About JoMA

  • JoMA is published by the Endicott Studio, an organization dedicated to literary, visual, and performance arts inspired by myth, folklore, fairy tales, and the oral storytelling tradition.

    For generations, artists have drawn upon mythic and folkloric symbolism to make contemporary works addressing the issues of their time. Our mission is to honor mythic artists of the past, support mythic artists working today, and to carry this tradition into the future.

    "The job of a storyteller is to speak the truth," writes the great children's book author Alan Garner. "But what we feel most deeply can't be spoken in words alone. At this level, only images connect. And here, story becomes symbol; symbol is myth. And myth is truth."

    JoMA is a nonprofit webzine, supported by reader donations, and creative contributions from an international circle of mythic writers, artists, and scholars.

The People
Behind JoMA

  • Editorial Staff:

    Terri Windling, co-editor
  • Midori Snyder, co-editor
  • Jamie Bluth, assistant editor


    Additional Reviewers:

    Elizabeth Genco

    Heinz Insu Fenkl

    Kathleen Howard

    Helen Pilinovsky


    * Read JoMA staff &
    reviewer bios here.

Contact JoMA:


  • Information on:

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    can be found on our Contact Information page.

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    The "willow" design background on JoMA's Home Page (and other pages) is by the great 19th century designer/craftsman/socialist/
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May 01, 2008

Womanwriting_3Remember when blogging was new and you could catch up on your favorite blogs over morning coffee? Now there's so much good stuff out there that there's no way in heck to keep up with it all (though syndication feeds are certainly a help), and I'm even falling behind on keeping up with blogs by friends. Case in point: I only just found out that Kim Antieau has been posting wonderful little interviews with other mythic-arts writers on her newly re-designed blog; she's got interviews with Alice Hoffman, Charles de Lint, Joanna Harris, Jane Yolen, and poet Jimmy Santiago Baca so far. She has also posted an intriguing interview with herself in which 60 writers, editors, family members and friends asked the questions. You can read some good snippets from the interviews below, and go here to check them out at full length. They are little gems.

Third_angel_alice_hoffmanKim to Alice Hoffman: Like many fairy tales, your stories often begin with catastrophe. Terrible things happen to your characters and to the people around them. Is it difficult to be a witness to these tragedies, as the writer? Is this emotionally draining for you as you are writing it? Or is it cathartic? Or neither?

Alice: It's cathartic to take straw and make it into gold, or as close to gold as you can get it. Also to transfigure reality and expand it. Terrible things happen in all fairy tales -- why not? They are the most honest of all literature.

Dingoviking150_2 Kim to Charles de Lint: Are you ever unsure of yourself or your writing?

Charles: All the time. I think a good writer is a mix of confidence (sure that what they’re writing is going to appeal to their readers) and uncertainty (what if all these words are crap?). If you’re too confident, you get an attitude that seeps through into your writing, affecting the characters and the story. If you’re too uncertain, you’ll never finish anything.

Lollipop_shoes_joanne_harris_2 Kim to Joanne Harris: Alice Hoffman says you can tell something about a person by which book they prefer: Wuthering Heights or Jane Eyre. Which book do you prefer? Why?

Joanne:Wuthering Heights; partly because I live within a stone’s throw of the place, and the landscape has shaped my childhood, and partly because of the raw poetry of the writing and the extraordinary insight the author shows into the darker mysteries of the human heart – an at such a tender age. Fantastic.

. . . And on another subject entirely, there's a good article posted on Salon.com today about Ursula Le Guin's new mythic novel, Lavinia.

April 29, 2008

12dancingprincesses_2


My hat is off to the Stainless Steel Droppings blog, which just keeps getting better and better. This week is Book Week, which editor Carl V. says "will focus on different art, artisans, etc. that have something to do with that form of entertainment that so many of us love: the book!" Today's post features the fabulous work of Su Blackwell and Brian Dettmer. Go here to see much more.

The art above is "Twelve Dancing Princesses" by Su Blackwell.

April 11, 2008

Delicious goblin fruits....

    Gobspr08

The Spring 2008 (2nd Anniversary) issue of the Goblin Fruit poetry webzine is now online, and by god is it a spectacular one. "In the grand tradition of launching from new and exciting locales," they say, "this Spring issue is brought to you from the Levant with cedar twigs and a handful of Damascene dust. These poems are wet, deep and sea-salted, sure to leave you breathless as a mermaid's kiss and just as doomed and desperate. Read them with caution, and make sure you know how to swim, first -- or don't, and see what dreams may come."

The issue is divided into The Book of Breath and The Book of Thirst, with so many fine poems in each part that it's hard to single out just a few for mention. Fans of fairy tale poetry should be sure not to miss "Prince Among Frogs" by Anca Vlasopolos, "Twelve Dancing Princesses" by A. Harvey-Fitzhenry,  "Things in the Well" by Erik Amundsen, and "Godmother" by  Anna Marie Catoir. Among the mythic poems, "Nesting" by Dana Koster, "Drowning Downstream" by Deborah P. Kolodji, "Noah's Daughters" by Virginia Mohlere, "Rusalka" by Julia Rios, and "Seeds" by Jasmine Johnston stood out for me, but all the poems are well worth perusing. And as is if all these treasures weren't enough, there's also a special feature on Catherynne M. Valente, with an interview and four of her poems.

Goblin Fruit (produced by the international trio Amal El-Mohtar, Jessica Wick, and Oliver Hunter) just gets better and better. We wish them a very happy 2nd Anniversary!

          Goblin_kite_and_urchinella_by_olive

August 08, 2007

Amy Ross Re-visited

Amy_rossFollowing up on our feature on Amy Ross, Amy now has a new blog showcasing her work: Nature Morph. Check it out for information on her upcoming shows in Portland, Boston, Atlanta, and Miami; for fascinating images of works-in-progress; and for metamorphic mushroom imagery like the picture on the left. Great stuff!

