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Search results for tag #literature

[?]CNI_CNoticias Internacionales » 🌐
@CNI_CNoticiasInternacionales@mastodon.social

Dicen que en las ruinas del antiguo Hospital San Juan de Dios, en Granada, Nicaragua, todavía se escucha por las noches el sonido de varias patas caminando sobre el asfalto.
fictograma.com/d/2976-pequenos

    [?]CNI_CNoticias Internacionales » 🌐
    @CNI_CNoticiasInternacionales@mastodon.social

    En Nazalia, un juego escolar terminó convirtiéndose en el inicio de una pesadilla institucional.
    “Códigos de Cambios” mezcla distopía, control moral y miedo colectivo en...
    fictograma.com/d/2977-codigos-

      [?]Assoc for Scottish Literature » 🌐
      @scotlit@mastodon.scot

      Doyle didn’t just write Crime fiction: Alan Brown looks at Arthur Conan Doyle’s “vain, volatile, & brilliant” Scottish adventurer-scientist-explorer-&-dinosaur-hunter, Professor George Edward Challenger…

      6/

      reactormag.com/dinosaurs-in-th

        [?]Assoc for Scottish Literature » 🌐
        @scotlit@mastodon.scot

        After THE LOST WORLD, Challenger’s other adventures include the novels THE POISON BELT and THE LAND OF MIST, & the short stories “The World Screamed” & “The Disintegration Machine”. Alan Brown digs deeper into Doyle’s science fiction

        7/

        reactormag.com/the-further-adv

          [?]Assoc for Scottish Literature » 🌐
          @scotlit@mastodon.scot

          (Conan Doyle personally preferred Professor Challenger over Sherlock Holmes – even dressing up as the Professor for a photograph of Challenger’s Amazonian expedition)

          8/

          theguardian.com/books/2020/nov

            [?]Assoc for Scottish Literature » 🌐
            @scotlit@mastodon.scot

            When Doyle killed Sherlock Holmes at the Reichenbach Falls, “20,000 people cancelled their subscriptions to the Strand”. Public pressure – & a huge fee – brought Holmes back from the dead; did this fictional immortality influence Doyle’s spiritualism?

            9/

            lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v22/n13/le

              [?]Assoc for Scottish Literature » 🌐
              @scotlit@mastodon.scot

              In 1912, “Arthur Conan Doyle, creator of the world’s most celebrated fictional detective, had turned detective himself in an actual murder case – in the process liberating a man who had spent nearly twenty years in prison for a crime he didn’t commit”

              10/

              crimereads.com/arthur-conan-do

                [?]Assoc for Scottish Literature » 🌐
                @scotlit@mastodon.scot

                “think Kurosawa’s ‘Rashomon’, or Tarantino’s ‘Jackie Brown’, but set in Glasgow”

                The Oscar Slater case also features in Frank Kuppner’s 1989 novel (“of sorts”), A VERY QUIET STREET

                11/

                indelibleinkblog.wordpress.com

                  [?]Assoc for Scottish Literature » 🌐
                  @scotlit@mastodon.scot

                  The 12 best Sherlock Holmes stories, according to Arthur Conan Doyle – via @literaryhub

                  In March 1927, Conan Doyle put together a list of his own top 12 Sherlock Holmes stories, sealed it in an envelope, & left it with the editor of the Strand magazine…

                  12/

                  lithub.com/the-12-best-sherloc

                    [?]Assoc for Scottish Literature » 🌐
                    @scotlit@mastodon.scot

                    “The Captain of the Polestar”, by Arthur Conan Doyle
                    [Being an extract from the singular journal of JOHN M’ALISTER RAY, student of medicine]

                    As a Dundee whaling ship becomes trapped in the Arctic, strange cries are heard & a figure is glimpsed on the floes…

                    13/

                    youtube.com/watch?v=EvcA7uYtv6U

                      [?]Assoc for Scottish Literature » 🌐
                      @scotlit@mastodon.scot

                      “The Captain of the Polestar” is possibly Doyle’s finest supernatural story – & owes much of its atmosphere to Doyle’s own experiences as a 20-year-old medical student, serving as ship’s surgeon on the Peterhead whaler the SS Hope

