Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Sweet Reads

I love it when someone says "Have you ever read..." and they mention a name that is new to me, someone whose work I haven't yet discovered, and I end up completely captivated and begging for more! I adore a great read and I'm always looking for new authors to try.

My cousins (thanks Amanda and MaryAnne!) suggested the works of Dorothea Benton Frank and I am SO very glad they did! Amanda was even kind enough to lend a few of her copies to Brie and me.

I started with this one:


I tend to get carried away when I talk about books, so I'm going to do my very best to KISS. (Keep It Simple, Stupid!) ;)


THE PEOPLE
: Likable, even LOVABLE, characters. There were people in this book that I wanted to have as my neighbors. A couple who were great 'best friend' material. Some I wanted to hug. All of them I wanted to know. I love it when an author can make me care about her characters!

THE SETTING: What you have is an island of beautiful scenery and Frank's real gift for being descriptive without dragging it out to the point of boredom. Some authors do that, you know. She's so good that this I-prefer-temps-in-the-70s girl would be willing to tolerate the South Carolina heat if I could witness the glorious sunsets and bury my feet in the sand like a true Carolina girl. I love it when an author can make me SEE and FEEL the places in her stories!


THE STORY
: This woman can flat out tell a story, and she does it beautifully. Meals needed to be prepared, jeans needed laundered, dust bunnies needed taming, but I found myself constantly wanting more and hardly able to resist the temptation. Yet I hated to come to that last page, knowing that was it...there would be no more time spent with these incredible people. I love it when an author makes me want more and dread the end all at the same time!

My advice? (Yeah, humor me. Pretend you asked.) Go to Books a Million, click on Amazon.com or visit your local library and pick up this book. Or one of her other titles, because I have a feeling they're just as good. :)

Now I'm outta here. Susan's story is unfolding on Sullivan's Island and I don't want to miss a minute of it! ;)

Kindred Connections

Kristin over at Windy Poplars is holding her very first 'Kindred Connections' Wednesday and I thought I'd join in. Please drop by her place and read all about it to see if you'd like to join as well! It's a great way to meet other 'kindred spirits' with whom you share some common interests. :)

Windy Poplars

1. If you could describe your desired lifestyle in one word, what would it be?
RELAXED! The very best days around here are when the kids are home from school, we have nowhere we have to be and nothing we absolutely must do. This week they're on spring break and for the most part we are enjoying it very much. :) The only downfall is that there are still school related practices and events during this time.

2. What style of home is your "House of Dreams"?
I'm fortunate enough to be living in it. :) We built 12 years ago and we built what made us happy. A two-story country farmhouse with a porch that wraps around one side and a BIG country kitchen. Nothing fancy...no jacuzzi tub, no heated floors, none of that. Just a HOME. :)


3. If you could live in a fictional story/movie, which would it be and why?

I'd have to say Anne of Green Gables. The setting was gorgeous...PEI with all of its breathtaking scenery and the ocean. That beautiful farm and the quaint farmhouse. And it took place in a time when ladies were ladies and knew how to act as such, and no one was afraid of hard work.

4. Do you prefer coffee or tea? Favorite kind?
I'm definitely not a coffee drinker. I do enjoy tea, both iced and hot. If it is iced, I prefer unsweetened or very lightly sweetened. If it is hot, I prefer Constant Comment. :)

5. Share the last sweet/romantic thing your hubby did for you.
Well, the Hubster isn't terribly romantic. When we were dating I would receive cards in the mail with these wonderfully sweet letters he'd written while we were apart. I still have them and read them occasionally. Unfortunately it seems that time and familiarity steal away that romance little by little if you let it. :( And it really is a shame. We're all a little happier when we feel loved and wanted. It seems it is always those we love the most who are taken for granted.

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Monday, April 5, 2010

Marvelous Monday

What a beautiful morning! The sun is peeking out and there is a cool, gentle breeze blowing through the window. Easter weekend could not have been more wonderful! Great weather, great company, great times!

Since Thursday (the Hubster took off work Thursday and Friday) we have:

*weeded flower beds
*put down edging along the one that had none
*planted two trees
*divided daylillies
*mulched all the beds
*tilled the veggie garden
*attended an Easter egg hunt
*had a birthday party at our house
*went to church yesterday morning
*hosted Easter dinner
*ENJOYED THIS GORGEOUS WEATHER!

A busy but very enjoyable few days!

