She's got some thoughts fit for sharing widely here:
https://twitter.com/GailSimone/status/1417860766661693443?s=20
https://twitter.com/GailSimone/status/1417860766661693443?s=20
More from the Book Fair
Jul. 3rd, 2012 09:38 pmRob McClennan's got links to photos taken at the Fair. You may want a look at what some of those of us running tables there have been up to over the years.
The "5 Things" Meme
Jun. 13th, 2012 11:18 pmComment to this post and I will pick five things I would like you to talk about. They might make sense or be totally random. Then post that list, with your commentary, to your journal. Other people can get lists from you, and the meme merrily perpetuates itself.
The list I was given by
ms_danson is as follows:
( What do you want to be famous for, mapping, ice cream, new vs comfortable, the look of the prairies )
The list I was given by
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-userinfo.gif)
( What do you want to be famous for, mapping, ice cream, new vs comfortable, the look of the prairies )
After "Chasing Boudicca"
Jan. 21st, 2011 10:39 amI went to see Chasing Boudicca last night at the National Arts Centre's Fourth Stage.
Based on a poetry collection by Kathleen Hunt, and performed by the aforesaid Kathleen in company with Marie Bilodeau, Ruthanne Edward, and musician Nathan Bishop, the show was inspired by the life, battles, pains, victories, defeats and debated death of the namesake warrior queen of ancient British legend...a legend that goes back two millennia.
As Kathleen noted in the performance, we know of her mainly through the writings of her surviving enemies, for she did not live long enough to tell her own tales on her own terms.
In some respects, you can draw a parallel between Boudicca and our own Louis Riel. In others, it's far more difficult and not just due to the politics, the geography and the passage of nearly two millennia between the lives of those doomed rebels. Riel at least managed to put his own story as best he could on the record at his trial in Regina.
And yet I believe that Kathryn's managed as much for the last queen of the Iceni.
At the very least, she and her friends brought me to tears by the end of the show.
And that is not a complaint. Not at all. Not ever.
Thank you for this.
Based on a poetry collection by Kathleen Hunt, and performed by the aforesaid Kathleen in company with Marie Bilodeau, Ruthanne Edward, and musician Nathan Bishop, the show was inspired by the life, battles, pains, victories, defeats and debated death of the namesake warrior queen of ancient British legend...a legend that goes back two millennia.
As Kathleen noted in the performance, we know of her mainly through the writings of her surviving enemies, for she did not live long enough to tell her own tales on her own terms.
In some respects, you can draw a parallel between Boudicca and our own Louis Riel. In others, it's far more difficult and not just due to the politics, the geography and the passage of nearly two millennia between the lives of those doomed rebels. Riel at least managed to put his own story as best he could on the record at his trial in Regina.
And yet I believe that Kathryn's managed as much for the last queen of the Iceni.
At the very least, she and her friends brought me to tears by the end of the show.
And that is not a complaint. Not at all. Not ever.
Thank you for this.