Ken and I love to do jigsaw puzzles. We usually have one going in the kitchen where we can take a minute and pop in a few pieces between other work. I find it relaxing and I think there’s proven evidence that you get a little dopamine rush when a piece clicks. But sometimes I wonder about the people who design them, like what choices are they making with the illustrations? Case in point, last week, we got a new Charles Wysocki puzzle. Charles Wysocki was an American painter who specialized in “primitive Americana”. If you’ve ever done a Wysocki puzzle, you know it heavily features this idyllic view of late 1800s towns with a LOT of American flags everywhere, and as a Canadian, I find this weird, because I’ve never done a Canadian puzzle covered in OUR flag, but sometimes there are also clocks, so it all evens out. This week, though, I opened up the new puzzle and looked at the poster, excited to discover that all the buildings were antique stores and curiosity shops. “Oh, wow!” I said to Ken. “Look at all the cool stuff in the windows of these antique stores!” He agreed that it was going to be a lot of fun, considering we have an antique business ourselves, and I started to build the frame. But then I looked closer and something dawned on me: the painting the puzzle was based on represented life in the 1800s, and all the people were wearing old-timey clothes and driving horses and buggies so NONE OF THE THINGS IN THE WINDOWS WOULD BE ANTIQUES! The stuff in the stores were things that those people would have used every single day and probably thought were modern conveniences, like the railroad lantern, the ironstone china, and the coffee grinder. If they wanted to be truly authentic and antique, shouldn’t the stores have sarcophaguses or suit of armour at least? So unless this town is one of those places where actors are all dressed up and pretend to be pioneers for the tourists, it’s seriously out of whack.

And it reminded me of the time that I started working on a Dowdle puzzle, which are based on the work of a different American artist, Eric Dowdle. This one was of Peggy’s Cove in Canada, which is strange considering he was from Utah, but it does explain the presence of a random Mountie standing by a flagpole, like that’s just what Mounties do all the time or whatnot. I started to piece the edge together as one does and immediately discovered that one of the pieces was all chewed up and distorted, like a dog had eaten it and spat (or sh*t) it back out. Oh well, I thought, at least it’s not missing, because I HATE when a puzzle has a missing piece, and I think I’ve written about suspecting Atlas of stealing puzzle pieces before. But it got worse. See, there are a lot of tiny human (?) figures in the puzzle, and as I started to pull them out, it became clear that the artist who designed it was, perhaps, really more into horror stories than pastoral scenes of a harbour town.

Like, OK, it’s bad enough that there are 4 dudes in three-piece suits and fedoras standing on a rock looking like they all want to talk to me about Jesus, and numerous people are hoisting giant lobsters in the air and swinging them around like that’s a completely normal activity (and maybe it is in Peggy’s Cove–I’m going there in August so I’ll keep you posted) but then, in the background, there’s this guy:


What the absolute f*ck is this guy doing, crawling out over a rock towards you like that girl from The Ring?! You don’t notice him at first, because there’s so much else going on, what with all the proselytizing and lobster waving, but once you do, HE’S ALL YOU SEE. And then suddenly it seems like maybe instead of an idyllic fishing village, this is a zombie town, and all the figures are now ominous and the lobsters are screaming for help. In the poster that came with the puzzle, he appeared to be wearing large, weird mittens on his hands, and I really didn’t want to find the rest of him in case he came to life and started crawling over the back of my couch.
So anyway, I’ll keep doing my Wysocki–I just won’t look too closely at the horses’ eyes, just in case they’re devil horses or something, because you never know…
And then suddenly it seems like maybe instead of an idyllic fishing village, this is a zombie town, and all the figures are now ominous and the lobsters are screaming for help.
You took a simple puzzle and were still able to turn it into a zombie apocalypse. I appreciate the humor here. Thanks for the laughs!
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All I can see is a building with a sign that says “Wharf Hags” and below that it says “Local Artisans” which kind of ruins it for me. I was hoping there’d be a building with Stygian witches—wait, I guess they’d be “Peggy’s Coven”. I still want to go inside because I’m sure the Wharf Hags do some badass arts and crafts, especially in a place that makes Twin Peaks look like Mayberry.
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OMG I didn’t even realize it said Wharf Hags!! Now I can’t wait to go to Peggy’s Cove!
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So there are supernatural witches that haunt the harbor? With witches and zombies, no wonder the lobsters want to get out of there as soon as possible. 🤣
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🤣🤣
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The perspective in both of those puzzles is as odd as the characters in them. In the Wysocki, the horses way on the back road are practically the same size as the horses on the much closer front road. Both of these guys would have flunked the remedial art class I was required to take in junior high, and they (or their heirs) are making millions off puzzles!
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Absolutely. The scale is as weird as the topic, but they’re so fun to do lol!
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Lobster cannoli!
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Also, why are half the trees dead?!
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OMG that’s hilarious! It’s like the Mafia wandered into town! “We need a new place to dump the bodies.” (Just don’t forget the cannoli!)
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One time I was reading the “crayon” book (I think it was The Day the Crayons Quit) to the kiddos at the school and I got to the part where the dog ate one of the crayons and then threw it up or something like that, and I started laughing so hard I had to quit reading for a spell.
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Atlas HAS eaten puzzle pieces before, the little jerk🤣🤣
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Oh no! But I do have a cute antidote…I hear this odd sound, and I look over and it is MY CAT who has pulled out some bubble wrap and is standing on it actually and intentionally POPPING BUBBLES!
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Oh that IS cute!
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Yeah, I have to inspect the cat toys and cut off any dangly bits like ribbons and such because Moon Pie, being a former feral, will rip her “prey” to shreds and attempt to eat the parts. She’s little and fluffy-cute but so, so fierce!
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Hopefully it didn’t require a vet visit for Atlas!
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No he’s so big that he can easily digest things like that, the dummy! Also, I’ve sent you a copy of Charybdis—hope it gets there soon!
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I’ve never enjoyed putting together puzzles, but I might start doing them now because paying attention to the tiny details might make for great raw material for horror stories 🙂
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I never used to like them either but our daughter got us into them! I actually did write a horror story about them called A Surprise In Every Box😊
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never look a gift horse in the teeth? lol puzzles are too addicting for me, especially as I’m close to finishing
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I agree!
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That’s funny! Strange that I’m feeling like I am having deja vu with the second puzzle because somewhere in my streaming reading someone wrote about this second puzzle and it’s weirdness. Anyway, I found a very old Peggy’s Cove pamphlet from ages ago that was in a packet of my Mother’s things. So I look forward to writing about your visit. You are so good with details!
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I’m too edgy for them (maybe that’s why).
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Maybe the guy on the rock is being eaten by a giant and vengeful lobster?
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And the bottom half of him is already gone…eek!
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