Want some romance with a side of literary rivalry? How about if it’s set in the Victorian era and features that aptly named mode of early horror fiction—the penny dreadful? The Lady and the Highwayman by Sarah M. Eden, which came out earlier this month, is a delightful historical romance that pushed all the right buttons for me. If you love Victorian literature, bold heroines, and sweet couples solving mysteries together, then this is the perfect book to curl up with on a cool autumn day! Continue reading The Lady and the Highwayman Review
Month: September 2019
Review of Hadestown—A Mythic Musical
All aboard! You don’t want to miss the train to Hadestown, a Broadway musical that gives Greek mythology a modern twist. Friends have been telling me for months that I needed to see this show, especially since the tale of the spring goddess Persephone and her underworld husband Hades is one of my favorite myths and I’m a sucker for creative retellings. I finally got the chance, and let me tell you: it totally lives up to the hype. The production stars Reeve Carney (whom some of you may recognize as Dorian Gray from the show Penny Dreadful) as the poet Orpheus, Eva Noblezada as his lover Eurydice, Amber Gray as Persephone, Patrick Page as Hades, and André De Shields as Hermes. The production swept the Tony Awards this year, winning eight awards including Best Musical and Best Original Score. Hadestown is currently playing at the Walter Kerr Theatre in New York. Continue reading Review of Hadestown—A Mythic Musical
Review of Monster, She Wrote—A Comprehensive Compendium of Female Authors
Some members of the literary community always seem to express surprise and disbelief when they see women writing horror and speculative fiction books—and winning awards for them. Aren’t these genres predominantly the purview of men? Well, not really. Women have been there from the very beginning, and a compelling argument can even be made that these genres couldn’t exist without them. Scholars Lisa Kröger and Melanie R. Anderson do just that in Monster, She Wrote: The Women Who Pioneered Horror & Speculative Fiction. This exhaustive guide explores over one hundred female authors from the earliest days of speculative fiction to the present day. The book comes out tomorrow, September 17, and you do not want to miss it! Continue reading Review of Monster, She Wrote—A Comprehensive Compendium of Female Authors
Will My Cat Eat My Eyeballs? Review
Do you have any burning questions about death that you’ve just felt too squeamish to ever ask? Well, children have no such qualms. In her latest release, Will My Cat Eat My Eyeballs?, mortician Caitlin Doughty answers real questions from real kids about death, dead bodies, and decomposition. I’ve been a fan of Caitlin Doughty since her early Ask a Mortician days on Youtube, and have reviewed her previous two books: Smoke Gets in Your Eyes and From Here to Eternity. So you bet I was first in line to snag a review copy of her newest book aimed at her youngest fans. Will My Cat Eat My Eyeballs?: Big Questions from Tiny Mortals About Death comes out tomorrow, September 10. Continue reading Will My Cat Eat My Eyeballs? Review
Back to School Reading List: Poetry Edition
It is now September, and I know for many of you that means it’s time to go back to school. It’s become a yearly tradition for me to put together a reading list of Gothic works you may encounter on your English syllabus. So far, I’ve done my initial Back to School Reading List of Gothic novels, a Short Story Edition, and a Drama Edition. Now it’s time to tackle poetry! Here are a few of the darker poems you may come across in class: Continue reading Back to School Reading List: Poetry Edition