A Festival for the Fish Ladder

Lea Wait, here, admitting that although I knew a little about alewives (no – they’re not the wives of beer drinkers — they’re 8-10 inch fish lobstermen sometimes use as bait), there was a time when I had no idea what a fish ladder was. My education, sad to say, was lacking. So on the chance that you, too, might be curious about the need for a ladder for fish, on Memorial Day weekend my husband and I attended the 5th Annual Damariscotta Mills Fish Ladder Restoration Festival.

A little history (drum roll, please!) The Damariscotta River was called that by the Abenakis because it was the “river of many fishes.” Those many fishes were the large schools of alewives who swam up river from the sea, and up the falls at Damariscotta Mills, to get to the fresh water in Damariscotta Lake each spring, where they would spawn. This mass migration provided food (fresh fish and smoked) for humans, and for the ospreys,eagles and gulls who would gather for the occasion.

Alewives, heading up the fish ladder

By 1730, however, the falls had become partially blocked by a double sawmill, and as settlements increased, other mills were built, and the alewives’ traditional routes were blocked. As early as 1741 the Massachusetts Legislature (Maine was then a district of Massachusetts) passed “An Act To Prevent the Destruction of Alewives and Other Fish,” requiring that passage for fish be provided around falls blocked by mills.  

Bob & I Escaping Giant Osprey!

At first, the solution to get the alewives the necessary 42 feet up the falls was that a local shipowner had his employees net the fish and transport them to the lake above. When this plan didn’t work well, he built a lock stream to assist the fish in their ascent, but it was small and ineffective. In 1809 the towns of Newcastle and Nobleboro constructed the first substantial Lock Stream, which had to be rebuilt every five to ten years.

  In 2007 the fish committee of Nobleboro and Newcastle determined to establish a more efficient, attractive, and permanent, fish ladder, and initiated a major re-building project. Since then, about 2/3 of the new mortar and stone fish ladder has been completed. The restoration continues, and each year a three-day Festival is held to raise money to continue the work, so the alewives can make their journey up the falls to Damariscotta Lake. 

This year hundreds of people came out to watch the alewives swim and jump their way up the ladder, referred to by some as “the fish way.” Onlookers also found time to eat and drink; have their picture taken with a giant osprey; buy art donated by local artists, take their children for a horse cart ride, buy smoked alewives, and, generally, be part of a Maine tradition.

Alewives are still used for lobster bait, and two bushels of alewives are also, by tradition, delivered to every widow in Newcastle each year. 

And in Maine, no one questions the need for fish to have a ladder to get to their home lake each spring. Or that celebrating the return of the alewives every spring isn’t exactly the right thing to do.

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Writing a Crime Novel is Like . . .

To what do you compare writing a crime novel?

Lea Wait: One of your analogies is also mine, Kaitlyn : the enormous picture puzzle. In my case I say the author has to make up all the pieces: the characters, the time, the place, even the weather, the year, the costumes, the clues … and that sometimes, even though a whole group of puzzle pieces fit together just right … they don’t fit with the other pieces, so the author has to be brutal, and push the whole group off the table and let the dog (or the baby sister) chew on them, and start again. I think that’s especially important with historicals, since so much research goes into the planning stages, but  even in contemporary mysteries, backstories, forensics, time of year, current events — all have to fit together to have the puzzle (= novel) work. Since I’m the sort of writer who plans 80% of her mystery ahead of time, that all makes sense. I suspect those writers who don’t plan further than a chapter ahead would have very different analogies in explaining how they write!

Kate Flora: I have to confess that I have never tried to explain the process in the ways that you ladies have. When readers ask me how I plot, I tell them how the book often begins with a character in a situation, and having to face the challenge of understanding who they are and why they are in that particular situation.Then I go on to talk about the prewriting phase of the book, what I call the “cooking” phase, where I carry the story around in my head, working it the way you’d knead dough, until I understand the major pieces of my plot: who was killed, where they were killed, how they were killed, why they were killed, who did it, who might have done it or might have wanted to do it, who will be the holders/divulgers of essential information, and how my protagonist is the right person to solve that crime.

When I’m writing about my cops solving a crime, I very often use the analogy of putting together the puzzle–finding all the pieces, building the frame, and finally finding a way to put all of those pieces together. I also use the image of the old paint-by-number set. (I don’t know if they have those anymore.) The detective will fill in dabs of this color and that, and gradually, a picture of what really happens will emerge. This one is good because it ties into something quite essential about detective work–that it requires the detective to use his or her imagination, along with the gathered facts and knowledge of the parties, to come to an understanding of what probably happened.

