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I was flattered this week to receive a Kreativ Blogger Award from one of my favorite bloggers, Caroline Pointer. Thank you, Caroline! Now, before you read on, head over to Caroline's blog, Family Stories. She blogs there about genealogy and shares heartwarming stories guaranteed to inspire you. It's a friendly place where you'll feel right at home.
When a blog receives a Kreativ Blogger Award, the blogger, in turn, recommends seven other blogs. It's a great way to spread the word about blogs that you otherwise might miss So, here are my seven recommendations. Some are about writing and others reflect my hobbies and interests. There are so many more blogs that I could recommend, but these should keep you busy for a while. Enjoy!
1. Robin at All Things Heart and Home has lots of tips for home decorating and mouth-watering recipes. Stop by daily to see what's new. She's getting ready for the holidays, and she has some great ideas to share.
2. At the Christian Writer/Reader Connection, Susan J. Reinhardt blogs about writing and the books she is reading. Her posts are always interesting and insightful. She posts there on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. I love it that she always responds to her readers' comments.
3. If you're a shy writer, like me, check out Shrinking Violet Promotions, a blog about…well….introverted writers!
4. At 19th Century Historical Tidbits, Lynn Coleman offers fascinating bits of information about life in the 19th century. This is a must-read blog for historical fiction writers.
5. Larry Ferlazzo's Websites of the Day, is the place to read about the best educational websites. This is a good reference stop for kids' writers and one that I visit often.
6. Renae Brumbaugh blogs Christian devotions with a humorous twist on her blog, Funny Coffee Girl. Her posts are always thought-provoking and fun.
7. Carolyn, from Prince Edward Island, offers a feast for the eyes at her Aiken House and Gardens blog. Log on to see the amazing things she's done with her home and garden. Her photos are spectacular.
Now, according to the Kreativ Blogger Award rules, I am also supposed to share with you seven interesting facts about me:
1. With Thanksgiving right around the corner, I'll begin with the fact that I am a descendant of Edward Doty who was a passenger on the Mayflower. Does that make me a pilgrim?
2. I once built a miniature replica (1 inch = 1 foot) of my great-grandparents' 19th-century parlor. I've also built a mini general store and several other miniature rooms.
3. I'm a nature nut, passionate about flower gardening, bird watching and animals. My love of animals led to a stint as a volunteer veterinary assistant at the local animal shelter's spay/neuter clinic.
4. My idea of heaven is writing in a quiet woodland cabin on the shore of an inland lake. I love being near the water and live within walking distance of Lake Michigan.
5. I played the flute and piccolo in my high school marching band and won the John Philip Sousa Band Award in my senior year. I aspired to be a band director but then got sidetracked by kid lit.
6. I sometimes wish I could step into a time capsule and see what 's happened in this very spot from now all the way back to the beginning of time.
7. I am owned by (and I mean that literally) two independent and cantankerous cats, Pepper and Ben, and an ancient ring-necked turtle dove named Lucky.
So there you have it, seven little-known facts about me.
I hope that you enjoy visiting the blogs that I've mentioned, and while you're there, please leave a comment or two. Bloggers always love to hear from their readers.
Thanks again, Caroline! I appreciate the award.
Pop Quiz: Who wrote the words to the classic Thanksgiving song "Over the River and Through the Woods"?
Answer: Lydia Maria Child, one of the earliest American women to earn her living as a writer.
Lydia was the youngest of six children. Born Lydia Francis in Medford, Massachusetts in 1802, she added the name "Maria" when she was rebaptized at age 19. She preferred to be called Maria. Her father was a baker famous for his "Medford Crackers." Her mother, described as a somewhat distant woman, died when Maria was twelve. Maria's education was unconventional. In Noted Women of Europe and America, author James Parton wrote: "She received the best part of her education from circumstances, rather than from schools. Her first teacher was a certain Ma'am Betty of local celebrity, who was extremely untidy in her habits, kept her school in her bedroom, chewed tobacco, and continually lamented, as the never-to-be-forgotten catastrophe of her life, that Governor Brooks had once seen her drinking from the nose of her tea-kettle. Whatever may have been the other qualities that fitted this amiable lady for the position she occupied, it is at least certain that her pupils became attached to her, and it was their unfailing habit to carry to her a Sunday dinner. At Thanksgiving, too, she shared the wide charity of the Francis household, where it was the custom at this genial season to summon to a preliminary feast in the large kitchen all the workmen, besides some of the obscurer friends and dependents of the family. Pumpkin pies of vast extent baked in milk-pans were there served to them; a chicken pie of immense size graced the center of the table, surrounded by large dishes containing a profusion of doughnuts, turnovers, and other like delicacies. The little girl was of course present on these occasions to enjoy the pleasure of the guests, and doubtless, also, for she was a healthy, hungry child, to appropriate a few stray cakes and tarts to her own use. Besides receiving instruction from Ma'am Betty, she attended the public school for a short period, and later spent a year in a young ladies' seminary. Her education was then considered complete…It was at the age of twelve, while visiting her married sister in Skowhegan, Maine, that the idea of adopting literature as a pursuit first occurred to her." Maria went on to write a popular series of advice books for women, historical novels, and anti-slavery literature and edited an early American magazine for children for which she earned a steady income of $300 per year.Her poem entitled "A Boy's Thanksgiving Day," is what is commonly known today as "Over the River and Through the Woods." It appeared in one of Child's later books called Flowers for Children, published in 1844. In the poem, she celebrates her childhood memories of visiting her grandfather's house on Thanksgiving Day. Here is the poem in its entirety:
A Boy's Thanksgiving Day
Over the river, and through the wood,
to Grandfather's house we go;
the horse knows the way to carry the sleigh
through the white and drifted snow.Over the river, and through the wood,
to Grandfather's house away!
We would not stop for doll or top,
for 'tis Thanksgiving Day.Over the river, and through the wood-
oh, how the wind does blow!
It stings the toes and bites the nose,
as over the ground we go.Over the river, and through the wood.
with a clear blue winter sky,
The dogs do bark and the children hark,
as we go jingling by.Over the river, and through the wood,
to have a first-rate play.
Hear the bells ring, "Ting a ling ding!"
Hurray for Thanskgiving Day!Over the river, and through the wood-
no matter for winds that blow;
Or if we get the sleigh upset
into a bank of snow.Over the river, and through the wood,
to see little John and Ann;
We will kiss them all, and play snowball
and stay as long as we can.Over the river, and through the wood,
trot fast my dapple gray!
Spring over the ground like a hunting-hound!
For 'tis Thanksgiving Day.Over the river, and through the wood
and straight through the barnyard gate.
We seem to go extremely slow-
it is so hard to wait!Over the river, and through the wood-
Old Jowler hears our bells;
He shakes his paw with a loud bow-wow,
and thus the news he tells.Over the river, and through the wood-
when Grandmother sees us come,
She will say, "O, dear, the children are here,
bring pie for everyone."Over the river, and through the wood-
now Grandmothers cap I spy!
Hurrah for the fun! Is the pudding done?
Hurrah for the pumpkin pie!The real Grandfather's house still exists in Medford, Massachusetts near the Mystic River. The woods have long since disappeared.Surprisingly, no one seems to know who wrote the melody for the Thanksgiving song. About Lydia Maria Child's passing, James Parton wrote: "She died in 1880, tranquilly and unexpectedly. Her funeral took place on a half-clouded October day when the ground was strown [sic] with the red and gold of fallen autumn leaves. Her pall-bearers were chosen from among the farmers of the neighborhood, who were all her friends, and as her coffin was lowered into the grave the sun burst forth, and a perfect rainbow spanned the eastern sky."