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Offline Rilla

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on: February 21, 2017, 12:59:38 PM
Thoth's Favorite Books

Stumped on what to read next? Try some of these authors!

A Game of Cabbages and Kings by Martin R R DeGeorge 'recommended' by Key Sorel, Epitome, and Hors D'oeuvre!

Pennyweather Gamble by R. Velvet

Antheia by R. Velvet (The villain resembles Noman perfectly!)

Consort's Flight by R. Velvet (Based off Eileadora resident Keaton Norwood!)

The Complete and Unabridged Works of William Shakespurr

King Rawrthur and Purrlin's Adventures, a children's novel by K. A. Peargate

Rawrthurr the lionhearted by K. A. Peargate

Harry Pupper and the Purrlin's Stone by J.K. Growling

Hungry Dog Games by Suzanne Collie

Do you have a favorite book or a recommended read? (Or has your character mentioned one before you'd love to add to this list? Add it below!)
« Last Edit: February 21, 2017, 01:40:14 PM by Cecilie »



Cas

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Reply #1 on: February 21, 2017, 06:42:45 PM
Riley has mentioned: 
The Highway Man by A. Rein (Fictional RP-based novel)
- A novel about a miscreant and his many unmoral deeds on his travels.



Offline Fayola

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Reply #2 on: February 21, 2017, 07:28:14 PM
Fayola used a series of children's books while learning to read over the last few months. I have mentioned in scenes:

Kiley Kit's Day Out

Kiley Kit's Magical Adventure

Kiley Kit's Sad Day



Offline Rolan

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Reply #3 on: March 11, 2017, 10:15:54 PM
Tarsus has mentioned:

The Spheres of Longing, Author Unknown

An old, obscure manuscript discovered some decades ago and reprinted for mass consumption. An unnamed narrator speaks of his time among a race of strange, cone-shaped beings of profoundly alien psychology. It deals less with the narrator's day to day experiences than with his attempt to explain and codify their inscrutably complex philosophies and ways of seeing the world.

Nearly everyone assumes the narrative is fictional, a plot device used to make some greater point. Some people pretend to have read and understood it; few have done the former and almost nobody the latter. It's one of those books.

Tarsus sure as hell doesn't get it either, but he is one of the few people in the world who knows that it is not a work of fiction.

-

Cold Stars, by R. Hopewell

"There is a hole in the soul of man. A bottomless void that no amount of light, heat, life, or love can fill. I am the voice of that abyss."


A madman recounts his view of the end of the world through the window of his cell in an asylum - an end he is ultimately responsible for. A monster hunter chases a presumed vampire through a dead, twisted woodland only to come face to face with something far worse than any son of Cain. An ancient star-spawned predator muses on its last kill and the nature of its own existence before it slinks beneath the earth to hibernate.

These and several other strange and macabre tales greet the reader of Cold Stars, a collection of short horror fiction, authored several years ago by the pseudonymous R. Hopewell. A somewhat ironic pen name, for the various stories' broad themes fundamentally deal with hopelessness, crushing revelations, and mortal men confronting the ineffable.

Almost none of Hopewell's various protagonists make it out alive, and they're the lucky ones.  The author has a way of evoking a sense of creeping dread even when precise physical descriptions of his various horrors aren't terribly forthcoming.

Tarsus is the book's true author, and wrote it during a particularly dark period to work through a bout of depression.

(This story is a wonderful analogue for the above, and an excellent excuse to pimp my current fave RL author to a new potential audience :3)



Offline Derp

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Reply #4 on: March 12, 2017, 10:45:18 AM
[As a running joke... @Render ]

Further books written by Martin R R DeGeorge

50 Leaves of Cabbages by Martin R R DeGeorge - An erotica novel involving love between to cabbages.

Cabbage and Lettuce by Martin R R DeGeorge - Star crossed lovers meet while their two family feud. Romantic tragedy.

Moby Cabbage by Martin R R DeGeorge - The tale of a farm hand on a cabbage patch farm while the farmer goes mad trying to hunt the elusive white cabbage.

The Princess Cabbage by Martin R R DeGeorge - A swashbuckling tale of love, romance and pirated cabbages.



Martin R R DeGeorge seems to be a prolific writer but his plots and novels leave a lot to be desired.
« Last Edit: March 12, 2017, 08:29:52 PM by Dorax »