Escape Artists
PodCastle => Episode Comments => Topic started by: Ocicat on January 02, 2016, 01:27:35 AM
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PodCastle Miniature 86: The Wedding Of Snow, Earth, And Salt (http://podcastle.org/2016/01/01/podcastle-miniature-86-the-wedding-of-snow-earth-and-salt/)
by Kate Heartfield
With a special full cast reading. Happy New Year!
Wilson Fowlie as the Narrator
Graeme Dunlop as the North Wind
Jennifer Albert as Snow
Khaalidah Muhammad-Ali as the East Wind
Arun Jiwa as Earth
Peter Wood as Salt
Rachael K. Jones as the West Wind
A Podcastle original!
The North Wind raised his glass, a tall flute clouded with cold, filled with thick yellow wine so
sweet it stung the tongue. All the guests raised their glasses and waited through the speech,
which was a warning.
“What is done, undoes. You will not leave here as you came.”
All the guests drank, and their eyes opened wide as the ice wine coated their throats.
Rated G.
(http://escapepod.org/wp-images/podcast-mini4.gif) Listen to this week’s PodCastle Miniature! (http://media.rawvoice.com/podcastle/media.libsyn.com/media/podcastle/PCFlash086_Wedding.mp3)
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Full cast readings are fun! I'm glad to be young enough not to be mixing up weddings and funerals yet. :P
Happy New Year!
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I'm afraid I didn't get what this one was going for. The imagery was interesting, but it didn't really come together for me as a story. It kind of felt like a poem, which is a thing I don't understand even though I understand that other people like poems.
So, not for me, I guess!
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I'm afraid I didn't get what this one was going for. The imagery was interesting, but it didn't really come together for me as a story. It kind of felt like a poem, which is a thing I don't understand even though I understand that other people like poems.
If you ever feel like you would like a better handle on what other people see in poetry, I highly recommend the book The Ode Less Travelled by Stephen Fry. It's actually a 'How to write poetry' book, but he uses tons of examples of existing works to illustrate the principles he talks about.
Even though the book did inspire me, I haven't actually written much poetry since listening to it (the audio version is read by the author and he is an excellent narrator; it's worth listening to just for the experience!), because I don't put aside the time for it (like any other hobby, it requires a certain time investment) but I do have a much greater appreciation for the appeal of poetry to people who like it. (I also don't seek out poetry any more than I did before, but I am able to appreciate it better when it crosses my path. :) )
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The part that made me squee, if only a little? This was a polyamorous wedding! (OK, even if they did sort of melt together into an amorphous mass there at the end, but what do you expect from anthropomorphic personifications?)