Tag: war

Let’s Hope

keeping on keeping on

Hope. I’ve written and thought about resilience and about people who keep showing up. I’ve wondered how they do that, over and over. In my just-released book, I’ve written about the Great Depression and World War II—two of the most hopeless times in history. My characters, like the real people in those times, did what needed doing, often at the cost of their health, their peace of mind, and sometimes their lives.

We act now like those people are all gone and there are no such people left, but I beg to differ. As I reread an article from a year ago (October, 2018, National Geographic) I wonder about the role hope played in those real people’s lives. The article, entitled “Despite Perils, Decide to Hope” lists our current era as a good time to hope. “Our planet is beset by conflict, climate change, pollution, disease, and other hazards, what better time to be hopeful?” reads the title.

Indeed.

The author, Anne Lamott, says we should look to the helpers. Aren’t they the same people who keep showing up and doing what needs doing? Lamott writes that they represent our hope these days. They’re the ones who vaccinate babies and care for ebola patients. They plant trees and study glaciers. They recycle; they develop new drugs; they protect our civil rights; they petition the government; and report on its activities. They keep doing what needs doing—what’s possible. I believe there’s reason to hope, and that all those people doing stuff are driven by hope. Sometimes that’s a radical act.

How about it? Are there any radicals out there?

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.”

Sea Mist

The waves looked soft as he peered through tropical rain. The island was only a ragged outline. Crawling down the rope netting into a landing craft, he watched it grow closer, more distinct. It would be his first combat. Would he stand up to it? Was he brave as he thought—hoped?  Somehow he knew he would survive, but what about the others? Weeks earlier, in the middle of the ocean, he’d looked through a light mist silvered by soft by moonlight and realized survival wasn’t enough.  Seeing the guy next to him fall—that’s what made him sick.