Monday, July 3, 2017

Roam With Me -- NYC from Ellis Island to Ground Zero to Broadway-- June 9, 2017

What a day we had! Our morning began with a ferry ride from Liberty Island to Ellis Island and to the Statue of Liberty.
While both of these places were wonderful, since we were still with our large group, we actually spent far more time waiting in lines for the ferry rides (and the bathrooms!) than we did seeing and appreciating the sites.



When you are part of a group tour, sticking to a schedule is the most important thing. Because of that, we literally were given 10 minutes to see the Statue of Liberty, so that meant that all we could do was hustle over to the front side of it, take a bunch of photos and hustle back.


If you ever get the chance to visit, take as long as you can to really savor the place. We discussed perhaps revisiting it when we were on our own for the next five days, but we ended up seeing so many other places, that we just didn't have time for a repeat visit, but if I get back to NYC, I will definitely make the time to spend a while on both Ellis Island and on all sides (and inside) of the Statue of Liberty. 

We rode another ferry across to Manhattan and got off at Battery Park. From there we walked up Wall Street to take a gander at the famous bull statue. Ha! Good luck with that. There were so many people crowded around it that the best I could do was simply raise my phone above people's heads, aim it in the direction of the bull and snap a photo of whatever I could.
I did this mostly to show just how many people truly were crowded around it and that I wasn't exaggerating in the least. 

At this point, we were a little worried that this was how all of NYC was going to be! Fortunately, though, we soon learned that while it is a busy and populated city, this crazy scene around the bull was not the norm for other areas of Manhattan. Thank goodness! I think my son thought I was crazy for planning to stay another five days in that madness.

From there we walked to Zuccoti Park and partook of a lunch from the various food vendors selling everything imaginable all around the square. While a bit pricey, the food was delicious -- we'd been just a little wary after our horrible experience with food truck vendors in Washington D.C. Thankfully, the vendors in Zuccoti Park were phenomenal.

We were given a good hour to sit and rest which we did, but we also strolled around the area and saw the brass statue of a businessman that survived the events of 9/11 and has become memorialized in a famous photo of it covered in ash. We also stepped into a massive Eataly store straight across the street from there. 

Once we were back with the group we walked down to the Ground Zero memorial park and museum. We spent some time walking around each of the infinity pools that now exist where the two towers once stood.
These have the names of all the victims etched into them. It is a somber yet life-affirming place. 

We went into the museum. You can take photos in much of it, but there is one main exhibit where photography is not allowed, as it should not be. The memorabilia collected there has to be seen in person to appreciate it, and even then, you can hardly wrap your head around the tragic events that unfolded right where you are now standing. I shed quite a few tears while I was in that exhibit, and even these 16 years later, I have a hard time believing that all those people were killed so horribly in such a short amount of time.

After we left the museum, we walked over to the nearest subway station and boarded our first NYC subway ride! We were on at a fairly busy time of day, but we still managed to get all 43 members of our group into one car!
Once we got off at 49th street and started up the stairs, my students got their first glimpse of a homeless person sleeping in the stairwell. Frankly, we were all a little surprised to see him there because the stairway was narrow and poorly lit. Afterwards, during our extra five days, we rode the subway a few times, but we never encountered another homeless person sleeping on the steps in any of the stations. 

Our supper was at the Buffalo Wild Wings in Times Square where many of the group also had to change into their Broadway Theater attire before the show. We watched "Charlie and The Chocolate Factory," and we all loved it.


What great effects they managed for that show. I was enthralled the whole time, and even my 23 year old son was so impressed by the show that he put on his glasses to better see everything. 

The way they managed the Oompa Loompas was especially neat. The actors were dressed in all black with their faces made up and inserted into what were essentially large puppets that they manipulated with their hands by moving the Oompa Loompas' arms and legs into positions. They were able to create the illusion that the Oompa Loompas were walking, dancing, working, etc. It was really amazing and very mesmerizing to watch. 

Just a few days after this show, the Tony Awards took place a couple blocks away from our hotel, and we saw the main actor of "Charlie and the Chocolate Factory," Christian Borle, on TV. It was kind of surreal having just watched him on stage, knowing he was mere blocks away from us, yet watching him on TV in our hotel room.

After the show, we wandered around Times Square for a while. It's a crazy uber-lit up place, that's for sure.
It looked like the middle of the day, yet it was almost midnight! We ended up spending quite a lot of time in and around Times Square over the following days because our hotel was only a few blocks away, so we took our leave of the group and checked into our hotel. 

The best was yet to come! I'll tell you all about it in my next posts.




Friday, June 30, 2017

Roam With Me in DC and NYC -- June 8, 2017!

As we prepared to set out on our last morning in Washington D.C., I had to stop and check to see what the day of the week was. I'd only been gone from home three days, and I'd already lost track of time -- crazy. That was mostly due to how completely jam-packed our days had been on a group tour where you manage to put more into a single day than you normally manage to accomplish in a week or more back home.

