Saturday, December 24, 2022

The Calling (short story) by Leanne Dyck

a downpour becomes magical for one teenage girl when... 

Illustrator unknown

Before and after school, she walked the same road day after day--sometimes in the rain, sometimes in the sun. Today was sunny but--. She heard car tires crunching gravel.

"Hey, church girl." The car was full of hooting and hollering boys from her class. "Jump in, we want to give you a ride." Laughter.

Even though a rain cloud moved to cover the sun, even though she felt a drop of rain, she told them, "That's okay. I'm fine."

More laughter as they drove away.

She prayed that they would stay away. She took a shortcut home, through the forest. Hoping they wouldn't find her, she came out on the old road. Things were o--. She heard tires crunching gravel. She looked around for a place to hide but--.

A commanding voice said, "Mary. Mary, get in the car." The car didn't look familiar. It was too expensive for their town.

The light rain shower became heavy. And somehow, Mary knew the voice couldn't be denied. She pulled open the car door and crawled into the bucket seat that hugged her body. 

When she closed the door, the interior light went out like it always does in cars but a bright light remained, filling the car.

"Mary, You are God's precious child. With you, He is very pleased." The driver... The driver glowed with bright light. "I bring you tidings of great joy for onto you a child will be born, and you shall call him the prince of peace, the..."


by Abraham Hunter


Wishing you joy, happiness and peace


photo by ldyck
20/12/22



2023 on this blog...

We'll begin the year with a book review...

Flipping Forward, Twisting Backward
Alma Fullerton
illustrated by Sarah Mensinga


And then...

Sunday, December 18, 2022

Blankie by Leanne Dyck (short story)

Blankie is a holiday-themed story about a senior citizen celebrating the season in a retirement home.

Illustrator unknown

The retirement home residents were gathering in the large room with the decorated Christmas tree in the corner. Some of them were in wheelchairs like he was. Others were aided by walkers or canes. Still others shuffled unaided to a padded chair, grabbed an armrest, and slowly lowered themselves. The younger, more spry caregivers circulated song sheets. And there was singing or humming or croaking. They even sang his favourite carol, "Oh, come all thee faithful, joyful and..." He still had a good voice, a strong voice, a melodious voice--a deep baritone that he imagined shook the room. Cherry red punch in clear plastic cups and shortbread cookies cut into snowflakes were served. The partiers were encouraged to indulge. He took two cookies.

The pretty blonde caregiver... What was her name? Was it... It... Holly? Maybe... He decided that Holly would do. Holly, with a Santa hat on her head, pulled presents out from under the tree. Depositing a wrapped box on his lap, Holly told him, "From your family." and gave him a peck on the cheek. 

His family--sons, daughters, grandchildren, and... He had a vague memory of a great-grandchild or many two--were flung like snowballs across the country. Sometimes he wondered if they thought of him. But they did, they had. The proof was on his lap.

His arthritic hands tore off the wrapping paper. Someone had used too much tape. The cardboard box unwrapped, he prepared for more tearing but someone had the good sense to put the tape away. He flipped back the flaps on the box and peeked inside. What was that shade? Periwinkle blue. Was it a cardigan? What a thoughtful, welcomed gift. He always felt a draft.

Holly was back beside him. She helped him pull the sweater--. No, it was a blanket. She helped him slowly pull the blanket out of the box.

A blanket. As a newborn, he'd been wrapped in a receiving blanket. There were pictures in his photo album. His earliest memory was of a blanket. He'd called it Blankie. Thumb in mouth, he toddled off to bed, dragging Blankie behind him. Late at night, if the monsters came, he pulled Blankie over his head, and feeling safe, he drifted off to sleep. During the day, he threw Blankie over two chairs. He spent hours in his secret hideaway. He was seldom without Blankie. He carried her everywhere.

