Sabtu, 12 Juli 2008

Cotton Candy and Time Passing

Here's cutie Reilly with a big old hunk of cotton candy.

Where do the years go? Reilly looks EXACTLY like her mother did as a child. I can remember Amy as a baby just like it was yesterday.

Yes, yes, I know that's what all old farts say...but daggone it, it's true...

More Cuteness

Amy took the kids to a friend's house for a visit. Andrew thought the dog's bed was a mighty fine place to chill out!

Andrew's First Birthday!

Andrew turned one on July 10. Here's the birthday boy with his two great-grandfathers, Pop-Pop Kavanagh and Pop-Pop Hiltz.
Andrew with his daddy, Buster, and one of his grandfathers, Pop Buddy.

The birthday boy enjoying a french fry on his big day


Jumat, 11 Juli 2008

Cinderella - Steven Curtis Chapman

The inspiration for this song was Steven's youngest daughters, Stevey Joy and Maria.

Jennifer LOVES this song, and wanted it added here.

Listen to the words, with tissues in hand. You'll need them...

Bravery


A picture of a very brave man...singer Steven Curtis Chapman performed in concert tonight for the first time since the death of his daughter, Maria Sue.
He opened "with the first song that came to mind on the evening on May 21", (the day Maria died) "Blessed Be Your Name".

Jumat, 04 Juli 2008

Happy 4th of July



A day for enjoying the simple pleasures. A beautiful sunny day. To the movies to see "Kit Kittredge - American Girl". A little shopping and dinner at Panera. Painting our fingers and toes with red and blue nail polish for the holiday. Talking to family back in Maryland. Jen and I enjoying our time spent together.


No need to seek out fireworks...our neighbors will be setting off plenty of them at dusk. We'll be entertained for hours.


And thankful, always thankful, for the blessings and freedom we enjoy.

Senin, 30 Juni 2008

All Fall Down

As I've mentioned before, our tiny house has eight huge trees in the back yard. Four are shade trees, four are pine trees.

One week ago, the dog and I narrowly escaped death when a huge pine branch plummeted to the ground, just after we had been in the yard. Initially, I thought it might have been a random rotten branch.

No more. We have had thunderstorms nearly every day this past week, and with every storm, more large, rotted branches are coming down. Thankfully, none have done any damage to the house, the electrical wires, or the AC unit.

One huge branch is hanging precariously above the back door, even as I write this. This one's a monster, and it will definitely produce the big bang when it falls.

When we moved in, the landlord mentioned that he should "do something" about the trees, but he never did. Now nature is taking its course, and the branches are coming down about us, and, with the house being foreclosed upon, the landlord isn't about to spend the money now to address the tree situation.

The forecast for this afternoon is for more thunderstorms with high winds. Hopefully, when the hanging branch comes down, it will clear the house as the others have...

Sabtu, 28 Juni 2008

They're Finally Here!



From left, Maria, Sofi, Jennifer, and Haley.


Today we went to the MOSH for Sofi's ninth birthday party. The Birthday Girl is sporting a tiara and holding a Webkinz that Jen gave her. A wonderful time had by all.

Jennifer and I cut out of the festivities a bit early, because my mother and sister flew down to see us. They were supposed to come in April, but a family emergency forced them to cancel the visit the night before they were due to arrive. They'll be here until Tuesday. Jen has already decamped to the hotel, as she's a girl that has always liked a good hotel room.

Funny, everyone will say to me that this gives me time to myself. All I seem to do is rattle about the house, chatting to the pets, while trying to figure out what to do with my free time. Well, I did live large and paint my fingernails. Yes, it's great living the glamorous life!

I always tease Jen prior to the visits and say to her, "Let the spoiling begin." And so it has...She's already got her back to school wardrobe, courtesy of Mom-Mom, and two new bathing suits, thanks to Aunt Diane. Yes, two...one that's left at Uncle Paul and Uncle Ken's house. while the other stays at ours.

Tomorrow it's off to St. Augustine, our traditional trip every time the family visits, then back to the hotel to get in some swimming before the afternoon thunderstorms.

It's SO good to see my mom and sister. Now if we could just persuade everyone to move here...

Kamis, 26 Juni 2008

Gone, Baby, Gone -

- That would be the furniture we put out for the Dumpster Divers to help themselves to. Yes indeed, as of 4pm today, it's ALL been carted away. I made some woman in a blue SUV very happy...she snatched it up. And she made me happy as well. That's fewer items we'll have to move, once we find our new place.

She also spared our tender and delicate trash collectors. They are very choosy in their trash pickup. If they deem an item or a can too heavy, they won't take it.

Every Thursday finds me at the curb, lovingly staging my trash to make sure it gets picked up the next morning. Though I have three large trashcans, with wheels, I only put one bag in each of them. Any remaining bags, should there be any, are placed neatly beside the cans.

You see, it's too much of an effort for the collectors to wheel the cans five feet from the curb to the back of the truck. They would rather take the lids off the trashcans, throw them down into the storm drain, then lift the bags out of the cans one at a time and carry them over to the truck. Then, as a parting gift, they'll give the trashcans a toss, sending them into the storm drain with the lids. Occasionally, they'll surprise me, and just toss the lids and cans in the near vicinity of the driveway.

I've already staged the trash for tomorrow morning. I'm on a roll. Hmmm...what can I put out next for the Divers?

Bon Jovi - Living on a Prayer

Just because it's time for an 80's flashback and because Jon Bon Jovi is still so darn cute!

Rabu, 25 Juni 2008

Go Figure...



The Big Purge has started. Now that we know we definitely have to move, we're starting to get rid of things we don't want to take with us.

Early this morning, I hauled several items to the curb. Our trash pickup is every Friday, but we have a lot of Dumpster Diver traffic that passes through the neighborhood, so I figure most of the goodies I'm putting out will be long gone by the time the trash truck rolls through on Friday morning.

Today I put out two small wood tables, two chairs that were used in the back yard, and the kitchen chairs. Nice stuff, but I just don't want to move them yet again. This time, we're traveling with only what we really want and use. Oh, I also put out a stack of broken flowerpots...about 6 of them.

The flowerpots were at one time quite lovely. I had sealed, painted, and decorated them. Then a neighbor hit them with his lawn mower. Don't ask; you don't want to know the details. So you could say they were basically a pile of painted terracotta chunks that had once been flowerpots.

I was sure the furniture would be gone by now. Just a few minutes ago, I looked out the window. The only thing missing from the pile is the flowerpot shards! Yeah, yeah, one man's trash is another man's treasure; I KNOW that. But go figure...

Oh, NO! A Sequel Is Coming!



Late yesterday, after work, I was feeding my mind and reading People magazine online. To my horror, I read that Disney is planning a sequel to the dreadful "Camp Rock". Thankfully, it won't be released until sometime next year.


The first one was bad enough...and that stinkeroo is going to be eventually released on DVD!

Selasa, 24 Juni 2008

Family, Foreclosure, and the Big Branch

We had a relaxing, restorative weekend.

Friday night, I suffered through "Camp Rock" on the Disney Channel (okay, "restorative" didn't enter the weekend until Saturday). Jen had been counting down to the airing of the movie for months, thanks to the propaganda commercials touting the movie that have run on Disney for months.

Yes indeed, what more could a 9 1/2 year old want? A Hannah Montana marathon, snd then a movie with the Jonas Brothers! I had my marching orders that all I had to do was to be wrapped up by 8pm so we could "enjoy" the movie together.

The movie stunk to high heaven. "High School Musical" it ain't. But whichever Jonas played the male lead in the movie could've stood there and read a menu...it wouldn't have mattered to Jen.

