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wildbootsappeared · 2 years
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Just a lil palossand with a bucket on its head. For my smol, humble Inktober run.
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wildbootsappeared · 2 years
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Doing a small, humble little Inktober. Not expecting to end with 31 drawings, not using any special prompt list, just inking some pokemon ghosties as a break from grad school.
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wildbootsappeared · 2 years
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Doing a small, humble little Inktober. Not expecting to end with 31 drawings, not using any special prompt list, just inking some pokemon ghosties as a break from grad school.
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wildbootsappeared · 2 years
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In the grand tradition of me forgetting to post things I’ve been sitting on for months and months, here’s an arcanine I drew as a prize for someone on Instagram a while back.
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wildbootsappeared · 2 years
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Started replaying SwSh in anticipation of ScarVi, and fuck I love these stupid little cake creatures. Drew a few alcremie variants in a rare burst of inspiration. I probably should’ve done full body drawings instead of just busts because wow do they ever look like little sheep. Which one is your favorite?
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wildbootsappeared · 2 years
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This bad boy goes out to @negrek and her fic, Salvage.
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wildbootsappeared · 2 years
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Uncle Sam, I mean Petrel, wants YOU for Team Rocket!
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wildbootsappeared · 2 years
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What I Read in 2021 (Books)
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… So that happened!
What I Read in 2020 (Books) What I Read in 2020 (Fic) Book Recs from the First Half of 2021
Keep reading for stats, some analysis, and (most importantly!) some recs:
That’s a lot of books even for me (more than double what I read last year!), but it makes sense. When work from home started in 2020, my life shifted away from education-adjacent tasks into content creation-adjacent tasks, and I started to spend a lot of time reading and making videos about books. It took me a while to hit my stride in 2020 (for a while, I couldn’t make myself sit down and finish a book at all), but once I got going, that momentum carried me all the way into 2021. 
This was also the year I committed to grad school and the librarianship career path, so I’ve been working harder to think about not only the books that I like personally but a) the books that would a good fit for my library’s collection and b) what trends are happening in publishing right now. Young adult (YA) fiction is starting to feel like a person I’m getting know. I want to report back what I’ve learned and share some of the best treasures I found.
My stat brag starts with a qualifier: I read 93 books cover-to-cover and marked another 7 as “DNF.” That stands for Did Not Finish, but it really means this book was bad enough that I had to stop and I will not start again. For those books, I did at least skim enough to get a sense for characters, themes, and plot, but my page count is inflated. C’est la vie, life is short! Maybe this year I’ll get even more books in.
So let’s dig into what kinds of books I read!
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A few of the books I read came as recommendations or caught my attention because of their critical acclaim, but others I read simply because I wanted a new audio book right that second while I was folding laundry or whatever and it was available. If an interesting-looking book was by an author of color, I was more likely to pick it up, but I didn’t have a quota I was trying to reach. 
That said, I was interested to see what patterns arose, so I did my best to track data about author race. Where possible, I used authors’ own self-identifiers, but it wasn’t always easy to find author information online or to discern shades of melanin in a photo: there’s a margin of error here.
In a few places, my bookshelf represented some groups better than the actual US population of that group (according to the 2020 census). For example, US population is only 13% Black and less than 2% Native American. That’s pretty neat, especially since some very good stories came out of that segment of my reading. I definitely wouldn’t be upset if I read more next year, though. Those are both groups who are generally underrepresented in every way possible, and even if 100 novels by Native American writers came out next year, there’s still a history of centuries of white dominance to contend with. Furthermore, Black and Native American Identities are so varied that I feel like I’ve barely scratched the surface. Growing up Black in the rural south is pretty different from growing up Jamaican is pretty different from growing up Apache in south Texas is pretty different from growing up on an Ojibwe reservation near the Canadian border. I’m going to keep seeking out books by both of those groups.
In other areas, I didn’t do so hot. The US population is 18% Latinx, and I only read 13 Latinx novels. I also failed to read a single Arab author, so I’ve got a few near the top of the my list for 2022.
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I can’t know for sure how accurately I’ve recorded the number of queer authors on my list. Not everyone is out, and authors don’t owe it to their readers to be out (as YA author Becky Albertalli recently had to remind her Twitter followers when she felt compelled to come out as bi). To the best of my knowledge, 26/100 of the books I read were by queer authors.
I read more books about queer characters than I did books by queer authors. That has at least something to do with changing industry expectations: readers, librarians, and publishers want to see queer characters more than they ever have before. Queer also authors didn’t necessarily write characters whose identities matched their own (like Rose Szabo, non-binary author of What Big Teeth, which features several gay and bisexual characters but no trans characters).
I love that so many books (especially those for young people) are exploring queerness and queer culture now, but it is disappointing how often it was just a quick aside in the life of a straight, cis-gender protagonist. This is not to say that ever book needs to be a queer book, just that I see you, token gay couple in the background, and I’m not super impressed by your grab at my attention.
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Since I work in a teen library, it shouldn’t surprise you that most of the books I read were written for teens. Naturally, that means I read a lot of romance, adventure, fantasy, and coming of age stories.
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Most of the books I read, adult and YA books alike, were also books that came out in the last five years (with the notable exception of The Master and Margarita). Trends in YA die like mayflies, so I focused my efforts on books released in 2021 and books available on the shelf at my library right now (or on the Libby app right now). If you’re looking for classics, I don’t have much to offer you this year.
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These are tags I manually generated for each of the books I read, not publisher tags. I was interested in trends and patterns I saw emerging beyond just character race or genre. Like, the surprising number of stories about ghost dogs (more than two!), the prevalence of dual perspective romances, and the books that explored music.
And now, finally, some recommendations!
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wildbootsappeared · 2 years
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I’ve been terrible at uploading some art I’ve been sitting on for a while. Belatedly, enjoy this dhelmise!
