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Archive for June, 2022

On this last Sunday of June 2022, I thought it fitting to publish a piece of my novel The Unicorn, The Mystery (Adelaide Press–NYC/Lisbon) that was included in the issue titled Glorious Defiance and came out in June. As we witness the last gasps of patriarchy attempting to control women, I am reminded that Sinister Wisdom, a multicultural lesbian literary and art journal, has long been an important voice for lesbians–a group of people who have had to live on the margins of patriarchy. I’m publishing part of the story that was published in the Journal and below that is a link to learn more about Sinister Wisdom.

KITTY—A REPRESENTATIVE OF SATAN?


Janet Mason


(In an abbey in the French countryside, circa 1490)


I had wandered way past my destination when I decided to look
for the unicorn. I had seen the unicorn in the abbey before, after
all. Who knew where she might be?
I had been headed to the library in the church. I had gone right
past the church and was almost to the end of the abbey at the
east wall. Perhaps I wandered there intentionally. This was one
of my favorite places. The grounds were more overgrown. Vines
wound around trees. The grass was higher. I could feel it tickling
my toes in my sandals. I looked down and saw the periwinkle face
of a wildflower smiling up at me.
Perhaps the quietness had to do with the fact that the nuns
lived in this area and that they had taken a vow of silence. I stood
still for a moment and listened. I heard the rustle of wind in the
tree branches and the grass. I heard the hum of the insects. I
heard the chirp of a passing bird. I heard another bird responding.
Perhaps they were warning each other about my presence. Then
I heard something that I almost never heard in the abbey. It was
the sound of female voices. Two women whispered. I could hear
their voices distinctly. One had a deeper voice and the other one
was higher. I didn’t want to scare them, so I hid behind the medlar
bush. I felt ashamed of the fact that I was spying on them, but
maybe they would lead me to the unicorn. Maybe the unicorn was
spying on the nuns too. I also felt ashamed of myself because even
as a lowly monk I could still go to the library. In fact, I was expected
to go there—when I wasn’t huffing and puffing bringing the pigs
their slop or praying in the church until my knees were sore. By
comparison, the nuns weren’t allowed in the library unless they

were cleaning it. But, for some reason, I found this part of the
abbey—with its overgrown weeds and the silence of cloistered
nuns—intriguing.
The branches were in front of my eyes so I couldn’t see much,
but I could just make out the white habits of the two nuns. One
was shorter than the other.
“Here, Kitty, Kitty,” said one
I could only see the bottom of her white habit, but she paused.
I had the distinct impression that she was looking around.
“Forget about Kitty for one moment,” said the one with the
higher voice.
“But she might need me,” responded the nun with the lower
voice. “I brought a pail with some water in it. I was going to bring
milk, but I was afraid it would cause suspicion if word got out that
I was taking things from the larder.”
“Stealing,” replied the one with the higher voice. “You would be
stealing from the larder if you brought milk for Kitty, and stealing
is a sin.”
Stealing was a sin and that was serious. But the nun with the
higher voice sounded like she was on the verge of a giggle….

You can read about Sinister Wisdom by clicking here.

Click here to hear me read from another section of The Unicorn, The Mystery about the Goddess Bastet.

To learn more about The Unicorn, The Mystery, click here:

The Unicorn, The Mystery now available from Adelaide Books — #amreading #FaithfullyLGBT

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Today, in honor of Juneteenth, I am reposting this blogpost. This morning, after a service on Juneteenth, the congregation rang the church bell of my Unitarian Universalist church. Let freedom (continue to) ring.

I decided to launch my BookTube series with a review of Juneteenth, a novel by Ralph Ellison. To view the review on You Tube, click the above image. The text of the review is below. Each month — or longer, depending on my schedule — I will bring you a BookTube review of a book that I consider to be a classic.

Juneteenth

Ralph Ellison

Random House

I became aware of Juneteenth (a national holiday celebrated on June 19th) some years ago. The holiday marks the date that slavery was ended in the United States. On June 19th, 1865, federal agents arrived in Galveston, Texas to free all the enslaved people in the state.

The Emancipation Proclamation was issued a few years earlier by President Abraham Lincoln on January 1, 1863.  Although the intention of the Proclamation was that enslaved people should be freed, the Proclamation was severely limited because it only addressed the seditious states that were opposing the Northern United States in the U.S. Civil War.

On June 17, 2021 (this year), Juneteenth (June 19th) was signed into law to officially become a federal holiday.

Juneteenth is also the title of a novel that was written by Ralph Ellison and published after the author’s death in 1999 by Random House. Ralph Waldo Ellison was a critical thinker and writer about race and history in the United States. He wrote many essays and criticism, but only published two novels. His important novel The Invisible Man was published in 1952. His novel Juneteenth was edited and published with his notes after his death in 1994.

In the introduction, Ellison’s colleague and the editor of Juneteenth, John F. Callahan,writes that “Juneteenth is a novel of liberation, literally a celebration of June 19, 1865, the day two and a half years after the Emancipation Proclamation was decreed when Union troops landed in Galveston, Texas, and their commanding officer told the weeping, cheering slaves that they were free. The delay, of course, is symbolic acknowledgment that liberation is the never-ending task of self, group, and nation and that, to endure, liberation must be self-achieved and self-achieving. In his novel Ellison, who took part in more than one ‘Juneteenth ramble’ as a boy in Oklahoma, speaks of false as well as true liberation and of the courage required to tell the difference.”