June 24, 2007

The Power of a Great Idea: With Thanks to Colleen Mondor

Chasingray Just wanted to give another round of thank yous to Colleen Mondor, who set up last week's fabulous Summer Blog Blast Tour of 50 Authors. The whole project was incredibly informative, insightful, and inspirational, opening the door to a new and dynamic way to meet authors and read about their works.

Here's a bit from Colleen's recent blog post about the experience:
"I began organizing the Summer Blog Blast Tour a couple of months ago, for reasons I explained earlier. I had hopes that it would introduce readers to authors they have not been aware of and give them some insight into how some of their favorite books were written. I envisioned lots of jumping from site to site as readers followed the daily link lists and became more and more interested in what the SBBT was trying to accomplish. I thought I might hear from some authors or publishers who found our work to be worthwhile. I thought we might connect with a few people - I hoped we would.

"But really-- I had no idea we would hit this one so incredibly freaking far out of the litblogosphere ballpark...."

May 21, 2007

Women and violence...

BuffyDespite having worked in publishing for two and a half decades now, I have to admit that when it comes to Joss Whedon, creator of Buffy the Vampire Slayer, I turn into into a teenage fan girl. Buffy, during its best seasons, was ground-breaking, mythic, hilarious, and contained some of the best writing and character development I've ever seen come out of Hollywood. (Okay, for us New-York-is-the-center-of-the-universe literary types, that might sound like faint praise indeed...but writers like Joss Whedon, Aaron Sorkin and David Chase have managed to convince me that television writing can equal the art of novel writing at its best.)

Buffy is a show that I dearly wish had been around when I was a teenager, and I envy all the young girls (and young men) who have grown up with its heroine and her friends as archetypes. As if that wasn't reason enough to love Joss Whedon, please read his recent blog entry on women and violence on the Whedonesque website. (With thanks to Emma Bull for the link.) It's utterly spot-on: both heartbreaking and a rousing call to action. Bless you, Mr. Whedon.    

And if you want to know more about what you can do about violence against women and girls around the world, go here.

Speaking of Buffy, Will Shetterly wrote a thoughtful essay a couple of years ago reflecting on what one can learn about writing the series -- from both its triumphs and its failures. You can find the essay, "The Buffy Lessons: Learning from the Dead" on the Qwerty Ranch blog. (If you haven't yet watched all seven years of the series yet, however, don't read the essay, for it's full of spoilers.)

April 14, 2007

Goblin Fruit: Spring Issue

Springtitle Congratulations to the very talented trio of Jessica Wick, Amal El-Mohtar, and Oliver Hunter for another splendid issue of Goblin Fruit, the tasty and handsomely illustrated online poetry journal. This spring issue marks the one year anniversary of their fertile collaboration -- made more challenging by the fact that the three live spread out across the globe.

Of the current issue Amal writes: "We wanted this issue to have a tang of salt air and loam to it, a feel of both drowning and digging; expect to find anything from dismembered elves to devoured dryads. There are maenads and mermaids and fairy princes; there are weddings, gods, frogs and ships (in no particular order), all dancing together in a way that I think would do Lewis Caroll proud."

Cornucopia This is another terrific collection of poems (those highlighted with a red leaf have an audio option). Among them, Karen A. Romanko, Casey Fiesler, and Karen Berry give us mermaids as drowned daughters, an awkward mermaid on a metro, and a poignant retelling of Ariel's fate from "The Little Mermaid." J. C. Runolfson writes a chilling poem of Green Jenny, a ghostly water sprite, while Kirsten Anderson celebrates the fantastic marriage between the land and the water. Catherynne Valente and JoSelle Vanderhooft plow new furrows in old myths and fairy tales.

ElizabethfoxAs a bonus offering, the issue also presents the winners of the Faerie Queene Poetry contest which treated the subject of the Faerie Queene and Queen Elizabeth. It was my pleasure to be called in as the tie breaker at the last moment. First place went to Samantha Henderson for her wonderful ballad-like poem "Queen Elizabeth and the Fox," second place to Felicity Maxwell for "Corona Reginarum," and third place to Marcie Tentchoff for "Fair Price."

And as always, Oliver Hunter has illustrated the issue throughout with his sketches and paintings featured here in this post. You can see more of his remarkable work on Endicott in "The Mage of Muse Hill" and "Traveling the Wilds."

January 31, 2007

Healing Tales and The Snow Queen

The_snow_queen_by_meg_fox 

Back in November, we profiled the work of multi-media artist Meg Fox, looking at the ways she and other writers and artists use fairy tale themes to discuss the difficult subject of child abuse. Now Meg has written to say that she's started a new blog specifically for this kind of work: Healing Through Visual, Literary and Performance Arts. The art above is one of the new pieces featured on the blog, based on The Snow Queen by Hans Christian Andersen -- a writer we were speaking of just yesterday.

Edmund_dulac_3In an excellent essay titled "In Trance of Self," fiction writer and playwright Deborah Eisenberg discusses the young protagonists of The Snow Queen, looking at the ways that both Gerda and Kay claim our sympathy: "Who among us, like Gerda, has not been exiled from the familiar comforts of one's world by the departure or defection of a beloved?...Who has not been forced to accede to a longing that nothing but its object can allay? On the other hand, who has not experienced some measure or some element of Kay's despair? Who has not, at one time or another, been paralyzed and estranged as his appetite and affection for life leaches away....Who has not, at least briefly, retreated into a shining hermetic fortress from which the rest of the world appears frozen and colorless?...And who, withholding sympathy from his unworthy self, has not been ennobled by the sympathy of a loving friend?" (To read the full essay, seek out Mirror, Mirror on the Wall: Women Writers Explore Their Favorite Fairy Tales, edited by Kate Bernheimer.)

