between the before and after

Month

June 2013

13 posts

“It seems to me that on one page I recognized a portion of an old diary of mine which mysteriously disappeared shortly after my marriage, and, also, scraps of letters which, though considerably edited, sound to me vaguely familiar. In fact, Mr. Fitzgerald (I believe that is how he spells his name) seems to believe that plagiarism begins at home.” —

—Zelda Fitzgerald, in a review of her husband’s book in 1922 (via trishahaddad)

Reminder that F. Scott Fitzgerald stole his wife’s writing, many times, while suppressing her works. See “Save Me the Waltz”, which he forced her to revise so that he could use parts of it in his own book “Tender Is the Night”. And which author do we study in school?

(via rubyvroom)

I didn’t know this.

(via alienswithankhs)


He also encouraged her to have affairs so he could use that for inspiration, and when she wanted to leave him for a man she fell in love with, he locked her in their house and wouldn’t let her leave.

When she wanted to publish “Save me the Waltz,” Fitzgerald wrote in his diary about DELIBERATELY trying to TRIGGER her schizophrenic episodes and making her incapable of fighting that battle.

And Fitzgerald scholars KNOW all this.  They write articles about how it was all okay because in the end, it inspired Fitzgerald to write Great Literature.

(via prozacpark)

knife his corpse

(via freedominwickedness)


that sounds about right

(via missleaves)

He was a shitty author, tho…

(via heirofmedusa)

Jun 15, 20138,712 notes
“If nothing else, one day you can look someone straight in the eyes and say, “But I lived through it. And it made me who I am today.” —Iain Thomas (via bodyfluids)
Jun 10, 2013605 notes
Jun 10, 201365 notes
Jun 9, 20134,540 notes
Jun 6, 2013247 notes
Jun 6, 20138,655 notes
Jun 6, 20136 notes
Jun 6, 20135,494 notes
Jun 5, 201336,150 notes
“Art history is important as a way of exploring acts and products of human creativity. For me, art history and design and architectural history, broadly conceived to encompass all forms of visual and material culture, is important as a way of making sense of the stuff that surrounds us. It can give us fascinating insights into the lives and practices of our people as both producers and consumers…” —Deborah Sugg Ryan, in her interview for the AAH’s project Day in the Life of an Art Historian. (via caravaggista)
Jun 5, 2013165 notes

doglets:

“Pew pew pew” -church interior designer

Jun 4, 201334,412 notes
Jun 4, 20138,123 notes
Jun 2, 2013169,153 notes

May 2013

17 posts

May 31, 201322,742 notes
May 30, 2013268 notes
Keep on Walking Gabrielle Aplin

viskiss:

‘But all that glitters is not gold

From the bruises flowers grow
I feel so much better now you’re not around
There’s no one to kick me while I’m down
No one to burn my bridges anymore
So keep on walking
‘Cause I’m not here to make you feel good
To dry up your tears and apologise for you
I feel so much better now you’re not around
So keep on walking out
Ohhhh’

May 28, 201360 notes
May 23, 20132 notes
“You mean the generation that paid three times as much for college to enter a job market with triple the unemployment isn’t interested in purchasing the assets of the generation who just blew an enormous housing bubble and kept it from popping through quantitative easing and out-and-out federal support? Curious.” —When comments are better than the article, Atlantic edition (“The Cheapest Generation: Why Millennials arent’ buying cars or houses, and what that means for the economy”)
May 17, 201332,928 notes
May 14, 2013157,003 notes
May 14, 2013913 notes
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