After the movie, I was ready to go to bed and sleep off the bad taste in my mouth. Jen was bouncing about the room, prattling away about the film, and anticipating...

Saturday, and getting together with Sofi for the afternoon. Pam and I got a chance to catch up with each other face to face, instead of our scattered calls that have marked the summer thus far.

Then two happy calls on Saturday night. My mom's call to let us know that she and my sister are flying in this weekend for a visit. Then Paul calling for a Sunday morning beakfast invitation to meet his brother, sister-in-law, and nephew, who came down for a visit.

We all met up met at the Golden Corral at 9am, then went back to Paul's to swim before the afternoon thunderstorms rolled in.

Woke Monday morning to glorious sunshine. At about 9:15 am, I took the dog outside briefly, then headed to my office to begin work. As soon as I shut my office door, there was a loud noise I couldn't quite identify, but it sent the cats scrambling and the dog barking madly. Then I head Jen's voice saying, "Mom, you should see the big branch that just fell in our back yard!"

We have eight huge trees in our back yard...well over 100 feet high. All of them need to be cut down, as they're rotting. Lying in the yard, in the exact spot where Lucy and I had been standing not three minutes before, was a branch about 15 inches in diameter, and about 30 feet long. The branch somehow cleared the roof and the satellite dish. It was a scant two inches from the AC unit, as well.

When I looked up, I could see the branch had fallen from about 50 feet up. There was another huge branch that had been knocked loose and was now hanging by a thread as well. On its trek to the ground, the branch had knocked down a bunch of smaller branches. I picked up what I could, but the big branch wouldn't budge.

Then it hit me...had that branch come down while Lucy and I were outside, it would have killed us both. Really. That realization made me suddenly queasy, so I wandered back into the office to collect myself.

After telling Jennifer that the back yard is off limits from now until we move, I called the landlord. No, not to get some help getting the tree removed. My landlord doesn't do repairs or maintenence. Never has. Plus he's the slowest moving cuss in the South. I was just calling for an update on the foreclosure.

I spoke to his office manager, and got the answer I expected. He's letting all of his rental homes go to foreclosure. The twenty days he had to respond has passed. The next step is waiting for his court date. Once the house is officially foreclosed upon, we'll all get served again, and an auction date for this house will be set.

So, we've got about 90 to 120 days to find another place to live while this all plays out. Time to pack...

Minggu, 22 Juni 2008

Honey, We Have A Visitor...

He's a real beauty, isn't he?

Well, after all, this IS Florida. And while we do love the Gators, as in football, a real alligator up close and personal is a disconcerting experience.
Such was the case for a Jacksonville woman this weekend, when a 10 foot alligator decided to take up a spot in her backyard, near her swimming pool. The handsome fella is pictured above.
An animal trapper managed to tie the alligator and remove it from the woman's property. According to an animal specialist, we Floridians can expect to see more alligators searching for water as the weather gets hotter.
A few years ago, Jen and I lived in an apartment right on an inlet off the St. John's River. We would periodically see alligators swimming crankily about. To my surprise, I learned they can move at 35 mph on dry land, and that the biggest chances of getting chomped were in the early morning and at dusk.
That bit of information gave me pause, as I had, in blissful ignorance, been walking our dog, Lucy, in the early morning and at dusk close to the water's edge (we had recently moved to Florida from Maryland). Obviously, once enlightened, I never did so again.

Sabtu, 21 Juni 2008

Beautiful


Three of my beautiful nieces: Amy, Laura, and Sarah. Can you believe that Sarah, on the right, is the YOUNGEST of the three sisters? She's a gorgeous 5' 10" tall!!!

Jumat, 20 Juni 2008

Hong Kong State of Mind













All Photos by Codino A. C. Divino


Today, one of my favorite bloggers, Eugene Cho, wrote about the trip to Korea he, his wife, and children will be making shortly. And he asked those of us checking in to share where our favorite places are.
For me, for always, it will be Hong Kong. Found these beautiful pictures and let my mind wander back to the week my mother and I spent there back in 1999, just before flying to the mainland and Jennifer.

Anniversary

Five years ago today we moved from Maryland to Florida. The time has flown...

Kamis, 19 Juni 2008

Blogging, Blogging, and More Blogging

Yes, Jen and I are really getting into this blogging thing. We've discovered fancy templates and add-ons, and even decided it's time for each of us to have a second blog apiece.

Jen's newest blog is All Things Hannah Montana (http://allthingshannahmontana.blogspot.com/). Perhaps you can ascertain from the title what the content of the blog might be...

My newest blog is Hoku Casa Cooks (http://hokucasacooks.blogspot.com/). This does not imply I'm a hot mama - far from it. No, this is just my blog for cooking, recipes, cookbooks, etc., as I'm a Food Network junkie. I'll leave the Hot Mama thing to Nigella Lawson...she's better at it, anyway!

Clearly, neither one of us were especially touched with the originality stick in naming our newest blogs...

Mrs. Nie Hui Zhen



All is still up in the air with whether or not we will be staying in our present house or moving. However, I am attempting to arrange my addled brain to think about purging all of the unnecessary things we've collected over the years, and to try to formulate some sort of packing strategy.
Last night, I was putting scattered photographs away, and paused for a bit to look through the box of pictures I'd taken while in China. Nearly nine years later, I can remember nearly every aspect of the journey to adopt Jennifer.
In the box were two very special pictures, given to me by Mrs. Nie Hui Zhen. Mrs. Nie was the director of the Yongfeng Social Welfare Institute, where Jennifer spent 10 months of her life.
I met Mrs. Nie in the hall of the Lake View Hotel in Nanchang. My mother and I had traveled to Nanchang with 15 other families. I was the first in our group of waiting parents to receive my daughter.
Mrs. Nie, with the help of a translator, answered my many questions about Jennifer's early life. The next morning, she spoke directly to the officials at the Jiangxi Civil Affairs office, and Jen's adoption was the first one finalized that day.
Later that afternoon, before she returned to Yongfeng City, she stopped by our hotel room and handed me several pictures of Jennifer that had been taken in the early months of her life. She lifted Jennifer out of her crib for a final hug, then walked out of the hotel room and our lives forever.
I remember tearing up as she held Jennifer for the last time. Here was a child that she had told me had been very special to her. She had traveled with Jennifer by train to Nanchang, handed her over to a perfect stranger, and would return to the orphanage without her.
I was blessed with a bright, healthy, loving baby. I am sure that Jen's happy disposition was in part from the love she received in the brief time she was cared for by Mrs. Nie. Many times, in the years that have passed, I have thought often of Mrs. Nie, and hope life has been good to her.
In thinking of her yesterday and today, it seems only fitting to share a bit about her here...a woman who touched my life forever, if only for a moment.
(The pictures above are not from my personal collection. They were generously posted on another website by an adoptive mother whose daughter also came from the same orphanage.)

Rabu, 18 Juni 2008

More on the Mrs. Mike Mystery...

More Google work this morning, as I continued my search for more info on Kathy Flannigan and "Mrs. Mike". Believe it or not, this article appeared in "O". Oprah's magazine, late last year.

Since I don't worship at the shrine of All-Things-Oprah, I'd have never found it. I stumbled across the author's website, and got more info in 10 minutes then I have in the last five years.

There are poignant surprises. Kathy and Mike's two birth children, Mary Aroon and Ralph, died of diptheria toward the end of the book. What I didn't know, until I read th article below, was if the Flannigans lived closer to an area with better medical facilities, their children would have likely survived. Mike Flannigan died of a ruptured appendix in his forties. Likewise, he probably would have survived, had they lived in an area where he could've received better medical attention.

