biandlesbianliterature:

[image description: a photo of the movie cover of The Miseducation of Cameron Post by emily m. danforth against a rainbow background. There is another copy underneath, with the page edges facing out. The page edges are rainbow! The second image is a tweet from @penguinplatform that reads “The special edition of The Miseducation of Cameron post has landed! It’s a stunning book with equally stunning sprayed rainbow edges. #PrideBookClub

Get it here: Waterstones http://po.st/CameronWaterstones … or Amazon http://po.st/CameronRainbow

“]

This looks really gorgeous. Looks like QBD has it listed in their online store, for Australians who don’t want to give money to Amazon during the strike/boycott, or, y’know, ever.

Is there a particular GF bread recipe that you like best or would recommend? *curious* Thanks! :)

The recipe I’ve made most is found in Gluten Free Makeovers and is Beth and Jen’s High Fiber Bread, though I substitute three of the flours because some are hard to come by. Millet and Montina I sub for buckwheat and quinoa, and lupin flour for the teff. (Lupin is a bean flour, but be careful – it can cause a reaction in people with a peanut allergy.) I don’t know if the recipe’s on Beth’s blog or if it’s a book-only recipe. I’ve attempted a fair few of the bread recipes in the book, and they’ve turned out pretty well, even with substitutions. That recipe is the one I go back to, though. I often fill it full of seeds, too – poppy, sesame, linseed and sunflower are favourite additions. I often brush the top with sesame oil, too, because I love the flavour and it gives a great crust.

If you’re interested in getting into baking, I’ll tell you this – with most GF bread doughs, you cannot knead them. You need a good stand mixer with a dough hook. If you try to knead by hand, you’ll just get it everywhere and end up with no bread. Use the machine. Also, I don’t know how most bread baking machines go with GF dough. The one bread machine I tried to use kept erroring out, even though we were using the GF recipe from its own manual. Use the oven.

Meet the lesbian witches who’ll be your new TV obsession

ballion:

leafstranger:

squeeful:

Two lesbian witches are about to take over your TV – and we’re so here for it.

A Discovery of Witches, which is coming to Sky 1 later this year, will feature Sarah Bishop, a powerful lesbian witch played by Doctor Who and Arrow star Alex Kingston. 

Together with her partner, another witch called Emily Mather, Sarah raises her niece Diana, teaching her how to use her powers to fight in a centuries-old struggle between supernatural beings.

@farrahkaya

So like … The Sabrina The Teenage Witch we actually deserve and where they aunts are actually gay? Yas.

Meet the lesbian witches who’ll be your new TV obsession

dodgylogic:

insufficient-earth-skills:

moon-boob:

fecundism:

prissygrrrl:

fecundism:

fecundism:

ive been reading a book that basically explains how so-called “brain differences” between the genders is the result of gendered socialization and not the cause of it. i honestly expected the book to be very cis-centric but its actually the opposite, the author stresses that testimony from trans ppl is actually indispensable because we’ve, in a sense, “lived both experiences”

more cis feminists should have this mindset

one of the first examples that she uses to introduce her point about how perception by others can shape a person’s performance actually uses a trans woman. it explains that as a certain trans woman became to be seen as a woman more and more frequently, the ppl arond her eventually started viewing her as being ill equipped for tasks that they did not bother her about pre-transition. eventually she even found herself underperforming in these tasks herself.

whats the name of the book

Delusions of Gender by Cordelia Fine

Here’s a pdf, babes ❤

I knew it was this book before I’d finished reading the first two lines. Honestly this book is indispensible if you want to debunk any gender determinism people claim is science. I can’t recommend it enough.

She’s written a new one! It won the Royal Society prize for science book of the year, and it’s called Testosterone Rex, and it is excellent.

(Bonus: it’s making old white men really really mad.)

(Bonus bonus: I am myself a neuroscientist, and the old white men mentioned above – who are not – could not have missed the point harder if they’d actively tried. Which. Maybe?)

Now Available to Pre-Order: Concerto in Chroma Major by Naomi Tajedler

interludepress:

image

Alexandra Graff, a Californian living in Paris, is a stained-glass artist whose synesthesia gives her the ability to see sounds in the form of colors. When she’s commissioned to create glass panels for the new Philharmonie, she forms a special bond with the intriguing Halina Piotrowski, a famous Polish pianist. As their relationship develops, Alexandra shows Halina the beautiful images her music inspires. But when it comes to a lasting future together, will Halina’s fear of roots and commitment stand in the way?