In light of yesterday's discussion in the Comments section of the Hans Christian Andersen post, Eisenberg's description of Kay's experience caused me to think about Kay's story in a new way: as a metaphor for depression. I'd always viewed Kay as simply cut off from love, like a lover who has turned suddenly cold when his affection has been transferred to someone else. (Sandra Gilbert's Snow Queen poem cycle is a wonderful exploration of this interpretation.) And yet, another reading of the tale is that young Kay is cut off from life itself, from all feeling and all pleasure...which evokes the painful experience described by sufferers of clinical depression.

  Arthur_rackham_5

This is what I love about fairy tales -- that there are so many different ways to read them, some of which their various tellers and authors intended, and some of which perhaps they did not. They also contain much food for thought concerning the process of healing and transformation -- not only for those who are putting their lives back together after traumatic childhoods, but for everyone who has been scarred by life in one way or another.

Milo_winter_snow_queen Here's another essay in the Endicott archives on the healing power of myth and mythic fiction: The Dark of the Woods; plus I'd like to recommend Midori's powerful Armless Maiden article once again.

I'd also like to list some memorable works of contemporary fiction inspired by The Snow Queen fairy tale -- starting with"The Snow Queen" by Patricia McKillip, an absolutely gorgeous short story published in the Snow White, Blood Red anthology, and Kelly Link's superb "Travels With the Snow Queen," published in Stranger Things Happen. Other good short stories: "The Tale of the Brother" by Emma Donoghue (Kissing the Witch), "In the Witch's Garden" by Naomi Kritzer (Realms of Fantasy magazine, October 2002), "The Lady in the Ice Garden" by Kara Dalkey (Firebirds), "Ice" by Francesca Lia Block (The Rose and the Beast), and "With the Snow Queen" by Joanne Greenberg (With the Snow Queen). (A.S. Byatt's fabulous story "Cold," in her collection Elementals: Stories of Fire and Ice, also plays with a bit of Snow Queen imagery, along with imagery from other fairy tales.)

W_heath_robibsonThe afore-mentioned Snow Queen cycle of poems by Sandra M. Gilbert can be found in her collection Blood Pressure, and Adrienne Rich's poem "The Snow Queen" can be found in The Fact of a Doorframe. The Snow Queen by Eileen Kernaghan is a gentle YA novel that brings elements of Scandinavian shamanism to Andersen's tale. The Ice Queen by Alice Hoffman is a magical contemporary novel that draws imagery from The Snow Queen, among other fairy tales. And, of course, there's The Snow Queen by Joan Vinge, a classic work of science fiction that draws on themes from the fairy tale.

You can read an annotated copy of Andersen's original tale over on the Surlalune Fairy Tale Pages, and also see Snow Queen illustrations from the 19th & early-20th centuries. The art in this post is by Meg Fox, Edmund Dulac, Arthur Rackham, Milo Winter, and W. Heath Robinson.

January 23, 2007

Memory Maps

Unknown_artist_17th_century_1

The Radio Ballads project that we discussed yesterday reminded me of another ground-breaking interstitial arts project examining historical and contemporary life in Britain: Memory Maps. Created in collaboration by cultural historian (and fairy tale scholar) Marina Warner, the University of Essex, and the V&A Museum, Memory Maps is an internet-based project focused on the relationship between people and place. 

John_constable_1In her introductory essay, Marina Warner writes: "A new genre of literature has been emerging strongly in recent years. It doesn't belong automatically on any particular shelf in a bookshop, or to a particular category in a library catalogue. Writers working in this vein are exploring people and places and the relations between them, and in order to do so they combine fiction, history, traveller's tales, autobiography, anecdote, aesthetics, antiquarianism, conversation, and memoir. Mapping memories involves listening in to other people's ghosts as well as your own....Memory Maps is a website designed to inspire and foster work which will continue this approach to writing by providing focal points of interest - catalysts of thought - in the form of paintings and artifacts, alongside databases about people and places."

Rowland_suddaby_1

The Memory Maps project begins in Essex, England, one of the oldest inhabited parts of the British Isles. The project organizers began by collecting images of Essex and asking a wide range of writers for their responses -- including poet & film-maker Ian Sinclair, ecological activist Ken Worpole, musician Billy Bragg, poet Angela Livingstone, novelists Michele Roberts and Lisa Appignanesi, and numerous others (with A.S. Byatt still to come). The project then invites you, the reader, to "respond and contribute, stitching new thoughts, dreams, history, and stories into the map."

Babys_gown_19th_century_1 The form of writing they are chiefly seeking, Warner explains, comes from an old, very English tradition "of the personal, even eccentric essay, the wide-ranging, meditation, and the anecdotal almanac.The precursors of Memory Maps include Robert Burton and The Anatomy of Melancholy; John Aubrey and Brief Lives; Sir Thomas Browne who investigated local beliefs and rituals, ancient and modern; Samuel Taylor Coleridge, most aleatory of English conversationalists on paper and in person; Thomas De Quincey, who forged a new kind of impassioned personal testamentary essay; and others: this is another zone of exploration.

Furnishing_fabric_19th_century"These earlier writers in the genre contributed to a definition of belonging, and an idea of Englishness in their time by inquiring into local customs and opinions, and eavesdropping on local anecdotes. Likewise in the Scottish Highlands, at the end of the seventeenth century, the minister Robert Kirk was equally keen to convey the special character of his parishioners' beliefs in 'the secret common-wealth of fairies', as he called his book of collected lore. Today, in a country braided from different peoples, cultures, and systems of thought, inquiry of this kind can draw out even more richly coloured and densely tangled strands...

"As the Memory Maps grow," Warner concludes, "they will go on connecting different people and places across time and in the present. Such an exchange between images and writings, past and present, memory and imagination, releases energy: the energy of stories."

