@LynnJBird1 This speaks highly of you. It seems like the sort of thing Mark Lester and did.
This speaks highly of you. It seems like the sort of thing Mark Lester and did.
— Hookland (@HooklandGuide) April 5, 2020
things are remembered differently
@LynnJBird1 This speaks highly of you. It seems like the sort of thing Mark Lester and did.
This speaks highly of you. It seems like the sort of thing Mark Lester and did.
— Hookland (@HooklandGuide) April 5, 2020
The alleged home tree of the wood sprite All-Eyes Blood-lash. #WyrdWednesday https://t.co/2oVIZcNnfA
The alleged home tree of the wood sprite All-Eyes Blood-lash. #WyrdWednesday pic.twitter.com/2oVIZcNnfA
— Hookland (@HooklandGuide) March 4, 2020
@SPradarelli Well, as it is Hookland, you already own them. Feel free. https://t.co/QrCZfY7SyK
Well, as it is Hookland, you already own them. Feel free. pic.twitter.com/QrCZfY7SyK
— Hookland (@HooklandGuide) March 4, 2020
@groweatgift @catvincent The ghost soil always wins.
The ghost soil always wins.
— Hookland (@HooklandGuide) March 4, 2020
The common, land owned by none, held by all, is home to commonwealth of folklore, the commonwealth of imagination. I regard it as sacred. – #CLNolan https://t.co/oDTh0ipFCY
The common, land owned by none, held by all, is home to commonwealth of folklore, the commonwealth of imagination. I regard it as sacred. – #CLNolan pic.twitter.com/oDTh0ipFCY
— Hookland (@HooklandGuide) March 4, 2020
@christeos_pir Strandloper. That’s the one.
Strandloper. That's the one.
— Hookland (@HooklandGuide) March 4, 2020
@christeos_pir Yes. Really. It is much more about how place colonises us than anything else.
Yes. Really. It is much more about how place colonises us than anything else.
— Hookland (@HooklandGuide) March 4, 2020
@christeos_pir The white person never becomes that important to the lives of the indigenous, this is not a novel of faux heroism, but rather of personal intimacy, relationships with land and its cycles of lore.
The white person never becomes that important to the lives of the indigenous, this is not a novel of faux heroism, but rather of personal intimacy, relationships with land and its cycles of lore.
— Hookland (@HooklandGuide) March 4, 2020
@christeos_pir You have to trust in Garner to make even apparently hackneyed tropes bloom into something glorious.
You have to trust in Garner to make even apparently hackneyed tropes bloom into something glorious.
— Hookland (@HooklandGuide) March 4, 2020
@Alderley I hate to say it, but Average For Hookland.
I hate to say it, but Average For Hookland.
— Hookland (@HooklandGuide) March 4, 2020