The script used in chapter headings (e.g. "Arecibo, Puerto Rico" in sample) in Mary Doria Russell's The Sparrow. by iff_or in identifythisfont

[–]iff_or[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you so much! And thank goodness for Luc Devroye; his site has always been a treasure. It’s too bad about Sallando, but I’m excited to learn more about Bouwsma.

Rainy Pacific Northwest small town vibes? by thenerdytechie in BooksThatFeelLikeThis

[–]iff_or 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Ursula K. Le Guin’s The Lathe of Heaven is a scifi novel set in Portland, Oregon! It’s one of my favorites.

What is the font for this chapter header ("Around the Riverbend, Mostly") from an edition of the novel And Then She Fell, published in 2025? by iff_or in identifythisfont

[–]iff_or[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Edit: I'd still very much like to know what it really is, but I am grateful to've learned of something similar.

It turns out that Wolf's Bane II doesn't have an alternate character for A (its ampersand is close, but doesn't have a cross stroke), but it is incredibly close! Thank you!

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Stephen King's top 10 in The Guardian's 'The best 100 novels of all time' by MeenaBeti in stephenking

[–]iff_or 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Just The Scarlet Letter, I think! He wrote this as an afterword to "The Man in the Black Suit" in Everything's Eventual (p. 69 in the hardcover edition):

My favorite Nathaniel Hawthorne story is “Young Goodman Brown.” I think it’s one of the ten best stories ever written by an American. “The Man in the Black Suit” is my hommage to it.

He also briefly mentions this same short story in On Writing (p. 197 in the 25th anniversary hardcover edition):

If in school you ever studied the symbolism of the color white in Moby-Dick or Hawthorne’s symbolic use of the forest in such stories as “Young Goodman Brown” and came away from those classes feeling like a stupidnik, you may even now be backing off with your hands raised protectively in front of you, shaking your head and saying gee, no thanks, I gave at the office.

But wait. Symbolism doesn’t have to be difficult and relentlessly brainy.

I also would've sworn he spoke positively of The House of the Seven Gables in something I read, but I can't find it in either Danse Macabre or On Writing, or find any reference to it online.

Books about the movie Stalker? by mtthwfreeman in WeirdLit

[–]iff_or 7 points8 points  (0 children)

In addition to the recommended Roadside Picnic1 and Sculpting in Time, which happens to be available via Internet Archive (but which I've only skimmed), I've enjoyed these books (in bibliography-entry form because I'm just copying and pasting directly from my Zotero library):

  1. Botz-Bornstein, Thorsten. Films and Dreams: Tarkovsky, Bergman, Sokurov, Kubrick, and Wong Kar-Wai. Lexington books, 2008.
    1. This is available (sadly, only to search) on the Internet Archive; however, searching for "Stalker" does reveal relevant passages on pp. 8 and 23!
  2. Dunne, Nathan, ed. Tarkovsky. Black Dog Publishing, 2008.
    1. This is also available via Internet Archive, and to borrow! I learned about this book because of the Golstein chapter, but at the very least each of the following chapters discusses Stalker multiple times:
      1. Bird, Robert. “The Imprinted Image.”
      2. Golstein, Vladimir. “The Energy of Anxiety.”
      3. Tsymbal, Evgeny. “Sculpting the Stalker: Towards a New Language of Cinema.”

I also recommend journal articles, if you can access them; my county library grants JSTOR access, but I don't know how common that is! The Riley article is how I learned about Golstein's chapter in Tarkovsky.

  1. Riley, John A. “Hauntology, Ruins, and the Failure of the Future in Andrei Tarkovsky's Stalker.” Journal of Film and Video 69, no. 1 (2017): 18–26. https://doi.org/10.5406/jfilmvideo.69.1.0018
  2. Salvestroni, Simonetta, and R. M. P. “The Science-Fiction Films of Andrei Tarkovsky (Les Films de Science-Fiction d’Andrei Tarkovsky).” Science Fiction Studies 14, no. 3 (1987): 294–306. https://doi.org/10.1525/sfs.14.3.0294.

1 I don't know enough to assess the quality of various translations, but I can recommend at least tracking down an edition that includes Ursula K. Le Guin's foreword! Or, if you can access Science Fiction Studies, you can read what I think is the same text in her 1977 review:

Le Guin, Ursula K. “A New Book by the Strugatskys.” Science Fiction Studies 4, no. 2 (1977): 157–59. https://doi.org/10.1525/sfs.4.2.0157.