This is one of those pokemon I really hated at first, but then I thought about it more and became fascinated. I wanted my version of this pokemon to be overgrown and wild-looking. This guy doesn’t just snatch massive anchors off the ocean floor: anything is up for grabs (including you, if you look like lunch).
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wildbootsappeared · 2 years
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Adding a few more to the list!
Pet by Akwaeke Emezi is a fabulist tale of a girl who learns about a (human) predator in her community when a creature called Pet comes to visit. Pet is super uncanny, big No Face vibes, and is definitely a magical monster.
The Abyss Surrounds Us by Emily Skrutskie frankly has very mediocre prose and character development, but it was such a fun concept I didn’t care. I have three words for you. Ready? 1) Lesbian 2) pirates & 3) sea monsters. The protagonist trains sea monsters genetically engineered to protect commercial ships until, oops, she’s kidnapped by pirates. This one goes out to everyone who picked squirtle as their starter.
Boots’ Definitive List of “Mainstream Fiction That’s Basically Off-Brand Pokemon Fic”
Humans who tame monsters. Animals that talk. Humans that transform into animals or monsters. These themes are common for a reason: they’re good shit. They’re a huge part of the Pokemon fandom, but they appear in other stories as well. If you want to improve your skills as a writer, these are some good non-fic options to broaden your palette. 
So many adult Pokemon fans grew up reading Warrior Cats and Animorphs that I’m not going to bother with them here. Instead, I’ll focus on books you might not have heard of yet but should definitely check out.
Keep reading
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wildbootsappeared · 2 years
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This week is for dark-types. Have a mightyena.
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wildbootsappeared · 2 years
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You know what would make cats better? Knives on their faces and tails.
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wildbootsappeared · 2 years
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I haven’t been drawing much because I’ve been busy with grad school and hanging with my partner, but I do have a small backlog of fan art. Please enjoy this zoroark.
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wildbootsappeared · 2 years
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Gym leaders Tate and Liza from my night hike set.
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wildbootsappeared · 2 years
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From my night hiking set, a howling lycanroc (midnight form) and a bonus midday lycanroc. 
He howls until even the rocks cry.
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wildbootsappeared · 2 years
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Minior, clefairy, and all the tools you need for a night hike.
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wildbootsappeared · 3 years
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Boots’ Definitive List of “Mainstream Fiction That’s Basically Off-Brand Pokemon Fic”
Humans who tame monsters. Animals that talk. Humans that transform into animals or monsters. These themes are common for a reason: they’re good shit. They’re a huge part of the Pokemon fandom, but they appear in other stories as well. If you want to improve your skills as a writer, these are some good non-fic options to broaden your palette. 
So many adult Pokemon fans grew up reading Warrior Cats and Animorphs that I’m not going to bother with them here. Instead, I’ll focus on books you might not have heard of yet but should definitely check out.
Elatsoe by Darcie Little Badger is a YA murder mystery about a teenage Apache girl who can raise the spirits of animals from the dead. Specifically, her main companions are her ghost dog named Kirby and, later, her grandmother’s enormous, invisible mammoth ghost. Dog ghost and mammoth ghost both sound like fun pokemon designs to me! The book also includes vampires, fairy rings, and other kinds of magic both benevolent and threatening, but there’s no shortage of ghost-dog-to-the-rescue with his Sonic Bark. There are also a few animal people mentioned briefly, and I think they’d appeal to PMD fans and possibly the pokemorph community.
A Snake Falls to Earth by Darcie Little Badger focuses on animal people in more depth. It’s a tale of environmental calamity and cooperation between human teenager Nina and a gaggle of animal people (a cottonmouth snake, two coyote girls, and a hawk). More than half of the novel is about the daily lives and misadventures of the animal people community, which exists totally separately from the human world. The animal people are the most charming and interesting part of the book. They can easily change between their animal “true forms” to a human-like “false form” and perform other magical feats.
Watership Down by Richard Adams is told from the perspective of a family of rabbits who are trying to survive in the world and make a home. It’s got epic battles and rabbit mythology.
Hollow Kingdom by Jane Buxton is more xenofiction (fiction told from a non-human perspective), much weirder and more irreverent than Watership Down but not less spiritual and gripping. It’s a zombie apocalypse story set in the Seattle metro area, told from a perspective of a domesticated crow and other pets dealing with the loss of their humans and the challenges of the new world.
Borne by Jeff Vandermeer is a surreal and quirky yet horrifying fantasy apocalypse story about a human scavenger trying to survive the chaotic wastes left behind by The Corporation. Her main companion is an amorphous shapeshifter named Borne (read: ditto). It also features murderous bears, trickster foxes, and a number of other hard-to-explain oddities. To me, it reads like the delightfully horrible lovechild of pokemorph fic and PMD.
Heart’s Blood by Jane Yolen is not the first in the Pit Dragons series, but it is the one I read as a child. Heart’s Blood is the name of the protagonist’s prize fighting dragon. The human characters have some other struggles and conflicts going on, but their main source of income is breeding and pitting dragons against each other in blood sport.
The Red Threads of Fortune by Neon Yang is also not the first of the fantasy silk punk Tensorate series, but it is the one that features characters racing into battle on the backs of tame-ish dragons and navigating semi-psychic bonds with their attack dinosaurs. It also features a variety of queer relationships.
The His Dark Materials Trilogy and The Book of Dust by Philip Pullman are set in a world where all humans have an animal familiar, a daemon, who represents an aspect of their personality and their soul. The books also feature sapient armored bears, interplanar travel, specters, witches, and magical technologies. The books are all phenomenal and you should read them regardless, but there’s also a lot to like here for folks who like journeyfic.
More to come ... eventually!
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