The Flannigans did adopt a Native American daughter, but the two Kathys of the two "sequels" to "Mrs. Mike" are completely fictionalized (so I doubt if I'll be reading either of the books). Sadly, according to the article below, none of the Flannigan's children survived.

Unlike the author of the article here, I do plan to do further research with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, to see if I can gain any further information on Mike Flanigan. If I'm lucky enough to come up with any additional information, I'll gladly post it.

It's an odd feeling to come to the end of the search, learning that not all of the details in the book actually happened, and especially sadly, that the Flannigans lost all of their children.

But I will still give Jen a copy of the marvelous book for her birthday this year.

The Story of My Life

It Was One of Those Books—the Kind You Keep Forever and Read Again and Again, It Taught Me About Dreams, About Love, and—In a Remarkable Plot Twist—About the Courage it Really Takes to Live

By Peggy Orenstein

I HAPPENED ACROSS MRS. MIKE when I was in sixth grade; it was buried under a stack of tattered comic books in my older brother's room. I'd snuck in there to snoop for contraband issues of National Lampoon, which my mother insisted he hide from me (already possessed of a journalist's curiosity, I took that as a challenge). But Mrs. Mike, with its cover illustration of a parka-clad girl on a dogsled, stopped me. The manila library pocket, its check-out card intact, was stamped Susan B. Anthony, the Minneapolis junior high my brother had attended. I didn't stop to wonder why he would have boosted a love story, first published in 1947, about a plucky 16-year-old girl who married a Mountie. Figuring that if he'd swiped it, it must be juicy, I hightailed it to my room, slid under the covers of my canopy bed, and dug in.

That was 35 years ago. Mrs. Mike has sat at my bedside ever since—traveling with me from Minnesota to Ohio to New York and, finally, to California. After all this time, it's held together with rubber bands and Scotch tape, the pages weathered and dog-eared. I pick it up about once a year, intending merely to leaf through, and end up as engrossed as the first time I read it; the themes of resilience, a woman's indomitable spirit, of living a life of purpose, and doing so with gusto and courage still hook me.

A classic girl's adventure yarn, Mrs. Mike is the real-life tale of Katherine Mary O'Fallon, a turn-of-the-last-century Boston lass who, stricken with pleurisy (one of those literary wasting diseases about which one no longer hears) is sent to Canada to take in the bracing fresh air at her uncle's cattle ranch. She weds Mountie Mike Flannigan after seeing him a mere handful of times and joins him in the wilds of Alberta. Yet this is no happily-ever-after trifle: Every tender moment is offset by tragedy, every triumph booby-trapped with loss. Kathy announces she's pregnant, and shortly afterward a fire levels her town, destroying her home, incinerating her neighbor's son. In the absence of doctors, Mike must assist in amputating a man's leg (without anesthesia). Tension simmers among whites, "'breeds," and Indians. Mosquitoes drive men mad.
When the couple's own two children perish from diphtheria—a disease that would have been treatable had they lived closer to civilization—Kathy breaks. She leaves Mike to return to Boston. But the harsh country, as much as her husband's love, has changed her, and eventually she goes back. They adopt the children of friends (who also died in the epidemic) and begin again, knowing they may well lose this family, too. By the book's final page, Kathy is barely 19 years old.

As a girl, I was inspired by Kathy's determination. It was the early 1970s, and the feminist movement was crashing headlong into the traditional expectations I'd been raised with. I knew I wanted something different for myself, and even if I wasn't sure what that might be, I suspected that it would involve breaking free of my family and community as Kathy had. She had defied convention and her mother, leaving behind everything she knew, perhaps forever, for a questionable future. True, she was simply following her man (the book isn't called Ms. Kathy, after all). But given the parameters and proprieties of the time—before meeting Mike, she'd never even worn pants—hers was a radical act. I wanted to be that fearless, that confident of my convictions, that willing to create a life on my own terms. It was Kathy I thought of at 21, when my father warned me that I'd never make it as a writer. It was Kathy I thought of when I quit my day job with no money in the bank. It was Kathy I thought of when I moved to San Francisco, where I didn't know a soul.

In my late 20s, with my career blossoming, the appeal the book held for me shifted: Now I was more taken with the passionate, collaborative partnership Kathy and Mike had formed. I was hoping to find my own soul mate, someone who would engage me, heart and mind. When I found that man, just to be sure, I read him Mrs. Mike during late, lazy nights in bed. I noticed that the story was a tad schmaltzy, its portrayal of native people often problematic. But, luckily—for him as well as me—he saw past that. He compared the book to his own all-time favorite, Jude the Obscure, another tale of near-inexplicable perseverance.

I'm not saying I wouldn't have married him if he didn't love my favorite book, but that certainly clinched the deal.

MRS. MIKE CAUSED A SENSATION WHEN it was published 60 years ago, selling more than a million copies the first year. Since then, it's been continuously in print, though often just barely. I'd assumed its authors, husband and wife team Nancy and Benedict Freedman, were long dead. Even if they'd been as young as 30 in 1947 . . . well, you do the math. Still, they'd had such a profound affect on my life, I wondered what theirs had been like. So one afternoon in the fall of 2002, I did the contemporary version of sneaking into someone's bedroom: I Googled them. Immediately, I found a newspaper article about the way that much-loved but obscure books had been given new life via Amazon.com. Mrs. Mike was example A. The dozens of reader reviews—mostly from women like me who'd treasured the story in their teens—had prompted a major reissue. Interesting. But there was more: The Freedmans had been interviewed for the story. Interviewed! That meant they were alive. And not only were they alive, but in a miraculous coincidence, their home was only a short drive from mine. It felt like fate. I quickly banged out a fan letter explaining what their book had meant to me—the chance to have a similar impact on even one reader is, as much as anything, why I became a writer—and asking if I could meet them. Within days I received an invitation to tea.

By then, my husband and I had been married for ten years, the last five of which had been spent—more and more miserably—trying to have a child. We'd been through three miscarriages, months of soulless sex, invasive tests, pills and shots, two cycles of in vitro fertilization using my eggs and a third using a friend's. Nothing had worked. Along the way, I seemed to have lost the ability to feel joy; my husband was angry that his tenderness couldn't restore it. Now, when I reread Mrs. Mike before visiting its authors, it was the tragedies that stood out, the cost of Kathy's willfulness. I recognized myself in the flat grief of her losses, the way pain eroded her capacity for love. I, too, dreamed of starting over somewhere else, making different, perhaps more traditional, choices. Even my usual refuge—my work—was suffering. How could I trust my instincts as a writer, as an observer of human nature, when I'd so screwed up my own life?

I don't know what I wanted from the Freedmans. A little distraction, perhaps, a reminder of a better time in my life. I was eager to quiz them about what had happened to Kathy and Mike after the book's final page. Had things gone well? Were they happy? After so much sadness, had they found peace? I felt personally invested—maybe too invested—in the answers.

NANCY FREEDMAN, 87, met me at her apartment door. A tall, slender woman, she carried herself like the actress she trained to be. Her hair, cut in a jaw-length bob, was a dramatic white, her eyebrows dark above pale blue eyes, her features wide and vibrant. The beauty in the lines of her face was the best argument I'd seen yet against Botox. She greeted me as if we were old friends. Later, I'd realize that full-throttle was the Freedmans' approach to everything—during their courtship, which took place almost entirely by mail, Benedict wrote "page 40" at the top of his first letter, as if they were already mid-conversation. "You gotta love a guy like that," Nancy would tell me. They've been married 66 years.