Until... He remembered the day his mother informed him, "A big boy like you can't carry a blanket to kindergarten." But she added with a wink. "You can carry a piece." The silver chrome scissors flashed in the sunlight as Blankie was reduced to a small square of flannel, bordered on two sides by silk. He carried the transformed Blankie in a pant pocket. And so when the other boys were too loud... And so when the teacher was mean... He shoved his hand into his pocket and rubbed the flannel, the silk between his fingers. With Blankie in his pocket, he stood straighter and held his head higher.

He kept the blanket square in his pocket for years--through elementary, junior high, and even high school. Entering the workforce, he put, by this point, more gray than light blue square in his wallet. He only pulled it out when he was alone. It was on the table beside him giving him the confidence he needed to phone her. It was in his wallet reminding him to be a gentleman when he took her on their first date. The day he married her, he took the square out of his wallet and threw it away. Men don't need blankies, he told himself. Each of his children was wrapped in a receiving blanket. He had pictures in his album. And he told them stories about his adventures with Blankie--and they always begged for more. 

The periwinkle blanket free of the box, Holly helped him drape it over his lap. "Happy Holidays," she said. 

"Happy Holidays," he replied. He ran the flannel, the silk between his fingers and he felt happy, he felt remembered, he felt loved.



Christmas Eve on this blog...


Saturday, December 24
The Calling (short story)
a downpour becomes magical for one teenage girl when... 


Listening to...




A rare treat...

Thanks to the Springwater Lodge on Mayne Island my husband and I got to try a new-to-us

Sunday, December 11, 2022

Book Review: Driven: The Secret Lives of Drivers by Marcello Di Cintio, published by Biblioasis (non-fiction)

 In 2018 author Marcello Di Cintio 'spent a year traveling around Canada'--west to east; south to north--'to seek out the life stories of the nation's taxi drivers.' (p. 5) In Driven, Di Cintio devotes thirteen chapters to introducing cabbies--and in chapter nine he writes about the non-profit ride-share service Ikwe Safe Ride. Ikwe 'matches volunteer female drivers with women needing a ride.' (p. 137)



Driven: The Secret Lives of Drivers

Marcello Di Cintio

Biblioasis

2021

271 pages

As I've lived most of my life in rural Canada, I can count the number of taxi rides I've taken on the fingers of both hands. However, ever since I watched the sitcom Taxi I've been intrigued by the occupation. Taxi was about driving cabs in the United States. Interested to learn about Canadian cabbies drove me to read Driven. (See what I did there. Clever, eh?)

I learned...

An escaped slave from Kentucky, Thornton Blackburn was Canada's first taxi driver but he wasn't the last immigrant cabbie. 

'A federal government analysis of 2006 Census data showed that over half of all Canadian taxi divers were born abroad.' (p. 247)

And...

The male-dominated occupation--'Female cabbies remain a rarity if not an outright novelty' (p. 81)--'is physically and psychologically unhealthy' (p. 69) and life-threatening. 'A 2012 Statistics Canada report revealed that taxi drivers were murdered on the job at a higher rate than workers of any other legal profession. Even police officers are killed less often.' (p. 102)

Cabbies are threatened with violence. The occupation is threatened by Uber. Due to technicalities, Uber drivers can jump through loopholes that taxi drivers get tangled in. If things remain unchanged, cabbies 'figure the industry only has about five years left.' (p. 50)

On page 137, Di Cinto writes: 'During my year among the cabbies, I would come to see most taxi drivers as inherently good.'

Nice guys in tough times. Maybe it's time to ask ourselves, what can we do to help?

I found Driven: The Secret Lives of Drivers by Marcello Di Cintio to be an engaging and informative read. 

by Kathy Lawrence

December on this blog...

Sunday, December 18
Blankie (short story)
a holiday-themed story about a senior citizen celebrating the season in a retirement home.

Each year I celebrate Christmas Eve by sharing a story...
Saturday, December 24
The Calling (short story)
a downpour becomes magical for one teenage girl when... 


