#FairytaleTuesday: Herr Korbes

It’s been awhile since I’ve posted so here’s a reminder: I’ve been going through the Grimm’s 1812 volume of fairytales, one after the other for a few years. I’ll finish eventually, I promise. [CW: some Looney Tunes-level violence and shenanigans by animals and anthropomorphized household objects] Aarne-Thompson-Uther Index type 210: The Traveling Animals and the Wicked Man … Continue reading #FairytaleTuesday: Herr Korbes

#FairytaleTuesday: The Robber Bridegroom

It’s been awhile since I've posted so here’s a reminder: I’ve been going through the Grimm’s 1812 volume of fairytales, one after the other for a few years. I’ll finish eventually, I promise. [CW: murder, dismemberment] Aarne-Thompson-Uther Index type 955: The Robber Bridegroom. This one is related to type 312: Bluebeard and type 311: How the … Continue reading #FairytaleTuesday: The Robber Bridegroom

Fairytale Tuesday: The Elves and The Shoemaker

It's been awhile since I posted so here's a reminder: I've been going through the Grimm's 1812 volume of fairytales, one after the other for a few years. I'll finish eventually but for now, let's move on to some cobbler-elf shenanigans This is one of those Grimm multi-part tales, which means multiple Aarne-Thompson-Uther Index classifications:"The … Continue reading Fairytale Tuesday: The Elves and The Shoemaker

#FairytaleTuesday: Dreams of the Ghost Kingdom

In Spring of 2022 , Shannon Quist, an author and adoptee, wrote her Master's thesis on these gaps in knowledge and the methods that some adoptees have turned to in order to better understand their lives and their stories, including the use of auto-fiction. As you read the following guest post, I ask that you try to look at it through the eyes of someone who didn't know her story and how her journey--and that of other adoptees--has been one of tales and truth and the ways in which she has sought to find the balance between and write her own story.-- Elizabeth