"All this he saw, for one moment breathless and intense, vivid on the morning sky; and still, as he looked, he lived; and still, as he lived, he wondered."

Pride Month 2025: Story of the Day

Wallada bint al-Mustakfi: the Caliph’s Daughter Who Loved Women and Lived Free

Wallada bint al-Mustakfi (Córdoba 1001 – 1091), daughter of a deposed Umayyad caliph, was not merely a noblewoman—she was a poet, provocateur, and cultural icon in the intellectually radiant courts of Al-Andalus. Refusing to live within the confines of her class or gender, Wallada established her own literary salon, wore men’s clothing in public, embroidered her verses into her robes, and engaged in romantic relationships with both men and women.

Her most famous affair was with the poet Ibn Zaydun, but lesser-known texts suggest her intimate companionship with women—relationships filled with desire, wit, and defiance. In a society that oscillated between religious conservatism and poetic license, Wallada carved a space for queer autonomy through language, performance, and visibility.

She is said to have worn a robe inscribed with the verse “I am made for greatness and walk proudly.” And on the hem: “Forsooth I allow my lover to kiss my cheek / and bestow my kisses on him who craves it.

Wallada’s life was not without danger—her choices were scandalous even by the standards of a cosmopolitan court—but she never sought invisibility. Instead, she offered a pansexual model of unapologetic self-expression, where love and literature intertwined in acts of personal and political resistance. Wallada reminds us that queer history isn’t just about survival—it’s about brilliance, power, and self-fashioning. Her poetry and presence prove that queer women have long claimed space in the public eye—not in spite of their gender and desire, but through it.

books and literature

Werewolves Wednesday: George MacDonald’s The Gray Wolf

ONE evening — twilight in spring, a young English student, who had wandered northwards as far as the outlying fragments of Scotland called the Orkney and Shetland Islands, found himself on a small island of the latter group, caught in a storm of wind and

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books and literature

The Wandering Earth

The collection is extraordinary and spans from grand feats of sci-fi imagination (the titular story) to humorous tales such as the one in which a writer called Cixin Liu becomes homeless after spending all his money and energy on a grand saga called The Three-Thousand-Body

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books and literature

Weird Sisters

Well, this was a fairly unusual read for me in this period, I’m more in my sci-fi era, but good things come from good friends who gift you books you wouldn’t have bought: they usually help you discover something cool you didn’t know. What I

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