Issue 7: Through the Grating

Issue 7: Through the Grating

Don’t go in the basement.

While that phrase sounds like the beginning of a horror story, it was a household rule when I was growing up. I had no problem following it. Our basement gave me the creeps, beginning with its creaky wooden door and metal latch that clinked louder than the others in the house (or so it seemed). The door’s screaming hinges and latch served as an alarm, alerting the family that someone (Mom) dared to venture below.

Ignoring the warning screams of the door, this brave soul was met with a cold blast. A frozen moment on the threshold. A last chance. Turn away now. 

But sometimes there was no getting around it. Mom had to go in the basement.

Issue 6: Through the Grating

Issue 6: Through the Grating

There’s a scene in Frank Capra’s iconic film, It’s A Wonderful Life, when George Bailey and Mary Hatch stroll by the old Granville house, (an example of a Second Empire Victorian). The abandoned house is rotting. Yet,

“I love that old house. I want to live in it,” Mary says, eyes shining.

“I wouldn’t live in it if I were a ghost,” says George, grimacing in disgust and bafflement.

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Issue 5: Through the Grating

Issue 5: Through the Grating

I love adventure tales. Stories with larger-than-life heroes, villains, and those unforgettable, morally gray characters in between. Anyone else find they can’t resist a pirate with a heart of gold?

Give me swashbucklers sailing the high seas, explorers in search of treasure, lifesavers battling storms. Clever escapes. Daring rescues. Bold battles.

Give me scenes that crackle with the potential for disaster or triumph as characters face the unexpected before returning home—literally or metaphorically—changed in some way. For no matter where the adventure happens or what type of trial the hero faces, one thing is certain: things don’t go as planned.

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