K.R. Gastreich's Blog, page 41
February 13, 2012
Heroes in Love

and philosopher Hypatia. Orestes is a worthy hero, but he will
not win Hypatia's heart. Nor will he save her life.This week on Heroines of Fantasy, we're going to talk about heroes.
Now, don't worry – the heroines won't be left out of this discussion. They can't be. After all, in matters of love it takes two to tango. (Or three, or more, if you and/or your characters are living the Chinese curse of having an interesting life…) So when we talk about how our heroes love, we must at least make reference to the heroines who have captured their hearts.
It's a common complaint that female characters in fantasy have historically been confined to the role of Romantic Interest for the Hero. She waits on the sidleines while he proves his worth, and her everlasting love will be his reward when all the manly adventures are over and done. Scenarios like this one have rankled readers -- especially women readers – because they so often undermine the potential of female characters to reflect the true complexity of real-life women.
I am of a mind that clichés like this not only shortchange our heroines, they also shortchange our heroes. By giving the heroes of fantasy an inordinately simple path to romantic fulfillment, we impoverish their characters, allowing them to escape the true complexity of real-life men.
Now, maybe this is what many are looking for in fantasy. There's probably more than one person out there who has finished that engaging book, or gone home (or to the bar) after that entertaining movie, and thought, "Wow. If only the rules were that straightforward. Slay the kraken; win the girl. Now that's a world I wouldn't mind living in…"
Whether or not your taste is for uncomplicated love in the context of fantasy, I'm going to ask you to indulge me this week and talk about male characters who experience the reality of love in our fictitious worlds.

There's my example. Now it's your turn. Talk to me about heroes in love. Real love, in all its beauty and cruelty, with all its nuances, inconveniences, uncertainties and confusions. Who are these heroes? How have they loved? Who have they loved? Did they get the woman in the end? (If it was 'real', they probably did not. But I'd like to know…unless, of course, the reveal would involve too many spoilers.)
And here's something else to think about as the discussion moves along: As we break boundaries in the ways our female characters live, are we also breaking boundaries in the ways that our male characters love?
I look forward to hearing your thoughts.
Posted by Karin Rita Gastreich
Published on February 13, 2012 06:00
February 6, 2012
A Tale of True Love for Valentine's Day
Valentine's Day. How the heck did a defiant priest become the basis for a holiday of lovers, celebrated with hearts and candy and engagement rings? There are many, many legends. My favorite claims that Valentine was jailed because he defied Emperor Claudius by marrying young men and women against the law--a law that said no young men were allowed to marry (in an attempt to boost numbers in his army.) On the eve of his execution, Valentine wrote "the first Valentine" to his beloved, his jailer's daughter (whom some legends claim was healed of her blindness by the saint) signing it, from your Valentine.
As that story goes, and all stories of Valentine, the man was executed and thereby martyred, attaining eventual sainthood. I don't like that ending. Not at all. Therefore, in Heroines of Fantasy tradition, we're going to turn things around a little and make it our own. Using this picture and the basic Valentine legend above, let's rewrite the story, and this time let Valentine LIVE!
Same rules as last time: FIVE LINES ONLY! No cheating. Please do not be offensive. Sex and/or violence is allowed, but please don't get too graphic. Posting ends midnight on Saturday, February 11th. I'll conclude with the last five lines, and post the whole collective story on Sunday, February 12th.
And so it begins: the story of a boy and a girl, and love unattainable; at least, that is what their kin wanted them to believe. Her name was Adalaide, a maid small and slight even for her kind. He was Valentine, his temper wicked even for his. They met in the wood. They fell in love; and turned the world upside down.
Now it's your turn...
As that story goes, and all stories of Valentine, the man was executed and thereby martyred, attaining eventual sainthood. I don't like that ending. Not at all. Therefore, in Heroines of Fantasy tradition, we're going to turn things around a little and make it our own. Using this picture and the basic Valentine legend above, let's rewrite the story, and this time let Valentine LIVE!
Same rules as last time: FIVE LINES ONLY! No cheating. Please do not be offensive. Sex and/or violence is allowed, but please don't get too graphic. Posting ends midnight on Saturday, February 11th. I'll conclude with the last five lines, and post the whole collective story on Sunday, February 12th.

