Wednesday, September 13, 2017

Taylorsville's Local Artist Who Uses Gourds as a Medium


Nicky is participating in a lovely gourd display at Evon A. Ford Memorial Library, 208 Spring Street, Taylorsville, MS 39168-0430. She's featuring her concept of The Dream Bucket. As the author of The Dream Bucket, a family inspirational novel staged near my imaginary town of Taylorsburg, MS, I am so happy about this display I could explode, or bust wide open, as I used to say back when we were kids in Taylorsville.
Nicky has written a poem about The Dream Bucket
and featured it on the gourd. It can be found on
https://collardpatch.blogspot.com/2017/08/nicky-blakeney-gourd-artist-4_27.html

The Dream Bucket is only one shelf of the library's interesting display. I'm grateful to Nicky Blakeney, amazing local artist; Joyce McKinley, the librarian; and the Friends of the Library, including the town's mayor, Rosalyn Glenn.

I feel sure Taylorsville, Mississippi, has many other talented artists besides Nicky Blakeney. For example, Sarah Walker Gorrell is an amazing local author. Please drop me a note on my Facebook message page (Mary Cooke) about other artists and creatives in my hometown.

Nicky became interested in the concept of The Dream Bucket when  she read the novel. She wrote in a review on Amazon: "If you like good 'clean' reading, with a good story line that moves along smoothly this is it. Set in the deep south at the turn of the century, she brings her characters to life and you feel as if you may know them."

The Dream Bucket at Amazon







Nicky Blakeney, Mississippi Gourd Festival 


Eighth Annual Mississippi Gourd Festival

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 15 AND 16, 2017
SMITH COUNTY AG COMPLEX, RALEIGH, MS
Classes on both days, plus early-bird
classes on Thursday afternoon, September 14



Wednesday, September 13, 2017, Nicky McAlpiin Blakeney  announced, "The Gourd Festival! It Starts(for Me) tomorrow! Set up day! Hope to see you Friday or Saturday."
Her beautiful, patriotic artwork is already getting quite a bit of attention on Facebook. 
The handles add interest to these striking creations.


Tuesday, September 05, 2017

#1 Devotional Book: Do you know how God loves you?

In 2010 I wrote a daily devotional book for my daughter, who gave the book its title.  Last night I offered it for free as a kindle book. Today so many people downloaded it that it is ranked as NUMBER ONE in free books in three categories: Meditations, Personal Growth, and Inspirational.

I'd love for you to get your copy.


Today's ranking of 
Do You Know How God Loves You?

Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,215 Free in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Free in Kindle Store)

Wednesday, August 30, 2017

Too close to the fire

"Why did they not evacuate?"

The last time hordes of people tried to leave Houston all at once some of them died on the road. For whatever reason, some didn't leave Houston. Instead of judgment, we need to offer empathy, compassion, and help. My daughter, Christie Marie Underwood,  has an answer for all those who comment, "Why did they not evacuate?"

She wrote:
Have you never danced too close to the fire?
Have you ever lost the hand you were holding?
Have you ever spoken words you wish you could retract?
We all have, least we not have a pulse or maybe not a heart.

Sunday, August 27, 2017

Nicky Blakeney, Gourd Artist, 5

NICKY BLAKENEY AND THE DREAM BUCKET
 When Nicky read my novel, The Dream Bucket, she found the ideas presented in it an inspiration for bringing happiness and hope into life. She decorated two gourds about The Dream Bucket,  and she wrote a poem about it:




The Dream Bucket
 I have a beautiful dream.
 I keep it in my Dream Bucket
 With my pennies, nickels, dimes, and quarters.

I feed my bucket every day, 
Pennies, nickels, dimes and quarters. and 
Sometime I add a buck or two to help it grow much faster.

Someday when my Bucket is full, 
My dream will come to be, 
Because I saved my pennies, nickels, dimes and quarters
To make that dream come true!
Nicky Blakeney

Here's the gourd with the poem on it:
And here is the first gourd she designed about The Dream Bucket:

Nicky Blakeney, Gourd Artist, 4


FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 15 AND 16, 2017
SMITH COUNTY AG COMPLEX, RALEIGH, MS
Classes on both days, plus early-bird
classes on Thursday afternoon, September 14

NOTE: Find Nicky Blakeney on Facebook.