Since this book is hard to read, I approached it like a mystery. When it opens, a white racist senator from the South experiences an event that renders him a dying man. As he lays dying, he reviews his childhood when he was an orphaned boy raised by a black community that he ran away from. The mystery to me was how did this man become an outspoken racist. If this fictional character were alive today, he would have been one of the few politicians who voted against making Juneteenth an official holiday.

In the book, Ellison delves into the heart of America where the main character (who as a boy was called Bliss) is seduced by the culture that teaches him that racism makes him more important and will be  financially profitable for him.

Along the way, Ellison offers the reader such gems of wisdom as uttered by the older black man, a minister, who took him under his wing when the senator was a child: “…But you had a choice, Bliss. You had a chance to join up to be a witness for either side and you let yourself be fouled up. You tried to go with those who raise the failure of love above their heads like a flag and say, ‘See here, I am now a man.’ You wanted to be with those who turn coward before their strongest human need and then say, ‘Look here, I’m brave.’”

The relationship between the older black man, named Hickman, who visits the Senator on his deathbed is explained by Ralph Ellison’s notes which are published in the end of the book: “Hickman despises the man but loves the boy whom the man had been.”

As he sits with the dying man, Hickman ruminates, “Why can’t they face the simple fact that you simply can’t give one bunch of men the license to kill another bunch without punishment, without opening themselves up to being victims? The high as well as the low? Why can’t they realize that when they dull their senses to the killing of one group of men they dull themselves to the preciousness of all human life?”

Reading Juneteenth by Ralph Ellison gave me a deeper insight into the heart of America, the place where American racism, and the root of all oppression, is located.

This is Janet Mason with reviews for BookTube.

To learn more about my recently published novel — The Unicorn, The Mystery, click here:

The Unicorn, The Mystery now available from Adelaide Books — #amreading #FaithfullyLGBT

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HAPPY PRIDE!

This Pride, the backlash has encouraged me to be healthier than usual. I went to a healthy plant-based diet more than two years ago for health reasons (although we had been thinking of it for a few years before that because of the animals — I should say the other animals). The health benefits have been amazing!

To make a long story short, I had a medical emergency that landed me in the hospital, became disillusioned with the medical system and went vegan on the advice of a local acupuncturist.

The backlash is real and has potentially devastating consequences, and this is not to diminish that.

But it does feel good to #outlivetheenemygovegan. This is often referred to as “kill them with kindness.”

For years, I lived in the LGBTQ culture of excess, and in fact have lost the size of a small person while on my vegan journey. I think of the weight loss as watching my addictions walk away! Bye bye!

I can’t fault myself–or others–for having been influenced by the mainstream toxic food culture, but I am very grateful that I woke up.

So HAPPY PRIDE and here’s wishing you the best.

My partner and I have had two Pride miracles (so far) of seeing rainbows in our backyard. We were able to film them on these very short videos.

To learn more about my novel THEY, a biblical tale of secret genders (published by Adelaide Books New York/Lisbon), click here.



I am fast becoming a tough, old vegan bird.

To learn more about my latest published novel — The Unicorn, The Mystery, click here:

The Unicorn, The Mystery now available from Adelaide Books — #amreading #FaithfullyLGBT

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I’m very happy to announce that my novel Loving Artemis, an endearing tale of revolution, love, and marriage is being published this August by Thorned Heart Press.

I’m especially happy to be able to make this announcement during Pride, especially this Pride. The following is information from the publisher on a special blog tour.

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It’s great to meet in person with someone that you’ve known online for a while. In my case I met bill berry and his wife Lisa Brennan about a month ago when they were in Philadelphia. bill (/William E. Berry, Jr.) is the Publisher/CEO of aaduna, an online adventure with words and images.

We first connected back in 2015 when aaduna ran a segment of my novel THEY, a biblical tale of secret genders which was eventually published by Adelaide Books. bill then nominated the segment (titled The Mother) for a Pushcart Prize and he also ran a conversation that we had (all done online) in his addunanotes blog.

We always wanted to meet and finally we did about a month ago when bill and Lisa were travelling to the Philadelphia area. I knew that bill had been important to my development as a writer. But what I found out during our visit with our respective spouses (my partner Barbara and bill’s wife Lisa) — and what I had sensed — is that we had so much in common that it was uncanny.

And in a world and country that is so divided, more connection is what we need!

Lisa, Barbara, bill

You can click on the following link to read more from bill about our meeting and for his words on my novel The Unicorn, The Mystery

https://aadunanotes.blogspot.com/2022/06/making-past-relevant-to-future.html

Janet, bill, and Barbara

bill is very involved politically in his community and the following is an article that he wrote for The Citizen:

William Berry: If you remain silent, you are complicit | Columns | auburnpub.com

To learn more about my novel THEY, a biblical tale of secret genders (published by Adelaide Books New York/Lisbon), click here.



I am fast becoming a tough, old vegan bird.

To learn more about my latest published novel — The Unicorn, The Mystery, click here:

The Unicorn, The Mystery now available from Adelaide Books — #amreading #FaithfullyLGBT

Read Full Post »

Thanks to Thorned Heart Press for publishing and bringing to life my novel Loving Artemis, which will be out later this summer.

Loving Artemis is a love story billed as an endearing tale of revolution, love and marriage.

It is a love story set in the relatively recent historic context (in the 1970s) of events that led up to marriage equality. And love is what the world needs more of.

Stay tuned for the cover reveal.

Thorned Heart Press has a special offer for bloggers. Click on this link for more details.

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