All posts by Kathy Pooler

Writer’s Digest Conference East 2013 Take-aways: You Already Have Everything You Need

Posted by Kathleen Pooler/@kathypooler

“Think of the readers who will love your story and believe that you already have everything you need to get your story to them” Tayari Jones, Author of Silver Sparrow and closing keynote speaker for The Writer’s Digest East Conference in NYC, 4/7/13

Writer’s conferences are a wonderful way to learn your craft, update yourself on industry trends and network with like-minded people. I usually find I get out what I put in and what I found in New York City at this year’s Writer’s Digest Conference was magical. Since this is my third WD conference, I went  prepared to hone in on my specific needs–memoir revision, pitching, networking and listening to agents and publishers speak to ever-changing publishing options.

Two main take-aways:

1. Traditional and self-publishing are here to stay and can work together in peaceful coexistence with the emergence of hybrid publishing developing where an author chooses the combination of publishing options.

2. The changing role of the literary agent where “new routes to productivity and profit need to be explored” (Kristin Nelson, Literary Agent for Hugh Howey, Author of Wool. )

For a detailed discussion of this, please see Porter Anderson’s Ether for Authors, “Who is Pitching Whom”

In the end, it seemed to all boil down to putting your energies into writing a good story. Writing is the only way you will get published.

Here’s a few nuggets I gathered to share with you:

Photo Credit "Treasure Chest-250" uploaded form Flickr Creative Commons
Photo Credit “Treasure Chest-250” uploaded form Flickr Creative Commons

*  “When doing a reading of your work, create curiosity in the reader by reading from a point of high drama. Honor your work by letting it speak for itself.”  Journalist/Critic/Writer/Speaker Porter Anderson, Public Speaking for Writers: How to Turn Reading Into Book Sales Boot Camp

*  ” Be an author entrepreneur. Agents are partners with writers. The role is shifting and there are no gatekeepers.” Panel on The Future of Publishing

*  ” Break into the market by pitching smaller magazines before pitching big magazines. Do a few short items first to establish credibility. Try online. Don’t pitch a story idea ,write a brilliant essay.” Panel on How to Write for Big Name Publications.

*   ” Write from your true self–get in touch with that self. You are a river that is ever flowing and craft is the riverbank. Marry craft to self.” Author and #1 Bestselling Writing Coach James Scott Bell , Opening Keynote Speaker

*   “Readers need to bond with and care about the protagonist in the first paragraph; set up the protagonist’s character traits within the first five pages.” Literary Agent /Author Donald Maass, Creating the Greatest Characters of Your Career

*   ” In revision, ask: what is the story? the theme?do the scenes tie in with the theme and move the plot along? What needs more work? Don’t let the perfect be the enemy of the good.” Editor, Cheryl Klein

*    ” Generate your own work by listening to your own voice- only 2% comes from authentic self; count words; don’t try to organize at first. Think Scene, Series (meaningful repetition and variation) and  Theme.” Author/Founder, Book Architecture, Stuart Horwitz, The First Draft- Revision Demystified

*     “Become a servant to your reader. Your story is waiting to be read. Get it done- no excuses.” Author Adriana Trigiani, Central Keynote Speaker, Your Writing Life.

*     “Three things you need to write a successful memoir: Strong writing voice; Narrative hook –Remember SMILE- shocking, memorable, inspiring, loving, entertaining– and Author platform.” Literary Agent /Author Regina Brooks, Serendipity Literary Agency LLC, You Should Really Write A Memoir

*    “We live in a 140-character world. Your first ten pages have to sing.” Literary Agent Paula Munier, The First Ten Pages.

***

Questions agents asked during the Pitch Slam where we had two minutes to pitch our story to literary agents and one minute for their response:

How is your story unique in the market?

What is your author platform?

What is your narrative arc?

What is your purpose for telling your story?

Why would I want to read your story?

Who is your audience?

What is your marketing plan?

***

I left the conference feeling motivated and committed to keep writing as well as uplifted by the efforts of all in the publishing industry to keep moving forward, despite the digital disruptions and unknowns ahead.

 

How about you? If you’ve been to a writer’s conference, what take-aways do you have to share? Please leave your comments below~

 

Next week: The Face of Alzheimer’s Dementia: A Memoir Moment

 

Interview with Memoir Author Linda Kovic-Skow: “French Illusions” Book Tour

Posted by Kathleen Pooler/@kathypooler

“The World is a book, and those who do not travel read only a page.” -Saint Augustine

I am very pleased to feature Memoir Author Linda Kovic-Skow in her book tour for her memoir, French Illusions. Leaving your homeland when you are twenty-one years old and traveling to France to work as an au pair without knowing a bit of French can lead to a very intriguing story. Not only was I captivated by her story but I felt I was there with her experiencing France for myself. My book reviews are on Amazon and Goodreads.

Welcome, Linda!

Memoir Author Linda Kovic-Skow
Memoir Author Linda Kovic-Skow

KP: Can you tell us a little about your memoir?

 

LKS: In the summer of 1979, when I was twenty-one, I contracted to become an au pair for a wealthy French family in the Loire Valley. To secure the position, I pretended to speak the language, fully aware that my deception would be discovered once I arrived at my destination. Based on my diary, French Illusions captures my often challenging, real-life story inside and outside the Château de Montclair. The over-bearing, Madame Dubois, her accommodating husband Monsieur Dubois, and their two children are highlighted as I struggled to adapt to my new environment. Continually battling the language barrier, I signed up and attended classes at the local university in the nearby town of Tours, broadening my range of experiences. When I encountered, Adam, a handsome young student, my life with the Dubois family became more complicated, adding fuel to my internal battle for independence.

 

KP: What compelled you to write this story after thirty-three years?

 

LKS: About four years ago, after my husband and I dropped our youngest daughter off at college, I went through a sort of mid-life crisis. I missed being a mom and I wondered how I would fill the void. Sure I had my part-time bookkeeping business, but it consumed only a few hours a day and it wasn’t interesting any more. Something was missing, but what?

 

This prompted me to review what I like to call my “mid-life list.” This is similar to a “bucket list,” with an important twist. The idea was to refocus myself and figure out the things I wanted to do with my life in my fifties – while I could still do them. My list was short.

 

-Learn to play the piano

-Travel to Africa to see the elephants

-Travel to Tahiti and see the island of Bora Bora

-Travel back to France (with my family this time)

-Write a book

 

At the time, I didn’t own a piano and, with two daughters in college (on the east coast no less!), I couldn’t afford a trip to Africa or Tahiti. I had already traveled back to France in 2001 with my family, so that left me to examine the fifth item on my list more closely.  If I did write a book, would it be fiction or non-fiction? What genre would I choose?

 

The answers to my questions came to me in the shower (which is where many of my ideas seem to materialize, strangely enough). I decided to hunt down my diary from my au pair adventure in France and compose a memoir. It took me three years and countless hours to write French Illusions, but now I can scratch another item off my mid-life list.

 

KP: Can you tell us about some of the difficulties you experienced writing your memoir?