Sunday, December 4, 2022

The Sweater (short story) by Leanne Dyck

The holidays bring unmanageable stress to some people's lives. This short story is for them--it's about spousal abuse. 

by David Hughes

In a glass-walled boardroom, businessmen in suits and ties sit around a rectangular table. Garrett Smit stands in front of these men feeling like a sheep among lions. Sweat pours from his forehead into his eyes. On the floor beside him, an easel holds a chart.

"You can." His voice quivers. He coughs, takes a sip of water, and tries again. "You can clearly see by this..." He sweeps his hand back--too far. "Ch--." The chart falls from the easel to the fl--. Garrett catches the chart but--.

The clients he had hoped to--; he needed to impress push back their chairs.

"Please," Garrett begs, "you need to--."

The clients make a beeline for the door. Garrett is called into his boss' office.

***

In an immaculate kitchen, two friends sip coffee in a quiet suburban neighborhood. As Bev Smit chats with her friend Mary, she weaves in yarn ends on the man's sweater she has just finished knitting. The cuff on her shirt rides up revealing a purple bruise.

"More bruises, Bev?"

"I'm a klutz." The same excuse she always uses.

"You're not his punching bag." Mary leaves the table. "Never again!" She heads down the hall to the bedroom. 

Bev is in hot pursuit.

Mary slides open the glass doors and finds a suitcase in the back of the closet. She puts it on the bed, opens the drawers, and starts to pack.

"Mary, I can't." Bev notices the time on the alarm clock--5:40 PM. "I need to start supper." She grabs the clothes out of Mary's hands, stuffs them back into the bureau, and rushes down the hall to the kitchen."

"What are you going to make? I'll help."

"No, Mary, you need to go. Garrett will be upset if he finds you here."

"Come with me."

"I can't."

On the way to the door, Mary hugs her friend. "Call if you need anything--night or day."

Alone, Bev goes to the fridge and fills her hands with vegetables. She peels and chops.

As she works, she glances out the window. Headlights pierce the night.

She rushes to the freezer, grabs two pork chops, and puts them in the microwave to defrost.

She's taking the pork chops out of the microwave when the front door flies open. She runs to greet him. "Hi, honey. How was your day?"

"Peachy. Just peachy." He spies the extra coffee mug on the table. "Who. Was. Here?"

She grabs the offending mug--"Mary. Only Mary."--and deposits it in the sink.

"How many times do I have to tell you? No visitors!" He roars.

"Yes, I know. I'm sorry. She dropped by and I didn't want--."

"You're sorry. You're always sorry."

"Please, please, don't be mad. I have... I have something for you." She rushes into the bedroom, grabs the sweater, and rushes out.

"Wow," he mocks, "a sweater."

"I know it's not much...just a sweater, but... I made it for you. Please try it on."

"All right, all right. Oh, my God, woman." In the bedroom, in front of the full-length mirror, he pushes his head into the neck, hands into the sleeves, and pulls it down over his body. He stands admiring himself. And then he sees the suitcase.

Bev tries to explain, apologize, beg, but Garrett isn't prepared to listen. His anger boils over. He coils his fingers into fists and...

***

Bev brings her knitting to the guild meeting and when the president asks, "Is there any new business?", Bev, in a voice no louder than a whisper, shares her truth. 

All present--Mary and the rest--listen carefully and when she is done a plan is formulated.

***

After work, Garrett heads to his favourite watering hole--a dive where drinkers go to drink. He heads to his dark corner. "Labatt's Wildcat," he tells the waitress, "and keep them coming."

Beer after beer, he becomes so loaded that he doesn't notice her through the fog until she sits down. Pretty, he judges and thinks it's his lucky day. "What'll you have? My treat."

"What kinds of coolers do you have?" She asks the waitress.

"Peach, raspberry, strawberry, and--."

She orders a strawberry cooler. When it's delivered to the table, she takes a sip and pulls her knitting needles out of her purse. He thinks that's odd but whatever. She's still pretty.

The next time he looks over she's flipping through a magazine. She must find what she's looking for because she presses the page open with the palm of her hand. Sliding the magazine across the vinyl tablecloth, she breathes in his ear. "Like it?"

