Avatar

Maomao has taken over my life, man

@pizzapasta23045 / pizzapasta23045.tumblr.com

[she/her, 19] mmmmmm apothecary diaries

Welcome to the cave of cringe

Gentle request for all future anons! Do send asks go for it I understand wanting anonymity! I'd appreciate if you gave yourself a nickname or an/multiple emoji so I can see who is who! It would be dearly appreciated! Nothing special, even just a letter!

Tag guide if you want to read my posts:

(Thanks for that by the way)

  • Textpost: Any posts I wrote or commented, plus shit I find particularly cool.
  • Inquiries to a pizza: my asks, also tagged under text post.
  • Traumatized Kaeya being traumatized: self explanatory, really.
  • Modern au: self explanatory, again. This is for almost everything in the game.
  • Autism impact: again, self explanatory, Autism hc, might tag other neuorodivergent hcs for easy browsing and visibility but it's mostly just autism.
  • Snippet: At this point i'm winting the tags just so you're aware they exist. Also self explanatory.
  • My fic and shit: my fanfic, check it out if you feel like it!!
  • Pizza's shogun agenda: My thoughts on the puppet shogun.

Spam liking is encouraged, don't hesitate!

I have a second account @kaeyasflatass where I have only posted jokes about Kaeya's flat ass. Don't use it much just felt pressured to have a personal Kaeya @ since all the other blogs have it lmao.

Btw for those unaware, Chainsaw Man chapters are dropped at exactly midnight in Japan and it was already April 1st yesterday in Asia so ch.198 actually dropped at exactly the moment April Fool's ended.

Just finished tensorate series by neon yang and those novellas were soooo good I devoured them. It’s hard to pick a favorite… some of the things I really liked were Akeha’s relationship with gender (and how in the 3rd one it’s just stated they use they/them now with no further explanation, I fucking love that), the narration of the last 2 novellas (I’m a sucker especially for anything that’s an assortment of academic records or reports), the richness of the worldbuilding, and how you’re given answers that have just enough ambiguity to keep you both satisfied and constantly theorizing. Rider was my favorite character, I got really attached to them and I was so elated when they didn’t die and Mokoya was able to have that prophetic dream about their future (also they (presumably with the help of thennjay) have twins? Nobody tell Sonami.) Rider’s slackcraft was also cool… I hope they managed to rescue their twin… imagine raising your twin sibling who is like 20-30 years younger than you with your polycule… also I want a lizard arm… okay I think red strings of fate is probably my favorite then. Hmm lastly I’ll say that I think these novellas altogether tell a story that is perfectly wrapped up and I’m very satisfied but I do love that but there’s enough stuff to build upon if there were ever more additions and while I don’t think that will be likely I love that I can still think “oh what’s Sonami’s reign gonna be like” and “are they actually clones of Hekate and what does that mean” etc. idk this series is awesome you should read it

I finally finished THE TENSORATE SERIES by Neon Yang! Each book is written in a completely different style than the others, and is told from a different character's perspective. They're magical, queer, and morally gray.

You should read all four novellas, but for the sake of consistency...

Read this I'm so serious.

With the rise of booktok/booktwt, there's been this weird movement against literary criticism. It's a bizarre phenomenon, but this uptick in condemnation of criticism is so stifling. I understand that with the rise of these platforms, many people are being reintroduced into the habit of reading, which is why at the base level, I understand why many 'popular' books on booktok tend to be cozier.

The argument always falls into the 'this book means too much to me' or 'let people enjoy things,' which is rhetoric I understand -- at least fundamentally. But reading and writing have always been conduits for criticism, healthy natural criticism. We grow as writers and readers because of criticism. It's just so frustrating to see arguments like "how could you not like this character they've been the x trauma," or "why read this book if you're not going to come out liking it," and it's like...why not. That has always been the point of reading. Having a character go through copious amounts of trauma does not always translate to a character that's well-crafted. Good worldbuilding doesn't always translate to having a good story, or having beautiful prose doesn't always translate into a good plot.

There is just so much that goes into writing a story other than being able to formulate tropable (is that a word lol) characters. Good ideas don't always translate into good stories. And engaging critically with the text you read is how we figure that out, how we make sure authors are giving us a good craft. Writing is a form of entertainment too, and just like we'd do a poorly crafted show, we should always be questioning the things we read, even if we enjoy those things.

