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Daily Caller Feed
Daily Caller Feed
32 w

‘The Onion’ Buys Alex Jones’ Infowars Network
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‘The Onion’ Buys Alex Jones’ Infowars Network

'Silence the American people'
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Daily Caller Feed
32 w

Democratic Sen. Fetterman Praises Some Of Trump’s ‘Serious, Qualified’ Cabinet Picks
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Democratic Sen. Fetterman Praises Some Of Trump’s ‘Serious, Qualified’ Cabinet Picks

Fetterman told reporters the appointment of Gaetz was 'God-tier kind of trolling'
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Daily Caller Feed
32 w

‘I Know Him And You Don’t’: Chris Cuomo Unloads On Viewer Who Says Trump Won’t Try To Unite Country
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‘I Know Him And You Don’t’: Chris Cuomo Unloads On Viewer Who Says Trump Won’t Try To Unite Country

'You don't understand leadership'
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Daily Caller Feed
32 w

‘I Didn’t Know If I Was Supposed To Grab Your Hand’: Even Denzel Washington Can’t Handle King Charles’ Sausage Fingers
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‘I Didn’t Know If I Was Supposed To Grab Your Hand’: Even Denzel Washington Can’t Handle King Charles’ Sausage Fingers

He froze and didn't know how to proceed with the greeting
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Daily Caller Feed
32 w

Ben & Jerry’s Sues Parent Company Claiming It Was Silenced Over Stance On War In Gaza
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Ben & Jerry’s Sues Parent Company Claiming It Was Silenced Over Stance On War In Gaza

"Unilever has silenced each of these efforts."
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Daily Caller Feed
32 w

Eva Longoria Abandons America After Trump Win
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Eva Longoria Abandons America After Trump Win

'They’re going to be stuck in this dystopian country'
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Daily Caller Feed
32 w

HART: Electile Dysfunction, If It Lasts 4 Years, Consult Experts
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HART: Electile Dysfunction, If It Lasts 4 Years, Consult Experts

I can no longer even watch 'The View'
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Pet Life
Pet Life
32 w

Catster Photo Contest: Cats of the Week Winners (November 14, 2024)
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Catster Photo Contest: Cats of the Week Winners (November 14, 2024)

The post Catster Photo Contest: Cats of the Week Winners (November 14, 2024) by Catster Editorial Team appeared first on Catster. Copying over entire articles infringes on copyright laws. You may not be aware of it, but all of these articles were assigned, contracted and paid for, so they aren't considered public domain. However, we appreciate that you like the article and would love it if you continued sharing just the first paragraph of an article, then linking out to the rest of the piece on Catster.com. Click to Skip Ahead Winner Silliest Cutest Most Dignified Most Expressive Best Action Shot Sleepiest Enter Your Cat This Week’s Winner Name: Macaroni & Cheese Breed: N/A Fun Fact: I found her in my recycling bin and took her in and she’s been my closest and cuddly friend ever since! She is very affectionate and loves dinner time. She is always happiest when close to her humans Silliest Name: Jambu Breed: DSH Fun Fact: This is his favorite pose – seen often enough that it has been dubbed “Jambu style” in the after adoption group for the rescue where he was born. He’s one of my glorious little weirdos! Click here to view our full list of past winners Cutest Name: Maomao Breed: British Shorthair Fun Fact: While Maomao is an introvert, she loves playing and having her photos taken by her human. Most Dignified Name: Oliver Breed: Maine Coon Fun Fact: He’s having a diarrhoea a whole day until slimy & watery poo but he still stood tall & look down upon us, the peasant of the household, who only live to serve this young archduke. Socials: @TirthamOliver Most Expressive Name: Kai Breed: Blue point Siamese Fun Fact: Kai just turned 3 on October 1st. He rotates thru his sleeping spots but his “twin” bed is one of his favorites! Best Action Shot Name: Pumpkin Breed: American longhair Fun Fact: Pumpkin is 10 years old and always manages to have the fluffiest coat in town! She is a super sweet lap cat that will always beg for food:) Sleepiest Name: Ketamina Breed: European domestic shorthair Fun Fact: Mina is the sweetest baby, abandoned at birth by her mother’s owner. She’s been with us for 3 weeks, loves to play with her siblings, eats like a full grown woman, and is a mini sized super love bug Enter Your Cat Submit your kitty for a chance to be featured! Click here This article is a part of our Weekly Photo Contest View our previous week’s winners here: November 8, 2024 The post Catster Photo Contest: Cats of the Week Winners (November 14, 2024) by Catster Editorial Team appeared first on Catster. Copying over entire articles infringes on copyright laws. You may not be aware of it, but all of these articles were assigned, contracted and paid for, so they aren't considered public domain. However, we appreciate that you like the article and would love it if you continued sharing just the first paragraph of an article, then linking out to the rest of the piece on Catster.com.
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SciFi and Fantasy
SciFi and Fantasy  
32 w

