Welcome to the musings and notes of a Cadillac, Michigan based writer named Micah Holmquist, who is bothered by his own sarcasm.
Please send him email at micahth@chartermi.net.
Micah would appreciate it if you purchased items from Teaberry's Shop.
The Royal Wedding filled a hole in my heart that has been empty since September 11. The luxurious example of Prince William and his lovely bride has shown me that I can sing, I can run and I can dream.
When the two royal love birds get married tomorrow, I think Rowan Williams should say, “And if you do decide to get divorced. Well, that’s why the Church of England is here.”
With all due respect to the fine contributions from the likes of Crossan and Schweitzer, Katherine Tegen and Sally Anne Lambert’s 2005 work The Story of the Easter Bunny is the definitive account of the Historical Easter Bunny.
Through lively text and lovely pictures, the authors contextuatlize the Easter Bunny in his time, but also show that universal nature of the story. By stripping away all of the unnecessary supernatural elements that are not necessary to explain how a bunny could organize a group of other bunnies into a mighty force that could deliver gifts and treats to a large number of Christian households, Tegen and Lambert present a message that is both difficult to fully grasp and highly challenging.