Mithical
About

  • "Mithical" is a personal blog, which means you won't find a consistent amount of just one thing but a wide variety of content posted here ranging from personal posts, photography, quotes, illustrations, social media news and technology, along with a mix of things that signify certain traits about my personality or mood at the moment.
    Theme by Peter Vidani for Tumblr
    Tweaked by Mithical for personal use.

  • What you don’t know can affect you, what you refuse to see can kill you.

    — Julius Gabriel, Domain by Steve Alten

    01/12/12 ←



  • I didn’t try to tell him different. It’s scary to find out that someone else, even a friend, knows just how things are with you. “You are just a kid, Gordie.”

    “Gee, thanks, Dad.”

    “I wish to fuck I was your father!” he said angrily. “You wouldn’t go around talking about taking those stupid shop courses if I was! It’s like God gave you something, all those stories you can make up, and he said: ‘This is what we got for you, kid. Try not to lose it.’ But kids lose everything unless somebody looks out for them, and if your folks are too fucked up to do it then maybe I ought to.”

    The Body, Stephen King

    12/22/11 ←

  • (Source: superpasta)

    155379
    Reblogged from You said to "be cool" but I'm already coolest.
    Comment books lit reading

    12/11/11 ←

  • The End

    I can’t stand the ending of a good book. When reaching the dreaded final chapter and my mind blinks in realization of how it will be the last thing I’ll ever read—how that world, to which I have invested my time and emotions to, will be closed forever.

    I tell myself that one day, probably, I may walk into a library and come upon that book to which I refuse to let go of right now, and smile as I remember how much I loved every minute of it, how much I grew with the characters and how better I understand the world now. But that’s also all I will be able to do as I will keep walking, moving on with the life that was once touched by that book.

    12/01/11 ←

  • Is it weird that I feel compelled to read only at Midnight? It’s as if my mind recognizes it as the first thing one should do to start the day.

    Is it weird that I feel compelled to read only at Midnight? It’s as if my mind recognizes it as the first thing one should do to start the day.

    06/15/11 ←

  • My literary classics iBooks reading list I intend to finish this Summer. 
Wish me luck! 

For a written, bulleted list send me a message to my Ask box and I’ll post it tomorrow—it’s almost 1 A.M. Here.

    My literary classics iBooks reading list I intend to finish this Summer.
    Wish me luck!

    For a written, bulleted list send me a message to my Ask box and I’ll post it tomorrow—it’s almost 1 A.M. Here.

    06/12/11 ←

  • prettybooks:

No one is trying to do away with books. The definition of a book? –noun
1. a written or printed work of fiction or nonfiction, usually on sheets of paper fastened or bound together within covers.
Books are books whether they’re being written on computer, with a typewriter or by hand. They’re still books whether they’re printed on paper and bound together or formatted as an ebook. I also see a lot of people saying “ebooks” (I’m assuming they mean ereaders) “hurt my eyes”. No. No they don’t. You obviously haven’t used one, have you? There is no way ereaders (at least, the recent ones with e-ink technology and not LCD screens - shiny screens aren’t comfortable for anyone whether it’s on a laptop, phone or e-reader). E-ink is amazing. Go out and have a look before you decide that, well, of course they must hurt your eyes. I mean, you can sit on your Macbook or laptop for hours on end reading Tumblr memes but god forbid that you should be forced to read on a far superior screen. I’ve had my Kindle since March and not once have I thought “this is so uncomfortable”. You can’t read in the dark but you can’t read a print book in the dark either. Turn the light on.Secondly, ebooks are not killing bookshops. I find it hilarious that people will complain that the demise of Borders and other bookstores is due to the rise in popularity of ebooks and ereaders yet they’ve been ordering books online for years.Print books will never disappear. I thoroughly believe that. I also accept that ereaders aren’t for everyone. It’s completely fine if you don’t want to buy one but it’s frustrating that I constantly see complaints about ereaders (specifically Kindles, interestingly. You’ve forgotten other ereaders exist?) that are based on ignorance and a nostalgic attempt to hold onto print books. I slightly understand. I love print books and will never stop buying them, but there’s also many benefits of ereaders (which I won’t list here as you’ve all heard them before).God, just stop complaining about something that doesn’t affect you one tiny bit. If you keep buying print books, people will keep publishing them. Simple. The biggest concern is the millions of people who can’t read or won’t read. We need to focus on that rather than people’s individual choices about what book format they want to read. There’s also a long and rather interesting argument presented by michaeltalbot.(Also, I don’t mean this as a direct attack on the original poster! It’s more of a general rant.)
Basically, my argument is:
“I don’t care how people read, I care if people read.”
- John Green

    prettybooks:

    No one is trying to do away with books. The definition of a book? 

