In a review of True Blood in the Boston Globe, Mark A. Perigard wrote Vampire-human love is all the rage these days, and creator/writer Alan Ball throws down the fangs with a sequence Sunday that “Twilight” devotees can only imagine in their most secret fan fiction: a sex scene that is both sensual and bloody between stars Paquin and Moyer.
Nick Gillespie opined on Comin' Through The Rye in the online version of Reason, reflecting that, when The Wind Done Gone came out, After running through a list of takeoffs ranging from Nobel Prize winner J.M Coetzee's revision of Robinson Crusoe (called Foe) to Star Trek fan fiction, I argued: None of these literary knock-offs, it is safe to say, has in any way weakened the audience or market for the works that inspired them.
On Examiner, Jolie du Pre, in a short piece on the release of Yuri Monogatari 6, quoted the site Yuricon: Yuri can be used to describe any anime or manga series (or other thing, i.e., fan fiction, film, etc.) that shows intense emotional connection, romantic love or physical desire between women.
And, the Rogers Hometown News (Arkansas) reported that The Anime Club meets [at the Rogers Public Library] on the second Saturday of each month, from noon until 2 p.m. Snacks and an episode of an anime program are provided, as well a chance to share anime artwork, fanfiction or conversation. This event is for grades eighth through 12th and their guests. Sign up at the library or online.
Nick Gillespie opined on Comin' Through The Rye in the online version of Reason, reflecting that, when The Wind Done Gone came out, After running through a list of takeoffs ranging from Nobel Prize winner J.M Coetzee's revision of Robinson Crusoe (called Foe) to Star Trek fan fiction, I argued: None of these literary knock-offs, it is safe to say, has in any way weakened the audience or market for the works that inspired them.
On Examiner, Jolie du Pre, in a short piece on the release of Yuri Monogatari 6, quoted the site Yuricon: Yuri can be used to describe any anime or manga series (or other thing, i.e., fan fiction, film, etc.) that shows intense emotional connection, romantic love or physical desire between women.
And, the Rogers Hometown News (Arkansas) reported that The Anime Club meets [at the Rogers Public Library] on the second Saturday of each month, from noon until 2 p.m. Snacks and an episode of an anime program are provided, as well a chance to share anime artwork, fanfiction or conversation. This event is for grades eighth through 12th and their guests. Sign up at the library or online.