 

LKS: I have to admit writing my memoir was a lot more complex than I initially imagined it would be. My diary offered a great outline, but I realized early on that I would have to change the names of people and places in my story to protect identities. This was especially true with regard to my host au pair family. Acquiring permission from them was out of the question. Totally out of the question. I mean it. Read my book and you’ll understand. Additionally, over thirty years had passed since I spoke with anyone I’d met in France. I no longer had any contact information. With this in mind, I researched common French names that might fit my characters. I tried them out and retained the ones that were a good fit.

 

Other decisions haunted me along the way. Where will I find elusive data on the  Loire Valley, the Loire River and the town of Tours? How should I deal with the French sprinkled throughout the book? Should I italicize my inner thoughts? Oh, and I really struggled with how much detail to include in my own love scenes. This was probably the most challenging dilemma of all.

 

KP: Is there an excerpt you would like to share?

 

LKS: It’s difficult to choose one excerpt, but I’m proud of the detailed picture I paint of a French baker in Songais.

 

“I watched as the other woman, maybe in her eighties, kneaded a large ball of dough at a table on the other side of the display window. Her gnarled fingers pulled and rolled the dough, adding flour until it gained the right consistency. At one point, she stopped to scratch her face , leaving a smudge of flour on her cheek. As I followed Madame out the door, our eyes met, her grin transforming her face from serious to radiant.”

 

KP: What’s a typical weekday like for you?

 

LKS: I start my day about 8:30 in the morning with a generous cup of coffee. After I check emails, I attend to book business for a few hours – promotions, research, my blog or twitter. At certain times of the month, I meet with clients or perform tasks associated with my bookkeeping business. Often, in the afternoon, after lunch, I walk the dog, run errands or write. I can’t sit for long or my neck hurts, so I switch back and forth between my desk and a standing computer station. Late in the day, my husband arrives home from work and that signals a break for dinner. After a few more hours writing at the computer, I finally shut things down at around nine o’clock. Ahhh, a glass of wine usually helps me unwind.

 

KP: Does your book have a hidden message for readers?

 

LKS:Set in the beautiful Loire Valley, French Illusions, my remarkable true story, will remind readers what it was like to be young, adventurous and filled with dreams. It’s not too late to create your own memories so go out and explore the world.

Life’s for living, after all.

 

Thank you Linda for sharing your adventuresome,romantic and intriguing memoir writer’s journey with us.

 

 

French Illusions Book Cover
French Illusions Book Cover

 

-Purchase information for my book at Amazon: Amazon

 

Author’s Bio:

Linda Kovic-Skow resides in Kirkland, Washington. She earned an Associate Degree in Medical Assisting in 1978 from  North Seattle Community College and a Bachelor of Arts in Business Administration from Seattle University in 1985. She has been married for 27 years and has two daughters. An enthusiastic traveler, Linda also enjoys boating, gardening and socializing with friends. French Illusions, her debut memoir, is the culmination of a three-year project.  

For more information, visit http://lindakovicskow.com/. Watch the book trailer, it’s a lot of fun

 

 

How about you? Do you have a daring story to tell?

 

Linda will give away a free copy of her memoir to a random commenter.

 

We’d love to hear from you. Please leave your comments below~

 

Next Week: “The Face of Alzheimer’s Dementia:  A Memoir Moment”

 

 

 

 

 

Why “Wild” Works: Memoir Writing Tips

Posted by Kathleen Pooler/@kathypooler

 

“Don’t tell me the moon is shining; show me the glint of light on broken glass.” Anton Chekov

 

 

Wild Book Cover by Cheryl Strayed
Wild Book Cover by Cheryl Strayed

 

 

Sometimes, our greatest teachers are found on the pages of a book. That’s what happened to me when I read Cheryl Strayed’s memoir, Wild as it apparently has for many others.

 

#1 New York Times bestseller since its 2012 release, it holds many memoir writing tips.

 

So, I set out to look at what Cheryl does to captivate my attention, keep me turning the pages and then leave me with the sense that I have not only accompanied her on her journey but I have experienced a connection to my own journey.

 

Wild is a story within a story of a twenty-six year old woman who decides to take a hike along the Pacific Crest trail in the wake of her mother’s sudden and untimely death from cancer, her failed attempts to bring her siblings together after her death and a divorce from a man she loves but does not feel capable of relating to in a mature, committed way. The fact that she is an inexperienced and ill-equipped hiker further adds to the drama and tension of the journey.

 

Strayed weaves in her inner and outer struggles seamlessly, tapping into universal themes throughout the story. I found myself grieving over the potential loss of my own mother; I could almost feel the pain in my feet as she recounted the blisters that develop from poorly-fitting hiking boots and I marveled at her ability to walk alone through snake and bear-infested trails. With raw honesty, she reflects on her own flaws and needs in a way that makes me root for her.

 

I was spellbound by this book.

 

Here’s are the lessons I take away from reading “Wild “:

The author:

 

  • Transforms real-life events into a story that matters by tapping into universal issues: death of a parent, divorce, grief, regrets, hiking alone on a trail.

 

  • Reflects upon the meaning of the experiences by weaving in the voice of innocence and the voice of experience. By sharing her inner thoughts about her losses, I feel her deep pain and understand why she took off by herself to try to sort it all out.

 

  • Uses graphic sensory details to bring the reader into the story. Not only do I feel the blisters on my feet but I experience thirst when her water supply is dwindling and the water tank on the trail is dry. I nearly gasp out loud when her boot goes sailing into the precipice below. And,oh those rattlesnakes…

 

  • Conveys the meaning of the story clearly through the theme of searching for self after devastating losses and regrets.

 

  • Develops multidimensional, believable characters whom I can see and  root for or disdain, like the two bow hunters she meets on the trail and has a “creepy” feeling about: “They both looked in their midthirties. One man was sandy-haired and wiry, though he had a little belly; the other was a redhead tall and meaty enough to be a linebacker. They both wore jeans with big buck knives hitched onto their belts and enormous backpacks that had bows and arrows slung across them.”

 

  • Uses fiction techniques effectively. She writes in scenes using sensory detail, dialogue, conflict, tension, a defined plot that moves along at a steady pace.

 

  • Crafts a beginning, middle and end. I see the reason for her hike, feel the rising action of hiking it alone with dangers everywhere from wild animals to temperature extremes, snow-covered mountains, questionable human predators and come full circle with her to the end of her hike where she sees her life with new eyes. Tranformation.

 

Speaking of craft, Cheryl has admitted taking a long time to write her memoir. She took the hike in 1995 and her memoir was released in 2012. When asked in an interview why it took her so long to write, she replied:

For a number of reasons. It took me years of apprenticing myself to the craft before I could write a book. Once I did that, the story I most urgently had to tell was the one I told in my first book, Torch. I don’t write about something unless I feel a stirring inside of me to do so and it wasn’t until 2008 that I felt that in relation to my experience on the PCT. I think the years between my hike and writing about it made for a better book. I gained perspective that I wouldn’t have had if I’d written about it immediately.”

 

  • Writes from a position of strength and perspective by allowing time and emotional distance to guide her story.

I have heard that a good memoir:

       *invites the reader into a personal experience ,

       *keeps him/her engaged throughout and

       *provides a level of satisfaction at the end.

 

Isn’t that something we all want to do for ourselves and for our readers?

 

I am grateful to Cheryl for inviting me into her world and showing me how she faced and overcame her life challenges. Not only did I enjoy her story but I learned some important tips about memoir writing.

