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Fallen Fairy Tales

  • Jul. 5th, 2009 at 12:03 AM
Thomas the Rhymer
Added: DAMMIT! This was actually a post about the Fallen Princesses Project & also Lev Grossman (who pointed it out to me)'s new book The Magicians. Bad, bad, stupid cut-and-paste has failed me. Gone, gone, never to be re-undone. The links alone must suffice.

Here's what got pasted in instead (a comment I made to yesterday's Urban Fantasy post, but you should probably see it here, too):

* This 2008 Library Journal article by Nanette Wargo Donohue - footnoted in the Wiki "Urban Fantasy" listing - is spot on. Poor L. Miller's got no excuse!Read more... )

Beautiful Work

  • Apr. 11th, 2009 at 11:09 AM
EK/DS wedding band
Charles Vess's Titania "Midsummer Play{" Fountain is finally up & installed in the Square across from Abingdon's Barter Theatre! We visited Charles & Karen last summer, and got to see the work in progress. Fantastic & unforgettable. Now, Charles is kind enough to post some highlights for all.

Jim Kelso's Japanese metalwork & nature-inflected jewelry. "O, if I had a million dollars..!" I'd buy it all and love it forever. He just wrote to say his only crafts show this year will be at the Smithsonian Craft Show April 23-26, "and will have a variety of work including small boxes in wood and metal, display sculpture and jewelry." If you get there, say Hi for me!

Clipppings: Burnt Ale & Dissociative Fugue

  • Mar. 6th, 2009 at 3:04 PM
Madame de Jurjewicz
The New York Times offers a recipe for Red Hot Ale made with a hot poker. God, I miss my wood stove (and associated tools!). It caramelizes the sugar in the ale. Burnt Caramel is my favorite flavor (well, top 3, anyway). (If you don't want to sign up for the NYTimes, it's also here.)

Remember the 23-yr-old recent Bryn Mawr grad who mysteriously disappeared from her apt in NYC on August 28th? She was found drifting in New York Harbor on Sept. 16th, and just gave a fascinating interview to the NYTimes: she was suffering from dissociative fugue, a rare form of amnesia that causes people to forget their identity, suddenly and without warning, and can last from a few hours to years. “It’s weird,” Ms. Upp said. . . .“How do you feel guilty for something you didn’t even know you did? It’s not your fault, but it’s still somehow you. So it’s definitely made me reconsider everything. Who was I before? Who was I then — is that part of me? Who am I now?”

Our Boston friend, artist Tabitha Vevers, has a show up at the DeCordova (Lincoln, MA) right now. It just got a great review in the Boston Globe. The mermaid picture in the first paragraph is in fact owned by us; we lent it for the show. Very cool; someone from an art shipping firm came to our house to crate it up. There are 7 more images of her work up online here.