By this time, everyone's feet and legs were very sore from all the walking we'd been doing, but I was really excited because this was the day that we'd be heading to New York City! Woohoo! Unfortunately, we got a later start out from the hotel than we were supposed to because one member of our large group decided to sleep in despite numerous others attempting to wake him up. We were not happy with that particular individual, and since he was a student, I let him know it throughout the day. You just don't do that when 42 other people are waiting for you.

When we finally rolled out of the parking lot, we headed back to Washington D.C. for two final stops. The first was at the Marine Corps monument of the replica of the famous Iwo Jima flag-raising photo. We were fortunate enough to arrive at the same time that two Marines were climbing onto the monument carrying a large bag.


We watched them lower the large flag and replace it with a smaller one. They then raised that flag, saluted it, lowered it, and then they repeated the process with another flag. I think they had many more to do because the bag they'd carried up was large, but we didn't stay to watch the entire proceedings. I am sure that the families for whom those flags were intended will appreciate what those two men were doing that morning. 

As a Legion Rider, I've seen those flags draping caskets and then given to grieving families in cemeteries. They become cherished tokens of loved ones that can be passed on down the road. 

From this monument, we walked over to Arlington Cemetery. This was my second visit, but the place still filled me with awe. It was the first visit for my boyfriend, who is also a Legion Rider, and I could see that it impacted him greatly. 

We stayed to watch the Changing of the Guard twice from two different vantage points. Since both times I've been there have been on school tours during high-tourist time, I would really like to return during a time when the viewing area isn't packed with people. While most of them were appropriately quiet and well-behaved, there were still those who just don't get that they need to show their proper respect to the whole area. 


While standing by my son in Arlington as we watched, I heard "Taps" played twice, and every time I hear that, I remember him playing it in high school at military funerals and during the Memorial Day ceremony. I was always so proud of him for doing that, and when I attend funerals as a Legion Rider, I'm always a little bit disappointed in the dressed soldiers who show up only to hold a bugle with a recording to their lips. Nothing beats the real thing, even if the person squeaks on a few notes -- it's the sentiment behind those real notes that matter, to me. Anyway, those are just some thoughts I had while standing and watching the Changing of the Guard next to my grown son who used to play the trumpet in high school.

After stopping to see the Eternal Flame, the memorial to the Challenger victims, and the view from Robert E. Lee's house, we left both Arlington Cemetery and Washington D.C. and headed for New York City.  

As we drove along I-95 and the New Jersey Turnpike, I was actually quite surprised at how lush the vegetation was.
I guess I was expecting it to be stripped and full of buildings or something. I'm not really sure; I just know that I was surprised by it -- as I'm sure visitors to Nebraska are surprised to encounter rolling hills in certain parts of the state that they were otherwise told is completely flat and full of cows and/or corn. 

Of course, once we got closer to New York City, that vegetation quickly turned to a gridlock of cars that better met my preconceived notions of what driving into New York City would be like! Ha, ha.


From this point on, it became a game of creep forward a little, wait a while. This gave me a lot of time to peek down into other driver's cars from my elevated vantage point in a charter bus. Let's just say that about 99 per cent of the drivers were scrolling through their phones while they, too, played the game of creep forward a little, wait a while. I shook my head, but I can understand the need to fill the long minutes with activity to keep yourself from screaming at the other drivers. 

I wouldn't want to drive in that every day. This bottle-neck was completely due to the number of people wanting to go through the Lincoln Tunnel into Manhattan, but what was strange was that once we actually got through the tunnel, the traffic virtually disappeared!

After waiting an hour to get through the tunnel, it only took us minutes to arrive at the Empire State Building. However, once inside there we were in for another long, long wait in lines before we could get to the observation deck.

And to our disbelief, the first elevator only takes you to the 80th floor. From there, you have to either get in more long lines to wait for another elevator to take you to the 86th floor where the observation deck actually is, or you can do what we did -- take the stairs! The first four flights I managed all right, but for the last two, I was definitely sucking air!

But when we finally stepped out onto the observation deck, it was all worth it! 





If only I could have stayed up there for hours! However, when you are with a group, you have to stick to a schedule, so we exited and then split up anyway for supper. 

My family ate at Heartland Brewery, a restaurant/pub that is located on the corner of the block that houses the Empire State Building. We were led downstairs into a very nice room with real NYC ambiance where we ate our very first NYC meal. I had a delicious pulled pork sandwich with onion chips right in the sandwich. Yummy. 

After we got back on the bus and went back through the Lincoln Tunnel, our great bus driver named Steve took us into Weehawken to JFK Boulevard and pulled over, so we could all exit and take in the amazing views of the nighttime Manhattan skyline. 




We were truly blown away by the view, and I immediately envied the people who lived in the houses on that street and who had that incredible view everyday. But then I thought about the cost of living there, and my envy dissipated. 

We drove to our hotel in Clark, New Jersey for our final night with the group because, even though we'd be spending the next day with them, we'd be leaving them that night to forge on for ourselves for five days in NYC. 

More to come.


