umm do you have any good gateway books into second wave feminism đ
So if you want to read some of the defining books of the era I'd say
Sexual Politics, Kate Millett
Ob/Gyn, Mary Daly
Dialectics of Sex, Shulamith Firestone
Intercourse; Right-Wing Women; Woman Hating; Pornography; all four by Andrea Dworkin
Against Our Will, Susan Brownmiller
Ain't I a Woman, bell hooks
Sister Outsider, Audre Lorde
I haven't read it but I've also seen The Female Eunuch by Germaine Greer recommended a lot.
These are all good starts for second-wave feminism imo. upon reading them you'll also find some recommendations to other books as second-wave feminists referenced each other pretty often.
I would also advise reading history books written about the second-wave on the side. For example, Jewish Radical Feminism by Joyce Antler shades some light on Firestone's, Brownmiller's and Dworkin's life and political perspectives that helps put their work in context. Another really good one is Battling Pornography by Carolyn Bronstein, you can read this in a series with Pornography by Andrea Dworkin and Against Our Will by Susan Brownmiller. And then you also have The Trouble Between Us by Winifred Breines, about the tensions between white and black, straight and lesbian, upper and lower class second wave feminists. Also a very interesting read that puts some works in context and still has strong relevance nowadays
from an indie author who's published 4 books and written 20+, as well as 400k in fanfiction (who is also a professional beta reader who encounters the same issues in my clients' books over and over)
show don't tell is every bit as important as they say it is, no matter how sick you are of hearing about it. "the floor shifted beneath her feet" hits harder than "she felt sick with shock."
no head hopping. if you want to change pov mid scene, put a scene break. you can change it multiple times in the same scene! just put a break so your readers know you've changed pov.
if you have to infodump, do it through dialogue instead of exposition. your reader will feel like they're learning alongside the character, and it will flow naturally into your story.
never open your book with an exposition dump. instead, your opening scene should drop into the heart of the action with little to no context. raise questions to the reader and sprinkle in the answers bit by bit. let your reader discover the context slowly instead of holding their hand from the start. trust your reader; donn't overexplain the details. this is how you create a perfect hook.
every chapter should end on a cliffhanger. doesn't have to be major, can be as simple as ending a chapter mid conversation and picking it up immediately on the next one. tease your reader and make them need to turn the page.
every scene should subvert the character's expectations, as big as a plot twist or as small as a conversation having a surprising outcome. scenes that meet the character's expectations, such as a boring supply run, should be summarized.
arrive late and leave early to every scene. if you're character's at a party, open with them mid conversation instead of describing how they got dressed, left their house, arrived at the party, (because those things don't subvert their expectations). and when you're done with the reason for the scene is there, i.e. an important conversation, end it. once you've shown what you needed to show, get out, instead of describing your character commuting home (because it doesn't subvert expectations!)
epithets are the devil. "the blond man smiled--" you've lost me. use their name. use it often. don't be afraid of it. the reader won't get tired of it. it will serve you far better than epithets, especially if you have two people of the same pronouns interacting.
your character should always be working towards a goal, internal or external (i.e learning to love themself/killing the villain.) try to establish that goal as soon as possible in the reader's mind. the goal can change, the goal can evolve. as long as the reader knows the character isn't floating aimlessly through the world around them with no agency and no desire. that gets boring fast.
plan scenes that you know you'll have fun writing, instead of scenes that might seem cool in your head but you know you'll loathe every second of. besides the fact that your top priority in writing should be writing for only yourself and having fun, if you're just dragging through a scene you really hate, the scene will suffer for it, and readers can tell. the scenes i get the most praise on are always the scenes i had the most fun writing. an ideal outline shouldn't have parts that make you groan to look at. you'll thank yourself later.
happy writing :)
â° First of all â being sick is boring as hell
Nobody tells you that. You think itâs gonna be poetic and tragic and emotionally moving, maybe a few tears on the windowpane and a soft piano soundtrack? Wrong. Itâs pacing in a waiting room for two hours to be told to come back next week. Itâs reruns of trash TV because your brain fog is so bad you can't even process a podcast. It's Googling "why do my bones hate me" at 3 a.m. and finding nothing helpful, only vibes. So if you're writing a sick character and every scene is Deep and Heavy and Symbolic, I love you but no. Let them be bored. Let them be over it. Let them fall asleep halfway through someoneâs big speech.