And then I could add the flippant answer: Writing a crime novel is like having a whole year of detention. You have to stay there and you can’t leave until all your homework is done. Maybe it’s also like The Breakfast Club, too, where you find that your assumptions are wrong, and things are more rich and complex than you first imagined.

Barb Ross: I use E. L. Doctorow’s quote all the time, “Writing is like driving at night in the fog. You can only see as far as your headlights, but you can make the whole trip that way.”   Because that’s how writing feels to ME.

When I’m trying to describe it to other people, I used to go with the whole pottery metaphor. First you make the clay (first draft) and then you make the pot. But lately, watching my sister-in-law who works in a high-end knitting store, I’ve gone much more with the first draft being like spinning the yarn and the rest being like knitting. I remember as a child watching my mother knitting argyle socks, with all the little spools of color. Somehow, it has to come out with both a patten AND a shape. And, sometimes you have to rip out rows and rows to get back to the mistake and knit that part over. That’s the way writing is feeling to me today.

Kate Flora: Barb…I often use a different knitting analogy which also brings in my legal background–that writing a mystery, like writing a brief, is like knitting a complex pattern with several colors of yarn, and having to carry one strand in the back while you work on a different part of the pattern, then bringing it forward again. I’m awful at knitting. Was reasonably good at writing briefs, and am grateful that the ripping out and rewrite doesn’t involve actual stitches. Of course, as I write this, I am about to return to the task of cutting 40,000 words out of a book, asking…now at the single phrase level…do I need it, does it add anything, would the book be any different without it. Argh!

Paul Doiron: Writing a crime novel is like playing a piece of music written for the cello. So says Yo-Yo Ma anyway. I know absolutely nothing about classical music and cannot even carry a tune, but I’m reading a book called Imagine: How Creativity Works by Jonah Lehrer, and I was taken by his chapter on Yo-Yo Ma’s creative process. “Perfection is not very communicative,” says Ma. “If you are only worried about not making a mistake, then you will communicate nothing. You will have missed the point of making music, which is to make people feel something.”

Ma then describes how the search for emotion shapes his performance. “I always look at a piece of music like a detective novel,” he says. “Maybe the novel is about a murder. Well, who committed the murder? Why did he do it? My job is to retrace the story so that the audience feels the suspense. So that when the climax comes, they’re right there with me, listening to my beautiful detective story. It’s all about making people care what happens next.”

Of course, all of us on the members of this blog actually write detective stories, but it’s intriguing to think of ourselves in the reverse way. Aren’t we all musicians, too? When we write, aren’t we’re on stage, performing, trying to connect? We want our audience to feel something. I love Ma’s line about not worrying making a mistake. I, too, try to cultivate a certain recklessness in my work because I want my readers to feel emotions when they immerse themselves in my novels. I’d rather take big chances and fail than write neat little books that are safely structured, carefully conceived from beginning to end—and instantly forgotten as soon as the reader finishes the last page.

Vicki Doudera: I love that quote from Yo-Yo Ma, and it’s interesting to think of writing in that way.

For me, a lifelong jock, I think of writing in terms of sports, especially running. I’ve been a runner since grade school, and wondered for many years if a marathon was in my future. Then I wrote my first mystery. Sitting in a chair for months on end to complete A House to Die For was a feat Running is like Writingrequiring strength, endurance, and stamina, along with proper nutrition (popcorn) and hydration (tea and wine.) When you think about it, slogging one’s way through 26 miles isn’t that different. Discipline, diet, blisters, and hitting the dreaded “wall” — writing’s got it all. Who needs to run a marathon when there are books to write?

 

 

 

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Done and Dusted

Hi from Sarah Graves, who is recovering from a very long bout of writing. The work to be done was A BAT IN THE BELFRY, another Home Repair is Homicide mystery starring amateur sleuth Jake Tiptree and her friend Ellie White. Jake and Ellie have been solving murders in Eastport for 15 years now, so many that it’s a wonder there are any living people left. But there always seems to be one more victim suitable for a doing-in, and this time was no exception.

Now that I’ve finished the book and its rewrites, though, I feel pretty done in, myself. I remember when I finished the first one, THE DEAD CAT BOUNCE, and thought I might have to lie down for a week. This time I don’t need to lie down at all, but the very idea of starting another book or even a short story….please. At least let me get a blood transfusion, first.