And so it begins: the story of a boy and a girl, and love unattainable; at least, that is what their kin wanted them to believe. Her name was Adalaide, a maid small and slight even for her kind. He was Valentine, his temper wicked even for his. They met in the wood. They fell in love; and turned the world upside down.
Now it's your turn...
Published on February 06, 2012 06:00
January 30, 2012
The Vilification of Wool

Jodi's first novel (of a trilogy), Incarnate releases out into the world tomorrow, January 31.
Ana is new. For thousands of years in Range, a million souls have been reincarnated over and over, keeping their memories and experiences from previous lifetimes. When Ana was born, another soul vanished, and no one knows why...
Newberry Award Winner, Robin McKinley says: "Incarnate has an eerie and intriguing premise..."
New York Times bestselling author, Rachel Hawkins called it, "...lyrical and thought-provoking...the kind of book that stays with you long after you've turned the last page."
Award-winning author of the Shade trilogy, Jeri Smith-Ready called it, "...breathtaking, heart-melting, soul-feeding, mind-blowing..."
And not only is Jodi an amazing storyteller, but she's mistress of all things knitted and wool, and quite committed to the medium, as her guest post will attest. Enjoy!
****
The vilification of wool in fiction must be stopped.
Bold statement, I know, but how many times have you read about a character pulling out a "rough woolen blanket" or wearing "scratchy woolen clothes?"

As I write this post, I have within reach no fewer than ten woolen objects -- and none of them are scratchy or rough. Several pair of fingerless mitts knit out of Merino wool, a few knit out of BFL wool, one pair knit from Falkland wool. Let's not forget the Merino and silk hat I'm wearing, or the Corriedale wool I have on a spindle.
Of those, the Corriedale is probably the roughest, but it's still soft enough to use for socks or perhaps a hat if one doesn't have a sensitive head.
Let's do away with adjectives like "rough" and "scratchy" for wool. Some wools certainly are rough and scratchy, but if you want to hurt your characters with wool, why not ruin their favorite pair of mittens? (Doable in a variety of ways, from felting them in the washing machine to the terrible death of wool moths.)

And did you know that wool is flame-retardant? Indeed, while wool will catch fire, it does not stay on fire. Flames quickly go out.
Another thing: wool is one of the only fibers you want to keep wearing if you fall into a freezing lake and have no change of clothes. (A real danger in fantasyland!) With most other fibers, like cotton or nylon, you're better off being naked. Can you believe it? NAKED. But wool -- wool is warm even when it's wet. Wool will save your life.
Fantasy and YA books often have messages of tolerance. What makes wool any less deserving of that message, especially considering its many virtues?

Jodie Meadows lives and writes in the Shenandoah Valley, Virginia, with her husband, a Kippy*, and an alarming number of ferrets. She is a confessed book addict and has wanted to be a writer ever since she decided against becoming an astronaut. Her debut YA fantasy/dystopian is Incarnate, coming January 31 from HarperCollins/Katherine Tegen. Order on IndieBound! Incarnate, by Jodi Meadows
*Kippy is a cat along the line of Crookshanks or the Cheshire Cat--a character in her own right, and often one who steals the show.
Published on January 30, 2012 06:12
January 23, 2012
A Plague on Both Your Houses: A Guest Blog by Athena Andreadis
Don't you know
They're talkin' 'bout a revolution
– Tracy Chapman