OUR GOURDS AND PINECONE FLOWERS

When Nicky placed the photo of the gourd on the right in this picture, I was blown away. I didn’t 
know  she was a talented artist who could create beautiful objects. I wanted that one. My memory tells me that the one on the right was not for sale. Then I saw the one on the left in the picture. I liked it too.

I decided I would need one of her gourd bowls or baskets to go in our living room. John, my husband, had other ideas about what our gourd bowl should look like. He gave me precise instructions for me to pass on to Nicky, who designed a bowl exactly to fit his specifications. It is interesting, quite beautiful He wanted something more primitive looking. 

The point is that Nicky, who is always cheerful, will create  whatever her customers request. Here is our bowl made especially for us by Nicky.
John wanted black oak leaves drawn on a brown background to give the appearance of leather. Around the top Nicky made a row of holes and laced thread that was various shades of tan and brown.
Underneath the bowl she wrote: For Mary Lou Gregg C. Cooke, March 2016, Nicky Blakeney, Proverbs 3:5-6. 
Both John and I were delighted with the results.

Meanwhile, I told Christie, my daughter, about the gourds. "I want one," she said. "Tell her to make me one with a fleur de lis. on it. Here is the one Nicky made. 
So many times, I'm just wrong about what people are going to like. Although I thought it was beautiful, I was afraid Christie would think it had too many designs on it. Nicky told me, "I did get carried away."
I asked her to make a simple one. Here is Nicky's second design:
I fussed over whether these gourds could be shipped. Since I needed to go to Laurel and visit my sister and then go to Taylorsville to discuss Travelers in Painted Wagons on Cohay Creek with Sarah Walker Gorrell, I met Nicky for lunch. John, Sarah, her friend Mike, Nicky, and I met at the Huddle House. When we started to leave, we found ourselves in a flood. We managed to load the gourds.

After I came back home, Christie surprised me. "Mama, I love the gourd you selected, but I like the other one too."  She has both of them. Nicky, Christie, and I learned that the gourds can be shipped successfully.

A few weeks later, Christie asked  Nicky to make her a Holstein gourd with flowers. Since Christie works with Holstein calves, her office is decorated with pictures and little statues of calves. Here is the vase that Nicky made. It is one of my favorites. (Nicky shipped  it.)









Saturday, August 26, 2017

Nicky Blakeney, Gourd Artist, 3

Note: Throughout this blog entry pictures of twisted handle baskets are shown.


What do you want to do with gourds, in the future, that you haven’t done before?

I want to finish my first Gourd Luminary first. I hope to learn to make Thunder drums. And I will take time to learn to carve gourds well. I hope! After those things.  The things I want to learn just pile up in my mind.



Is there anything other than the pleasure you get from decorating gourds that keeps you working at it?  


Yes, I don’t often talk about it, though most people that know me know about it. I have Parkinson’s disease. So decorating gourds is my therapy as well as my pleasure. My Dr. tells me that decorating gourds helps keep my mind alive.  I must say here my Awesome GOD has been so good to me. Though I can’t do many of the things I have done before I can still get up in the morning, I can still talk, with good sense, most of the time!  I know my children, Grandchildren and my great grandchildren and I know he walks with me everyday



Now back to the Mississippi Gourd Festival, tell us what we need to know If we want to go to the festival.

The Festival is always the third weekend of September This year on Friday the 15th and Saturday the 16th. We set up on Thursday. There are “early bird” classes on Thursday Afternoon. The doors are only open for those taking classes at that time. Classes are listed at mississippigourd society.org. see festival 2017/

The doors officially open Friday at 8 AM   and will be open until 5 PM. And on Saturday 8 AM until 5 PM.

If there are classes with fewer students than planned for you may sign up for that class at the festival. You must be there when the class starts.









Nicky Blakeney, Gourd Artist, 2

Other than the Festival are there means or places to learn different techniques?  
Yes, there are probably hundreds of books written by many authors about different ways to decorate gourds. I also belong to several of the many web sites on computer that are learning tools where members teach each other how they do a certain thing, what is the best way to do it, where to find what you need to do it and tips on how to use something made for another purpose to help do what you are trying to do with little cost.  Gourd Artist are for the most part willing to help a fellow gourd head.

What is The Gourd Festival about?
Several things. There will be vendors from MS and states as far away as the Carolinas, Florida, Arizona, Louisiana. They will be selling anything to do with gourds. From raw gourds (gourds that they have grown, dried, and cleaned) to gourds made into things that you have to be told are made of gourds, musical instruments, tools to do the work, paints, Ink, ink dies, leather dies, embellishments, and of course decorated gourds for any season or no season.

