Time magazine features front woman of indie-pop band Japanese Breakfast Michelle Zauner.
As she began piecing the songs together, Zauner was also reading—a lot. She wanted to explore how the concept of melancholy has evolved in stories of love and longing, society and familial relationships over time. She worked her way from European Romanticism to Greek mythology before turning to Gothic Romance classics like Jane Eyre, Wuthering Heights, and Frankenstein, and even modernist staples like The Magic Mountain by German author Thomas Mann, which is her husband and fellow bandmate Peter Bradley’s favorite book and directly inspired a song on the album. (Rachel Sonis)
Daily Mail looks at some recent and pretty obvious and/or spoiler-ridden trigger warnings.
Bromley Little Theatre in south-east London [...] previously warned audiences that its version of Charlotte Bronte's classic Jane Eyre included 'arson'. (Tom Lawrence)
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