Wednesday, November 19, 2025

The Luniferous Gazette #23: Anadem!

Let's Play with Various Assorted Crowns

I interrupt the Gazette’s normal pontification pattern for a little epeolatry, which is the worship of words. In particular, the singular appreciation of a word I—

Even if I never heard it uttered aloud by modern tongue, surely in all my 4+ decades, I’ve encountered this word on a page at least once before . . . right? I’m an English Major, so it can’t be the first time on planet Earth that I read this shiny strand of letters, and thought—

Mmm, what a scrumptious syllabic truffle. 

Anadem” was Dictionary.com’s word of the day on May 1st, 2025. A noun of Greek origin, this word is associated with ornamental headbands, like “a wreath or garland of flowers worn on the head” (Dictionary.com). I’ve wanted to devote an entire issue just to this word for a while now, but I wasn’t sure how to ink it until today. 

When I read this word, I felt like I’d found a long-lost synonymic sister to “Tiara,” “Diadem,” and “Coronet.” I collected sparkly word sets when I was younger, and discovering this fourth form of ornamental headwear was like a sudden meet-and-greet with a missing quadruplet princess! The dazzle is real. 
                 
My sisters and I were homeschooled for much of our education, and for several of those years, our mother would assign us twenty-five new words per week from our trusty Webster’s Dictionary. We were required to look their definitions up, write the words down three times, and use them in a sentence. 

“Anadem” deserves the full royal treatment, so why don’t we get fancy and try it out in a poem:

Petal Potential

I don’t think I have a soul exactly,
but perhaps a cerebral anadem 
woven from flower-bursts 
of thought twinkling 
in my brain. 

One day, I must lay this ephemeral 
wreath at the edge of all I am,
return my sparkling electron
cloud to the universe, 
but until that day 

I shall braid garlands of cosmic 
glitter and gossamer-grown
dreams into ink. 

There, now the word is properly emblazoned upon my neural matter forever. And if you’re wondering why you followed this thread of nonsensical musings, you’re far too late. Now you’ll never forget the meaning of “anadem,” either, and perhaps might even feel tempted to drop it into casual conversation.  

For anadem is an underappreciated circlet of syllables and well deserves its spotlight among various assorted crowns.  

*Six pearls were sacrificed in the making of this picture. 

A Sequin for Your Thoughts 

Have you ever wondered what the difference is between a tiara, diadem, and coronet?

A diadem is a full-blown circle that rests on the forehead, a tiara is a half-circle crown that sits higher up on the head, and a coronet, well, its definition made me chuckle when I looked it up. It’s a wee bit smaller and less ornate in design, as this demure headpiece is reserved for lesser royalty who aren’t cleared to flaunt a regular-sized crown. 

Regardless of their distinguishing differences, just like their linguistic sibling anadem, I believe all three make fabulous names for cats, unicorns, space palaces, and the odd human.  

*If you want to know more about royal crowns, I highly recommend checking out Moon Honey’s Ancient History Jewelry Stories. This professional goldsmith does a “Tiara Tuesday” special that is always full of fascinating historical insights on the evolution of crowns. For example, she explored the fashion precedent set by people who dared to wear their tiaras upside down

I hope you enjoyed this amateur foray into epeolatry! Expect more in the future. I can’t say when or what word will next be placed on the altar of appreciation, but coy syllables are always waiting in the margins for us to notice their bright wink and scribble. 

Sources:

“Anadem.” Word of the Day. Dictionary.com.
<https://www.dictionary.com/e/word-of-the-day/anadem-2025-05-01/>

“Crown, Tiara, or a Coronet? How to Tell the Difference Between the Three.” Town and Country Mag.com. <https://www.townandcountrymag.com/style/fashion-trends/a43085809/crown-tiara-coronet-difference/>

“Difference between Tiara, Diadem, and Crown.” Adastrajewlery.com.
<https://adastrajewelry.com/blog/difference-between-tiara-diadem-and-crown?srsltid=AfmBOorcLkTsLc3rYC4BzF5cmR8Ll-lm4LBfvkbTwzQtf7Xs_Zm4sxw8>

  ~*~ 

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Wednesday, November 12, 2025

The Luniferous Gazette #22: Hello, Hattie! I lost you for awhile . . .

