Weβre excited to hear what these gnomes think about the latest issue!
π₯°12
Forwarded from Achromous
My copy of Toadstool Magazine Issue 2 recently arrived. It is of really fine quality. Thank you very much to the creators for your kind words about my art piece, and giving it a whole page! The magazine is beautiful and full of wholesome stories, poems, art, and crafts.
β€18
Forwarded from Millenniyule
Beginning at 8pm BT (9pm CET, 3pm ET, Noon PT):
UK Column (@ukcolumn and EastApp)
+2h Toadstool Magazine (@toadstoolmag)
+4h Nils Wegner (@Skototaxis)
+6h Gifts Ungiven
Watch it here: https://odysee.com/@millennialwoes/
UK Column (@ukcolumn and EastApp)
+2h Toadstool Magazine (@toadstoolmag)
+4h Nils Wegner (@Skototaxis)
+6h Gifts Ungiven
Watch it here: https://odysee.com/@millennialwoes/
π₯4
Thank you if you are joining us from Milleniyule, that was a great chat with Woes! Hereβs a flavour of whatβs in the second issue of the magazine π
π₯°6
Forwarded from πToadstoolπ
Hereβs a small selection of the madness (and cosiness) contained in the pages of the winter issueβ¦ order your copy today! www.toadstoolmag.com π
β€13π2
Forwarded from Imperium Press (Imperium Press)
Our worldview is not just about the big things, big ideasβit's just as much about the small things. The things that live in the woods near your house, the wee folk who live behind the fireplace, or above the doorway. What we're doing is about reviving our people, but it's also about reviving the primacy of the domus. It's about reviving the love of home, the love of the cozy and familiar.
This is why I enjoyed the Toadstool Mag episode of Millenniyule so much. (Creating this familiar, cozy environment is something Woes himself does exceptionally well too, and it's part of why he gained a following so quickly.) Toadstool Mag fills a much needed niche in our scene. It may not be everyone's cup of mead but it occupies an important space, and is doing something just as necessary as creating a body of theory. If we as a movement can't accommodate the small and familiar, if we can't carve out a space that can be lived in by people who "just wanna grill" (in a manner of speaking) then we're sunk.
If you could boil our civilizational problems down to one thing, it would probably be oikophobiaβfear of the familiar, hatred of all that is native and local. Everyone with any sympathy for us is at heart a localist; every localist is just one of us who hasn't realized it yet. Throw a log on the fire and pull up a chair.
https://odysee.com/@millennialwoes:4/MY2022ToadstoolMagazine:5
This is why I enjoyed the Toadstool Mag episode of Millenniyule so much. (Creating this familiar, cozy environment is something Woes himself does exceptionally well too, and it's part of why he gained a following so quickly.) Toadstool Mag fills a much needed niche in our scene. It may not be everyone's cup of mead but it occupies an important space, and is doing something just as necessary as creating a body of theory. If we as a movement can't accommodate the small and familiar, if we can't carve out a space that can be lived in by people who "just wanna grill" (in a manner of speaking) then we're sunk.
If you could boil our civilizational problems down to one thing, it would probably be oikophobiaβfear of the familiar, hatred of all that is native and local. Everyone with any sympathy for us is at heart a localist; every localist is just one of us who hasn't realized it yet. Throw a log on the fire and pull up a chair.
https://odysee.com/@millennialwoes:4/MY2022ToadstoolMagazine:5
Odysee
Millenniyule 2022: Toadstool Magazine
Support: https://millenniyule.com/donate
π₯18π2
Imagine not reading Big Daveβs poetry π€ a sad life indeed
Buy Toadstool magazine and see things that are AT LEAST this mad
π www.toadstoolmag.com π
Buy Toadstool magazine and see things that are AT LEAST this mad
π www.toadstoolmag.com π
π₯4
Forwarded from Big Dave Sunchild (Dave Martel)
My poem published in issue 1 of @toadstoolmag
π₯16π3β€1
Our human liaison A. Cuthbertson, who we have had tied to a chair in a cave for several months now, apparently writes books and things. This one seems worth a read.
π9β€1
Forwarded from Atop The Cliffs - Occidental Poetry Journal
5 Best books I've read this year
The fifth book is:
"Spire" by A Cuthbertson
I picked up a lot of sci-fi this year which I usually enjoy reading as kind of an inbetween book between more intellectual pursuits. The theme this year though was me failing to finish such books. The exception to this was Spire published by the Bizarchives. From my short Telegram review
"Spire is a sci-fi short. To me it read a bit like a 2000ad comic in novel format. I could easily see this as a tale of Tharg from back in the day. This is an action packed short read, a bit of space horror with some subtle and not so subtle parallels to today. It's an easy read, I read the first half in a coffee shop and finished the second half before bed. Easy doesn't mean bad though, it's enjoyable. Better to read this than browse your phone or watch the telly.
There are a lot of elements of familiarity in the book and where it ends up caught me a little off guard, but again a good thing. Even in a short read there are plenty of surprises. Cuthbertson is good at world building and also atmosphere building. Our protagonist is just likeable enough to carry us through into his world. I should take a page from his writing and wrap this short review up. Go buy this book, buy a copy for your friend who doesn't read as well. I guarantee they will enjoy this sci-fi horror."
Pick up a copy from @TheBizarchives
The fifth book is:
"Spire" by A Cuthbertson
I picked up a lot of sci-fi this year which I usually enjoy reading as kind of an inbetween book between more intellectual pursuits. The theme this year though was me failing to finish such books. The exception to this was Spire published by the Bizarchives. From my short Telegram review
"Spire is a sci-fi short. To me it read a bit like a 2000ad comic in novel format. I could easily see this as a tale of Tharg from back in the day. This is an action packed short read, a bit of space horror with some subtle and not so subtle parallels to today. It's an easy read, I read the first half in a coffee shop and finished the second half before bed. Easy doesn't mean bad though, it's enjoyable. Better to read this than browse your phone or watch the telly.
There are a lot of elements of familiarity in the book and where it ends up caught me a little off guard, but again a good thing. Even in a short read there are plenty of surprises. Cuthbertson is good at world building and also atmosphere building. Our protagonist is just likeable enough to carry us through into his world. I should take a page from his writing and wrap this short review up. Go buy this book, buy a copy for your friend who doesn't read as well. I guarantee they will enjoy this sci-fi horror."
Pick up a copy from @TheBizarchives
π7β€3