A biography on Maeve Binchy just hit our library shelves, and I snatched it up. I think I read all her books and bought a few to reread. I remember when Minnie Driver was hired for the movie, Circle of Friends, my favorite of all the Binchy books and how displeased (but in a gracious way) Ms. Binchy was because heroine, Bennie, was a big girl and Minnie Driver wasn't. What I didn't realize but learned in the bio. was Ms. Binchy was six-foot tall and what Alexander McCall Smith would call, "traditionally built."
In reading the bio, I learned what a penny candle is (Light a Penny Candle), and also that not every author makes for an interesting biography. Ms. Binchy traveled a lot, partied a lot, and drank a lot. She lost her faith but, nevertheless, was buried with Catholic rites. More of her books were made into movies than were shown here, at least in the Puget Sound area--more's the pity. But here's the cool thing: she lives on in uTube and was a delightful speaker. It's easy to spend half-an-hour or so listening to a charming Irish brogue tell stories. Goodbye and God bless, Maeve Binchy, thanks for the many hours of good reading.
Tuesday, December 9, 2014
Monday, December 8, 2014
Christmas Traditions Warm the Heart by Betty Jo Schuler
Christmas Eve, late at night, my husband Paul and I pour a
glass of
wine, sit on the floor by our fragrant long-needled pine,
the room lit
only by the tree's soft lights, and exchange gift-wrapped
boxes
containing ornaments we bought one another. This tradition began
twenty-five years ago, the year we met, when he gave me a
breathtaking
bauble—a clear glass pear-shaped ornament containing a
partridge and a
pear tree. Every
Christmas Eve since, we've exchanged ornaments in a
special moment of quiet, peace, and love. A Candlelight Service at our
church, early in the evening, followed by family gift-giving
at my
mother's, sets the tone for this special night.
Our Christmas
tree, cut from the forest days earlier, is decked
with love and memories, and on this particular night, we
reminisce.
There's a tiny red-and-white striped stocking, yellowed over
the years,
that I bought the year my first son was born. (Paul wasn't a part of my
life then; we married when my youngest son was in high
school, but they
are like his own and he's a beloved stepfather.) A "God's Eye" made of
Popsicle sticks woven with yarn nestles in the branches, a
gift made by
our first grandson, his initials on the back, written in crayon.
Picture-frame ornaments with photos of other grandchildren,
when they
were small, evoke tender memories. A smiling ice cream cone, a gift
from my daughter and her husband, marks the sale of my first
published
children's book, Ice Cream for Breakfast. A china bell with shamrocks,
brought from Ireland, and a gold cross from Rome, are
mementos from my
youngest son and his wife's travels. Paul's and my trips are noted too,
and there are decorations given to us by his brother and
sister, and
mine, and my favorite cousin. Beaded candy canes and wreaths were made
by an aunt that's deceased.
And the lights that bubble
around the
bottom of our Christmas tree were purchased only a few years
ago, but
reminders of Paul's childhood, they still intrigue little
ones. The
quilted tree skirt, hidden by piles of gifts before our
family opening,
bears a large green S on a background of red and white—a
treasured gift
made by our daughter-in-law.
Our middle son and his wife gave us
appropriate ornaments for our interests, a golf club for my
husband and
a book for me.
The day we take
our ornaments, some shimmering, some dulled by the
years, from their boxes, is a special one at our house. Most of the
boxes are labeled with the date, and a description, but
others are
labeled in our minds.
And each year on the night before Christmas, we
reminisce.
Merriest
Christmas Ever by Betty Jo Schuler
Saturday, December 6, 2014
A Dog's Life by Gail Roughton (as told to her by Max Branan)
I used to be an only dog. I remember those days. Life was
good. Mine was the only food bowl on the floor. All the toys in the toy box
were mine. No other belly vied for attention when I rolled over on my back. The
last bite rule applied only to me. (The last bite of food any of my humans were
eating, I mean. You know, that last bite of anything that tastes so good? The
rule that it belongs to the dog, no matter how hungry the human is? Wanted to clarify that, didn’t want y’all to
think I was the one doing any biting.
I would never!) At least, I think I
remember those days. It was so long ago.
