Outstanding--perhaps even uncomfortable--literature that transcends common tropes, characters, and even genres themselves: welcome to the New Weird.
These unusual items are both surprising and hilarious.
If you love your books strange, uncanny, and downright bizarre, you're going to want to read these books of the new weird genre.
The name H.P. Lovecraft is synonymous with all things creepy, weird, and haunting. Discover ten of the writer's not-to-miss stories.
Discover surreal & weird books where beautiful prose entwines with bizarre worlds that challenge the bounds of reality and imagination.
From niqabi skater girls to super fashionable influencers wearing abayas, get ready for some mega fashionistas who prove that religious code is yet another way to take your style to a whole new level.
See and hear the stranger than fiction stories of famous carnival folk
The best pictures of a monastic scriptorium show the monks at work on their elaborate and painstaking artistry. The first picture shows a group of monks in the scriptorium. A monastic scriptorium by Peter Jackson The second picture shows a closer view of a monk at work on his vellum manuscript. A monk writing his […]
❛ I'D GLADLY LET YOU SQUISH ME WITH THOSE THIGHS Y/N-CHAN! ❜ 。in which oikawa tooru tries to win over the cold captain of the taekwondo team through her social media. HQ FANFIC ! T. OIKAWA X F. READER ⓒ haikyuu | haruichi ⓒ kick me! | SAMUGIRI 𝙘𝙤𝙫𝙚𝙧 𝙛𝙧𝙤𝙢 𝙘𝙨𝙢 𝙢𝙖𝙣𝙜𝙖
The glorious 141 group chat Soap: In the end, we're all human beans. Price: And together we will rice. Ghost: So lettuce pray. Gaz: Ramen. Kate Laswell has left the chat.
How artists in the 19th century imagined the year 2000 - WTF fun facts
Library music is often used in television, radio and film productions. This low-budget, pre-written music is intended to convey particular moods to the audience. Entire LPs, named by theme and often in multiple volumes, are dedicated to a wide variety of moods and concepts such as 'business dynamism', 'modern leisure', 'relaxed terror', 'perky dismay' and 'unspecified uncertainty'. The library music records presented here were found in the Scarfolk Council archive. Our files show that audio from them was included not only in many of Scarfolk's public information and infant indoctrination films, but they were also the soundtracks to party political broadcasts of the 1970s. Library music was also used by large corporations in their threatening advertising campaigns, as well as the aggressive training and breaking of ineffective, altruistic employees. Additionally, subliminal audio from releases such as 'Sound Frequencies to Induce Unconditional Obedience' (Music de Scarfolke, 1970) was broadcast on all local television channels on the hour, every 8 hours, for a duration of 3 seconds. It triggered in citizens the compulsion to stand at their open front doors and shout out confessions to thought crimes they had perpetrated during the day. Teams of social workers hiding in bushes and beneath cars recorded the confessions for later exploitation by the state. For example, up until 1979, a portfolio of each citizen's crimes was buried with him so that any outstanding sentences or punishments incurred in this life may be carried over into the next.
It’s time to bump up your ‘well, actually’ game.
Sit back, relax, and enjoy the ride.
Slyder is an antagonist in Barbie & The Diamond Castle. He is voiced by Mark Acheson. Slyder is a clumsy flying serpent, and was the servant of an evil former muse named Lydia. Slyder first appears as Melody sings, showing an ability to locate the young muse through her voice. He goes to apprehend her because Lydia told him to. He manages to burn Alexa's and Liana's house down while searching for her, but he is tricked with a fake mirror and he ends up without Melody. He and Lydia are turned to
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Reissue: "This Was A Shit Idea" — A prolific novel on the colonization of Mars, told from the perspective of a farmer.
All about the writer and spiritualist HP Lovecraft
24 Weird Book Titles So Strange They're Worth Reading - The internet has generated a huge amount of laughs from cats and FAILS. And we all out of cats.
Johan Deckmann examines the complications of life through clever titles painted on the covers of fictional DIY books that tackle life's biggest questions.