As requested by Marika and Mark

I think I’ve shared before on LJ the tragic fate of my earliest books, which were devoured many years ago by some kind of bug (maybe a termite?) while stored at a family member’s house. All that remained of my Little Golden Books were their little golden spines. In time, I’ve tried to replace many of them (the books, not the spines) by shopping antique stores and vintage book sites. In fact, I found one today while looking for something else and ordered it. There’s one that I fear will always elude me, especially since I don’t know its title or author, only the pictures inside it, but I suppose part of the fun is in the search.

All these pictures can be clicked to enlarge.

According to my mother, I learned to read early, but except for the children’s books I actually owned, I don’t remember a single book from childhood. In fact, I didn’t see a Dr. Seuss book until I was already a teenager. I know I loved reading and was always in the bookmobile in summers, but I think I blocked out portions of my childhood because I was sick, and books became part of those disappeared memories.

I was nine when I began reading my first “real” books–that is, novels. Unlike an ex of mine, who read Moby Dick at around the same age (don’t be too impressed; his intellect peaked early–he dumped me, after all!), I went for more age-appropriate material when I discovered, in the library of my new school in South Carolina, Laura Ingalls Wilder. I also discovered I was only allowed to check out one book a week. One! Which I read the first night I got home, then had to wait a week for the next one.

This would NOT DO. My mother, always struggling with a tight budget, directed me to my brother’s and sister’s collections, where the Hardy boys and Walton boys (not to be confused with the TV family, who were actually Spencers in the book that brought them to life) and Nancy Drew and her pals were cavorting all over the bookshelves. I enjoyed them, but I didn’t want mysteries. I wanted more little houses on prairies, and Spin and Marty at camp learning to ride horses didn’t cut it.

At this point, a kindly family friend, a divorced man with no children of his own, took pity on me. Every few weeks when he went to Greenville on business, he stopped at a discount store (an early version of Wal-Mart) and picked up a Whitman’s Classic for me.

Oh, the joys of discovering the Marches and the Peppers and Heidi and Rebecca and her aunts and (the original) Tom and Becky and… Well, see for yourself. These never leave my possession, so no bugs had a chance to eat them.

I was like any addict, however. I needed more and more. So he finally enrolled me in a book club.

Just as the Whitman Classics fulfilled my need to graduate from the kids’ books I don’t remember, these (sometimes abridged) Readers Digest Best Loved Books for Young Readers, including Jane Eyre, Pride and Prejudice, and The Great Impersonation, took my reading comprehension and enjoyment up another notch. By the time we moved to Alabama, I was ready for my mother’s bookshelves, reading everything from romantic suspense to literary giants.

I’m not sure if I’ve told this story before, but one time when I worked in the bookstore, a mother came up to me. She was frustrated because she kept buying her elementary school-age daughter books, but her daughter didn’t want to read them.

“What else can I do,” she pleaded, “to encourage her to read?”

“Do YOU read?” I asked. “Do you let her see you read?”

That idea had never occurred to her (she wasn’t a reader). I really was blessed to be born into a family of readers, because even if I can’t find the actual beginning of my love affair with books, I do know there’s nothing like walking with a troubled young bride across a misty moor, watching with Daisy as Gatsby throws expensive shirts on his bed, eating cold potatoes with the impoverished Pepper family, weeping over the loss of a beloved little sister, watching Neely O’Hara disintegrate, surviving a war with a green-eyed belle, trout fishing with Lady Brett’s chaps in Spain, and traveling the country with a dog named Charley.

Nothing feeds my soul like a book.

Various whatever kind of stuff

First, this photo makes me SMILE until my face hurts.

I love to see my friends laugh, and that’s a genuine Tim laugh happening here even though I was tormenting him with my camera.

Second, Wednesday, something rare was spotted in the Galleria:

Yeah, flowers, that’s nice, but there are always flowers in the Galleria.

