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

Victory Cry

There will probably never be an end to the stories pulled from the rubble of 9-11 --- stories of brave men who shouldered people in wheelchairs down a hundred flights of stairs, or ferrymen who swallowed smoke to sail crowds safely off the island, or a woman who kept her head and stayed on the … Continue reading Victory Cry

Late In Time

On Waiting, Hunting, & Courtship โ€œCome back and see us,โ€ she said. โ€œWeโ€™ll be here.โ€ And as we turned in our coats to go, she caught me once more: โ€œAnd enjoy yourselves. Have fun.โ€  This was just after sheโ€™d said she was bored of bingo, and couldnโ€™t they offer more activities for the long, dark … Continue reading Late In Time

The Longest Day of Light

โ€œToday is the longest day of the year,โ€ Mom would say one evening late in June, then shoo us out the back door to drink up every last drop of light, because, she said, the evenings would only be getting shorter from now till December. So Iโ€™d lie over the swing after dinner, brushing my … Continue reading The Longest Day of Light

Grave Flowers

We stood at my grandma Karenโ€™s grave on Palm Sunday, the wind matting the grass and making all the fake grave flowers tremble. Dad brought a bundle of daffodils from Papa Larryโ€™s garden, and as he tucked them in the granite vase, I said I hoped they wouldnโ€™t blow away. But itโ€™s early April and … Continue reading Grave Flowers

Look East

A Story of Christmas Yet To Come Race Point is the easternmost Iโ€™ve ever beenโ€” in fact, itโ€™s just about as eastward as you can get in the States, at the fingertip of Massachusettsโ€™s arm. It was a strange thing to stand with all North America behind me, to face the horizon of sea, to … Continue reading Look East