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Archive for May, 2009

Family Time

Wednesday, May 27th, 2009

I have been in Richland WA visiting my son and his family. The drive takes more than four hours but in the summer I can take Chinook Pass over the Cascade Mountains. It’s a beautiful route with breath-taking views of Mt. Rainier. I watched my grandson, Mark, play in a baseball tournament on Monday. He plays catcher (it makes my legs hurt just to watch) and he got a solid base hit. The not-so-good part is that it was ninety degrees and we sat in full sun. I lathered on sun screen, but got sunburned anyway.

On Tuesday morning I talked to the elementary and middle school students in Burbank WA. Bob teaches at Burbank High School. The three schools are within easy walking distance of each other so I talked in the high school auditorium and the kids came to me. That way I could give only one talk, rather than two.  Note: I have not reversed my decision about no more school visits. Having a son who teaches in the district led to a waiver of my rule and his lovely introduction made me glad I did.

The students had read many of my books and asked excellent questions at the end. Barnes & Noble from Kennewick WA sold books and I signed a lot of stock for them to have a special store display. After talking, autographing, and having lunch with Bob and Pam (she teaches in a different district but we were able to meet during her lunch hour,) I hit the road for the long drive home. When I arrived, Lucy did laps around the table, Molly purred, and I went to bed early.

I’ll be heading back to Richland the first weekend in June for granddaughter Chelsea’s high school graduation. It’s a good thing I have a trustworthy pet sitter and a car that gets good gas mileage. (Prius, 51 mpg.)

 Today it was back to work on the book I’m currently writing. I love visiting my family but no matter where I go, I’m always glad to get home. After a few days away from the computer it is sometimes hard to regain my momentum in a story but today I jumped right in and finished an entire chapter.

A Perfect Cinnamon Roll

Monday, May 18th, 2009

This morning I’m meeting my granddaughter, Brett, for breakfast. She finished her freshman year of college, got home last night, and has two days before she leaves for her summer job at a resort on Orcas Island. We’re meeting at Lil’ John’s, where, if I’m lucky, I will have a perfect cinnamon roll.

I am a cinnamon roll connoisseur. Carl was, too. We’ve ordered cinnamon rolls at restaurants all across the country and Lil’ John’s are usually the best. They are big, soft, more like bread than pastry, with just the right amount of vanilla frosting. I use the qualifier, usually, because once in a while, perhaps one percent of the time, I’ll get one that isn’t soft. The edges are crusty, as if it has been sitting around since the day before. Five star cinnamon rolls must be fresh.

Baking a great cinnamon roll is a lot like writing a great book. Theoretically, anyone should be able to do it. A baker takes readily available ingredients - flour, sugar, yeast, cinnamon - and mixes them together to make cinnamon rolls. Yet those same ingredients come out in a wide variety of ways, depending on who is combining them. Much depends on how the dough is kneaded, how it rises, the temperature of the oven and how quickly the roll is served.

Writers take words - a Dictionary full, available to anyone - and combine them to tell a story. If the person who’s mixing a batch of words does it skillfully and with great care, the end result will be worth reading. Just as a batch of dough needs time to rise, a manuscript needs time for revisions. You can’t just stir the words together and call the book finished. It must be created with care.

Today’s breakfast will be a joy no matter what I eat because I’m meeting Brett. And when I get back home, I’ll measure another cup of words, sift a simile, and stir a fresh idea or two into my current manuscript.

Mother’s Bracelet

Friday, May 8th, 2009

Mother’s silver charm bracelet began as a “grandma bracelet,” with charms engraved with the names and birth dates of her six grandchildren. Some are profiles of a little girl or boy; others are plain silver discs. Next Mother added a charm for me and one for my brother, Art. After decades of marriage, she got a new diamond wedding ring, and added her original slim silver ring to the bracelet.

A tiny silver pig dangles from the bracelet - a tribute to my father’s many years with the Hormel Company. There is also a charm from Portugal. I have no idea what its significance is other than knowing that my parents once took a trip to Portugal. Eventually, Mother added charms for her great-grandchildren. She wore the bracelet for special family occasions, and she always wore it on Mother’s Day.

After my mother died, Art and I made plans to meet at her home, to distribute her belongings. Mother had lived in California. Art and his wife, Joan, flew in from Minnesota. Carl and I planned to drive our pickup from Washington so that I could bring home a small chest of drawers, the only item my mother had which had belonged to HER mother. I also wanted to keep Mother’s “every day” dishes, the Spode Buttercup pattern which I had always loved. Her “good” dishes were white Haviland that had originally belonged to my dad’s mother.

