- Summary: He’s writing in blood; a feeble attempt to finish the story. The story of his life, of him and him and him. It’s a story of life, of love, of lions and fireworks and years gone by.
- Summary: Okay, here's the deal, this is 100% serious and no-joking here. This is for chairty. More specifically – Invisible Children. You all know how much fans crave the gay-love between you guys (Because seriously, it's awesome) and we kind of need to utilize that. So! Without further ado, I present to you Fueled By Ramen's/Decaydance's/Pete Wentz's/Clandestine Industry's collaboration charity project! Calendar's! Here are your months, bitches.
- Summary: A thousand strands of barbed wire twists around my mangled heart and shreds it all to bloody pieces. My throat constricts and I suffocate, fingers trying futilely to remove the invisible noose I'm hanging from while invisible tears water the cracked soil beneath me. I look around and no one sees me. Like a blind man, my vision's black and all I can do is reach uncertainly before me, trying to find you again. Can you hear me? Can you see me? Are you still beside me?
No pain has ever been this strong before; trying to strip my soul away from my body and peel my flesh right off my bones. Every day becomes the last and the night goes on forever, the rising sun is never coming. If you find me, take my hand and guide me towards the shining stars because in your arms I'll never be afraid again. - Summary: A thick red cloud temporarily filled the room, the Winchesters, Castiel, and Lucifer all coughing until it cleared.
- Summary: “I do,” and then Frank pulls the trigger. But Gerard is far from dead.
21 Feb 2010
My continuing project to collect the significant bits of Ponder/Ridcully canon, although I should have most of it by now, if not quite all. Follows the post with the quotes from Hogfather.
1. The Last Continent: Rincewind brings The Wet to FourEcks and Ridcully, Ponder, and the Senior Wizards (plus Mrs Whitlow) arrive by way of a dimensional portal in the office of the long-lost Egregious Professor of Cruel and Unusual Geography... on a tiny desert island inhabited by an atheist creator god whom Ponder teaches about evolution and Mrs Whitlow teaches about sex. They get to FourEcks, via organic boat and then shipwreck, in time for Rincewind to save the day, and take him and the Luggage back with them. ( Read more... )
2. Night Watch: Night Watch is nearly exclusively a Vimes book, in fact, with a very occasional thread of Vetinari as per usual in a Vimes book, but it's framed with the wizards, because it's magic that accidentally catapults Vimes back in time. ( It also catapults Ridcully, in the bathtub, out into the yard. )
3. Unseen Academicals: Obviously this book's main thread is the wizards, although its primary protagonists are two non-wizard employees of the university, Nutt and Glenda, the respective best friends of Trevor Likely and Juliet, a dim-witted Discworldian recasting of Romeo & Juliet in hereditary supporters of rival footie teams. Nonetheless, it's pretty much the entire book that is relevant to Ponder/Ridcully, but I've picked out the most significant bits, at any rate. ( Read more... )
1. The Last Continent: Rincewind brings The Wet to FourEcks and Ridcully, Ponder, and the Senior Wizards (plus Mrs Whitlow) arrive by way of a dimensional portal in the office of the long-lost Egregious Professor of Cruel and Unusual Geography... on a tiny desert island inhabited by an atheist creator god whom Ponder teaches about evolution and Mrs Whitlow teaches about sex. They get to FourEcks, via organic boat and then shipwreck, in time for Rincewind to save the day, and take him and the Luggage back with them. ( Read more... )
2. Night Watch: Night Watch is nearly exclusively a Vimes book, in fact, with a very occasional thread of Vetinari as per usual in a Vimes book, but it's framed with the wizards, because it's magic that accidentally catapults Vimes back in time. ( It also catapults Ridcully, in the bathtub, out into the yard. )
3. Unseen Academicals: Obviously this book's main thread is the wizards, although its primary protagonists are two non-wizard employees of the university, Nutt and Glenda, the respective best friends of Trevor Likely and Juliet, a dim-witted Discworldian recasting of Romeo & Juliet in hereditary supporters of rival footie teams. Nonetheless, it's pretty much the entire book that is relevant to Ponder/Ridcully, but I've picked out the most significant bits, at any rate. ( Read more... )