Words and pictures from the author of And the Crows Took Their Eyes as well as the Elizabeth Goodweather Appalachian Mysteries . . .
Thursday, April 23, 2026
Wednesday, April 22, 2026
Things Left Undone
I've wrestled my workroom into a cleaner, neater, more organized place. But in doing so, I've been confronted with an embarrassing number of unfinished projects.
There are a bunch of quilt blocks that were demonstration pieces, back when I taught quilting at our local junior college branch. And there are leftovers from larger projects.
Like these 9 large squares--leftover from my niece Amelia's wedding quilt. Well, hell, thought I. I'll use them to make a quick pillow cover for that pillow form that's taking up room on my cutting table.
And I did. And it felt so good to have finished something--and to be sewing again -- that I determined to do some more.
This was an easy one--a basket block with the handle and heart needing to be appliqued.
I'd forgotten how much I enjoy hand sewing.
Done! I'll put it with a few other red/blue/yellow blocks I discovered and maybe someday put them all together in a little quilt. Maybe. First I need to finish some unfinished quilts.
Like this one. I think I made the blocks in one of my classes, using fabric reproducing Civil War era colors and patterns. Unfortunately, I really don't much like the muddy colors which may be why I never finished quilting it.
All but one block were quilted and the binding was on, but back then I'd begun an ambitious scheme of lots of quilting in the borders. Now, older and wiser, I thought about it and decided it wasn't needed--the three layers were already stable with the quilting in the blocks. So I picked out the one line I'd begun (20 years ago,) finished the unquilted block, and pronounced it done. Now I just have to figure out what to do with it.
But it feels great to finish these orphans. And though my quilting isn't what it once was, I was delighted to find I could still thread a tiny quilting needle.
Now I'm working on a House block which I evidently had intended to embellish with embroidery. So out comes the long diused embroidery thread and hoop.
As I began work on the cross pieces in the windows, I thought ahead to doing some vines and flowers around the door, some shrubbery, smoke coming from the chimney . . . And then, I thought, maybe I'll embroider Home Sweet Home across the top.
Then I looked more closely at the piece. There, in faint pencil across the top, I'd already written Home Sweet Home--twenty years ago.
Better late than never.
Tuesday, April 21, 2026
Animal House
Cannoli helps Josie with her reading. The Babysitters Club is a big favorite.
Angeline is not impressed. She prefers T.S. Eliot.
Monday, April 20, 2026
1925 and Beyond
"Rainbow Fairies" It's 1925 and my mother is seven. She's the tall one second from the right --- and I've unearthed yet another scrapbook in my workroom cleanup. My grandmother was a meticulous recorder, and I'm enjoying this look at my mother's past.
First grade-- look at the clothes and the Very Serious expressions. There are samples of my mother's schoolwork in each grade but I'll spare your those.
Wilson Junior High in Tampa, Florida. My mother's alma mater . . .and mine and John's as well. What's more, the same principal (Miss Bush) was still in charge.
Girls just gotta have fun--even during the Great Depression.
Sunday, April 19, 2026
Saturday, April 18, 2026
Dear Sirs,
The inhumane conditions in the privately run concentration camps that house the victims of ICE are a disgrace to our country. The mere fact that the USA has concentration camps is a disgrace.
I beg you to visit the camps, to see for yourself, and to act to change this deplorable situation.
And I fervently wish that you would not continue to ignore the deteriorating faculties of POTUS. He is a loose cannon on the ship of state, causing irreparable damage to our democracy and to our reputation in the civilized world.
Your unhappy constituent
Friday, April 17, 2026
Bluebells and Ramps and a Spring Galette
I went to check on the bluebells behind the house. (I have visions of a bluebell wood, such as we saw in England but it's not there yet.)
Still, their numbers are increasing. And so are the ramps in my little ramp patch.
The ramp patch is the result of my buying and planting freshly harvested ramps. I only harvest a few blades from my ramps, rather than the whole pungent plant.
But they added a garlicky whang to the asparagus and mushroom galette that was our supper.
Thursday, April 16, 2026
Wednesday, April 15, 2026
Like the Cat Ate the Grindstone
I have always loved dogs. Here I'm at my Aunt Mamie's in Troy, Alabama. My grandmother and I rode the train from Tampa to attend Mamie's daughter's wedding. I was a flower girl. The ring bearer was a red-headed little boy named Rusty. At the reception I asked the piano player to play "Home on the Range" and he did.
Kindergarten at Seaborn in Tampa. And my brief ballet career.
1959. Senior year at Plant High in Tampa. John and I were "going steady." He gave me a ride to school every day in his Model A.
I had to save out this picture of Justin to show Josie (who scored another goal in last Saturday's soccer game.)
And then there was a whole mess of materials from the quilting classes I taught back in the early 2000's. Not to mention patterns and instructions for the many group quilts I helped with.
I've heard of people's lives flashing before their eyes when they were in a perilous situation. Well, I'm not in such a situation; my life is crawling before my eyes at a slow and crowded pace. It's so much information and so many memories that I can only do a small amount at a time--like the cat ate the grindstone.
Tuesday, April 14, 2026
Monday, April 13, 2026
Woo Hoo!!!
What good news! The autocratic Orban and his "illiberal democracy" have been handed a huge defeat. Unlike Someone, Orban has accepted defeat and conceded.
Orban had pledged fealty to Putin, and our own president, who is securely in Putin's pocket, endorsed Orban and sent the despicable JD Vance to Hungary to promise financial support from the USA. (This, when we supposedly can't afford health care and the forestry service, and, really, anything that makes life better for us non-plutocrats.)
I have to admit that along with being happy for this defeat for a far-right government, I take pleasure in seeing Vance coming back with this defeat added to his failure to negotiate a treaty with Iran. Couldn't happen to a more deserving sycophant.
I'd like to believe that this is a tidal shift that will propel a Blue wave at the midterms.
Fingers crossed.
Sunday, April 12, 2026
Saturday, April 11, 2026
Twenty-Two Years Ago . . .
I continue in my purge of my workroom. After recycling the manuscripts of my Elizabeth Goodweather novels, I turned to the stack of notebooks that contained the printed material of ten years or more of writing classes, publicity pieces, interviews, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera.
Out with them! But I'm conscientious enough to want to recycle all that paper which means removing it from the plastic page protectors and also tearing off any staples. And in the course of this, getting a nostalgic trip back in time. Lots of good classes, good students, good memories.
Then I hit a notebook with printed out emails from my early efforts in 2002 to find an agent--and a representative sampling of rejection. There had been around sixty but I only kept the positive ones--the ones that said nice things about my writing while gently turning me down.
Then there was the excitement of an offer from an agent, my acceptance, and her attempts to sell that first book. More positive rejections and finally the decision to put that first novel aside and try again with what became Signs in the Blood.
It was like reliving that roller coaster of emotions when, a year later, my agent began trying to sell SIGNS. And oh, the joy and edge-of-my-seat tension when the agent let me know that Kate Miciak at Bantam Dell was interested!
The rewriting, the adding a subplot, the tweaking the ending, as emails flew between Kate and my agent and me. At last, the contract! A modest two book deal!
And then all those memories went into the recycling. It was nice to remember the excitement, and my agent's great sense of humor. And I still got a thrill at seeing Kate's encouraging words.
But, the nice thing is, I don't miss any of it. It was all a fine experience and I'm glad I had it. But I'm happy not to be writing into the wee hours, trying to make a deadline.
Been there. Done that.
Friday, April 10, 2026
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