â° Second â sickness is basically a toxic relationship with your own body
And wow, the drama is unmatched. One day your character wakes up and thinks, âMaybe today will be normal.â Their body: âPlot twist, bitch.â Now theyâre sweating through a hoodie, canceling plans, and pretending they're âjust tiredâ because explaining the truth is somehow more exhausting than the illness itself. Let your character hate their body sometimes. Let them feel betrayed by it. Let them mourn the version of themselves that used to just do things without needing a three-day nap after. But alsoâlet them fight for their body, too. Advocate. Adapt. Try again. Because itâs not all despair. Sometimes itâs really freaking brave just to get out of bed and put on pants.
â° Third â itâs not cute
Hollywood loves to write illness like itâs an aesthetic. Clean blankets, sad smiles, a gentle cough. Yeah⌠no. Sometimes itâs vomit in your hair. Itâs medical tape pulling off skin. Itâs being too tired to shower but still scrolling through memes like your life depends on it. Give us the gross stuff. The embarrassing stuff. The human stuff.
â° Fourth â let them be funny
Sick people are hilarious. Mostly because we have to be. Youâve got two choices when your body is a disaster zone: laugh, or fully unravel. So we joke about our failing organs. We flirt with the nurse while on IV fluids. We name our medical devices. We send memes from the ER. Let your character joke. Let them be sharp, sarcastic, absurd. Not because they're âtaking it well,â but because thatâs their armor. Humor is one of the most honest forms of pain. Use it.
â° Fifth â sick â broken
Please hear this: your character is not less than. They are not just here to suffer and die and inspire others with their angelic perseverance. Theyâre a person. Maybe a chaos goblin. Maybe a genius. Maybe a mess. Maybe a lover, a fighter, a giant emotional raccoon with a heating pad. Let them live and have goals. Let them chase things. Let them screw up. Let them be loved and desired and complicated. Their illness is part of them, not all of them.
â° Lastly â donât wrap it up too clean
Recovery isnât linear. Some illnesses donât âend.â And thatâs okay. You donât need a miracle cure in the third act. Sometimes strength is just learning to exist in a different way. Sometimes itâs re-learning how to hope. Sometimes itâs finding a new rhythm instead of forcing the old one to work. Let your character find peace, not perfection. So yeahâif youâre writing a sick character, youâre doing something important. Youâre making space for people whose stories rarely get told with truth and teeth and tenderness. Just promise me you wonât turn them into a symbol. Let them be a person. A funny, scared, strong, exhausted, hopeful person. Like the rest of us.
@katrein05 I Hope This Helps a little... :)
This woman holds the highest recorded IQ ever: an astonishing 228. Far surpassing Einstein (160-190), Hawking (160), and Musk (155). Yet, despite her brilliance, she faced ridicule for her response to a seemingly simple problem.
But she saw what no one else could.
Hereâs her story:
Marilyn Vos Savant was far from an ordinary child.
By the age of 10, she had:
⢠Memorized entire books
⢠Read all 24 volumes of the Encyclopedia Britannica
⢠Achieved the highest recorded IQ of 228
She seemed destined for a life of genius.
But reality took a different turn.
âNo one paid much attention to meâmostly because I was a girl. And I accepted that,â Marilyn Vos Savant once said.
She attended a regular public school, left Washington University after two years to help run her parents' business, and seemed destined for an ordinary life.
But in 1985, everything changed.
The Guinness Book of World Records listed her as having the "Highest IQ" ever recorded: 228.
Suddenly, Marilyn was thrust into the spotlight:
⢠Featured on the covers of New York Magazine and Parade Magazine
⢠Guest on Late Night with David Letterman
But she couldnât have anticipated what lay ahead.
The Rise and the Question
Marilyn joined Parade Magazine to write the iconic "Ask Marilyn" columnâa dream for someone with a passion for writing.
Yet, this dream turned into a nightmare with a single question in September 1990.
The Monty Hall Problem
Named after Monty Hall, the host of Letâs Make a Deal, the question went like this:
Youâre on a game show.
There are 3 doors.
⢠1 door hides a car.
⢠The other 2 hide goats.
You choose a door. The host opens another door, revealing a goat.
Should you switch doors?
Marilynâs answer: âYes, you should switch.â
The backlash was overwhelming. She received over 10,000 letters, including nearly 1,000 from PhDs, insisting she was wrong:
⢠âYou are the goat!â
⢠âYou blew it, and you blew it big!â
⢠âMaybe women look at math problems differently than men.â
But was she wrong?