Then there are the classes for those interested in learning to decorate gourds but I must warn you It is addictive! You can find a list of classes at mississippigourdsociety.org under 2017 classes. there are demonstrations to show you How they did that.

What are some of your favorites of the things you have made?
Gourd Bowl with Flowers Made of Pine Cones
The First Antebellum Doll  I Made of Gourds
Lady in Blue






Nicky Blakeney, Gourd Artist, 1


Nicky Blakeney visits the Collard Patch


Eighth Annual Mississippi Gourd Festival 

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 15 AND 16, 2017
SMITH COUNTY AG COMPLEX, RALEIGH, MS
Classes on both days, plus early-bird
classes on Thursday afternoon, September 14

 Nicky Blakeney is a someone I’ve admired since my childhood. She is a little younger than my older sister, and I knew her sister Jeanne in 4-H Club. In our golden years, Nicky and I have become reacquainted. We’ve discovered our mutual love for things artistic, and we’ve also discovered we are distant cousins two different ways. (Many people in and from Taylorsville, Mississippi are related.)

She is an amazing artist. Most of her work is gourd craftsmanship; also she designs flowers from pine cones.  Recently she visited the Collard Patch and gave me an interview. (It will be necessary to divide it into small increments.) I’ll share what she said and some pictures of her gourds.
Nicky is excited about the Mississippi Gourd Festival 2017, which is the eighth annual Gourd Festival.

INTERVIEW:

How did you get into decorating gourds?
I first learned about decorating gourds from my Friends and neighbors, Mike and Michelle Thompson. I had watched them decorate gourds for several years. Then in June 2010 the opportunity came to start the Mississippi Gourd Festival in Raleigh, MS in our home county of Smith.  Mike and Michelle were asked to get it started.  It would replace a show the third weekend in September that had been canceled.

Smith County had the perfect place for it, The County Ag complex. It is indoors, air conditioned, with restrooms and a kitchen, Each year some group, club or origination provides food on site.
Three months after it was first mentioned the doors were opened for the first Mississippi Gourd Festival.

I have been a crafter most of my life but until that weekend I had never thought about decorating a gourd.  I took classes that weekend. At least three.  I can’t even remember now how many.
 The first class I took, we made a Santa Claus.  




(‘that is where I learned how to put paint on the brush.) I finished him in class, brought him home and over the next 6 months I took the paint off and redid it so many times I often said he had had more face lifts than any Hollywood celebrity.
That weekend I joined the MS Gourd Society and the American Gourd Society and have been hooked ever since.

What keeps you interested in decorating gourds? Every gourd is a new experience. Even if I am doing the same thing on a gourd that I did on the one before. Gourds are shaped differently by nature. And what I do must be done for that gourd, and every gourd is “one of a kind”.
What is your favorite decorating medium? Pyrography, which is wood burning. I first learned about wood burning as a teenager, many years ago and had had the desire to learn how to do it since then. I guess one of the reasons I like it is the fact that I can see the results almost instantly.
 I have learned what “Pyrography” is in the last eight years. 
Gourd Bowl with Gourd and Pine-Cone Flowers
How do you decide what to do with a certain gourd? Different ways. Sometimes I have an Idea and look for a gourd to fit it. Or I see a gourd and a picture pops in my mind. Then there are those that I have on hand and they set there for months or even years before they “speak to me”! Those are usually the special ones. 







Wednesday, July 19, 2017

House of Seven is now available on Kindle. Here's a sample.




CHAPTER ONE

Oh, Baby.

BETH



June, 1913, Mississippi

Beth should have never agreed to let George give her a ride home from church Sunday evening. As they turned into the front lane, she made an angry swat at a mosquito biting her neck. What a relief it was to have the smell of the magnolia blossoms distract her nose from George’s unpleasant breath. “Oh, I’m tired.”

“How many children do you want?” He held her hand as they walked toward the front porch.

The flimsy muscles of his hand, damp and limp, would revolt almost any woman. How would she ever have children with him?

He dropped her hand so he could smooth his waxed moustache.

“You’re a good man, George.”

Yanking his nasty handkerchief out of his pocket and blowing his nose one more time, he unnerved her, but he was her suitor. Soon he would marry her, and they would have a houseful of interesting and beautiful children, who inherited their parents’ best traits. What if she grew to hate him? He was who he was, and her feelings were her fault.  

