Thursday, March 30, 2023

Cat Thursday - I'll be the brains


Welcome to the weekly meme that celebrates the wonders and often hilarity of cats! Join us by posting a favorite lolcat pic you may have come across, famous cat art or even share with us pics of your own beloved cat(s). It's all for the love of cats! Share the link to your post with your comment below.








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Thursday, March 23, 2023

Cat Thursday - MIA


Cat Thursday is on hiatus this week. See you next week!



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Monday, March 20, 2023

Our Wolves by Luanne Castle - Review

I really loved this slim volume of poetry. These are poetic "stories" derived from the classic fairy tale Little Red Riding Hood. Anyone who knows me knows I love fairy tales and retellings of the tales. The tale is used effectively with unique portrayals of Red, and the wolf. The wolf is an abusive father, a killer, a sex offender...many precarious scenarios. Yet not all the poems portray Red as a victim. 
I don't think I've ever read a collection quite like this. I have an extensive poetry collection and I know I will be returning to this volume again and again.

Love this quote at the front of the book:

"The wolves in the woods have sharp teeth and long claws, 
but it's the wolf inside who will tear you apart." 
--Jennifer Donnelly, Stepsister

Some of my favorites were:
What Happens in the Dark When It's Cold Outside
You All Been Waiting for a Wolf Confession
How to Digest the Wolf
Your Sonnet

Advance Praise:

In Our Wolves, poet Luanne Castle navigates the timeless story of “Little Red Riding Hood” in a compelling collection of sharp, memorable poetry. Familiar tales are ageless for a reason. Their magic is that they can easily be transformed to explore subjects of abuse, danger, sexuality, self-sufficiency, and interpersonal relationships in a way that makes these challenging topics palatable to readers. Trying to find the reasoning behind Red’s traumatic adventure, as well as using it to comment on contemporary events, Castle creates taut narratives and sympathetic monologues to show how the story shapeshifts with the teller. Here, we hear from the wolf, the huntsman/woodcutter, Grandmother, townspeople, and Red herself. Not just a victimized or innocent child, Castle’s Red also appears in wiser (and sometimes older) incarnations that are knowing, rebellious, resilient, and clever. This technique subverts stereotypical conventions and shows that Red’s story “is not so very different from yours / and yours and yours and yours and yours.” Filled with atmospheric power, dynamic portrayals, and bright imagery, Our Wolves will haunt you long after you’ve returned from its woods. -Christine Butterworth-McDermott, author of The Spellbook of Fruit & Flowers

In this recasting of the Little Red Riding Hood tale, Luanne Castle’s wolves are not the wolves skulking in our imaginations. Her poems challenge our senses, bounce from view to view, shifting their focal points. Grandmothers and red-coat-wearing girls may or may not bear guilt. Indeed, Granny may be the Wolf. Or the Wolf may be a father, pulling down panties to slap bare skin. The story is told “to search / for who, not why. It’s all about blame.”; Which is, of course, only one truth lurking within this fable. The poems in Our Wolves burrow under your skin and into your flesh. They don’t let go, no matter how you scratch; they’re unsettling, magical. Relentless. Unforgettable. -Robert Okaji, author of Buddha’s Not Talking

“Perhaps you were wrong.” In these imaginative and evocative poems, expectations are subverted, and flat, centuries-old characters are brought to life in both amusing and startling ways. Castle tells the old story of Red Riding Hood from new angles and perspectives, creating a multitude of responses from the reader, eliciting from us everything from moments of cringing to laughter. Most interestingly, Castle subverts the predictable and achieves complexity by using an unlikely combination of forms and mixed modes–from the more traditional lineated lyric and narrative poems to the unexpected Haibun and Abecedarian, using every technique available to create this lively and memorable book. These poems invite us to confront what we take for granted and then let loose our own inner wolf to bite in and savor them all–one well-crafted word at a time. -Kimberly K. Williams, author of Sometimes a Woman and Still Lives