  Jack_airy 

Click here to learn more about Memory Maps, and how to contribute to the project yourself. And click here to listen to Billy Bragg's contribution, the song "A13, Trunk Road to the Sea".

January 13, 2007

Mermaids in the Desert

Cactus_and_teacupKim Antieau has posted a lovely new story, "Sister Sophia and the Drifter," on her Church of the Old Mermaids blog. (Read our November 24th post explaining the Church of the Old Mermaids project here.) The story was written at the Endicott West arts retreat in Arizona, where Kim and her husband, poet Mario Milosevic, are staying again this winter. You can read about their daily adventures in Arizona on Kim's The Furious Spinner blog (and catch a glimpse of a Sonoran desert bobcat!) Speaking of Mario, check out his Terrastina and Mazolli blog, which is a serialized novel (in daily 99-word episodes) about a year in the life of a fictional Northwest couple and their twin daughters.

And speaking of serialized novels, Will Shetterly has posted Installment 34 of his magical Young Adult novel Mystrella. This too is being written at Endicott West, where Will and his wife, Emma Bull, live as Writers-in-Residence. There must be some particularly potent creative magic blowing in the desert air right now...

January 10, 2007

Stu Jenks: Mythic Photography

Cedarbreaksstarcircle_2 Stu Jenks, whose fabulous photographs have graced the Endicott Studio's pages for a long time, has finally entered the blogosphere with his new blog: Fezziwig Music, Writing and Photography. Stu's beautiful and evocative landscape photography is paired with his observations on the road -- traveling throughout the American southwest and, more recently, to his ancestral home in Scotland. For more about Stu, visit his gallery on the Endicott website as well as browsing through the wonderful galleries on his blog.

January 02, 2007

Forest Rogers: "Forest Beings"

Snow1464wb

Forest Rogers, a wonderful illustrator, painter, and sculptor, has started a new blog, "Forest Beings," this last December. It is filled with treasures of her delicate sculptures, works in progress, illustrations, and paintings. Forest's beautiful drawings of Vasilissa the Wise and Baba Yaga are among my favorites, as well as her lovely woodland creatures and myth and folk figures. (The figure above is a "Winter Fairy" while the piece below is from "East of the Sun and West of the Moon." )

Blogbear2   

December 13, 2006

Santa Lucia Day

Carl_larsson

December 13th, I've just learned, is Santa Lucia Day in the Scandinavian holiday calendar. "So here's the thing about being Scandahuvian," writes Marissa Lingen (an author of speculative fiction from Minnesota), "we are both a fussy and a violent people. We really try to downplay the latter trait, still being embarrassed about those raids on your coastlines and all. (Sorry. Really.) But it's there. And it has to come out somewhere, and where it comes out is in the winter baking. We have sandbakkel tins for the fussy side. The violence is lussekatter. I'm serious. Lussekatter are a glorious personal symbol of light against darkness...." 

Carl_larrsen_3Baking lussekatter takes on mythic dimensions in Marissa's wonderful Santa Lucia Day journal entry, which you'll find in its entirety here. I highly recommend it. More information on Marissa and her other writing can be found here

The link to Marissa's journal came to us courtesy of Kij Johnson, who is the author of The Fox Woman (one of my all-time favorite works of mythic fiction) and other magical novels and tales. The art above is by the Swedish painter and designer Carl Larsson (1853-1919). You can learn more about him on the Carl and Karin Larsson Family Association website, and see an extensive selection of his work on the Scandinavian Treasures site.

 

November 24, 2006

The Church of Old Mermaids

Siren

Last winter, during a month-long stay at the Endicott West writers' retreat in Tucson, Arizona, Kim Antieau sat down and wrote a mythic novel titled The Church of Old Mermaids. "I had no intention of writing," she says, "but I reread The Old Man and the Sea by Ernest Hemingway. I wanted to write a simple story like that, full of compassion and passion, from a woman's viewpoint. I was going to write The Woman and the Old Sea. I imagined a woman walking through the wash and picking up trash to sell at a table she sets up on 4th Avenue in Tucson. I thought she should call it a church. But what kind of church? That's when the Old Mermaids came my way...." Kim's novel hasn't yet been published, but you can read the first chapter on-line here. (And find a list of her other books here.)

Churchofoldmermaids_2Since then, Kim has set up her own Old Mermaid Sanctuary, and is encouraging others around the world to do the same: to create sacred spaces large and small that are personal, magical, and unique. "The Old Mermaids lived in the Old Sea," she explains, "until it dried up [turning into the Arizona desert]...then they had to make their way in a world that was new and alien to them — and they did it with love and beauty....Many of us feel as though we have washed up on alien shores because we no longer live in our places of birth, or because we feel out of sync in our communities, or because we are not living in a place where we can discern beauty. The word ‘sanctuary’ comes from the Latin ‘sanctus’ which means holy. ‘Holy’ comes from the word ‘whole.’ A sanctuary is a place where we are whole and holy, it is where we mend ourselves and the world until all is whole and holy.

Coom_2"Creating an Old Mermaid Sanctuary is not about consumption or knowing about fine art. It's certainly not about what our mainstream culture has declared beautiful or popular...The Old Mermaids created beauty and saw beauty all around. Their home was a work of art, cobbled together from what they found in the desert. Isn’t that how most of us create our lives, cobbled from what we can find?...I want to see Old Mermaid Sanctuaries everywhere — and I would like to create a gorgeous Old Mermaid Sanctuaries book, complete with photos and stories of your Old Mermaid Sanctuary places — be it a dresser top, a room, a yard, a spot in the forest, a workplace, a home. I hope you'll want to participate in this project."

To learn more about the Old Mermaid Sanctuaries project (and how to participate yourself), visit Kim's Church of Old Mermaid blog -- where you'll find stories (including one, I'm honored to say, inspired by a drawing of mine), musings, and information on The Old Mermaid School of Telling Tales & Finding Art and the newly created Old Mermaid Journal (from Lulu Publishing).      