Did he have to wear that green and yellow plaid shirt with those dirty red and black striped pants? As George and Beth left church, ladies held their noses.

Nothing in his face showed he knew how much he bothered her. When they reached the steps to the house, he walked in front of her then rushed across the porch and stood at the entrance. Some southern gentleman he was! How much more could she endure?

She lifted her skirt to avoid tripping on the steps. When she caught up with him, she placed the back of her hand on her forehead. “I’m sorry, George.”

“Sorry?” He placed his hand on the wall. “About what?”

“Oh, I have a headache. I need to go inside now.” She opened the door, and after she waved goodnight, she slammed it, then bounded up the stairs.

Aunt Genie’s bedroom door was open as were her windows. Eavesdropping again. She was incorrigible.

Hyena laughs came from the window where the woman stood. She turned around as Beth entered the room. Genie held an empty water pitcher.

“What have you done?” Beth brought her hand to her mouth.

“Oh, nothing.”

“No, it wasn’t nothing.” Beth made a fist of her hand and pressed it into her mouth.

“That stupid George was on his way to his surrey, and I made it rain on him.” Aunt Genie laughed and slapped her skinny leg. “You know what? He looked up to see if it was really raining, held his hands out to feel raindrops.”

“You didn’t.”

“George needed a shower. You yourself said he smelled nasty.”

“We’re going to get married. You have to be nice to him.”

“No, I don’t.” the elderly aunt pointed her bony finger at Beth. “I’m not marrying him, and you ain’t either. He ain’t asked you, and if’n he does, I give you credit for having better sense.”

“You just want me to be an old maid so I can take care of you and my parents.”

“Not a bad idea.” Genie sat in front of her dressing table and handed Beth a tortoise shell hairbrush. “Brush my hair and braid it for bed.”

Beth dug into Aunt Genie’s stringy mouse-gray hair with the brush.

“Not so hard. Remember? I’m—”

“Tender headed.”

“Truth is I’m trying to find you a good husband.”

Beth went to bed without brushing her own hair. She’d deal with the curly mess tomorrow.

Monday morning at four o’clock when the mockingbirds sang a chorus outside the window and the cuckoo in the hall joined in, Beth popped out of her bed—time to freshen up for the day. Making as little noise as possible, she poured water into her bowl, splashed some on her face, and washed the important places. She needed to spend about an hour on her hair, but she’d fix it later. She brushed over the outside layer and twisted it into a bun.

In a jiffy, she sat, pen in hand and candle burning, at her writing desk. Work to do in blessed quiet.

From a basket, she removed a list. Ten—ten submissions with dates, and the names of the recipients filled the paper. At the right of the graph was a column where she planned to date her acceptances and another for rejections. So far, she had eight little rejection slips, not a real full-sized letter of rejection in the stack. She planned to rewrite each one and resubmit it, but she was almost out of places to send her books. In the meantime, she was formulating a plan for book number eleven.

Since her parents and aunt were still asleep and the noise of the typewriter would end her solitude by waking Aunt Genie, she reworked a returned manuscript by making notes with her pen. How kind of the editor who had bothered to suggest some changes, or did he spill his red ink?

After working fifteen minutes, she looked inside her desk drawer, where she found a brochure about a vacation to Rome. She composed an undated letter requesting two tickets on a cruise and another one reserving a room in a hotel near the Vatican.

Beth stared out the window. She had no hope of changing her aunt. She’d take the beloved woman with her as a chaperone and leave her clammy-handed guy behind. No hope of changing him either. He didn’t eat enough. That was one problem. Also, what if being with her made him nervous enough to cause his hands to drip with sweat?

Somewhere in Italy, she’d meet a tall, intriguing Englishman on vacation. They’d fall in love, and he’d take her to an opera by Puccini. They would go on short tours while Aunt Genie stayed in the hotel and sipped tea.

Only one problem kept her from finalizing the plans, from mailing her orders for tickets, from packing her trunk: money. If she could sell a manuscript with a substantial advance, she could proceed. Otherwise, she’d stay in Opal, marry George, and live her life of desperate resignation.

When the hall cuckoo announced five o’clock, Beth set aside her papers. Time to go downstairs and cook breakfast for the family. She filled the skillet with bacon. George always saved the best bacon and sliced it carefully for the DuBard family. He was an excellent butcher. Hmm, if she stepped out of the picture, that cute new girl at church—what was her name—Patricia might like going out with him.