***

The National Association of Memoir Writers is co-sponsoring a workshop with Cheryl Strayed June 1, 2013 in Petaluma, CA. Click the link to sign up for the great opportunity to work with Cheryl.

Learn from the New York Times bestseller about how to write a successful memoir!

 

Workshop Schedule (subject to change):

8:30 Continental Breakfast
9:15 Welcome and opening remarks.
9:45 Introduction
10:00 Talk & First Writing Session
11:00 Sharing Q&A
12:30 Lunch
2:00 Craft Talk & Second Writing Session
3:30 Sharing and discussion
4:00 Reading 4:30 Q&A
5:00 Book Signing & Close

 

 

How about you?  Have you read Wild?  If so, what lessons did you take away?

 

 

Announcement: Congratulations, Debi Wandrey! Your name was selected in a random drawing of commenters to receive Barbara Techel’s memoir, Through Frankie’s Eyes: One Woman’s Journey to Authenicity and the Dog on Wheels Who Led the Way.

 

 

Next Week: Memoir Author Linda Kovic-Skow will discuss her memoir, French Illusions. Linda will give away a free copy of her memoir to a commenter whose name will be selected in a random drawing.

 

 

 

 

 

 

How Vulnerability Can Be A Beautiful Gift in Memoir Writing: A Guest Post by Barbara Techel

A guest post by Barbara Techel @joyfulpaws posted by Kathleen Pooler/@kathypooler

 

“And the day came when the risk to remain tight in a bud was more painful than the risk to let it blossom.”Anais Nin

 

I am very happy to feature Memoir Author Barbara Techel  again this week.  As you may remember, Barbara touched us all with her guest post on “Evolving Spiritually Through the Love of Animals” last August. Barbara has just released Through Frankie’s Eyes: One Woman’s Journey to her Authentic Self and the Dog on Wheels Who Led the Way, a lovely testimony to her genuine love of animals with a focus on Frankie and how she inspired so many. My reviews can be found on Amazon and Goodreads. (Tissue alert: You will fall in love with Frankie.)

 

Welcome back, Barbara!

Memoir Author Barbara Techel
Memoir Author Barbara Techel

 

 

The quote by Anais Nin really resonates with me. It reminds me of a time over seven years ago when I could no longer stay in the comfortable place I was. I wanted more. But I was also scared. I didn’t know if I could go outside of my comfort zone—to be vulnerable loomed large in front of me.

Frankie's spirit live son through Wheelchair Joie while Kylie watches in the background
Frankie’s spirit lives on through Wheelchair Joie while Kylie watches in the background.

 

 

As I wrote my memoir, I realized I was beginning a process to open myself to being vulnerable. As I wrote my story, I found myself crying at times as I let the words spill across the page. I also found myself worrying once again what others may think of me when they read my book. Would they disagree? Would they be mad? What would they think?

Each day I’d show up to do the work— and continue the writing. Each day that I did, I felt a small piece of myself heal. I also felt myself beginning to bloom in unimaginable ways. I started to believe in myself. I started to feel more comfortable in my own skin. I felt like I was a flower beginning to slowly open my petals to possibilities.

I was beginning to feel the warm embrace around my heart of finally accepting who I am.

In late May my memoir was written. I had done it! It was now time for the editing stage and fine tuning to begin.  I was rejoicing in the fact I had let myself be open to the page and let my feelings wash over many chapters. I was well on my way to releasing my story to the world.

Then something happened that stopped me in my tracks. Someone I loved dearly, core to my story, passed away. I couldn’t even think about pushing my book out into the world. I needed time to grieve.

Something that became very clear to me through this process was that I was once again vulnerable. It never truly leaves us, but comes in waves at different times in our lives.  I was feeling vulnerable because of the deep pain and grief I was feeling for my loss. All I wanted to do was swim in the sadness.

I was also feeling unconfident because everything I had planned in regards to when I thought my story would be published was now unknown. Now I didn’t know when my book would find its place in the world. As I moved through the days and weeks, I began to realize I would indeed fulfill my dream of finishing my book. I still didn’t know when, but the confidence I had gained in writing my memoir, gave me a knowing and trust in myself that I would eventually publish it. I believed in my process and I knew I wouldn’t let myself down.

Though the unknown felt vulnerable I called on my faith to carry me through.

That day finally came. It was all Divine timing. My book was now edited, the book cover design done, and layout complete. As I sat holding the finished book in my hand I marveled at the accomplishment. I never felt more ready. Or so I thought.

Once again I faced the feeling I thought I could escape.  The feeling of putting yourself out into the world baring your struggles, your feelings, and your heart, made vulnerability appear again.  As I asked for endorsements and reviews, I knew I’d have to send my book to each perspective reviewer. Oh, how my fingers trembled as I hit the send button. And then I waited.

I sat in the discomfort of feeling yet again, vulnerable—sometimes for a fleeting moment, but at other times it lingered for days. Then one day I recalled the Anais Nin quote.

The place I was before, afraid to go out of my comfort zone, was actually more painful than the risk I was taking in sharing my story and opening myself up to others.

The best part of being vulnerable is that I realize no matter what anyone else may think or say about my book, I know I did the work. I know I put every bit of my soul into my writing. I know in my heart of hearts I want to inspire others— I want to continue to make a difference.

This is where vulnerability is an amazing beautiful gift. For if we welcome it with open arms, it will take us not only to a new place of healing for ourselves, but quite possibly help someone else to do just the same.

 

 

Through Frankie's Eyes Book Cover
Through Frankie’s Eyes Book Cover

 

Author’s Bio:

Barbara Techel is a passionate advocate for dogs with Intervertebral Disc Disease (IVDD) and dogs in wheelchairs. She is also passionate about helping others see their challenges in a positive way. After her dachshund, Frankie suffered a spinal injury she was custom-fitted for a wheelchair and Barbara realized the beautiful opportunity she had to spread a positive message that animals with disabilities can and do live quality lives if given a chance.

In her newest book, “Through Frankie’s Eyes” she takes you on a journey that led her to live her own truth and live with more joy, all because of what Frankie was teaching her along the way.

In August 2012 she founded National Walk ‘N Roll Dog Day in memory of Frankie and in honor of all dogs in wheelchairs. She also started the Frankie Wheelchair Fund which helps dogs who need wheelchairs whose families may not be able to afford them, or for dogs in rescue.

She is the award-winning author of the children’s book series “Frankie, the Walk ‘N Roll Dog” which are true, inspirational stories about her paralyzed dachshund. Frankie teaches us that no matter our challenges, we can persevere with a positive attitude. And despite our challenges we can each give back in our own, unique way. Frankie is Wisconsin Pet Hall of Fame Companion Dog.

Barbara’s books have received National Best Book for children’s picturebook, Merial Human-Animal Bond award, Editor’s Choice from Allbooks Review, Indie Excellence finalist and Indie Excellence winner.
Frankie’s story also appears in “Every Dog Has a Gift” by Rachel McPhearson, published by Penguin/Tarcher March 2010 and “Dogs and the Women Who Love Them: Extraordinary True Stories of Love, Healing and Inspiration” by Linda and Allen Anderson published Fall 2010 by New World Library (recommended by Oprah’s O Magazine).