A Review of Hattie and the Wild Waves by Barnara Cooney

I still have my childhood copy of Hattie and the Wild Waves by Barbara Cooney. It’s wrinkled, the spine is peeling, and the pages are starting to tear loose from their bindings. Yet the pressed treasure within is still as vibrant as the first day I opened the paperback book, and my eyes drank in the deepest dreams that travel across time through the lives of mother and daughter.

Cooney is one of my favorite illustrators of such splendiferous books as Roxaboxen and Miss Rumphius. Her lines are soft and gentle, yet filled with intricate details in every nook and cranny. Hattie and the Wild Waves is a tribute to her mother, Mae Bossert Cooney, and takes us on her journey to becoming an artist. 

The story opens with Hattie and her brother, Vollie, and sister, Pfiffi, discussing what they wish to achieve when they grow up. Pfiffi wishes to become the most beautiful of brides while Vollie wants to follow in his father’s steps in the family’s woodworking business. As for Hattie, her heart is set on painting, and her thoughts filled with “the moon in the sky and the wind in the trees and the wild waves of the ocean.” 

Hattie is so entranced by “picture-making,” that even falling sick cannot stop her. In fact, these interludes give her the perfect opportunity “to make pictures from morning until night, interrupted only by bowls of milk toast and broth.” I particularly love this passage, because it reminds me that even when health issues flare or anxiety tangles one’s brain into knots, it’s not truly the end. Dreams are stubborn little things, after all, and spring back in the most unexpected of ways. 

Cooney’s illustrations bring all the keenest moments of Hattie’s life into focus. From the bow of the family’s yacht, The Coronet, where salty breezes take “all the curl out of her hair,” and overflow Hattie's mind with fresh ideas for artwork, to her summer haven, Far Rockaway, a house beside the ocean. Here, Hattie’s solitary walks on the beach with only her tiny black dog fill her with boundless questions as she takes in the variable toss of stormy sky and sea spray.  

“‘Oh, Ebbie,’ she would say, picking up the little dog, ‘what are the wild waves saying?’” 

This same question follows us all through life as the clamor of our heart tosses our own deepest unnamed wishes like star foam. Hattie doesn’t get an answer right away, and her young heart must set such questions aside when her beloved Far Rockaway is later sold. 

The reader follows Hattie through many homes in the story, from “the red-brick house on Bushwick Avenue,” to the grand castle-like estate “The Oaks” in Long Island. Through every season of change, her little paint box and Ebbie go with her. It doesn’t matter if she can’t play piano beautifully like her mother, or stitch elegant needlework like her sister. For Hattie’s true passion lies in capturing black swans gliding across a pond on her canvas. 

Eventually, the three siblings grow up, and Hattie’s sister marries in a grand ceremony while her brother travels for work on family business. Only Hattie remains with her parents in a towering hotel that has a sweeping view of the East River and New York City. Sometimes, Hattie can paint the Statue of Liberty or even the shimmer of the ocean. However, more frequently she must relinquish the brush as she finds herself caught up in daily social demands. 

In our own lives, there are times where we must drop the dream, as well—but not forever. No, our little whisper will aria anew when we least expect it. One night, while attending the opera, Hattie hears a woman sing so soulfully from the depths of her heart, that she can’t deny her own feelings anymore.

She can’t waver one second longer: “The time had come, she realized, for her to paint her heart out.” 

The next day, Hattie enrolls in an art institute and then takes a trolley to Coney Island to meet her dear old friend, the ocean. The attractions are mostly shut down as the weather is fiercely inhospitable and “spitting snow.” Yet a paper scrap from a fortune-telling booth and the wild, breaking waves both echo the truth that she’s known, all along:

“You will make beautiful, beautiful pictures.”

To this, Hattie finally acknowledges, “Oh, yes, I shall.”

I love the word “shall.” It’s stronger than just a wish, for it means “to express what is inevitable.” And Hattie, in all her glorious will, is inevitable. 

