Being baseball fans runs in our family from generation to generation. How and why we choose our teams varies.
We're Back - Sort of
The Great Passion
I couldn’t turn down an offer from Bloomsbury to send an advance reading copy of the historical fiction account of Johann Sebastian Bach’s composition of the “St Matthew Passion” in 1727. James Runcie, in The Great Passion, uses the reality of Bach’s faith and proficiency and the known people who surrounded his work and creates a story that feels true.
Last Trip?
These steps recall a journey that began right here twenty years ago. In the early part of 2002, I climbed for my first time. I had heard about the extensive de Grummond Children’s Literature Collection in a kiddie lit class and wanted to see for myself. I had no idea as I entered the McCain Library how big it would become in my life.
Honeybee Rescue
Try Again
Back to The Place
Lessons in Chemistry
100 Years and Counting
Not a Snake Doctor
My first memory of a dragonfly came when I was about six years old. As the oldest grandchild, I accompanied my uncle, who was nine years older, when he took the wheelbarrow down to the artesian spring to retrieve the watermelons Papaw had placed there for the ritual afternoon cutting on the long front porch.
Second Banana
Puppet to Protagonist
I Plan, God Laughs
I heard the old adage in my title a while ago, but this week turned out to be a perfect example. My project editor at University Press of Mississippi (UPM) for Becoming Ezra Jack Keats had alerted me that the copy editor would be finished with her work on the manuscript-in-progress and have it to me by June 16.
Hazard
Doing Things Right
Feeling comfortable wandering around in my local library has been one of the perks of being well-vaccinated with coronavirus numbers going down. This week after two years of ordering ahead and picking up at the window, I was really pleased to go inside and see that Oak Grove Public Library is getting things right.