The Kickstarter campaign for my next book, Beyond Pomegranate & Thorns, is 74% funded, and it would be unreasonable for anyone to expect me to be able to think about anything else right now. I’m so grateful to the backers who jumped right in to get me off to a strong start… but now we enter the knuckle-biting stage! Yes, I’m optimistic that we’ll make it, but I won’t stop stressing until it’s 100%. So until then, let me share some more teasers and tidbits.
To recap, this book will be a collection of short stories, poems, and art, all of which are inspired by, riffing on, or jumping off from traditional fairy tales, myths, and folklore. Today I’m digging a little deeper into the classical myths that have inspired pieces in my current draft.
Here’s the funny thing about it: unlike fairy tales, I never really liked Greek and Roman mythology. Primarily this was because all the gods and heroes just seem so unpleasant: always wrangling and jockeying to score status points, not to mention raping and murdering with impunity, while innocent humans are always the collateral damage. How can you respect such a petty, vindictive bunch, let alone worshipping them? But perhaps my dislike of these classical myths is precisely why I’ve ended up exploring and reimagining a number of them. How would the stories change if I changed the way I thought of the characters and their motives? How can I salvage a more interesting, meaningful message by holding the stories in a different light? In the case of Persephone, for example, I’ve written both a story and a poem, but each one looks at a completely different angle of the myth, and takes it in a completely different direction to re-imagine it with a completely different message.
Pandora’s Box (short story, art)
Persephone in the Underworld (short story, poem, art)
Medusa (poem, art)
Pygmalion and Galatea (short story)
The Theban Sphinx (poem, art)
Potnia Theron “Mistress of the Animals” (art)
Siren (short story)
Cyclops (art)
That’s just where things stand as of today. They’ll all have art eventually; the illustration for the siren’s story is sketched but not yet transferred to rubber and carved, and I haven’t started anything yet for Pygmalion. Then there’s the weird sci fi idea I’ve been mulling for a while now about the Trojan Horse. Perhaps that will get written in time for inclusion in the book — or perhaps there will be something else I haven’t thought of yet at all. Who knows?
How do you feel about these famous myths? Do you have favorites — or least favorites? They’re such a foundational part of European/Western culture that whether you like them or not, they’re in the air all around us. Even though I don’t always care for the original myths, it turns out that I’ve really enjoyed reckoning with some of them, and allowing my imagination to see where they can take me, and where I can take them. When Beyond Pomegranate & Thorns is finally completed and out in the world, I hope that my new twists will inspire you to rethink these myths and what they can tell us.
To check out all the details about this project, please visit the Kickstarter campaign. And if you should feel inspired to back this project, I’d be very grateful indeed!
[Pictures: Queen of the Underworld teaser, details of story and rubber block print with watercolor by AEGNydam, 2025 (See original at NydamPrints.com);
Apotropaic, rubber block print by AEGNydam, 2025 (Image from NydamPrints.com).]
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