                      14/

                      theguardian.com/books/2012/aug

                        [?]Assoc for Scottish Literature » 🌐
                        @scotlit@mastodon.scot

                        You can download a free ebook of THE CAPTAIN OF THE POLESTAR, & Other Tales by Arthur Conan Doyle – as well as many other works by the great man – from @gutenberg_org

                        15/

                        gutenberg.org/ebooks/294

                          [?]Assoc for Scottish Literature » 🌐
                          @scotlit@mastodon.scot

                          The cheese-mites asked how the cheese got there,
                          And warmly debated the matter;
                          The Orthodox said that it came from the air,
                          And the Heretics said from the platter…

                          —Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, “A Parable”

                          /fin

                          poetryfoundation.org/poems/462

                          A Parable
by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle

The cheese-mites asked how the cheese got there,
And warmly debated the matter;
The Orthodox said that it came from the air,
And the Heretics said from the platter.
They argued it long and they argued it strong,
And I hear they are arguing now;
But of all the choice spirits who lived in the cheese,
Not one of them thought of a cow.

                          Alt...A Parable by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle The cheese-mites asked how the cheese got there, And warmly debated the matter; The Orthodox said that it came from the air, And the Heretics said from the platter. They argued it long and they argued it strong, And I hear they are arguing now; But of all the choice spirits who lived in the cheese, Not one of them thought of a cow.

                            [?]Book dedications bot » 🤖 🌐
                            @dedication_bot@stefanbohacek.online

                            Glassworks by Olivia Wolfgang-Smith

                            For everyone whose story is still in progress

                            Alt...For everyone whose story is still in progress

                              [?]Assoc for Scottish Literature » 🌐
                              @scotlit@mastodon.scot

                              CFP: James Kelman at 80
                              Spring 2027, University of Glasgow (date tbc)

                              This international conference will consider the living legacy of Kelman’s writing, & his ongoing significance in the cultural & political worlds of the 21st century. Proposals are invited on Kelman’s fiction & its political significance, focusing on any period or aspect of Kelman’s work.

                              Submissions deadline: 30 June 2026

                              @litstudies

                              call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/

                                [?]RJT » 🌐
                                @many@subconscioussignature.earth

                                [?]Grenhas Valhalla » 🌐
                                @Grenhas@mast.lat


                                Autor: ✒️📖✒️
                                «Guarda tus sueños; ¡Los sabios no los tienen tan hermosos como los locos!.»

                                  [?]Walt » 🌐
                                  @astralcomputing@bookstodon.com

                                  Weird Tales vol VII number 6 (June 1926) - featured story: The Foot Fetish by Howard R. Marsh



                                  @books @scifi @Scifiart @sciencefiction

                                  astralcomputing.com

                                  Art by E. M. Stevenson

                                  Weird Tales vol VII number 6 (June 1926) - featured story: The Foot Fetish by Howard R. Marsh. Cover illustration by E. M. Stevenson.

The magazine cover features a thick, bright red border enclosing a central illustration. At the top, the title "Weird Tales" is printed in large, white block letters with black outlines. Underneath, the subtitle "The Unique Magazine" is in black cursive. The main illustration depicts a dramatic, dimly lit scene. In the foreground, a pale woman with long dark hair lies flat on her back on a yellow mattress. Her eyes are closed, and she wears a gown with red, blue, and yellow patterns. A man in a green tunic with orange details leans over her, touching her arm. Behind them, a chaotic struggle unfolds. A man in a white shirt chokes another man whose head is thrown back. To the left, a man in a blue uniform and peaked cap points a pistol into the scene. In the background, a dark silhouette stands with raised hands. On the right wall, a menacing, green-hued face is visible, with blue smoke rising from a small lamp below it. The lighting is low and theatrical, casting high-contrast highlights on the white shirt and the woman. At the bottom left, "June 1926" and "25¢" are printed in black. The bottom margin reads "Don't Miss SPIDER-BITE, by Robert S. Carr, in This Issue" in white. The left margin contains vertical text: "JUNE, 1926", "WEIRD TALES", "Printed in U.S.A.", and "Vol. VII, No. 6—25c".

