Category Archives: Travel

#5. Creating Custom Gifts For Holidays

Ya’ll, seriously, my life is in bloom.

I wanted to show you how I covered # 5 on my Self-Promise List.  I spent time with my family for my mother’s birthday.  As you can see my nephew was making beautiful water glass music using his spooned fist.  As I type this, I’m surrounded by azalea bushes that are beginning to bud and pink.  I couldn’t help and try something creative tonight and with eggs, no doubt.  This is my first-year blowing out the egg goo and painting shells instead of dunking them into dye.  I got a tutorial on alisaburke.blogspot.com.  She’s a spectacular blogging artist who has all kinds of egg design techniques featured here.

A few years ago I felt like I wasn’t doing enough because I wasn’t traveling the world.  All of my friends were going to these fabulous places, learning all new languages, posting pictures of buildings older than any civilization today and I couldn’t be anything but jealous.  Instead of being happy for these lovely and daring friends of mine, I was a bitter belly.  Luckily, at 25, I look at these pictures and think my life couldn’t be any better.  Thanks for being a part of that on this blog. : ) Happy Thursday Night and Spring Break!

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Yes, that is a James Joyce mug. I picked wisely when getting coffee at brunch.
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My nephew is better at my phone games than I am and my mother is the most beautiful woman I know.

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Needle ball in the azaleas.  
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I have this tree in my yard without the slightest clue of what it is.  I’m obsessed with it’s flowering pattern.  Any biologists or gardeners that want to help me out?
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I know this looks like a first grader created it, but it was fun while it lasted folks. 
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I tried branching out on my own creative genius and it worked. 
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I call this: Pin-up Pantyhose Easter Egg.  
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“Wear Your Boots if You Wander Today”

“Constance made me learn the deadly ones…”

In my family, we put Stephen King in the freezer.  My grandmother put Pet Cemetery next to the cold cuts.  I put The Shining in with the frozen peas and mom’s homemade chili in Rubbermaid.  Maybe the idea was that we can freeze the characters to death.  Or that the darkness in the book will be overtaken by the coldness in the freezer.  In order to have these phobias, you have to believe in the liveliness of characters.   You may think they talk to each other in your purse when you put more than one book side by side, marked with your silly annotations.  If they’re in the freezer it’s the same thing, they’re just trying to plot how to get out.

On the moon we have everything. Lettuce, and pumpkin pie and Amanita phalloides. We have cat-furred plants and horses dancing with their wings.

Horrors and thrillers aren’t really my genre.  You’ve heard me say a thousand times, I only read pretty fiction.  Well, the sprinkler spray of blood droplets, and Carrie’s prom night screaming aren’t really pieces of gorgeous fiction for me.  They’re great fiction, don’t get me wrong, I’d just rather not experience their greatness.   It usually causes many sleepless nights.

You see, part of my problem is I’m deathly afraid of the dark.  I sleep surrounded by night lights and a just-in-case flashlight under the pillow on the empty half of my bed.  A boy shut me in a closet once and I cried, hugged myself.  When in middle school my friends played seven minutes in heaven, I would take the opportunity to go talk to the parental supervision in the kitchen and ask for a glass of water.  My mother used to creep in my room in the evenings to unfold the blankets from over my head.  What if I couldn’t breathe in the night?  I thought that if I could just cover myself all the way up then nothing could get me.  I still think that.  Not one foot will hang from the edge of the bed, not one snack for the shadows.

We Have Always Lived in a Castle by Shirley Jackson has this amazing cover with a young doe-eyed blonde holding a black cat, an older woman peeping behind her shoulder, breathing on the shell of her ear.   While the mob behind them is going all Beauty & the Beast mob, Merricat looks intently at the reader.  There’s something about the part down the exact center of her head, and the one loose lock of hair.

We Have Always Lived in the Castle by Shirley Jackson

We Have Always Lived in the Castle by Shirley Jackson

That’s not even the best cover.  It seems Shirley Jackson was gifted with brilliant illustrators.  The covers are just another reason why I love this book.