Also featured in Woman’s World magazine, The American Dog, Dog Living magazine, USAToday.com and AOL PawNation.

Barbara can be reached at:

www.joyfulpaws.com

www.twitter.com/joyfulpaws

www.facebook.com/joyfulpaws

 

Thank you, Barbara, for showing us how vulnerability can be a gift!

 

Even Max. our Golden boy, enjoys reading about Frankie
Even Max. our Golden boy, enjoys reading about Frankie

 

How about you? What has helped you deal with the vulnerability that comes with writing? Do you see it as a gift?

 

Barbara will give away a free copy of Through Frankie’s Eyes to a random commenter.

 

We’d love to hear from you. Please leave your comments below~

 

 

 

This Week: I am also still over at Lorenzo’s blog with a guest post, ” Defining Moment: Where Will Your Memoir Begin?” and at Victoria Johnson’s blog with a guest post on “Creative Space”

 

 

 

 

Next Week: “Why Wild Works: Memoir Writing Tips

 

Finding My Hope in Philly: A Memoir Moment

Posted by Kathleen Pooler/@kathypooler

” For I know the plans I have for you,” declares the Lord,”plans to prosper you and not to harm you; plans to give you hope and a future.” Jeremiah 29:11

 

How does hope work in your life?

 

Hope through faith is a powerful theme in my life and in my memoir-in-progress. Sometimes, it wavers though and I need a little boost. My weekend in Philly with Susan Weidener and the Women’s Writing Circle proved to be just what I needed to get that boost.

 

When Susan invited me to present a workshop on journaling for the Women’s Writing Circle, I was honored and excited for the opportunity. I had taught many nursing workshops in my career but this would be my first writing workshop. Boy, was I in for a treat.

 

Susan and I met on LinkedIn –therein lies the power of the internet for making meaningful connections– when I shared a blog post on using fiction writing techniques in memoir. I was intrigued by one of her comments about standing in your truth and decided to read her memoir, Again in a Heartbeat which I loved for its gripping honesty and universal hopeful message of life after loss. Then I read the sequel, Morning at Wellington Square about finding one’s purpose after a loss, which I also loved.

 

When I learned more about the Women’s Writing Circle and Susan’s work with helping women find their voices, I visualized myself being a part of the group. My memoir-in-progress is about all the self-defeating detours I took because I hadn’t found my voice. I was 43- years-old when I did. Better late than never.

 

In the meantime, I was planning a trip to visit my 96-year-old aunt in a Wayne, PA nursing home and was running into one snag after the next.

 

Before I knew it, Susan had invited me to co-facilitate this workshop that was near my aunt’s nursing home.

 

It really does pay to dream.

 

Friday, Susan picked me up at the Paoli train station –actually more of a pit stop with a small wooden platform and a few folding chairs. But I noticed, it even had a library:

 

Library at Paoli,PA train stop
Library at Paoli,PA train stop

 

 

We drove to see Aunt Glenna at the nearby nursing home and had a lovely two-hour visit:

 

 

Visiting with Aunt Glenna

 

The workshop was on Saturday and I was excited to meet the women in person as I felt I had already “met” them through their engaging and poignant stories and poems in The Slants of Light anthology which will be launched in the Spring:

 

Cover for Slants of Light Anthology, available soon.
Cover for Slants of Light Anthology, available soon.

 

The workshop was filled with heartfelt sharing and writing. As a teacher, I have always been amazed at how much I learn and grow through the process of teaching and this workshop was no exception.

 

After discussing journaling tips, the healing benefits of journaling and journaling tools, we split up into pairs, wrote from writing prompts then shared our writing with our partner. After lunch, we gathered in the circle to share our writing with the entire group.

 

Next to a vase of coral-colored roses, a cylindrical white candle  burned atop a lace-draped small round table in the center to honor the sacredness of our words and stories.

 

As I listened, I experienced heartfelt connections to the stories of the other women. It was a testimony to the power of women’s voices in sharing, connecting and healing.

 

Susan and I at the Women's Writing Circle Journaling Workshop 2/23/13
Susan and I at the Women’s Writing Circle Journaling Workshop 2/23/13

 

I have mentioned the heartbreak of a son who struggles with substance abuse, a story that is always close at heart. So the prompt I chose during the writing exercise which led to this letter to my son, B was “One reason I get sad is” …

…sometimes knowing you are still struggling with who you  are and where you fit  into the world. When I visualize you, I see your many talents; your sensitivity; your dark, dancing eyes; your generous heart.

I see the four-year-old boy who shared his dripping orange popsicle with his little friend, Becky while the two of  sat at the end of the driveway one hot summer afternoon.

I see the seven-year-old rascal at the top of the pine tree, waving your hands above your head, “Look Ma, no hands” as I watched in terror and frustration, trying to coax you down.

I see the kind and loving 10-year-old reaching out to hold the hand of an elderly nursing home resident during a school trip.

I look up at the gangly 13-year-old young man with the crackly voice before you darted off to joke and spar with your friends.

And I wonder, where did it all go so wrong?

What happened to that precious son of mine who now sits in his apartment, alone,and struggles day-to-day to make some sense of the life he hasn’t had? Who looks back at the lost opportunities and dreams and mourns his path?

With fierce mother love, I hang on to hope;

hope that you will reconnect with that little boy within who has so much innate goodness and worth;

hope that you will begin to see  yourself as I see you- healthy, whole and still filled with promise.”

 

After hearing my story and knowing I would be meeting B during a two-hour layover at Penn Station, the women of the Circle encouraged me to read it to him.

I wasn’t sure what I would do.

Although, we’d been in contact, I hadn’t seen B in thirteen months. He met me as planned and I did read him the story, after giving him a big hug and sitting across from him at dinner to hear his story.

My voice teetered a bit toward the end, especially when I read the word “hope.”

Looking at one another through tear-glazed eyes, my handsome, sober 37-year-old son reached across the table to touch my hand and with  a slight smile and nod said,

“I like it, Mom. I am hopeful.”

 

Hope multiplies when it is shared.

 

Thank you Susan and lovely women of the Women’s Writing Circle for helping me tap deeper into my hope.

 

Through my faith and with a little help from my friends, I did find my hope in Philly.

 

“Then you will call on me and come and pray to me and I will listen to you. You will seek me and find me when you seek me with all your heart.” Jeremiah 29: 12-13

 

How about you? Do you have a story of hope to share?

 

 

I’d love to hear from you. Please leave your comments below~

 

 

Announcement: Congratulations to Marlena Baraf for winning a copy of Lorenzo Martinez‘ children’s book, The Ballerina and Peanut Butter and Jelly Sandwich. Anyone one who wrote music for Captain Kangaroo, as Lorenzo did, has got to be good with children!

 

This Week: I am also still over at Lorenzo’s blog with a guest post, ” Defining Moment: Where Will Your Memoir Begin?” and at Victoria Johnson’s blog with a guest post on “Creative Space”

 

 

 

 

Next Week: Memoir Author Barbara Techel will return to discuss “How Vulnerability Can Be a Beautiful Gift in Memoir Writing”, in conjunction with the release of her memoir, Through Frankie’s Eyes: One Woman’s Journey to Her Authentic Self and the Dog on Wheels Who Led the Way.