I’m Max, by the way. Max Branan. There’re eight humans in my
family, Mama and Daddy of course—y’all know her as Gail Roughton ‘cause she
writes under her maiden name, says it’s her love song to her daddy or some such—my
human sister, Becca, my human brothers Lee and Patrick, Becca’s husband Jason,
and Becca and Jason’s puppies, Austin and Kinsley. See, my birth Mom lived with
Becca and Jason and got herself in the family way. Becca didn’t believe it at
first because she said her dog didn’t do things like that. As if. What’d she
think my Mom was? A doggy saint? Anyway,
all my puppy brothers and sisters got new homes but I’m the one who lucked out,
‘cause Patrick picked me out of all ‘em
to bring back to Home Central.
Patrick did a search and told Mama that Max was the most
popular name for male dogs and Maya the most popular name for female dogs, but
that’s not why my name’s Max, un-uh. My name’s Max because about three days
after Patrick got me vaccinated up with all the puppy shot prelims at the vet’s
office and brought me home from Becca and Jason’s house I got sick. Real sick. So back to the vet I went and
they said I had that parvo thing. With a fifty-fifty shot of making it out of
the vet hospital alive. But I’m tough. I made it through with flying colors. And
when I went back home, Mama (that’s Gail Roughton to y’all) said I looked as
pitiful as the Grinch’s dog Max on the cartoon version of The Grinch That Stole Christmas. So that’s why I’m Max. No
popularity contest or anything involved. And boy, did they spoil me rotten or what?
So there I am. Dog heaven. I was about three, I guess. And then
Jason found this stray on the side of the road. He thought she was a German
Shepherd and probably a couple of months old. So he took her home. At first
Becca thought it’d be great to have a German Shepherd for their baby – Austin
wasn’t born yet, he came about two weeks after that – since my humans used to
have a big white German Shepherd they still talked about. Only problem was,
this gal liked to eat furniture. And she was scared of her own shadow and
didn’t know the meaning of the words “house-broke”. Well, Mama’s such a soft
touch. She took one look at her and then sent Patrick over to collect her. He
named her Maya. To go with Max. Not so much because it’s the most popular
female dog name as for the “M” thing.
And uh – by the way – German Shepherd, my wagging tail. As
near full Doberman as makes no never mind. Mama and Patrick knew it first time
they looked at her. The undocked tail and ears made everybody else hard to
convince, until they saw a Dobie with undocked tail and ears on Animal Planet. Then
they all yelled in amazement, “Hey! Maya’s a Dobie?!” Mama and Patrick just
rolled their eyes. She was already as tall as my stomach when she first walked
in the door and I ain’t no shrinking violet, I’m a fifty-five pounder myself. The
vet really blew it, too. Told my folks she’d be about fifty pounds full grown. Try
110 pounds last weigh-in. Maya’s Mama’s shadow. And I got to confess, yeah, I
fell in love too. Eventually. Oh, no hanky-panky or anything, both Maya and I
have made that trip to the vet, but yeah, I love the girl. Mainly because
Austin was born two weeks after Maya got to Home Central. And I liked the
little bundle of screams and wet diapers, don’t get me wrong, but Maya? Oh,
man, she fell in love. Took all my share of the eye pokes and pulled tail. All
I had to do was walk up and lick his face every now and then. That kid grew up
laying on her, sitting on her, standing on her. She loved it all. We got him
grown to darn near human size and what did Becca do? She brought in a brand-new
one and the whole thing started all over again. Though I got to admit, that
Kinsley’s a pistol. Her “Hiya!’ makes my tail wag, I just can’t stop myself.
Only thing about Maya is – you got to watch the sudden
noises. Mama knocked a kitchen chair across the floor once when she was
sweeping. And Maya – man, she moved like lightening. Next thing I know, she’s
sitting on Daddy’s lap on the sofa, all hundred plus pounds of her, with her arms wrapped around his neck! She looked
just like that Scooby-Doo character when he gets scared and jumps in Shaggy’s
arms, you know?
And then one Saturday night when Austin was about two,
Patrick came home from work and called Daddy out to his truck. Now, that was weird, right there, man, ‘cause in this
family, when anything’s wrong, you call Mama first. But I figured maybe his
truck engine was making a strange noise or something. Not. Daddy walked back in
and announced, “Patrick’s brought home a puppy.” Mama goes “For real?!” And Daddy says, “Oh, yeah. Says
he was sitting by his truck in the parking lot when he got off work. ” So
Patrick walks in with this little – and I mean little – bundle of black and white fur and sits it on the couch by
Austin. Austin says, “Baby!” Funny, he was only two, but he knew that was a
baby. Must be some universal baby language. Lee looked at Mama and said, “Did
it ever occur to you that there’s always
a baby something or other in this
house?” Mama looked pitiful and said, “Oh, yeah.”