                                  Alt...Weird Tales vol VII number 6 (June 1926) - featured story: The Foot Fetish by Howard R. Marsh. Cover illustration by E. M. Stevenson. The magazine cover features a thick, bright red border enclosing a central illustration. At the top, the title "Weird Tales" is printed in large, white block letters with black outlines. Underneath, the subtitle "The Unique Magazine" is in black cursive. The main illustration depicts a dramatic, dimly lit scene. In the foreground, a pale woman with long dark hair lies flat on her back on a yellow mattress. Her eyes are closed, and she wears a gown with red, blue, and yellow patterns. A man in a green tunic with orange details leans over her, touching her arm. Behind them, a chaotic struggle unfolds. A man in a white shirt chokes another man whose head is thrown back. To the left, a man in a blue uniform and peaked cap points a pistol into the scene. In the background, a dark silhouette stands with raised hands. On the right wall, a menacing, green-hued face is visible, with blue smoke rising from a small lamp below it. The lighting is low and theatrical, casting high-contrast highlights on the white shirt and the woman. At the bottom left, "June 1926" and "25¢" are printed in black. The bottom margin reads "Don't Miss SPIDER-BITE, by Robert S. Carr, in This Issue" in white. The left margin contains vertical text: "JUNE, 1926", "WEIRD TALES", "Printed in U.S.A.", and "Vol. VII, No. 6—25c".

                                    [?]Bob the Traveler » 🤖 🌐
                                    @bobthetraveler@mastodon.world

                                    French author, poet, and playwright Victor Hugo, who died OTD in 1885, lived at the Place des Vosges in the Marais district of cromwell-intl.com/travel/franc

                                      [?]Bradley Bravard » 🌐
                                      @bradleybravard@mastodon.social

                                      "We live in times of terrible confusion. We do not know that which is necessary to know, and we know that which we should ignore."

                                      -Les Miserables by Victor Hugo

                                      Hardcover edition of the novel Les Miserables by Victor Hugo on a table next to a soft drink in a plastic cup and a chocolate cookie on a blue plate

                                      Alt...Hardcover edition of the novel Les Miserables by Victor Hugo on a table next to a soft drink in a plastic cup and a chocolate cookie on a blue plate

                                        [?]The Vulgar Tongue » 🤖 🌐
                                        @TheVulgarTongue@zirk.us

                                        RIBBIN. Money. The ribbin runs thick; i.e. there is plenty of money. CANT. Blue ribbin. Gin. The cull lushes the blue ribbin; the silly fellow drinks common gin.

                                        A selection from Francis Grose’s “Dictionary Of The Vulgar Tongue” (1785)

                                        --
                                        @histodons

                                        Image imitating a page from an old document, text (as in main toot):

RIBBIN. Money. The ribbin runs thick; i.e. there is plenty of money. CANT. Blue ribbin. Gin. The cull lushes the blue ribbin; the silly fellow drinks common gin.

A selection from Francis Grose’s “Dictionary Of The Vulgar Tongue” (1785)

                                        Alt...Image imitating a page from an old document, text (as in main toot): RIBBIN. Money. The ribbin runs thick; i.e. there is plenty of money. CANT. Blue ribbin. Gin. The cull lushes the blue ribbin; the silly fellow drinks common gin. A selection from Francis Grose’s “Dictionary Of The Vulgar Tongue” (1785)

                                          [?]Walt » 🌐
                                          @astralcomputing@bookstodon.com

                                          Born this day: 05/22/1968
                                          Paul Melko (born May 22, 1968) is an American science fiction writer whose work has appeared in Realms of Fantasy, Asimov's Science Fiction, Strange Horizons, and Live Without a Net. Won the Locus Award (2009) for Best First Novel for Singularity's Ring.