Yet the older and more worn I get by time, the easier it is to forget what my own wild waves are saying. Rereading Barbara Cooney’s lovely illustrated homage to her mother reminds me that even if you drop a dream, the waves will return it. Maybe they’ll tumble it around like sea glass first, but when we’re ready to receive it again, the dream will return with new gloss.  

A few post-review thoughts . . . 

If I hadn’t joined Substack, I probably wouldn’t be writing this little review of Hattie and the Wild Waves. Why not? I simply wouldn’t feel a compelling drive to do so, and would be content with a quiet, unexpressed fondness for my favorite children’s book. 

But I made the motto of The Luniferous Gazette “Weird. Weekly. Wondrous.” It certainly makes for a pretentious boast, or a tall challenge to ink from the deepest parts of my soul, heart—whatever one calls a lost repository of stray wishes these days. 

I must confess that I was a bit downcast last week when I read multiple Substack posts warning about how this platform is changing and supposedly becoming more like other social media platforms; inundated with an overabundance of notes, writers, and influencers, etc. 

Hi! Bless my sparklestars, I guess I must include myself among that paltry throng of newcomers. 

When my husband urged me to consider joining Substack after reading how it was a platform geared specifically towards writers, I didn’t realize that I was a part of a mass influx of people this year. But I’m happy to be here regardless of whether the Almighty Algorithm notices me or not. It never has before, so I presume we shall continue mutually ignoring each other. 

My personal opinion? Ignore the doom stats and allow yourself the freedom to have fun playing in this digital playground, whatever that means for you.  

I don’t know of any other social media platform that offers so many multimodal ways to communicate for free. Now, I’m contemplating turning into a podcast princess and recording some of my novels just for the joy of it next year. While other platforms feel more like pretty folders for random thoughts, organizing ink dreams on Substack reminds me of opening my Trapper Keeper in sixth grade: a deluxe delight!

And now I can include my childhood book friend, Hattie. I would love to know more about yours.  

 

Princess photobombs the book spotlight.
 

Sources:

Cooney, Barbara. Hattie and the Wild Waves. Scholastic Inc. 1992. 

“Shall.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/shall. Accessed 12 Nov. 2025.

 ~*~ 

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Wednesday, November 5, 2025

The Luniferous Gazette #21: Grammie, Tag Sale Queen of Quiet Legend

Sequin or Sapphire, a Sparkle is a Sparkle

My writing group has been urging me to ink an issue on my secondhand treasure hunts, but I can’t really do that before first talking about who inspired them: my grammie, Nancy Anne, a tag sale queen who scoured yard sales on the East Coast for decades. 

I grew up on the West Coast and didn’t know what a “tag sale” (yard/garage sale) was until I moved to Connecticut and would travel up to New York to visit her. The first time I asked if I could accompany her on a tag sale run, she warned me that she got up early, so I’d better be prepared to hit the road. 

Tag sales meant serious business for her. She’d underline sale announcements in newspapers, plot the fastest routes between stops with her trusty car map (she had no GPS then), and be out the door at the crack of dawn. Sometimes, we'd venture as far as Saratoga Springs for the fancy tag sales. I must confess that rummaging through random boxes, shelves and crates for treasure on a strict schedule made the hunt even more thrilling!

She’d also check out stores that were closing, which is how she ended up acquiring this fabulous tiara for me: 

So you want to be a princess? Trust in Grammie, dear. She had a Maine accent, so that term of endearment sounded more like an airy “dia” as she would drop the “r.” 

All my memories of my grandmother are filled with queenly gleam. She always wore sweaters and fluttery skirts embroidered in beads, sequins, faux jewels and pearls. I can’t think of her without a trace of fairy glitter on the heart. She could find anything, just like a real fairy godmother.

Sometimes, the items we wanted to bring home had unexpected proportions and required ingenuity to fit into our vehicle. I’m still not sure how Grammie managed to expertly wedge a sturdy pink steel Canadian bike that I paid only 5 bucks for into the back of her small, cube-shaped car that was already full of granddaughters. Secondhand magic, I suppose! 