What I can do, though, is work that requires no words. Painting, plastering, wallpaper scraping, sanding of floors and woodwork — those chores, put off while the book was in progress, now look like fun, seeing as they do not have to be done while staring at a screen or pounding a keyboard. Anything that doesn’t involve a keyboard, in fact, is fine with me. But friends, when this blog entry is done, there will be no keyboarding for a while. Even the idea of the keyboard on a piano makes me feel a little queasy. I am entering a Silent Period that will last until the 14th, so until then be well, stay safe, and have a really lovely first two weeks of June.

 

 

 

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June Firsters — Characters All

We probably all know at least one person who shares our birthday, but living in a small Maine town for nearly three decades (can that really be?) means that I know quite a few.

Vicki Doudera here. I’m not talking about the celebs, who, like me, were born yesterday on June 1st —  Marilyn Monroe, Pat Boone, Morgan Freeman, Andy Griffith, Heidi Klum, Ron Wood, Alanis Morissette  – I’m talking about the REAL stars in my world, all of whom make life on the coast in Camden the better for their birth on June the first.

Before I go any further, my apologies if this post seems a little familiar to those of you who have been reading our blog for a few years.  I admit that I’ve taken this one off from a few years ago and dusted it off for your reading pleasure.  I’m very much engrossed in getting a book done — in addition to celebrating my birthday…– so please forgive me.

Back to my favorite June firsters.

There’s Allen Fernald, for one. I’ve been fortunate toAllen Fernald know this great guy for most of my 28 years in Maine. We chat at church and the yacht club, have served together on committees and capital campaigns, and work out in the exercise room he and his wife Sally endowed at the Penobscot Area YMCA.  Like the rest of the folks born on this day, he has an interesting story. Allen came to Maine for college, then worked in New York City at the publishing company of Holt, Rinehart, and Winston. In 1977 he bought Down East magazine and returned with his family to Maine.  The company he went on to found — Down East Enterprise – published my first book, Moving to Maine.

Sue Hopkins is another June first baby. She and her husband Bob Carter live around the corner from us in a lovely old home filled with antiques. Like me, she is a lover of Nancy Drew Mysteries and has a collection of vintage volumes by Carolyn Keene. Vintage Nancy(The one she gave me occupies a place of honor in my writing space at the camp.)  Sue has the sharp mind of a lawyer, having practiced law before she moved to Maine from California, but uses it now to help organizations run more efficiently. I know firsthand what a good friend and tireless worker she is as well. Happy Birthday, Sue!

Another neighbor who blew out candles over the weekend is Jory Squibb. Known in our town as the guy who built and drives Moonbeam, a tiny car no bigger than a go-cart, Jory is an environmentalist and fellow cyclist who’s pedaled with Ed and I in the Trek Across Maine.

I can’t recall when I first met Jory and his wife Brenda, but it was probably through kids.  Our son Nate and their daughter Chloe started kindergarten together, and both ended up in Burlington, Vermont, for college. (In fact Chloe made the waffle batter for the graduation brunch we had for Nate a few years back.) It was my pleasure to help Jory and Brenda sell their home on Pleasant Ridge and then purchase another around the corner. In getting to know them better, I realized what caring and involved community members they are.

Pat Jones also celebrated her birthday yesterday. She is one of those enviable women who seem to have found the fountain of youth.  Not only have her lovely looks remained unchanged, but she is just as sweet as back when I met her in the 1980’s.  Like me, Pat sells real estate, and I’m dying to sit down with her and gather stories for plot ideas for my Darby Farr Mysteries. I just know Pat has some juicy tales to tell!

Allen, Jory, Sue, and Pat are people who share my special day, folks we used to call “birthday buddies.” Apparently that term has gone the way of “hook up,” as the online Urban Dictionary gives a second definition of the term, one that I’d never heard:  birthday buddy: a friend, most likely a lover, that lives far away and on your birthday comes to your house and bangs you.  Not to worry — my birthday pals all live nearby – but where do these phrases come from?

At any rate, the first of June is a very good day to be born. For kids, it means cake and presents, as well as the start of the month when school ends and summer vacation begins. I remember — and still feel — some of that excitement.  Hooray! It’s finally June. The lilacs still linger, the lupines are blooming, and Maine’s black fly season is nearly behind us.

