Good Question!

The questioner had no idea! We were anticipating together Mississippi’s biggest lawn party scheduled for this Saturday, August 19. I mentioned that I had attended all eight of them except last year when I had Covid, even the ones during the pandemic that became virtual. She asked, “When you went to the first one, did you have any idea that you would ever be a panelist?”

Star Crossed

Star Crossed, by Heather Dune Macadam & Simon Worrall is a true and well-researched book, using personal letters and writings, documentary evidence, and long personal interviews with the subject’s sister Michelle. The book starts almost frivolously with a mixture of Romeo and Juliet, combined with a soap opera, mingled with a bohemian art group in Paris in 1941.

Cliches

“Avoid clichés like the plague.” I don’t remember when I first heard this writing advice, which you might notice is also a cliché. It goes so far back in my memory, I’m guessing it was from a high school English teacher. I had a couple of really good ones. Either Mrs. Bounds or Mrs. Olsen might have been the ones who impressed me with the saying early on.

Be Mine

In his newest novel, Be Mine, Richard Ford writes what sounds like a memoir as Frank Bascombe recounts a car trip with his son Paul. At 47, Paul has been diagnosed with ALS, called “Al’s” in their surprisingly light conversation. Seventy-four-year-old Frank has become the caretaker, though he is frequently interrupted with advice by phone from Paul’s sister Clarice who differs with her father’s decisions.

Glitches and Connections

The first road trip for Peter, as he publicized Becoming Ezra Jack Keats with me, held both glitches and connections. My sister Beth arranged for events near her new home in Atlanta and invited our other two sisters, Gwyn and Ruth, to join us. There would be a signing at Read It Again Book Store, a visit with residents in her new digs, and a meeting with her book club that had chosen my book for their June read.