    –noun

    1. a written or printed work of fiction or nonfiction, usually on sheets of paper fastened or bound together within covers.

    Books are books whether they’re being written on computer, with a typewriter or by hand. They’re still books whether they’re printed on paper and bound together or formatted as an ebook. 

    I also see a lot of people saying “ebooks” (I’m assuming they mean ereaders) “hurt my eyes”. No. No they don’t. You obviously haven’t used one, have you? There is no way ereaders (at least, the recent ones with e-ink technology and not LCD screens - shiny screens aren’t comfortable for anyone whether it’s on a laptop, phone or e-reader). E-ink is amazing. Go out and have a look before you decide that, well, of course they must hurt your eyes. I mean, you can sit on your Macbook or laptop for hours on end reading Tumblr memes but god forbid that you should be forced to read on a far superior screen. I’ve had my Kindle since March and not once have I thought “this is so uncomfortable”. You can’t read in the dark but you can’t read a print book in the dark either. Turn the light on.

    Secondly, ebooks are not killing bookshops. I find it hilarious that people will complain that the demise of Borders and other bookstores is due to the rise in popularity of ebooks and ereaders yet they’ve been ordering books online for years.

    Print books will never disappear. I thoroughly believe that. I also accept that ereaders aren’t for everyone. It’s completely fine if you don’t want to buy one but it’s frustrating that I constantly see complaints about ereaders (specifically Kindles, interestingly. You’ve forgotten other ereaders exist?) that are based on ignorance and a nostalgic attempt to hold onto print books. I slightly understand. I love print books and will never stop buying them, but there’s also many benefits of ereaders (which I won’t list here as you’ve all heard them before).

    God, just stop complaining about something that doesn’t affect you one tiny bit. If you keep buying print books, people will keep publishing them. Simple. The biggest concern is the millions of people who can’t read or won’t read. We need to focus on that rather than people’s individual choices about what book format they want to read. 

    There’s also a long and rather interesting argument presented by michaeltalbot.

    (Also, I don’t mean this as a direct attack on the original poster! It’s more of a general rant.)

    Basically, my argument is:


    “I don’t care how people read, I care if people read.”

    - John Green

    (Source: teethteethteeth)

    302
    Reblogged from prettybooks
    Comment Books Argument eBooks Reading

    06/10/11 ←

  • Fear and Religion. Religion and fear. The two are historically entwined. The catalysts for most of the atrocities committed by man. Fear of evil fuels religion, religion fuels hatred, hatred fuels evil, and evil fuels fear among the masses. It is a diabolical cycle, and we have played into the Devil’s hand.
    — Julius Gabriel, Domain by Steve Alten

    01/11/12 ←

  • That’s the worst, I think. When the secret stays locked within not for want of a teller but for want of an understanding ear.
    — Gordie Lachance, The Body by Stephen King

    12/21/11 ←

  • I’m in love with Dan Brown’s website. Posting this because soon I will have read all the books on that shelf. I never got around to read the last book of the five, and it happens to be the oldest of them all: Digital Fortress. Now I am.
So far, you can say I’m in love with Susan Fletcher.

    I’m in love with Dan Brown’s website. Posting this because soon I will have read all the books on that shelf. I never got around to read the last book of the five, and it happens to be the oldest of them all: Digital Fortress. Now I am.

    So far, you can say I’m in love with Susan Fletcher.

    12/08/11 ←

  • We looked at each other and grinned. We knew we were both terrified, but at least we were together. It’s not so bad being scared if you’re not alone.
    — Darren Shan, Cirque Du Freak: A Living Nightmare

    10/19/11 ←

  • Almost there! 

I’m thinking of writing some of my thoughts after I’m done. Maybe.

    Almost there!

    I’m thinking of writing some of my thoughts after I’m done. Maybe.

    06/12/11 ←

  • What, unless biological science is a mass of errors, is the cause of human intelligence and vigour? Hardship and freedom: conditions under which the active, strong, and subtle survive and the weaker go to the wall; conditions that put a premium upon the loyal alliance of capable men, upon self-restraint, patience, and decision.
    — The Time Machine, H.G Wells

    06/10/11 ←

  • The sun had already gone below the horizon and the west was flaming gold, touched with some horizontal bars of purple and crimson.
    — The Time Machine, H.G Wells

    06/09/11 ←