For more information on the folklore of mermaids, you'll find a good article on the subject by Heinz Insu Fenkl in the Journal of Mythic Arts archives. There's also an extensive mermaids website devoted to mermaid lore, links, and imagery.

September 05, 2006

Stardust Blog

Neilcvrain1 Fabulous! Charles Vess now has a blog to chart the making of Stardust, the new film project with Neil Gaiman. There are photographs, journal entries on the experience, links, and tons of insider info. Pop in from time to time and catch the latest.

Logabook_1 One of my favorites from the blog is a link to The Friends of English Magic that is currently featuring some gorgeous samples of Charles' new illustrations for Susanna Clarke's Ladies of Grace Adieu, due out in October.  Click on the images to really see them. Then preorder the limited edition of the book. You know you want it.

August 19, 2006

"Traveling is a brutality"

Mengoat Over the last year I have been following the most fascinating travel blog: Sirensblog. Since 2002, Sirensong has been traveling throughout India, Nepal, and Sri Lanka, studying classical dance, learning languages (she is proud of the fact that she can "read street signs and argue (successfully) with taxi drivers in Hindi, Tamil, Malayalam, French and Nepali"), and recording her amazing journeys in her blog. Her photographs are extraordinary -- some of her work has appeared in Trekshare and Lonely Planet as well as other travel websites. Check out the entries from January 8 to January 17, 2006 which covered the Tibetan Kalachakra Ceremony, with his Holiness the Dalai Lama. The photographs are splendid.

Couple1 Sirensong's blog shares the good, the bad, and the decidely ugly of hard core travel. (Her post on the litany of weird and scary ailments that have plagued her in India is enough to keep even the most intrepid traveler home next to the medicine cabinet.) Reading her blog reminds me constantly of a famous quote by Pavese about not only the tribulations but also the almost mythic nature of travel itself:

"Traveling is a brutality. It forces you to trust strangers and to lose sight of that familiar comfort of home and friends. You are constantly off-balance. Nothing is yours except the essential things -- air, sleep, dreams, the sun, the sky -- all things tending toward the eternal or what we imagine of it."

Additionally: for more information on the Kalachakra Ceremony and all things Tibetan, do visit the Norbulinka Insititute.

Recommended Reading

  • Neil Gaiman: M Is for Magic

    Neil Gaiman: M Is for Magic
    This is a collection of previously published short stories, ostensibly for young adults but fun for all. Neil Gaiman narrates the audio version, and his skill at reading aloud makes the anthology a real treat. (J. Bluth)

  • Donna Gillespie: Lady of the Light

    Donna Gillespie: Lady of the Light
    A compelling novel of Pagans and Romans; rebellious barbarians rattling the gates of the Empire -- and the indomitable warrior woman who stands on the threshold of both worlds. Great historical details, fierce battles, and intrigues, all properly seasoned with the right amount of fantasy. This is the sequel to The Light Bearer. (M. Snyder)

  • Michael Swanwick: The Dragons of Babel

    Michael Swanwick: The Dragons of Babel
    This is a wonderful serpentine of a book, constantly coiling back on itself and changing. It skillfully interweaves various mythologies and allusions, to an effect that is both jarring and beautiful. A compelling read, and gorgeously written, I highly recommend it. (K. Howard)

  • Brian Barker: The Animal Gospels

    Brian Barker: The Animal Gospels
    This gorgeous poetry collection draws on animal imagery, folklore and myth to explore cultural history and contemporary life in the American south. Powerful work. (T. Windling)

  • Peter Hoeg: The Quiet Girl

    Peter Hoeg: The Quiet Girl
    Hoeg's latest is a thoroughly interstitial novel: part literary thriller, part urban fantasy, part post- catastrophe sf, set in near-future Copenhagen and told in rich, labyrinthine prose. This fascinating, atmospheric story may be my favorite of Hoeg's books since his haunting, best-selling Smilla's Sense of Snow . (T. Windling)

  • Oh Jung-hee: The Bird

    Oh Jung-hee: The Bird
    The fantasy in this book is imaginary rather than actual (the heroine's brother believes that he can fly, like his cartoon hero Astroboy), and Jung-hee's use of folklore is sparing (but powerful nonetheless). This beautifully written Korean novel explores family dysfunction and violence against children in ways far beyond the cliche, examining the passage of its young heroine from abused girl to abuser. It's a simply amazing read. (T. Windling)

  • Jonathan Carroll: Glass Soup

    Jonathan Carroll: Glass Soup
    Like many mythic fiction readers, I'm a big Jonathan Carroll fan--despite the fact, or maybe because of the fact, that I find his books so disturbing. Somehow I missed the publication of Carroll's Glass Soup, published last autumn. Good lord, this writer just gets better and better. The novel is a sequel to White Apples, and like the former is odd, outrageous, hilarious, infuriating, and occasionally profound. Carroll wrestles with some big themes here: the nature of love, the nature of religious belief, the nature of life and death itself. (T.Windling)

  • Jeanette Winterson: Tanglewreck

    Jeanette Winterson: Tanglewreck
    Time has lost its moorings. Time tornadoes are ripping through London, depositing artifacts from centuries past and stealing people from the present.... So starts the story of eleven-year-old Silver, who has been living with her selfish aunt ever since her family vanished under suspicious circumstances -- until the strange Abel Darkwater shows up looking for a missing clock called the Timekeeper, purported to control all of Time. I've long been a fan of Winterson's writing, and so I wondered what her first book for children would be like. Ultimately, there's a big adult life message in the story...nevertheless it's a fun read, full of quirky characters and adventures. [Read a longer review here.] (J. Bluth)