Happy Birthday to my fellow “June Firsters” in Camden and elsewhere. Wishing you a wonderful day and many years of celebrations.

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Choices for Crime Writers: The Sleuth’s Love Interest

In the traditional romantic suspense (aka Gothic) novel set up, the heroine meets two attractive men, one good and one evil, only she doesn’t know for certain which is which until near the end of the story. The traditional female amateur sleuth (Miss Marple being an exception) often acquires a love interest with law enforcement connections, to the point where the cop boyfriend comes pretty darn close to being a cliché. On the other hand, it’s extremely useful to have someone on the “inside” and in some series the relationship evolves so that the crimes are solved by a sleuthing couple rather than by the female sleuth alone.

In the Face Down series I wrote as Kathy Lynn Emerson, my detective is Susanna, Lady Appleton, a married (later widowed) sixteenth-century gentlewoman who is an expert on poisonous herbs—”every husband’s worst nightmare,” as one reviewer wrote. For the first three books, her sleuthing partner was her obnoxious, overbearing, philandering husband, Robert (it was an arranged marriage) and his only redeeming quality was the fact that he was, secretly, an “intelligencer” for the Crown. I knew early on that I was going to kill him off. My editor at St. Martin’s was all for that plan. But once he was gone, and Susanna had been cleared of his murder in

cover of the large print edition

Face Down Beneath the Eleanor Cross, there was a void to fill. I tried out two candidates, both “good guys,” Robert’s former “boss” in the intelligence service, Walter Pendennis, and Susanna’s neighbor in Kent, wealthy merchant Nick Baldwin. Walter had court connections. Nick was soon appointed a local J.P. But marry one of them? Not a chance. You see, back in the 1500s, the only way a woman could keep control of her own property (and her person) was to remain unmarried. The minute she said “I do” everything she owned became his. That didn’t stop Susanna from having romantic relationships, however, something I was able to keep going through all ten books and numerous short stories.

The other historical mystery series I wrote as Kathy was the Diana Spaulding 1888 Mystery Quartet, featuring a female journalist in 1888 America. The first book, Deadlier than the Pen,

also available in large print and as an ebook

was originally intended as a single title. In fact, it started life as a Gothic novel in which, at the end, the heroine is about to marry. When my publisher and I opted for a four-book series instead, the choice of profession for Diana’s love interest, Ben Northcote, became even more useful. He’s a physician who also serves as a coroner in his home town of Bangor, Maine. In the other three books in the series (Fatal as a Fallen Woman, No Mortal Reason and Lethal Legend), Diana and Ben work together to solve murders.

That brings me up to Kaitlyn Dunnett’s Liss MacCrimmon Scottish-American Heritage Mysteries. What to do? What to do? Liss is definitely an amateur sleuth. She was a professional Scottish dancer before a career-ending injury to her knee. In Kilt Dead she’s working in Moosetookalook Scottish Emporium in Moosetookalook, Maine, population 1007. She’s motivated to solve the murder herself by the fact that she’s a suspect in the crime, but at the planning stages I faced the age-old problem of how to give her access to information on the progress of the case. A romantic relationship with the investigating officer was out. He’s not a nice man. Nor is he very bright. Enter Sherri Willett, dispatcher at the sheriff’s office and part-time sales clerk at the Emporium. Although Liss is the one who solves the mysteries in this series, Sherri is there as her sidekick and source of intelligence, especially after she changes jobs and becomes a member of the Moosetookalook police force.

But that left me without a love interest. As a subplot, romance works well in a “cozy” mystery, even if he doesn’t turn out to be “the one.” If Liss’s love interest wasn’t to be in law enforcement, then what should his profession be? Since I was already setting this series in my own back yard, so to speak, I looked around said back yard and found—no surprise here!—my husband. At that time he was looking forward to retiring from his job as a probation officer and was planning two new careers: running a Christmas tree farm and doing custom woodworking. Voila! Dan Ruskin of Ruskin Construction, doing custom woodworking on the side, was born. In the books in the series, just about every item my husband has made, from decorative boxes to magic wands to jigsaw puzzle tables, has popped up as one of Dan’s creations.