Sunday, June 25, 2017

Roam with me in D.C.! June 6-7, 2017

This was my second visit to the nation's capital -- both trips were school ones, and both were taken with my son. The first was five years ago right after he graduated high school. This more recent time I went again to commemorate my daughter's high school graduation, and since we were also slated to visit NYC, I decided to make a real vacation of the experience by tacking on extra days in NYC for us and by including my son and my boyfriend on the trip. It was to be one last family vacation before my two kids started down their separate paths as a teacher/coach (my son) and as a college freshman (my daughter).

For that reason it made the trip both extra-special and extra-sad. I doubt we'll ever have another opportunity like this, so I'm so glad we took advantage of the school's trip to make a memorable one of our own.

One of the problems, though, with traveling with 42 other people is that you have to cater to a set schedule to accommodate all those people. This meant meeting at the school at 12:30 a.m. to depart for the airport in Omaha by 1:00 a.m. which meant absolutely no sleep for us on June 5th. Ugh.

After arriving at Eppley and checking in all 43 passengers' bags, we then awaited our 6:20 a.m. flight to St. Louis where we had a short layover before proceeding on to Washington D.C. We were there by noon. Crazy how you can get halfway across the entire country in a matter of hours!

For my son and me, most of the D.C. experience was a repeat of what we had done five years ago, but it's always good to revisit places to get a fresh perspective. We began our visit to D.C. at the Holocaust Museum, a very somber start to our time there.

Just like five years ago, though, we didn't have enough time in the museum to really absorb and read much of the wealth of information, images and items on display; however, I got just as choked up this time as I did before. Honestly, if I can ever get there a third time, it will be during the winter when there aren't so many tourists and other student groups like our own because that is a place that deserves both my time and my focus. 

My boyfriend was shocked by the film footage showing the Nazis bulldozing emaciated, dead bodies into pits for mass burial. I was shocked that he'd never seen that footage before because it made a huge impression on me in a junior high history class I took -- it's an image that you can never forget. Sadly, more people should visit places like this museum and learn from our past because I continue to see atrocities being carried out all over the world. One should gain insight and wisdom and empathy from places like the Holocaust Museum, and one should realize that we should treat each other with humanity.

Our next stop was a Smithsonian Museum. There are many to choose from, so we chose the Natural History one because my daughter plans to be a paleontologist. It's a massive building with many displays, and once again we didn't have near enough time to really soak it all in, so we hurried to the dinosaur fossil hall. I could really see her working in a place like that someday, and she was captivated by the people working in the small lab which was visible to visitors. In the gift shop she gravitated right to a book about Quantum stuff -- I'll leave that to her understanding and enjoyment.

With a group tour always comes lots and lots of walking, and we hit the ground running from that point on. We walked to the White House for a photo op, we walked to our bus which involved retracing our steps a few times until we caught up with it, then we walked all around the Korean, Vietnam and Lincoln Memorials.

I'd told my students about how the spot where Martin Luther King Jr. gave his "I Have a Dream" speech is marked, so many of them went to find that as did my family and I. Unfortunately, by this time it was quite dark, which makes for the monuments looking quite pretty all lit up but doesn't make for seeing the marker of his speech the best especially when some other tourist has disrespectfully poured a beverage of some sort all over it. We did our best, though. My boyfriend and I also managed to locate the name of a Vietnam soldier we know by association with his sister, and we were honored to snap a quick photo of it to prove we'd found him.


Finally, June 6th came to an end for us as we rode our bus into Virginia to the hotel where we were staying a couple nights. 

June 7th began with a visit to the Capitol.
Again, it was rush, rush, rush to get there on time for our scheduled group visit. The tour only allows visitors to see a small part of the building, but it's still worth your time to go.

For me, though, seeing part of the Library of Congress for a second time was the highlight of the visit.
That beautiful main visitor room almost brings me to tears, and looking down into the reading room makes me want to skip out on the rest of the tour, get a library card and roam the stacks for the rest of eternity. Sigh. Naturally, my kids were looking down into the reading room imagining Nicholas Cage as Benjamin Gates roaming the stacks looking for the President's secret book! Ha. (O.K., I was too, a little.)

While at the Library of Congress, I finally got to see something I hadn't seen five years ago -- Jefferson's library. He and I are of the same mind-set as one of his well-known quotes is "I cannot live without books." Nor can I, Mr. President, nor can I.

After this, we went to have lunch from a variety of food trucks. Take it from me, when you are in D.C. do NOT eat from those food trucks. Horrible, horrible food. I wasn't really hungry, so I just had an ice cream bar, but I watched most of the other 42 travelers throw away their food because it was mostly inedible. Just a word of caution from one traveler to another. 

That afternoon we ventured on to Mount Vernon. Five years ago, this place had left a great impression on me, so I was excited to revisit it. It didn't disappoint. The only thing that did was that once again there were so many large tours there that day that we couldn't really get close to the Washingtons' burial site without waiting in a long line, so we chose not to see that particular piece of history. 

We walked down to the river and all around the grounds of our first President's special home. The flower garden caught my attention five years ago, and it wowed me again.
And we all sat on the expansive porch and took in the grand view from there.