I AM OBSESSED WITH THIS BOOK.  In fact, I’ve been watching Ghost Hunters for the entirety of this Sunday just to get my eerie fix.  I might even read the book again as soon as I finish this blog. The main character is a young girl named Merricat.  She seems to be the town witch.  Usually the town witch is that old woman who sits on her porch.  The town witch usually shakes her cane and angry vowels at the small children jumping rope and skipping sidewalk cracks in front of her petunias.  I guess it could be different, we did have Salem in this country after all.  Actually, wasn’t there just an article about Papua, New Guinea killing a witch? Yes, yes there was.  Proof here.  Somehow, in a world of modern technology where you can talk on video to someone 28,785 miles away, we’re still burning witches by the stake.

I am living in my house on the moon, and here, I can swim through the air.

Merricat is everything a reader wants in a character.  She’s psychologically strange.  She buries pieces of her loved ones under rocks, by creeks, in the dirt, to keep her superstitions at bay.  It’s a ritual, like when I miss my hometown, I wear an oak leaf around my neck because it makes me feel close to the soil of Raleigh, close to the spirit of it, my City of Oaks.  I bury money in the backs of drawers, sometimes I even forget where it is.  That’s just the thing though, Merricat never forgets.  She checks on her buried treasures.  She uses words as power.

Sketch by Sherri DuPree Bemis on Flickr

“I decided that I would choose three powerful words, words of strong protection, and so long as these great words were never spoken aloud no change would come” (44).

In the South, I know it’s common (as seen in Hollywood movies) for young people to ask God for something they need and then flip open the Bible to find His response.  We are such delicate little creatures here in the South that we need Psalms, or John to speak our truths to us.  There’s also people like me who read books in hopes that I need the book.  Something in my life is wrong, something is off and spinning, something is empty and needs the fill of words from a very specific novel.   I read to be fixed, tilted right again, silenced.  In Merricat’s world it’s three words, a book nailed to a tree, silver dollars, and a blanket.

When something opens, a secret is found and Merricat believes she must destroy it before it becomes actively bad.  Hence, the books in the freezer, before they unleash something actively bad into my home.

This is Jonas, the black cat.

Merricat also believes in going to the moon, the deep poison of certain mushrooms, breaking things when the air turns helter-skelter, and her damsel in distress sister Constance.  At first, I didn’t particularly warm to Constance.  I thought she was hopeless and a bit too flowery for me.  As the book grew, I realized that Merricat was the flower and Constance was the lady knowingly giving up her freedom to the insane.  Merricat is such an intense character that you release everyone else from being normal and start to believe that her psychotic is normal.  Her superstition is normal.  SHE is normal.

I’m trying desperately not to ruin this book for you.  I expect every single one of you to read this book or I will throw a redheaded tantrum.  Let the beast take over, ride to the moon and have a cup of tea, watch it crash to the floor and break into tiny little porcelain mirrors.  Maybe you’ll see yourself differently in the split halves.

“On the moon we have everything. Lettuce, and pumpkin pie and Amanita phalloides. We have cat-furred plants and horses dancing with their wings. All the locks are solid and tight, and there are no ghosts.” – Merricat


#21 Shoot a firearm.

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I didn’t plan on getting my inner redneck on yesterday, but what can I say, she just came out.  Deep in the woods of no man’s land, burnt wood smoking to my side, and the strip of cool winter against my skin, I just had to shoot a few shotguns.  I thought I was on an episode of Buckwild, until I realized my camera didn’t do slow-mo quite the way there’s did.  I couldn’t see the punch to my shoulder as the bullet went wind-borne.  Unfortunately, I was also fully-clothed, so not quite nude enough for MTV.  A day before the Superbowl (which commercials have been sucking, literally, we just watched Bar Rafaeli make out with Walter), I had to show the world what a true-woman I was.

Obama Skeet Shooting

Now don’t get me wrong, I’m not usually for guns.  In fact, I’m a twinge for the ban on assault rifles (don’t shoot me, pun intended).  I just think the very name of an “assault rifle” proves the average civilian doesn’t need to have one of those laying around in an unlocked panty drawer.  However, I believe that people have the right to bare arms, have the right to go out into the woods and kill game to feed their family and make a sale.  I believe in hunting for overpopulation reasons.  I’m not anti-gun, let me put it that way.  I also like the idea that Obama and I were skeet shooting on the same weekend.