I spiced things up a bit in Scone Cold Dead and A Wee Christmas Homicide by adding the new state trooper in the area, Gordon Tandy, to the mix. He, too, is interested in Liss. I mentioned above the well-established tradition of giving the heroine two men to choose between. They aren’t always the good guy and the bad guy. Sometimes they’re both flawed. And some protagonists, like Janet Evanovich’s Stephanie Plum, are so consistently unable to make a choice that readers start to get annoyed. Morelli or Ranger. Bill or Eric. Angel or Spike. Oops. Veered out of genre a bit there! Anyway, you get the idea. So in my series, I did not draw out the minor suspense over the issue of “the boyfriend” for very long.

At the end of the fourth book, The Corpse Wore Tartan, Liss accepts Dan’s marriage proposal. They’re engaged throughout book five, Scotched, and the wedding takes place in Bagpipes, Brides, and Homicides,

in stores July 31

which will be out in late July. In the one I’m working on now, with a Halloween setting (Vampires, Bones, and Treacle Scones), they’ve been married for several months. I’ve already had fan email telling me she picked the wrong man. To these readers, Dan is the “dull” one.

I’ll agree that life with Gordon the trooper would have contained more conflict. That’s one reason Liss didn’t seriously consider marrying him. They brought out the worst in each other. I know Alpha males are the stuff of romance novels, but how many women really want to live with one on a daily basis? There would be conflict, sure, but not the kind I want for the sleuth in my humorous mystery series. Her opponent should be the villain, not her spouse. And, yes, I admit it—in her personal life I’d like her to be, mostly, happy. Liss MacCrimmon will continue to encounter murderers, but to balance the bad she gets Dan, two cats, and a house full of books.

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Reading From a Mystery

Hey all, Gerry Boyle here. About to set out for a reading and I’m puzzling, as always, about what part of the book to choose. I’ve decided on PORT CITY BLACK AND WHITE, but that’s as far as I’ve gotten. The problem is the difficulty of reading from  a crime or mystery novel.

My choices: the first page so I can at least give the audience a taste. But I’ve been asked to speak for 20 minutes. The first chapter? That will take about 3 minutes, tops. Then what? The next chapter? An action sequence from the middle of the book? A character-building passage? Hey, I could read the climactic chapter and save everybody a few hours and $24.95.

I always puzzle over this and not because I don’t like to read from my work. I’m fine with that as I like my stuff as much as most authors like their own writing. And the sound of my own voice. But you can’t get too deep into the book without requiring a long intro to set up a scene. And if you read all from the early portions, where the tension is building and characters are developing, it can seem a little sloggy, especially if you drop in mid-chapter.

Too late to help me for this time around. But I’m all ears if my fellow Maine Crime Writers and the Maine crime readers have any suggestions. How do you authors choose? What do you readers like to hear.

So wish me luck.

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Deadly Animals

Paul Doiron here—

Before heading to Monhegan this past weekend—a fog-bound island off the Maine coast where you will always find yourself in need of a good book—I went looking for one to bring with me. I have a teetering pile beside my bed, but I was in a particularly dark mood, having just returned from Las Vegas (another story for another time), and I found myself rejecting one book after the other until my eye fell upon a paperback I had purchased over the winter and then forgotten about: The Book of Deadly Animals by Gordon Grice.

The title is literal. Grice’s book is a bestiary of just about every creature that predates on human beings. I bought it at Longfellow Books in Portland, because I always buy something whenever I set foot in an independent bookstore, and because of its amazing blurbs. How many paperbacks have endorsements from David Sedaris, Susan Orleans, Michael Pollan—and Bear Grylls?

It seemed like a good fit for me. I write crime novels about a game warden. Maine doesn’t have a great number of deadly animal species (although we have more than I realized, I now know), but I had ideas of working a killer moose or rabid coyote into some future book. I started reading the first night and couldn’t bring myself to stop. I don’t want to summarize, since Grice covers so much ground, but here are some of the things I learned:

  • In the United States an estimated 4.7 million dog bites occur each year, causing about 800,000 ER visits (but only 12 deaths on average).
  • Medieval mastiffs were bred to run into combat with vessels of fires on their backs to burn the undersides of horses (or just disembowel them with their teeth).
  • In a 7-month span in 1996 in Uttar Pradesh, India, wolves attacked 76 children, killing at least 22 so forget all that gentle wolf stuff.
  • A grizzly can fit a human head in its mouth for a bite, but if a person is lucky the skull slides out (minus the scalp) like a squeezed marble.
  • The Champawatt tigress is listed in the Guiness Book of World Records as the most prolific animal killer of human beings ever documented. It took 200 victims in Nepal and another 236 in the Kumaon region of India.
  • Hyenas can find prey by deduction, by following the flight patterns of vultures to injured animals.
  • The species of shark that has almost certainly killed more people than any other is the little-known, deep-sea ocean whitetip, which participated in the famous massacre of the crew of the USS Indianapolis, in World War II, in which 875 sailors went into the water following a Japanese torpedo attack, and only 317 survived (and of those, 183 had lost some flesh to sharks).
  • Prairie dogs spread the plague and armadillos make excellent hosts for leprosy.
  • Cobras kill 10,000 to 20,000 people in India annually.
  • The most formidable large predator in the world is the orca, or killer whale, which has been known to rip the tongues out of blue whales for the sheer hell of it, leaving the peaceful giants to bleed to death; leap onto the land to snatch a sunbathing seal; and hold great white sharks out of the water to “drown” the gill breathers in the air (before eating their livers).

I could go on with this litany of death, but instead I’ll just say: buy this book. Even if you’re not a mystery writer looking for elaborate plot devices that involve the use of poisonous boomslangs or chest-impaling hound fish, you’ll find Grice’s descriptions so macabre you never look at even the cuddliest of creatures the same way again.

For my part, I’m trying to come up with a way to pit Maine game warden Mike Bowditch against a rampaging orca in Passamaquoddy Bay. They’re occasionally spotted not far from Eastport. Watch out, Sarah Graves!

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For Memorial Day – Taps

 

 

 

 

 

Words to Taps
(Note: there are no “official” words to Taps
below are the most popular.)

Day is done,
gone the sun,
From the hills,
from the lake,
From the skies.
All is well,
safely rest,
God is nigh.

Go to sleep,
peaceful sleep,
May the soldier
or sailor,
God keep.
On the land
or the deep,
Safe in sleep.

Love, good night,
Must thou go,
When the day,
And the night
Need thee so?
All is well.
Speedeth all
To their rest.

Fades the light;
And afar
Goeth day,
And the stars
Shineth bright,
Fare thee well;
Day has gone,
Night is on.

Thanks and praise,
For our days,
‘Neath the sun,
Neath the stars,
‘Neath the sky,
As we go,
This we know,
God is nigh.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LVVjXLirMfY

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The Wickedness of Lupine-nappers!

It’s the plant that wonderful author Barbara Cooney wrote about in Miss Rumphius. At this time of year, roadsides along the Maine Turnpike are gaudy with the rich purple blue of wild lupines. Sadly, those same roadside are also often lined with the stopped cars of lupine-nappers. These are the folks who think that anything not under lock and key must be theirs for the taking. The ones who believe that anything in the wild is up-for-grabs, and they want to be the first to do the grabbing.

I see it happen every year as I drive past, and I can’t help but wonder: What are they thinking? Do they ever stop to consider that if everyone behaved like them, there would be no more lupines? That if for one lupine season, everyone passing yielding to the impulse to grab their shovels and dig up “just a few” that pretty soon there would be none? They can’t consider this, right, or else they wouldn’t be out there stealing beauty from the rest of us.

It is very clear that none of these people had MY mother. She had an unshakable response to the lupine thieves’ impulse: If you know it isn’t yours, you don’t touch it. And they know it isn’t theirs. What if we all acted like that? If we all picked the flowers in public parks? How many times have we seen someone bend over and snip off a blossom or a single rose. “It’s just one,” they think. “Taking just one can’t hurt.” But of course it can, if a lot of others also take “just one.”

Years ago, I visited the Petrified Forest. I’d heard about it all my life—this odd place in the desert where there were the remnants of a whole forest that had been turned to stone. But it was a huge disappointment. After decades of uncontrolled souvenir hunting, there wasn’t that much left. The curious public had chipped it up and carried it away. I could only imagine what it must once have looked like.

Again, my mother’s voice. What good is complaining, she might ask. What are you going to do about it? Well, I know I can’t stop all the lupine thieves. But I can make a modest suggestion. When the impulse to “have that, own that, possess that” comes on, resist it.

Take a deep breath and try to let go of the need to own that lupine, that rose, that flower. Then, instead, slow down and use all your senses to enjoy it where it is.