The skirmish in the ongoing war about contemporary fantasy between Leo Grin and Joe Abercrombie reminds me of Tiptree's story. Grin and Abercrombie argued over fantasy as art, social construct and moral fable totally oblivious to the relevant achievements of half of humanity – closer to ninety percent, actually, when you take into account the settings of the works they discussed. No non-male non-white non-Anglosaxon fantasy writers were mentioned in their exchanges and in almost all of the reactions to their posts (I found only two partial exceptions).
I expected this from Grin. After all, he wrote his essay under the auspices of Teabagger falsehood-as-fact generator Andrew Breitbart. His "argument" can be distilled to "The debasement of heroic fantasy is a plot of college-educated liberals!" On the other hand, Abercrombie's "liberalism" reminds me of the sixties free-love dictum that said "Women can assume all positions as long as they're prone." The Grin camp (henceforth Fathers) conflates morality with religiosity and hearkens nostalgically back to Tolkien who essentially retold Christian and Norse myths, even if he did it well. The Abercrombie camp (henceforth Sons) equates grittiness with grottiness and channels Howard – incidentally, a basic error by Grin who put Tolkien and Howard in the same category in his haste to shoehorn all of today's fantasy into the "decadent" slot. In fact, Abercrombie et al. are Howard's direct intellectual descendants, although Grin's two idols were equally reactionary in class-specific ways. Fathers and Sons are nevertheless united in celebrating "manly" men along the lines demarcated by Tiptree.
As I've said elsewhere, I enjoy playing RPGs in many guises. But even for games – let alone for reading – I prefer constructs that are nuanced and, equally importantly, worlds in which I can see myself living and working. Both camps write stories set in medieval worlds whose protagonists are essentially Anglosaxon white men with a soupçon of Norse or Celt to spice the bland gruel. To name just a few examples, this is true of Tolkien's Middle Earth, Howard's Conan stories, Moorcock's Elric saga, Leiber's Fafhrd series, Jordan's Wheel of Time toe-bruisers, Martin's fast-diminishing-returns Fire and Ice cycle. The sole difference is approach, which gets mistaken for outlook. If I may use po-mo terms, the Fathers represent constipation, the Sons diarrhea; Fathers the sacred, Sons the profane – in strictly masculinist terms. In either universe, women are deemed polluting (that is, distracting from bromances) or furniture items. The fact that even male directors of crowd-pleasers have managed to create powerful female heroes, from Jackson's Éowyn to Xena (let alone the women in wuxia films), highlight the tame and regressive nature of "daring" male-written fantasy.
Under the cover of high-mindedness, the Fathers posit that worthy fantasy must obey the principles of abrahamic religions: a rigid, stratified society where everyone knows their place, the color of one's skin determines degree of goodness, governments are autocratic and there is a Manichean division between good and evil: the way of the dog, a pyramidal construct where only alpha males fare well and are considered fully human. The Sons, under the cover of subversive (if only!) deconstruction, posit worlds that embody the principles of a specific subset of pagan religions: a society permanently riven by discord and random cruelty but whose value determinants still come from hierarchical thinking of the feudal variety: the way of the baboon, another (repeat after me) pyramidal construct where only alpha males fare well and are considered fully human. Both follow Campbell's impoverished, pseudo-erudite concepts of the hero's quest: the former group accepts them, the latter rejects them but only as the younger son who wants the perks of the first-born. Both think squarely within a very narrow box.

