I think it’s funny how bits and pieces of
my life, my memories, find their way into my writing.
In Book ONE, the main character, a young
woman alone and feeling lost, finds her grandmother’s cookbook. It was more of
a journal, recipes and anecdotes of family events. Memories.
A few years ago I started making scrapbook
pages of my favourite recipes. I have the originals, but each of my
grandchildren has a copy. There are photos of the kids baking with me, and
notes about where a recipe came from, or when it was first served.
Kayla, Tia and Rianna, my baking buddies. |
All the recipes are in a binder, in
protective sleeves, the binder covers done with each child’s name and photo in
true scrapbooking style.
The recipes were about thirty in number when my
daughter and daughter-in-law presented me with a make work project.
Two more grandchildren, born a month apart,
had me scrambling back to Staples for more binders and a slew of photocopying.
I hope, when those kids are grown, they will enjoy the recipes, and remember
their grandmother with love. Exactly the feelings my character had
reading her grandmother’s journal.
My father died suddenly in 1988. I think of
him often, and have to laugh as memories of him find their way into my books.
Dad’s routine on a Sunday morning was
simple, coffee, a cigarette, and the crossword puzzle. He had this small
pencil, which he picked up at the golf course for marking his score card, and
used it for the crossword.
I wasn’t so fussy, if I saw the unfinished
crossword on the table, I’d grab a pen and fill in what I could, often having
to scratch over a mistake. Those were tough puzzles.
My dad had a subtle way of telling you what
he thought, without making it a big issue. Like when I was a teenager and I experimented
with peroxide, leaving my normally dark hair streaked with orange. I didn’t get
the expected parental lecture, what I got was a simple question. “How long will
it take to grow out?”
So his annoyance, at my taking a pen to his
crossword puzzle, was handled the same way. “Some might say it’s a sign of
conceit to do a crossword in ink.” I used the pencil after that, but I used one
with an eraser on the tip.
Is it any wonder when I had an elderly man
and a young woman strike up a friendship, it was forged over filling in a crossword
puzzle. I liked this concept so much; I made the crossword an ongoing part of
Book FOUR.
My dad was fond of peanut butter, loved it
on his toast in the mornings. My mother found a wooden plaque, cut in the shape
of a slice of bread, with the following motto. “Man cannot live by bread alone,
he must have peanut butter.” I remember it sat on the top of the stove in their
place in Florida .
In Book SIX, I wanted two strangers to
meet, and strived to make that meeting memorable. The woman is in the grocery
store picking up supplies for the cottage, and stops in the aisle with all the
peanut butter and jams.
She had recently lost her husband, her
grief compounded when she learns he’d been having an affair. She looks at the
peanut butter and has a flashback to better times, remembering when her husband
gave her that same wooden plaque, a joking reference to her pregnancy craving
for peanut butter.
The other character comes upon this teary
woman and…well, you’d have to read the book.
What gets me is all these real memories end
up in my writing without any plan. I wasn’t writing only to stop and think,
what could I use from my life to make this work? After writing those segments,
I’d sit back in surprise, shocked that those memories came so fluidly from my subconscious,
and worked so well.
Thanks Dad, love you and miss you every day.
1 comment:
Our father had a knack for telling stories, and reruns of the stories were a common thing. This is something he handed down to me. One of my favourite Dad stories has been repeated many, many times...
While watching a football game with Dad we were discussing how Mom and Dad had the two girls and planned to stop there. Then I came along, I was an "accident" (a point my sisters would remind me of).
Feeling quite full of myself, I said, "Then you finally had the son you always wanted."
Without missing a beat, Dad pointed to the screen to a shot of quarterback Joe Montana and said, "There's the son I always wanted."
We all have a wealth of Dadisms.
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