Stop by the roadside, if you want, but leave your shovel behind. Take your camera and your five senses instead. Before you take that coveted flower’s picture, try to really see it. See those sturdy pyramids with ascending their corn-row arrangements of tiny, puffy pillows. Notice the variations of lighter and darker blues ranging all the way from lavender to inky purple. Admire the way patches of lupine hold their own against the thick surrounding grass.

Breathe in the freshness of the outdoors. Breathe out the need to possess it. Take a moment to just be where you are, surrounded by this sturdy, amazing, determined little plant. Say, “Thank you, Lupine, for improving my day.” Take a picture, if you want.

Then get back in your car, holding the moment instead of the freshly dug plant. Go home and plant something lovely yourself where others can enjoy it.

(Note: this column has appeared before, but as I was driving past the lupines yesterday, and they seemed sparser than last eyar, I thought it a good idea to post it again.)

Posted in Kate's Posts, Uncategorized | 4 Comments

A Cruel May

James Hayman:  Perhaps, as T.S. Eliot famously wrote, April is the cruelest month. However, for me and for many other writers in Maine, this year, it feels like May.

The past few weeks have been filled with both beautiful weather and terrible news.

Several hours after midnight on May 7th, the main barn at Bill and Cynthia Thayer’s Darthia Farm in Gouldsboro, a post and beam structure built in 1859, burned to the ground. Eighteen sheep, sixty chicks, three draft horses, two calves and two pigs, all of whom were in the barn, perished in the blaze.  Cynthia suffered burns to her face in a brave but futile attempt to rescue some of the animals.

As many of you no doubt know, in addition to running Darthia Farm with her husband Bill, Cynthia is a talented novelist, the author of three fine books, Strong For Potatoes, A Certain Slant of Light and A Brief Lunacy.  She is also a good friend and mentor to me and was the first reader of the first half of my first novel, The Cutting.

Jeanne and I initially met Cynthia when she came down to Peaks Island to conduct a writing workshop at the island branch of Portland Public Library.  When I was introduced to her I told her that I was hard at work on my first fiction.

“How much have you written?” she asked.

“One hundred and fifty pages,” I replied.

“Would you like me to read it and give you my opinion?”

“I’d be thrilled,” I said, surprised by her generosity.

“I have to warn you,” she said, “I’m not your mother.  If I think it’s dreadful, I won’t spare your feelings.”

I told her I wouldn’t want it any other way. I emailed her the manuscript that night and she called me back less than twenty-four hours later.

“I have to tell you,” she said, “You kept me up all night.  I think the book’s terrific.” Once again, I was thrilled. These were the first words from anyone whose literary judgment I respected that made me think that maybe, just maybe I might really become a novelist

She then offered a number of suggestions on how to improve the manuscript.  In each case, she was right. Her suggestions did improve it.

When the barn burned down, friends of the Thayers set up a fund to help them rebuild and bring in new livestock.  Anyone interested in making a donation can do so online at:  http://www.giveforward.com/darthiafarmphoenixfund

In addition, Chris Bowe and Stuart Gerson, owners of Longfellow Books in Portland have generously set up a fund raising event.  Forty Maine writers, including me, will be signing books at the store on Monument Square on First Friday, June 1st from 5 PM till 8 PM with all proceeds going to the Darthia Farm Phoenix Fund.  Stop by if you can.

Sadly, the fire at Darthia Farm turned out not to be the either the last or the worst of this month’s bad news.  This past Monday, May 21st, I learned that an old friend and colleague, Michael Macklin, died unexpectedly in his sleep while accompanying students from the Waynflete School in Portland to the Breadloaf New England Young Writers Conference at Middlebury, Vermont.

Michael was a carpenter, a poet and a teacher of poetry as well as a fellow board member of the Maine Writers and Publishers Alliance.  We both joined the board on the same day back in 2006 and since the organization’s by-laws mandate a six-year term limit, we were both scheduled to attend our last board meeting next Tuesday, May 29th.

There is a tradition of opening every MWPA board meeting with the reading of a poem.  Over the past six years that pleasant task has fallen most often to either Michael or fellow poet and board member Betsy Sholl.  Perhaps my fondest memory of Michael will be the sound of his deep, sonorous voice reading one terrific poem or another at one of the dozens of MWPA meetings and functions we attended together over the years.

Readers of this blog who knew Michael and cared for him might want to attend  A Memorial Celebration of Michael Macklin’s Life and Work tomorrow Friday, May 25 at 4:30 PM at the Waynflete School’s Franklin Theater, 360 Spring Street, Portland.

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