I'm happy to announce the publication of the second edition of my first book, Calling All Horses. I have added and rearranged a few things inside the book, and there's a cool new cover designed by Karen Cluppert of Not Just Words. I offer the book for $0.99 on Kindle and $8.99 as a paperback through Amazon.com. Like my most recent book, Dessert First, it's full of slices of life - a nice book to pick up and read before bed. Here is a summer-y excerpt from the book, first published in 1993:
We just came back from
six days at Long Lake and I can still feel the aaaahhhhhhhhhh of it.
Almost as far back as I
can remember, I've gone to a lake cottage in summer. It was a tradition with my
family as I grew up, and now Mike and I carry on the tradition with our own
children. I love everything about a lake, even the smell of boat motor fuel.
It's unbelievable what a lake does for me. This August I went to Long Lake so
depressed that I wondered if I'd be able to enjoy the vacation. But after an
hour or two there, I had a new head and new skin. I wonder if the sound and
smell and sight of the moving waters soothe my soul because somewhere inside me
is a baby who remembers swimming in utero for nine months.
In a place with no clock,
phone or TV, we have a number of sacred inviolable traditions, and to my
delight this year they seemed important to our oldest, who is seventeen. He
kept reminding us what we had to do.
Cottage traditions
include things like Nutter Butter cookies, Canasta and chess, bicycling and
canoeing, fishing, visiting Grandma's old farmstead and grave in St. Michael's,
the guys playing pool at the local pub, and daily naps, often outside. We all
compete for the Laziness Award. (Of course, this would not be possible if we owned the cottage!)
Being at the lake unlocks
decades of good memories for me, including first exploits fishing with my dad
in rented wooden boats. We'd fish in the dark for hours, by feel, without
bobbers.
The first cottage I
remember, at Okauchee Lake, was a humble basement dwelling. There were
thirty-one steps to the outhouse. Eventually, my folks settled at a Beaver Lake
cottage year after year. Likewise, after trying four different cottages, Mike
and I have stuck with Long Lake since 1985. When you go to the same place every
year, it's more homelike and easier for you to immediately forget the so-called "real world."
I remember
being a teenage girl at Beaver Lake. I had a special place I went to – my
dreaming spot. It was on a rickety wooden walkway built
alongside an old boathouse.
I'd stand there alone and
quiet with the boathouse at my back and the lake before me. No one could see
me.
I could
predict weather by the color and action of the water. I knew for sure when a
storm was brewing. I wonder how many times I stood in a downpour, leaning
against the boathouse, getting soaked gloriously to the skin, watching the rain
pound the black waters and the sky put on a fierce show. The wildly fresh air
filled my nose and throat and I'd feel emotions that I couldn't name.
Beaver Lake
in those days was so clear that you could look down five or six feet and see
the many colors of pebbles at the bottom. One year I gazed down and spotted a
beautiful sterling silver ring formed by adjoining flying doves. To my delight
it fit my ring finger perfectly.
I wore the
ring constantly after that – until a day the
following summer when I was once again swimming in Beaver Lake and the ring
slipped off my finger. No amount of searching could retrieve it.
I came to
believe that what the lake gave, the lake reclaimed. For me, the lake truly had
a personality during those tender summers. It seemed perfectly plausible that
the lake, as some sort of nameless being, granted me the ring and then took it back. I wondered
who next received the gift.
There's a
romanticism about a lake. You can feel a longing and passion just beneath its
placid surface. No wonder the lake spoke to me when I
was a teenager, and does still.
I wonder
what the lake says to my children. Long after these days of lying idly on a
warm pier and watching water drops sparkle on a perfect spider web, they will
have lake memories.
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