CONSILIENCE
A Companion Blog to The Ash Girl
Consilience is a scientific method of validating a hypothesis across multiple disciplines. The biologist E.O. Wilson reclaimed the root of the word, which means “a jumping together” in his book of the same name. In it he posed the radical notion that the arts and social sciences might be invited to that auspicious table. This blog, and The Ash Girl, is a bit of an homage to E.O. Wilson’s proposal. Each post offers a deeper look into the story, the symbolism, the science and the themes from the author’s point of view (by chapter) and welcomes you to add yours.
In this way we might come to some expanded understanding and shared awe of our half-known worlds.
The Goddesses’ War
What if all of the goddesses (every goddess ever named in any myth or story anywhere) began their own war to reclaim what has been lost and bring the worlds back into balance? What if Athena, given her nature as warmonger, strategist and embodied wisdom was their leader? And what if all that we are experiencing now, the rise of extraordinary events in nature—tsunamis, hurricanes, plagues—the rise of women, the un-gendering movement, ancient methods of healing finding its healers, ancient ways of seeing finding its muses, was the effect of The Goddesses’ War?
Magic Number 3
The Ash Girl is structured as multiple sets of Borromean Rings, where lost parts are reclaimed and the pathway to wholeness paved, when the ‘properly chosen third’ shows up.
3 is the universal number of wholeness so let’s keep that in mind as we unpack CHAPTER 3!
Story Time
Once there was a story and no one to tell it.
Chapter 5 LEAPS in time ahead to 1945.
“BUT that is 3 YEARS,” some early readers cried. “I wanted to see Ben and Charlotte fall in love, the proposal.” Frieda trying to explain to Charlotte who and what she really is in a way that won’t make her descent harder than it already has been. All of that happened between the lines on the page, within the words that this telling offers and you have the power to re-appear it. Because.
Atonement
“This is where the little black dog comes in.”
Chapter 8 in some ways is my favorite, if one can have a favorite child. Not more loved perhaps, but one filled with voices that make me both starving and full. Images and lines that conjoured themselves and hover in my body long after my eyes leave the page.