Over breakfast, she told her family, “Maybe I should break up with George.”

Mom stirred cream into her coffee. “I thought you wanted children.”

“That’s what you need to do, Bethie.” Aunt Genie talked with a mouth full of bacon. “Write him a letter edged in black.”

Papa frowned. “Not so harsh, Argenta.”

“You’re right. We don’t want to lose access to the best bacon in town.” Aunt Genie reached for another slice.

When the three senior members of the family fell silent, Beth gained an opportunity to continue.

“I was considering. If I broke up with him, he might start courting that new girl, Patricia Evans.”

Mom poured coffee into her saucer. “That’s an excellent idea, but you know what could happen? If you see him with Patricia, she is kind of cute, you might feel jealous and be sorry.”

Afraid she would cry, she stood. “May I please be excused?”

Leaving the dishes to her mother and aunt, instead of helping clean the kitchen as she usually did, she gathered her supplies and shampooed her hair. The water from the rain barrel out back made her locks shiny and soft.

When she went back to her room, she latched the door and towel-dried her hair, then enjoyed the sensation of plaiting her hair in a French braid

She read a New Testament chapter and spent a few minutes of quiet, ending with a prayer. “Lord, I’m sorry about the way I’ve treated George. If I stop seeing him or if I continue to see him, I’ll feel guilty either way for being selfish unless you send me a sign.”

Next, she plopped her seat in a chair and made the keys of her typewriter fly.

At ten, she donned her hat and long-sleeved cotton smock to protect her arms and neck. “Mom, I’m going for a walk.”

The lane winding through the yard that stretched from the front of the house to the mailbox provided a pleasant place to stroll. Blue jays called back and forth as they scampered through the grass.

Beth played a little game with Papa she called showing-up-near-the-mailbox-when-the-postman-arrives. Some days she could beat Papa to the box, but most days he’d come from nowhere with a grin all over his face. Neither of them ran, and no one mentioned the game. It would make it seem that checking the mail was more important than it was.

She heard the postman’s automobile motor puttering along the road. Mr. Jolly, the RFD mail carrier, arrived at the roadside box at ten after ten.

Since the law required Mr. Jolly to put the mail in the box instead of in the recipient’s hands, it would be inappropriate to stand next to the mailbox. But today she didn’t want Papa to win. She was hoping to receive more responses from the acquisition editors to whom she’d sent proposals a month ago. She had a feeling it was her lucky day.

“You must be expecting some important mail.” Mr. Jolly shot one side of his mouth up in a quirk of a smile.

Heat flooded her face. The postman, always teasing her about her mail, made her look like a stupid little girl. It probably was against the law for him to humiliate her. He must have gone to the other houses and laughed with the neighbors about Sweet Pea DuBard—that’s what folks called her when she was a child. “Sweet Pea can’t find a man. She’s always looking for love in all the wrong places. Did you know she sends off manuscripts to publishers in New York City? I bet she writes love stories, but she don’t know nothing about romance.”

She waited politely for him to shift gears.

He inserted the mail into the box. “Morning, Mr. DuBard.”

Papa’s hand came from nowhere, reached into the box, and pulled out the bundle of mail. He reached into his pocket for his spectacles and positioned them on his nose. He held up the envelope. “A letter from Albert.”

Wheezing, Beth stood in humiliation. Papa was holding onto her mail, which could be rejection notices. Any second he’d hand her a letter, then see the tears slide down her face, and say, “It’s all right, baby girl.”

She was not a baby. At twenty-six, she was old enough to have published a novel or at least to have a husband and a child or two.

He removed his pocket knife, slit the envelope, and shook the letter open. “Let’s see.”

She couldn’t endure any more embarrassment. She turned around and eased toward the house. Her feet tripped along slowly, but her brain whirled with curiosity she dared not show.

“Come back, Beth.” Papa refolded his letter and sorted through the mail. “Let’s see if you have anything.”

Standing in front of him, she tried not to let him see her suffer.

Papa raised his eyebrows as he held up an envelope. “A letter to you from Uncle Albert.”

“That’s all?” Surely she had a rejection slip.

He thumbed back through the mail. “Oh, here you go.”

She grabbed the other letter, ripped it open, and turned toward the house. It was from a publisher—a tentative offer for a book. A book deal! Oh, to shout the news to her mother! But Aunt Genie would blab it all over town.

