Difference between revisions of "My Immortal"

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A distinct [[Carlisle]] tradition, My Immortal was introduced to CTY in 11.2 when nomore (by Carlislian terms; he was aging out that year) Campbell Nilsen brought it with him and would often gather his friends and read it aloud, mainly during breaks in Game Theory. In the 12.2 session, Ari Carr, Mark Gee, and Simon Wentworth led the informal readings' evolution into a mealtime tradition. While it initially started as a reading between these friends, people gradually joined and it soon became a session-wide tradition. The tradition consists of sitting in a circle in Dickinson's HUB after meals and taking turns reading terrible fan-fiction. The token literature is My Immortal, a Harry-Potter fan-fiction which is rumored to be the [[Starcrash]] of literature (if you can even call it that). Participants take turns reading, a turn ends either when a paragraph is completed, or the reader laughs from the sheer hilarity of the works.
 
A distinct [[Carlisle]] tradition, My Immortal was introduced to CTY in 11.2 when nomore (by Carlislian terms; he was aging out that year) Campbell Nilsen brought it with him and would often gather his friends and read it aloud, mainly during breaks in Game Theory. In the 12.2 session, Ari Carr, Mark Gee, and Simon Wentworth led the informal readings' evolution into a mealtime tradition. While it initially started as a reading between these friends, people gradually joined and it soon became a session-wide tradition. The tradition consists of sitting in a circle in Dickinson's HUB after meals and taking turns reading terrible fan-fiction. The token literature is My Immortal, a Harry-Potter fan-fiction which is rumored to be the [[Starcrash]] of literature (if you can even call it that). Participants take turns reading, a turn ends either when a paragraph is completed, or the reader laughs from the sheer hilarity of the works.
 +
  
 
While it is pure tradition to read My Immortal first, the reading session also includes other "notable" works of literary merit. Included in this list is:
 
While it is pure tradition to read My Immortal first, the reading session also includes other "notable" works of literary merit. Included in this list is:
 
<ol>
 
<ol>
 
<li>Half Life: Full Life Consequences</li>
 
<li>Half Life: Full Life Consequences</li>
 +
<li>Harry Potter Becomes a Communist</li>
 
<li>Excerpts from "Ask Alice"</li>
 
<li>Excerpts from "Ask Alice"</li>
 
<li>Others which are at the leisure of the current session campers</li>
 
<li>Others which are at the leisure of the current session campers</li>
 
</ol>
 
</ol>
 +
 +
These readings now fall under the jurisdiction of the Court Jester, a position founded with Mark Gee in 13.2 but only declared official in 15.2 with Isabel Tyree.

Revision as of 20:04, 8 August 2014

A distinct Carlisle tradition, My Immortal was introduced to CTY in 11.2 when nomore (by Carlislian terms; he was aging out that year) Campbell Nilsen brought it with him and would often gather his friends and read it aloud, mainly during breaks in Game Theory. In the 12.2 session, Ari Carr, Mark Gee, and Simon Wentworth led the informal readings' evolution into a mealtime tradition. While it initially started as a reading between these friends, people gradually joined and it soon became a session-wide tradition. The tradition consists of sitting in a circle in Dickinson's HUB after meals and taking turns reading terrible fan-fiction. The token literature is My Immortal, a Harry-Potter fan-fiction which is rumored to be the Starcrash of literature (if you can even call it that). Participants take turns reading, a turn ends either when a paragraph is completed, or the reader laughs from the sheer hilarity of the works.


While it is pure tradition to read My Immortal first, the reading session also includes other "notable" works of literary merit. Included in this list is:

  1. Half Life: Full Life Consequences
  2. Harry Potter Becomes a Communist
  3. Excerpts from "Ask Alice"
  4. Others which are at the leisure of the current session campers

These readings now fall under the jurisdiction of the Court Jester, a position founded with Mark Gee in 13.2 but only declared official in 15.2 with Isabel Tyree.