He speaks to her cleavage. "I don't know. I guess."

"It's what your wife should knit, but she's too busy knitting for you."

He shifts his focus from her breasts to the magazine. "What?"

"Don't you think it would look nice on her? Suit her figure."

"How do you know what my wife looks like?"

She takes another sip of her drink. "Oh, we know a lot of things."

He drains the old and starts the new.

"We know how your wife got all those bruises."

He puts both hands palms down on the table, leans forward, and glares at her. "Leave me the--."

She swings her needle up in an arch and down. The metal tip slides into his hand, between the bones. "I said we know and if you don't stop, you'll see us again. And you don't want to see us again because the next time won't be so pleasant."


by M L Swanburg

December on this blog...

I'm filling the month with stories and also a book review.


Sunday, December 11
by Marcello Di Cintio
Who drives Canada's taxis?

Sunday, December 18
Blankie (short story)
a holiday-themed story about a senior citizen celebrating the season in a retirement home.

Each year I celebrate Christmas Eve by sharing a story...
Saturday, December 24
The Calling (short story)
a downpour becomes magical for one teenage girl when... 

Sunday, November 27, 2022

Island Invasion (short story) by Leanne Dyck

This short story was inspired by The Inconvenient King by Thomas King.

(Thomas King is the 2022 winner of The Pierre Berton Award)

After reading Thomas King's book I was inspired to write... 

But was it my story to tell?

I'm indebted to Johnny Aitken for giving me the support and encouragement I needed to claim this story.




photo by ldyck

Island Invasion


I’m outside, weeding my lawn. Scotch Broom has long roots and spreads like peanut butter. It’ll take over if you’re not on it. I stand up to stretch my back and see this ship-size white truck roll up and just park on the street right in front of my property. And it’s just there for a good long time. So I wave at the driver. You know earth to outer space. The driver-side window rolls down so I walk over.


The driver opens his mouth and words come out but the only one I can identify is Galiano. Galiano Island is one of the islands that form the Southern Gulf Islands. The others are Gabriola and Saturna and Pender and Salt Spring and Mayne and… I was born on Mayne Island but left in my twenties. I moved back two years ago when my parents died and left me their house. My people the Tsartlip First Nations have been living here as far back as 3000 BC. I feel my ancestors in this land. It feels so good to be home.


Galiano,” he says again and points at my house.


I turn to face Galiano Island, and swing my hand back and forward, pointing to indicate that the island is a ways off.


He nods, leans out of the cab, and stretches out his arms like he’s embracing all of Mayne Island but once again he says, “Galiano.”


I try again. Pointing down, I say, “Mayne”.


Main Galiano.” He nods. “Thank you,” he says in his thick accent. Poor guy. He’s lost and he doesn’t even know it—or refuses to see it. Then he just drives off. Maybe he’ll find someone else who can help him.


A little while later, I’m still working on the roots when he comes back. This time he climbs out of the truck. By the way he slams the door, I can tell he’s pissed off. He’s carrying a pamphlet and he waves it at me. All I see is the title but that’s all I need. It’s a map of Galiano. A long string of words shoots out of his mouth. The only word I catch is Galiano but I understand. He’s upset because he can’t find his way around the island. Duh, of course, he can’t because this is Mayne, not Galiano. Somehow I need to make him understand. I have my work cut out for me so I invite him into my house and set a mug of coffee and a map of Mayne Island on the table directly in front of him. He sips the coffee and picks up the map. That’s a major breakthrough, I think. But he throws the map back on the table. He looks me dead in the eye and utters one word. You guessed it, “Galiano.” There’s no helping some people.


He follows me back outside like a little lost puppy. I lead him to my large garden where I grow almost all the vegetables I eat. He oohs at the garden and aahs at my view. My property overlooks the ocean. Clearly, he’s impressed by what he sees. He sits in a lawn chair and watches me work until the sun begins to set.


Ferry,” I say. Unlike Vancouver, Mayne Island has three ferries—one in the morning, one in the afternoon, and one in the evening. You miss the last one and you’re stuck. Believe me, I don’t want him to get stuck.