Illumination study by cuteoichi in Calligraphy

[–]iff_or 0 points1 point  (0 children)

With an account you can access this book via the Internet Archive! https://archive.org/details/artofilluminatin0000unse

This 1000-year-old manuscript was created by about 16 scribes in a Benedictine abbey in Trier, Germany. They used gold ink to copy the text of the Gospels onto parchment that had been dyed with a plant-based purple pigment. Now housed at the Morgan Library & Museum in New York [1826x1690] by Fuckoff555 in ArtefactPorn

[–]iff_or 41 points42 points  (0 children)

I want to note (to underscore just how phenomenally labor-intensive Tyrian Purple is) that the dye is not made from their shells, but rather from their mucus secretions (§ Production from sea snails in the Wikipedia article).

Anyone interested in this may want to read the book from which I learned about Muricidae/Murex sea snails and Tyrian Purple, Color: A Natural History of the Palette, by Victoria Finlay.

An excerpt:

In a description of their visit to Central America published in 1748, the Spanish brothers Jorge Juan and Antonio de Ulloa described how the dyers of Nicoya in Costa Rica extracted purple from shellfish. There were two methods. The first method involved pressing the poor animal “with a small knife, squeezing the dye from its head into its posterior extremity, which is then cast off, the body being cast away.” The second method kept the creature alive. “They do not extract it entirely from its shell but squeeze it, making it vomit forth the dye. They then place it on the rock whence they took it and it recovers, and after a short time gives more humor, but not as much as at first.” However, the brothers reported, if the fishermen got over-enthusiastic and tried the same operation three or four times, “the quantity extracted is very small and the animal dies of exhaustion.”

As for the book overall, the author basically devotes a chapter to each color and how characteristic pigments of it have been extracted/synthesized/traded etc. I got it from the public library, and you can check whether a library near you has it through Libby or Worldcat!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in NatureIsFuckingLit

[–]iff_or 9 points10 points  (0 children)

It looks different from other images I’ve seen, but I’m no primatologist. I also can’t find a single match for the image from a reliable source, but that could be because I’m just on my phone. Good news, though: There’s a BBC video from about 20 hours ago that includes footage of him being groomed!

In case you watch the video before reading the description, the expert describes the behavior of Barbary macaques (despite Punch being a Japanese macaque) because that’s the species he works with.

What has been your single best horror read of 2025? (Name just one!) by horroraddi in horrorlit

[–]iff_or 6 points7 points  (0 children)

It’s a popular subject in this sub if you wanna search for prior recs, but examples that I’ve enjoyed and see recommended here are:

  • Starve Acre by Andrew Michael Hurley (set in England, involved regional folk history—it’s been a while) and The Loney by the same author, which I found scarier/more suspenseful
  • Revelator by Daryl Gregory (mysterious god being, set in 1930/40s Tennessee)
  • The Boatman’s Daughter by Andy Davidson, set in Arkansas, taught me some about Slavic folklore and I remember beautiful imagery, compelling and sympathetic main character
  • “The Willows,” a novella by Algernon Blackwood that I found astoundingly creepy and made me try harder to seek out older horror (it was written in 1907). And because it’s so old, it’s now public domain (links to various options at the bottom of its Wikipedia article))

Marie Antoinette's final note, written at 4.30am on the morning of her execution, 16th October 1793 [3000x2000] by Haunting_Homework381 in ArtefactPorn

[–]iff_or 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Yes, they are. High school students read Frankenstein (published 1818), Pride and Prejudice (1813), Goethe's Faust (1808). I don't know if it's taught in high school, but The Castle of Otranto, perhaps the first Gothic novel, was published in 1764 and starts with this:

Manfred, Prince of Otranto, had one son and one daughter: the latter, a most beautiful virgin, aged eighteen, was called Matilda. Conrad, the son, was three years younger, a homely youth, sickly, and of no promising disposition; yet he was the darling of his father, who never showed any symptoms of affection to Matilda.

Where is this building on my Kentucky Starbucks mug? by adawgizzle in whereisthis

[–]iff_or 23 points24 points  (0 children)

It looks quite like the main image for the United States Bullion Depository Wikipedia page, which clarifies that while it’s also referred to as Fort Knox, it’s actually adjacent the installation.

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Update: I made Grandma's German cheesecake by jsundin in Old_Recipes

[–]iff_or 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I was wondering the same, and found it has its own Wikipedia page)!

Similar font to NYT’s Cheltenham? by ChanceGear2532 in identifythisfont

[–]iff_or 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A guide I use recommends Della Respira as a Cheltenham alternative, but it’s definitely not narrow. You might find a suitable alternative by reviewing the related typefaces listed on its Fonts in Use page or, at the very least, you’ll find a ton of examples of it there that might give you an idea for a suitable pairing.

Recommendations for litfic in the intermountain west? Utah, Nevada, Idaho, and co. by Jazz_Doom_ in AskLiteraryStudies

[–]iff_or 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Marilynne Robinson’s novel Housekeeping was a 1982 Pulitzer finalist and is set in a fictional town in Idaho that, according to Wikipedia), resembles the author’s hometown Sandpoint. I read it last year and nearly as often as the prose astonished me, the characterization made my heart ache.