  • Ekaterina Sedia: The Secret History of Moscow

    Ekaterina Sedia: The Secret History of Moscow
    a wry political satire of Moscow in the 1990s with a richly imagined underworld, populated by Russia's iconic fairy tale figures -- from the smallest of the domovoi (house spirits) to the powerful Koschey the Deathless. Readers will find this novel thoroughly engaging -- whether one is new to Russian history and folklore or already well versed in both. [Read a longer review here.] (M. Snyder)

  • Ellen Kushner: The Golden Dreydl

    Ellen Kushner: The Golden Dreydl
    This children's novel is charming, fast-paced, filled with imagery and characters from Jewish folklore(including riddles! my favorite), and sparkles with the author's considerable humor. [Read a longer review here.] (M. Snyder)

  • Libba Bray: The Sweet Far Thing

    Libba Bray: The Sweet Far Thing
    This novels completes the trilogy that began with A Great and Terrible Beauty and Rebel Angels: gothic-tinged, Victorian-era historical fantasy for Young Adults. Reviews for this book have been mixed, but I found it to be a satisfying conclusion to Bray's engrossing story. The book isn't perfect: the magical elements are sometimes sketchy, and the language is occasionally anachronistic -- but Bray's particular talent is in creating complex characters full of all the strengths and flaws of real people. If, like me, you tend to go for character-driven novels over plot-driven novels, give this intelligent and thoughtful book a read. (T.Windling)

  • Kelly Link & Gavin Grant: The Best of Lady Churchill's Rosebud Wristlet

    Kelly Link & Gavin Grant: The Best of Lady Churchill's Rosebud Wristlet
    I adore this collection of fabulous tales and poems (among other things) from the pages of LCRW. If somehow you've missed this quirkly, edgy, trail-blazing little 'zine these last ten years, here's a good place to get a taste of all the delights you've been missing. The anthology contains excellent, wide-ranging work from Jeffrey Ford, Karen Joy Fowler, Karen Russell, Sarah Monette, Theodora Goss and numerous others -- including fairy tale works by Nan Fry, Lawrence Schimel and Kelly Link. (T. Windling)

  • Ted Chiang: The Merchant and the Alchemist's Gate

    Ted Chiang: The Merchant and the Alchemist's Gate
    New from Subterranean Press: this time-travel story set in Baghdad fuses the lyricism of Arabian Nights tales with an incisive and thoroughly modern meditation on the nature of past and future. Chiang, a fiercely intelligent writer, uses the stories-within-stories literary technique to powerful effect. (T.Windling)

  • Randall Silvis: In a Town Called Mundomuerto

    Randall Silvis: In a Town Called Mundomuerto
    This is a rather lovely little magical realist novel, set somewhere in South America, exploring the tragic side of myth and folklore when it devolves into mere superstition. (T.Windling)

  • Michael Swanwick: The Dog Said Bow-Wow

    Michael Swanwick: The Dog Said Bow-Wow
    New from Tachyon Publications: a collection of 16 terrific stories--ranging from fantasy to sf--from this innovative, award-winning author. (T. Windling)

  • Giambattista Basile: The Tale of Tales

    Giambattista Basile: The Tale of Tales
    Finally, an edition of Basile's influential Lo cunto de li cunto, one of the very earliest known collections of literary fairy tales (published in Naples in the 17th century), translated by fairy tale scholar Nancy Canepa. If you're interested in the roots of fairy tales, don't miss this important and surprising volume. (T. Windling)

  • Neil Gaiman: The Absolute Sandman, Vol. 2

    Neil Gaiman: The Absolute Sandman, Vol. 2
    This gorgeous volume contains two never-reprinted stories, including one which will make you think a little more kindly of Desire, the also never-reprinted "The Sandman: A Gallery of Dreams," and the original script and pencils for Chapter Two of "Season of Mists." Oh, and issues 21-39 of "The Sandman. If you haven't yet met the Endless, introduce yourself (K. Howard).

  • Sarah Monette: A Companion to Wolves

    Sarah Monette: A Companion to Wolves
    In the harsh north, the men and their wolves stand as shields, protecting the towns from the predations of the trolls. Though the wolfbond is viewed with suspicion and hatred, Njall defies his father to honor his calling. The strength of that bond, and the meaning of honor are movingly explored in this powerful and exciting book (K. Howard).

  • Nathalie Mallet: The Princes Of The Golden Cage

    Nathalie Mallet: The Princes Of The Golden Cage
    An engrossing tale of intrigue, murder, fratricide, and magic--all delivered by a likeable young prince, caught in the path of destruction. Set in an imaginary Persia, Mallet's tale is a fun cross between the Arabian nights, classic fantasy, and a twisty murder mystery. Looking forward to more adventures of the young Prince Amir, coming in 2008.(M. Snyder)

  • Michael Scott: The Alchemyst (The Secrets of the Immortal Nicholas Flamel)

    Michael Scott: The Alchemyst (The Secrets of the Immortal Nicholas Flamel)
    This book was so much fun to read. The plot is compelling and there is always one more secret to discover. Scott does a fabulous job of incorporating elements of a multitude of different mythologies. I am eagerly awaiting the sequel. (K. Howard)

  • Miranda Shaw: Buddhist Goddesses of India

    Miranda Shaw: Buddhist Goddesses of India
    This is an essential reference book for any mythic library. Miranda Shaw has written an eminently readable and comprehensive text on the multitudes of female goddesses in Buddhism. The academic reviews cite this as "a significant contribution to the field." I found it absolutely fascinating. Handsomely illustrated too.(M Snyder)

  • Christopher Barzak: One For Sorrow

    Christopher Barzak: One For Sorrow
    While reading Christopher Barzak's remarkable debut novel, I was reminded of a quote from Danish author, Tove Ditlivson: "Childhood is long and narrow like a coffin, and we do not get out of it without help." This is a poignant and lyrical rites-of-passage story, written with a gentle touch. Barzak deftly combines the supernatural elements of the plot with the ambiguous realities of small town life. Read a longer review here. (M. Snyder)

