A collection of 60 poems viewing fairy tales, myths, witches and more from the female perspective. This collection includes Snow White's Apples, The Looking Glass, and Cinderella's Pumpkin from a second collection focused around fantasy and fairy tale objects.
Colleen Anderson writes fiction, dark fiction, erotica, poetry, SF, fantasy, and anything of interest. She has a BFA in Creative Writing and freelances as a copyeditor and proofreader. She is a Ladies of Horror Fiction, Canada Council, and BC Arts Council grant recipient, has been published in eight countries. An award-winning author, her works appear in Amazing, Cemetery Dance, Weird Tales, and HWA Poetry Showcase. A Rhysling Award winner for “Machine (r)Evolution” she is also a two-time winner of the SFPA’s dwarf poetry contest. Author of four poetry collections, I Dreamed a World, The Lore of Inscrutable Dreams, Weird Worlds and Vellum Leaves and Lettered Skins, she is working on two more collections. Her fiction collections, Embers Amongst the Fallen, A Body of Work are available online. She has served on the SFPA executive as well as British Fantasy Award and Stoker juries.
She is a member of the HWA and SFPA, and co-edited Tesseracts 17 with East Coast, dark fiction writer Steve Vernon, Playground of Lost Toys with Ontario, award-winning author Ursula Pflug, and edited Alice Unbound: Beyond Wonderland. She has published more than 500 pieces of fiction and poetry. www.colleenanderson.wordpress.com
I bought this book not knowing it was poetry. (That's on me.) I don't really read poetry often. Candidly I rarely understand it... also on me.
But I wanted to try this nonetheless because I like the publisher and I was up for trying to expand my horizons. I was intrigued by the theme of a poetry collection that retells or riffs on or expands upon fairy tales, mythos, fantasy and stories, which as the back cover puts it, "through a feminist lens."
I'm going to avoid a rating because, again, candidly, I didn't really understand the vast majority if them.
BUT...
There were two poems that (1) got through my thick skull; and (2) I enjoyed reading. The first was "Rapunzel and Medusa," which was a meeting of the minds and lives of those two fairy tale/mythological figures. I was touched by their extremes, yet not extreme. The other one was "What Goldilocks Learned," which was a clever re-imagining/take on Goldilocks having to suffer through the relationship of three different men and even as to the one who was "just right," he still wasn't particularly satisfying. I found that one quite entertaining. If I were judging this book strictly on those two poems, this collection would be 4 stars. But there's like 60 poems in this book. With so many I didn't know how to interpret (again my fault, not the author's) I can't really feel right about giving this book an overall rating.
BUT...AGAIN...
I recommend this. There's bound to be way more savvy and poetry-centric readers who would love to see this. Even I could tell there was a lot of creativity in here.