A prominent example was the accusation from one of Grin's acolytes that contemporary fantasy is obsessed with balance which is "foreign to the Western temperament" (instead of, you know, ever thrusting forward). He explicitly conflated Western civilization with European Christendom, which should automatically disqualify him from serious consideration. Nevertheless, I will point out that pagan Hellenism is as much a cornerstone of Western civilization as Christianity, and Hellenes prized balance. The concept of "Midhén ághan" (nothing in excess) was crucial in Hellenes' self-definition: they watered their wine, ate abstemiously, deemed body and mind equally important and considered unbridled appetites and passions detriments to living the examined life. At the same time, they did not consider themselves sinful and imperfect in the Christian sense, although Hellenic myths carry strong strains of defiance (Prometheus) and melancholy (their afterworld, for one).
Frankly, the Grin-Abercrombie fracas reminds me of a scene in Willow. At the climax of the film, while the men are hacking at each other down at the courtyard, the women are up at the tower hurling thunderbolts. By the time the men come into the castle, the battle has been waged and won by women's magic.So enough already about Fathers and Sons in their temples and potties. Let's spend our time more usefully and pleasantly discussing the third member of the trinity. Before she got neutered, her name was Sophia (Wisdom) or Shekinah (Presence). Let's celebrate some people who truly changed fantasy – to its everlasting gain, as is the case with SF.
My list will be very partial and restricted to authors writing in English and whose works I've read, which shows we are dealing with an embarrassment of riches. I can think of countless women who have written paradigm-shifting heroic fantasy, starting with Emily Brontë who wrote about a world of women heroes in those tiny hand-sewn diaries. Then came trailblazers Catherine Moore, Mary Stewart and André Norton. Ursula Le Guin's Earthsea is another gamechanger (although her gender-specific magic is problematic, as I discussed in Crossed Genres ) and so is her ongoing Western Shores series. Katherine Kurtz's Deryni cycle is as fine a medieval magic saga as any. We have weavers of new myths: Jane Yolen, Patricia McKillip, Meredith Ann Pierce, Alma Alexander; and tellers of old myths from fresh perspectives: Tanith Lee, Diana Paxson, Marion Zimmer Bradley, Terri Windling, Emma Bull, C. J. Cherryh, Christine Lucas.
Then there's Elizabeth Lynn, with her Chronicles of Tornor and riveting Ryoka stories. Marie Jakober, whose Even the Stones have haunted me ever since I read it. Elizabeth Marshall Thomas, whose heroic prehistoric fantasies have never been bested. Jacqueline Carey, who re-imagined the Renaissance from Eire to Nubia and made a courtesan into a swashbuckler in the first Kushiel trilogy, showing a truly pagan universe in the bargain. This without getting into genre-cracking mythmakers like Isak Dinesen (Karen Blixen) and Louise Erdrich.

Athena Andreadis brief bioAthena Andreadis was born in Greece and lured to the US at age 18 by a full scholarship to Harvard, then MIT. She does basic research in molecular neurobiology, focusing on mechanisms of mental retardation and dementia. She is an avid reader in four languages across genres, the author of To Seek Out New Life: The Biology of Star Trek and writes speculative fiction and non-fiction on a wide swath of topics. Her work can be found in Harvard Review, Belles Lettres, After Hours, Strange Horizons, Crossed Genres, Stone Telling, Cabinet des Fées, Bull Spec, Science in My Fiction, SF Signal, The Apex Blog, World SF, The SFF Portal, H+ Magazine, io9, The Huffington Post, and her own site, Starship Reckless.
Images: Éowyn, shieldmaiden of Rohan (Miranda Otto) in The Two Towers; Sonja, vampire paladin (Rhona Mitra) in Rise of the Lycans; Yu Shu Lien, Wudan warrior (Michelle Yeoh) in Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon.
Published on January 23, 2012 10:23
January 16, 2012
A Fantasy for All Seasons

I must have ordered the Narnia books off of the Scholastic book flyer, because the whole set came to me at once, in all of their new-book-smell and glossy-cover glory. In those days, The Magician's Nephew was still last of the set, not first, and I had not a single clue about the Christian allegory. My favorites, for no explicable reason, were The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, The Voyage of the Dawn Treader, and The Silver Chair. My gateway drug to fantasy, they introduced me to new worlds and places I could only imagine; I thirsted for more.
Then, in fifth grade, I made an amazing discovery in my elementary school library: Anne McCaffrey's Dragonsinger. Once I realized that my mom had all McCaffrey's books on our bookshelf at home, I read every novel of hers I could find. Then I moved to the other books on my mom's bookshelf, which was chock full of fantasy.

Fantasy became my dirty little secret during high school and college. I was not going to be a geek, so to the general public I was a wholesome, outgoing, all-American teenager. Who knew that I played Warhammer in the back room of my friend's house and wrote Pern fanfic for Star-Rise Weyr? And NOBODY knew that I would occasionally pick at that old story I'd started during middle school. That was for me alone.

