920b FAERIE MAGAZINE
920b FAERIE MAGAZINE
920b FAERIE MAGAZINE
Faerie Magazine
Spring 2014
ISSUE N
27
looking for more
From Faerie Magazine
Summer 2014
MAGAZINE
summer 2014
FAERIE ?
The Summer 2014 Preview
A few months back,
on a rainy springtime afternoon, we asked our
find us on facebook & keep up with us at twitter.com/Faeriemagazine !
+ NEW
livingyour own fairy tale.
And on that note, we hope your summer is full of
DIY HOMES magic and faerie road trips and adventures. Use our
emails below and tell us all about it!
FICTION
stunning & sustainable
XOXO,
a midsummer nights from Carolyn, Kim, and
GARDEN PARTY Anna
+ how to throw your own!
SARAH
ADDISON
Carolyn@faeriemag.com
its road trip season! follow us on a Kim@faeriemag.com
SCOTTISH
faerie trail!
ALLEN
Anna@faeriemag.com
2 faeriemag.com
Faerie Magazine
Spring 2014
Issue 27 Summer
A Glass of
26 Novelist Eowyn Ivey Hood with Sanda Zikic
interviewed by Carolyn
Turgeon, photography by 82 The Sinking World
Viona ielegems of Andreas Franke
12 Something left in by Grace Nuth
clementine
54 Top of the Mark by
Goodness:
Jo-Ann Mapson
Columns
56 TINY ENCHANTED 9 Lord Whimsy, A Faerie
WORLDS from The Slug Roadtrip
and The Squirrel
4 faeriemag.com faeriemag.com 5
photography Johnny Autry, used with permission from Storey Publishing.
g
g BERRY JUICE
PREP TIME: ABOUT 2 HOURS,
PLUS OVERNIGHT FOR JUICE TO SETTLE, PLUS CANNING
MAKES: APPROXIMATELY 4 QUARTS
Faerie Magazine
Spring 2014
1 Put the berries into a large nonreactive stockpot, and then add
filtered water to barely cover the fruit. Bring the contents to a boil. BEYOND JUICE
2 Reduce the heat and simmer for 10 minutes, stirring and mashing Once you have made juice from
the berries as they cook, or use an immersion blender to grind the summer fruits, it only takes a few
berries. Stir occasionally to avoid sticking, and skim off any foam. cups of your bounty to go a new level
of enjoyment: fruit and herb syrups.
3 Line a large colander with two layers of cheesecloth dampened Its simple to create syrups that burst
with filtered water. Set the colander over a large bowl, making sure with taste highlights. In a saucepan,
that the colander sits well above the bottom of the bowl so that the combine 1-2 cups of fruit juice with
juice can flow freely. an equal amount of sugar, add sprigs
of your favorite edible herb, and bring
4 Slowly pour the hot berries into the colander. to a boil, stirring until the sugar
dissolves. Simmer for 5 minutes,
5 Leave the juice to strain for at least 1 hour. Do not squeeze or then strain and bottle in a decorative
force the berries through the cheesecloth, or the juice will become swing-top bottle.
cloudy.
Serving suggestions: glaze for roasted
6 Refrigerate the juice overnight in a clean covered container to let meats or vegetables, cocktail mixer,
solids settle to the bottom. The juice will clear. For canning, ladle the topping for waffles or pancakes or ice
juice out and discard the solids. cream, flavoring for smoothie, childs
soft drink.
This juice can be used immediately or preserved by canning.
