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This is a blog for nerdfighters by nerdfighters. We like to stay organized so the tags will give you specific links to similar posts. If you have any questions or comments, don't hesitate to ask. If you want to submit something like a gifset or a post, send the link to us.
“Oh what a lovely shade of blue you paint me,
Decorate me,
Confiscate me and this crooked heart.
Tell me,
How did you get so good at your craft?
At this twisted art?”
Belle Jar (via belle-jarred)
“So I walked back to my room and collapsed on the bottom bunk, thinking that if people were rain, I was drizzle and she was a hurricane”
John Green in “Looking For Alaska” (via bookwormmads)
“In my memory,it doesn’t end.We just stay there,looking at each other forever.”
John Green,”Paper Towns” (via valeriagastman)
“You don’t remember what happened. What you remember becomes what happened.”
John Green, An Abundance of Katherines (via themindmovement)
thought-cafe:
““Plants use lipids for energy storage just like we do, except they do it in fruits, and nuts, and seeds…which, when you think of it, are kinda like plant breast milk—it’s food for their growing babies.” - Hank Green on Crash Course...

thought-cafe:

“Plants use lipids for energy storage just like we do, except they do it in fruits, and nuts, and seeds…which, when you think of it, are kinda like plant breast milk—it’s food for their growing babies.” - Hank Green on Crash Course Anatomy https://youtu.be/fR3NxCR9z2U

neil-gaiman:

sunspotery:

So according to an interview with Neil Gaiman in the back of Good Omens, before Terry Pratchett became a full time writer he wrote at least 400 words a day.

I’ve been trying it out for a couple weeks now and let me tell you 400 words is a totally awesome goal. It is very approachable and not intimidating, often leads to more than 400 words cause well now I have to finish this scene

Seriously I probably would have written nothing in the last couple weeks, instead I’ve written 1000′s of words. 

10/10 would recommend.

Terry would be proud.

“We don’t tend to write about disease in fiction - not just teen novels but all American novels - because it doesn’t fit in with our idea of the heroic romantic epic. There is room only for sacrifice, heroism, war, politics and family struggle.”

fishingboatproceeds:

In which John reviews the mobile version of the game Monopoly, while also exploring the complicated history of the famous board game.

This video is part of a series in which I’m taking long looks at my mobile gaming habits. For more, head on over to hankgames, or start with this review of the skateboarding game True Skate

Huge thanks to Meredith for recording all of my achingly slow Monopoly gameplay.

“If she loved you so much, why did she leave you that night? And if you loved her so much, why’d you help her go?”
Looking For Alaska - John Green (via ashtonirwinofficial5sos)