  • Heather O'Donoghue: From Asgard to Valhalla

    Heather O'Donoghue: From Asgard to Valhalla
    O'Donoghue's volume provides a fascinating look at Norse myths and the ways they have influenced culture and creative artists from William Blake and Richard Wagner to JRR Tolkien and Neil Gaiman. Read a longer review here. (T.Windling)

  • Will Shetterly: The Gospel of the Knife

    Will Shetterly: The Gospel of the Knife
    Set in the 1970s, a hippie misfit from a small Southern town is about to shape the world in ways even his comic books couldn't prepare him for. From his narrow scrapes with bigotry, to his encounters with girls, there is an emotional reality & honesty that becomes necessary as events spiral out into the deepest myths of humanity. Read a longer review here. (A. Santa Maria)

  • Emma Bull: Territory

    Emma Bull: Territory
    Set in Tombstone, Arizona, in 1881, Territory features some familiar faces, such as Doc Holliday and Wyatt Earp, alongside characters not normally seen in Westerns. Bull refers to the historical events in Arizona as the Matter of Tombstone, much like the Arthurian legends are the Matter of Britain. Before reading Territory, I would have dismissed the comparison as ridiculous. Now, I find it apt. Read a longer review here. (K. Howard)

  • O.R. Melling: The Light-Bearer's Daughter

    O.R. Melling: The Light-Bearer's Daughter
    Set in a landscape that shifts between contemporary Ireland and the half-hidden world of faerie, Melling's latest novel centers on a young girl whose mother mysteriously disappeared when Dana was a toddler. The book contains a dazzling cast -- from high kings and queens to wise-cracking cluricans, tricksterish boggles, a powerful she-wolf and shape shifting ravens. Read a longer review here. (M. Snyder)

  • Ellen Datlow & Terri Windling, eds.: The Coyote Road

    Ellen Datlow & Terri Windling, eds.: The Coyote Road
    The latest volume in the mythic fiction anthology series I edit with Ellen Datlow is now out. This one contains stories and poems inspired by Trickster myths, from Chris Barzak, Holly Black, Rick Bowes, Charles de Lint, Carolyn Dunn, Jeff Ford, Ellen Kushner, Kelly Link, Pat McKillip, Delia Sherman, Will Shetterly, Jane Yolen, and lots of other good folks; with illustrations by Charles Vess. (T.Windling)

  • Alma Alexander: Worldweavers: Gift of the Unmage

    Alma Alexander: Worldweavers: Gift of the Unmage
    Thea is the seventh child of a seventh child, and so is supposed to have great magical powers. But she doesn’t. Or maybe her powerlessness is in fact her great power? Time spent in another world, meetings with Grandmother Spider, and life at the Wandless Academy (a school for those who can’t do magic) teach Thea how, when there’s a battle to be fought, she can choose the place of the battlefield. (J. Bluth)

  • Susan Fletcher: Alphabet of Dreams

    Susan Fletcher: Alphabet of Dreams
    Mitra and her little brother Babak are exiled royal-blooded Persians. They hide in the City of Dead, stealing food and dreaming of being reunited with their family. Then Babak starts dreaming other people’s dreams. His gifts of prophecy get him noticed by a Magus, and the siblings begin a journey across the desert, pulled by others’ ambitions and desires. This is a beautiful story of adventure and self-discovery, with a slowly-revealed mystery at its very heart. (J. Bluth)

  • Jack Dann and Gardner Dozois, editors: Wizards: Magical Tales From the Masters of Modern Fantasy

    Jack Dann and Gardner Dozois, editors: Wizards: Magical Tales From the Masters of Modern Fantasy
    This excellent collection is full of diverse and wonderful stories. Orson Scott Card introduces a forthcoming series in a compelling longer story. Offerings by Neil Gaiman, Elizabeth Hand, and Peter S. Beagle are particularly lovely. (K. Howard)

  • David Anthony Durham: Acacia

    David Anthony Durham: Acacia
    Already a well-respected author of historical fiction, Durham skillfully turns his hand to fantasy with Acacia, the first of a planned trilogy. The story takes place in an excellently realized world, populated with a multitude of complex and distinct cultures. Along the way, important and timely questions of power, politics, and choices are raised. I am eagerly awaiting the next volume. (K. Howard)

  • Karen Russell: St. Lucy's Home for Girls Raised by Wolves

    Karen Russell: St. Lucy's Home for Girls Raised by Wolves
    This is a collection of wonderful short stories reminiscent of the subtle magic realism of Kevin Brockmeier. In the title story, packs of wild girls are gathered into dormitories, forced to shed their raucous, gleefully wolfish natures in order to become domesticated young women. Read a longer review here. (M Snyder)

  • Betsy James: Listening at the Gate

    Betsy James: Listening at the Gate
    In this beautiful and mythic Young Adult novel, James creates a complex tale of dualities as two children from two different cultures struggle for identity in this richly imagined world. Throughout the novel, James incorporates fragments of poetry and children’s songs which act as an unexpected commentary on adult conventions. Read a longer review here. (M Snyder)

  • Charles de Lint: Promises to Keep

    Charles de Lint: Promises to Keep
    If you are already familiar with residents of de Lint's invented city of Newford, Promises to Keep provides a lovely glimpse into their past, and how they came to know one another. Readers new to de Lint's work will find this book an easy introduction to Newford. The cover art is by Mike Dringenberg, well-known for his work on Neil Gaiman's Sandman. Read a longer review here. (K Howard)

  • Cassandra Clare: City of Bones

    Cassandra Clare: City of Bones
    Oh boy, the legacy of 80s urban fantasy has returned and is thriving in City of Bones, a splendid new novel from Cassandra Clare. Fast-paced, funny, dark, and exciting, Clare has dipped her pen in the deep resources of fairy lore and epic tales, and has her ear well tuned to the teenage voice. The plot is tight, twisting, and full of surprises. Read a longer review here. (M Snyder)