6 faeriemag.com faeriemag.com 7
BURKE HEFFNER
A Real Life
to quit my day job. Last year Revolver sur- down those things into little steps. As Lao
passed the funding we needed to make Tzu said, The journey of a thousand
our film on Kickstarter, against all odds. miles begins with a single step. As a burlesque star, Veronica has graced stages from
FaerieTale
And I started my Danger Diary blog al- Paris to Prague to Australia. This year marks her
most two years ago; it now has over forty Tip #4: Tell Everyone eighth world tour with musician Emilie Autumn. She
was recently featured on MTVs MADE for her inspir-
thousand readers per month. About Your Dreams. ing story and cabaret artistry. She and her partner-in-
Dreams can come true. And if I can
crime Burke Heffner are in currently in pre-production
do it, ANYBODY can. Here are my sev- Being vocal about what you want will
for their cross country road trip film, Revolver. Learn
by Veronica Varlow en tips to turn your life into a faerie tale. help you get it faster. Be bold and tell peo- more at Dangerdiary.com
8 faeriemag.com
Faerie Magazine Faerie Magazine
E
Spring 2014 Spring 2014
owyn Iveys award-winning 2012 debut novel The Snow
Childtells the story of a husband and wife who move to
Alaska as a new start and a welcome distraction after suf-
fering a personal grief. Life is harder than they expected, and the
winters brutal. One night, in a rare lighthearted moment, they make
a girl from snow, shaping her from the season's first falling flakes.
The next morning, a blond-haired girl appears in the trees. Inspired
by the Russian fairy tale of the Snegurochka or snow girl, The Snow
Child is both poetic and immersive, perfectly calling to mind the
completely unique and relatively untouched wildness of the Alaskan
wilderness.
Eowyn Ivey
and there is this sense of this happened, and then this, and then
this, in a plodding way. I read a lot of fairy tales, but I always left
slightly disappointed, like I was hoping for more. Yet something
h
On Fairy Tales, Inspiration, and The Snow Child
about the Snegurochka fairy tale spoke to me. Maybe that is one of
the interesting aspects of fairy talesbecause they are plain in their
structure yet speak to so many universal experiences, we are then
able to fill in our own details.
FM: Why do you think fairy tales continue to be so popular and have
such an important place in our culture?
EI: This is fascinating to me. I didn't realize as I was writingThe Snow
Childthat I was riding a tide of interest in fairy tales. I was just fol-
lowing my own inspiration as a writer. But there is a clear resurgence
interviewed by CAROLYN TURGEON
of books and movies and television shows inspired by fairy tales, and
PHOTGRAPHY BY VIONA IELEGEMS
10 faeriemag.com faeriemag.com 11
Faerie Magazine CAROLINE TRAN
Spring 2014
F
or those of us enamored with faer-
ies and myth, the idea of sipping
dandelion wine from hibiscus cups
A MAGICAL
and nibbling on honey cakes in a forest
by Tricia (Fontaine) Saroya
A MAGICAL
clearing is nothing short of ambrosial. If
you dont have a convenient hundred-acre
wood in your backyard, you can still throw
MIDSUMMER
a charming, magical garden party sure to
MIDSUMMER
delight your friendsand attract the faer-
ies, too!
Heres how. First, pick as natural a setting
NIGHTS
as you are able. Any large beautiful natu-
NIGHTS
ral focal point will work, like a tree, a flower
garden, an ivy-covered wall, a fountain set in
nature anything thats beautiful and nat-
DREAM PARTY
CAROLINE TRAN
ural. Next, mix in more natural elements
DREAM
greenery and flowers, plants, driftwood, tree
stumps, pine cones, branches, moss, and so
on. Then add touches of glamour and spar-
kle with crystal, candles, fine china, can-
PARTY
delabras, glittered goodies, mercury glass
vases or candle holders, chandeliers, glass
bell cloches over a tiny plant anything
sparkly and beautiful. The mix of natural
and elegant is a wonderful, and unexpected,
combination. Consider the surprise of see-
ing a crystal chandelier hanging outside in
a tree. A beautiful china set on a tablecloth
of moss. A satin tablecloth covered with
fine chinaand a lichen- and mushroom-
covered branch centerpiece.
For one of my own parties, I covered an
old wooden table in sheet moss so that it
CAROLINE TRAN CAROLINE TRAN
dripped off the ends. I placed the table un-
der a low branch from a two-hundred-year-
old sycamore tree; the natural arch created
by the branch made a lovely frame. I then
wrapped vines and wisteria blooms around
the branch, and let them trail onto the table,
where I placed potted ferns and orchids. I
also tucked more vines and clusters of flow-
ers into the plants on the table.