And now to share with you the pics of my giveaway! Texas Holly has now received the package and I want to show the rest of you what it was she won. I promised bright and springy! See what you think:








The yellow candle is my new favorite scent and I thought I'd share the love. I hope the flower seeds are compatible with her area of the country! I didn't even think about that when I was buying them. I know what does well here and what I like and pretty much didn't think beyond that.

The towels were fun to decorate. :) I've made yoyos for years and have completed a few projects with them but this was the first time I had used them to adorn hand towels. And I have tons of buttons just because I LOVE buttons! Thought they'd make cute flowers. :)

I'd better get off this computer and get busy. Much to do around here today while the sun shines! Hope you have a beautiful and blessed day!

Thursday, April 1, 2010

Just Dandy!




To be certain that we are aware of spring's arrival, our grass is the greenest of greens and these are popping up throughout our yard. They stand so brilliantly luminous on their lush green canvas and I can't help but love them.

I know how most people feel about dandelions. They ravage them at the root, pummel them with pesticide, do everything short of setting off a minor nuclear explosion to rid their lawns of this horrid weed. And while I know it is a weed, to me it is a lovely flower, bright and beautiful and full of the promise that the earth is awakening once again.

That is until they look like this

and stand proud and tall on your recently mowed lawn. It seems that even cutting them with swiftly spinning blades can't keep them down for more than a few hours at best. Mow in the evening and by morning you have them reaching for the skies, a good 4" above the tips of the neatly trimmed blades of grass. I'll admit that does annoy even me.

This is an essay I wrote a couple of years ago for a local publication. I hope you enjoy it and that the next time you see those little yellow sunshine blooms in your yard, you won't be quite so anxious to grab your trowel.

Dandelion Memories

My first real memories of them are from my fourth Easter. There was always a new outfit bought to wear to church on Easter Sunday and that year mine was a bright and beautiful sunshine yellow. The details of the dress have since faded from memory, but I can still see the dress coat and bonnet as if they were right here in front of me.

The morning air was cool but the day had dawned sunny and bright, as Easter should. I was allowed to walk around on the front porch and in the side yard while waiting for my parents to get ready to leave. And that is when I discovered them, in all their glorious beauty, glistening with morning dew. I stepped off the porch and into that golden sea, feeling as if I were stepping into some magical world. All around me those flowers shone and danced in the breeze and, for just a little while, I was a yellow fairy princess dancing around our little yellow lawn.

Yes, they were dandelions, one of those first harbingers of spring. To my four year old eyes, that tiny postage-stamp yard was the most beautiful place in the whole world. Of course I had picked my share of pretty bouquets for display in jelly jars prior to that morning, but something about that Easter Sunday, the absolute perfection of it, has been held tight in my memory all these years.

Somehow I have managed to hold onto my love of those little yellow beauties and all the promise they hold. I hear people complain about them and their struggles to keep them from taking over the lawn. I see them down on hands and knees, digging them out by the roots in order to prevent their return. I watch them buy bags and bottles of expensive treatments to spread over their lawns in hopes of eradicating the nuisance. Then I watch those bright little blooms pop up overnight in spite of it all. And I smile. Some things are just meant to be.

As I am constantly reminded by those who are less fond of them, dandelions are weeds. They are flowering weeds, but nevertheless they are a scourge. I wholeheartedly agree that once the pretty yellow blooms are spent and turned to skeletal white puffballs sitting atop the ugly green spikes that tower over the rest of your well-manicured lawn, they aren’t the most appealing things. But can you honestly resist plucking one of them, puffing up your cheeks like you did as a child, and sending their downy puffs floating through the breeze?

For once in your adult life, live a little. I know, I know…that only spreads their seeds. But come on! Stop being so practical and just enjoy the moment!

Now that I am grown and have children of my own, we live in the country and enjoy a much larger yard than the one I had growing up. I will admit to being particular about my lawn, mowing it often and doing my best to keep it looking nice. But I can honestly say we have never tried to rid it of the dandelions that are so plentiful come spring. I will dig out the occasional stray that manages to find its way into my flower bed, but I never bother the ones in the yard. After a long and dreary winter, I look forward to clear and breezy spring days. I’ll help my son string up his kite and we’ll run through the dandelion-yellow field next to our house as the wind lifts it high into a bright blue sky. My daughter and I will string together chains of bright yellow blooms, the daintiest and best of spring jewelry. And between the yellow of the field, the blue of the sky, and the brightness of their smiles, I know that they are making their very own dandelion memories to treasure forever and always.