When You Come Marchin’ Home

A True Story from Home Last February was gray and long, as the lean months before spring tend to be when winter feels old. But in my mailbox on Edgewood Road, there was something new: letters from Jared about what he hoped to plant in his garden that spring. He wrote of marigolds and tomatoes. … Continue reading When You Come Marchin’ Home

All the Books in Eldredge Public Library

A good writer is one who recognizes that there is always more to the story than they're capable of telling. The world is vast, and they will never come to the end of it. John wrote his gospel with this humbly in mind. He had undertaken the formidable task of writing about his Rabbi and … Continue reading All the Books in Eldredge Public Library

Gravestone Flowers

A True Story from Home To me, Mrs. Olave Thurston was the lady in my grandpaโ€™s stories---as if she was another Ma Ingalls or Miss Rumphius. When we ate chicken for dinner, Papa would tell how Mrs. Thurston raised, butchered, and boiled her own. When spring came and I cut fresh flowers for the table, … Continue reading Gravestone Flowers

The Butcher’s Violin

A True Story from Home There it was, lying in a black case on the quilt like a closed casket.  โ€œWell, open it,โ€ she said quietly.  I unhitched the clasps and cracked it open to see a dark violin lying in green velvet. It was coated in dust and rosin, its strings were frayed, and … Continue reading The Butcher’s Violin

It’s Recipes We Remember

I don't know if my great-great Grandma Howard was a round woman, or if she was as twiglike as my great-grandma Wanda, or if she had my grandma Karenโ€™s smile, or my dadโ€™s love of German chocolate cake. I only know what Dad remembers, and that is her cinnamon rolls. They were doughy to their … Continue reading It’s Recipes We Remember

A Light in the Valley

Mavonโ€™s dad knew he was dying. He didnโ€™t want to leave them here on the farmโ€”Mavon, her brother, and mother, but he was ready to be with Jesus, and he reminded them from his deathbed:ย  โ€œWeโ€™ll just be separated for a short time, and soon, weโ€™ll be together again.โ€ There was something elseโ€” โ€œHe told … Continue reading A Light in the Valley

It Began in Sedalia

The carnival tent on Fifth Street was as hot as an air balloon. The old men wore shiny shoes, and there was one woman in a dress with piano keys all over it. Ragtime wafted from pianos all over townโ€”from the mainstage on Fifth; from somewhere up in the banisters of the Bothwell Hotel lobby; … Continue reading It Began in Sedalia