Of course, my secrecy only lasted a few years. During a Medieval Literature class in college, I had an epiphany: I could read King Arthur myths in college? I felt like I was getting away with some elaborate scheme. I was going to study the very roots of modern fantasy, and the University was going to give me a college degree in exchange! My scheme persisted through my M.A. in Medieval Literature and cemented my fate. Not only could I now read and discuss fantasy, I could pick at the author's historical accuracy. And eventually, when I was ready, I discovered The Lord of the Rings, and appreciated all of the complexities and subtleties of Tolkien's amazing world.
Fantasy has formed a significant portion of my personality and worldview. I no longer care that I'm a fantasy geek—which is ironic, because becoming a geek is so much more cool and mainstream. The benefits of reading fantasy have far outweighed any drawbacks to my social life or character: I have a rich imagination, a strong vocabulary, and the ability to appreciate political, religious and social systems completely foreign from my own. I appreciate people of all different races, cultures and ethnic backgrounds, and my mind is open to new possibilities, both in fiction and in life. I believe I am a better person, more open-minded and less prone to a black-and-white worldview because of fantasy.
I did try to reread the Narnia books a couple of years ago, and found them thin in plot and character, overbearing in religious message. It made me sad to have my sense of wonder stripped away, and I wish now I hadn't reread them, that I could always hold them in my heart with the same charm they once held for me. Still, I will never forget how they shaped me on this journey to become the reader and writer I am today.

Now here is my question for you: how has fantasy shaped you as a reader, and as a person? And how has your taste for fantasy changed with the seasons of life?
Published on January 16, 2012 00:01
January 9, 2012
The Essential Face of Fantasy

As a genre, fantasy has multiple expressions: dark, humorous, violent, romantic, children's, YA, adult, urban, epic…the list goes on and on. Yet the common denominator for all these expressions is the presence of magic.
Writers of fantasy struggle at great length to build systems of magic unique to their worlds. Readers respond to magic with a critical eye, seeking sorcery that "makes sense", at least on an instinctive level, and – most importantly – that does not simply function to save the day at the end of our heroine's journey.
This week I'd like to share some of my thoughts about magic; ideas that have come together as a result of crafting Eolyn, and that continue to evolve as part of my journey with fantasy.
Let's start with:
Magic does not have "rules", but rather is constrained by rules imposed on it.
Arguably a semantic consideration, but it's very difficult for me to think in terms of "the rules of magic", because in my mind, the whole point of magic is that it breaks the rules. Magic acts in ways that defy explanation, most often with respect to the known laws of science.
Nonetheless, effective story telling depends on magic having limits. Certain things can and cannot be done by the wizards, witches, mages and magas of our worlds. I've come to think of these boundaries not so much as an inherent property of magic, but as constraints that result from the imperfect knowledge, imagination and/or abilities of practitioners. Which brings me to my next thought:

Similar to what we talked about with respect to religion in fantasy last week, for me the most convincing systems of magic are thoroughly embedded in their respective cultures. The practice of magic has a past, present and future. Magical knowledge can evolve, undergo innovation, and be lost.
It is in this context that "the rules of magic" make the most sense to me. A society's structure, history and current state of knowledge can determine what kind of magic is practiced by its members. In this way, magic never reaches its full potential because every culture has an imperfect understanding of that potential, and therefore a limited ability to achieve it.
So for example, in an imaginary world we could have one society with warlocks who practice shape shifting but do not engage in divination. A neighboring land might have witches who see the future and read minds, but are inept when it comes to assuming the form of other animals. For me, these differences are most convincing if they exist for reasons grounded in history and culture.
Magic is not the same as science.
Science can inform systems of magic, and it has become popular in recent years to recur to science for explanations of our magic. There are some very clever examples of this, one being the application of the law of conservation of mass to the problem of shape shifting.
It is really up to the author how much of a given magical system can be explained (or constrained) using our current understanding of the natural world. In Eolyn's world, there is a whole class of magic, Middle Magic, that is essentially an antiquated version of ecology, botany, natural history and medicine.
Yet, however tempting and useful it is to occasionally explain magic through natural laws, sooner or later we need to let magic be magic, and allow it to transcend the framework of science.
Which brings me to my last thought for today:

I've noticed that we writers like to dig into magical systems, ours and those of others. We dissect them and try to make sure every piece fits back together neatly. This is a good, solid practice that helps us build cohesive worlds, but there's one irony in the process. If magic is truly at work, sooner or later, no matter how water-tight "the rules" are, you'll come across something that does not make sense.
The best part of this is, if everything else is done right, that one illogical piece is never a weakness of the system; the illogical piece is what defines it as magic.
Now, it's your turn…
Talk to me about magic: systems of magic that appealed to you, uses of magic that put you off, spells that you thought were totally cool and would like to be able to do in real life.
Also, what do you think the role of "rules" should be in magic? Does science have a place in explaining magic? Is magic "the essential face" of fantasy?
As an aside, while selecting images for this post, out of curiosity I did a google search for "the face of fantasy". Google kicked back oodles of portraits of beautiful women, a handful of demonic-looking men (which I found rather curious), and. . .George R.R. Martin. An essential face of fantasy, indeed.
Posted by Karin Rita Gastreich
Published on January 09, 2012 06:15
January 2, 2012
Of Gods and Prophecy

Magical systems are often religion-based. Gods are invoked, sacrificed to, avoided at all costs and petitioned to for aid. In Finder, the "ornery desert gods" are often called upon as a curse, but there is little in the way of gods or religion in that book. Still, they are there if only implied. In A Time Never Lived , gods play a huge role in the story. The first book didn't need gods; the second book did. That's just the way it rolled. And it made me wonder...

I started wondering how others feel about this, if they think of it at all. For example--much as I loved the Narnia books as a kid, once I figured out all the Christian allegory--ugh--might as well have put worms and goop and other icky things inside for all I'd want to open them again. I'll admit--I'm agnostic on the best of days, but it's really not about being anti-religion. I love CS Lewis' The Screwtape Letters , as well, Till We Have Faces. Both of these by a super-religious writer, writing super-religious themes; so why did Narnia bug the crap out of me while the others didn't?

Anyway, before I go on and on about Lewis* and all he tried (and mostly succeeded) to do with is writing, I ask you--how do you feel about gods and religion in fiction? Does fantasy fiction need them to be authentic? Does it bother you because you are a religious person, and the notion of any other god than yours unsettles you? Do you prefer a magic system that doesn't rely on a divine presence? What books? Tell me! I'm a curious oyster by nature, and once I get to wondering, it hurts my brain until I have answers.
Published on January 02, 2012 06:24
December 26, 2011
Sleeping Beauties

I've found out over the Christmas holidays that my niece's favorite Disney Princess is Aurora, the Sleeping Beauty. Not because of any particular aspect of her story, but because she's the one who wears Pink.
Right inside those two sentences, there are a few topics for discussion, but not for this week. This week, Sleeping Beauty is my favorite princess as well, not because she wears pink, or because all she needs is a kiss from the right guy to cure her, but because of the extraordinary example she sets and which I intend to follow, for at least a few days:
Why wake up when you don't really have to?
All this to say, Heroines of Fantasy is on holiday this week, but before we let everyone get back to their beauty rest, let me just make a couple announcements:
Please stop by Donna Brown's blog Book Bags and Catnaps to vote for our novels as part of the Indie Love contest. It will only take a few minutes; just scroll down and click 'Like' underneath the thumbnail for EOLYN, FINDER, THE SONG AND THE SORCERESS, or THE NORTHERN QUEEN. There are a lot of great titles, and you can vote as many times as you want, so 'like' away. Voters have the chance of winning a $25 gift certificate from Amazon. Thanks for your support!
Elsewhere, on my blog for EOLYN, I've posted my annual Christmas Reading. This year's excerpt, by popular demand, is the 'Gingerbread House' scene from Chapter Two. Ten minutes of a little story telling magic; I hope you enjoy it.
Those are all the announcements.
Starting next week, Terri Lynne-DeFino will be our MC for the spring. Hooray! She is bringing a great selection of guest bloggers with her; for names, links and dates please check out the right hand bar.
Also, if there are any particular topics you'd like to see us put forward for discussion in the New Year, please let us know! You can write your suggestions in the comments here, or email us at women.writing.fantasy(at)gmail.com
On behalf of Kim, Terri and I, I'd like to wish all of you a wonderful holiday. Thank you so much for being part of our discussions and musings on Heroines of Fantasy. We've really enjoyed this blog and very much appreciate all the insights and perspectives you have brought to the table.
Now, go get your rest, because next week, we'll be back at it!