If you've never gone to Mount Vernon, it should be on your list of places to see in the U.S.A. before you die.


From there we rode to Alexandria, Virginia -- mere days before the unfortunate shooting took place. We were given some time to walk around the main streets of this old city, and the four of us visited a delicious chocolate shop called Kilwins. Yummy fudge but we each bought one special treat for later.

After supper at The Fish Market, we broke up our large group into two smaller gender-based ones and went on walking ghost tours of the city. The ladies' group had a lively male presenter who really got into his stories, and our tour ended in a small cemetery. 

We passed back through D.C. and stopped at the Jefferson Memorial. We then walked over to the Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial which is better viewed in the daytime to be able to clearly read all the engravings.

Back at our hotel, we met up with a young lady who was an exchange student in my town and who briefly stayed with us during that time. She and I have kept in touch over the years, and she has been visiting a friend in Alexandria for a couple of months before she heads back to Mongolia. While Asia has never been high on my places to travel list, I would like to go to Ulaanbaatar to see her in her native land someday.


Next up will be a post about our last half-day in D.C. and our first NYC experience! Read, ride and roam every chance you get!



      








Tuesday, May 2, 2017

A Quiet Voice -- A Writer's Rejection

Writers get rejected. It's part of the process. It's nothing new to any experienced writer. In fact, sometimes we get flat-out ignored -- no response at all. That always leaves me wondering if the agent even received my submission, and if so, then is that person simply rude or was my writing so atrocious that he or she couldn't even come up with a polite way to reject me? So, let's just say that, as a writer, I'd rather be rejected than ignored.

When I am rejected, though, I'd really like to know why. Sometimes the agent simply sends a form letter which contains absolutely no explanation as to why I was rejected -- no helpful advice, no snarky ridicule, simply nada. That isn't helpful at all, and receiving a form rejection is almost as bad as being ignored.

Recently, I had a rare opportunity (for me as I don't live anywhere near where literary agents reside) to visit in person with a book agent. I pitched myself and one of my completed, but not published, novels to him. He graciously offered to look at the first few pages of the novel, so I e-mailed them to him the next day. He, in turn, wrote back to me the very next day with a politely worded rejection that actually included an explanation as to why he was passing on my work. I wasn't at all surprised by his rejection since I didn't think he was someone who would really be interested in the things I write, but it's always worth it to at least take the chance when it comes along.

What surprised me, though, was his reason for rejecting me. At least, at first I was surprised by it. After further consideration, I'm not so much surprised as I am intrigued. Here is the line that first surprised me taken right from his e-mail to me:

"You are a good writer, but I think your voice is a little to quiet to interest an acquisition editor."

First of all, I'm going to do a tiny bit of snarky ridicule myself and say, "Seriously, dude, if you want to reject a writer, then at the very least make sure you are using the correct form of too when you do so. My voice might be too quiet, but it certainly is not to quiet." All right, I'm done being snide even though that blunder on his part was a pretty egregious one for a literary agent to be making.

Let's examine his use of the adjective quiet since that was the word that really grabbed my attention and made me think about my writing style. Quiet is not a term I would ever have used to describe me in any situation, especially when I was younger. However, as I've aged and matured, I will admit that I have become a quieter person.

I value peace and quiet; in fact, I long for it at times. I used to need to be the first person to speak up in class or at a meeting, but now I generally hold my tongue until I've heard more and have had time to think through what I want to say, if anything. I've always been a reader, but over the past ten years or so, I've made a daily dose of reading one of my priorities, and a person can't read effectively unless that person is being quiet.

The agent went on to say that he simply didn't get engaged in what I had written and that he thinks there should be conflict going on in every scene. Well, I disagree with that, and that's probably because I actually like to read things that make me ponder and question and that appeal to the introspective side of me. Clearly when I read a thriller or an intense mystery, then I would want to have that intrigue and conflict going on all the time, but I don't think that needs to be a part of every scene in every type of story.

I've had a bit of success with my first novel, The Clearwater House, even though it, too, was rejected by different agents. I finally decided to just get it out there through Kindle and print-on-demand publishing via Amazon's CreateSpace. I've sold enough copies to know that it has been worth my time to go through the process of releasing it this way. The people who have read it have all really liked it, and that's what really matters to me. Sure, I'd love to have had it published in a traditional manner with a nice big advance and royalties galore afterwards, but that wasn't meant to be. I still hold out hope that someday I'll meet the right agent at the right time who will like my voice, no matter how quiet it may be at times.

Until then, though, I'll keep writing and probably keep putting my books out there in my own way. With that in mind, I'd like to offer the first chapter of that rejected novel for your consideration and commentary. I'm thinking of putting it out there in conjunction with a long short story I've written and some poems I've written following my divorce. I've become quite a believer in the power of second chances, so I'm thinking of putting pieces together that show that you're never too old or too beaten down by life or circumstances to make a change for the better.

