megancraneandcaitlincrews:

For all of us writers: a manifesto.

megancraneandcaitlincrews:

For all of us writers: a manifesto.

(via novaren)

"

The problem that needs to be fixed is not kick all the girls out of YA, it’s teach boys that stories featuring female protagonists or written by female authors also apply to them. Boys fall in love. Boys want to be important. Boys have hopes and fears and dreams and ambitions. What boys also have is a sexist society in which they are belittled for “liking girl stuff.” Male is neutral, female is specific.

I heard someone mention that Sarah Rees Brennan’s THE DEMON’S LEXICON would be great for boys, but they’d never read it with that cover. Friends, then the problem is NOT with the book. It’s with the society that’s raising that boy. It’s with the community who inculcated that boy with the idea that he can’t read a book with an attractive guy on the cover.

Here’s how we solve the OMG SO MANY GIRLS IN YA problem: quit treating women like secondary appendages. Quit treating women’s art like it’s a niche, novelty creation only for girls. Quit teaching boys to fear the feminine, quit insisting that it’s a hardship for men to have to relate to anything that doesn’t specifically cater to them.

Because if I can watch Raiders of the Lost Ark and want to grow up to be an archaeologist, there’s no reason at all that a boy shouldn’t be able to read THE DEMON’S LEXICON with its cover on. My friends, sexism doesn’t just hurt women, and our young men’s abysmal rate of attraction to literacy is the proof of it.

"

The Problem is Not the Books by Saundra Mitchell  (via albinwonderland)

(I thought it would be fun to reblog this, since I wrote it in the first place. :D Man, I love tumblr! -SM)

(via saundramitchell)

(Source: iluxia, via yahighway)

Social networking websites: They’re sharing more than you think
In the wake of the current ‘Girls Around Me’ privacy maelstrom, I wanted to share this post from October 2009 where I show you how to see for yourself that, even WITHOUT your consent, websites are sharing information about you.

Social networking websites: They’re sharing more than you think

In the wake of the current ‘Girls Around Me’ privacy maelstrom, I wanted to share this post from October 2009 where I show you how to see for yourself that, even WITHOUT your consent, websites are sharing information about you.

mothernaturenetwork:

How did tornadoes in Texas toss 18-wheelers?Tornadoes have an easier time flipping trucks when they’re empty, resulting in a weight imbalance between each end of the truck.

mothernaturenetwork:

How did tornadoes in Texas toss 18-wheelers?
Tornadoes have an easier time flipping trucks when they’re empty, resulting in a weight imbalance between each end of the truck.

booksdirect:

“The Book of the Future”

booksdirect:

“The Book of the Future”

(Source: The New York Times, via yahighway)

So nerdy, and yet so cool!
This hilarious iPhone 4 case will guarantee that you win any dorkathon you choose to enter. The plastic case — which covers the back and sides of the phone — is shaped like a raw hard drive, complete with vendor sticker, fake screws and even SATA connectors.

It would probably work just as well as a sticker, but this case obviously offers extra protection, too. The design is almost ridiculously authentic, betrayed only by the little hole through which the iPhone’s camera can peek. I see this going one of two ways. If you are spotted by another nerd, they’ll love it. But if some normal person spies your case, they will probably assume that the back fell off your iPhone.

So nerdy, and yet so cool!

This hilarious iPhone 4 case will guarantee that you win any dorkathon you choose to enter. The plastic case — which covers the back and sides of the phone — is shaped like a raw hard drive, complete with vendor sticker, fake screws and even SATA connectors.

It would probably work just as well as a sticker, but this case obviously offers extra protection, too. The design is almost ridiculously authentic, betrayed only by the little hole through which the iPhone’s camera can peek. I see this going one of two ways. If you are spotted by another nerd, they’ll love it. But if some normal person spies your case, they will probably assume that the back fell off your iPhone.

"I’ll bet this, though: in a hundred years, people will be writing a lot more dissertations on Harry Potter than on John Updike. Look, Charles Dickens wrote popular fiction. Shakespeare wrote popular fiction—until he wrote his sonnets, desperate to show the literati of his day that he was real artist. Edgar Allan Poe tied himself in knots because no one realized he was a genius. The core of the problem is how we want to define “literature”. The Latin root simply means “letters”. Those letters are either delivered—they connect with an audience—or they don’t. For some, that audience is a few thousand college professors and some critics. For others, its twenty million women desperate for romance in their lives. Those connections happen because the books successfully communicate something real about the human experience. Sure, there are trashy books that do really well, but that’s because there are trashy facets of humanity. What people value in their books—and thus what they count as literature—really tells you more about them than it does about the book."

— Brent Weeks (via martinaboone)

Tags: Brent Weeks

I Simply Wont…

I wish there weren’t so many Tumblrs with the F-Word in their name.

Will. Not. Reblog.