Brown Recluse Pictures

    brown recluse

  • The brown recluse spider or violin spider, Loxosceles reclusa, is a well-known member of the family Sicariidae (formerly placed in a family “Loxoscelidae”).
  • A brown venomous North American spider, identifiable by the dark brown violin-shaped marking on the top of its orange-yellow head
  • A venomous American spider that has a mark on its back in the shape of a violin; a brown recluse spider

    pictures

  • (picture) a visual representation (of an object or scene or person or abstraction) produced on a surface; “they showed us the pictures of their wedding”; “a movie is a series of images projected so rapidly that the eye integrates them”
  • A photograph
  • A portrait
  • (pictural) pictorial: pertaining to or consisting of pictures; “pictorial perspective”; “pictorial records”
  • A painting or drawing
  • (picture) visualize: imagine; conceive of; see in one’s mind; “I can’t see him on horseback!”; “I can see what will happen”; “I can see a risk in this strategy”

brown recluse pictures

brown recluse pictures – Beautiful Creatures

Beautiful Creatures
Beautiful Creatures
Lena Duchannes is unlike anyone the small Southern town of Gatlin has ever seen, and she’s struggling to conceal her power, and a curse that has haunted her family for generations. But even within the overgrown gardens, murky swamps and crumbling graveyards of the forgotten South, a secret cannot stay hidden forever.

Ethan Wate, who has been counting the months until he can escape from Gatlin, is haunted by dreams of a beautiful girl he has never met. When Lena moves into the town’s oldest and most infamous plantation, Ethan is inexplicably drawn to her and determined to uncover the connection between them.

In a town with no surprises, one secret could change everything.

Ethan Wate is struggling to hide his apathy for his high school “in” crowd in small town Gatlin, South Carolina, until he meets the determinedly “out” Lena Duchannes, the girl of his dreams (literally–she has been in his nightmares for months). What follows is a smart, modern fantasy–a tale of star-crossed lovers and a dark, dangerous secret. Beautiful Creatures is a delicious southern Gothic that charms you from the first page, drawing you into a dark world of magic and mystery until you emerge gasping and blinking, wondering what happened to the last few hours (and how many more you’re willing to give up). To tell too much of the plot would spoil the thrill of discovery, and believe me, you will want to uncover the secrets of this richly imagined dark fantasy on your own. –Daphne Durham

Amazon Exclusive Interview with Kami Garcia and Margaret Stohl, Authors of Beautiful Creatures