Benedict was on the couch in the living room, facing a window that overlooked a canal dotted with rowboats and waterfowl. At 88, he has difficulty walking, though you'd never know it; he made his way across the room by leaning casually on the backs of strategically placed chairs. His mind, however, was still nimble: He had just finished his day's work on a nonfiction book titled Rescuing the Future, which he described as a plea, for the good of humanity, to focus on looking forward rather than bickering over past wrongs.

"What appealed to us about Kathleen Flannigan's story," Benedict told me right off, "was how it paralleled our own." He and Nancy had met briefly in Los Angeles in 1939. He was a junior writer on Al Jolson's radio show; she was a 19-year-old ingenue about to move to New York. But after a few months of hoofing around Broadway, she was diagnosed with a lethal heart infection (now treatable with antibiotics) that forced a retreat to her native Chicago, where she was confined to bed. Benedict followed her there and, though he'd seen her a mere five times, proposed marriage. Nancy burst into tears; her father, who was a doctor, explained that she probably wouldn't survive three months. Benedict didn't care. "I just didn't believe she was going to die," he said. "Also, I felt even if it's only three months, we've got three months. Better than lying in bed staring at the ceiling."

Like Mike, who fashioned a bed on a dogsled for Kathy out of boxes and fur blankets, Benedict folded back the seat of his jalopy—a convertible with a beach umbrella for a roof—to make a chaise for his bride before they headed West for their honeymoon. For eight years, first in Chicago and later in Los Angeles, he would carry Nancy up every flight of stairs. "She couldn't walk," he said. "On the other hand, she was always full of life."

And like Kathy, Nancy never saw another doctor. Benedict took care of her himself. Three months turned to six, turned to a year, turned to eight. Slowly, she improved. The woman who should never have seen 1942 now has four great-grandchildren. She credits her recovery to Benedict's love—"he hauled me back to life," she said, "he really did"—and to Mrs. Mike, which they wrote together from her sickbed. I could have swooned from the romance of it all.

AFTER MIKE FLANNIGAN DIED, IN HIS 40s, from a ruptured appendix (another preventable loss, I thought grimly), Kathy went to L.A. and tried to peddle her story to the movies. No one bit. But an agent introduced her to the Freedmans, who thought her life might be the stuff of literature (Mrs. Mike was eventually adapted for the screen; the film is truly ghastly). They invited her to their tiny apartment, a converted garage on what had once been the actress Mary Pickford's estate, and spent two days listening to her talk. "We were enchanted by her story," Benedict recalled. "Here was this girl, very young, incapacitated—but willing to fall in love, really fall in love, passionately, without any care for anything else. That reinforced our own determination to live the life we wanted to live regardless of the clouds on the horizon."

I knew the feeling. "Did any of their children survive?"

Nancy shook her head. "No. They had adopted an Indian girl. But not the ones that are in the book. I dreamed those."

I must have looked confused. "Mrs. Mike is a novel," Benedict explained.

"A novel?" My stomach clenched. I felt an abrupt, almost physical sense of displacement, the way you would if, say, you found out at age 45 that your mother was actually your aunt. I'd based my life on this book. It formed a core part of my identity. As an 11-year-old I'd accepted each word as gospel; it had never occurred to me to question that assumption. Now I looked at my ancient library copy, which I'd brought with me: Sure enough, a red F was taped to the side, indicating it should be shelved in the fiction section.

"But did she really live in that town that burned down?" I asked, my voice rising.

"Yes," said Nancy.

"No," said Benedict.

Yes? No? Which was it? I'm sure I looked as stunned as I felt. "What's true is her spirit," Benedict added, firmly. "She was a person afraid of nothing, willing to take on anything. And the most important scenes—for example, when she leaves Mike and goes back to Boston—we didn't invent that. But we also didn't check her account of things."

Part of me wanted to rush home right then and try to retrace the story, to follow the Flannigans' trail north. I could Google the town of Grouard. Or look up Mike's name in the records of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. But even as I plotted my search, I realized its results would be irrelevant. Mrs. Mike might have played a lesser role in my life had I known it was, at least in part, fabrication. But Kathy—the reality, the invention, the symbolism—had been there when I needed her most. And if I still needed proof that real, ordinary people could choose bold, unconventional lives, all I had to do was look at the Freedmans, whose story was as enthralling as Kathy's—maybe more so. They had lived so fully, experienced so much, crossed paths with so many great names of their day. Nancy had played Juliet in a production of Shakespeare's play staged by Fanchon and Marco, the brother-sister dance team who'd launched the careers of Cyd Charisse, Joan Crawford, Doris Day, and Bing Crosby. Igor Stravinsky himself had chosen her to dance in Petrushka at the Hollywood Bowl. She had studied under the director Max Reinhardt.

Meanwhile, Benedict's father, David, had created the character of Baby Snooks for Fanny Brice, written a Broadway hit, and was head writer of Eddie Cantor's radio show. When, at age 13, Benedict needed a date for a school dance, his father tried to fix him up with the burlesque queen Gypsy Rose Lee (who, informed of the boy's predicament, responded, "Well, for Dave's sonŠ" and flipped a breast out of her bra; Benedict did not pursue the opportunity).

David died when Benedict was 16, leaving gambling debts that bankrupted the family. They left their tower apartment in Manhattan's swank Beresford building (the unit is now owned by tennis star John McEnroe) and Benedict, the eldest of three dropped out of school to help support the family. He worked for an actuary by day, and wrote scripts at night and on weekends. Eventually, he snagged a job as a junior writer on the Marx Brothers' film At the Circus and headed off to Los Angeles. He wrote gags for Mickey Rooney, Bob Hope, Jimmy Durante. He spent 12 years with The Red Skelton Show, moving with it from radio to television, and wrote episodes of such classics as My Favorite Martian and The Andy Griffith Show. He and Nancy collaborated on the writing of eight books. They still spend hours a day working side by side, Benedict on his humanitarian manifesto and Nancy on a novel.

"Tell her about the time you met Howard Hughes," Nancy said during that first visit, and I listened, rapt, to how the famous eccentric instructed Benedict to shower, sponge himself off with rubbing alcohol, then shower again before their meeting. It was a fine anecdote, but I was more impressed that, at 44, with three kids and a wife to support, Benedict had walked away from his Hollywood paycheck—with Nancy's blessing—to pursue an early dream, the one he'd abandoned when his father died: studying advanced mathematics. He enrolled at UCLA, eventually earning a PhD in mathematical logic and teaching for 35 years at Occidental College in Los Angeles. The man had the courage to reinvent himself at midlife, to refuse to be ruled by regret. Maybe, I thought, I could do that, too.

NANCY AND BENEDICT spent their entire Mrs. Mike windfall on a house in the Pacific Palisades designed by the architect Richard Neutra—only to see the house severely damaged in a mud slide. A second house, in Malibu, went up in flames. At times over the years, they were penniless; once when their kids were young, Benedict had to tend bar until a writing job came through. None of it fazed them. As children of the Great Depression, they never much trusted wealth or stability. "One of the things we learned from all of it was to celebrate bad news," Benedict said. "If a book is turned down or something goes very wrong, you go out and have a party."

"Good news, you're happy anyway," Nancy added. "But bad news, you've got to have a great dinner and kick up your heels."

"Benedict and I have had difficult periods," she continued. "And we always faced serious, scary problems. But I have a theory about courage. I don't think it's a moment of bravery when you have a rush of adrenaline. Courage is something level, a kind of force that sustains you. And that's what it takes to face difficult things, to make it through life successfully."

Maybe Nancy was right. It's easy to congratulate yourself on your wisdom, your bravery when things are going well. The challenge is to trust in yourself, your work, your marriage, your gut, when they aren't. I'd thought, as Kathy had, that seizing my destiny and finding true love would protect me from pain, bad luck, mistakes, failure. I'd clearly missed the point of the book. Those things aren't avoidable; they're actually the hallmark of a life fully lived.