Beth drew in a calming breath and reread the letter. She had three weeks to revise her manuscript, and then the publisher would take another look. It was 83,000 words, and they wanted 90,000. Also, they demanded she cut out two main characters and change a location. They expected her to eliminate most of the adverbs. If she had nothing else to do, she could revise the manuscript within six weeks, but she had only three. Oh, and they wanted her to change the title. After all that, they’d look at it again. This was her big chance to succeed—her platinum opportunity. She wouldn’t do anything but work on the book, except to sleep when she had to. In two weeks, she’d have it ready to mail.

She proceeded to her next piece of mail. It was odd to get a letter from Uncle Albert. Papa had one too. She ripped hers open. Two keys and two tickets fell from the big brown envelope. Lifting the items from the ground, she saw that the tickets were dated for Tuesday, which was tomorrow. They were for the train to Taylorsburg.

She guessed she needed to read his letter. I’ve moved to Natchez. What about his newspaper and printing business? She read on. Inside the envelope, he’d enclosed a deed giving her his house and newspaper office, along with a statement saying the printing business and newspaper were her property.

This was big news. She just drew the Rook card of her life. Despite her urge to throw the letter into the air, run down the lane while she shouted as loud as her lungs would allow, she maintained a straight face.

How could Uncle Albert believe a woman, especially a skinny little slip of a woman, who had always lacked the courage to speak up for herself, could do this? He was demanding she move away from her mom and pop, manage a house, publish the newspaper, run a printing business, manage Aunt Genie....

Fluttering her eyes in the bright sunlight, she mumbled, “Uncle Albert believes in me. If he thinks I can do this, I can!”

All through lunch Papa stared at her but didn’t talk. She pushed peas around on her plate.

After lunch, her parents went upstairs for their accustomed siesta. She ran behind them. Before they had time to remove their outer clothing and bed down, she knocked on their door. She didn’t want to tell Aunt Genie any of her news, and she needed to discuss the possibility of taking Aunt Genie with her. No way would her father allow her to go off without taking a chaperone. This arrangement would give him an opportunity to move Genie out of the house.

Papa opened up his bedroom. “Come on in.”

“We were expecting you.” Mom seated herself in the rocking chair.

“You going?” Papa held his letter from Albert.

Beth turned her back to her parents and pressed her fist into her mouth. “Yes.”

Mama leaned forward. “You sound determined.”

“I’m sorry, Mama. I didn’t mean to sound harsh or ungrateful, but I need to do this.”

“Your mind is made up, girl. That’s good. No dilly dallying back and forth.”

“I need to take my manuscripts, but I suppose I’ll leave the typewriter here.”

“Albert probably left you one. If not, we’ll ship yours on the next train.” Papa made a note in his tablet.

Yawning, Mom turned the covers back on the bed. “We need a half hour’s nap, and so does Aunt Genie. Then I’ll spring the news on her and we’ll get packing.”

Well, is that all, Mom? All these years Beth had assumed her mother didn’t want her to leave home. Mom didn’t want Beth upstairs in the bedroom of her childhood but was too polite to tell her.

Couldn’t you at least shed a tear or two?

“Thanks.” Beth started to leave. “I have something else.”

“Oh?” Mama stared over her spectacles.

Beth tightened her lips to suppress a smile. “Smackover Publishers sent me a tentative offer to—”

“Oh, baby!” Mama jumped from her chair.

Both parents hugged her. “I have to fix things on my manuscript first. I’m going to be so busy. I don’t know if I can do all this.”

“God will give you strength.” Papa squeezed her.

“Got to get busy.” She left their room and climbed the stairs to the attic, where the dust made her breath rattle. Coughing in spasms, she almost fell on her trip back down the stairs. She crept to the kitchen, where she boiled some coffee and sucked a piece of peppermint.

Slow down, Beth, or you won’t get anything done. Mug of steaming coffee in hand, she went outside and sat on the garden bench, where she inhaled clean air.

“Enough of this.” Holding a fist full of skirt, she raced back up the stairs all the way to the attic. Coughing fits slowed her pace as she pushed the big trunk to the top of the stairs.

“Baby girl, let me get that for you.” Papa came to her rescue. “Where do you want this?”

“In the yard so I can clean off the dust.”

“Here. I’ll do this for you.”

“Thank you.”

