Connecticut Book Festivals Podcast

Storytelling, Folklore, and the Power of Place with Kelly Jarvis

22 min · 6. heinä 2026
jakson Storytelling, Folklore, and the Power of Place with Kelly Jarvis kansikuva

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In this warm and engaging episode of the Connecticut Book Festivals podcast, Jed Doherty welcomes back author and folklorist Kelly Jarvis to celebrate her new gothic historical romance, Sea and Stars. Kelly begins by sharing the real-life “fairy tale” behind her own Belle-inspired library, a promise made by her high school boyfriend—now husband—that beautifully echoes the romance at the heart of her work. From there, the conversation flows into the power of books in our lives. Jed recalls a Reading With Your Kids conversation about how books in the home are a top predictor of a child’s future success, and Kelly, who teaches children’s literature at Central Connecticut State University, reinforces how simply surrounding kids with books can transform their literacy skills. Kelly then opens the door to the world of Sea and Stars, a Beauty and the Beast retelling set in 1847, beginning on the wild, mystical Isle of Skye and crossing the ocean to Mystic, Connecticut. Listeners meet Arabella Porter, a courageous healer gifted with a touch of fairy magic, and James Alden, a wealthy, secretive shipyard owner whose metaphorical “beastliness” comes from a dark past at sea. Jed and Kelly talk about folklore, landscape as character, and the courage it takes to leave home, as well as Kelly’s deep belief that storytelling is what makes us human, even in an age of AI. She also hints at more fairy tale–inspired romances to come and invites listeners to learn more at KellyJarvisWriter.com.

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jakson Storytelling, Folklore, and the Power of Place with Kelly Jarvis kansikuva

Storytelling, Folklore, and the Power of Place with Kelly Jarvis

In this warm and engaging episode of the Connecticut Book Festivals podcast, Jed Doherty welcomes back author and folklorist Kelly Jarvis to celebrate her new gothic historical romance, Sea and Stars. Kelly begins by sharing the real-life “fairy tale” behind her own Belle-inspired library, a promise made by her high school boyfriend—now husband—that beautifully echoes the romance at the heart of her work. From there, the conversation flows into the power of books in our lives. Jed recalls a Reading With Your Kids conversation about how books in the home are a top predictor of a child’s future success, and Kelly, who teaches children’s literature at Central Connecticut State University, reinforces how simply surrounding kids with books can transform their literacy skills. Kelly then opens the door to the world of Sea and Stars, a Beauty and the Beast retelling set in 1847, beginning on the wild, mystical Isle of Skye and crossing the ocean to Mystic, Connecticut. Listeners meet Arabella Porter, a courageous healer gifted with a touch of fairy magic, and James Alden, a wealthy, secretive shipyard owner whose metaphorical “beastliness” comes from a dark past at sea. Jed and Kelly talk about folklore, landscape as character, and the courage it takes to leave home, as well as Kelly’s deep belief that storytelling is what makes us human, even in an age of AI. She also hints at more fairy tale–inspired romances to come and invites listeners to learn more at KellyJarvisWriter.com.

6. heinä 202622 min
jakson The Eternality Of Love kansikuva

The Eternality Of Love

In this warm episode of The Ct Book Festivals Podcast Jed welcomes Dr. Dale Atkins. Dr Dale joins us to celebrate her touching picture book The Turquoise Butterfly. Inspired by her late mother Sylvia, whose favorite color was turquoise and who was fondly associated with butterflies, the story explores what Dr. Dale calls the “eternality of love.” Through the relationship between a grandmother and granddaughter, the book shows how memories, stories, and shared experiences help children carry a loved one’s spirit forward, even after death. Dr. Dale and Jed talk about the profound benefits of intergenerational relationships—emotional, physical, spiritual—and how grandparents and elders give children a sense of belonging, legacy, and resilience in a disconnected world.