What does your writing process look like? Is it tough to write a book together? Did you ever have any knock-down drag-out fights over a plot point or character trait?
Margie: The best way to describe our writing process is like a running stitch. We don’t write separate chapters, or characters. We pass the draft back and forth constantly, and we actually write over each other’s work, until we get to the point where we truly don’t know who has written what.
Kami: By the end of the book, we don’t even know. The classic example is when I said, “Marg, I really hate that line. It has to go.” And she said, “Cut it. You wrote it.”
Margie: I think we were friends for so long before we were writing partners that there was an unusual amount of trust from the start.
Kami: It’s about respect. And it helps that we can’t remember when who wrote the bad line.
Margie: We save our big fights for the important things, like the lack of ice in my house or how cold our office is. And why none of my YouTube videos are as popular as the one of Kami’s three-fingered typing…okay, that one is understandable, given the page count for “Beautiful Creatures.”
Kami: What can I say? I was saving the other seven fingers for the sequel.
What kinds of books do you like to read?
Kami: I read almost exclusively Young Adult fiction, with some Middle Grade fiction thrown in for good measure. As a Reading Specialist, I work with children and teens in grades K-12, so basically I read what they read.
Margie: When I write it comes from the same place as when I read: wanting to hang out with fictional characters in fictional worlds. I identify more as a reader than a writer; I just have to write it first so I can read it.
What books/authors have inspired you?
Kami: “To Kill a Mockingbird” by Harper Lee, “A Good Man is Hard to Find & Other Stories” by Flannery O’Connor, “Fahrenheit 451” by Ray Bradbury and “The Witching Hour” by Anne Rice. I also love Pablo Neruda.
Margie: I think Harper Lee is the greatest writer alive today. Eudora Welty is my other Southern writer kindred; I was obsessed with her in grad school. Susan Cooper and Diana Wynne Jones made me love fantasy, and my favorite poets are Emily Dickinson (at Amherst College, I even lived on her street) and Stevie Smith.
Did you set out to write fiction for young adults? Why?
Kami: We actually wrote “Beautiful Creatures” on a dare from some of the teen readers in our lives.
Margie: Not so much readers as bosses.
Kami: Looking back, we wrote it sort of like the serialized fiction of Charles Dickens, turning in pages to our teen readers every week.
Margie: And by week she means day.
Kami: When we were getting texts in the middle of the night from teens demanding more pages, we knew we had to finish.
Margie: As it says in our acknowledgements, their asking what happened next changed what happened next. Teens are so authentic. That’s probably why we love YA. Even when it’s fantasy, it’s the emotional truth.
A lot of us voracious readers like to cast a book after reading it. Did you guys have a shared view of who your characters are? Did each of you take a different character to develop, or did you share every aspect?
Kami: We’ve never cast our characters, but we definitely know what they look like. Sometimes we see actors in magazines and say, “Lena just wore that!”
Margie: We create all our characters together, but after a point they became as real as any of the other people we know. We forget they’re not.
Kami: I never thought of it like that. I guess we do spend all our time talking about imaginary people. Margie: So long as it’s not to them…
Did you always plan to start the book with Ethan’s story? Why?
Kami: We knew before we started that we wanted to write from a boy’s point of view. Margie and I both have brothers—-six, between us-—so it wasn’t a stretch. It’s an interesting experience to fall in love with the guy telling the story rather than the guy the story is about.
Margie: We do kind of love Ethan, so we wanted there to be more to him than just the boy from boy meets girl.
Kami: He’s the guy who stands by you at all costs and accepts you for who you are, even if you aren’t quite sure who that is.
What is on your nightstand now?
Kami: I have a huge stack, but here are ones at the top: “Mama Dip’s Kitchen,” a cookbook by Mildred Council, “The Demon’s Lexicon” by Sarah Rees Brennan, “Shadowed Summer” by Saundra Mitchell, “Rampant” by Diana Peterfreund, and an Advanced Reader Copy of “Sisters Red” by Jackson Pearce.
Margie: I have Robin McKinley’s “Beauty,” Maggie Stiefvater’s “Ballad,” Kristen Cashore’s “Fire,” Libba Bray’s “Going Bovine,” and “Everything Is Fine” by AnnDee Ellis. And now I’m mad because I know a) Kami stole my “Rampant” and b) didn’t tell me she has “Sisters Red”!
What is your idea of comfort reading?
Kami: If given the choice, I’ll always reach for a paranormal romance or an urban fantasy. I also re-read my favorite books over and over.
Margie: It’s all comfort reading to me. I sleep with books in my bed. Like a dog, only without the shedding and the smelling.
Have you written the next book already? What’s next for Lena and Ethan?
Margie: We are revising the next book now. I don’t want to give too much away, but summer in Gatlin isn’t always a vacation.
Kami: I would describe book two as intense and emotional. For Ethan and Lena, the stakes are even higher.
Margie: That’s true. Book two involves true love, broken hearts, the Seventeenth Moon, and cream-of-grief casseroles…
Kami: Gatlin at it’s finest!

Here is Another Picture of My Brown Recluse Spider Bite

Here is Another Picture of My Brown Recluse Spider Bite
This was toward the end when I could walk again. I got bitten on May 31, 2004 and this was taken on July 31 just to give you an idea of the amount of time involved. The black part (necrotized, mummified tissue) was surgically removed about a month later, the day that I was laid off from my government contract job. I still have the chunk, about the size of a potato chip.

Today there is a giant scar there and I still have little sensation in my ankle.

Picture of a brown recluse spider bite

Picture of a brown recluse spider bite
Photo courtesy of Mr. Norman Feller

brown recluse pictures

Evening Tapestry
Brown Recluse formed in 2006 around the core of Timothy Meskers and Mark Saddlemire. Their debut release, the six-song Black Sunday EP, is a brilliant blast of pop invention, blending influences from the psych pop of The Zombies and Margo Guryan, the tropicalia of Os Mutantes and ’60s producers like Joe Meek and Phil Spector. Over the next year, the duo expanded to a six-piece that played numerous East Coast shows with bands as varied as The Pains of Being Pure at Heart, Tyvek and Dirty Projectors, writing new material and winning new fans along the way. The Soft Skin EP was recorded in mid-2007 and released on Slumberland in September 2009. Its pastoral, psychedelic vibe brings mind the sunshine pop of Curt Boettcher’s The Millennium/Sagittarius projects as well as familiar touchstones Brian Wilson, The Clientele and the Elephant 6 collective. Evening Tapestry is Brown Recluse’s long-awaited debut album. From the summertime daydream of opener “Hobble to Your Tomb” to the ’50s-tinged