The cartography of inner weather
Maps, atlases, and essays that treat geography as a feeling. Returns to the same authors for years; never abandons a book once started.
Share · 31% of archive
Reads at night, in pages rather than feeds. Returns to maps when the day will not hold still. Five years of saves describe a person who does not look up at the city — she looks down at the map of it, drawn by someone else, and corrects the legend.
The unambiguous part. Before any inference, before any voice.
What she returns to, in clusters. Depth is how deep into a theme she goes; share is how much of the archive lives there.
Maps, atlases, and essays that treat geography as a feeling. Returns to the same authors for years; never abandons a book once started.
Park Chan-wook, Bong Joon-ho, Hong Sang-soo. Reads criticism more than reviews. Watches the same film three times before writing about it.
Maggie Nelson, Anne Carson, Jenny Boully. Saves these on Sunday nights almost exclusively.
Annie Dillard, Robert Macfarlane, Helen Macdonald. Pairs reliably with the cartography cluster.
Letterforms, printing history, the Vignelli grids. A longstanding undercurrent — never the loudest, never absent.
Texture observed, not chosen. The first tag is the strongest pull — the cartography is the centre of gravity.
This portrait is a sample. Yours will be specific to your data — the books you actually read, the tabs you actually kept, the hour you actually save.