Eilis Flynn :: The Reality Beyond

Latest News

8*2011

What is The Riddle of Ryu? The e-novella is on sale now, so find out at Smashwords.com, Amazon.com, or BN.com!

3*2011

Futuristic romance Static Shock sold to Crescent Moon Press! Stay tuned for details!

11*2010

The Sleeper Awakes is available in trade paperback! Check out the Ellora’s Cave website for details, or order it at your local bookstore!

10*2009

Dragons everywhere! Jacquie Rogers and I presented a workshop on dragons around the world at the Emerald City Writers’ Conference. Stay tuned for the handout, available as a pdf soon!

7*2009

Echoes of Passion is here! It’s part of the Hunters for Hire series at Ellora’s Cave/Cerridwen Press. Check out the excerpt over at the fiction section of my site here!

4*2009

I’ll be conducting a workshop on Eastern- and Western-culture dragons with my friend Jacquie Rogers at the Emerald City Writers Conference in October 2009!

2*2009

Echoes of Passion has a release date! It’s July 2, 2009—more details soon!

12*2008

“Two Worlds, United by Anime,” contribution in Japanification of Children’s Popular Culture, a compilation of essays just published!

10*2008

New book signed with Cerridwen Press! Echoes of Passion, a sci-fi romance set in the Hunters for Hire universe, will be coming out next year. Details to follow soon!

Writer's Notes
Spring Festivals All Over
By Eilis Flynn

Let’s look at spring, which is celebrated by every culture and everyone (especially after a long, hard winter). In some cultures it’s a celebration of the new season, while in others it’s a celebration of the new year, the time that life springs anew (sorry). From the start of the Roman year (the ides of March) to the festival of Nawruz, the Persian new year, the spring equinox is celebrated in a number of ways:

http://www.schooloftheseasons.com/spring.html

It’s not just the colder climes and countries that observe the end of the winter. One of the most popular festivals celebrated in India, Holi is the season when "physiologically people in India, particularly in the north, rave for more sensuous and sensual pleasures with both sexes longing to mate!" I’m just quoting here:

http://www.indianmirror.com/festivals/fes2.html

The spring festival in Japan, "haru matsuri," is usually centered on the planting of crops, with variations around the country, praying to the gods for a bountiful harvest. One variation is "rissun," when a male member of the family scatters roasted beans, ceremonially scattering demons out of the home:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/religion/religions/shinto /holydays/harumatsuri.shtml

Then there’s the full moon festivals of spring, the spiritual high point of the year for the Buddhists:

http://www.taracanada.com/MoonFestivalsofSpring.html

And finally, there’s Schmeckfest, the festival of tasting, a four-day festival in Freeman, South Dakota, celebrating the heritage and culture of Germans from Russia, specifically Russian Mennonites, from the 19th century:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schmeckfest


Copyright Eilis Flynn 2007