
intj - 5w4 - 17 - literature enthusiast
82 posts
L1teraturen3rd - L1teraturen3rd - Tumblr Blog


manifesting a bsd remake with a 1950 detective aesthetic pt.2 (poster from blood and sand)

Guy surprised again by having FUN stepping out of comfort zone and trying a new medium (real) (not fake)


disco elysium portraits for the house guys WHOOPEEEE
I feel like a modern day Bertie Wooster would be obsessed with true crime. He'd always be listening to some podcast or another and saying stuff to Jeeves like if only you'd have been there Jeeves, you would have set this thing straight in an instant

A doodle for this lovely fic: <https://archiveofourown.org/works/57620521/chapters/146621173>
*you can change the desicions you make, gowever you do not retain the knowledge of it that you have
reblog for larger sample size!!

Bertie Wooster at any given moment
The reason Sherlock & Co is the best modern Sherlock adaptation is they’re the only ones that get a 21st century version of the mildly autistic self employed detective is not “emotionless suave supercomputer” but “high school dropout who eats buttered pasta for every meal”
i think that the short story form is best for the mystery and detective genre in particular as it allows the development of intrigue and interest in such a brief period of time. i think that one of the essences of mystery is thrill and suspense, which, yes, can be built over a long time within a novel-length story, but i think that mystery short stories definitely have a charm that full-length mysteries, although wonderful, don't possess.
i mean, one of the first, argued to be *the* first, forms of a modern mystery is edgar allan poe's "the murder in rue morgue", a short story. another icon of mysteries is the sherlock holmes stories, the vast majority of which are short stories. the father of mysteries in japan, edogawa rampo-san, mostly wrote short stories and rarely any novels.
the mystery genre is aptly suited for short stories, and short stories are, in my opinion at least, the best form of mysteries
pg wodehouse: jeeves is a man of iron. he is secretive and serious. he does NOT smile or laugh or do any of those things. a subtle quirk of the lips only
stephen fry in 1990: actually jeeves CAN smile. but only a little, as a treat
'she's an angel' by they might be giants is bertie wooster about jeeves. i can write an essay about this, but essentially, bertie is just as taken as the narrator from that song by the "angel", who is jeeves in this case. he is as smitten as the narrator by jeeves
ok guys no more jeeves and wooster for me i'm afraid today when my mom asked how i was feeling (i've been sick for the last few days) i told her i felt 'perfectly spiffing' completely unironically
i have only been watching jeeves and wooster (the 90s show, i mean) for a few days now (i've read the first book earlier this year) and i can already tell you with confidence that reginald jeeves is autistic

do you see my vision
some late night tea and fresh baked bread with jam at the bookshop



The Dancing Men part 2
rejoining sherlock fandom but this time instead of kinning a cool, cold, detective whos good at puzzles im just discovering that im autistic
"to me, the sherlock holmes stories are about a great friendship. without watson, holmes might well have burnt out on cocaine long ago. i hope the series shows how important friendship is." -jeremy brett