One meeting with my favorite authors did not erase years of struggle. There were still plenty of nights in our California home when the atmosphere felt as chilly as the Yukon's. But over time, especially after the birth of our daughter, my husband and I found our way back to each other, just as Kathy and Mike had. Last summer, we celebrated our fifteenth anniversary, and we marked the occasion by rereading Mrs. Mike. This time, I felt new appreciation for the bittersweet finale—the couple's courage to forgive and their faith in reconciliation. I asked my husband what he had taken away from the book. "That's easy," he said, with a half smile. "Life is hard. But love is strong."

I already have plans for my next rereading: It will be in another few years, snuggled up in bed with my daughter. Maybe Mrs. Mike won't be the book that changes her life. But when she hears Kathy's story, and especially how it influenced my own, I hope she'll be inspired to find the book that will.

© Peggy Orenstein. All rights reserved.

Selasa, 17 Juni 2008

More On Maria's Miracle Fund


In the 27 days since Maria Sue Chapman died, the Maria's Miracle Fund, as of noon today, has received just over a half a million dollars in donations.
In the past, Shaohannah's Hope gave grants of $3,000 per family toward defraying some of the enormous expenses associated with adoption. Think of how many more children will now have their forever families, due to the generosity of so many.
Yes, there can be beauty from ashes...

The Mrs. Mike Mystery

Growing up, one of my favorite books was "Mrs. Mike" by Nancy and Benedict Freedman. I read the Scholastic books copy until it fell apart, but still have a battered copy my parents gave me for Christmas one year. I ususally pick up my tattered copy about once every 18 months and re-read it. Yes, I still love the story as much now, as I did when I first read it over 40 years ago.

For those that have never read the book, it is the story of the early married life of Katherine Mary Flannigan, and her husband, Mike, a member of the Canadian Mounties. The Freedmans met Mrs. Flannigan, who was widowed in 1933, and were so taken with her story, that they turned it into a book. "Mrs. Mike" ended with the death of Mike and Kathy's two birth children and the adoption of three other children.

Nearly 50 years later, the Freedmans wrote two other books, "The Search for Joyful" and "Kathy Little Bird". One was about Kathy Forquet, the daughter of Oh-Be-Joyful and Jonathan Forquet, whom Mike and Kathy adopted. The other is about Kathy Forquet's daughter, also named Kathy. I haven't read either, but understand there is little mention of Kathy Flannigan in either book. Yes, I'll eventually read them, but have to mention that the reviews on Amazon are less-then-glowing for either.

For the last few years, I have been sporadically searching the internet, trying to find more information. There's a thread out on Geneaology.com, asking many of the same questions I have. Like me, no one can find anything anywhere. What of Kathy and her children? Did she & Mike have other children? Where are the descendents? It wasn't until I found the blurb on Wikipedia that I found out Kathy Flannigan had remarried!

Daggone it, there aren't many answers out there, just the info on Wikipedia, and Kathy's obituary, in the New York Times, exactly 145 words, and one has to pay to read it.

This year, I plan to give Jennifer a copy of "Mrs. Mike" on her birthday. I'm hoping she will love it as much as I do.

Here's what Wikipedia has:



Katherine Mary Flannigan (born Katherine Mary O'Fallon, c. 1890, Ireland died 1954) immigrated with her family to Boston, Massachusetts as a small child. At age 16, she travelled to Calgary, Alberta to visit family and recover from an illness. In 1907, she met and married Mike Flannigan, a sergeant with the Northwest Mounted Police, and moved with him to isolated posts in the mountain and lake regions (Lesser Slave Lake) of British Columbia and northern Alberta.

Her true story was the basis for the novel Mrs. Mike and the 1949 film of the same title.

After Sgt. Flannigan's death in 1933, Mrs. Flannigan left the North for a time and eventually related her story to Benedict and Nancy Freedman. Their novel drawn from her experiences, Mrs. Mike, was published in 1947 and became a critical and popular success.

Mrs. Flannigan then wrote The Faith of Mrs. Kelleen, which was set in 1880s Ireland and based on the story of her great-aunt. The January 1951 New York Times review by Orville Prescott stated, "Having lived a life of dramatic adventure (her honeymoon was a 700-mile jaunt by dog team in the Canadian north) and having seen others write a popular novel about it, Mrs. Flannigan has evidently decided that any other books about her relations might as well be written by herself."

Press sources report that in her later years, Mrs. Flannigan remarried (John P. Knox) and lived in Vancouver. She died on Aug. 8, 1954, while visiting family and friends in Calgary.

Senin, 16 Juni 2008

Tiger, Tiger, Tiger!




We love Tiger Woods...


SAN DIEGO — With a throbbing knee and a pounding heart, Tiger Woods made one last improbable escape Monday and won the U.S. Open in a 19-hole playoff over Rocco Mediate, his 14th career major and maybe the most amazing of them all.

One shot behind after a collapse no one saw coming, Woods birdied the 18th hole to force sudden death at Torrey Pines against a 45-year-old with a creaky back who simply wouldn't go away.
But that one extra hole was enough to doom Mediate, trying to become the oldest U.S. Open champion at 45 years, 6 months.

He put his tee shot in the bunker at No. 7, knocked his approach off a cart path and against the bleachers, chipped some 18 feet past the hole and missed the par putt.

On the verge of one of golf's greatest upsets, Mediate instead became another victim.
Woods, who delivered so many spectacular moments over four days along the Pacific bluffs, only needed a two-putt par at the end to win the U.S. Open for the third time, and the first since it last was held on a public course at Bethpage Black in 2002.

It capped a remarkable week for the world's No. 1 player, who had not played since April 15 surgery on his left knee and looked as though every step was a burden. But the knee held up for 91 holes, and the payoff was worth the pain.

"I'm glad I'm done," Woods said. "I really don't feel like playing anymore. It's sore."
Woods joins Jack Nicklaus as the only players to capture the career Grand Slam three times over.

Mediate's odyssey began two weeks ago when he had to survive a sudden-death playoff simply to qualify for this U.S. Open. Even more unlikely was going toe-to-toe with Woods — whom Mediate referred to as a "monster" — and nearly slaying him.

He had a 20-foot birdie putt on the 18th hole to win, but it slid by on the left.
Mediate struggled to keep his emotions after taking bogey on the first extra hole, but he walked off Torrey Pines with 12,000 new friends who crammed both sides of every fairway for a playoff that was tighter than anyone imagined.

"Obviously, I would have loved to win," he said. "I don't know what else to say. They wanted a show, they got one."

Did they ever.

From the opening tee shot Thursday in a light fog known as "June Gloom," this U.S. Open simply shined.

"This is probably the greatest tournament I've ever had," Woods said.

It was filled with some of his greatest moments — a 30 on the back nine Friday to get into the mix, two eagles from a combined 100 feet and a chip-in birdie on Saturday to take the lead, and one of the biggest putts of his career when he holed a 12-foot birdie with the final stroke of regulation to force the playoff.

Then came a playoff in which he built a three-shot lead with eight holes to play, only to find himself trailing four holes later.

Next up for Woods? Even he isn't sure after hobbling around on a knee that clearly hasn't healed.

"I'm going to shut it down for a while," Woods said.

Beating the Heat


We just got a recent picture of Bailey and Zeus, sporting their summertime "haircuts" to beat the heat.
We're so grateful to the family that took them in, and for them continuing to keep us all updated on how they're doing. But we all miss those sweet doggies...

