Pillow talk, in a cosily secluded mountain cabin where " there was no better dawn chorus anywhere on earth, " concerns the fates of the American chestnut, the lynx and the coyote, culminating in a lovers'quarrel about the importance of predators in the food chain.
12.
"The Scotsman " newspaper wrote of " Windows in the West " in 2005 that " There was something cosily familiar about the painting's cheery, glowing character, the snow-covered roof and the warm yellow stone, the embracing perspective . . . . It carries a nostalgic, storybook charm; Katie Morag in Glasgow's West End ".
13.
The Australian journalist Siobhan McHugh has argued that the term " Anglo-Celtic " is " an insidious distortion of our past and a galling denial of the struggle by an earlier minority group ", Irish Australians, " against oppression and demonisation . . . In what we now cosily term " Anglo-Celtic " Australia, a virtual social apartheid existed at times between [ Irish ] Catholics and [ British ] Protestants ", which did not end until the 1960s.
14.
Besides the aforementioned inclusion of unusual instruments, the record is characterised by presenting " a softer touch " by the " fully confident " band, as opposed to " Otherworld " which " sparkled with all the energy of L�nasa s live performances . " " The Irish Times " said " original tunes abound, finesse shares equal status with percussion, and so Sean Smyth's fiddle weaves cosily between Kevin Crawford's flute and Cillian Vallely's ever-subtle piping ."