CONCERTO IN CHROMA MAJOR
Price: $16.99 print / $6.99 multi-format ebook
Release Date: July 12, 2018
Details: Trade paperback, 6"x9"
Pages/Words: 256 // 69,205
ISBN: 978-1-945053-66-5 print // 978-1-945053-67-2 multi-format eBook

IP Web Store Advance Purchase Special

US/Canada: If you purchase the print edition of Concerto in Chroma Major before July 12, 2018 from the IP Web Store, you will automatically receive the multi-format eBook for free with your order.

International: Order the print edition by July 12, 2018 from your favorite book retailer and receive free multi-format eBook by submitting a copy of your receipt to contact@interludepress.com.

About the Author

Born and raised in Paris, France, Naomi Tajedler learned to love art from the womb when her father played guitar to her pregnant mother. Her love of books led her to a Bachelor of Arts in Book Restoration and Conservation, followed by a Master’s Degree in Art Market Management. Her first short story, What The Heart Wants, was published in SUMMER LOVE (2015), an LGBTQ Young Adult collection by Duet Books. In 2017, one of her flash fiction stories was published by Queer Fiction Press. She also contributed to the Cassandra Project, a collection of works sold for the benefit of Rrain. When not writing, Naomi can be found sharing body positivity tips on social media and trying recipes out on her loved ones.

Cover art by C.B. Messer

This sounds amazing!

EDIT: according to the author on Goodreads, it has –
Fat representation
Jewish representation (both secular and more traditional)
wlw
Synesthesia
Genderfluid representation
Good food
A tour of Paris, by a Parisian 😉
And, of course, music and art!

The Covert Captain: Or, A Marriage of Equals –  by Jeannelle M. Ferreira

copperbadge:

strangeselkie:

It’s HEEEEEERE! 
My new book is live. It’s a Regency romance! With lesbians! Perfect for light weekend reading! 

I am DOPILY EXCITED to share this with you. It’s a long time coming. Also, I love the cover.

This is the book I reblogged about last week that people were interested in – the ebook is now out! (The print book takes longer.) 

The Covert Captain

Nathaniel Fleming, veteran of Waterloo, falls in love with his Major’s spinster sister, Harriet. But Nathaniel is not what he seems, and before the wedding, the truth will out…

Eleanor Charlotte Fleming, forgotten daughter of a minor baronet, stakes her life on a deception and makes her name—if not her fortune—on the battlefield. Her war at an end, she returns to England as Captain Nathaniel Fleming and wants nothing more than peace, quiet, and the company of horses. Instead, Captain Fleming meets Harriet. Harriet has averted the calamity of matrimony for a decade, cares little for the cut of her gowns, and is really rather clever. Falling in love is not a turn of the cards either of them expected. Harriet accepts Captain Fleming, but will she accept Eleanor? Along the way, there are ballrooms, stillrooms, mollyhouses, society intrigue, and sundering circumstance.

I haven’t read it in final form yet (I’m off to buy it in a moment) but I got to read some of the initial draft a while ago, and I really enjoyed it. I can safely vouch for the quality of its prose! 🙂

The Covert Captain: Or, A Marriage of Equals –  by Jeannelle M. Ferreira

If the door’s locked, try the wall

we-are-rogue:

[by
Geoff Manaugh]

a drywall knife

In one of the most interesting moments in his memoir, [jewelry thief Bill Mason] sees that architecture can be made to do what he wants it to do; it’s like watching a character in Star Wars learn to use the Force.

In a lengthy scene at a hotel in Cleveland that Mason would ultimately hit more than once in his career, he explains that his intended prize was locked inside a room whose door was too closely guarded for him to slip through. Then he realizes the obvious: he has been thinking the way the hotel wanted him to think—the way the architects had hoped he would behave—looking for doors and hallways when he could  simply carve a new route where he wanted it. The ensuing realization delights him. “Elated at the idea that I could cut my own door right where I needed one,” he writes, Mason simply breaks into the hotel suite adjacent to the main office. There, he flings open the closet, pushes aside the hangers, and cuts his way from one room into the other using a drywall knife. In no time at all, he has cut his “own door” through to the manager’s office, where he takes whatever he wants—departing right back through the very “door” he himself made. It is architectural surgery, pure and simple.