You dont have to break the bank on flow-
ers to achieve that luscious look. Use your
own houseplants and place them in the cen-
ter of the table. Ferns, pothos, and Creep-
ing Charlies are especially lovely. Hide the
pots with moss, leaves, bark, and vines. In-
clude whimsical elements, like a birdhouse
with a plant inside or a birds nest tucked
into the top of a plant. Let tree branches CAROLINE TRAN CAROLINE TRAN
12 faeriemag.com 13
ELIZABETH MESSINA
14
Faerie Magazine Faerie Magazine
Spring 2014 Spring 2014
LOST IN
A FAIRY TALE
in which we pair a few enchanting poems from Theodora
Gosss forthcoming Songs for Ophelia with the lush fairy
tale images of photographer Viona ielegems
16 faeriemag.com faeriemag.com 17
Faerie Magazine Faerie Magazine
The Elf Kings Daughter
Spring 2014
THEODORA GOSS is the author of several anthologies of VIONA IELEGEMSS inspiration comes
poetry and short fiction as well as The Thorn and the Blossom, a novella from fantasy worlds such as old story booksSpring
and 2014
It is the Elf Kings daughter, in two-sided accordion format. She teaches classes on reading and childrens fairy tales. A long-time fairy tale pho-
with the leaf-light in her eyes, writing fairy tales. I love fairy tales, she says, because they are so tographer and otherworldly costume designer,
that greenish twilight beneath the beech boughs realistic: we all face wolves and want to go to the ball. Their realism is she tries to grasp the elegance and gracefulness
where only the hum of flies on another level, a symbolic level. But they are fundamentally about of women, freezing time, opening doors to other
what we fear and desire. That is why they have lasted so long and are dimensions. She also hosts neo-romantic balls
disturbs the lilies of the valley continually rewritten. They are about the deepest, most fundamental and historically inspired dinner parties and pic-
and ferns their fronds unfurl. parts of ourselves. The poems here will be collected in Songs for Oph- nics in many fantastic locations across Europe.
How dare I stir or show my presence elia, forthcoming from Papaveria Press. Visit Theodoragoss.com. Learn more at Viona-art.com.
to the Elf Kings girl?
18 faeriemag.com faeriemag.com 19
Faerie Magazine Faerie Magazine
Spring 2014 Spring 2014
Cordwood and Mermaids in Colorado
KimAnna and Michael Cellura-Shields
20 faeriemag.com faeriemag.com 21
The Sinking World
Grace Nuth
I love to shoot underwater.
The visibility underwater
creates this lyrical and
MAGAZINE
looking forward to most. Now that summers here,
how many of you are enjoying the blissful elements
of the season? Whats your perfect summer day?
Country car rides The sunshine. Letting No school, no stress, I love the smell of summer rain, the sound of it
with the windows yourself be free and feeling free, staying up all hitting my house while my windows are wide
down. I love the embracing the curves night, traveling, taking open. I also love the fact that my morning alarm
rumble of the road youre born with and photos, making art, making is the birds chirping outside my window.
underneath me, the having confidence in a memories. Carolynn Mirabile
sigh of swaying tree swimsuit. Laura Zsikai
leaves above me, and Melanie
the nostalgic scent of Nichols
dusty lanes and hay- The sound of the crickets just ...The taste of a home
ridden fields. before dark and the birds just grown tomato. Theres
before the light. nothing tastes like a home
Tristan Normile Ruth Lapen grown tomato!
I love walking
The bees buzzing, into the woods
the whir of a in the early
hummingbirds wings Sitting under the morning after
Catching so close to my ear, the
gazebo watching a rain. The
blazing colors of the
fireflies flowers and the sun
my granddaughter
smell literally
feeds me with
on my back while the
with my ocean roars that lulls play in her pool!
life.
children me to sleep! Libby
Subscribe at faeriemag.com
Jan Lugenbuhl Emily Crum Wendy Willow
24 faeriemag.com faeriemag.com 25