 

When Your Story Involves Making History: An Interview with Memoir Author Lorenzo Martinez

Posted by Kathleen Pooler/@kathypooler

” The history of every country begins in the heart of a man or woman.” Willa Cather

I am very pleased to feature Memoir Author Lorenzo Martinez in this interview about his upcoming memoir. The working title is “From Cuba to Freedom.”  Lorenzo and I met on The National Association of Memoir Writer’s Facebook members only group.

I am fascinated by his story of a young boy leaving his homeland as part of Operation Pedro Pan, 1960-1962. Lorenzo has a varied and rich background to share with us today, including musical contributions to the Captain Kangaroo TV show. That certainly takes me back in time.

Welcome, Lorenzo!

Lorenzo Pablo Martinez, Author, Composer and  Pianist
Lorenzo Pablo Martinez, Author, Composer and Pianist

 

KP: Your memoir deals with your participation in Operation Pedro Pan, a program that helped Cuban minors come to the United States without their parents between 1960 and 1962. In researching Operation Pedro Pan, I learned that it was created by The Catholic Welfare Bureau at the request of Cuban parents to provide an opportunity for them to send their children to Miami to avoid Marxist-Leninist indoctrination. The history itself is fascinating. What made you decide to write a memoir about it?

 

LM This was a defining moment in my life. It turned my life upside down but opened up many opportunities for me as well. Everything I am today sprung from that experience.  I always knew that someday I would write about it. We were getting close to the fiftieth anniversary of the Pedro Pan program, a historic moment that I had been a part of.  I realized that it was now or never.

 

KP: I am envisioning how difficult it must have been for both the parents and the children to leave each other.  There must be many stories related to this historical event. Tell us a little about your memoir and how you decided on what stories to tell. What is your main theme?

 

LM: The Pedro Pan children came to this country believing their separation from their families would be a short one. Our “job” was to apply for our parents’ visas and to bring them over until we could return to Cuba together. It was a common belief that “Fidel would not last long.” The Cuban Missile Crisis, however, changed everything. Our parents were stuck in Cuba. Would we ever see them again? Some Pedro Pans never did.  I decided to write about the period of waiting for my parents to join me, which took many years. Many years of crying for Cuba. Many years of shattered dreams. Many years of trying to find my way. Of learning who I was. Those struggles defined the theme of my book: “accepting your past before creating your future.”

 

KP: What impact has writing your memoir had on you? In particular, how did you get through writing about the difficult parts, such as leaving your parents or adjusting to foreign country?

 

LM: It was an emotional experience. By the time I started writing about it, my parents had both died. Writing brought all the heartaches of that separation to the fore, a separation that their death made so final. There were many nights of writing through the tears. And thinking I would never be able to get through it. Reliving those moments, however, made me realize how strong I was during the time I was writing about, and how that same strength helped me at other times in my life.

 

KP: Your credentials include musician , composer, author of children’s books, overseeing communication and marketing for an international organizations in education, health and the arts. How have these roles prepared you for writing your memoir?

 

LM: it’s been said if you want to be a writer, you have to “live life.”  Everything I did, prepared me for writing my memoir. Music is very much a part of my memoir, because I had left a promising future in Cuba as a pianist and this is sprinkled throughout my manuscript. I gave up a music scholarship and performances that were already scheduled when I came to this country. Having books of children’s songs published by traditional music publishers gave me experience with agents and traditional publishing that has been invaluable in working with my agent now and pursuing the traditional publishing route for my memoir. Overseeing communication and marketing departments for various international organizations has prepared me to deal with the new world of publishing in which an author has to be involved in his own marketing and publicity.

 

 

KP: You are currently working with an agent who has been submitting your manuscript to editors since September, 2012. You mentioned that you have received positive feedback but no tangible deals yet. Have you considered other publishing options, such as self-publishing?

 

LM: I am going the traditional way for now, particularly since so much of the feedback has been positive. Because of my experience with traditional music publishing, I’ve decided to continue along this path. Self-publishing is still an option, and I will consider it once all the traditional avenues have been exhausted.

 

KP: What memoir writing and publishing tips would you like to share for those of us in various stages of memoir writing?

 

LM: Never give up. There will be times when you wonder what you’re doing. And why. That’s the time to ignore the negative voice and keep writing.  I used to trick myself saying, “You don’t have to finish this book, just finish this one paragraph, or this one section, then you can quit.” Of course, I never gave up. I believe it is important to have feedback from people you trust. Their feedback is crucial during various stages of writing. The most important thing, however, is that you trust yourself and allow yourself the doubts that will creep in along the way. Eventually, you’ll find yourself crossing the “finish line.”

 

 

KP: Thank you for sharing your heartfelt story with us, Lorenzo. You have shown us how facing the pain of the past can help us become strengthened for the future. I anxiously await the publication of your memoir and I’m sure I’m not alone in that feeling. 

 

Author’s Bio:

Born in Cuba, Lorenzo Pablo Martinez was part of Operation Pedro Pan, a secretive mass exodus of children fleeing the Castro regime that landed in America between 1960 and 1962. He holds a master’s in piano performance from the Manhattan School of Music and a doctorate in music education from Teachers College, Columbia University. As a pianist, he has appeared in recitals and on radio and television. Also a prolific composer, his music has been performed nationally and at international festivals. The television show Captain Kangaroo featured some of his works, and for Group Soup, a children’s book published by Viking, he contributed the title song. In addition, a book of his children’s songs, The Circus was published by Clarus Music Ltd.

Mr. Martinez has published a children’s story, The Ballerina and the Peanut Butter and Jelly Sandwich, and has recently completed a memoir of his Pedro Pan experience that is awaiting publication; he’s currently working on a series of bilingual stories for children and a Young Adult mystery novel.

 

He can be contacted at:

(blog):  www.lorenzo-martinez.com

(Email): fadoremi2003@yahoo.com

(Facebook): Lorenzo Martinez

(Twitter): @lmpartin

 

How about you? Has your story ever involved making history?

 

Lorenzo will give away a free copy of his children’s book, “The Ballerina and the Peanut Butter and Jelly Sandwich” to a random commenter.

 

We’d love to hear from you . Please leave your comments below~

 

Announcement: Congratulations to  Paula!  Your name was selected in a random drawing to receive a free copy of Linda Joy Myers’ memoir, Don’t Call Me Mother: A Daughter’s Journey From Abandonment to Forgiveness.”

 

This Week: I am also over at Lorenzo’s blog with a guest post, ” Defining Moment: Where Will Your Memoir Begin?”

 

Next Week:  “Finding  My Hope in Philly: A Memoir Moment”

 

 

 

 

Re-visioning Memoir: An Interview with Linda Joy Myers

Posted by Kathleen Pooler/@kathypooler

” We don’t know who we are until we see what we can do” Martha Grimes, Writer’s Handbook

I am very happy to welcome back Linda Joy Myers in this interview to discuss the recent launch of her re-visioned memoir, Don’t Call Me Mother: A Daughter’s Journey From Abandonment to Forgiveness and the healing journey she took to  reveal the story that needed to be revisited. My reviews can be found on Amazon and Goodreads.

