In previous blog posts, I’ve mentioned that my husband and I gather once a year at our cabin with our friends from way back – Randy and Peggy Hamann and Sue and Kris Mestad. This too-long year, 2020, corona-virus year, Rick and I self-isolated ourselves as much as possible from others and decided that we’d quarantined ourselves safely enough for our friends to venture a risk and come to the cabin. They had also done self-isolating. In June 2020, Kris and Sue were supposed to be on a 17-day trip through the French Riviera and Italy. Their plans were squashed…
Read MoreA SWEET AU REVOIR TO 2019, HELLO TO 2020, AND MY WORD FOR THE YEAR: PRACTICING
Happy 2020 New Year, friends! 2019 had its tough moments, such as receiving middle-of-the-nights calls that my mom had fallen. She had a tough year, fracturing her right hip three times, but is doing much better and loving living near my brother, Steve, and his wife, Debbie, at her new home at Praha Village in New Prague. But, 2019 is a year I’ll store in my heart for always. It was a year where I learned (make that, practiced) bridge (“Relax,” my fellow bridge players constantly say, but the pressure is real! I love the game and the women I’ve…
Read MoreWONTON TOMAYTAH
The pressure upon left-handed people is that they’re supposed to have a natural-born tendency to be creative, artsy, and have a flair for all those things of which those who favor using the opposite hand do not. We lefties, it’s presumed, should have it easier at a) singing, b) acting or c) speaking another language. Not one to shy away from trying something, I gave them all a go. My only solo came when I was four years old and Mom said I’d been “chosen by our church’s Mother-Daughter Banquet committee” to sing a song. I chose to serenade the women,…
Read MoreNICE, FRANCE AND THE WINNER OF EBOOK GIVEAWAY
Thinking about Nice, France today and the horribleness of the terrorist attack along the Promenade Des Anglais. Eighty-four people were killed by a madman, at least 10 of them children, on Bastille Day 2016. This image is a symbol of my heart going out to France and those who grieving. Hard to announce the winner of the ebook giveaway in light of France’s tragedy. But I do want to thank of you who who left comments for a chance to win Sue Russell’s latest release, An Iron Yoke. It was meaningful that so many people read this blog post. Sue…
Read MoreAN INTERVIEW WITH BRITISH AUTHOR SUE RUSSELL OF KENT COUNTY, UK
In the course of doing research on British novelist Sue Russell, I learned of her having played the piano for a ballet school, scrubbed steps in hospitals, volunteered as a Samaritan for 17 years, and taught English in Indonesia. But what fascinated me most, from a writer’s viewpoint, was discovering Sue knew she wanted to be a writer when she was a young girl. I couldn’t help but smile when I read that by 12 she had a handful of rejection slips. Ahh, to quote another British writer, Jane Austen, the half agonies and half hopes of a writer. Decades later, Sue’s friends put up a challenge.…
Read MoreDay 8 Favorite Movie Line for Moments in May 2015 Challenge
“Fester and rot.” Kate to Luc in French Kiss The romantic comedy French Kiss released in 1995. I can hardly believe the movie’s twenty years old. The film is perfectly cast and allows the stars’ talents to shine. It stars Meg Ryan, who plays Kate, a jolted young woman who flies to France, determined to win back her fiancée (Timothy Hutton), and Kevin Kline, who plays Luc, a Frenchman who is cunning and highly motivated to help Kate on her quest. The wonderful Jean Reno also plays an important role in this delightful film. While there are many quotable lines…
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