He gets the message, jumps into his truck and I wave goodbye to that strange encounter.


Signing with relief, I walk back into my house, watch a little TV, and then I start to get ready for bed. But then there’s this pounding on the door. It sounds urgent so I run to answer it. And guess what? Yup, it’s him. He has the BC Ferries’ schedule in his tight fist. He sets it on the table and I clearly see the problem. The pamphlet is open to the Galiano Island ferry schedule.


Well, I don’t mind telling you that my patience is wearing thin. I find the Mayne Island ferry schedule and circle the time for the first ferry with the first pen I can lay my hands on.


But he says, “Galiano” and flips back to that island’s ferry schedule.


I can’t kick him out. He’s lost; he’s alone, and he’s more than a little pathetic. So I offer him my spare bedroom.


But I’m determined that he’ll be on the first ferry headed back to the mainland. I serve him breakfast and put him on the road in plenty of time to catch the ferry—day after day after day. He always comes back. He’s been here way too long—drinking my coffee, eating my food, sleeping in my spare bedroom—and I'm going to--. But I can’t… What would you do?


Books I've reviewed by Indigenous authors.


Selling Stolen Land by Samuel Kramer




Illustrator unknown

December on this blog...

I'm filling the month with stories and also a book review.

Sunday, December 4
The Sweater (short story)
a short story about the special--and surprising--relationship a knitter has with a knitting guild.

Sunday, December 11
Book Review: Driven: The Secret Lives of Drivers
by Marcello Di Cintio
Who drives Canada's taxis?

Sunday, December 18
Blankie (short story)
a holiday-themed story about a senior citizen celebrating the season in a retirement home.

Each year I celebrate Christmas Eve by sharing a story...
Saturday, December 24
The Calling (short story)
a downpour becomes magical for one teenage girl when... 

Sunday, November 20, 2022

20 Guest Authors on Leanne Dyck's Blog

One of the best resources an author can have is another author. 20 authors share writing tips and details about their author journey.

 

photo by ldyck


Authors featured in this article:

Susin Nielsen, Amber HarveyJoanna Penn, Melodie Campbell, Alix Ohlin, Arleen Pare, Ayelet Tsabari, Karen McBride, Pam WithersEllen Schwartz, Brenda Chapman, Robin Stevenson, Anne R. AllenJan Degrass, Shane Peacock, Heather Shumaker, Lou Allin, Debra Purdy Kong, Mary Sharratt, Winslow Eliot 

How/why did you start to write?

I wrote from a very young age. I joke that my first "published" book was when I was 10

One summer, when I was around eleven, my friends were away and I was bored. Since my parents didn't believe children had to be entertained, I was left to sort out this problem for myself. An avid reader, my mind was always filled with stories, and having access to a notebook, a fountain pen, and some wildly exciting red ink, I began to write.-Amber Harvey

I've always written journals and diaries, especially while traveling and I have always dreamed of writing a great novel. My idol was Umberto Eco with The Name of the Rose which I loved but the literary fiction ideal blocked me because I didn't think I could write like that. Dan Brown released me from the fear of writing as I saw that you could have a similar plot of religious history but still be a mainstream writer, so I started believing I could write a novel. -Joanna Penn

Only child for nine years--never anyone to talk to! So I invented characters even before I could write. -Melodie Campbell

I started writing as a child. I grew up in a house full of books, and reading was how I understood the world. My Grade Two teacher...encouraged me to write special assignments outside of class. I still have some of the things I wrote for her, like an illustrated fable that I stitched into a little book bound with construction paper. -Alix Ohlin

I started to write creatively after completing a graduate thesis in 1994. I remember driving home from the University of BC after my oral defense, thinking it was too bad that I had finished the project because I had enjoyed the writing process, the business of chewing over ideas and arranging them. And revising. And then immediately the idea of writing a novel popped into my mind. -Arleen Pare


How did you become an author?

