I’m not one for clickbait-y titles but what the heck, I have a zine to promote.

In June, I’m wrapping up work on Desert Pookas, my zine of Irish fairy tales adapted into current day Arizona accompanied by linocut print illustrations. This zine is a long time in the making, with my interests cohering enough last June to apply for and get a grant to finish the project. Thanks to my friend Charissa for encouraging me to apply again (I’d been rejected twice) and to the Arizona Commission on the Arts for deciding in my favor this time. (Note: If you live in Arizona and are interested in applying to the grant I received, the deadlines for this year are June 20 and October 24. I’m here to answer questions if you have them about the process.)

I was awarded just under $1500 (the maximum amount for this grant) and I used the funds to learn about printmaking from Dempsey Keenan of Serpentine Hearts and bookbinding from Angie Dell of Shut Eye Press, as well as to purchase supplies, tools, and help with printing from Paper Jam + Print. If you’re local I encourage you to apply, or look around for what your state or city offers by way of grants.

The zine is filled with short stories, clips from books I read while working on it, and studies of the Sonoran desert’s flora and fauna. Alongside the words, illustrations — a novelty for me! The zine is also about my estrangement from where my ancestors are from (Ireland), my desire to make a home in a place I don’t belong (Arizona), and my experience of desert nights as a thin place.

Ireland has a history of solidarity with Palestine, and recently carried that tradition on by officially recognizing a Palestinian state. At the same time, the country I was born in and where I’ve lived my whole life sends more money and weapons to Israel. The grief of belonging to a country I don’t share values with is heavy. With that in mind, all the money I make from online zine orders I’ll donate to the Arizona Muslim Alliance’s Gaza Efforts. I’ve been part of their phone bank for a few months and I’m so grateful for the work they do.

The zine is priced on a sliding scale ($10-20) and if you can’t purchase it no worries, you can still support my work by sharing this newsletter or posting about the zine online.

Reading

A list of the books I’m reading and referencing as I work on Desert Pookas:

Writing

My interview with Julia Hannafin was published last week in Write or Die and I’d love if you gave it a read. Julia’s novel Cascade (published by Great Place Books) is immediate and lusty and also so sad. It writes into the complexity of grief, love, and drug and alcohol use, set in a marine research group on the Farallon Islands of the San Francisco coast. I really enjoyed our conversation and loved reading the book.

Cooking

Fried eggplant sandwich with pepper jack, chopped spicy pickles and cilantro, romaine leaf, on Noble sourdough from Monsoon Market (shoutout to my Dad for picking some up). No pictures because it was late in the evening and I got over-hungry. Earlier in the week I made peanut noodles following Hetty Lui McKinnon’s recipe and ate it for a few days with kimchi, roasted carrots, and sautéed kale on top.

The Good Enough Weekly comes out every Friday, alternating an essay with Of the Week. I also take on freelance editing and writing projects. Reach out if you’re looking for help in those departments — I’ve worked on everything from zines to textbooks. More info here. My zine of adapted Irish fairytales, Desert Pookas, is available for preorder now!

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