Minggu, 15 Juni 2008

Father's Day Fun

Some of the handsome men in the family...my nephew, Zach, my great-nephew, Andrew, and my nephew, Trevor, celebrating Father's Day at Mom-Mom & Pop-Pop Hiltz's house.
Andrew with one of his great-grandfathers, Pop-Pop Kavanagh.

Buster, my niece Amy's husband & a wonderful father, with Reilly and Andrew.


Andrew on Father's Day, wearing a "My Dad Rocks" shirt.


Thanks, as always, to my niece, Amy, for bring the diligent picture-taker in the family, then posting them to her own blog, so Aunt Donna can copy them! Looks like everyone in Maryland had a great time celebrating Father's Day.
Our Florida Father's Day celebration was Jen & I going to the craft store, then over to visit her two surrogate dads, my dear friends Paul & Ken.
From the moment Paul & Ken first saw Jen, in 2001, it was love at first sight. Since we moved to Florida, in 2003, they have been her daddy figures. Jen loves her time with her uncles and truly feels like she has two fathers.

Father's Day

To my dad, Donald W. Hiltz - the best father a person could ever wish for.

How do you pay tribute to a man who has probably weathered more storms in the last year then he's had in his entire life? Throughout all that has happened, he has shown himself to be what he has always been - a man of remarkable character and strength.

I am blessed to have him as a father. Daddy, here's a big "Same Here" to you, especially today. I love you more then words could ever say.

Sabtu, 14 Juni 2008

Culture Club - Miss Me Blind (1984)

Another favorite from the 80's. Yes, back in the day, I loved the way Boy George did his eye makeup!

All Things Nancy


We headed to Books A Million today, as Jen had seen a sign in the window yesterday about Webkinz. (An aside - my dad says we'll have to build an addition onto the house to hold Care Bears and Webkinz. Jen's never been much on dolls, but stuffed animals...). No Webkinz purchased, but we hit a grand sale on Nancy Drew books! Jen came away with three more to add to her collection.
She loves Nancy Drew. She's won a Nancy Drew DVD, she's been Nancy Drew for Halloween, and reading the books has inspired her to begin writing her own "Sadie Miller Mystery" series. We even found the "Nancy Drew Cookbook" in a bookstore last year.
So, in honor of all things Nancy today, I got some info off Wikipedia about everyone's favorite sleuth:
Nancy Drew is an amateur sleuth, the fictional heroine of a popular mystery series, primarily aimed at the children-young adult audience, and written under the collective pseudonym "Carolyn Keene". The series was created and outlined in detail in 1930 by Edward Stratemeyer, founder of the Stratemeyer Syndicate, with the first manuscripts written by Mildred A. Wirt Benson and edited by Stratemeyer's daughter Harriet Stratemeyer Adams. The Stratemeyer Syndicate had a strict non-disclosure contract; writers such as Mildred Benson produced books based upon outlines provided by the Syndicate. As a ghostwriter, Benson was the second most prolific writer (after Stratemeyer-Adams herself), producing twenty-three of the first thirty volumes.
Series history

Nancy Drew is alive right now, the series is actually based on a real Nancy Drew and her adventures.
Character evolution of Nancy Drew -
Original Nancy, 1930 to 1940 -

Nancy Drew was depicted as an independent-minded teenager, who has already completed her high school education. She is sixteen at the beginning of the series, but gradually aged to eighteen by the mid 1940s (this was changed when the original books were later revised; she is always eighteen), by then necessary to graduate from school in many states. Apparently affluent, she maintains an active social, volunteer, and sleuthing schedule, as well as participating in athletics and the arts, but is never shown as working for a living or acquiring job skills. Nancy is also unhindered by the Great Depression and World War II.

Nancy lives with her father, attorney Carson Drew. In volume one of the original series, it is stated that Nancy's mother died when Nancy was ten years old (changed to three in later revisions); volume four expands upon the idea by indicating she has managed a servant and the household for her father since that time. This fact was changed in later revisions.

The Drews' housekeeper, Hannah Gruen, is in charge of cooking delicious meals, cleaning, and all sorts of errands. In the early stories, "Hannah," is depicted as the servant of employer Nancy, and follows directives down to uniform appearance, menus and groceries from her young supervisor. Hannah is excluded from discussion of mysteries, and does not take meals with the family. This character gradually changed, as the role of the middle-class and their servants did in reality. By the mid 1940s, she is more a member of the family, and less formal with Nancy, often attempting to restrict her independence. She lives with the Drews in the family's three-story brick house in the fictional town of River Heights.

The evolution of the series and, as adjusted in later revisions of the early stories, Hannah assumes more of a warm, maternal role in Nancy's life and, along with the character of Nancy's cosmopolitan New York relative, Aunt Eloise (introduced in 1952) helps provide a rounded sense of family. In The Whispering Statue in 1937, a dog named Togo was also integrated into the Drew home, adding spirit and flavor to several of Nancy's adventures. This healthy presentation of a loving, but non-traditional family structure was years ahead of its time and may have helped the series maintain a fresh, contemporary accessibility among young fans while other idealized series from the same era fell out of favor.

In The Clue of the Whistling Bagpipes, published in 1964, Nancy further explores her mother's genealogy; her mother, whose maiden name was Austin, was descended from the Scottish nobility. Nancy travels to Scotland, where she meets her great-grandmother, Lady Douglas, the widow of a former member of the House of Lords. Lady Douglas is the daughter of a member of Clan Cameron.
Nancy's car -
In the first few books Nancy drives a blue roadster. During the war years, Nancy's car is only vaguely referenced as a coupe, but post-war, is again a blue open car or convertible. Later on in the series it changes to a yellow convertible, gradually she again drives a blue convertible and rents other colors of cars when hers is unavailable. In the Nancy Drew Files she drives a red Mustang.
Nancy's friends -

Many friends frequently visit the Drew household. The first of these, Helen Corning, appears in the earliest novels, and again in original volumes 8,9, and 20(after which point she is not seen in Nancy's life). From volume five upward, Nancy is accompanied by her two close friends, George Fayne and Bess Marvin. George (short for Georgia in the revised editions, named for her grandfather in the original editions) Fayne and Bess (short for Elizabeth) Marvin are cousins who have opposite personalities and appearance. George, tall and slim, with short black hair, makes a point of being a tomboy while Bess, slightly plump with luxurious set hair, but not clearly described as blonde until 1936, has the most girly appearance and girly attitude of the threesome. Early George Fayne characterizations depict her as bold, slightly clumsy, blunt, and untowardly forward, resulting in the nickname, "George the Terrible", from series fans. Bess, on the other hand, tries to be proper, and is also easily frightened — once wrecking a car simply because she saw something unusual, and drove off the road into a tree.

Helen's appearances resume in the original volumes Nancy's Mysterious Letter and The Password to Larkspur Lane, which were ghostwritten by Walter Karig. In these volumes, her personality is more like George Fayne's. Helen disappeared when Mildred Benson resumed ghostwriting, but in volume 20, was announced as having been on an extended tour of Europe (a common plot device for absent characters in Stratemeyer Series books) for one final appearance and plot device in The Clue in the Jewel Box, introducing Nancy to European acquaintances. Her loss of touch with Nancy is explained more fully in the revised series (see below).
Nancy's character -

Nancy is blue-eyed and laid-back. She was originally a blonde, and illustrators often drew Bess with hair coloring somewhat darker blonde or light brown, when the three girls appeared together. Nancy's modern hair color is described variously as "red-gold" and "titian", rather than the less glamorous "red." This change was actually due to a printer's error on the original jacket of a book; missing ink layers including yellow left Nancy's hair red. But on most covers she is shown as a blonde, redhead or strawberry blonde.