29. kesä 202631 min
jakson What Makes a Human Human: Understanding That Everyone Belongs kansikuva

What Makes a Human Human: Understanding That Everyone Belongs

In this powerful episode of the Connecticut Book Festivals Podcast, Jed welcomes back Mary Keating, lawyer, poet, and author of Recalibrating Gravity, to celebrate Disability Pride Month and reflect on the legacy—and limits—of the Americans with Disabilities Act. Mary shares the story of the car accident at age 15 that left her a paraplegic and completely changed her life in a single moment. With warmth and candor, she recalls how her “can‑do” family refused to sideline her, including her mom’s memorable insistence that she still come downstairs and set the table—an early lesson that she was expected to contribute, not retreat. Jed and Mary dig into the everyday realities of an inaccessible world: housing that can’t be entered, events held up flights of stairs, and public systems designed as if disabled people don’t exist. They highlight how many mainstream conveniences—like curb cuts, captions, touchscreens, and voice control—originated from accessibility innovations that benefit everyone. Mary reads two deeply moving poems from Recalibrating Gravity: “Happily Ever After,” which captures the loneliness and isolation of disability, and “What Makes a Human Human,” written after a dehumanizing moment in a Yale Law classroom. Both pieces illuminate how architecture, policy, and casual language can either erase or affirm someone’s humanity. Throughout the conversation, Mary and Jed return to a hopeful challenge: we can all be “architects of change” by noticing who’s missing, speaking up, and insisting that disabled people are not afterthoughts but full participants in our communities and stories.

22. kesä 202630 min
jakson Angels, Demons and Detectives kansikuva

Angels, Demons and Detectives

Lee Driftwood joins the Connecticut Book Festivals podcast to talk about his dark urban fantasy series, Forgotten Flame, and the unforgettable city that shapes it—New York. Lee shares how, as a third-generation former New Yorker, he couldn’t imagine setting his fantasy anywhere else. For him, the city is more than a backdrop; it’s a living, listening character that’s always present in the story. We learn about the first two books in the series, When She Walked In and What Was Lost, and meet the central duo: Michael, a private investigator, and Gabby, an NYPD detective who shows up at his door with a life-changing secret—she’s lost her memory. While angels and demons lurk in the shadows of this world, Lee explains that they’re really a metaphor for the spectrum of human nature, not literal supernatural beings. Lee talks us through his decision to craft a five-book arc, inspired by Roger Zelazny’s Nine Princes in Amber. He planned Michael and Gabby’s journeys in advance, but let secondary characters surprise him—some he meant to “knock off” ended up surviving and thriving because he liked them too much to let go. We also hear about Lee’s roots in corporate satire, how frustration with corporate life pushed him to write his first book, and how that experience rekindled his passion for fantasy. Away from the noir-tinted streets of New York, he’s a dad of eight-year-old twins, dreaming up a photography book for kids and wrestling with the challenge of introducing them to classics like Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.

15. kesä 202622 min
jakson Middle Grade Meets Mental Health: K G Mach’s Powerful WWII Story kansikuva

Middle Grade Meets Mental Health: K G Mach’s Powerful WWII Story

In this moving episode of the Connecticut Book Festivals Podcast, Jed sits down with K.G. Mach (pen name of author Kimberly Mach), creator of the middle grade novel Present, Still Missing, to talk about war’s invisible wounds and the power of stories to open hard conversations at home. K.G. Mach introduces us to Irene, a baseball‑and‑football loving girl growing up just after World War II. Irene’s dad returns from the war physically safe but emotionally distant, living with what we now call PTSD. K.G. explains that while PTSD wasn’t officially recognized until 1980, its impact on families has been with us throughout history. She shares fascinating research about Mason General Hospital on Long Island, where doctors were successfully using talk therapy and outdoor activities with veterans in the 1940s—only to see that work sidelined as the Cold War began. Jed and K.G. Mach explore how the book looks at PTSD through a child’s eyes, and why it was important to her that the story remain honest but ultimately hopeful. They talk about Irene’s fierce, sporty spirit (inspired in part by K.G.’s sister‑in‑law), gender expectations in the 1940s, and how friendships and empathy grow over the course of a middle school year. K.G. also shares powerful moments from school visits and book signings, including a veteran father who opened up to his daughters after seeing the book. The conversation branches into intergenerational stories, listening to our elders, and how reading together can spark life‑changing family discussions about trauma, resilience, and mental health.

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