Welcome back, Linda Joy!

Linda Joy Myers,PhD
Linda Joy Myers,PhD

 

KP: I find it fascinating that the memoir you wrote seven years ago seemed to beckon you to return to it. In your updated version of your memoir, Don’t Call Me Mother, you take us deeper into your story of being abandoned by your mother and reflect on the impact that has on you and your family today. What made you decide to expand on your original memoir rather than write a separate memoir- the same title with a different subtitle?

 

LJM: I spent about 10 years writing this memoir, beginning two decades ago. The story of my mother and grandmother, the tangled threads, research on Ancestry.com and the way it still fascinates me is like a kind of addiction—I could be tempted to keep going over the same territory if I wrote a whole new book about them. I want to write about men and my father next, and I want to publish my WWII novel. I felt the stories in the Afterword were really important to work on and share as part of the original story, as they loop back to the themes. I continued my journey with the material in Don’t Call Me Mother without getting lost in the story. I’m trying to move forward!

 

KP:  Since a memoir reflects a slice of your life defined by a specific time period, it makes sense that one’s story does change over time. What are the main factors that led to your decision to go deeper into your story?

 

LJM: In one story, I pick up the thread of my time with Vera, the year I’m alone in a home that was abusive and scary. In 2003, I decided to face the shadowy fears that had stayed with me all my life and I met her children again for the first time since I was five, a skinny, sick, and frightened child. I hoped that by doing so I’d stop having the bad dreams that could still haunt me. Through meeting them, I learned about my own courage, and how we can find a new perspective through living—and writing beyond the original wounds. I learned about forgiveness—it’s a gift, and we don’t always plan it. My point is to show how we can continue to learn from our stories, and if we share this new knowledge, we can help others understand more deeply the power of transformation that we can manifest in our lives.

 

KP:  In your updated version, you take us through your painstaking process of healing, especially facing your relatives, in a way that makes the reader feel the pain of rejection. What advice would you give others who are facing painful realities as they write their memoir?

 

LJM: Well, first we have to find ways to bear the grief and sorrow that come when we get a shock of recognition about “the way things are,” and how different they are than we wanted them to be. In the second story in the Afterword, I find out that the Iowa extended family, whom I’d seen as a buffer and a way to have some kind of family, judged the fact that I wrote a memoir, and further, they were a bit paranoid about what I wrote—and didn’t write—about them. In a moment of insight during an intense encounter, I saw how much of an outsider I was. My grandmother never “belonged” in that family—she had a different father than her 6 brothers and sisters—he died before she was born. She moved to the big city of Chicago, and took ships to England. My mother was always hysterical and “eccentric.” And I lived in that crazy state of California, I was a therapist, I too went to England, but not on ships! And I was always poking around to find out more about the history of the family. When you grow up with people who lie all the time, the truth has premium value—at least to me. In that insightful moment when I finally see that I’m an outsider, that we always were, and that I’d left out truths in the first version of the memoir so I could preserve this family connection, I was stabbed with grief. I cried and cried as I bathed my feet for the last time in the Mississippi River, as I sat in the rain by my mother’s grave and drove by the houses where I’d spent my childhood summers. The grief, the insight, and the falling away of denial freed me from my false beliefs and the need to pretend who I was or wasn’t. Finally, I was myself and that was good enough. I thought it was an important, and vulnerable, story to share.

 

KP: You teach weaving the light and dark moments in and you do that very well throughout this memoir, leaving the reader with a sense of hope in healing despite the reality of the circumstances. In the end, you share a powerful message of not only forgiveness for those who have hurt you but also self-forgiveness. What role did writing this version play in achieving this forgiveness?

 

LJM: Even though I’ve taught writing as healing all these years since the first edition was done, I’m still amazed and moved by how powerful writing the truth is! Again, with memoir, we’re living the story and while we’re living it, we’re also trying to find ways to put language around it, finding the scenes that can capture in some small way how it is for us. I wrote several versions of these stories but it helps to have time between the event and the writing. My later versions were much better! But the story about me and my daughter I wrote right after we lived it because I didn’t want to forget one single thing that happened. When she read it she said, “Yes, that’s what happened that day.” What a blessing! It was a full circle between us, mother and daughter. We are the first in several generations to share our love freely, have sincere even if difficult talks without angry outbursts—at least most of the time—and my grand-daughter is growing up without abandonment fears. I’m happy!

 

KP: It seems to me that writing this version has been a gift to yourself and your family. You write in your preface, “It is a testament to my belief that, under all the hurt and anger, love is buried deep inside each person.” This insight is also a gift to your reader. When in your writing process did you realize that your story was transformational both for yourself and your reader? Did it evolve as you wrote or were you clear from the start that your message would have the potential to help others as well as yourself?

 

LJM: Just like the saying, “No tears in the writer, no tears in the reader,” if we feel transformed and are able to present the evidence in scenes and use language to shape feelings and perceptions, then the reader will feel it too. It’s a writing challenge then, to keep shaping and choosing and smoothing until it’s seamless. I have seen the power of writing to heal the writer and the reader so often that it’s a given in my world.

 

KP:  Thank you, Linda Joy, for sharing your thoughts on how re-visioning your memoir led you to a deeper level of healing.

Your mantra, “Be brave.Write your story” is captured in your memoir.

 

 

Wheat fields at night
Wheat fields at night

 

Author’s Bio:

Linda Joy Myers, Ph.D., MFA, is the President and founder of the National Association of Memoir Writers, an Instructor at Writers Digest, Co-President of the Women’s National Book Association, San Francisco branch. Linda is the author of The Power of Memoir—How to Write Your Healing StoryBecoming Whole, and Don’t Call Me Mother, which won the BAIPA Gold Medal prize. Linda’s next book is Truth or Lie: On the Cusp of Memoir and Fiction. She gives workshops through NAMW, Story Circle, and the Therapeutic Writing Institute, and helps people capture their stories through coaching and online workshops. www.namw.org.  Blog: http://memoriesandmemoirs.com; Twitter @memoirguru

Her re-visioned memoir can be ordered on Amazon:

 

Don't Call Me Mother Book Cover, 2013
Don’t Call Me Mother Book Cover, 2013

 

How about you? Have you written a memoir that you need to revisit? How do you feel about reading a re-visioned memoir?

Linda Joy will give away a copy of her memoir to a random commenter.

 

We’d love to hear your thoughts. Please leave your comments below~

 

.

 This week: I’m also for at Cheryl Stahle’s blog, Your Best Writing Group with a memoir vignette “Summer Day Along the Hudson River…Nothing Quite Like It” as part of her March Memoir Madness series.

 

 Next Week: Memoir Author Lorenzo Martinez will discuss his upcoming memoir about participating in the Operation Pedro Pan project of the 1960s.

 

 

Seven Lessons I’ve Learned in Revising My Work-In-Progress Memoir

Posted by Kathleen Pooler/@kathypooler

I work very hard at writing, writing and rewriting and try to weed out the lumber.” David McCullough

 

Pencils with Erasers from dreamstimefree images

I once heard a saying “Life is the art of drawing without an eraser” (Author Unknown).

Those of us who are writers know we need to keep erasers handy.

