your arms full and your hair wet

blood-and-confetti:

ohlookalamppost:

thenextdragonborn:

kaminobutt:

djiini:

rapunzel-pond:

snowyesque:

mysterious-storyteller:

thehornydevil:

pokecatchsoul:

asktartaurus:

red-delicious-pony:

THKBNFJSTHLAYG|DG 


HWAT HAPPEN

(Источник: gravityisforsuckers)

(Источник: eosmedia из блога suburbanwhiteamerican)

Essentially the Pilot in 3 frames.

totally-not-a-mage:

(со страницы x-fileslove)

(Источник: disneyladiesfromlastnight)

"I can bear any pain as long as it has meaning."
Haruki Murakami, 1Q84  (via seoulologyy)

(Источник: cachaemic из блога mer-profonde)


A path of blue flowers in the Keukenhof flower garden.
so beautiful

A path of blue flowers in the Keukenhof flower garden.

so beautiful

(Источник: viage из блога sereneities)

uchicagoadmissions:

Novel Ideas
UChicago professors assign a little summer reading to the Chicago Maroon, and to you.
Read Alone in Berlin by Hans Fallada. It will remind you that the sense of justice is ineradicable.
— Thomas Pavel (Gordon J. Laing Distinguished Service Professor in Romance Languages and Literature)
I would recommend Half of a Yellow Sunby Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. This is a luminary, beautifully written, can’t-put-it-down-until-I-finish-it tale of love, war, and human endurance. A must-read!
— Rachel Jean-Baptiste (Assistant Professor of African History)
I recommend Dale Carpenter’s Flagrant Conduct: The Story of Lawrence v. Texas. This is a fascinating and readable account of the ins and outs of how the Supreme Court of the United States came to hold unconstitutional the criminal punishment of homosexual sodomy.
— Geoffrey R. Stone (Edward H. Levi Distinguished Service ProfessorThe University of Chicago Law School)
Erik Larson, In the Garden of Beasts: a fascinating tale of University of Chicago professor of history and departmental chair William E. Dodd, who, by a strange twist of fortune, became the U.S. Ambassador to Nazi Germany in 1933. He was accompanied by his daughter Martha, who turned out to be no less fascinating than her father at this critical moment of 20th-century history.
— David Bevington (Phyllis Fay Horton Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus, Department of English, Department of Comparative Literature)

uchicagoadmissions:

Novel Ideas

UChicago professors assign a little summer reading to the Chicago Maroon, and to you.

Read Alone in Berlin by Hans Fallada. It will remind you that the sense of justice is ineradicable.

— Thomas Pavel (Gordon J. Laing Distinguished Service Professor in Romance Languages and Literature)

I would recommend Half of a Yellow Sunby Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. This is a luminary, beautifully written, can’t-put-it-down-until-I-finish-it tale of love, war, and human endurance. A must-read!

— Rachel Jean-Baptiste (Assistant Professor of African History)

I recommend Dale Carpenter’s Flagrant Conduct: The Story of Lawrence v. Texas. This is a fascinating and readable account of the ins and outs of how the Supreme Court of the United States came to hold unconstitutional the criminal punishment of homosexual sodomy.

— Geoffrey R. Stone (Edward H. Levi Distinguished Service Professor
The University of Chicago Law School)

Erik Larson, In the Garden of Beasts: a fascinating tale of University of Chicago professor of history and departmental chair William E. Dodd, who, by a strange twist of fortune, became the U.S. Ambassador to Nazi Germany in 1933. He was accompanied by his daughter Martha, who turned out to be no less fascinating than her father at this critical moment of 20th-century history.

— David Bevington (Phyllis Fay Horton Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus, Department of English, Department of Comparative Literature)