Another critique the agent had in person to my story when I pitched it to him was that my protagonist, Georgia, is too old. I firmly disagree with that since my overall point and belief centers around the fact that you're never too old; however, he may be right that, from the publishing world's perspective, no publisher would want to take on my book. But I don't really need a publisher if I know that people would actually read my book and that people would actually like my quiet voice and my older female protagonist.

Do you agree with the agent, though, that my voice in it is too quiet, that I need far more conflict throughout, and that I should not open at a funeral? Or do you see promise in what you see here and maybe even would like to read more of it someday to see where her new journey takes her? Please, please, please let me know your thoughts.

Here is the opening to my (in my opinion) completed but not-yet-published novel called State of Georgia:

Chapter One


           The flowers were beginning to give her a headache. Not just the cloying smell of them, but the sight of them – too many of them – arranged neatly by the undertaker’s assistant at the front of the church. The largest, a spray of lilies, carnations and daisies with its “husband,” “father,” and “grandfather” labelled ribbons prominently displayed, lay across the now-closed casket. ‘Why did people feel the need to send things that die to a funeral of all places, and why give them to a dead man who never appreciated the sight of a single flower his whole life?’ Georgia almost chuckled at the ludicrousness of her thoughts, but fortunately she caught herself in time. She’d hate to emit a giggle, or worse, a guffaw, and ruin the widow-in-mourning image she was supposed to be exuding.
           Georgia knew she shouldn’t be ungrateful, especially since it was her own husband, or his body at least, lying in the casket only a few feet in front of her, but the past few days had been trying. She’d only begun to accept the fact that Donald was gone. He wouldn’t be coming in the back door this evening and letting it slam behind him, a nightly ritual intended to catch the attention of his beloved semi-deaf beagle, Bowser, who would startle awake from his sleeping spot by the big front window, struggle to his feet and toddle to his master, tail wagging like mad.
        She gave a small start in her pew as she realized that she hadn’t thought about Bowser for the past few days. ‘Dear God, had anybody been feeding and watering the poor animal?’ she wondered to herself before leaning toward her daughter and whispering, “Have you been taking care of Bowser?”
          Sally, her middle child and devoted Daddy’s girl, glanced disapprovingly at her mother over the sodden tissue she held to her mouth. “Yes, he’s fine. I fed him before we left the house.”
         Georgia nodded and patted her daughter’s arm. “Thank you, honey.” She felt Sally pull away from her in a gentle yet firm manner, as if to say ‘how can you be thinking of the dog at a time like this!’ Raising her eyes to the pulpit, Georgia attempted to focus on what the man up there was saying, but it seemed to be reaching her ears as nothing more than white noise.
            Suddenly, she realized that those on either side of her were standing, and she began to rise also, but she felt her legs shake a bit, so she sat back down. Randy, her eldest son, bent down to assist her. “You all right, Mom?” he asked in a worried tone as he helped her stand. He kept her arm tucked into his while they waited for everyone to find the right page in the hymnal.
        “Yes, dear. It’s just a bit warmish in here, that’s all.” She smiled up at him and noticed how gray he’d become this last year. Where had her little boy gone? Tears began to well up as she saw him in her mind’s eye bounding down the stairs and out into the freshly fallen snow – a ten-year-old full of joy at a day off from school.
         Randy saw the tears form and said, “It’ll be o.k., Mom.”
        She nodded and blinked back the tears. Of course it would be o.k. Why was everyone saying this to her? Did they really think that she was going to curl up into a ball and rock back and forth like some clichéd crazy person who didn’t know what to do with herself now that her husband of forty-three years was dead?
       Georgia looked at the casket as the pallbearers moved into place behind it. It was just a big shiny box. She knew that Donald was in it, but she didn’t feel anything about that. She had to wonder why it was that she didn’t seem to care that he was gone. That wasn’t really fair to herself, though, because she did care; she cared very much. But there wasn’t anything she could do about it.
       She wasn’t the one who had suddenly dropped dead at the table a few nights ago. One minute he was watching the evening news and grumbling about the weather report, and the next minute he was silent. She’d been at the sink rinsing off her plate to put it into the dishwasher because she always finished first and left him to watch the news while she got a jump-start on grading papers or preparing something for the next day’s lessons.
      She’d had the garbage disposal running and hadn’t quite heard what he’d said, so when she shut it off and leaned over to put things in the dishwasher, she’d asked, “What did you say?” He hadn’t replied.
      She’d stood up and looked at him to say something else and that’s when she’d noticed that he was slumped awkwardly in his chair with his arms hanging at his sides. In her haste to get to him, she’d tripped over the open dishwasher door and fell hard bruising her shin and her shoulder where she landed.
      Rubbing that shoulder now, Georgia turned to follow Sally and her family down the church’s main aisle. Randy took her arm, and she could feel his protectiveness coming through her skin.
He’d been the first person she’d called. “Did you call an ambulance?” he’d asked her and had been shocked to find out that she hadn’t.
     She did eventually, but there had been no reason to rush. It had been clear to her once she’d pulled herself off the floor and hurried to Donald that he was gone – gone to a place that he wasn’t coming back from.
      She remembered looking up at him from her crouched position next to his chair, really looking at him for the first time in years. Who was this man? She didn’t even recognize the Donald she’d married. This man was an old man; he was no longer the Donald she’d fallen in love with.
      She’d cried then, even though no tears had fallen yet today. Oh, how she’d cried. A part of her had secretly hoped the Donald of her dreams would return, and now that he was dead, she knew there was no hope of that happening. She’d pulled a chair close to his, picked up his limp arm and held his hand until Randy showed up.
      Then Randy had joined her and sat on the other side of his father, holding his right hand. Finally, Randy had risen and made the other calls that had to be made – the first to the hospital to make everything official, the second to his two siblings, Sally and Jerry.
     Jerry had the furthest to travel as he was stationed in Honolulu, but he still managed to arrive only a couple hours after Sally and her brood of five children and one hard-to-manage husband appeared. She, though, had been the most distraught, and Georgia had been secretly relieved that her daughter couldn’t arrive sooner because she brought too much intensity with her.
       However, she was glad to see her grandchildren. Sally’s five were her only ones. Randy’s wife had left him for another man shortly after their wedding, and despite a series of relationships, he hadn’t been able to bring himself to permanently commit again. Jerry, she felt certain, was a bona fide bachelor for life, or at least as long as the Air Force kept him moving from place to place.  She had a feeling he’d found a special someone in Hawaii, but that was just a mother’s hunch.
      When Sally had arrived, her eldest, Willow, had rushed to her grandmother’s side and hugged her hard. Georgia remembered wincing a bit from the pain she’d inflicted upon her still tender shoulder, but she’d been so happy to see Willow again. Of all her grandchildren, Willow was the most special to her, and the girl knew it, too.
     Almost a teenager now, Willow had peered into her grandmother’s eyes with adult compassion and said, “Don’t worry, Grandma. You still have me.”
    Now as Georgia stepped out into the overcast day, she called lightly to Willow and watched the petite girl hurry toward her. “Walk with me, honey. I’m riding in your car to the cemetery.”
      As they headed toward the car, they were soon surrounded by Willow’s brother and sisters who all piled into the back of the Suburban. Georgia waited outside of the vehicle and watched as the pallbearers lifted the casket with Donald’s body into the waiting hearse.