Later, Mason actually mocks the idea that a person would remain reliant on doors, making fun of anyone who thinks burglars, in particular, would respect the limitations of architecture. “Surely if someone were to rob the place,” he writes in all italics, barbed with sarcasm, “they’d come in as respectable people would, through the door provided for the purpose. Maybe that explains why people will have four heavy-duty locks on a solid oak door that’s right next to a glass window.” People seem to think they should lock-pick or kick their way through solid doors rather than just take a ten-dollar drywall knife and carve whole new hallways into the world. Those people are mere slaves to  architecture, spatial captives in a world someone else has designed for them.

Something about this is almost unsettlingly brilliant, as if it is nonburglars who have been misusing the built environment this whole time; as if it is nonburglars who have been unwilling to question the world’s most basic spatial assumptions, too scared to think past the tyranny of architecture’s long-held behavioral expectations.

To use architect Rem Koolhaas’s phrase, we have been voluntary prisoners of architecture all along, willingly coerced and browbeaten by its code of spatial conduct, accepting walls as walls and going only where the corridors lead us. Because doors are often the sturdiest and most fortified parts of the wall in front of you, they are a distraction and a trap. By comparison, the wall itself is often more like tissue paper, just drywall and some two-by-fours, without a lock or a chain in sight. Like clouds, apartment walls are mostly air; seen through a burglar’s eyes, they aren’t even there. Cut a hole through one and you’re in the next room in seconds.

~ Geoff Manaugh, A Burglar’s Guide to the City

@copperbadge, maybe a book to add to your to-read pile, if you haven’t read it already. Seems like your jam. 🙂

autisticwomen:

This Black History Month, we’re featuring quotes from contributors from the AWN anthology All the Weight of Our Dreams: on living racialized autism (editors Lydia X.Z. Brown, E. Ashkenazy, and Morénike Giwa-Onaiwu)

Image descriptions from top down.


[First image text:

“Claiming a heritage and culture is not only about color. It’s about lived experience, attachment, feelings, tradition, home, and love.”

-E. Ashkenazy, “Foreword: On Autism and Race,” All the Weight of Our Dreams: on living racialized autism, an AWN anthology available now on Amazon

Background photo in low-saturation color is a group of tree roots] 


[Second image text:

“I came to understand that autism was not something tragic or shameful…. I was born right the first time.”

-Finn Gardiner, "Letter to People At the Intersection Of Autism and Race,”
 All the Weight of Our Dreams: on living racialized autism, an AWN anthology now available on Amazon

Background photo of a blooming flower in purple hues]


[Third image text is 

“We who exist anyway,
Our selves proof of a
revolutionary survival power.
We who must keep breathing and
breaking bleeding recreating.”

-Mikael Lee, “Revelation,” All The Weight of Our Dreams: on living racialized autism, an AWN anthology now available on Amazon

Background image is a grayscale dandelion]


[Fourth image text:

“Yeah, I notice.
I notice that I’m different from other blacks
because I’m autistic.
I notice that I’m different from other autistics
because I’m black
I notice
Do you?“

-COBRA, “Confessions of a Black Rhapsodic Aspie,” All the Weight of Our Dreams: on living racialized autism, an AWN anthology available now on Amazon

Background photo in low-saturation color shows the back of a person’s head and shoulders]


[Fifth image text:

“If I had a time machine and could go back to my school days, I wouldn’t try so hard to mold myself into a person whom I was not meant to be.”

-Kristy Y., “Burnout in Recovery,” All the Weight of Our Dreams: on living racialized autism, an AWN anthology available now on Amazon

Background is a faded photo of a chalkboard]


[Sixth image text:

“I’m Black. I’m a woman. I’m the child of immigrants. I’m a mother. I’m autistic. And I know there are more people like me somewhere.”

-Dee Phair,  "Unpacking the Diagnostic TARDIS,” All the Weight of Our Dreams: on living racialized autism, an AWN anthology available now on Amazon

Background is a closeup photo of a small child’s hand holding an adult’s hand]