We’ve all heard the phrase “writing is rewriting” and nothing could have felt closer to that truth than that as I worked on the first revision of my memoir-in-progress. After defining the narrative arc of the story- the beginning , middle and the end- I now am going back to refine, deepen and polish up the narrative.

The first review of my draft from my manuscript consultant took four hours to go through over the phone. The suggestions beyond defining the narrative arc of the story included: cutting out, rearranging, going deeper into sections of the story.

The first thing I did was set it aside and let it marinate for a few weeks.

With fresh eyes, I approached my edits asking myself the following questions:

*Am I clear on the vision (main theme) of my story?

*Does it fit in with the overall theme?

*Does my story make sense?

*Do the scenes move the story along?

*Does the sequence of scenes make sense?

*Are the subthemes woven in tightly enough?

*Are the characters believable?

*Is my POV clear- past voice vs present day reflection

*Does my main character demonstrate change/growth?

*Is there enough tension and conflict to hold the interest of the reader?

*Is the ending satisfying?

*Is it grammatically correct?

 

Basically, I need to revise with the reader in mind.

I’m at the point where every time I look at my manuscript, I change it-cut out, rearrange or add to. Since my first revision is in the hands of my manuscript consultant, I am in a cooling off period. When my next round of edits come back, I will repeat the cycle asking myself the same questions as above.

Fellow Memoirist Madeline Sharples posted an excellent article about revision that helped me to see the importance of initially reading through my manuscript without editing.

That means sitting on my hands.

Then I’ll grab my red pen and circle and change what I need to.

In summary, seven lessons I’ve learned about revision are:

* Be open to constructive feedback.

* Expect to look at your manuscript with new eyes.

* Give yourself periods of cooling off to gain perspective.

* Edit with the reader in mind.

* Find a question that the book needs to answer and let that question guide you.

* Read your manuscript out loud.

* Rewrite and revise until it’s right.

How will I know when it’s right?

That will be another topic for another time and by then I’ll most likely need to replace all those erasers.

First, I will read through it like a reader while sitting on my hands.

 

How about you? What tips do you have to share about the revision process?

I’d love to hear from you. Please leave your comments below~

 

On Thursday, March 7, National Association of Memoir President and Memoir Author Linda Joy Myers will return to discuss another aspect of revision in “Re-visioning Memoir.” She will give away a free copy of her re-visioned memoir, Don’t Call Me Mother: A Daughter’s Journey From Abandonment to Forgiveness to a random commenter.

 

This week: I’m also for at Cheryl Stahle’s blog, Your Best Writing Group with a memoir vignette “Summer Day Along the Hudson River…Nothing Quite Like It” as part of her March Memoir Madness series.

 

Photo Credit: Dreamstimefree.com

 

 

 

What Do Writers Read? A Guest Post by Memoir Author Belinda Nicoll

A guest post by Belinda Nicoll/@BelindaNicoll

“Either write something worth reading or do something worth writing.” Benjamin Franklin

I am very pleased to feature Freelance Writer, Memoir Author and Creativity Coach Belinda Nicoll in this guest post. Belinda and I met in Sonia Marsh‘s Gutsy Indie Publisher Facebook group. She blogs about creative writing, the changing world of books and publishing and offers a series of rite-of-passages stories by guest writers. Her current series, What is the Gist of Your Story, features guest bloggers who discuss how the premise and themes of their books can be the basis of effective book publicity.

Her favorite topics are personal transformation and global change. Here are my reviews of her memoir, Out of Sync on Amazon and Goodreads. She is currently working on a novel.

We are told that in order to be a good writer, we need to be a good reader. Belinda shares her thoughts on how her writing process has influenced her reading habits and then how her habits have changed.

Welcome Belinda!

 

Author and Creativity Coach Belinda Nicoll
Author and Creativity Coach Belinda Nicoll

As a cognitive process, reading is a means of acquiring knowledge; it’s a complex interaction between the nature of the content—informative, educational, persuasive, entertaining—and the objectives of the reader. When you read, you bring your attitudes, skills, values and beliefs to the experience; if you approach a text with an open mind, it’s likely you’ll feel changed in some way when you get to the end of the book; but if you’re set in your ways, certain content might make you feel uncomfortable or even bring about a dislike of the author.

 

After I started writing my memoir, Out of Sync, I was unable to read for pleasure. I had work to do—stepping into my student shoes, I plowed through creative writing guides, absorbing the do’s and don’ts of memoir-writing. I read other memoirs to emulate the style of writers I admire: Alexandra Fuller, Jeanette Walls, Frank McCourt, Joan Connor, and many more. I read news reports about the economic growth in post-apartheid South Africa to make sure I get my facts right in describing how the changes there caught my husband and I off-guard after our expatriation to the U.S. in 2001. I read world news to stay abreast of globalization, one of the themes of my memoir and a concept a lot of Americans were still in denial about. I read forecasts about the world economy; we could relate to predictions of rising inflation in the U.S., because we’d been through it in South Africa and were recognizing the signs. I cried every time I read a story about people who’d lost loved ones in the 9/11 disaster—it wasn’t easy writing the chapter of my memoir that deals with our arrival at JFK International Airport on that fateful day. I read and made notes; I read and jotted down references; I read and edited my memoir, again, and again.

 

Until recently, long after the completion of my memoir, I’ve been the worst novel reader imaginable—I could not read even a chapter without dissecting the text and noting (for instance):

  • if the protagonist, antagonist, and others are represented as flat or multi-dimensional characters;
  • if point of view is that of the narrator’s or if the story is told from first-, second-, or omniscient perspective;
  • how setting is used in providing a historical or cultural context for the characters;
  • if dialogue is stilted or natural, or if it’s (mis)used as information dump;
  • if the plot abides by the prescribed structure of the book’s genre;
  • if the author is making use of special literary devices such as back-story, cliffhangers, flashbacks, or letter and emails (parts of my memoir are told in epistolary style as I inserted certain email exchanges between me and my family).

 

I had turned into such a critical reader that my husband complained, saying “Please do not tell me what you think of that book or its author until I’ve read it.” When I started selling my published memoir, my reading shifted to the how-to topics of book publicity. Slowly, I started reading novels for relaxation again; and now, when I read the memoirs of my peers with the intention of posting a review for them, I manage to ‘go with the flow’ and concentrate on how the story makes me feel rather than attempt to critique it. I’ve even joined a book club again, and even though the other members seem a little dazzled by having an author in their midst, Im trying to act like a reader and not a writer.

 

Having said that, I’m currently working on my first novel, so I’ve got books strewn all over the house in preparation for research: Cults In Our Midst by M.T. Singer, Monster by A. Hall, The Great Anglo-Boer War by Farwell…of course, I’m doing my best to ignore my husband, who’s shaking his head, mumbling, “There we go again…”

 

Bio

Belinda is a freelance writer, indie author, and creativity coach. She blogs about issues related to writing and creativity, as well as her favorite subject: change. Her memoir, Out of Sync, is available online at Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Kobo, Smashwords, and Kalahari (South Africa). You can follow Belinda at Facebook, LinkedIn, or Twitter.

"Out of Sync" Book Cover
“Out of Sync” Book Cover

 

Thank you , Belinda for showing us how the writing process has influenced your reading habits. I know that once I started writing, I started reading books differently, with an eye out for what works and what doesn’t. You bring up a good point though about getting back to reading for the pure enjoyment of being immersed in a story.