She becomes involved in mysteries without always being a welcome presence. She always carries a flashlight; occasionally drove her blue convertible at high speeds to escape her villians, but usually drove the legal speed limit; breaks and enters; trespasses; sneaks about; opens locked doors, lockers, chests, drawers, etc. She is more courageous than her friends and undaunted by the money or time spent in investigating a clue. Hannah voices her concerns about Nancy's behavior, but is clearly the Drews' employee in these early tales; her opinion is often discredited.
Her early style is in the vein of a sophisticated young girl with immaculately curled hair, pearls, high heels, and elegant dresses. This is largely the work of commercial artist Russell H. Tandy, the first illustrator for the series. He was a fashion artist and infused Nancy with a modern fashion sensibility. He painted the dust jackets and drew the inside sketches for volumes 1–10 and 12–26. He drew the inside sketches for The Clue of the Broken Locket, but not the cover. By the end of the 1930s, Nancy was dressing along the lines of a sophisticated young woman, with smart suits, matching hats, gloves, and handbags.
1940-1950: Teen-aged Nancy -

With the start of the 1940s, Nancy began to evolve into a less reckless, and also less obviously affluent, character with The Mystery at the Moss-Covered Mansion. Her fashion style becomes a bit more casual, and she no longer pursues angles that greatly endanger herself or her friends. Her car changes makes and models a few times, finally becoming a blue convertible in the post-World War II era. She pursues hobbies, particularly art and music, but also dancing, and various athletics, including sailing, swimming, skin-diving, tennis, and even horse back riding. Her age also gradually changes to eighteen. Other than some minor allusions in 1943's The Clue in the Jewel Box, the war rationing doesn't seem to affect River Heights, or Ned Nickerson.
Many of Nancy's mysteries in this era involve her application of knowledge gained from avid reading, or from consultation with teachers, professors, or other experts, and this is passed on to the readers, a trend which grows and continues to the end of the series. Nancy thus shows greater respect for authority figures, such as her father, the local police, and others willing to help with her investigations.

Although still illustrated as very mature during the war years, this style gives way to a more casual, stereotypical teen appearance by the end of the decade, partially due to a switch in illustrators. Book covers began to replace the flapper style favored on early jackets with a conservative, more classic appearance. Following the post-war trend for young people to have their own, casual style, instead of dressing the same as adults, Nancy becomes less constrained. Sweater or blouse and skirt ensembles, as well as a pageboy hairstyle, are introduced in 1948, and continue with new artist Bill Gillies, who updated 10 covers and illustrated three new jackets from 1950 to 1952. Gillies invented the modern-era trademark as a spine symbol: Nancy in side profile with a quizzing glass. Benson wrote her last volume for the series, The Clue of the Velvet Mask, in 1953.
1950s-1970s: Revisionist Nancy -

During the 1950s, Harriet Stratemeyer Adams took on responsibility for writing the books and also revised the earlier volumes to speed pacing and remove regional and racist references.
Internal illustrations were returned to the books beginning in 1954. In 1957, most Stratemeyer Syndicate books dropped from 200 to 180 pages in length, including the rewrites. Plot wise, stories begin to involve more travel away from River Heights. Nancy's hometown is now more metropolitan and less rural; fairly close to Chicago, and not too far from New York City and other metropolitan destinations on the East Coast of the United States.

In the revisions, Nancy is eighteen, not sixteen; her mother died when she was age three, not ten. Hannah Gruen is a motherly figure who helped raise Nancy, and at times restricts her rash actions. Aunt Eloise Drew, a smart New Yorker who was Nancy's aunt, is frequently either chaperone or hostess to Nancy's New York adventures. Nancy's dog, Togo, still exists, but now occasionally helps her in her cases.

Other characters are developed as well. George Fayne develops into a more personable, but still masculine girl, while Bess becomes obsessed with boys and food. George and Bess are given their own respective boyfriends early in the 1950s, Burt Eddleton and Dave Evans, both chums of Nancy's boyfriend Ned Nickerson. The original stories began to be updated in 1959, Helen Corning became an older friend of Nancy's, and is bolder than the original Helen, serving as actual sleuthing sidekick in the first four volumes. The stage is also set to explain her departure from regular involvement with Nancy -- Helen becomes engaged; and in her last appearance before she is married, she is planning her wedding while she helps Nancy sleuth. She and her husband Jim Archer appear in some later volumes, and revised versions of several stories as well.

Rudy Nappi, artist from 1953 to 1979, illustrates a more average teenager, but still in very preppy, conservative clothing. Nancy's hair changes to strawberry-blonde, reddish-blonde or titian by the end of the decade. The change, due to a printing ink error, was so favorable that it was adopted in the text. Mrs. Adams Dickinson herself even explained regular changes in Nancy's hair color as possibly induced by the young sleuth's beautician. In 1962, all Grosset and Dunlap books become "picture covers", to reduce costs. Several of the 1940s cover illustrations were updated by Rudy Nappi for this change, but contained the old story. The books themselves were gradually updated, in some cases only sharing a title with the original, with completely new plots and settings. For example, the original Lilac Inn really was only a setting for a crime. In the 1961 revision, it is the setting for almost all of the story. Settings in the series involve travel to several different regions in the United States, and also international destinations, including France, Peru, Scotland, Hong Kong and Africa.

None of the stories in hardcover issue today as published by Grosset and Dunlap are older than 1957. In 1979, two million copies of Nancy Drew books were sold.
The Quest for Carolyn Keene -

Due to confusion and difficulties in protecting the secrets of series production, ghostwriters for the Stratemeyer Syndicate signed away all rights to authorship or future royalties, and all correspondence was handled through Harriet S. Adams' office. The syndicate's process for creating the Nancy Drew books consisted of first creating a detailed outline, with all elements of plot; then the drafting of a manuscript that was occasionally revised or rewritten; and finally editing. While Edward Stratemeyer and his daughters Harriet and Edna wrote all outlines for the Nancy Drew books except one (The Clue of the Velvet Mask, outlined by Andrew Svenson), a number of other writers wrote the manuscripts. Among these were Mildred A. Wirt Benson née Augustine, Walter Karig, George Waller, Jr., Margaret Scherf, Wilhelmina Rankin, Alma Sasse, Charles Strong, and Patricia Doll. Edward Stratemeyer edited the first three volumes and Harriet Stratemeyer all subsequent volumes with the exception of The Haunted Showboat and The Secret of the Golden Pavilion, which were edited by Jane Dunn and Jane Sanderson.
Legal disputes -

Walter Karig tried to claim rights with the Library of Congress in 1933, something that angered the Syndicate.

In 1980, dissatisfied with the lack of creative control at Grosset and the lack of publicity for the Hardy Boys' 50th anniversary in 1977, Adams switched publishers to Simon and Schuster, which would also make the American versions available in mass-market paperback. Grosset and Dunlap filed suit against the Syndicate and the new publishers, claiming some control over publishing as their firm provided illustrations.

Although Adams had written many of the titles after 1953, and edited others, she claimed to be the author of all of the early titles. In fact she had rewritten the older titles, but not been the original author. When Adams filed a countersuit, claiming the case was in poor taste and frivolous, Mildred Benson was called to testify about her work for the Syndicate. Benson's role in writing the manuscripts of early titles was revealed in court with extensive documentation, contradicting Adams' claims to authorship. The court ruled that Grosset had the rights to publish the original series as they were in print in 1980, but did not own characters or trademarks. Further, any new publishers chosen by Adams were completely in their right to print original titles.

