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oh god from which fandom though. i can't choose just one haha
my first otp was mulder/scully, back when i was like 8 and had no idea that fandom existed
now i'm all about dean/castiel. which is a problem for my heart, considering the last six or seven episodes of spn :| (when i say "problem for my heart," i mean "i no longer have a heart.") -
I could make a really inappropriate response to this question, but I won't. I suppose.
Honestly, unless I had a first mate or someone to dig the hole for me, I'd probably just keep my treasure in a locked room. I'm not a very cautious pirate. -
A really big book. I mean I know I'm small, but I don't think I can even fit inside a full-size dictionary.
Also, definitely Harry Potter. And when the year was up, I would change my name and my face and just live in the HP world forever. -
I do not have one. / I do not read them often, / Though I write many
I just really like traditional nature-inspired ones, especially ones about winter and autumn. -
Octopi. How is that even a question
:P -
that batman ride at 6 flags in illinois
also tilt-o-whirl. -
That is unfortunate.
I jest. Well, not really. I mean what. I'm flattered. I don't know how to respond to things like this. I assume you mean you love me in a "Wow, William, you are a really charming and humourous fella, and I really enjoy the character you portray on the internet." In which case, I appreciate the comment? I don't understand how social interaction works.
If you really are romantically in love with me, then that is unfortunate. I am awkward and an emotional ice cube, and I don't know how to navigate human relationships, and all I care about are books and pizza, and I would be a terrible lover I mean I don't do flowers or candy or candlelit dinners or dancing or anything.
I'm being facetious. Thank you, Anon, I love you too. -
Brooooosephhhhhs, ya'll need to check out my previous answers; I get asked this like once every ten questions rofl
Top five current favorites: Maurice by EM Forster, A Single Man by Christopher Isherwood, A Separate Peace by John Knowles, The Beautiful Room is Empty by Edmund White, and Leaves of Grass by Walt Whitman. I love my literary homos. -
Because I've not started T yet.
Also, not all trans men take T. Some of us live as male without pursuing any sort of physical hormonal/surgical changes. Some of us identify as male but decide to live as female for a variety of personal and/or professional reasons.
I realize that you probably didn't mean any offense, but it seems like you're assuming that all trans men physically transition in the same ways and live as male, which is very untrue.
That said, I do live as male and plan on physically transitioning in every way possible, and I hope to be on T within a year. -
Oh man, seriously?! THE MAN IS BEAUTIFUL AND CHARMING AND INTELLIGENT AND TALENTED.
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omggg. Jude Law, Robert Downey Jr, Benedict Cumberbatch, Dylan Moran, and Stephen Fry.
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I read a lot of them for my Eastern Philosophy class, and then wrote a bunch for my poetry class, and then I decided to write them when I had writers block. Then I realized "This is pretty fun, yo."
I would have answered this in a haiku but I'm lazy and uninspired rn -
American Gods by Neil Gaiman. It was magnificent.
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I'm reading Storm Front by Jim Butcher, Letters Between Forster and Isherwood on Homosexuality and Literature, The World in the Evening by Christopher Isherwood, Christopher and His Kind by Christopher Isherwood, and Crime and Punishment by Dostoevsky.
As for a good sci-fi novel for ~beginners~, idk really. The first sci-fi I read was HG Wells' The Time Machine, and that was ages ago. It's (literally) classic sci-fi, and it's fairly short, but if you don't read a lot of older prose, the language might distract you a bit. You could also try to find anthologies like the SFWA Grandmasters or The Year's Best Science Fiction collections. The SFWA anthologies are generally the best short sci-fi stories by the greatest and most well-known sci-fi authors. Bradbury is always good, because his science fiction is obviously sci-fi, but his writing style has a very "normal" feel to it; it's not full of confusing techno stuff and complicated explanations of things. It's like, "We flew our rocket to Mars, which was totally normal, and there was a river there, which was also normal, and we became Martians, which was pretty rad." It's hard to describe. His sci-fi kind of makes me want to describe it as a mix between sci-fi and general fiction, even though it's really just excellently written sci-fi. JUST READ ALL OF BRADBURY'S WORK OKAY XD Douglas Adams' Hitchhiker's Guide series is obviously a must, and it's absolutely hilarious as well. Some of Alfred Bester's short stories seem like they'd be suitable for someone who hasn't read much sci-fi, but I'd recommend waiting to read is novels, as they get really absurd at times.
Alright, I'm done rambling. -
Combination of laziness and lack of funds.
If I could afford it, I'd do it, but I don't buy my own food and I don't have a job so. -
English.
Also Spanish, German, French, Icelandic, Portuguese, Arabic, and Russian. -
Embla is my dear dear friend who I met through YouTube several years ago. Our personalities are pretty much identical, and we just ~get~ each other. So we got Facebook-married and are living ~*~JOYOUSLY EVER AFTER~*~
And one of these days, we will get forreal married and we will live in a trailer in Puerto Rico.
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William’s Bio
I have a pet alligator. His name is Chompy.