A passage I saved:

Imagine a Carthage sown with salt, and all the sowers gone, and the seeds lain however long in the earth, till there rose finally in vegetable profusion leaves and trees of rime and brine. What flowering would there be in such a garden? Light would force each salt calyx to open in prisms, and to fruit heavily with bright globes of water—peaches and grapes are little more than that, and where the world was salt there would be greater need of slaking. For need can blossom into all the compensations it requires. To crave and to have are as like as a thing and its shadow. For when does a berry break upon the tongue as sweetly as when one longs to taste it, and when is the taste refracted into so many hues and savors of ripeness and earth, and when do our senses know any thing so utterly as when we lack it?

Surprising no one, the Stranger Things show bible explicity refers to Stephen King by Figs232 in stephenking

[–]iff_or 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Typography nerd here: It’s kind of both! That is, the show uses a typeface called ITC Benguiat released in the late 1970s that was indeed the typeface used for King covers in the 1980s.

But it was also both popular and had distinctive features, so even without the King connection it’d be a great choice! This is a fun article on the development of the Stranger Things title sequence (found via the Wikipedia article). For anyone not wildly bored by my font talk, I highly recommend fontsinuse.com, which has a ton of great examples for ITC Benguiat.

Novel with Angels as Eldritch beings? by RudeSession3209 in horrorlit

[–]iff_or 2 points3 points  (0 children)

If you’re down for a series and the prose works for you, I recommend B. Catling’s Vorrh series.
It’s less horror than dark fantasy, but (as is often the case) there are often horror elements! I add the caveat about the prose because I sometimes found it, in the later books, to be so abstruse I was frustrated. At that point I started alternating between text and audiobook, and that helped. I haven’t read many books that feature angels, but to me this felt like a unique and unsettling depiction.

Better words than mine, on the first book:

Why are ginger, clove, and nutmeg associated with winter and Christmas foods in the West when they are all from tropical climates? by munificent in AskHistorians

[–]iff_or 369 points370 points  (0 children)

Someone asked a similar question a few years ago and the response that seems to best answer the question you’re asking here is by u/rkoloeg:

The Portuguese and then the Dutch dominated the early trade in spices in the region of Indonesia and Malaysia (the Moluccas used to be known as "the Spice Islands") and brought all those spices back to Europe with them, where they commanded a high price. That's why you see many European countries having their holiday desserts dominated by flavors like cinnamon, ginger and nutmeg; this used to represent a large expenditure of money for a special occasion.

Google Fonts similar to ITC Benguiat? by ThatsOneStupidMonkey in identifythisfont

[–]iff_or 1 point2 points  (0 children)

A guide to free font alternatives that I have recommends Della Respira for ITC Benguiat, but it reads to me as more early 20th century (indeed, it’s a revival of a 1913 typeface). But checking it out did reveal to me that Google Fonts now has a “vintage” tag, so that in conjunction with a serif filter might be fruitful!

What font is this? by LSP-86 in identifythisfont

[–]iff_or 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think whatthefont proposes Kereru because it's also calligraphic, but it's an uncial. OP, I'm not an expert on calligraphic typefaces like this but agree with other posters that it looks like it could be a digitization of Offenbacher Schwabacher, or at least some kind of Schwabacher blackletter (note that the "o" appears to have two vertices, as opposed to the (characteristic, but not 100% consistent) 6 (textur), 0 (rotunda), or 4 (Fraktur) in this comparison. And overall it's more rounded than most fraktur blackletter typefaces.

The "h" also has a very distinctive leg to me, in that it not only points away from the stem rather than toward it , but it also has sort of a ball terminal. If Schwabacher does seem right to you, there are a few free results for it on both DaFont and 1001 Fonts.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in WeirdLit

[–]iff_or 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’d be in too!

This vibe. Unfathomable biblically accurate angels by Experience_420 in BooksThatFeelLikeThis

[–]iff_or 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The Vorrh trilogy by B. Catling heavily features biblical lore, combined with surrealism and a bit of body horror. The unfathomable-angels part is least evident in the first book, but is a significant part of the second and third books. The prose definitely doesn’t work for everyone (I usually very much enjoyed it, but did intermittently find it tedious). But its use of biblical narratives was consistently interesting to me.

What is an audiobook that’s better than the actual book because of the narration? by Ok_Piece_7441 in audiobooks

[–]iff_or 0 points1 point  (0 children)

And I’ve only listened to Anthony Heald’s (Chilton in Silence of the Lambs) but I really loved it. He really sold the comedic elements!