As I left the house to make that sad journey, I fell and broke my ankle. Five hours, X-rays, and a cast later, I went home with instructions to keep the ankle elevated for a couple of days. As a polio survivor, I didn’t have enough arm strength to use crutches, so I was in a wheelchair for several weeks. I was unable to get in or out of the chair without Carl’s assistance. Travel was impossible. Mother had sold her condo before she died and it needed to be emptied for the buyers, so Art and Joan sorted through Mother’s things without us.

Art arranged to ship the chest of drawers and the Buttercup to me. I tried to think what else I might want to keep. Mother and I had different tastes. She was an elegant, stylish woman; I’m a “country girl,” most comfortable in jeans. Our homes reflected our personalities. I didn’t want any other furniture; her clothes didn’t fit me. Art called several times to ask about specific items that he thought I might want. The Haviland went to my daughter, Anne, but we gave most of the household goods to the Salvation Army.

On Mother’s Day the following year, I remembered the bracelet. Why hadn’t I thought to ask for that? When Art had called to describe Mother’s jewelry, in case I wanted any of it, he hadn’t mentioned the bracelet. I hoped Joan or one of their daughters had taken it, but when I inquired, Art said no, he didn’t remember seeing it. We assumed it had somehow been overlooked and ended up in a Salvation Army thrift store. My heart ached at the thought.

More than a year after Mother’s death, I received a FedEx package from a jewelry store in Burlingame, Calif. When I opened it, I recognized the oblong grey jewelry box, and my eyes filled with tears. Nestled inside the box was Mother’s charm bracelet!  A note from the jeweler explained that she had brought it in to have a charm added for the latest great-grandchild, but she had never returned to get the bracelet. When he tried to call her, he learned that the phone had been disconnected.

“She was a lovely lady,” he wrote, “and I know this bracelet meant a lot to her.” He had looked through his records until he found another customer who lived in the same condo complex as my mother. When he called that woman, she told him what had happened, and he explained about the bracelet. 

She knew my name, found my address, went to the jewelry store, and paid for the new charm. The jeweler sent Mother’s bracelet to me.

Each year on Mother’s Day, when I remove the precious bracelet from its box and fasten it around my wrist, I not only remember my mother, but I silently thank her neighbor and the jeweler, two generous people who took the time to return a family heirloom to someone they did not know.

Last week of April

Saturday, May 2nd, 2009

I am working on a new book, trying to add 500 words per day. First drafts are always slow for me but I’ve learned to trust the process. If I keep slogging along, adding scenes, creating dialogue, and fleshing out characters, at some point it will all come together and I will have a story that I care about. That’s when the fun part, revision, begins.

Tuesday was the five year anniversary of my husband’s death. My son-in-law, Kevin, came out and repaired the bird feeders that the deer had knocked over. (My deer LOVE birdseed!) Carl had built one of those feeders so it seemed especially appropriate to have it restored to use. Kevin found the perfect downed tree in my woods, cut it to the right length and mounted the trunk in the dirt. Once Carl’s feeder was attached and filled, I went inside to see how it looked from my kitchen window. When I looked out, there were already two finches dining on sunflower seeds. I also have a wonderful new hummingbird feeder which gets lots of customers.

I attended a LIFE class about the Prison Pet Partnership program, where women inmates train dogs from local shelters to become service dogs. I’ve supported this program for many years (one of the dogs in Shelter Dogs graduated from the PPP system) but this was the first time I had heard a formal presentation about it. Two of the dogs-in-training attended the class.

Today I’m going to a birthday party for my good friend and fellow writer, Larry Karp. It will be a fun day with many long-time friends. Stolen Children and Spy Cat were dedicated to Larry and his wife, Myra.

Molly is feeling better. She has gained back some of the weight she had lost, and she’s more active. Several months ago when the vet diagnosed a kidney problem, the only suggested treatment was a prescription cat food which Molly steadfastly refused to eat. I finally gave it up and let her eat what she wants, namely Fancy Feast Ocean Whitefish and Tuna. Yes, it has to be that particular kind and not the fillet type but the mushy stuff. She has taken to sleeping on my printer while I’m working. I put a towel on it to keep the fur out. She often turns the printer on. Never off.  You can see who runs my household.