When I decided to take my writing seriously, I applied and was accepted to the Writer's Studio at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver. I loved the program and had grown a lot as a writer during that year, so I knew I was on the right track. After that, I moved to Toronto to attend the Masters of Fine Arts program at Guelph. -Ayelet Tsabari

I suppose my journey to getting published began when I took a writing workshop during my undergrad. I got the chance to work with Andre Alexis and he saw something in me that I didn't even think was possible. I still remember how excited I was the first time he told me my writing was good enough to be published; I screamed in the elevator after leaving his office! -Karen McBride

I kept taking writing classes. I did a reading or two. I made friends with other writers. One day, after sending my new manuscript to several presses, one of them accepted it. 

Reflect on your writing process

I imagine the climax and work backwards from there asking why questions: why did the kayak go over the waterfall?
I don't start writing until the plot points are plotted out. Then I start imagining the characters. 

Most story ideas come to me through a character. I see someone interesting on the street or a character pops into my imagination, and I think, Who is this? What is his or her background? What problem is he or she facing? I may live with the character for a long time before a story idea emerges. 

What did you do before embarking on your writing career? Was it an asset to your writing? How?

I was a TV writer first, for twenty years, before I wrote my first original YA novel' 

Teaching taught me to prepare lesson plans and to organize a project, all helpful in laying out a manuscript. -Brenda Chapman

I worked for ten years as a counsellor and social worker. Counselling taught me to pay close attention to people, to relationships, and to communication; it gave me an opportunity to be involved in people's lives during difficult times and to learn more about how people understand themselves and their lives. -Robin Stevenson

I spent twenty-five years in theatre and film, acting and directing. And yes, the two are perfectly matched. Preparing for a role is very much like creating a character. You learn that every character in every scene must have a goal or a motivation. -Anne R. Allen

Before writing, I was a contemporary ballet dancer, touring and performing internationally. When I began to write I was still teaching dance and choreographing. The creative process was ingrained in me and this was extremely useful when I set out to write. -Jan Degrass

Please share one of your successful author platform-building techniques

Like many authors whose work appeals to a YA audience, I spend a great deal of time on the ground speaking to students in schools and libraries, and to older groups, teachers and librarians, and readers, for example, at conventions and international writers' festivals. I also maintain a lively and entertaining website as well as a presence on Facebook and Twitter. I try to push the publicists at my publishing house to get me onto radio and TV and blog sites, and I make sure that I perform well and am conscious of promoting my work to the best of my abilities when I have those opportunities. I think doing simple things like answering the many e-mail messages I receive from fans is important too.

I've found numerous speaking engagements, which lead to more speaking engagements, and now invitations to headline conferences and be the keynote speaker. -Heather Shumaker

Parting words

Read, listen to, and watch as much as you can. I find creativity is sparked in me when I see the brilliant creativity of others. -Karen McBride

There's an amazing community of writers online who I have met through blogs and Twitter. Anyone can become a part of that by being generous with their time, helping others on the journey, and sharing their story. -Joanna Penn

An author needs tools, talent, and tenacity. The first you can learn, the second you can hone, and the third is open to anyone who keeps at it. -Lou Allin

For me, success is about tenacity and becoming a better writer; learning to listen to those who are trying to help. -Debra Purdy Kong

If you want to have a career as a published writer, never give up. The only failed writer is the one who stops writing! Love what you do. The process of writing is everything and no one can take that away from you. -Mary Sharratt

The important thing to remember though is that writing in and of itself is a reward. The rest is just icing. -Brenda Chapman

I wish more writers would create a more loving relationship with Writing, so that they are kinder to it and to themselves--treating it like the special, sacred relationship that it truly is. -Winslow Eliot

I've been encouraged by and learned a lot from the authors who visited my blog. Featuring them on my blog is my way of saying thank you.


More...

-more authors to visit
-the full interviews
Where?

 

On this blog in November...