Poor Mama. She got another shadow with that boy. Patrick
named him Murphy. Gotta keep that “M” thing going. He weighed maybe four pounds
but he thought he was a Great Dane. He didn’t bother me that much, all I had to
do was growl real low and he’d back off but Maya? Guess you can’t beat the
mother instinct. He was all over her.
All the time. Don’t know how that gal kept her sanity, if Austin wasn’t
climbing all over her, Murphy was. Sometimes both of ‘em together. And feisty? That
Murphy, he gets going, you’ll swear you need to call an Exorcist from the
sounds coming out of his mouth! He’s topped out at twenty-two pounds, so he’s
way the smallest of us, but dang, is he annoying sometimes! You can’t even lay
your head on a pillow! And he’s always all over
Maya!
Now, as a side note, I heard Mama tell Daddy, “Patrick
conveniently forgot about showing me a picture of a friend’s litter of puppies
on FaceBook a few weeks ago. Funny, how they were all little black and white
bundles of fur, just like Murphy. Found him in the parking lot, right! In a box
with a friend standing guard till Patrick got there!”
So there you have it. How I went from an only dog to a trio.
But it’s not so bad most times. I guess it’d be pretty boring if I just had my
humans. Like at Christmas, it’s kinda nice to have the two of ‘em in the middle
of things with me. Gets kinda irritating, that last bite of food having to be
split into three bites all the time, but still. Keeps me young. Hey Murphy!! Wait
up!! That’s my stuffed squirrel and I
don’t have all the stuffing out yet!!! Oh! And before I forget, you can check out Mama here--http://bookswelove.net/roughton.php She's on the computer a lot, and I'm told I and the rest of the gang might make an appearance in an upcoming book she's got brewing. Which would only be fair, I mean, we put a lot of effort into distracting her when she's been working too hard.
Labels:
books we love,
dogs,
family life,
Gail Roughton,
humor,
pets
Friday, December 5, 2014
Let's Open Just One by Ginger Simpson
“I think I hear sleigh bells,” my dad said every
Christmas even though he was Jewish and didn't believe in the "reason for the season." We'd scurry to our bedrooms
and pretend to be fast asleep. Being the
oldest of four, I knew Dad was the one who went outside and attempted to make
reindeer tracks in the dirt. We didn't
have a fireplace, so Santa had to come in through the door. The important thing was that he came.
How my mom and dad
managed to give us such joy and the very things we wanted each holiday season when the raft shop
where my dad worked at the local air force base paid ninety cents an hour escapes me now that I'm an adult and realize the cost of Christmas. We thought we were in hog heaven when he
brought home the canned rations packed as life-saving food for the misfortunates having to use the rafts. They were a special treat to us. Each one had a candy inside, and the crackers
weren't bad either. I can't recall a
time those special treats didn’t put a permanent smile on my face and joy
in my heart.
Although Dad didn't actually celebrate the birth of Christ, he was always the first
to shake the presents beneath the tree and search for gifts bearing his name. Although we continually vowed to wait until Christmas morning to open gifts, he
was always the culprit behind the “let’s open just one.”
Sure, one package turned into two, and before we knew it, we sat
amongst opened boxes and a landslide of wrapping paper, happy with what we'd
received, but disappointed that once again we'd failed to wait until
morning.
So the tradition
continues. Christmas eve is our family time to
celebrate, and I'm always urged on by my father’s voice in my head, telling me
now from heaven, “just open one. What
harm can it do?” Oh, we still have our
Christmas dinner on the day of, and as a Christian, I celebrate the birth of
Jesus, and I will be forever thankful for the parents he gave me...one Jewish and one Gentile.
We weren't rich in the financial sense, but in love we were
millionaires. I’d give anything to have any one of those Christmas Eves over again, and hear my Dad’s sweet voice talking
to me for real. He’s been gone for over
twenty five years now, but if you're listening Daddy, your “not so” little girl
loves you and the legacy of respect and determination we gained from you. I miss you still. You remain my heart, and in your
honor, I'll always open 'just one' on Christmas Eve…or maybe we'll open them all.
Hope you have memories that warm your heart.
Happy Holidays from the Simpson Family.
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