Can’t Miss Indie Press Speculative Fiction for November and December 2024
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Can’t Miss Indie Press Speculative Fiction for November and December 2024

Books Can’t Miss Indie Press Speculative Fiction for November and December 2024 The end of the year can be a quiet time for publishing, but there’s still plenty happening if you look in the right places. By Tobias Carroll | Published on November 14, 2024 Comment 0 Share New Share The end of the year can be a quiet time for publishing, but there’s still plenty happening if you look in the right places. The SFF due out from indie presses at the end of this year abound with fiction that eludes easy classification and touches on different genres on its way. What follows is a look at some notable books due out on small presses for November and December, from Jersey Devil poetry to an anthology exploring the roots of D&D.  File Under: Bodies and Technology There’s a long history in SFF of works dealing with artificially-created beings, and it’s into that lineage that Sarah Colombo’s new novel Why Is Marigold? steps. The title character of this book is an android whose early education led to her working in a desalination facility. An encounter with a man reveals the existence of what may be gaps in her memory, setting up a wider mystery with existential dimensions. (Spaceboy Press; Nov. 8, 2024) Anita Felicelli’s 2019 novel Chimerica drew praise from a number of acclaimed writers, with Jonathan Lethem calling it “a coolly surrealist legal thriller.” Felicelli has returned with a new collection—her second—with the evocative title How We Know Our Time Travelers. In these stories, Felicelli reckons with some of the biggest issues facing the world today, including the evolution of technology and living in an era of environmental upheaval. (WTAW Press; Dec. 3, 2024) Bodies can be strange, even under the most quotidian circumstances. It’s not surprise, then, to see Megan Howell explore the boundaries of where bodies can go in her new collection Softie. Howell takes her characters through surreal transformations in these stories, a work that Publishers Weekly called “a beautiful and striking collection.” (West Virginia University Press; December 2024) For his second novel published in 2024, Nicholas Rombes takes readers to a very different place than the alternate timeline of The Rachel Papers. Rombes’s  Lisa 2, v1.0 is about a vintage Apple computer that a frustrated writer begins using in the present day, only to find that it has a strange effect on her work. It’s a heady combination, with one review citing “[r]emixed hints of Bradbury, Black Mirror and Kafka” lurking within. (Calamari Archive; Dec. 1, 2024) M. Shaw’s weird fiction has gotten attention from the likes of the Bram Stoker Awards. Shaw’s new collection All Your Friends Are Here. In a 2022 interview, Shaw said, “I will never, ever get tired of fucked up deer.” Based on the description for this collection, it sounds like fellow aficionados of unsettling deer will have plenty to observe here. (Tenebrous Press; Dec. 5, 2024) I’ve been an admirer of Marian Womack’s work for a while now, and reviewed her novel The Golden Key in this space in 2020. That review also references a collection of hers, Lost Objects, which is now returning to print in a new and expanded edition, complete with an introduction by Priya Sharma. Think surreal environments, bodily transformations, and climate change turned bizarre and you’ll have an idea of what to expect here. (Calque Press; Nov. 16, 2024) File Under: The Terror of Isolation Do you enjoy your fiction abounding with mysterious societies and ominous premonitions? If so, you’re likely to savor plenty about Pilar Adón’s novel Of Beasts and Fowls, translated by Katie Wittemore. This novel abounds with Gothic imagery and uncanny connections between characters, and follows a woman mourning her lost sister whose path crosses with a group of women living in a remote home. (Open Letter; Nov. 5, 2024) In a recent interview, Solvej Balle revealed that the concept behind her novel On the Calculation of Volume (Book I) dates back decades. Balle referred to “the idea of a woman stuck in time repeating one day again and again,” a concept that first came to her in 1987. This is also the first part of a septology, translated by Barbara J. Haveland; New Directions is also publishing the second volume this November.  (New Directions; Nov. 18, 2024) Upon gazing at the cover art for Valkyrie Loughcrewe’s Decrepit Ritual, you might think to yourself, “This could easily be a metal band’s cover artwork.” That’s no coincidence. This novel follows a depressed protagonist as they travel far from home in Norway and encounter a film that appears to defy multiple laws of reality. Do you like your fiction abounding with visceral imagery and analog media? Tune in here.   (Ghoulish Books; Nov. 26, 2024) As fans of the film The Lighthouse (or this SNL sketch) can tell you, the combination of isolation and elemental forces can make a lighthouse keeper’s life uncanny under most circumstances. In Rachilde’s novel The Tower of, translated by Jennifer Higgins, a man takes a job working at a lighthouse on the French coastline that quickly takes a turn for the phantasmagorical. (Wakefield Press; November 2024) James Reich’s bibliography rarely stops at the same place twice. It’s large enough to encompass explorations of colonialism along with mystical conspiracies; it’s hardly shocking, then, that his next novel is going full-on science fictional. That would be Skinship, a story of a spacecraft carrying the last of humanity and the sole survivor left behind on Earth. It might not be the last time he returns to this setting, if this interview is any indication. (Anti-Oedipus Press; December 2024) File Under: History and Mythology In 1979, TSR published Gary Gygax’s first Dungeon Master’s Guide, which included a list of stories that Gygax cited as an inspiration for Dungeons & Dragons. It’s with that in mind that editor Peter Berbergal assembled Appendix N, revised and expanded edition: Weird Tales From the Roots of Dungeons & Dragons, which features work by the likes of Jack Vance, Andre Norton, Clark Ashton Smith, and Ramsey Campbell. Throw in an introduction by Adrian Tchaikovsky and an afterword by Ann VanderMeer and you have the makings of an appealing read. (Strange Attractor Press; Nov. 26, 2024) In this 1676 novel, a European traveler arrives on a continent called Australia—but it’s not the one that we’re all familiar with. Instead, Gabriel de Foigny’s The Known Southern Land—here translated by Dana J. Lupo—is a collectivist utopian society at odds with both colonial expeditions and massive predatory birds. It’s a singular utopia that revisits the past in multiple ways. (Spurl Editions; Nov. 21, 2024) Some collections zero in on one aspect of their author’s bibliography. In the case of LH Moore’s Breath of Life, the opposite is true: this collection spans fiction, essays, and poetry, with stylistic trips into both horror and Afrofuturism. It’s a wide-ranging work; in their review, Publishers Weekly noted that it “[felt] like a career retrospective.” (Apex Book Company; Dec. 17, 2024) You probably haven’t read a creation story like the one found in Yarrow Paisley’s Divine in Essence before. Ghosts, Furies, and residents of the other side of the mirror all make appearances in this surreal spin on the world around us, Paisley’s follow-up to his acclaimed 2017 collection I, No Other. (Whisk(e)y Tit; Nov. 1, 2024) Cards on the table here: I grew up in New Jersey and I like cryptids. So when I heard that Kailey Tedesco had written a book of poetry inspired by the origins of the Jersey Devil, I did not need much convincing to have my interest piqued. The book in question is Motherdevil, which is in part about Mother Leeds — perhaps better known as “the Jersey Devil’s mom.” I’m so here for this. (White Stag Publishing; Nov. 1, 2024) File Under: Strange Cities and Uncanny Families The combination of writer Georges-Olivier Châteaureynaud and translator Edward Gauvin won an SFF Translation Award in 2011 for the book A Life on Paper. That same writer-translator tandem returns to Anglophone letters with The Messengers, a surreal tale of a young man making his way across a bizarre landscape interspersed with scenes of horror and mystery. (Wakefield Press; November 2024) World Fantasy Award-nominated writer Seb Doubinsky returns this fall with his novel The Sum of All Things. It’s the latest installment in his long-running City-States Cycle, a project Doubinsky has compared to Michael Moorcock’s Jerry Cornelius books. This novel blends political intrigue, royal succession, and radical violence in a milieu that’s at once familiar and unexpected. (Meerkat Press; Nov. 5, 2024) There’s something eminently rewarding about a volume collecting two works of fiction by disparate writers. (Yes, I read a lot of Tor Doubles growing up, why do you ask?) The latest installment of the Split Scream series features work by Ryan T. Jenkins and David Corse, novelettes that reckon with strange portals and haunted houses. (Tenebrous Press, Nov. 12, 2024) You might never look at seagulls the same way again after reading Vanessa Saunders’s novel The Flat Woman. It’s set in a world where environmental distress has caused the seabirds in question to die en masse, and to which the misogynist response has been to pin the blame on a nonexistent group of female terrorists. Of the book’s style, Saunders said that she sought one “that expresses our absurd, fast, and unpredictable modern world filled with screens, disasters, and polarization.” (University of Alabama Press; November 2024) Jeremy C. Shipp’s previous novel The Merry Dredgers followed its characters on a surreal trip through cults and abandoned carnivals. At the heart of that novel was the bond between two siblings; a very different connection between two sisters can be found in Shipp’s new book Familiar. This one’s about sisters engaged in magical activities with a penchant for tracking down killers; it’s another entry in Shipp’s compelling bibliography. (Ghoulish Books; Dec. 17, 2024) The post Can’t Miss Indie Press Speculative Fiction for November and December 2024 appeared first on Reactor.
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Nostalgia Machine
Nostalgia Machine
32 w

A Perfect Storm Of Madness And Power: The Reign Of Emperor Caligula
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A Perfect Storm Of Madness And Power: The Reign Of Emperor Caligula

Reigning from 37 to 41 AD, Caligula was the third emperor of Rome. He was born to general Germanicus and Agrippina the Elder, making him a member of the Julio-Claudian dynasty. While he appeared to be a promising leader at first, the remaining period of his reign was marked by episodes of madness, depravity, and extravagance. Eventually, in 41 AD, he was assassinated by conspirators... Source
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