yada yada young justice dark crisis sucks HOWEVER we've completed the circle of kon annoying the other members of core four so bad they throw hands with him
My favourite genre of character is the genius Idiot.
Like they're a super smart geniuses in every sense of the word but are completely weird and chaotic in everyday situations. The type to make toast by hooking up bread to a car battery.
I love them because in theory, they're smart enough to kill literally everyone around them if they chose to but don't because they're just big loveable morons too dumb to know hate.
Ah, Iris’ big call out of Joe for not telling her the truth...
You know, back then it was refreshing, especially after almost three seasons of Oliver lying through his teeth to his family and Laurel about being a vigilante and, subsequently, pushing them away. I like this part in particular:
“Maybe I could have helped you and Barry put the bad guys away, instead of being in the way.”
Because if Thea or Laurel knew earlier about Oliver’s night activities, so many dumb shit would have been avoided.
And Iris destroys this “Lying to love interest to protect her” idea in couple of sweep moves. It is awesome.
The Women’s Prize Trust is a registered charity championing women writers on a global stage. They empower all women to raise their voice and own their story, shining a spotlight on outstanding and ambitious fiction by women from anywhere in the world, regardless of their age, race, nationality or background. Born in 1992 when a group of men and women from the literary world noticed that the 1991 Booker shortlist did not include a single woman. Read the rest of the story here.
The 2022 Shortlist titles are:
The Sentence by Louise Erdrich
Sorrow and Bliss by Meg Mason
The Book of Form and Emptiness by Ruth Ozeki
The Island of Missing Trees by Elif Shafak
Great Circle by Maggie Shipstead
The Bread the Devil Knead by Lisa Allen-Agostini (not pictured)
This is inspired by a rather incredible true story about a hairdresser Sharon who manages to against all odds bring a community together to support a widowed father, Ed and fight for the life of his critically ill young daughter Michelle.
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Continue reading Ordinary Angels (2024) Review