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Recent Posts
- A Kinrowan Estate story: Quotes that aren’t
- What’s New for the 16th of February: Books by and about Bob Dylan, and music by Dylan and others; plus some new world music and jazz
- A Kinrowan Estate story: Unreliable Narrators
- What’s New for the 2nd of February: All about the Oz books, green man lore, and gargoyles; Baltic polyphony, East-West ambient psychedelia, and a grab bag of other music
- A Kinrowan Estate story: Knit One, Purl Two
- What’s New for the 19th of January: Go Ahead, Be Pleasantly Surprised At What’s Here
- A Kinrowan Estate story: Ancients and Venerables of Guild of St. Nicholas
- What’s New for the 5th of January: A look back at books Gary reviewed in 2024; some seasonally appropriate Nordic music and a little new jazz
- A Kinrowan Estate story: Biscuits
- What’s New for the 22nd of December: A Solstice Story, Crow Girls, Scrooge, Marley, Elizabeth I, Revels and more festive holiday reading; The Lion in Winter on stage and screen; Jethro Tull, Steeleye Span, Christine Lavin, swinging jazz and more holiday sounds
- A Kinrowan Estate story: Fireplaces
- What’s New for the 8th of December: Elizabeth Bear fiction; some holiday related offerings including new music from The Unthanks, Americana tinged jazz, Polar Express, and more
- A Kinrowan Estate story: Eggnog
- What’s New for the 24th of November: Norwegian winter holiday music, archival jazz, new roots music from around Europe, and more; books and what not about things fictional & medæival
- A Kinrowan Estate story: Pudding
- What’s New for the 10th of November: a grab bag of books from our favorite authors; Richard Thompson and Stephane Grappelli on film; music from all over; and comfort food
- A Kinrowan Estate story: Brandy (A Letter to Tessa)
- What’s New for the 27th of October: The Byrds Live, Trader Joe’s Organic Hot Cocoa Mix, Some Excellent Music Reviews, Folkmanis Puppets of an Autumnal Nature, The Mouse Guard begins…
- A Kinrowan Estate story: All The World’s A Stage
- What’s New for the 13th of October: Elizabeth Bear tends a pot of turkey stock, Groot and Rocket Raccoon, A Video and Fiction set in India, Tasty music reviews, and music from Irish trad band Clannad
- A Kinrowan Estate story: Autumn is Here (A Letter to Anna)
- What’s New for the 29th of September: Louisiana’s Lost Bayou Ramblers, live music by Kathryn Tickell, Ottawa based urban fantasies by Charles de Lint, Norwegian saxophonist Karl Seglem, Gus on the Estate Kitchen garden and other Autumnal matters
- What’s New for the 15th of September: Autumn on the Estate is here
- A Kinrowan Estate story: A Pudding Contest
- What’s New for the 1st of September: A grab bag of books, music, and film that touch on the theme of work
- A Kinrowan Estate story: A Ghostly Librarian
- What’s New for the 18th of August:
- A Kinrowan Estate story: Breakfast, Korean Style
- What’s New for the 4th of August: A raft of Cuban music reviews; Trader Joe’s chocolate peanut butter cookies; Looking at J.R.R. Tolkien; And a Cuban band documentary
- A Kinrowan Estate story: Kedgeree
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Winter Queen Speech: The City in Winter
Once, not so long ago – but longer ago now than it was then – it snowed in the city, and did not stop until everything changed. When we woke up, all the usual sounds were gone. No one was begging for loose change, or yelling for help from muggers, or telling her husband everything was all his fault. Some children were laughing and building snowmen in the courtyard of our building. There were no cars.
We put on our highest boots, our old boots from when we’d walked to school (not so very long ago then, either) and waded through loose-drifted white waves down to the corner store where the bums got their fifths, and we bought a big jug of cheap red wine. The jug was thick greenish glass, with a loop at the neck for carrying and for pouring. Back in our narrow kitchen we used the handle to upend the heavy bottle, gurgling the sharp dark red wine into a big cooking pot on top of the apartment’s grimy old white enamel stove.
We plundered the cabinets for crystallized old honey and rock solid brown sugar to sweeten it. We plundered the words to an old song for cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg and clove, and reached back into the farthest reaches of what we had read once for a little rosemary, too. The wine was heated, the wine was scented, the wine was flavored . . . The wine was ladled like soup out of the pot into the oldest, earthiest mugs we could find.
It was sharp. The fumes went up our noses, the heat went into our bellies, and we were not where we had been.
We lay on our mattress on the floor, listening to the jingling of the buses headed across town, their massive tires sheathed in chains; and it sounded like the jingle of horses’ sleigh bells on the wide road outside. The light on the ceiling was silver with reflected snow.
We drank more wine, made love, and slept, and woke and drank again, and listened to the horses’ bells on the road outside. We spoke of dancing in velvet, of swordplay in alleys, of friends and enemies, and of a hearth gone cold. And we refilled the wine cups.
For two days it was like that.
Then the wine was gone; the snow was gone, and we were back where we had been before the snow. Our old clothes fit again, and we answered the phone when it rang.
Can such things still happen now?
You tell me.
That is the story I remember. It was not so very long ago.
* FIN *
Ellen Kusnher
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