At first, I wasn’t going to shoot.  Lauren even said “we’ll be eye candy for the boys,” which sounds like a phrase that’s very against my normally feminist-driven ways, but I was happy to be a little eye-candy.  It was cold, we hadn’t yet built a fire, and how much candy could I give in a large coat and jeans.  It’s like giving a skittle, when boys want the bag.

Shooting my first real gun.  Don't ask me what it's called.

Shooting my first real gun. Don’t ask me what it’s called.

I watched for a bit, stared intently at shoulders to make sure no sockets were detaching.  And then, I was offered a choice of weapons.  Matt in his best voice, “choose your weapon.”  It was a movie moment, my hair was blowing in the wind, I shrugged and was suddenly loading my first Winchester.  If the boys weren’t there I definitely would have held it away from my shoulder and had a nasty purple bruise, but I was lucky and had a manucation about guns.  I held it against the soft cleft of my shoulder and prayed a few whispers for no broken bones and pulled the trigger.

Red is dead.

Just shooting around in my peacoat.  City meets country.

Just shooting around in my peacoat. City meets country.

I like to think I have game.  I played paintball at summer camp in cargo pants a few times, got blood on my helmet, busted a lip, broke my nose (I’m pretty sure) in kindergarten.  I’ve taken people off the field with a quick yellow blow to the face mask.  I’m a bit of a beast.  They even make it easy for you with shotguns and yet I’m incapable of hitting a target.  Good thing, I was facing away from people, huh?

The real professional.

The real professional.

Shooting a gun is like having a superpower that you can’t control.  I felt a little Incredible Hulk coming up in me.  I didn’t turn green, but I had sudden peck muscles and bicep muscles that appeared from nowhere.  I became a wild thang.  I made people’s heart sing.  (Just kidding).  I’ve read books with lots of guns and violent.  Matt is actually reading the first Sword of Truth book to me currently while it doesn’t include firearms just yet, it is very violent.  I can understand why characters suddenly become evil with the steel of a gun against their hip.  There’s definitely an element of psycho involved in shooting a gun (I’m not a very good advertisement).

Baby Donkey!

Baby Donkey!

As you can see, I was wearing my lumberjack outfit because I thought if I was going into hay fields and deer woods, I might as well look the part.  After I shot a few times, complained about the bruise that’s coming in on my shoulder, and sat with my hands between my knees thinking about the impact that bullet had on the field I shot it into, I was ready to go to the farm.

Donkey Whisperer

Donkey Whisperer

One of the people we were shooting with owns a giant farm near my new town and we went and petted a few donkeys.  There were babies with cocked ears and furry hinds who just stared at us.  I tried to pet one, but as you can see Matt is the donkey whisperer.  I guess they could tell I preferred horses before I met them.   Apparently, Alex breeds his donkey’s bigger.  I think he said their “mammoth” donkeys, but I’m not sure and I don’t quite feel like googling.  I wish mammoths still existed though.

We pet the donkeys, dust coating our hands and enjoyed the sunset of farm life.  Sometimes I think I could grow plants for the rest of my life and be happy.  Then I remember I was born with a pen in my mouth and I need to step back to my desk and write about the boy who delivers eggs, wiping each one with a dry wash cloth for the girl just next door.


Newsday Tuesday

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Favorite Tweets:

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Favorite Search Terms:

  • tooth fairy coloring book: I can only imagine a child finding this under their pillow and being upset it isn’t a quarter.   I still think you’re a good parent.
  • hobbit coloring sheets: We’ve got some crayons on the blog recently.  This was too exciting not to post.  How would you even begin to color those hairy feet?
  • open windows and books: This is a lovely sentiment.
  • what dr seuss books really mean: Little did you know he was a political cartoonist during WWII.

Book News:


“Lending Fragile Color to Wildflowers”

“A half-finished book is after all a half-finished love affair.”

A half-finished review is confusing and likely:

You feel like you enter the Secret Garden and are walking the maze of walled shrubbery.  There’s a parasol, a sailor, a composer, a writer of a journal as good as Sylvia’s Plath, but more hot-buttoned-English-vest.  A robot will greet you at the end and a boy with an accent part Caribbean, part Afrikan, part Southerner.  It’s the land of misfit toys meets Alice in Wonderland, but then you’re forced to put together these puzzle pieces of worlds you’ve lived.  It’s like looking at a broken mirror of your own humanity and staring at the pot-marked and freckled face that you see staring back.  This world of green and blue’s that reflects catastrophe, and the many lives we live in the one we’re given.

