Posting challenge
Oct. 12th, 2013 11:11 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I've been computer-less while traveling this week, which was an unanticipated and unwelcome development. Looking forward to catching up on the flist as well as new posts at
rs_games and
minerva_fest, which both began their annual run, and
hp_diversity, where there's a new rec for a previously posted fanwork every day in October.
While I catch up, have a rec from the Lewis (tv) fandom:
The Fountains Mingle With The River, Hathaway, Phillip, 3400 words, rated G
Hathaway gets into the habit of taking a half an hour off and wandering down to the river.
This striking fic develops a memorable minor character, the talented art student Phillip from the episode "And Moonbeams Kiss the Sea." After the close of the case, Phillip and Hathaway meet again and fall into a kind of companionship. It could be friendship, it could be romance. When Phillip--defined in the original episode primarily by his autism and apparent innocence--seems to express an interest in men, Hathaway is taken aback, perhaps more surprised than he should be to discover that Phillip is capable of recognizing and expressing feelings that Hathaway himself can't articulate. Refusing any easy resolution, this is a lovely story about uncertainty and the period of undefined emotion that accompanies growth.
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While I catch up, have a rec from the Lewis (tv) fandom:
The Fountains Mingle With The River, Hathaway, Phillip, 3400 words, rated G
Hathaway gets into the habit of taking a half an hour off and wandering down to the river.
This striking fic develops a memorable minor character, the talented art student Phillip from the episode "And Moonbeams Kiss the Sea." After the close of the case, Phillip and Hathaway meet again and fall into a kind of companionship. It could be friendship, it could be romance. When Phillip--defined in the original episode primarily by his autism and apparent innocence--seems to express an interest in men, Hathaway is taken aback, perhaps more surprised than he should be to discover that Phillip is capable of recognizing and expressing feelings that Hathaway himself can't articulate. Refusing any easy resolution, this is a lovely story about uncertainty and the period of undefined emotion that accompanies growth.