Thank you to all of you who voted in my poll for your favorite guest bloggers on Taliessin through Logres. Here are the top five winners:

Congratulations to Jenn, Arthur, Brenton, Andrew, and David! I hereby invite you five to write another guest post in the future when we get to The Region of the Summer Stars. It will be a while yet, but you can sign up in the comments below for which poem(s) you would like to write about.
And there will also be a special surprise post, an academic article on “The Prayers of the Pope” written by a noteworthy CW scholar, when the series is over! (One of you can still pick that poem; I want two posts on it, one “popular” and one “academic.”)
Cheers!
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About Sørina Higgins
Sørina Higgins is Editor-in-Chief of the Signum University Press. She holds a Ph.D. in English from Baylor University. Dr. Higgins is currently co-editing a volume on the ethical turn in speculative fiction with Dr. Brenton Dickieson and previously edited an academic essay collection entitled The Inklings and King Arthur. She is also the author of the blog The Oddest Inkling, devoted to a systematic study of Charles Williams’ works.
As a creative writer, Sørina has a volume of short stories, A Handful of Hazelnuts, forthcoming from Signum’s own press. Outside of academia, Sørina enjoys practicing yoga, playing with her cats, cooking, baking, podcasting, gardening, dancing, and ranting about the state of the world.
You might also do an in-between on ‘Divites Dimisit’ (perhaps a Seventy-Seventh Anniversary Christmas special?). It’s the post-Taliessin through Logres poem that changed most, between magazine appearance and The Region of the Summer Stars.
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I’d like to do ‘The Departure of Dindrane,’ if that’s alright. I’m willing to do any poem, though.
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You’ve got it.
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Thanks!
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Things to look forward to!
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As folks will have seen, I’m already trying to work a bit in that direction, but all the current liturgical liveliness in some parts of the blogosphere has got me thinking that more thorough attention to Williams and the liturgy (in various of the poems) would be rewarding. (There seems to be a significant A.E. Waite background – which I don’t think I really ‘get’ – to some of this… maybe Grevel or Gavin or Robert Gilbert or John Matthews can shed some light, here. AEW and the Epiclesis and what not…)
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