The Math Behind the Answer
Consider the two possible scenarios:
You pick the car (1/3 chance):
⢠If you switch, you lose.
You pick a goat (2/3 chance):
⢠Monty reveals the other goat.
⢠If you switch, you win.
Switching gives you a 2/3 chance of winning.
Eventually, her answer was proven correct.
Vindication
MIT ran computer simulations confirming her logic.
MythBusters tested it and reached the same conclusion.
Some academics even apologized.
So why did so many fail to see the truth?
The Reasons People Got It Wrong
⢠They "reset" the scenario instead of recognizing the shifting probabilities.
⢠The simplicity of 3 doors obscured the underlying math.
⢠Many assumed each remaining door had a 50% chance.
Marilynâs View
Marilyn blamed the compulsory schooling system for discouraging independent thinking. She argued that it:
⢠Creates passive learners
⢠Stifles exploration
⢠Hinders critical thinking
A Blessing and a Burden
Marilyn admits that her intellect often feels isolatingâthereâs no one to turn to when she needs answers.
Still, she sees her intelligence as a gift, not a curse .
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As I dive into researching signs of fear for my horror WIP, I wanted to share some of the most compelling and visceral reactions Iâve come across. Whether youâre writing a chilling scene or crafting a characterâs panic, these 20 signs of fear can help bring tension and realism to your story.
Hyperventilating â sucking in air but never feeling like itâs enough
Chest tightens â feels like a weight or hands pressing down
Limbs shaking violently, knees buckling
Complete loss of muscle control â collapsing or unable to stand
Cold sweat soaking through clothes
Heart hammering so hard they feel it in their throat or head
Tunnel vision â the world narrowing down to one terrifying focal point
Ringing in the ears or sudden deafness, like the world drops away
Dizziness / feeling faint / vision blurring
Dry mouth â unable to speak or even scream
Screaming / sobbing / gasping â involuntary vocal outbursts
Panic run â bolting without thinking, tripping over everything
Clawing at their own skin / chest / throat â like trying to escape their body
Begging / pleading out loud even if no oneâs there
Repeating words or phrases â âNo, no, noâ / âThis isnât happeningâ
Hiding instinctively â diving under tables, closets, or corners
Desperate grabbing â reaching for someone, anything solid
Loss of bladder or bowel control (for extreme terror)
Total mental shutdown â frozen, slack-jawed, staring blankly
Memory blackout â later canât recall what happened during the worst moment
Tears are powerful, but do you know what's more impactful? The struggle to hold them back. This post is for all your hard-hearted stoic characters who'd never shed a tear before another, and aims to help you make them breakdown realistically.
Heavy Eyelids, Heavy Heart Your character's eyelids feel weighted, as if the tears themselves are dragging them down. Their vision blursânot quite enough to spill over, but enough to remind them of the dam threatening to break.
The Involuntary Sniffle They sniffle, not because their nose is running, but because their body is desperately trying to regulate itself, to suppress the wave of emotion threatening to take over.
Burning Eyes Their eyes sting from the effort of restraint, from the battle between pride and vulnerability. If they try too hard to hold back, the whites of their eyes start turning red, a telltale sign of the tears they've refused to let go.
The Trembling Lips Like a child struggling not to cry, their lips quiver. The shame of it fuels their determination to stay composed, leading them to clench their fists, grip their sleeves, or dig their nails into the nearest surfaceâanything to regain control.
The Fear of Blinking Closing their eyes means surrender. The second their lashes meet, the memories, the pain, the heartbreak will surge forward, and the tears will follow. So they force themselves to keep staringâat the floor, at a blank wall, at anything that wonât remind them of why theyâre breaking.
A Steady Gaze & A Deep Breath To mask the turmoil, they focus on a neutral object, inhale slowly, and steel themselves. If they can get through this one breath, they can get through the next.
Turning Away to Swipe at Their Eyes When they do need to wipe their eyes, they do it quickly, casually, as if brushing off a speck of dust rather than wiping away the proof of their emotions.
Masking the Pain with a Different Emotion Anger, sarcasm, even laughterâany strong emotion can serve as a shield. A snappy response, a bitter chuckle, a sharp inhaleâeach is a carefully chosen defence against vulnerability.
Letting your character fight their tears instead of immediately breaking down makes the scene hit harder. It shows their internal struggle, their resistance, and their need to stay composed even when theyâre crumbling.
