Reblogged from
Reblogged from whatshewanted
kateoplis:

“Books are finite, sexual encounters are finite, but the desire to read and to fuck is infinite; it surpasses our own deaths, our fears, our hopes for peace.”
— Roberto Bolaño

kateoplis:

Books are finite, sexual encounters are finite, but the desire to read and to fuck is infinite; it surpasses our own deaths, our fears, our hopes for peace.

— Roberto Bolaño
Reblogged from kateoplis

wesleyallsbrook:

Made around the end of April/ beginning of May for Tina Connolly’s Old Dead Futures, an upcoming short story for Tor.com. Elements of this piece (the story, not the illustration) reminded me of Looper in that there-are-decisions-you-can-make-as-a-young-man-seeing-your-future-that-you-can’t-make-from-the-perspective-of-that-future kind-of way. And I love it when seemingly helpless protagonists manage to save themselves. Go read it when it comes out for Tor.com’s 5th birthday. Many thanks to Irene for always sending me the best SF!

Reblogged from WALLSBLOG
awesomepeoplereading:

Joe Strummer reads and writes.

awesomepeoplereading:

Joe Strummer reads and writes.

Reblogged from Awesome People Reading
kevindart:

Voyager - Space Show @1988

kevindart:

Voyager - Space Show @1988

Reblogged from Airows

vermillons:

Women in horror movies.

Suspiria, (Argento, 1977)

Reblogged from tastes like a bruise

caulfieldy:

history meme | 3 inventions [1/3] → "QWERTY keyboard" 

The first practical typewriter was patented in the United States in 1868 by Christopher Latham Sholes. His machine was known as the type-writer. It had a movable carriage, a lever for turning paper from line to line, and a keyboard on which the letters were arranged in alphabetical order. But Sholes had a problem. On his first model, his “ABC” key arrangement caused the keys to jam when the typist worked quickly. Sholes didn’t know how to keep the keys from sticking, so his solution was to keep the typist from typing too fast. He did this using a study of letter-pair frequency prepared by educator Amos Densmore, brother of James Densmore, who was Sholes’ chief financial backer. The QWERTY keyboard itself was determined by the existing mechanical linkages of the typebars inside the machine to the keys on the outside. Sholes’ solution did not eliminate the problem completely, but it was greatly reduced. . The keyboard arrangement was considered important enough to be included on Sholes’ patent granted in 1878, some years after the machine was into production. QWERTY’s effect, by reducing those annoying clashes, was to speed up typing rather than slow it down. The new arrangement was the “QWERTY” arrangement that typists use today. Of course, Sholes claimed that the new arrangement was scientific and would add speed and efficiency. The only efficiency it added was to slow the typist down, since almost any word in the English language required the typist’s fingers to cover more distance on the keyboard. The advantages of the typewriter outweighed the disadvantages of the keyboard. Typists memorized the crazy letter arrangement, and the typewriter became a huge success.

deforest:

Joan Crawford in Possessed (1931)