Pieces by Nanda PG-13
Aug. 14th, 2007 02:10 pm![[identity profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/openid.png)
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I'm reccing Jack O'Neill this month and decided, since Jack is such a physical kind of guy, I would start from the top and work my way down. So, here is the Thinky Rec where we begin with The Fron Mind
Rec Category: Jack O'Neill
Pairing: Jack O'Neill/Daniel Jackson (barely), Jack O'Neill/Samantha Carter UST
Category: Angst, apocafic, episode tag
Warning: Slash (barely), referenced character deaths
Author on LJ:
nandamai
Author's Website: http://nandamai.net/
Link: here
Why This Must Be Read: This is Jack's POV of the events following Lost City and is an Alternate History of those events. Nanda writes a breathtakingly sad story of their journey to the end of all they know, with Daniel providing the details that Jack desperately tries to put together in his mind. "Pieces" references many things: the pieces of their current situation that Jack tries to reconcile with what was once true, the way in which he wonders if his mind is whole, bits of a life lived that float to the top unexpectedly. Overall, it is a beautifully done, surprisingly ungraphic apocafic. The slash is barely touched upon, brilliantly placed and could be easily passed over by those uninterested.
Rec Category: Jack O'Neill
Pairing: Jack O'Neill/Daniel Jackson (barely), Jack O'Neill/Samantha Carter UST
Category: Angst, apocafic, episode tag
Warning: Slash (barely), referenced character deaths
Author on LJ:
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Author's Website: http://nandamai.net/
Link: here
Why This Must Be Read: This is Jack's POV of the events following Lost City and is an Alternate History of those events. Nanda writes a breathtakingly sad story of their journey to the end of all they know, with Daniel providing the details that Jack desperately tries to put together in his mind. "Pieces" references many things: the pieces of their current situation that Jack tries to reconcile with what was once true, the way in which he wonders if his mind is whole, bits of a life lived that float to the top unexpectedly. Overall, it is a beautifully done, surprisingly ungraphic apocafic. The slash is barely touched upon, brilliantly placed and could be easily passed over by those uninterested.