Friday, August 21, 2020

Will The Talented Mr. Ripley Be Gay In Upcoming TV Series Critical Linking, March 26, 2019

Will The Talented Mr. Ripley Be Gay In Upcoming TV Series Critical Linking, March 26, 2019 Sponsored by our Whats Up in YA Giveaway of a $100 gift card to Amazon! Enter here. Never mind poor Albus Dumbledore, there may be no character from literature from the past century whose sexuality has been debated and scrutinized more than the Talented Mr. Tom Ripley himself. To some, Patricia Highsmiths complicated character is the prototypical twink scamster whose story might as well have predicted Andrew Cunanan and the series of murders he committed, as recently explored in Ryan Murphys American Crime Story. To others Ripley is an anti-hero who has come to represent the twisted psychological effects homophobia and life in the closet can wreck. To others hes just a bizarre case of No Homo. (Hey, just because a bro sometimes gets so passionately obsessed with another bro to the point of murder doesnt make him gay.) With reports that Patricia Highsmiths crime novel series will be a TV series, the debate over Ripleys sexuality continues. As the urgency for diverse representation continues to rise to the forefront, Wakandacon offers a refuge that oftentimes doesn’t exist. For black folks eager to partake in the bevy of popular Comic-Cons and expos at their disposal, oftentimes its a frustrating experience fraught with casual prejudice and alienation. Cue Wakandacon, which prides itself on being a three-day celebration of Afro-futuristic art, technology, community, cosplay, and self-expression within the African diaspora. And after making its debut last summer, the burgeoning family-friendly convention will be making its triumphant return at the Hyatt Regency McCormick Place in Chicago on July 26-28. This sounds awesome! His commitment to demystifying cancer takes multiple expressions. Siddhartha Mukherjee has won acclaim for the sensitive and caring treatment he delivers to his patients, and for his innovative cancer biology research. But what has ultimately made him a household name is his work as a science writer, especially his debut piece chronicling the past, present, and possible future of the disease. Mukherjee has delighted, informed, and touched a wide audience through his books and essays, for which he will be awarded the 2019 Lewis Thomas Prize for Writing about Science. The prize, honoring scientists as inspirational authors, will be presented Monday, April 22, at a free, public event on The Rockefeller University campus. Many congratulations! Sign up to Today In Books to receive  daily news and miscellany from the world of books.

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