This is written based off of personal experience as someone who goes through this cycle a lot (emotional vulnerability who?) and some inspo from other books/articles
10 Traits That Make a Character Secretly Dangerous
âĽÂ Disarming Humor. Theyâre the life of the party. Everyoneâs laughing. No oneâs noticing how much they arenâtsaying.
âĽÂ Laser-Sharp Observation. They see everything. Whoâs nervous. Whoâs lying. Who would be easiest to break. And they donât miss.
âĽÂ Unsettling Calm. Even in chaos, they stay still. Smiling. Thinking. Calculating.
âĽÂ Weaponized Empathy. They know how to make people trust them. Because they know exactly what people want to hear.
âĽÂ Compartmentalization. They can do something brutal, then eat lunch like nothing happened.
âĽÂ Controlling Niceness. The kind of kindness thatâs sharp-edged. You feel guilty for not loving them.
âĽÂ Mirroring Behavior. They become whatever the person in front of them needs. It's not flattery. Itâs survivalâor manipulation.
âĽÂ Selective Vulnerability. They know how to spill just enough pain to make you drop your guard.
âĽÂ History of âBad Luckâ. Ex-friends, ex-lovers, ex-colleagues⌠they all left under âunfortunateâ circumstances. But the pattern says otherwise.
âĽÂ Unshakeable Confidence in Their Morality. They donât think theyâre the villain. That makes them scarier.
Soooo maybe an oddly specific question. Could you recommend your favorite books about politics in the last decade? Or even in the last 20 years? My school sucked and I'm trying to learn about modern politics on my own but there's so much content available that I'm lost. And you're very smart and read a lot, so I'm hoping you have recommendations. Thanks!!!
Omg thank you, I do read a lot so Iâm glad someone appreciates it.Â
Here are my top 20 books on politics and related sociological issues. I included some of these in a list I made over Christmas but I'll add to it here, and most are from the last 20 years.Â
This Town: Two Parties and a Funeral â plus plenty of valet parking! â in Americaâs Gilded Capital by Mark Leibovich
They Were Her Property: White Women as Slave Owners in the American South by Stephanie E. Jones-Rogers
The Destruction of Hillary Clinton by Susan Bordo (pair with What Happened by Hillary Rodham Clinton)
All the President's Men by Carl Bernstein
We Were Eight Years in Power: An American Tragedy by Ta-Nehisi Coates
Caste: The Origins of Our Discontents by Isabel Wilkerson
The Cruelty is the Point by Adam Serwer
Why We're Polarized by Ezra Klein
Women & Power: A Manifesto by Mary Beard
The Soul of America: The Battle for our Better Angels by Jon Meacham
This Will Not Pass: Trump, Biden, and the Battle for America's Future by Jonathan Martin and Alexander Burns
Political Fictions by Joan Didion
A Promised Land by Barack Obama
The Origins of Totalitarianism by Hannah Arendt
Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln by Doris Kearns Goodwin
The Optimistic Leftist: Why the 21st Century Will Be Better Than You Think by Ruy TeixeiraÂ
The Perils of âPrivilegeâ by Phoebe Maltz Bovy
Both/And by Huma Abedin
Renegades by Barack Obama and Bruce Springsteen (usual recommendation to listen to their podcast)
Beautiful Things by Hunter Biden (As you can tell by the below excerpt, Hunter Biden is me fr fr)
How to Write Dialogue That Doesnât Sound Like a Script
Okay, so here's the thing. After years of trying to get dialogue right, I think I've finally cracked the code.
Read it aloud.
Yeah, you heard me. Just read your characters' lines out loud. Youâll be shocked at how quickly you can tell if something sounds natural or like youâre writing for a robot. If youâve never said that line in your life, and if youâve never heard someone say it in real life, itâs probably time for a change.
This simple trick has literally transformed my writing for the better. Dialogue that used to feel stiff and scripted now flows like a conversation between friends. Just try it. Your characters will thank you, and so will your readers.
Also, if you catch yourself saying âWhat?â after reading a line, thatâs your cue. Itâs gotta go.
I made these as a way to compile all the geographical vocabulary that I thought was useful and interesting for writers. Some descriptors share categories, and some are simplified, but for the most part everything is in its proper place. Not all the words are as useable as others, and some might take tricky wording to pull off, but I hope these prove useful to all you writers out there!
(save the images to zoom in on the pics)
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