This one, LIGHTFOOT THE DEER by Thornton W. Burgess (1922), was a gift from my grandma when I was ten. It was HER favorite book when she was in 3rd grade (as seen by the inscription) and I seriously, with all my Bambi-licious heart, read it and loved it just as much as she did.
Grandma Iva (or Ijahawkiwa, as she was properly known) was one of my very first "creative cheerleaders." On our special days together, we wrote stories and painted pictures. She told me not just that I could be an artist but that I SHOULD. Everyone who created was an artist, whether it be a creation of words, paint, metal, numbers, technology, nature and so on. She taught me the world is made up on lines and circles, the simplest of shapes, but something beautiful and godly can come out of them. The same with simple words and powerful messages: "I have a dream" and "Jesus wept" and "Call me Ishmael" and "The end." Although she's passed on now, so much of what she taught me comes back when I write my silly stories, paint my weird pictures and read awesome books to my kid.
Since then, of course, I've had a gaggle of wicked awesome cheerleaders: any member of my family, who would dive into a new mushy manuscript at the drop of a hat, my beloved "Eat Write Period" crit group from Boston (who I can't think of without craving Panera shortbread) and my dear patient husband, who always has the right words whether I want to hear them or not. I owe pages and pages of thanks to every one of these people and more.
People who don't write often might not realize that a single book, a mere 50,000 plus words is a conglomeration of experience...and not just from the author. In another one of my favorite oldies---BLOW BLOW YOUR TRUMPETS by Seamus Frazer (awesome antediluvian sci-fi from 1945, by the way. Pretty scarce, but totally worth the search)---the author dedicates the book to his wife:
"This tale, written for you at odd moments during my exile in the East, is dedicated to you with all my love. You were with me when I conceived the story; and if there are defects in it now that it is finished, put them down to the fact that I had not the happiness of your wise criticism as I pieced it together in desert tents or under palm thatch in the jungle. There was the monsoon as pattern for the Deluge, and beyond the veranda chorus of the Ark. But memory and the uncertain mail had to supply me with a model for my heroines: remember this difficulty in their creation . . . Anyways, here it is---your book, bless you."Who are your creative cheerleaders? Have you hugged them today? Or, at the very least, given them a cookie and a heartfelt bless you?
3 comments:
My creative cheerleaders all know they're appreciated, I hope. Because I certainly do appreciate them! Without their support I wouldn't keep going. I need cheerleading to get me through the tough parts!
My husband is my biggest cheerleader, of course. His family can be very encouraging, too. My family... well they love me even if my dreams seem a bit far-fetched to some of them. But my mother is all too excited to live vicariously through me.
I have a few friends that consistantly encourage me to press forward. Most of them are not local. In fact, most of them, I've never met in real life.
Yeah. It's gets a bit lonely sometimes. But the writing community online makes a great cheerleading team.
Not really sure how to tell them that, since they're spread out all over the place, litterally and figuratively. And most of them probably think I'm a crazy voyure.
Look at that, the ramble has gotten his teeth into me. This is terribly frightening. I'd better shut up now before something really horrible happens.
Rah, rah, rah! Sis boom you guys. Having awesome friends is one thing, but having awesome friends that are naturally awesome writers make the whole fellow cheerleading bit a breeze. You guys rock and love to all your cheerleaders. :)
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