Um, no, although this Nordstrom window IS the inspiration for a scene in Someone Like You, a title that makes me think of Mark G. Harris for some reason, and although it IS the place where I fell in love with a mannequin many years ago, I didn’t find it very exciting on Wednesday.

Speaking of things that remind me of Mark G. Harris, while I was waiting for my glasses the other day, I shot a photo of this spot in the Galleria.

The ice rink where friends Alex and Aaron from The Deal like to go to get in touch with their inner Tonya Hardings children.

Will I ever get to the point?

Hump Day Happy

Though there won’t be time Wednesday for me to go out shooting photos, you can still get one of 14,000 things to be happy about from this book:

by giving me a page number from 1 to 612 and another number between 1 and 30. You know you want to.

The gas man fixed the gas leak on the meter behind the house. The dogs survived the presence of a stranger on The Compound (though not without a lot of complaining). And none of my photos are turning out all that great (the ones of Lindsey’s hair disaster are too dark for you to actually see her hair or anything else except her pretty face, which sort of defeats the purpose, because when doesn’t Lindsey look great in photos?), and Tim posted a photo of his newly cut hair here. Does that bring us up to speed?

I do owe Marika and Mark a post. But right now, I think they’d rather I finish co-editing a certain manuscript full of romantic short stories. In fact, I know they would.

oh, yeah, here’s my haircut

Shorn lamb(ert)

Timothy J. Lambert and I got haircuts today. Maybe if you ask nicely, he’ll let me post a picture.

Since I had the Kodak with me, I CAN show you what was on the floor after his cut.

In other news, the dogs and I are awaiting the gas company. The dogs so they can bark. Me so I can put my mind at ease about what I swear is the smell of gas behind my house. I’ll update this breaking story as there are developments.

I have various photos I’ve been wanting to post. I’ll get on that later. As well as a my-experience-with-a-book post Mark and Marika asked for. Because I’m just that cooperative.

To be continued…

Some suckage, with a happy ending

Remember how long I put off buying my new camera, but I finally decided that I wanted a reward for finishing A COVENTRY WEDDING (okay, a PRE-reward, but who’s counting), and I wanted to have enough time with the camera to get comfortable using it before Saints & Sinners in May.

On Thursday, an INCIDENT with the camera left the pop-up flash inoperative. It would still pop up, but wouldn’t fire. I went by the store where I bought it, but they were closed, so I had a bad night worrying about it on top of my other things to worry about. (I try to keep plenty of those going; how else will I look YEARS older than 35?)

On Friday, I had some unpleasant business to take care of, but I also made a trip to the camera shop after calling them. First, Camera Guy gave me the news I most dreaded hearing: camera must be shipped to Nikon for repair. After I got all basset-hound eyed, another person came and looked at it, just in case, but he agreed. Then I asked if we could try putting a separate flash attachment on it. If that worked, I’d buy the flash, take the camera to New Orleans, and upon my return, happily surrender the camera to Nikon for repair.

At first, Number 2 Camera Guy thought it didn’t work because he couldn’t make the camera shoot at all. Ahem. I reached over and removed the lens cap.

SUCCESS! The new flash worked! When I was handing over my credit card, Camera Guy asked me why I had two driver’s licenses, and I told him one was expired. He [jokingly] offered to take it off my hands so he could sell it to some underage chick who wanted to look, uh, 35 when she went out drinking. To protect any remaining Bush grandkids (hey, my concern for America’s youth is bi-partisan), I took his scissors and cut up the old license.

I paid for the flash, went on my happy way, and took care of that other worrisome stuff. On my way home, after taking out a loan so I could put gas in Jet (it’s cheaper to buy camera equipment these days than to keep a car full of gas, and my SUV is FUEL-EFFICIENT, so no lectures), I called Lindsey. She and Rhonda were game to come over for take-out, non-Passover violating food from Barnaby’s, so I COULD have had a pleasant evening.

