I've decided that I am going to go home and try to convince my parents that I need to stay where I am.
I have yet to decide if I want to tell them about Roman, however.
1. Dracula  by Bram Stoker
This start of beautiful season off with something classic and a little scary.
The name of Dracula brings to mind visions of vampires, stakes, garlic, and crucifixes. Yet, when you read the novel, it becomes self-evident how twisted modern vampire fiction now is. The vampires in this classic story are not meant to inhabit the roles of heroes. Instead you go back a few hundred years when men and women believed truly that the vampire was a real immortal, cursed to quench his undying thirst with a living mortalâs blood. The very idea of a blood drinker should, therefore, inspire the image of a villain and that is what the titular character of this novel is. A villan you canât help but keep reading about.Â
2. And Then There Were None by Agatha Christie
Another story that is perfect if you want something that will keep you up at night like it did for me when I read it last year.
There is scarcely any comfort to be found in this book, only an ancient, arcane horror. Ten people receive a mystery letter from someone they donât know that indicates they should come to a remote island. Why would they go????? After arriving, they try to figure out the connection between all of them while waiting for their mysterious host. After coming across a cute little poem about how ten little indians die, they decide they will wait it out until the next morning when the ferry comes back to take them home. But it will never come! Each guest suddenly dies matching the line from a poem. It really keeps you on the edge of your seat.
3. THE BONE WITCH BY RIN CHUPECO
A story about a young witch just fits so well with this season, but this story is not about a teenage witch =just flying around on a broom. No itâs far darker than that. When Tea accidentally resurrects her brother from the dead, she learns she is different from the other witches in her family. Her gift for necromancy means that sheâs a bone witch, a title that makes her feared and ostracized by her community. But Tea finds solace and guidance with an older, wiser bone witch, who takes Tea and her brother to another land for training.In her new home, Tea puts all her energy into becoming an ashaâone who can wield elemental magic. But dark forces are approaching quickly, and in the face of danger, Tea will have to overcome her obstaclesâŠand make a powerful choice.
4. Night Film by Marisha Pessl
This story opens in October on a cool evening with a blood chilling scene, itâs really everything you could hope for on a autumn night.
Night Film opens on a cold, cursed October evening, when Ashley Cordova, a young women full of potential, is found dead in a warehouse. Police rule her death a suicide, but investigative journalist Scott McGrath isnât so sure. From that inception point, Scott McGrath enters the strange circumstances surrounding Ashleyâs life and death, and comes face-to-face with the legacy of her father: the legendary, reclusive cult-horror film director Stanislaus Cordovaâa man who hasnât been seen in public for more than thirty years. For McGrath, another death connected to this seemingly cursed family dynasty seems more than just a coincidence. Though much has been written about Cordovaâs dark and unsettling films, very little is known about the man himself. Driven by revenge, curiosity, and a need for the truth, McGrath, with the aid of two strangers, is drawn deeper and deeper into Cordovaâs eerie, hypnotic world. The last time he got close to exposing the director, McGrath lost his marriage and his career. This time he might lose even more.
5. Autumn by Ali Smith
Ali Smithâs lauded Seasonal quartet, a series of four novels rooted in a different time of year, kicks off with Autumn there we watch as love is won, love is lost. Hope is hand in hand with hopelessness. The seasons roll round, as they always do.
6. Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen
I canât tell you how many times i have read this beaful story in my life buti wants have it one my list to read at last once a year and i find it fits so well in to the amazing season that is autumn with  The romantic clash between the opinionated Elizabeth and her proud beau, Mr. Darcy, is a splendid performance of civilized sparring
7.I Know Who You Are by Alice Feeney
This story is haunting and it will stay with you after you read it.
Itâs dark, twisted and unpredictable until the very last chapter keeping me on the edge of my seat from the very beginning. You are met with the unknown as you meet Aimee Sinclair, an actress who after coming home, she realizes her husband is missing and after that you are sent on a wild ride to find him.
8.Little Women by Louisa May Alcott Â
Another classic. I have always found that that reading about a world now gone is so very perfect for autumn, as we watch the leaves we had watch grow turn colors and fly away from us.
Little Women is a beauty told story with each of the sisters seeks out a different form of happiness: Meg wants to marry, Jo wants to be a writer, Beth wants to care for her family, and Amy craves material success. We get to live their world as we following the lives and loves of the four March sisters and their mother as they mature from youth through adolescence and adulthood.
9.Mexican Gothic  by Silvia Moreno-Garcia
If you love gothic horror, this one is for you. It has the same feeling as Jane Eyre but way creepier and set in 1950âs Mexico.
The atmosphere is perfect for the season, a debutante heads to a creepy countryside house, after receiving an ominous letter from her newlywed cousin, and finds the dark secrets that lie within the house and its occupants.
10.The Sun Down Motel by Simone St. James
A suspenseful and eerie mystery told via dual timelines all surrounding a rundown roadside motel and the secrets lurking that captivated a woman so much that she went missing in the 1980âs and now have caught the attention of her niece 35 years later. If you love a good mystery mixed with timeline jumping this a perfect one for you.