Of course, the best part of the experience was at the end, when Grammie would say with a twinkle in her eye, “Now don’t tell Grampa.” Then she’d take my sisters and I out for a secret ice cream run.

I was talking to one of my sisters yesterday about how our grandmother really didn’t care if something was expensive or popular, she just bought any sparkly thing that caught her eye that she thought someone would like. So sometimes I might end up with a pretty pink plastic heart necklace . . . and one time, a 14k gold chain she undoubtedly acquired at a random tag sale. 

This lavender gem came with that epic chain. I have no idea what it is, or if it once had another life as a beloved ring that was later twisted into a memorial pendant.  

 
I’m not sure what the tiny scrawls etched into the metal in the back mean, either. These unknowables intrigue me and are part of the excitement of secondhand gifts. I love wondering about the hidden history behind this mystery pendant and imagining its past.     

For Grammie, sequin or Linde star sapphire—a sparkle is a sparkle. 

My sister B noted that Grammie was the same way in how she interacted with other people. Social standing, appearance, employment status, education, none of that mattered to her, because she treated everyone with equal kindness and dignity. 

Furthermore, I must note that Santa Claus had nothing on her gift system. She had boxes in her basement lined up on wooden shelves with her family members’ names written on each one. All year, she’d slowly fill it with bounty until birthdays and Christmas rolled around. 

And if you ever told her that you liked something, you’d better be prepared to receive it for the rest of your days. I once told her that I liked cameos, and she gave me so many of them over the years in pendant, brooch, and pin form that I could fill a vase. I eventually started giving many of them to my oldest “fairy goddaughter,” and now she apparently loves cameos, too. Thus, my grammie’s legacy of sparkle-giving lives on!

When I was at college, my roommates were always excited when she would mail me a box, because it was inevitably filled not only with loot, but also homemade treats to share. Grammie was always thinking of others and how to bring them just a little bit of happiness.   

I believe the very last tag sale run I embarked on with my grammie was in 2013, shortly before I got married and moved overseas for a while. I paid just 10 cents for this lovely little vintage figurine of a porcelain girl in a pink dress. She’s a bit faded by time, but utterly perfect in the happy silhouette she casts—just like my glamorous grammie. 

Unfortunately, my grandmother’s health would begin a slow decline, and she’d eventually pass away. But every time I make an unexpected thrift score or discover a hidden treasure at a tag sale, I know she’d be proud and cheering me on. Grammie was a huge believer in angels and accumulated over 200 hundred figurines over the course of her life. Personally, I don’t have any firm belief in heaven, but I make an exception for my beloved grammie. 

I like to imagine that she has unlocked a new level in the afterlife: Nancy Anne, Patron Angel of Tag Sales and Thrifty Finds! 

 ~*~ 

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Wednesday, October 29, 2025

The Luniferous Gazette #20: Death-Come-Quickly, a Haunting Flower for Halloween

  The Demure Gem of Watkins Glen

*

This September, I finally got the chance to visit Watkins Glen State Park in New York with a family member. I was born not far from that location, and not long before he passed away, my father told me that he’d brought me there as a baby and wished we could visit again. So, it felt a bit like returning to my roots to pay homage to this forested gorge—a veritable miniature canyon! 

The park boasts nineteen waterfalls that spangle cliff faces that can reach 200 feet in height. The deeper one ventures into its high-shadowed walls, the more it feels like you are being swallowed up by a secret side path into Narnia or Middle Earth. As the state park’s website declares, those who visit are known be left quite “spellbound.” 

The hike can be steep and muddy at times, and there are markers bored into the rock walls periodically that give the location for emergency services in case someone suffers a serious injury. I couldn’t help wondering if they were affixed due to prior incidents. Either way, the little plaques served as constant reminders to watch my step! 

I also couldn’t help marveling at the way the green foliage caught the sunbeams above. Each leaf seemed to light up like a slice of live emerald and cast a beguiling glint over the stream winding through stony layers of bedrock below. 

All this is to say that the enclosed environment lends itself to an otherworldly ethereality—enter the flower, the true star of this issue and the hidden jewel of Watkins Glen! 

