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Drowning In A Sea of Words
E.E. Grey, an author.
Doin stuff. Writing. Reading.

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borogroves:

Ultimate Writing Resource List

disabilityinthemedia:

the-fandoms-are-cool:

a massively extended version of ruthlesscalculus’ post

General Tips

Character Development

Female Characters

Male Characters

Tips for Specific Characters

Dialogue

Point of View

Plot, Conflict, Structure and Outline

Setting & Worldbuilding

Creativity Boosters* denotes prompts

Revision & Grammar

Tools & Software

Specific Help

Whelp, time to be a famous writer.

(via believenthlie)

believenthlie:

Like You (Only Sweeter) - a Merlin/Arthur Modern AU (read on AO3 or LJ)

With the wedding to Elena looming on the horizon and Uther’s insistence that despite the fact that Arthur prefers blokes, the marriage will work, Arthur finds himself drowning under a sea of responsibilities  That is until Arthur meets Merlin, a children’s party magician who throws a wrench in all his plans to “do the right thing” and marry Elena. With a company merger at stake, Arthur has to choose between the duty of his family and the desire of this messy-haired post grad student.

Remade the graphic from last week now that the fic is done and posted!
tracker jackers are genetically engineered wasps, whose venom
causes pain, powerful hallucinations, and in extreme cases, death.

(Source: lullabiesonfire, via messrenjolras)

floozys:

boys will be bo-“

*flies in* 

*punches you in the face*

bOYS WILL BE HELD RESPONSIBLE FOR THEIR ACTIONS LIKE EVERYONE ELSE 

(Source: heleclcl, via valdemort18)

themugglelibrarian:

So much truth here. While it certainly isn’t all I read, my reading list is chock full of YA … and if I had to be honest, I’d probably fit better into the “adult” than the “young” category these days. So what?  I’m so regularly surrounded by those who also love YA, that I often forget about the snobbery that can, at times, surround the genre.  If a book or a genre isn’t your cup of tea, that’s cool.  That, however, is no reason to insinuate that others should be embarrassed for connecting with it.  In the words of Ranganathan (albeit, somewhat out of context), “every book its reader.”

(via aletteronastring)

Aaron Tveit and James Franco in “Howl”

(Source: smoke-filled-sighs, via gaykissesandlove)