A Few News Tidbits!

March 12, 2026

Insert dusty cough We have crawled out from underneath the more than 100 pages (SINGLE SPACED) we’ve written for our myth course so far. And we come bearing tidbits.

(Did you know there’s a tale from Cheyenne Native American mythology in which a beaver chewing through a pole ushers in the end of the world? NOW YOU DO.)

(The above was not an official tidbit, just something we can’t stop thinking about.)

ANYWAY. Read on for some odds and ends, including a few ways to meet up with us in person!

1) An absolutely enormous thank you to everyone who joined us for Ravens in the Labyrinth, our first course exclusively on myth in 8 years. Thanks to you, as promised, we were able to donate just shy of $4000, split between the ACLU of Minnesota and the Immigrant Rapid Response Fund. That’s really freaking awesome.

2) Our first book signing event for Fairylore is this coming Saturday (3/14) from 1:00-3:00PM at Virginia Highland Books in Atlanta! If you’re in the area, please come say hi!

3) Want to hang out with us in England? We’re the academic experts on The Great Courses upcoming trip Enchanted England: Folklore, Literature and Landscapes this September, and we helped design the itinerary. King Arthur, Oxford, Shakespeare, a refurbished jail hotel, TERRI WINDLING: this trip has everything. Frankly, our dream is that the trip fills entirely with Carterhaugh people (we know some of you have already signed up!) and we get to talk books and legends and Morgan le Fay with you on the bus and over pints for a week solid. If you’re interested in coming on this trip, we strongly recommend that you sign up by the end of April. Seriously, we hope you come!!

4) Have you read our new book Fairylore yet? Have you asked your friendly local librarian to acquire it/ bought your own copy/ gifted it to your friends and enemies? Yes? Thank you, you are our hero. If you’d like to be our superhero, please leave a quick review on Amazon or wherever you acquired it – it would help us SO MUCH, and we’ll be forever grateful.

And with that, we’re crawling back under our pile of mythology books. Good talk, see you next week!

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