Sunday, November 27
Island Invasion (short story) by Leanne Dyck
This short story was inspired by The Inconvenient Indian by Thomas King
Much thanks to Johnny Aitken for giving me the support I needed to claim this story.

And in December...?

 


Sunday, November 13, 2022

It All Started Here by Leanne Dyck

I was born in a rural hospital--E M Crowe Memorial Hospital. But who? And I wasn't the only one with that question. So I did some research and... Wow! 




E M Crowe Memorial Hospital

Elizabeth Mary Alexander was born in Clifton--a rural community located in Colchester County, Nova Scotia--on March 31, 1856. Yes, that's right, she was born at the height of the Victorian era. Queen Victoria reigned from June 20, 1837, until her death on January 22, 1901--63 years. The era was named in her honour. Victorians believed that a woman's place was in the home. Unless... Unless you married rich. Then the societal expectation was that you would adopt a cause on your husband's behalf. You know like a public relations agent. Elizabeth married wealthy grain merchant George Reading Crowe and set to work bettering the good name of Crowe. She held important positions in a number of organizations--the Manitoba branch of the YWCA Dominion Council, the Winnipeg YWCA, the Westminster Presbyterian Church Ladies' Society, the Women's Canadian Club of Winnipeg, and the Women's Missionary Society. 

It was as the President of the Women's Missionary Society that Elizabeth M Crowe became involved with the community of Eriksdale. Under her leadership, the Women's Missionary Society searched for a location in rural north-central Manitoba to establish a much-needed hospital. They choose Eriksdale. 

'The building was soon started with a member of Mrs. Crowe's family as its architect. However, before the completion of the hospital, Mrs. Crowe died [on November 6, 1918] and as a memorial to her services and benevolent donations, the hospital was named after her... The hospital was officially opened in May of 1926.' 1
 

'In 1940...the upstairs of the hospital became the maternity ward with a delivery room, nursery, and six patient beds.'

 

The E. M. Crowe Memorial hospital was the site of an event that should be included in the history books. On November 13,1962 at 4:46 PM, I was delivered by Dr. Gudmundur Paulson. Dr. Paulson served as Eriksdale's physician from 1939 to 1980.

Mom told me that an elderly patient protested my infant cries by knocking on the ceiling of her room--the floor of ours--with her cane. 

'In November 1962, the digging began for a new hospital, and in September 1963, the new E. M. Crowe Memorial Hospital was opened.' 1--'a seventeen bed, plus five bassinets, acute care hospital, with modern x-ray and delivery rooms, and wide spacious halls.2 

Mom--Olavia Willetts--had a long history of involvement with the hospital. In her twenties, she worked as a nurse's aide. In her forties and fifties, she worked first in the laundry room and later in the kitchen. Mom was an honorary member of the hospital guild--having served the guild for over 30 years. Over the years she and the other members of the guild help to raise funds to support the hospital. To honour their tireless work, on August 10, 1984, Eriksdale's Guild Memorial Park was officially opened. In 1988, to celebrate the Guild's 75th anniversary, the Municipal Council declared Guild week--June 20 to 25.

The E. M. Crowe Memorial Hospital has changed much over the years but Elizabeth Mary Crowe's legacy remains. But for how long? I've just been informed that the powers that be are threatening to close it down. I hope that this hospital is allowed to continue to serve the Interlake.

Helpful resources...

Elizabeth Mary Crowe by the Manitoba Historical Society  

Books about the E. M. Crowe Memorial Hospital in Eriksdale, Manitoba...

1 Memory Opens the Door, Lucy Lindell, 1970 and 1974

2 Beyond Beginnings, Eriksdale History Book Committee, 1996


 

On this blog in November...

Sunday, November 20
Writing Tips from 19 Guest Authors
My guest authors generously share writing tips and give insights into their own author journey.

Sunday, November 27
Island Invasion (short story) by Leanne Dyck
This short story was inspired by 


Craigdarroch Castle


Even though I have no mind for dates, I love to learn about history.