It's just werd to see people argue that we shouldn't read literature unless we know for certain we are going to like it. Or seeing people not be able to stand honest criticism of the world they've fallen in love with. I love ASOIAF -- but boy oh boy are there a lot of problems in the story: racial undertones, questionable writing decisions, weird ness overall. I also think engaging critically helps us understand how an author's biases can inform what they write. Like, HP Lovecraft wrote eerie stories, he was also a raging racist. But we can argue that his fear of PoC, his antisemitism, and all of his weird fears informed a lot of what he was writing. His writing is so eerie because a lot of that fear comes from very real, nasty places. It's not to say we have to censor his works, but he influences a lot of horror today and those fears, that racial undertone, it is still very prevalent in horror movies today. That fear of the 'unknown,'

Gone with the Wind is an incredibly racist book. It's also a well-written book. I think a lot of people also like confine criticism to just a syntax/prose/technical level -- when in reality criticism should also be applied on an ideological level. Books that are well-written, well-plotted, etc., are also -- and should also -- be up for criticism. A book can be very well-written and also propagate harmful ideologies. I often read books that I know that (on an ideological level), I might not agree with. We can learn a lot from the books we read, even the ones we hate.

I just feel like we're getting to the point where people are just telling people to 'shut up and read' and making spaces for conversation a uniform experience. I don't want to be in a space where everyone agrees with the same point. Either people won't accept criticism of their favorite book, or they think criticism shouldn't be applied to books they think are well written. Reading invokes natural criticism -- so does writing. That's literally what writing is; asking questions, interrogating the world around you. It's why we have literary devices, techniques, and elements. It's never just taking the words being printed at face value.

You can identify with a character's trauma and still understand that their badly written. You can read a story, hate everything about it, and still like a character. As I stated a while back, I'm reading Fourth Wing; the book is terrible, but I like the main character. The worldbuilding is also terrible, but the author writes her PoC characters with respect. It's not hard to acknowledge one thing about the text, and still find enough to enjoy the book. And authors grow when we're honest about what worked and what didn't work. Shadow and Bone was very formulaic and derivative at points, but Six of Crows is much more inventive and inclusive. Veronica Roth's Carve the Mark had some weird racial problems, but Chosen Ones was a much better book in terms of representation. Percy Jackson is the same way. These writers grow, not just by virtue of time, but because they were critiqued and listened to that critique. C.S. Lewis and Tolkien always publically criticized each other's work. Zora Neale Hurston and Langston Hughes had a legendary friendship and back and forth with one another's works which provides so much insight into the conversations black authors and creatives were having.

Writing has always been about asking questions; prodding here and there, critiquing. It has always been a conversation, a dialogue. I urge people to love what they read, and read what they love, but always ask questions, always understand different perspectives, and always keep your mind open. Please stop stifling and controlling the conversations about your favorite literature, and please understand that everyone will not come out with the same reading experience as you. It doesn't make their experience any less valid than yours.

the suffering never ends

Avatar
sinksanksockie

This is the real process

Avatar
thewritingbeast

Resources for you!

Character Ideas:

Character Design Ideas:

Naming Help:

Creating Background/backstory:

Character Interactions and putting your character into your world/story:

BLESS EVERYONE IN THIS POST.

Oh my God!

It’s amazing, some links aren’t working for me but those who are, are spectacular.

Reblogging because NAMING IS HARD

I hate being in fandoms like Alien Stage, Squid Games,The Hunger Games, ect. because any fandom will inevitably and quickly go "Ok, who among these humans who were forced into harrowing circumstances that are designed to make you go crazy, lose your personhood and morality so those in power can be entertained is the most moral human among them?" instead of coming to the realization that death games where people are made into their worst for other's entrainment just shouldn't be happening.

this flopped on twt so here just tired of ppl thinking seinen is just bloodier battle shounen with more nsfw content its legit just a demographic, i love the first half of berserk and vinland saga tho

edit: pretend i put dungeon meshi, jing king of bandits twilight tales,emanon and children of the sea/all of daisuke igarashi's work in this

You are using an unsupported browser and things might not work as intended. Please make sure you're using the latest version of Chrome, Firefox, Safari, or Edge.