Bonus
11.The Year of the Witching by Alexis Henderson
Handmaidâs Tale meets Salem: Born of rebellious feminist resistance by a girl who is branded as cursed because of her motherâs sins and facing the dark powers to make definite and concrete changes at the dystopian, puritanical, secluded society consisted of hypocrisy, ignorance, illogical and unfair laws.
This is another terrifying, fist clenching, soul shivering, mind crushing, heart pounding, forehead sweating, edgy, spooky, bleak, dark journey take you to the dark woods to face the four witches are ready to haunt you in your dreams and place a quite irritating thoughts inside your brains.
Things I Overheard While Talking to Myself by Alan Alda
The best educator offers the student no more, but no less, than the opportunity to acquire insight into his own nature.
âIt is not by wearing down into uniformity all that is individual in themselves, but by cultivating it and calling it forth, within the limits imposed by the rights and interests of others, that human beings become a noble and beautiful object of contemplation.â - John Stuart Mill, On Liberty
Romanâs Quarantine Quotes:Â
The entirety of the Hamilton soundtrackÂ
đ„șđ„șđ„șđ„șđ„ș
Moooooooooooon burgils being meeenaaaaannnnnn
&rpmam
If this were a normal and not-depressing situation, I would totally mess with Roman because he would have no proof it was me in the morning
While itâs familiar to us, our solar system may actually be a bit of an oddball. Our Milky Way galaxy is home to gigantic worlds with teeny-tiny orbits and planets that circle pairs of stars. Weâve even found planets that donât orbit stars at all! Instead, they drift through the galaxy completely alone (unless they have a moon to keep them company). These lonely island worlds are called rogue planets.
The planet-building process can be pretty messy. Dust and gas around a star clump together to form larger and larger objects, like using a piece of play-dough to pick up other pieces.
Sometimes collisions and close encounters can fling a planet clear out of the gravitational grip of its parent star. Rogue planets may also form out in space on their own, like the way stars grow.
Weâve discovered more than 4,000 exoplanets, but only a handful are rogue planets. Thatâs because theyâre superhard to find! Rogue planets are almost completely invisible to us because they donât shine like stars and space is inky black. Itâs like looking for a black cat in a dark room without a flashlight.
Some planet-finding methods involve watching to see how orbiting planets affect their host star, but that doesnât work for rogue planets because theyâre off by themselves. Rogue planets are usually pretty cold too, so infrared telescopes canât use their heat vision to spot them either.
So how can we find them? Astronomers use a cool cosmic quirk to detect them by their effect on starlight. When a rogue planet lines up with a more distant star from our vantage point, the planet bends and magnifies light from the star. This phenomenon, called microlensing, looks something like this:
Imagine you have a trampoline, a golf ball, and an invisible bowling ball. If you put the bowling ball on the trampoline, you could see how it made a dent in the fabric even if you couldnât see the ball directly. And if you rolled the golf ball near it, it would change the golf ballâs path.
A rogue planet affects space the way the bowling ball warps the trampoline. When light from a distant star passes by a rogue planet, it curves around the invisible world (like how it curves around the star in the animation above). If astronomers on Earth were watching the star, theyâd notice it briefly brighten. The shape and duration of this brightness spike lets them know a planet is there, even though they canât see it.
Telescopes on the ground have to look through Earthâs turbulent atmosphere to search for rogue planets. But when our Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope launches in the mid-2020s, it will give us a much better view of distant stars and rogue planets because it will be located way above Earthâs atmosphere â even higher than the Moon!
Other space telescopes would have to be really lucky to spot these one-in-a-million microlensing signals. But Roman will watch huge patches of the sky for months to catch these fleeting events.
Scientists have come up with different models to explain how different planetary systems form and change over time, but we still donât know which ones are right. The models make different predictions about rogue planets, so studying these isolated worlds can help us figure out which models work best.
When Roman spots little microlensing starlight blips, astronomers will be able to get a pretty good idea of the mass of the object that caused the signal from how long the blip lasts. Scientists expect the mission to detect hundreds of rogue planets that are as small as rocky Mars â about half the size of Earth â up to ones as big as gas giants, like Jupiter and Saturn.
By design, Roman is only going to search a small slice of the Milky Way for rogue planets. Scientists have come up with clever ways to use Romanâs future data to estimate how many rogue planets there are in the whole galaxy. This information will help us better understand whether our solar system is pretty normal or a bit of an oddball compared to the rest of our galaxy.
Roman will have such a wide field of view that it will be like going from looking at the cosmos through a peephole to looking through a floor-to-ceiling window. The mission will help us learn about all kinds of other cool things in addition to rogue planets, like dark energy and dark matter, that will help us understand much more about our place in space.
Learn more about the Roman Space Telescope at: https://roman.gsfc.nasa.gov/
Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com
I am an education major with a minor in astronomy. Despite what the picture above shows, this is not the NASA tumblr blog, however you will find many space themed posts so feel free to peruse. per request from my boyfriend, please note that I am taken. Thank you ((an rp blog that goes with my college AU. what this is all about you can find Virgil's over at @anxiouslyvirgil. My main is @sanders-specs.Rules and Disclaimers ))
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