Cloud Atlas by David Mitchell

It’s Cloud Atlas, not the sextet, but the story.

Cloud Atlas isn’t a book, it’s a work of art.  It’s how I imagine JK Rowling wrote Harry Potter.  David Mitchell must have spent years in a room with a very dark chalkboard.  He must have squared off a million different timelines and sketched the inhabitants between them.  Where are we? What’s the climate?  What voice does this character have, what size and shape are they and what does that mean for the echo of their voice in the walls of their bodies?  This just reminds me that all writers are insane.  We hear voices in our heads telling us where we’re going, how many apostrophes and bicycle accessories we need.

Steal Like an Artist

It’s rare to find a book that creates a whole new way of writing.  Science does new experiences everyday, math comes up with new formulas, but writing, writers are masters of plagiarism.  We tell the same stories, we use the same characters, the same character traits, the same desires, the same happy endings or catastrophic surprises.  I like to think I’m pretty well-read (maybe not in every genre though).  I have Specimen Days by Michael Cunningham sitting next to the toilet in my guest bathroom.  I hear it’s a similar read to Cloud Atlas.  Cloud Atlas came first and of course Cunningham’s whole Pulitzer winning novel came from Woolf.  Plagiarism, dear ones, remixing.

Cloud Atlas has six stories and they stack up like a mountain.  I believe the middle one is supposed to be the climax because I didn’t really desperately care about anyone but Louisa Rey by the second part of the book.  Although, Cavendish did become a friend that grew on me over time.  He wasn’t so great on first impression.  (He had some Chandler Bing tendencies).   Oh characters, oh how they loosen inside us.

BreakfastGreen aka Miriam (Spain) – Conviction, 2012

Mitchell is constantly reminding us of his Russian doll motif.  The novel is supposed to come apart and stack back up again.   As a reader, I felt like I could never suspend into the fiction and forget that I was part of a game.  My petticoat was always dirty with the garden maze soil.  It’s a complicated read.  I tried to explain it to my boyfriend and started by saying, “well in this section an English gentlemen is on a boat and writing his diaries about the characters on his voyage and then in the next story Frobisher is an apprentice composer and he is trying to sell the diaries of the man in the first story that he finds in the Belgium library of his Composer boss who has saved him from debt…” I had to stop there because my boyfriend saw what was about to happen and I had no idea where to place the commas, or my pauses for breath.

Russian Doll

I get very excited when I discuss books.  I was really excited to explain the science formula that unfolded as I read.  It was like eating a meaty taco and having the juices and jalapeno sauce spill over the napkin in your lap.  You’re fresh out of luck if you don’t politely place that all-white napkin across your knees. The bits ooze out, the flanked lettuce slips from the corners of your mouth, the string cheese is like drool.  (Never thought I’d compare a book to eating a taco, but you get crafty). You’re missing pieces of the plot, waiting for the big surprise.  In this book, I kept wondering if it would be bigger than just a birth mark.

Did I tell you when I was a kid that I was desperately embarrassed by a birthmark on my back?  I wouldn’t wear tank tops to school.  My mother always called it a “beauty mark.”  How very Marilyn of me.  I was more insecure about that mark and the gap in my teeth than I’ve ever been since then.   When I read characters with birth marks, I always remember that 11-year-old-girl who didn’t want to turn her face towards her shoulder and smile into the camera in case the small brown mound on the geography of her body would be discovered.

The comet birth mark (continuing motif) was both everything to that small reading girl and nothing to the reading of this story because it wasn’t enough of a connection to make me care about each and every character.  Why didn’t he work harder to make their souls vibrate through the page.  However, you can always thank a book that reminds you what you were like at your most human.  I was at my most human when I was eleven and insecurities hid in my pores.

I feel like I’ve stopped making sense.

This is my brain on Cloud Atlas.

Frobisher

If I have thoroughly confused you and made myself look like a moron, then just read the following passage, it’s about every single one of you.