      “Good-bye, dear,” she whispered. “Your journey has come to an end, and mine, well, mine is starting anew I guess.”  


Thank you for reading. Again, please leave me a comment for consideration. 

Tammy

Saturday, February 25, 2017

Why Jennifer Lawrence should produce and star in a movie based on my novel

This is both a very serious plea to Jennifer Lawrence and a tongue-in-cheek attempt to beg one of the biggest stars out there right now to listen to little old me when regular agents won't.

February 25, 2017

Hello Jennifer,

     Perhaps I shouldn't greet you with such a friendly tone since we don't know each other, but I'm a heck of a lot older than you and the chance of you ever really reading this are almost non-existent, so what the hell, I'm going to call you by your first name.
     Jennifer, you're a pretty great actress, and you seem like a down-to-earth sort of person which is a quality I admire in people. I've never been one to go for fake people either in my friends or in anyone I emulate even a little. No offense, but I don't really emulate you because I don't want to be an actress, and I'm plenty confident in who I am, but I do admire that you appear to be a very genuine person. That's kind of a hard thing to do these days, isn't it? Anyway, I digress. Let me get to the point.
     I wrote a novel called "The Clearwater House." You can check and see if you want to be sure that I'm telling you the truth. Look on Amazon. You'll see it's garnered some lovely stars and comments. Those who have read it have really enjoyed it, and I've heard from many of them that the book was "unputdownable" and a "page-turner" and that they "could really see it as a movie" along with many other compliments. Most have read it in a day or two even because they said they just couldn't stop reading it.
    The overall premise is that there's a woman named Lillian Chase who is a youngish artist from Nebraska living in Omaha and working at an art museum while she tries to pursue her own passion. Lillian suddenly inherits an old farm house from a woman she's never heard of; however, the house is located near Clearwater, a town and area that she knows a little bit because her grandfather lives nearby. She uses the house as a chance to escape Omaha for a bit and reconnect with her own paintings, but once she arrives at the house, the old home begins to "speak" to her through her paintings. Lillian discovers the truth about something bad that happened in the house years ago and how that story does actually pertain to her. She also meets the young farmer across the way, hooks up with him because he's a much better person than her loser boyfriend back in Omaha. His name is Jake, and he's a divorced father of a young son named Sam.
      You would be perfect to play the role of Lillian for many reasons. Let me highlight some of them:

1. You are beautiful, and I naturally imagine Lillian to be beautiful even though I don't spend an excessive amount of time focusing on her physical attributes. What matters even more, though, is that you have the natural beauty, the good old down to earth country girl beauty of us real Nebraska gals.

2. You have an open quality about you, but you can be stubborn, and you know what you want. These are Lillian's qualities as well.