  • Catherynne Valente: The Orphan's Tales: In the Night Garden

    Catherynne Valente: The Orphan's Tales: In the Night Garden
    In a textured, baroque writing style, Valente creates a novel out of familiar folk tales from around the world, but twists them into new, unexpected shapes that challenge what we assume about heroes and heroines, about rites of passage, and about women and men. The Orphan's Tale won the 2007 Tiptree Award. Read a longer review of the novel here. (M Snyder)

  • Arthur Phillips: Angelica

    Arthur Phillips: Angelica
    Angelica is a stylish and creepy ghost story set during the Victorian era. It's also a meditation on the ways that memory, character, and point of view serve to shape the things we see and believe, and even reality itself. A fascinating and memorable novel. (T. Windling)

  • Patrick Rothfuss: The Name of the Wind

    Patrick Rothfuss: The Name of the Wind
    Rothfuss' debut novel, The Name of the Wind, is complex and enjoyable; the characters are well-drawn and nuanced; and the plot draws the reader in, sometimes to the exclusion of all else. But the most gorgeous thing in this beautifully written book is the profound importance it places on words. In Rothfuss' invented world world, not only does the wind have a name, but there are seven words that can make any woman fall in love with you, and singing the wrong sort of songs can have the direst consequences. Read a longer review of the novel here. (K. Howard)

  • J.R.R. Tolkien: The Children of Húrin

    J.R.R. Tolkien: The Children of Húrin
    The Children of Húrin by J.R.R. Tolkien is a dark, Wagnerian tale of Middle Earth drawn from the author's unpublished manuscripts. The new book was compiled and completed by the author's son, Christopher Tolkien, and is gorgeously illustrated by Alan Lee. Read a longer review here. (T Windling)

  • Elizabeth Knox: Dreamhunter

    Elizabeth Knox: Dreamhunter
    The Dreamhunter, and its sequel volume, Dreamquake, are actually two parts of a single story titled "The Dreamhunter's Duet." (Don't read one without the other; Volume I ends on a cliff hanger.) This is one of the very best Young Adult fantasies I've read this year -- beautifully written, suspenseful, and utterly unique. You'll find a longer review of both books posted here. (T Windling)

  • Thedora Goss & Delia Sherman, editors: Interfictions: An Anthology of Interstitial Writing

    Thedora Goss & Delia Sherman, editors: Interfictions: An Anthology of Interstitial Writing
    Interfictions contains excellent, genre-busting stories by nineteen writers, from several countries, who "dig into the imaginative spaces between conventional genres -- realistic and fantastical, scholarly and poetic, personal and political" -- along with with an essay on interstitialism by Heinz Insu Fenkl. Read more about the book here. (T Windling)

  • Ann & Jeff VanderMeer, editors : Best American Fantasy

    Ann & Jeff VanderMeer, editors : Best American Fantasy
    This is an absolutely first-rate collection, full of stories you may not have come across in your reading last year and won't want to miss. The authors include Kelly Link, Kevin Brockmeier, Elizabeth Hand, Sara Monette, Sumanth Prabhaker and Chris Adrian; the stories come from a wide variety of publications including The New Yorker, Strange Horizons, The Mississippi Review, The Alaska Quarterly Review, Zoetrope, McSweeney's and many others. This wonderful anthology is the first in what I hope will be a long-running series, making excellent companion volumes to the estimable Year's Best Fantasy & Horror editions edited by Datlow, Grant & Link. (T Windling)

  • Datlow & Windling, editors: The Coyote Road

    Datlow & Windling, editors: The Coyote Road
    Inspired by world-wide Trickster myths, this anthology contains a riot of original YA stories and poems, complimented by the art of Charles Vess. There are terrific stories from Holly Black, Charles De Lint, Jeff Ford, Ellen Klages, Ellen Kushner, Delia Sherman, Kelly Link, Chris Barzak, Nina Kiriki Hoffman, Jane Yolen and many others. A longer review of the book can be found here. (M Snyder)

  • Alice Hoffman: Skylight Confessions

    Alice Hoffman: Skylight Confessions
    In her many books for adults and teenagers, Hoffman has been a pioneer of contemporary American Magical Realism, writing mainstream novels that bristle with magic, folklore, and fairy tale allusions. Her latest novel, Skylight Confessions, is a purely realist story about a fractured family in Connecticut, yet it's told using imagery and themes drawn from classic fairy tales. Read a longer review of the novel here. (T Windling)

  • Marina Warner: Phantasmagoria: Spirit Visions, Metaphors, and Media

    Marina Warner: Phantasmagoria: Spirit Visions, Metaphors, and Media
    In previous books, Warner had looked at the cultural history of fairy tales, the dark imagination, and mythic metamorphosis, among other subjects. Now she mediates on the spirit and the soul -- a facinating subject indeed. Read a longer review here. (T Windling)

  • Tim Pratt: Hart & Boot & Other Stories

    Tim Pratt: Hart & Boot & Other Stories
    Tim Pratt's fabulous collection contains 13 old and new tales -- including the title story, selected by Michael Chabon for the America's Best Stories anthology series. This is a writer to watch. (M Snyder)

  • Max Eilenberg & Angela Barrett: Beauty and the Beast

    Max Eilenberg & Angela Barrett: Beauty and the Beast
    I was thrilled to discover that one of my favorite artists, Angela Barrett, has illustrated one of my favorite fairy tales, Beauty and the Beast, set in one of my favorite historical time periods, the 19th century. Barrett's gorgeous pictures are complimented by a terrific story from Max Eilenberg, whose skillful re-working of the fairy tale is intelligent, poignant, and fresh. Read a longer review here. (T Windling)