Adams was rumored to be embarrassed about the negative publicity of the trial and many adult fans and collectors considered her integrity irreparably compromised after the trial. Following her death, her partners continued, finally selling the entire Syndicate to Simon and Schuster. An acknowledgment to Mildred Benson was added to Grosset copyright pages; they currently print the original 56 hardcovers and recently began publishing out-of-print titles originally issued by Simon and Schuster. The original Nancy Drew series added the last new title in 2003.
Pseudonym Carolyn Keene -

All Nancy Drew books are published under the pseudonym Carolyn Keene regardless of who the actual author was. The name Carolyn Keene has also been used to author a shorter series of books titled The Dana Girls. This series features two detective sisters.

Jumat, 13 Juni 2008

Ben & Jerry's Instead of Bruster's

A fun evening! Pam & the kids picked us up & took us to the Ben & Jerry's store across the river for ice cream, so no Bruster's today.

Even better, every Friday night at Ben & Jerry's throughout the summer is a family movie night. Everyone sits outside on chairs & watches a movie. There were about 50 people there. A warm evening, but a delicious breeze. I love living in the South.

Pam & the kids gave me a great pair of bright orange flip flops that Sofi & Maria had decorated. A huge sequined flower & beautiful "jewels". Since they matched the new outfit Jen had picked out for me, I put them right on & sparkled plenty while watching "Over the Hedge". Plus, a great pair of funky "Life is Good" socks. Those we'll save for the cooler weather!

Oh...and sparklers! Pam had brought sparklers to decorate my coconut sundae. Lit them right up in the store & everyone sang "Happy Birthday".

Heard from all that I love dearly today, as well. Shakespeare said it best, "I am wealthy in my friends". And in my family, as well! Indeed, life is good.

Reilly's Last Day of School -


- Was Wednesday, June 11. Here she is, posing with her Mommy and Daddy. Congratulations, Reilly!!!

Now, We Can Celebrate -

One thing I had asked God for, after my crabby post this morning regarding the foreclosure, was for peace regarding the situation. And God gave me that, after a conversation with the landlord. The issue isn't resolved, but I have peace.

Now, Jen and I can celebrate my birthday. We're off to dinner at Panera, then ice cream at Bruster's. Jen's happy about having her favorite broccoli-cheddar soup, and ice cream from Bruster's is good for curing pretty much whatever ails you!

Presenting - Luke & Rachel Ribaudo!


Luke, the son of my dear friend, Janet, and his beautiful bride, Rachel!

Becoming a Statistic -

Not that being a part, indirectly, of it all makes one feel any better...sigh. And I still would've felt a little better had the landlord had the courtesy to let us know the foreclosure was coming, instead of the shock of getting served.

Part of the rub in finding out about the foreclosure was that we were not problem tenants - we paid the rent on time, every month, faithfully. So, to read in the foreclosure papers that our landlord had not made the mortgage payment on this house for the last six months did not give me the big warm and fuzzy.

Since we've gotten the notice, we've been treated to flyers in the mailbox and notes from strangers, addressed to the landlord, offering to buy the house, not to mention attempts to deliver certified letters from the bank to the landlord as well.

I have this nightmare vision of the weekend bringing eager strangers directly to our front door, as the house is now newly listed on many of the free foreclosure search websites, and people are looking for a decent house on the cheap. We also happen to live in what's considered a "desirable" area of town. Trust me, it has crossed my mind to put a note on the front door, stating "Owner Does Not Live Here. Do NOT Disturb". Let the vultures figure out on their own how to contact the landlord and make him an offer.

Oh, and today is my birthday. I can't say I'm in the most festive frame of mind, what with wondering where the heck we're going to live, the thought of moving, etc.

An ideal birthday present? A financial miracle...to be able to buy our dream home - paying cash (see several posts below for pictures of said dream home). Certainly, to be done with renting and landlords forever would be nice...

Keep in mind I am writing this after a bad night's sleep, without sufficient coffee yet this morning, and that I haven't had my early morning prayer time. Falling out of bed and immediately checking the news is really no way to begin the day, as this was the first story I saw. Clearly, we're not alone...

From the Associated Press -

U.S. Foreclosure Filings Surge 48 Percent in May
Friday, June 13, 2008

WASHINGTON — The number of U.S. homeowners swept up in the housing crisis rose further last month, with foreclosure filings up nearly 50 percent compared with a year earlier, a foreclosure listing company said Friday.

Nationwide, 261,255 homes received at least one foreclosure-related filing in May, up 48 percent from 176,137 in the same month last year and up 7 percent from April, RealtyTrac Inc. said.
One in every 483 U.S. households received a foreclosure filing in May, the highest number since RealtyTrac started the report in 2005 and the second-straight monthly record.

Foreclosure filings increased from a year earlier in all but 10 states. Nevada, California, Arizona, Florida and Michigan had the highest statewide foreclosure rates.

Metropolitan areas in California and Florida accounted for nine of the top 10 areas with the highest rate of foreclosure. That list was led by Stockton, Calif. and the Cape Coral-Fort Myers area in Florida.

Irvine, Calif.-based RealtyTrac monitors default notices, auction sale notices and bank repossessions. Nearly 74,000 properties were repossessed by lenders nationwide in May, while more than 58,000 received default notices, the company said.

In Nevada, one in every 118 households received a foreclosure-related notice last month, more than four times the national rate. In California, one in every 183 households faced foreclosure.

The combination of weak housing sales, falling home values, tighter mortgage lending criteria and a slowing U.S. economy has left financially strapped homeowners with few options to avoid foreclosure. Many can't find buyers or owe more than their home is worth and can't get refinanced into an affordable loan.

Making matters worse, mortgage rates have been rising, reflecting increased concerns about what the Federal Reserve might do to battle inflation. Freddie Mac, the mortgage company, reported Thursday that 30-year fixed-rate mortgages averaged 6.32 percent this week, the highest level in nearly eight months and up sharply from 6.09 percent last week.

Efforts by government and the mortgage industry to stem the tide of foreclosures aren't keeping up with the rising number of troubled homeowners, and critics say a Bush administration-backed mortgage industry coalition, dubbed Hope Now, is falling far short.

Rick Sharga, RealtyTrac's vice president of marketing, said foreclosures are unlikely to peak until sometime this fall, as more loans made to borrowers with poor credit records reset at higher levels. "I don't think we've seen the high point," he said.

About 50 to 60 percent of borrowers who receive foreclosure filings are likely to lose their homes, Sharga said. The rest are likely to be able to sell or refinance.

A new government report released Wednesday found that among mortgages held by Bank of America, Citigroup Inc. and seven other large banks, foreclosures climbed to 1.23 percent of all loans in March from 0.9 percent in October.

As foreclosed properties pile up, they add to the inventory of homes on the market and drag down home prices. The trend is most dramatic in many parts of California, Florida, Nevada and Arizona, where prices skyrocketed during the housing boom and are now falling precipitously.
Sales of foreclosures, vacant new homes and other distressed properties now dominate some markets, causing grief for individual homeowners who need to sell for other reasons, like a job in a new city.

Nationwide, one out of every four sales between January and March was a distressed sale, and that figure jumps to more than 50 percent in the hardest-hit areas like Las Vegas, Detroit and distant suburbs of Los Angeles, according to Moody's Economy.com.

In some neighborhoods, lenders are slashing prices dramatically to rid themselves of an unprecedented number of foreclosed properties, sparking bidding wars and multiple offers.
While that's a positive for the real estate market, buyers in other parts of the country are still holding back.

"I think a lot of people are waiting to see if we really have hit the bottom," Sharga said.
Lehman Brothers economist Michelle Meyer said in a report Thursday that U.S. home sales are likely to hit bottom at the end of this summer, but said a recovery in sales is likely to be "feeble." Home prices, she wrote, are still expected to fall another 10 percent by the end of 2009.