3. You are the right age. Lillian is probably a bit older than you are at this moment, but by the time you would actually read the book, decide to take it on, try to convince others to help you, turn it into a screenplay, cast and film it and then get it released, you'd be a few years older, and then you'd be the perfect age. Plus, Lillian could be anywhere from late to early thirties, so you are spot on.

4. You have the clout to get it done now because you have already accomplished so much at such a young age. People will do it if you ask them to do it.

5. You know the right people to get it done, and you would have good ideas as to who to cast in the roles of Jake and Lillian's grandfather and Jake's dad and young Sam and a few other necessary characters you'll discover once you read the book.

6. You'd like Nebraska if you've never been here before, and you'd really like it once a born and raised Nebraskan such as myself showed you all the great things to love about the state and especially the Northeast section which is where Clearwater is located.

7. Most importantly, I can really see you as Lillian. I like you. I love the character I created. I think you'd do her justice.

     While the story is fictional, the settings are all real. Clearwater actually exists. It's the tiny town where my roots go back to, and I've placed the house in the story roughly in the locale where my grandparents' farm once was. I'd love to show you the area.
      Anyway, I know you won't actually see this, but on the offhand chance you do, I hope you will at least think about what I've proposed. While I'd ideally prefer that people just bought my book and read it, I would really love to see it made into a movie, and I agree with those readers who have told me that it would make a great movie. I think it would be an even greater movie if you were to play the part of Lillian Chase.

     Here is a photo of the cover of the novel, and below it is a photo of the back of the book:


The house depicted on the front of the book was my great-grandparents' house once upon a time. That house no longer exists except in that photo.

    So, Jennifer, please consider the possibility. I'd be happy to send you a copy of the book. Just let me know. Until then, keep up the great work!

                                                                                                     Sincerely,

                                                                                                     Tammy Marshall
                                                                                                     Neligh, Nebraska

p.s. If you're single, I have a wonderful and handsome son who is just a little younger than you are, he's a teacher and coach, and I'd love to introduce you to him. :)  Just sayin'. Have a great day!

Sunday, November 6, 2016

Read with Me! My path to publication.





The path to publication has been a circuitous one, to say the least. I haven't traveled down the trail I had first set out upon at all. Instead, I've wandered, I've dawdled, I've started anew, I've strayed quite far, I've tried to follow the crowd, and I've let the road take me where it wanted.

I imagine I'm not alone; however, I've often felt as if I am. 

I started writing my novel, "The Clearwater House," a long, long time ago. I can't even recall how I managed to keep working at it over the years, a little here, a little there, until I finally had a completed first draft. I've amended it many times over the years, and I could probably keep changing things in it forever, but at some point, you have to say that enough is enough.

I tried regular, and perhaps more credible, channels of publication from time to time, but I felt like I was beating my head against a door that said "INACCESSIBLE to little peon teachers from the middle of nowhere." So, I essentially gave up on finding an agent like I'd always planned and imagined my writing career would have. I was very sad and also disappointed in myself because I do believe that I have talent as a writer, but I couldn't get those with the power to help me to see that, I guess.

Honestly, though, I don't have nor have I ever had a lot of time to really chase agents. I also feel like I'm shooting in the dark because how am I really supposed to know if an agent is right for me based on an article in a writing magazine or from an online profile? In addition, I get a bit fed up with people who won't reply to my submissions unless they are interested in representing me. Seriously, a little feedback would be nice. Why didn't you like my work? What exactly about it didn't appeal to you? Are you simply too bogged down with the work of those you already represent, or was my work that horrible that you refused to touch it? I simply don't know because you won't reply to me!!! 

For five years I've been writing a bi-monthly column called "Novel Thoughts" for The Norfolk Daily News, and due to my connection with that newspaper and its editors, I approached them with the idea of publishing my novel in a serialized fashion. They graciously and enthusiastically jumped at the idea, so for one year, readers were allowed to read my book a chapter at a time as it was updated each week online.

I was astounded at the praise and positive feedback I got from the readers. Many of them contacted me wanting to purchase the novel, but I had to tell them that it wasn't available in print anywhere. Naturally, I really wanted it to be available, so I did contact a few more agents, but I had no takers. 

Once the year of serialization through the newspaper was up, I decided to publish via Amazon Kindle even though I'm not much of an e Reader reader myself. I did it because it was free for me. I don't want to pay to publish my book even though I want to see it in print. After all, my overall goal is to make a living as a writer, or at least a little bit of money, and paying to publish my work negates that very intent.

Through Kindle, I've sold a few copies, but only a few. Most people still prefer and want an actual physical copy of a book when they are reading, so I kept being asked where they could buy the actual book. I had to keep answering that it was only available on Kindle, and I got tired of hearing "I don't have a Kindle," or "I don't like to read on tablets," or many other reasons as to why the person wasn't going to buy my book on Kindle.

Another writer friend suggested that I use Create Space to make my book available through print-on-demand publishing. I was a little skeptical as to the quality of the finished product and also to my ability to set it all up, but my desire to have a physical copy of my book out there for people to buy and hold and read won out over my skepticism, and I decided to go for it.