“Because her scent is almonds, meadow grass.  Because if I smile at her ambition to be an Egyptologist, she kicks my shin under the table.  Because she makes me think about something other than myself.  Because even when serious she shines.  Because she prefers travelogues to Sir Walter Scott, prefers Billy Mayerl to Mozart, and couldn’t tell C major from a sergeant major.  Because I, only I, see her smile a fraction before it reaches her face…”

And here I’ve been teaching my students not to start a sentence with because, or and.

Cheers to my first review of the year being as confusing as unknotting a slim gold chain.

This is your brain on my review of Cloud Atlas.


Newsday Tuesday

Favorite Tweets:

Just the fact that Laurie Halse Anderson has a fantasy team makes me incredibly happy.

Favorite Search Terms:

  • figuras de alicia en el pais de las maravillas: Can someone just tell me what this means because google translation has made it very confusing.
  • inside my head i’m a disney princess: So I have competition.
  • thumbelina i wanna see the pictures while i go to sleep: This is one of my favorite parts of the movie (not the story).  She’s such a bookish little sprite.
  • one armed coach driver cairns unbelievable!: I feel like I either had this bus driver in Cairns or I heard a story about him and now imagine I had him.  Either way, weird google connection.

Book News:


Project 365 | Week 46 & 47

Day 335 | Peter Pan

All Teeth

A Miniature Peter Pan.  Never wants to grow up, just jump on the bed.

Day 336 | Split Ends

Jas is really bad at the hair stylish, so we haven’t brought him.

Tail in the face, tail in the face.  Sounds like a Ren & Stimpy song.

Day 337 | It’s Risen! 

Bread

Bread that got left at my house when it was supposed to go to the Thanksgiving Table.  When making it again, it sunk.

Day 338 | Let Down Your Glory, Glory! 

Sunset

Everyone needs a good sunset picture.

Day 339 | Nose Knows

The Night Creature

Day 340 | The Making

Mixing and Baking

The little bits of Thanksgiving. (Behind the scenes).

Day 341 | Quote of the Day

Thursday.

I thought my student’s quote and my quote went along together swimmingly. Shout out Lil’ Wayne for making that happen.

Day 342 | Double Mint Gum

Dolly

Over Thanksgiving, we cloned my boyfriend.

Day 343 | Bump in the Road

If you’ve ever wondered how spoiled my cats are.

They not only model, they sleep like an old married couple.

Day 344 | Storytime

Bedtime Stories

Mau reading the menace bedtime stories.  I was kicked out of my position as almost-favorite and in stepped the boyfriend.

Day 346 | Happy Days

Christmas Card Photo

I won’t really put this in my Christmas card, but I will blast it out all over the blogosphere.  If you want a Christmas card, just email! : ) It’ll be like A Month of Letters all over again.

PS. COMING SOON: BOOKISH PRESENTS FOR CHRISTMAS!


Project 365 | Week 44 & 45

My life can be summed up into four categories: Love, Teach, Pet, Write.

Day 314 | I Know I am

This is what it means to be a teacher.

I sat him next to a girl who is constantly told how awesome she is.  She literally told me last week that in her house, she’s not allowed to use words that she can’t spell.  That means no Mary Poppins’ fun as a child. (Supercalifragilisticexpeealadocious) He’s awesome too, and apparently, he knows it.  9th graders are ingenious.

Day 315 | Planner

HALLOWEEN!

I think this really shows how much I have my priorities in order.  Don’t celebrate your first 9 weeks as a teacher EVER, but do celebrate the candy holiday!

Day 316 | Beer Belly

Cat Nap

My kitten hasn’t mastered sleeping arrangements yet, or maybe she has.  Whatever she does, she takes up the whole couch and I’m squished in the corner.  It’s true, cats have staff.

Day 317 | Obama V. Romney in 9th Grade English

Soap Box Preaching

I gave my students the last 30 minutes of Tuesday to do soap box campaigns.  They each got a minute or two to stand up and prove their point.  While it was animated and theatric, it was also informational.  My students were surprisingly well-informed.  Here’s the board after the soap box.

Day 318 | Bookishness

Nothing less than obsessed with my book stats on goodreads.