p.s. -- Not to open yet another topic of discussion (because we're all supposed to go back to sleep now, right?), I wanted to mention that in searching for images for this post, it was almost impossible to find Sleeping Beauties that were NOT the Disney standard. It's amazing just how much Disney has, for better or for worse, co-opted our images of the classic fairy tales...
Posted by Karin Rita Gastreich
Published on December 26, 2011 08:14
December 19, 2011
La Befana

She looks underneath the table, in the potato bin, and behind the woodpile, sighing softly, sadly. She sweeps the floor with her ancient broom. She leaves the sweets from her hamper, and sometimes coal if the children of the house were naughty. The offering of wine sipped, cheese and bread nibbled, La Befana lets herself out again.
In the yard, her little white donkey lifts his head from a bucket, sweet well-water dripping from his ghostly muzzle. He's already eaten the grain from the shoe, and is ready when La Befana calls him to her. Off they go to find the next house wherein children live, to search again for her missing babe, to leave sweets and to drink wine, until dawn calls forth the new day, and her night of wandering is over.
There are as many stories of La Befana as there are towns in Italy. This is the gist of the one I remember from a time when I didn't know what memories were. It obviously collected quite a few stories and put it into one--including the Mexican element of grain in the shoe for the donkey. La Befana herself comes out of Italy's ancient past, and not, as far as this Streganona is concerned, a mispronunciation of Epiphany. Even the story I know from my childhood is very Christianized, though the pagan elements remain for any who care to acknoweldge them: At the turn of the year, La Befana sweeps away the year's detrius, and leads her white donkey to the dawn.

Another Christian legend says La Befana was a woman whose child had died. Hearing of the birth of the baby Jesus, she set out to find him, convinced he was her lost son. When she finally found the baby, she gave him gifts. In return, Jesus gave her all the children in Italy for one night every year.
At this time of year, in the northern hemisphere anyway, no matter the faith or culture, it is the celebration of light's triumph over darkness. What stories come out of your past? Your grandparents? Parents? Interesting neighbors? Share!
Glad Tidings of this Joyful Season, and Happy New Year!
Published on December 19, 2011 07:06
December 12, 2011
Pause

Normally I'm not a fan of wet weather, particularly when said weather is also cold. There is a reason why I live in sunny Southern California, where we all put on our parkas and scarves as soon as the temperature drops below 65.
However, at this point in the holiday season, I'm sort of looking forward to a shut-in, lazy sort of day, where "the weather outside is frightful, and the fire is so delightful." December, in particular, is hectic. I'm at the end of my semester, so I'm right in the middle of that last burst of grading. My eldest has finals this week. And there is still plenty of shopping, wrapping and baking, parties to attend, visiting, volunteering. It's easy to feel like I'm caught in a whirlwind of color and noise this time of year, with barely any time to pause and reflect. Never mind time to engage in one of my favorite leisure activities: reading.
Winter storms force us to pause and take a much needed break. To reflect. To relax. To curl up on the couch with a thick blanket, shut out the outside world, and read. Right now, I'm looking forward to finishing Terri-Lynne DeFino's richly woven A Time Never Lived, the incredible sequel to her first novel, Finder. Next I'm going to resume reading either Tamora Pierce's Bloodhound or the ARC of Under the Never Sky, a forthcoming YA dystopian novel by Veronica Rossi. Those are at the top of the towering pile of juicy fiction goodness stacking up next to my bed, but if those don't strike my fancy, I may pull out something else. Whatever I choose, it will most likely be fantasy of some sort, either epic or dystopian. It will provide me with a much-needed escape from the crazy day-to-day, for just long enough to recharge my batteries for the days to come.
As 2011 speeds toward its inevitable conclusion, I challenge you, gentle reader, to pause. Pick a day. Maybe it's a bad weather day, or a bad hair day, or even just an hour or two carved out between tasks on your to-do list. Buy, beg, borrow, or steal the time if you must. Forget about all of the musts and have-tos for just a little while, curl up in front of that fireplace, and lose yourself in a good book. You'll be so glad you did.
So-- rain or no rain, what are you going to read next?
~ Kim Vandervort
Published on December 12, 2011 00:02