About the Author:

Luanne Castle lives in Arizona, next to a wash that wildlife use as a thoroughfare. She has published two full-length poetry collections, Rooted and Winged (Finishing Line Press 2022) and Doll God (Aldrich/Kelsay 2015), which won the New Mexico-Arizona Book Award for Poetry. Kin Types (Finishing Line Press 2017), a chapbook of poetry and flash nonfiction, was a finalist for the Eric Hoffer Award. Our Wolves (Alien Buddha Press 2023) is her second chapbook. Luanne’s Pushcart and Best of the Net-nominated poetry and prose have appeared in Copper Nickel, American Journal of Poetry, Pleiades, River Teeth, TAB, Verse Daily, Saranac Review, and other journals.

Available on Amazon.


 



 



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Thursday, March 16, 2023

Cat Thursday - Bratty babies


Welcome to the weekly meme that celebrates the wonders and often hilarity of cats! Join us by posting a favorite lolcat pic you may have come across, famous cat art or even share with us pics of your own beloved cat(s). It's all for the love of cats! Share the link to your post with your comment below.






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Monday, March 13, 2023

Classics Club Spin #33

My spin selection is 
Where Angels Fear To Tread - E.M. Forster



I finished the last spin. Let's see if I can do it again. 
  1. The Picture of Dorian Gray, Oscar Wilde
  2. Meditations, Marcus Aurelius
  3. Werewolf, Montague Summers
  4. The Centaur, Algernon Blackwood
  5. Vampires and Vampirism, Montague Summers
  6. The Human Chord, Algernon Blackwood
  7. Of Mice and Men, John Steinbeck
  8. The Witch of Ravensworth, George Brewer
  9. In Search of Dracula: The History of Dracula and Vampires, Raymond T. McNally, Radu R. Florescu
  10. Murder in the Cathedral, T.S. Eliot
  11. The Phantom of the Opera, Gaston Leroux
  12. The Collector, John Fowles
  13. The Devils of Loudon, Aldous Huxley
  14. Grendel, John Gardner
  15. The House on the Borderland, William Hope Hodgson
  16. As I Lay Dying, William Faulkner
  17. Taras Bulba, Nikolai Gogol
  18. Where Angels Fear to Tread, E.M. Forster
  19. Dead Souls, Nikolai Gogol
  20. Mastering Witchcraft: A Practical Guide for Witches, Warlocks, and Covens, Paul Huson

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Thursday, March 9, 2023

Cat Thursday: Authors and Cats (117) Tove Jansson


Welcome to the weekly meme that celebrates the wonders and sometime hilarity of cats! Join us by posting a favorite lolcat pic you may have come acros s, famous cat art or even share with us pics of your own beloved cat(s). It's all for the love of cats! Share the link to your post with your comment below.

The second Cat Thursday of each month is Authors and Cats Thursday. Each time I will feature an author, pictured with their/a cat(s), or guest posts by cat loving authors who also (sometimes) write about cats.


Tove Jansson was born and died in Helsinki, Finland. As a Finnish citizen whose mother tongue was Swedish, she was part of the Swedish-speaking Finns minority. Thus, all her books were originally written in Swedish.

Although known first and foremost as an author, Tove Jansson considered her careers as author and painter to be of equal importance.

Tove Jansson wrote and illustrated her first Moomin book, The Moomins and the Great Flood (1945), during World War II. She said later that the war had depressed her, and she had wanted to write something naive and innocent. Besides the Moomin novels and short stories, Tove Jansson also wrote and illustrated four original and highly popular picture books.

Jansson's Moomin books have been translated into 33 languages. (Goodreads)



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Thursday, March 2, 2023

Cat Thursday - The mischief never ends


Welcome to the weekly meme that celebrates the wonders and often hilarity of cats! Join us by posting a favorite lolcat pic you may have come across, famous cat art or even share with us pics of your own beloved cat(s). It's all for the love of cats! Share the link to your post with your comment below.






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