicked had me timbers shivered
130 notes · View notes
west-end-wonder · 3 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Wicked x Frozen: Crossover
A list of actresses that have performed a leading role in both ‘Wicked’ and ‘Frozen’:
Caissie Levy: Elphaba in Wicked (Los Angeles) and Elsa in Frozen (Broadway)
Patti Murin: Glinda in Wicked (US Tour) and Anna in Frozen (Broadway)
Alyssa Fox: Elphaba in Wicked (US Tour, Broadway) and Elsa in Frozen (Broadway)
McKenzie Kurtz: Glinda in Wicked (Broadway) and Anna in Frozen (Broadway, US Tour)
Caroline Bowman: Elphaba in Wicked (Broadway) and Elsa in Frozen (US Tour)
Courtney Monsma: Glinda in Wicked (Australia) and Anna in Frozen (Australia)
Jemma Rix: Elphaba in Wicked (Australia) and Elsa in Frozen (Australia)
Sarah O’Connor: Glinda in Wicked (UK Tour) and Anna in Frozen (Singapore)
Willemijn Verkaik: Elphaba in Wicked (Germany, Holland, Broadway, West End) and Elsa in Frozen (Germany)
Honorable mentions:
Sabrina Weckerlin: s/b Elphaba in Wicked (Germany) and Elsa in Frozen (Germany)
Laura Emmitt: u/s Elphaba in Wicked (West End) and u/s Elsa in Frozen (West End)
117 notes · View notes