Month: November 2019

Nests of Rabbits

The gist of this story appears in my novel, See Willy See, to be released tomorrow, November 8, 2019. It will take a while to get to the bookstores and libraries, but it’s available on Amazon, Barnes and Noble, and Smashwords.

Stationed in Panama, training for combat, Connor dreaded his sister’s letters from Paris where she served in the U.S. Consulate and where they Nazis were poised to take over the city.

“I was just telling Daniel about the time Freckles got to snooping under the woodpile and found that nest of baby rabbits,” she wrote, “remember how we took them out of the dog’s very mouth?”

“I look in the woods here and imagine all the baby rabbits hidden in them.”

Connor smiled, remembering all their rescue missions—until he realized she was writing in code.

“Jesus!” he exploded, scrubbing his hands through already rumpled hair, glancing around at his tent mates, watching him.

“My sister’s French Resistance boyfriend is going to get her killed rescuing little Jewish bunny rabbits.”

Day of the Dead

We played their music—Moonlight Serenade, In the Mood, Begin the Beguine, Benny Goodman, and Count Basie. Dad liked roses, so we bought some and poked them behind our ears, pinned them in our hair. We sprayed the room with Mom’s favorite, White Shoulders. I broiled big T-bones, shucked oysters, baked lemon meringue pie. We ate by candlelight. Sis made Manhattans and we sipped them between dancing the Latin Walk, and jitterbugging, swinging around the living room like we knew what we were doing. By midnight when we played Sentimental Journey, it almost felt like they were dancing with us.

Million Letters Campaign

For thirty years, Andrew Carroll has collected letters, spanning 225 years of American war history. “These letters are America’s great undiscovered literature,” Carroll says.  “They give insight into war and human nature.”

What great timing for me that this article by April White about Carroll’s letter-gathering campaign appeared in the November issue of Smithsonian—just as I’m releasing my book set in the World War II era and focusing on families and staying connected.  Letters play a central role in my story, keeping Connor Conroy and his sister Nora connected to each other and their family on the home front.

Nora’s in Paris at the U.S. Embassy at the beginning of the narrative with the Nazis poised to overrun the city. Connor feels responsible for her circumstances because he goaded her into seeking a career. How could he have dreamed she’d take a job in a war zone? Now he has to decide whether to enlist and maybe get to Europe where he can protect her.

Back to Carroll’s hundreds of thousands of letters (so far).Twice he’s asked Dear Abby to promote his Legacy Project and twice she’s complied. Within four days, thousands of letters had overrun the local post office station.  The letters are now housed in the Center for American War Letters at Chapman University in California.

These are not celebrity letters. Soldiers wrote their own stories in these letters, intimate details of their lives at war and reassurances that “no Jap bullet has my name on it.” Back home, their friends and families wrote about the price of wheat and pork bellies, rationing, collecting rubber, and producing food, uniforms, blankets, socks, and bandages—materiel for the war effort.