 

How about you? Have your reading habits changed since you started writing?

 

We’d love to hear from you. Belinda will be giving away a free copy of her memoir, Out of Sync, to a random commenter so please leave your comments below~

 

 

Next Week: “Lessons I’ve Learned About Revising My Memoir-In-Progress” on March 4 followed by “Re-visioning Memoir: An Interview with Linda Joy Myers” on March 7.

Preserving My Dad’s Stories: A Memoir Moment

Posted by Kathleen Pooler/@kathypooler

“What a father says to his children is not heard by the world, but it will be heard by posterity.” Jean Paul Richter

I was blessed with a remarkable father, Bob, whom I looked up to my entire life. He died in 2010 leaving our family with a legacy of love and wise guidance.

Dad shows up a lot in my memoir; the symbol of strength and wisdom, the voice of reason, the calm in the storm.

Eight months before he died, I interviewed him. Typically, a man of few words, he spewed out a litany of stories on that day.

The man I adored and admired, my hero, was once a little boy with stories of his own.

Raw Beginnings

A blonde-haired four-year-old boy named Bob rides his scooter down the sidewalk, stopping to avoid the raised ruts. He squints to shield his sad blue eyes from the scorching sun, stopping to brush the thick shocks of hair from his forehead. Soon, he will be whisked off to a children’s home, along with his older brother, Dick and his older sisters, Ruth and Eleanor as their father works as a traveling salesman during the Depression. Their beloved mother, Edna Mae, is suddenly gone. Ruth recalled years later that Edna Mae suffered from blinding headaches until one day at the age of thirty-three, she died of a stroke, leaving Paul, her husband, to care for his four children. Bob, my father, was the youngest. Gathering them close in his magical sway, Paul reached out his loving arms and taught them to say,”All for one. One for all”, a refrain they would remember and live by their whole lives.

 A visit to the children's home by Grandpa Paul (R) and Uncle George & Aunt Rennie From L to R: Dick(12), Dad (6),El (8)  & Ruth (10). 1928
A visit to the children’s home by Grandpa Paul (R) and Uncle George & Aunt Rennie From L to R: Dick(12), Dad (6),El (8) & Ruth (10). 1928

A strong, young father had vowed to protect them all from his deep pain and loss; a loss that sent waves into the next generation.

“I never understood how my buddies could be so rude to their mothers.” Dad would say,”Their mothers would bake cookies and greet them after school. I would have done anything to have my mother back.”

At the children’s home, he recalled cold, lumpy oatmeal and being bullied by the older kids. One day on the playground while playing baseball, some older kids surrounded him, taunting him about the knickers he was forced to wear. Dick, his designated protector, came to his rescue as he did many times before and after. The brothers shared a mutual respect and close relationship for their entire lives as did all the siblings.

And Dad could never eat oatmeal, often relaying his experience,

”Makes me gag and reminds me of the children’s home.”

Dad recalled his excitement the day his father brought him a box of chocolates for Valentine’s Day. He couldn’t wait to take it back to his room and savor the treats at his leisure. But the matron had other ideas. She felt it was only right that this treat be shared with all the children as others were not so lucky as to have a father to bring such a nice surprise. Excitement turned to disappointment as he watched his treasured box of chocolates get divvied up among the group. That does explain why he savored sweets in later years. In fact, one dared not get between him and his dessert, especially if it was homemade chocolate pie.

The children were released from the home one by one, starting with Dick. Soon my father was the only one in the home. He missed his siblings but looked forward to the day he would leave. He was twelve when he left and recalled a happy day filled with hugs when he arrived in their home in Schenectady, New York. Dick was six years older than Dad and had joined the Army. When he came home on leave, he and Dad played hours of tennis, getting up at dawn before the hot sun started beating down. Dad recalled that they would often wrestle. Dick would establish dominance, while grinding his fist into my Dad’s temple; brotherly love at its finest. He missed Dick’s playful banter and the trading of outrageous puns among the siblings.

Ruth, four years older, was the surrogate Mom, cooking, cleaning and doting over her mischievous brother while their father worked as a traveling salesman for a printing company to support them. Soon after Dad was discharged from the home, Paul moved them to Upper Darby, Philadelphia to find work. He would be out of town during the week and home on the weekends.

One Friday afternoon, Paul drove up with a strange woman.

“Meet your new mother.” He said as they walked in the side door.

Shock and disbelief registered in Dad’s twelve-year-old mind. Lydia was forty-years-old, a spinster by 1934 standards, when she married Paul. She didn’t understand the workings of a twelve-year-old boy on the edge of his coming of age. Her stoic German personality was in sharp contrast to a young man who was trying to make his way in a world of uncertainty. While he fought the bullies in the school yard, he balked at the stern limits set in his new household. He was a rebel in the making, sneaking off to smoke his first cigarettes behind the garage and developing an ever sharp edge to combat his fears and longings.

But his new stepmother was a wonderful baker and he loved her Apple Streusel.

For all her sternness, born out of her lack of mothering experience, she was a gentle lover of birds. Dad recalled his memories of their pet pigeon, Oscar, who would fly into Paul and Lydia’s bedroom and perch near Lydia’s head. When it was time to move back to Schenectady, New York, Oscar was placed in a wicker bird cage and set atop the children, suitcases and lampshades in the back seat of their 1930 Ford. Imagine their surprise when they found eggs in a nest. Oscar became Oscarina and soon after their arrival in their new home, she flew away. They later found out that Oscarina returned to Upper Darby, perched on Paul and Lydia’s bedroom window sill.

Dad was fourteen and full of himself when he moved back to New York. His edges kept sharpening as he found himself on new ground once again. I look at the picture of my fourteen-year-old father, tall and handsome with a shock of light brown hair, reaching down to pet Spiffy, their beloved Huskie and wonder what he was thinking and feeling at that moment.

In two years, as a junior in high school, he would meet Kathryn DiCerbo, a sophomore, in the hallway at school. She would secretly decide on that day that he would become her husband. He didn’t know it then that she would become “the woman of his dreams” and his life would be forever changed; the deep longing in his heart would be filled with the love and laughter of a big Italian family who would embrace him with open hearts. He would be welcomed into the fold and honored like the Prodigal Son. Let the feast begin; a lost son has returned.

Dad and Mom, 1944 on their first wedding anniverary
Dad and Mom, 1944 on their first wedding anniverary

And the sharp edges would melt away… (to be continued)

 

 

Dad & Mom in 2005
Dad & Mom in 2005

How about you? Do you have stories of your loved ones that you want to preserve?

I’d love to hear from you. Please leave your comments below~

 

Announcement: Congratulations, Susan Rowland. You are the winner of Andrea Lewis’ memoir, Dramaville is Not a Place; It’s a State of Mind.

 

This week: I am also over at Belinda Nicoll’s My Rite of Passage blog with a guest post on her “What is the Gist of Your Story?” series with My Memoir-in-Progress.

 

Next week : Memoir Author and Creativity Coach, Belinda Nicoll will discuss “What Do Writers Read?” She will give away a copy of her memoir, Out of Sync to a random commenter.