It’s like the geekery that I’m supposed to have for facebook, I instead have for book social media. I’m sure you all would agree. : )

Day 319 | Bedtime Skype

Bedtime

I look drunk on tiredness.  I’m sleeping in it with that smile.  However, going to bed with hearts and smiles, there’s no other way.

Day 320 | OMM Writer

OMM Writer

I may not be doing NaNoWriMo, but I’ve written 4,755 words in November on OMM Writer.  After this blog, I’ll be up to 5,000 hopefully. I’m writing a short story that at this point, makes little sense.  It’s just words and eggs and girls in Shakespeare.

Day 321 | First Stockings

Santa, Baby!

The boy and I may be earlier than radio Christmas music, but we have new stockings and a tilted worldview.

Day 322 | Acorn Garland

Fro and the Great Outdoors Come to Christmas

The best thing about raking and blowing the yard all day is finding acorn caps for an acorn garland.  If you don’t have a lot of money and you have a little Christmas tree, you can make your own.  It may look more Charlie Brown than Martha Stewart, but you’ve made something with your own hands and recyclable materials.

Day 333 | Cat Nap

Can’t sleep with the cheeser.

The big cheese went all Wisconsin on Jas’ butt.

Day 334 | Miss Honey

Oh, you know…

Just my Miss Honey moment this week (from Matilda).  Monogrammed cupcakes from 9th graders, who knew they had hearts under all those hormones?


Newsday Tuesday

Favorite Tweets:

Book News:


Project 365 | Week 41

Guys, my blog has been sucking.  Don’t worry, this week there will be book reviews and bookgasms and bookishness.  I’m finally getting used to my schedule of taking classes and teaching classes and grocery shopping.

LET THERE BE BOOKS!

289:

Sunday Drive

This week is going to be a drive through my small town.

290:

Wires & Land

This is one of my favorite places on my drive home.  It’s where the farms are mixed with a bit of wire.

I read this poem this week and it’s what reminded me that I can find something beautiful in something ugly.

Valentine for Ernest Mann – Naomi Shihab Nye

You can’t order a poem like you order a taco.
Walk up to the counter, say, “I’ll take two”
and expect it to be handed back to you
on a shiny plate.

Still, I like your spirit.
Anyone who says, “Here’s my address,
write me a poem,” deserves something in reply.
So I’ll tell you a secret instead:
poems hide. In the bottoms of our shoes,
they are sleeping. They are the shadows
drifting across our ceilings the moment
before we wake up. What we have to do
is live in a way that lets us find them.

Once I knew a man who gave his wife
two skunks for a valentine.
He couldn’t understand why she was crying.
“I thought they had such beautiful eyes.”
And he was serious. He was a serious man
who lived in a serious way. Nothing was ugly
just because the world said so. He really
liked those skunks. So, he re-invented them
as valentines and they became beautiful.
At least, to him. And the poems that had been hiding
in the eyes of skunks for centuries
crawled out and curled up at his feet.

Maybe if we re-invent whatever our lives give us
we find poems. Check your garage, the odd sock
in your drawer, the person you almost like, but not quite.
And let me know.

291:

Shower Curtain Light

Ignore the claw marks.  That would be my kitten, Fromage.  She not only likes cheese, but curtains, blankets, decorative chairs, etc.

292:

My little town involves their secret cuddles.

Secret Canoodling!

I can’t help but take these photos.

They should be on that new Animal Planet show dedicated to cuteness.

293:

Slash & Burn

This is good for the harvest.  This is good for the harvest.  This is good for the harvest.

294:

Children’s Section of The Country Bookshop

I went to get the next book in The Wildwood Chronicles because it’s written for 24-year-olds and fifth graders.   I happened upon this chalk door, (like a gate into the secret garden).   Don’t worry, I didn’t break the seal of childhood by selecting a chunk of chalk and scribbling a 24-year-old heart onto the door.  I really wanted to though, maybe next time.

PS. This is The Country Bookshop in Southern Pines.  Their motto is “Bringing the World to Southern Pines.” 

295:

“We like big bird….with ranch & hot sauce.”

Political voice in small town America.

296:

Poe looks dashing in blue.

Somehow, I managed to mix Lewis and Edgar in one Creative Writing Club flyer.


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