                                          en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Mel


                                          @books @scifi @Scifiart @sciencefiction

                                          astralcomputing.com

                                          Art by Daniel Dociu

                                          Book cover for "Singularity's Ring" by Paul Melko, featuring art by Daniel Dociu. The composition is divided between a massive, intricate technological megastructure on the left and outer space on the right. This mechanical structure dominates the left two-thirds of the image, appearing as a dense, vertical wall of blocky, multi-layered architectural details. The surface is heavily distressed and complex, rendered in metallic shades of gold, bronze, ochre, dark brown, and black, suggesting a weathered, industrial exterior with numerous geometric protrusions, recesses, and openings. Near the lower center of this structure, a white and black circular wheel-like component is visible. On the upper right, a partial view of Planet Earth is visible against the dark backdrop of space, showing blue oceans, swirling white clouds, and green and tan landmasses. Below Earth, thin vertical cables or spires extend downward through a dark void toward a shadowed base. Across the middle of the cover sits a prominent rectangular text box with a dark gray background and a thin orange border. Inside the box, the title "SINGULARITY'S RING" is printed in a bold, blocky, lime-green sans-serif font across two lines. To the right of "RING," the author's name "PAUL MELKO" appears in a white, all-caps serif font. In the bottom right corner, a white logo features a stylized letter 'S' encircled by a ring, next to the text "Sci Fi" and the phrase "A SCI FI ESSENTIAL BOOK" in small capital letters.

                                          Alt...Book cover for "Singularity's Ring" by Paul Melko, featuring art by Daniel Dociu. The composition is divided between a massive, intricate technological megastructure on the left and outer space on the right. This mechanical structure dominates the left two-thirds of the image, appearing as a dense, vertical wall of blocky, multi-layered architectural details. The surface is heavily distressed and complex, rendered in metallic shades of gold, bronze, ochre, dark brown, and black, suggesting a weathered, industrial exterior with numerous geometric protrusions, recesses, and openings. Near the lower center of this structure, a white and black circular wheel-like component is visible. On the upper right, a partial view of Planet Earth is visible against the dark backdrop of space, showing blue oceans, swirling white clouds, and green and tan landmasses. Below Earth, thin vertical cables or spires extend downward through a dark void toward a shadowed base. Across the middle of the cover sits a prominent rectangular text box with a dark gray background and a thin orange border. Inside the box, the title "SINGULARITY'S RING" is printed in a bold, blocky, lime-green sans-serif font across two lines. To the right of "RING," the author's name "PAUL MELKO" appears in a white, all-caps serif font. In the bottom right corner, a white logo features a stylized letter 'S' encircled by a ring, next to the text "Sci Fi" and the phrase "A SCI FI ESSENTIAL BOOK" in small capital letters.

                                            [?]Assoc for Scottish Literature » 🌐
                                            @scotlit@mastodon.scot

                                            Arthur Conan Doyle (1859–1930) was born , 22 May, at 11 Picardy Place, Edinburgh – a 🎂 🧵

                                            On BBC Sounds: Bridget Kendall explores Conan Doyle’s life & work – the doctor & literary superstar who changed crime fiction forever

                                            1/

                                            bbc.co.uk/programmes/p054419v

                                              [?]Assoc for Scottish Literature » 🌐
                                              @scotlit@mastodon.scot

                                              Conan Doyle “scrawled lists, considering various combinations of given names and surnames…”

                                              —Michael Sims investigates the creation of the Great Detective for @literaryhub – & discovers why today is not

                                              2/

                                              lithub.com/how-sherlock-holmes

                                                [?]Assoc for Scottish Literature » 🌐
                                                @scotlit@mastodon.scot

                                                According to Guinness World Records, Sherlock Holmes has been portrayed on screen more than any other literary character. Olivia Rutigliano ranks the 100 best, worst, & strangest screen portrayals of the great detective

                                                3/

                                                crimereads.com/100-sherlock-ho

                                                  [?]Assoc for Scottish Literature » 🌐
                                                  @scotlit@mastodon.scot

                                                  Curently on BBC Sounds. Harriett Gilbert is joined by internationally bestselling crime writer Denise Mina & Dr Mark Jones, co-presenter of The Doings of Doyle podcast & editor of The Sherlock Holmes Journal, to discuss Sherlock Holmes’s lasting influence on crime & detective fiction.

                                                  4/

                                                  bbc.co.uk/programmes/w3ct74s3

                                                    [?]Project Gutenberg » 🌐
                                                    @gutenberg_org@mastodon.social

                                                    The Bayeux Tapestry tells only the winner’s story – but the other side can be found in old English texts

                                                    The story of the losers is full of meaningful silences and William of Normandy’s terror.