It didn't take all that long to set the book up since I've had the finished novel saved for years, but formatting it caused me a little stress and a few do-overs. I probably spent longer on my cover because it was important to me to include the photo of my ancestors' house that once stood in rural Clearwater. 

People often ask if the book is non-fiction, then, since the cover contains a photo of a real, yet long gone, house. No, the story is complete fiction. Only the setting of Clearwater and its rural environs is real.

I've written other novels during the many years since I first started "The Clearwater House." I plan to use Create Space to set them up for publication as well when I can find the time to do some final edits first. 

If some agent somehow, someday notices my work and decides to come knocking on my door or sends me an email, then maybe I'll still get a chance at publishing my books through a more reputable source. Until then, however, I'll be happy for any sale, and I'll extend a big hug -- whether it be a virtual one or an in-person one -- to anyone who buys and reads my book. 

Over the years I've spent trying to establish myself as a writer, there have been two people who have grown and changed right along with my writing. Those are my children, both of whom are all grown now. I always meant to become an author when they were young and then stay home and write and have the flexibility to be there for them at the drop of a hat. Life, though, had other plans for me, so here I am still trying to make a go of writing as a career, and they have grown up to be gifted and talented people in their own rights. One is a wonderful coach, and the other will be a fantastic scientist in a few years.

I will never give up on my dream of being a respected writer, and I hope they will never give up on their dreams, no matter what they may be. Because I'm blessed with them as my children, I have dedicated my first print-available novel to them. I love writing and reading so very much, but I love Trevor and Samantha even more.

To anyone reading this who also reads or has read my novel, I say thank you from the bottom of my heart. Happy reading!   (This novel is available for purchase on Amazon Kindle or in print form through Amazon or Create Space.)




Thursday, August 4, 2016

Roam With Me! Nebraska Passport Stops

It's hard to believe -- as it is every year -- that summer vacation is about over, and I'll be returning to teaching soon. At the start of the summer, I made a plan to visit a lot of the Nebraska Passport stops, but I haven't managed to get to very many after all. Life has a way of waylaying things for us, but that's all right. I have visited 24 of the 80 stops so far, and I have until the end of September to get a few more in.

Of the ones I've visited, I've been really impressed by Crystal Forge in Omaha that is connected to Hot Shops, a collection of over 50 small shops presenting the work of over 80 local artists. While we were there, we stopped in Terry Koopman's photography shop, and my daughter immediately noticed a beautiful large black and white photo of the drive-in movie theater from right here in Neligh. She then found two other large black and white photos of other spots from Neligh. Terry, a very friendly man, said, "What can I say? I like Neligh." We told him of some other places to photograph on his next stop through town.

Another amazing and startling find for us was Bootleg Brewers in the country near Taylor. We weren't expecting the large metal barn-like building that we came upon when we turned that final curve in the long and bumpy gravel road. And we certainly weren't expecting the large and numerous kilns we saw once we went inside the building. I should have had a beer, I know, but I can't pass up a chance to try a Bloody Mary in every new bar I visit because I'm on a quest to find the best one out there. Bootleg Brewers' was pretty darn good.


I also like to see where I can find great mango smoothies. So far, both Sip Espresso Bar in Columbus and 4th Street Coffee House in Stromsburg have delivered well. The great thing about the Passport program is that it takes you to places you would normally never see. I've passed through both Columbus and Stromsburg many times, but I never knew about either of those coffee bars until I saw them in my passport booklet.

I'd never imagined that there might be a windmill museum out there anywhere, let alone in Nebraska City, but that's exactly where you can find the Kregel Windmill Museum. Seeing that cluttered shop and those windmill pieces took me right back to the visits to my grandparents' farm near Clearwater when I was a girl.

I've visited Boys Town many times over the years, but until this summer I didn't know there was a Hall of History housed there. It makes perfect sense to have a record of the town's illustrious history, but the way they have this Hall of History set up is astounding. I was very impressed with the layout and the way they have preserved important pieces of the town's journey from one man's idea to the far-reaching place it's become.


One of the well-known places in Omaha that has long been on my list of places I want to see is the Joslyn Art Museum. I have only myself to blame for never making time for it before this, but I can now say I've been there. Modern art isn't really my thing, but I did enjoy the older pieces, and I was especially pleased to find one by El Greco in their collection. As a Spanish teacher, I've been to El Prado museum in Madrid, Spain, and I've seen many pieces by El Greco there and in the city where he lived most of his life, Toledo, Spain. 


Another place we really enjoyed was Kreycik Elk and Buffalo Ranch nestled in the gorgeous Niobrara River Valley. Actually, I didn't much like seeing the farm because I don't care to see bison being treated like cattle in a feedlot, and I don't care for that smell either, but I did love the view on the way there!


So, while I haven't yet visited (and probably won't) all 80 of this summer's Nebraska Passport stops, I have made it to quite a few, and I've really enjoyed the ones I have seen. Hopefully, I will make it to a few more before the end of September. If I don't get to any more, though, I'll have this great view of the Niobrara River Valley to remind me of summer 2016.