When he reached the ground, he stopped and wiped the sweat from his face. “I’m glad you’re finally using this Louis Vuitton trunk your mother and I have been saving for you.”

“I was saving it for my honeymoon.” Beth talked as she dusted and coughed. “I’m sorry I kept it in the attic.”

“Yes, we thought you’d want to use it for a hope chest. You know, fill it with all kinds of needlework.”

“Too busy to do needlework, Papa.”

The afternoon flew as everyone joined into the panicky rush.

Mom wiped her face. “This is a madhouse, what with getting Genie’s things packed and placing all of Beth’s manuscripts in the trunk and packing Beth’s clothes. I don’t know how we’ll get it done. Besides all this, Beth needs to be writing, and I need to be talking with her because—” Mom dissolved into tears.

Beth stopped pulling underwear out of her bureau and placed her hands on her mother’s shoulders.

“I don’t know when I’ll see my sweet little girl again.”

Beth laughed.

“What’s so funny?” Mom wiped her face.

“I needed your tears, and I’m just happy to see them.”

The mother and daughter hugged and swung each other in circles.

Papa coughed. “Something stuck in my throat. Tell you what. I’ll stay home from deacons’ meeting tonight.”
Beth bit her lip. “Maybe I should postpone the move until I have a chance to talk to George.”    

Monday, July 17, 2017

How long is a good joke funny?


My dad told some funny stories when I was a young girl, and I still remember some of these. When they pass through my mind, I smile. Sometimes I chuckle.  My mother told some good ones too.

As I’ve written novels in the Covington Chronicles about life a little more than a century ago, a few scenes from my joyful youth have crept into the books. A few months ago, I decided it was time to try my pen at writing a book that was primarily humorous—House of Seven.

Even though I wanted it to be all funny, some of the characters took over and showed their outrage about social conditions. I cannot write without exposing humanity’s cruelty to fellow human beings. As a result, House of Seven contains satire.

Dictionary dot com defines satire as “a literary composition, in verse or prose, in which human folly and vice are held up to scorn, derision, or ridicule.”  Usually, I think of satire as poking fun of contemporary events, but House of Seven is historical.

When you read it, ask yourself this question: How does the cruelty in this book resemble the inhumane events in our current world?

If I think too hard, I notice that all jokes show something negative about some person or situation. Except for the obvious pokes at the meanness of some of the characters, the humor in my new novel is innocent and not meant to be unkind.

House of Seven is scheduled to be available by the end of July 2017.  I hope it makes you laugh.

Monday, July 10, 2017

House of Seven is coming soon, and I can't wait to share it with you.


House of Seven is the sixth Covington Chronicle. It is not necessary to read the five preceding books—Secret Promise, The Courtship of Miss Loretta Larson, The Dream Bucket, Manuela Blayne, and Travelers in Painted Wagons on Cohay Creek—before reading House of Seven.

Only one of the seven major characters. Cecil Canterbury, has appeared in the other novels. Although he has been a minor character in the other books, the time has come for him to fall in love. One man, Jacob MacGregor, the local store owner, shows up in all the Chronicles, but he is most often in the background. Other townspeople drift in and out of the books of the series but cause no difficulty in understanding the current book.
FINAL COVER

In each novel, comic relief brightens dark moments. Taking a different tone, House of Seven shows everyday life from a humorous perspective. Even though it is full of romance laced with mystery and adventure, it is primarily written to give the readers fun.

Even in a humorous novel, it is impossible to overlook the flaws in society of any given time. One of the most shameful acts committed by United States citizens—lynching—cannot be ignored. More often than we would like to admit, this brutal crime against humanity, veiled as vigilante law enforcement, has occurred throughout the nation, but mostly in the South. Men and women of various racial groups (most often African American men) hung from trees, sometimes with bonfires beneath them and sometimes with hundreds of gunshots fired around them.

Other aspects of everyday life find their places in the pages of House of Seven. Almost everyone faces the challenge of growing old. How does a family choose to deal with a loved one, especially one who has spent a lifetime saying unkind words? Compassion and forgiveness provide ways for the individual characters to grow with the passage of time.

Children didn’t have easy lives in the early twentieth century. There was a practice of paying postage for a child to be mailed unaccompanied with no one except the postman. Kidnapping and forced pickpocketing occurred when economic conditions challenged wicked men and women to make money in unsavory ways.

In House of Seven, an extended family focuses on laughter and the sweet side of life.