                                                    by Catherine Clarke

                                                    theconversation.com/the-bayeux

                                                    Bayeux tapestry at PG:
                                                    gutenberg.org/ebooks/subject/4

                                                    THE BAYEUX TAPESTRY ELUCIDATED.
BY
REV. JOHN COLLINGWOOD BRUCE, LL.D., F.S.A.,

Plate I.

Top panel shows:

A enthroned figure on the left (likely King Edward the Confessor) gesturing to figures before him
Latin inscription referencing "Anglorum" (of the English) and "milites" (soldiers/knights)
Mounted knights and hunting dogs racing to the right — possibly Harold's journey to Normandy

Bottom panel shows:

The label "ECCLESIA" on the left, with a church building
The inscription "HIC HAROLD MARE NAVIGAVIT" — "Here Harold sailed the sea"
A longship with oarsmen navigating waves, accompanied by figures on shore
Wind-filled sails and stylized waves typical of the tapestry's distinctive style

https://www.gutenberg.org/files/55614/55614-h/55614-h.htm

                                                    Alt...THE BAYEUX TAPESTRY ELUCIDATED. BY REV. JOHN COLLINGWOOD BRUCE, LL.D., F.S.A., Plate I. Top panel shows: A enthroned figure on the left (likely King Edward the Confessor) gesturing to figures before him Latin inscription referencing "Anglorum" (of the English) and "milites" (soldiers/knights) Mounted knights and hunting dogs racing to the right — possibly Harold's journey to Normandy Bottom panel shows: The label "ECCLESIA" on the left, with a church building The inscription "HIC HAROLD MARE NAVIGAVIT" — "Here Harold sailed the sea" A longship with oarsmen navigating waves, accompanied by figures on shore Wind-filled sails and stylized waves typical of the tapestry's distinctive style https://www.gutenberg.org/files/55614/55614-h/55614-h.htm

                                                      [?]RJT » 🌐
                                                      @many@subconscioussignature.earth

                                                      [?]RJT » 🌐
                                                      @many@subconscioussignature.earth

                                                      [?](Older) RJT » 🌐
                                                      @one@subconscioussignature.earth

                                                      [?]RJT » 🌐
                                                      @many@subconscioussignature.earth

                                                      [?]Izaskun Gracia Quintana » 🌐
                                                      @IzaskunGraciaQuintana@mastodon.world

                                                      «Mal de bosque» (la traducción al castellano de mi novela «Basokoa») se publica el 10 de junio, pero yo ya tengo mis ejemplares y os los enseño para que veáis lo bonito que ha quedado 🖤🖤🖤

                                                      Fotografía en color de tres ejemplares de la novela «Mal de bosque», por Izaskun Gracia Quintana

                                                      Alt...Fotografía en color de tres ejemplares de la novela «Mal de bosque», por Izaskun Gracia Quintana

                                                        [?]BookShelves eBook Reader » 🌐
                                                        @getbookshelves@mastodon.social

                                                        📅 This Day in Literature — May 22

                                                        Born on this day: Arthur Conan Doyle (1859)

                                                        Created Sherlock Holmes, tried to kill him off, and was forced to bring him back.

                                                        lk0.eu/bks707m

                                                          [?]Book dedications bot » 🤖 🌐
                                                          @dedication_bot@stefanbohacek.online

                                                          This Way Up: When Maps Go Wrong (And Why It Matters) by Mark Cooper-Jones and Jay Foreman

                                                          Mark: This book is dedicated to my family.
Jay: No, this book is dedicated to my family.

                                                          Alt...Mark: This book is dedicated to my family. Jay: No, this book is dedicated to my family.

                                                            [?]Project Gutenberg » 🌐
                                                            @gutenberg_org@mastodon.social

                                                            On Making Time to Read War and Peace and Other Great Literary Works

                                                            Laura Vanderkam Offers Some Suggestions to Help Meet Your Reading Goals

                                                            lithub.com/on-making-time-to-r

                                                            "War and Peace" at PG:

                                                            gutenberg.org/ebooks/2600

                                                            On the right in the foreground is an hourglass that has pink sand running through it. One the left is an out-of-focus metal clock with roman numbers.

                                                            Alt...On the right in the foreground is an hourglass that has pink sand running through it. One the left is an out-of-focus metal clock with roman numbers.

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