Sunday, November 6, 2022

Book Review: Stray Dogs stories by Rawi Hage, published by Alfred A Knopf Canada

 Stray Dogs by Rawi Hage is a collection of 11 stories. Some books supply answers. Stray Dogs provokes questioning. There's much meat on the bone. This book lends itself nicely to being slowly digested in a classroom or by a book club.




Stray Dogs stories

Rawi Hage

Alfred A Knopf Canada

2022

201 pages

short-listed for the 2022 Scotiabank Giller Prize


At six pages "The Whistle" is the shortest story in this collection. Some of the stories are novelette or novella-length. The themes and plot lines are diverse as well. Themes include the role of fate; the resilient human spirit; immigration; and if not the importance of at least the influence of family. Some of the protagonists are photographers. In the author's photo, Rawi Hage is holding a camera--cannily foreshadowing the stories that await the reader. Story location is wide-ranging--Lebanon and France and Poland and Germany and Canada and... The more we learn about people living in other countries the smaller our world becomes. Flip open Stray Dogs and read. It points the way to world peace


 

On this blog in November...

Sunday, November 13
It All Started Here by Leanne Dyck
What does the wife of a wealthy grain merchant have to do with my birth?

Sunday, November 20
Writing Tips from 18 Guest Authors
My guest authors generously share writing tips and give insights into their own author journey.

Sunday, November 27
Island Invasion (short story) by Leanne Dyck
This short story was inspired by The Inconvenient Indian by Thomas King

photo by ldyck

You: Hey, Leanne, what method do you use to select the books you review?

Me: I follow the same guide that I use when I'm choosing what I 

Sunday, October 30, 2022

Book Review: The Dollhouse: a ghost story by Charis Cotter (MG mystery), published by Tundra Books

 As I believe The Dollhouse could have the power to strengthen a relationship between young and old, I highly recommend that children share this book with their grandparents.

Buy this Book

The Dollhouse: a ghost story

Tundra Books

time-traveling mystery

2022

346 pages

Winner of the Newfoundland and Labrador Book Awards


It's June 1997 and Alice Felicity Greene's parents are newly separated. Alice's mother Ellie is a nurse and gets a job at Blackwood House in the town of Lockport caring for seventy-eight-year-old Mrs. Fiona Bishop who has broken her leg. Ellie and Alice begin their journey to Lockport by train but when there's an accident they must continue by taxi.

The taxi driver tells them: Blackwood House "'stood empty for nearly seventy years. Something happened to the family and the house was locked up. By all accounts that house has seen more sorrow than most, ever since it was built way back in the 1830s... No good ever comes to people who live in that house.'" (p. 18)

But Ellie tells Alice: Blackwood House "'is not haunted. It's just old. There is no such thing as ghosts and I don't want you starting off your summer letting your imagination get the best of you!'" (p. 21)

At Blackwood House, Alice befriends Lily Barnett.

Lily 'was so pretty, with her dark hair and eyes, and she had the body of a teenager, but she acted and moved more like a six-year-old.' (p. 26)

Together Alice and Lily explore the grand old house. They discover a locked room. In the locked room they discover a...dollhouse.

Author Charis Cotter is a wordsmith who paints vivid pictures, such as...

'I felt like she and I were marooned in a small island of candlelight while the darkness lapped around us like waves against the shore.' (p. 282)

The Dollhouse: a ghost story is a carefully crafted, suspense-filled book that kept me entertained from the first page to the last. 

 


 

On this blog in November...

Sunday, November 6
Book Review: Stray Dog by Rawi Hage, published by Alfred A Knopf Canada
This story collection is short-listed for the 2022 Scotiabank Giller Prize
The winner will be announced on Monday, November 7

Sunday, November 13
It All Started Here by Leanne Dyck
What does the wife of a wealthy grain merchant have to do with my birth?

Sunday, November 20
Writing Tips from 18 Guest Authors
My guest authors generously share writing tips and give insights into their own author journey.

Sunday, November 27
Island Invasion (short story) by Leanne Dyck
This short story was inspired by The Inconvenient Indian by Thomas King

And...