Author, educator, and spiritual thinker Sophia invites readers to embark on an extraordinary journey with her newly released book, The Mermaid’s Tale. Published by Paper Wrights, LLC, the work blends memoir, mythology, and philosophy into a narrative that explores the timeless quest for meaning, autonomy, and soul-craft in a changing world.
In The Mermaid’s Tale, the author draws upon decades of personal experience as a Waldorf teacher, healer, traveler, and seeker. With lyrical prose and scholarly depth, she weaves together fairytales, sacred texts, and cultural myths to illuminate what she calls “the flowering plane of self-discovery.” Rather than presenting myths as relics of the past, she reimagines them as living stories—medicine for the human soul—that continue to shape identity and community in the 21st century.
The book opens with a poignant preface inspired by an African proverb: “When an elder dies, a library burns to the ground.” For Delaat, the act of writing is an urgent response to this truth. By sharing her own “pearls of experience,” she preserves a treasury of wisdom gathered across a lifetime of resilience—surviving homelessness, single motherhood, estrangement, and renewal through grace and prayer.
“Fairytales are not simply bedtime stories,” Sophia explains. “They are archetypal maps of transformation. They teach us how to reconcile opposites, embrace paradox, and awaken to the feminine soul long silenced in history.”
The Mermaid’s Tale explores figures from folklore and myth—gnomes, undines, sylphs, sprites, kings, and queens—not as distant characters, but as symbolic guides within the psyche. Drawing on thinkers from Carl Jung to Rudolf Steiner, Sophia shows how these archetypes reveal the path toward wholeness, healing, and authentic authority. At its heart, the book challenges readers to reclaim imagination, cultivate compassion, and rediscover beauty as a guiding force in both personal and collective life.
Beyond mythic analysis, The Mermaid’s Tale is also a call to action. Sophia insists that the modern world, beset by crises of leadership, ecological destruction, and social upheaval, can only be healed through a shift in consciousness that honors both the feminine and the masculine. The “kingdom” to be restored, she argues, is not just political or cultural, but spiritual—rooted in art, care for the earth, and reverence for the unseen.
In an age when technology often eclipses imagination, Sophia believes stories are the bridge back to our humanity. “Stories can be medicine that digest experience into wisdom,” she writes. “They remind us that life is a gift of discovery.”
About the Author
Sophia is a writer, Waldorf educator, and storyteller whose career spans more than two decades of teaching and community engagement. Her work draws upon mythology, psychology, and spiritual traditions to explore the mysteries of human transformation. The Mermaid’s Tale is her latest offering, a synthesis of personal memoir and mythic reflection.