Except…once I got the camera home and began looking through the viewfinder, everything seemed all blurry. I thought maybe the INCIDENT had done more than disable my flash, so I got all panicked. When Lindsey arrived and looked through the viewfinder, she then glanced at me like I was maybe a little crazy. I tried it again. No camera: I could see all right. Camera in front of my face: everything blurry. Though I’d never had to do this with the D40 or any other camera before, I had to put on my glasses to see clearly through the viewfinder.

Lindsey suggested stress was blurring my vision. Tim got this LOOK on his face, and when I questioned him, he said, “You think?” Then he told me I was doing a good imitation of Regis when he gets all worked up about something. I told him he could only call me Regis if he pretended to be Kathie Lee and told me stories about Cody. He declined.

Anyway, at about 3 a.m., as I lay in bed convinced that I had 201 incurable eye diseases, I suddenly remembered there’s some kind of little switch next to the viewfinder. I made a mental note to check that out, but didn’t get out of bed because a huge storm was rolling in and Margot was already tucked between my feet under the covers trembling.

But I did check it this morning. It’s something called a “diopter adjustment” switch. When I changed it, I could suddenly see again! It was a miracle, just like the first Photography Miracle! When I told Lindsey, she wondered why she could see through it okay but it was blurry for me. I suggested that her young eyes may adapt and refocus more readily than mine, which is when she reminded me that I’m only 35.

So I’m still keeping my eye appointment this afternoon. But I wanted to post what turned out to be a non-story because of this diopter switch if for no other reason than to spare Mr. Puterbaugh, who bought the same model camera, a future incident of screaming, “My eyes! My eyes!” Because no one may be around to make him laugh by calling him Regis.

It’s Wednesday…

I like a challenge and the chance to use my new camera. If you want one of 14,000 things to be happy about:

please give me a page number from 1 to 612 and another number between 1 and 30. I’ll not only tell you what the book says, I’ll endeavor to include a photograph in comments just for you.

I can’t promise the photo will have anything to do with your answer. Because honestly, what can I do with something like page 487, number 23, “Joe Pepitone, former Chicago Cub baseball player?”

A day without guilt (about not writing)

This morning I picked up McDonald’s “we no longer sell it so hot you can sue us” coffee for my mother and me while we visited. The coffee and company set the tone for a good day. After I got home, Amy came over for lunch (tuna salad–very basic) so I could finally meet her youngest, almost-four-month-old Colin. If Rexford were still living with Amy and her family, he would now have FOUR brothers! Think of all the possibilities for crumbs from hot dogs, pizza, and other boyfood! No worries, though. I picked up some all-naturalorganictotallysafeforyourdog treats last night, so Rex, Margot, Guinness, and EZ aren’t suffering.

Colin is a baby who smiles so much that the next time I write a novel, I’m making his photo my computer wallpaper. But first, I HAVE to get more proficient with my new camera. There are settings and choices galore, and I have in no way mastered them. I did manage to get one unblurred photo:

I always feel uplifted after a visit with Amy. When I met her, she was a single girl just out of college. At work, we always compared her to Laura “Oh, Rob!” Petrie, Mary Tyler Moore’s character on the Dick Van Dyke Show. She really did have the ability of MTM’s later character, Mary Richards, to turn the world on with her smile. She still does.

While she was here, we talked about another friend of ours we once worked with, Lisa. Lisa has one son, Ryan. Ryan was diagnosed with autism, and I have been awed by Lisa’s reaction to that. Not only has she completely embraced opportunities for Ryan to develop into the healthy, happy child he is, but Lisa has also become tireless in her efforts to raise public awareness about autism. There’s an upcoming TV news segment and a newspaper article that will include her.

You may be aware that Texas is where former First Lady Lady Bird Johnson began her campaign to beautify America’s roadways with wildflowers. This is the time of year when people drive into rural areas near Houston and admire nature showing off her color palette. It’s a rite of passage for every child to be photographed in a sea of bluebonnets (Texas’s state flower). I didn’t take these photos of Lisa and Ryan, but I can’t help sharing them.

I know the most amazing women.