On Leaky Toilets & Ordinary Days

Dear Maggie, One night last fall, our bathroom toilet flooded. It burst its banks and flowed out into our hallway and down the seams of our wood floors. It might have run clear to the Arkansas River had we not thrown down towels to stop it, creating a wet sort of dam. The toilet water … Continue reading On Leaky Toilets & Ordinary Days

O Little Town

One December, a few weeks before Christmas, I went down to the square of my hometown to pass out flyers for a Christmas event at my church. I grew up several miles outside of town, so I didnโ€™t frequent the block very often, except for the parade on Memorial Day every year. All the shops … Continue reading O Little Town

A Long Line of Quiet Women

Sometimes, usually when Iโ€™m in the kitchen, I find myself thinking about my great-grandma Minerva, Papa Jayโ€™s mom, who had a tight, little face, wore her black hair in a bun, and made him biscuits and gravy from scratch every morning. Papa is getting to an age when he canโ€™t remember things well or often, … Continue reading A Long Line of Quiet Women

With These She Was Content

This tribute was written for my grandma Naomi's memorial service. She entered Christ's presence Sunday morning, August 17th. My grandma Naomi was a lover of the little things. Looking out her and Papaโ€™s sunroom windows this time of year---when the cicadas are full in the trees, the fish flipping down in the pond, and August … Continue reading With These She Was Content

Pickling Day

We saved pickling for the hottest afternoons in July, letting the big round thermometer beneath Papa Jayโ€™s sunroom swing well over 90, the humidity souping up like the moss on his pond. It was a big job, with loads of cucumbers to harvest between our garden and Papaโ€™s. Over a few weeks, Mom would save … Continue reading Pickling Day

On Behalf of Mill Creek Mountain

Not many people know about Mill Creek Mountain (at least, we didn't think they did, but Iโ€™ll get to that). I wouldnโ€™t know it myself were it not for Don and Bo Sosebee, for Vesta Baptist Church in the valley below it, and for Jared, who took me there.  Jared and I took a drive … Continue reading On Behalf of Mill Creek Mountain

Hiding Place

On Dangerous Hospitality One of the first chapter books I owned was a little paperback my dad bought for me, called The Watchmakerโ€™s Daughter. It must have been a childโ€™s adaptation of Corrie ten Boomโ€™s story in The Hiding Place, which I wouldnโ€™t read until I was old enough to brave it.  I loved Corrie. … Continue reading Hiding Place

Remember

For Joel & NatalieA Blessing for Their House May you live like youโ€™re young in this house thatโ€™s older than you,old as the trees,old like the bell steeple on Main Street,and the railroad that runs with the river west to the town where Dad was born. May you not erase the aging lines of this place, which … Continue reading Remember

Over the Pond Banks & Through the Woods

The Story Behind True Stories from Home For every writer, thereโ€™s a day of small beginnings. Jane Austen started with a quill and inkwell in her familyโ€™s sitting room. Hemingway carried a notebook and pencil around in his pocket. For Tolkien, it was the back of a studentโ€™s Oxford exam paper where he drafted the … Continue reading Over the Pond Banks & Through the Woods