Wednesday, June 28, 2023

A Final Goodbye

I hope you all had a nice Father's Day last week.  Mine was a little different, although I got to spend it at the beach.

Cyndi and Bill picked me up Sunday morning and we drove to Wrightsville Beach in Wilmington. Along for the ride was a small vial of Stewart's ashes. Stewart was born and raised in Wilmington up until he joined the Navy, so it seemed fitting that he should be returned "Home." 

We met up with Bill's brother Art and his wife Helen who had arrived on Saturday, and together we formed a small community at the beach. Cyndi read a poem she had written for the occasion and I read some quotes that seemed appropriate for his "Homecoming." 

Then Art took the vial and returned its contents to the sea. Although Stewart is lying in peace in the Sand Hills Military Cemetery in Fayetteville, now a part of him is home where he belongs, where any good sailor should be, at sea.

We returned home Monday, knowing that Bill and Art finally had closure with their dad. Of Stewart's six children, only Bill and Art remain; he had outlived four of his children and now he is with them once again.

Rest in peace, Stewart.

Art and Bill
Helen and Art

                    


Cyndi and Bill
                                                        

Cyndi, Bill and Me





Art Returning Dad to the Sea




Quote of the Day: And when the day arrives I'll become the sky and I'll become the sea and the sea will come to kiss me for I am going home. Nothing can stop me now. Reznor


Thursday, June 1, 2023

Simon, Joan, and June

I trust you all are as thrilled as I am that we’re now in the month of June. June holds the promise of warm weather, sunshine, blue skies, summer, no coats, graduation, Father’s Day, weddings, and all things good. Hooray, it’s June!

I told you in my last blog that I was having a launch for my latest book, Restoring Simon, on May 20. I did have the launch and considered it a success—good people, good food, good sales.  My readers were three people from my writing group—Jim, Ellen, and Nancy, as well as my daughter Cyndi, and myself. 


Everyone did an excellent job of bringing my book to life. 
You can see from the pictures that my “trip” to Charleston has healed considerably. In fact, all that remains is still a little lump on my left wrist that no longer hurts. All’s well that ends well.
Cookies and Cake
Marble Cake
Book Display Table



Display Table with an actual WWI helmet that Jim provided

And speaking of Simon, the audio version is finished and will be available in a few days on Amazon. The narrator, Larry Sonderling, has narrated four or five of my books now, always doing a great job. He wrote me that he thinks Simon is the best of my books. The print and digital versions are available on Amazon and will soon be joined by the audio version.

So what am I doing now that that book is done? Silly you, I’m writing a new book, of course. This time, it’s about . . . a . . . (gulp) girl! I’ve avoided writing about girls for my last seven books. When I have such fine boys as Mark, Gary, Lou, Danny, Rob, Michael and Simon, why would I want to write about a prissy little girl? Good question. It seems my writing group suggested I write about a girl and even suggested who that girl might be.

If you read Testing Michael, then you read about the Civil War soldier Michael and Jim meet who turns out to be a woman passing herself off as a man. Her name is Joan. She is the subject of my new book, starting when she’s a little girl with three older brothers meaning she has to be tough if she wants to play with them. She’s not a prissy by any means. Wish me luck as I develop and flesh out her character and home life.

Dad's clock
Her father is a clockmaker around 1840 Connecticut and just doing research about clocks made me long to have the grandmother clock my dad made me fifty years ago running again. It hadn’t run or chimed in years so I called a clockmaker and yesterday he came and got it running for me. Hallelujia! I LOVE hearing it chime on the hour and the half hour. My dad would be happy. He made a few clocks, but mine was the first. And, I picked the clockmaker’s brain for information for my book while he was here. My book will be “Something” Joan. I’m a long way from coming up with the title, so stay tuned.

Quote of the Day:  Don’t watch the clock; do what it does. Keep going. Sam Levenson