I stopped dead in my tracks and begged my family member to wait so that I could capture a photo of a delicate pinkish-purple flower, hardly as large as the nail on my little finger. I had no idea what it was then, only that its quiet, airy beauty demanded my rapt gaze without delay. 

Later that evening, I would conduct an image search and discover that this tiny flower has numerous names—Geranium robertianum, or more commonly, “Herb Robert.” Some of my favorites include “Jam Tarts,” “Doll’s Shoes,” or even “Stinky Bob” as squishing it can produce an odiferous scent that is described as akin to rotting garlic. My, my, what powerful pungency is hidden in this petite little blossom! Maybe it will work against vampires in a pinch? 

In some states, it is considered a noxious weed, although in New York it is merely a “non-regulated class B noxious weed,” meaning weeding is encouraged but not presently mandated. To kill such a gossamer sprite would feel almost like a crime to my heart. It utterly enchanted me upon first viewing, after all. 

Yet these pretty petals hide more than one secret. Despite its fragile appearance, it can release chemicals that crowd out other types of healthy flora. But it’s humans who have given this demure flower its most lethal moniker—“Death-Come-Quickly.” 

This name was tied to the superstition that plucking the flower and bringing it indoors would cause someone to die soon. Some tales even link this flower to Shakespeare’s Puck, or the mischievous fairy “Robin Good-Fellow,” who will surely punish those who dare to harm it. 

Now, I didn’t pick the unassuming specimen that hypnotized me for a bright strand of seconds in Watkins Glen. Yet perhaps daring to steal a picture of Death-Come-Quickly was offense enough to earn me a warning? 

On the return hike, I didn’t trip once on the 832 stone stairs or the steep paths. However, as the parking lot grew tantalizingly close, a prodigious acorn whizzed mere millimeters from my face with extreme velocity. My family member was witness to this errant missile and laughed uproariously as they declared that I almost became Watkins Glen’s first confirmed acorn fatality. 

This near-accident might seem like mere coincidence, except for the fact that I was almost squashed by massive trees on two other occasions in my life—but that’s a story for another day. 

Wishing you all a Happy Halloween! May you gather a bounty of scrumptious candy, but perhaps, have a care—beware of any charming flower you are tempted to bring into your home that spooktacular evening . . . . 

Sources:

“Herb Robert Identification and Control.” KingCounty.gov. 
<https://kingcounty.gov/en/dept/dnrp/nature-recreation/environment-ecology-conservation/noxious-weeds/identification-control/herb-robert>

“Herb Robert (Geranium robertianum, Wild Geranium).” Highbury Wildlife 
Garden. <http://highburywildlifegarden.org.uk/the-garden/bees-faves/herb-robert/> 

“Saint or Sprite?” (June 17, 2011). The Medieval Garden Enclosed. The Cloisters 
Museum and Gardens. Metmuseum.org. <https://blog.metmuseum.org/cloistersgardens/2011/06/17/saint-or-sprite/>    

Watkins Glen State Park. New York State Parks, Recreation and Historic 
Preservation. <https://parks.ny.gov/visit/state-parks/watkins-glen-state-park#about>

“Weed of the Month: Herb Robert” (May 19, 2016). Harringayonline. <https://harringayonline.com/forum/topics/weed-of-the-month-herb-robert>
 

 ~*~ 

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Wednesday, October 22, 2025

The Luniferous Gazette #19: Hop onto "A Lake and a Fairy Boat" with me

The Poetic Dream of Thomas Hood

 

I first read Thomas Hood’s poem, “A Lake and a Fairy Boat,” when I was a teenager with a head still full of Lothlórien’s golden murmurings and the wild sails of The Dawn Treader. The three stanzas were filled with absolutely everything I loved—

Whimsy and gossamer, rubies and pearls—and wonder beyond the realm of dragons, beyond the harsh reach of reality until the last two lines. There, the poem breaks against the most forlorn of realizations and the deepest of longings: 

“But fairies have broke their wands,
And wishing has lost its power!”

This poem was published almost 200 years ago in Hood’s book, The Plea of the Midsummer Fairies. And yet, even today, to read it aloud is to taste the echo of melancholy and imagination inked fresh on the tip of the tongue, newly-gemmed as a drop of blood—

Or a castaway jewel of the mind.   

