Thursday’s Tale: Frau Trude by Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm

Illustration from: Sarah Foster "Frau Trude," also known as "The Old Witch" is another story by the Brothers Grimm that does not have a happily ever after ending. The tale starts with a girl who was "obstinate and inquisitive" and never obeys her parents. That doesn't bode well in Grimm stories, disobedience is usually punished while those who are sweet and kind end up with the happy endings. The girl tells her parents she want to visit Frau Trude's house. Her parents tell her not to go, Frau Trude is wicked, but also warn her that if chooses to visit the old woman, she will no longer be their child. A bit harsh, don't you think? The girl head over to Frau Trude's cottage, and when Frau Trude answers the door she asks the girl why the girl is so pale. The girl tells of seeing three men on the steps, a black man, a green man, and a blood-red man. The...
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Review: Ding Dong the Diva’s Dead by Cat Melodia

I love candy corn, the traditional kind with the yellow bottom, orange middle, and white tip. I could eat it by the handfuls, even though it really isn't good for me, there's no complexity to the flavor. But it's such a treat and makes me happy. That's kind of how I felt about Ding Dong the Diva's Dead by Cat Melodia. (I'm sorry that's got to be one of the worst nom de plumes I've heard recently.) It's a light, fun, perky mystery that kept me reading, even when I should have been working. It takes place behind the scenes at a small opera company. One of the singers has died in an "accident," and Debbie de Lille is called in to take her place as Nicklauss in Offenbach's Tales of Hoffman. Odd things keep happening, smoke bombs, threatening phone calls, a fire. Who's behind it all? And is Debbie going to make it to opening night alive? The actual whodunnit plays...
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Review: “Last Cottage” by Christopher Merkner

We know the Larsons. They come to Slocum Lake each summer. We would like them to stop, but they do not stop. So opens "Last Cottage" by Christopher Merkner, a chilling short story that takes place at a mid-Western lake. The Larsons are out-of-towners who arrive every summer. They are also the owners of the last privately owned land on the lake. The locals hate them, believe that they are standing int he way of the towns' economic development. They go to extreme measures to get the Larsons to leave. The first thing that grabbed my attention is that it's told in the first person plural. It's creepy and at the same time forces us to see things from the townspeople's viewpoint. And they do see everything, hiding in the bushes to watch the Larsons, see the reactions. And they justify everything they do. They really see it as reasonable, which is the disturbing part. "We" are crazy, but make it sound...
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Saturday 9: Someday We’ll Be Together

I'm not feeling terribly creative today, so I went in search of a meme. I found Saturday 9, where they post 9 questions every week. 1. Have you ever left a relationship but knew that eventually you'd get back together? Definitely. I can't even count how many times David and I broke up and got back together before we got married. 2. Are there things that you hate to buy? Items that you either hate to spend perfectly good money on or hate to spend the time it takes to buy them? I hate grocery shopping, at least the normal boring trip. It's not fun buying the same cereal, bread and lunch meat week after week. That's why I drag David and Amber with me- if I'm going to have a miserable evening, we all should. Now I really like out of the ordinary grocery stores, like the one we stop at when we go to Amish land with all the jellies, or the giant Giant Eagle...
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