This poem makes me just a little braver every time I read it. Or in this case, draw it. I’ve been messing around with Artweaver since June. I have several big projects in mind, but just the sheer idea of what I want to accomplish can feel overwhelming. Experimenting with digital art in the format of a comic is great practice, and I hope to sketch out a new one every 4-6 weeks. 

Illustrating this single comic took me over five hours, but I don’t regret a second of it. Hood’s words remind me that just because something is daunting doesn’t mean the venture isn’t worth it!

A dear cousin recently shared this wisdom from our late princess, Carrie Fisher: 

“Stay afraid, but do it anyway. What’s important is the action. You don’t have to wait to be confident. Just do it and eventually the confidence will follow.”

May we all hop onto the fairy boat in our heart and follow the currents to the farthest shores of our wishes. 

 

 

 ~*~ 

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Wednesday, October 15, 2025

The Luniferous Gazette #18: Angie's Earrings

In Memory of My Cousin

Angie’s Earrings

My cousin Angie took me to the mall 
to get my ears pierced at thirteen, 
a looong overdue rite of passage. 
I can still feel the prick of pain 
followed by the instant 
aura of glamor. 

She always treated me that way—
like I had worth and sparkle.
Even though I was several 
years younger, Angie never 
saw me as just a pesky kid.

When I was in middle school,
she took me to a college poetry 
workshop while she studied for 
nursing tests in the hallway all
because she knew how much 
I treasured ink and page!

Who does that? Why, Angela. 
Her full name twinkled 
like a jewel in my mind,
and my child’s heart knew
without saying that kindness 
was just her way of being. 

Maybe that’s why Angie wore 
the most hilarious earrings as a nurse . . .
a milk carton and a cookie with a big
bite out it, or a hydrant and a dalmatian, 
all to give her patients a good laugh—
A good life. My cousin died too young, 
hit head-on by a driver on drugs while 
coming home late from work one night. 

Yet even decades later, I have never forgotten 
the thrill of watching The Last Unicorn 
at a sleepover with her, or choosing 
my first pair of pierced earrings 
together at Claire’s, because 
perhaps I still wish to sparkle 
something a little like Angie 
and her happy earrings. 


I sometimes wonder why it seems like the kindest people I have known in life leave before me. After all, didn’t they deserve this shared span of time more than—

Yet the random whims of mortality deal out their end, and suddenly I’m left only with softly fraying memories, like gentle ghosts, echoing their presence. 

My cousin Angie was a genuinely loving person who went out of her way to be truly kind to me when she didn’t have to make that effort, and I’ll never forget that about her. 

I don't think I will ever become as gentle-hearted as Angie, but I believe the quiet beauty of even a severed-short existence such as hers can still teach me something today. 

I heard this starlit saying years ago, and I hold it like a silver seam against my own heart when life gets too hard—remember that even when a star goes out, the last path of its light continues onward. Rays travel forward, shining steadfast. 

All the goodness of a life (having been) may yet add light to my own (being now)

If I let it. If I learn. I bind this bright truth to my own silhouette in the dark.   

Poem Cited:

“Angie’s Earrings” (October 2025). Northern Narratives, 9. 64-65. 

 ~*~ 

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Friday, October 10, 2025

The Lunar Halo Edition

In May, I made quite the lofty pronouncement . . . I wanted my joy back! A slanting sparkle I lost long ago when I gave up part of who I used to be to time. Now after many mangled drafts, I am happy to share the Lunar Halo edition of Stealing the Dark Moon

I must confess that this single piece took me months of messing around on Artweaver. While not a perfect mirror of my initial idea, I learned a lot from practicing. And I have so many projects I look forward to tackling next! I want to illustrate three of my mom's poems. I have a backlog of children's stories and novels I wish to create art for in the future.

I hope with each new experiment, I gain a pixel's worth of confidence. 

 

The Luniferous Gazette #23: Anadem!

Let's Play with Various Assorted Crowns *  I interrupt the Gazette’s normal pontification pattern for a little epeolatry, which is the w...