This post is part of an interview series featuring the authors of Family Stories from the Attic, an anthology of essays, creative nonfiction, and poetry inspired by family letters, objects, and archives. Monday posts are featured on the Hidden Timber Books website, and Wednesday posts are featured here. Learn more about Family Stories from the Attic at the bottom of this post. Without further ado, let’s meet Sally Cissna, author of “Come Home, Peter.”
Sally Cissna
Q: Did you write “Come Home, Peter” with a particular person/reader in mind?
Sally: As the archivist for my family, I have been searching for a way to tell them, what I think is a fascinating story about their ancestors rather than just leaving the boxes of photos and papers in the attic to be possibly thrown out when I’m gone. So I believe I wrote for my family in general, which is made up mostly now of my nieces and nephews and their offspring.
And maybe most specifically for my sister, Maryon, who is 89-years-old and a part of this story.
Q: How has the publication of your piece influenced the work you are writing today or your writing in general?
Sally: I wrote this piece rather quickly because I have been researching for years to do a book or series on the whole of the 1900s. 1930 was a turning point for the family. Usually children grow up and move away or at least down the street, but here my grandmother welcomed three of her children and two of her grandchildren back into the house as she became the matriarch of the clan. I am now working on the story that begins in 1900 with the first meeting of my grandparents. That this style of narrative, letters, and in addition, actual newspaper articles, worked so well for “Come Home, Peter,” I have been using it in for the book also.
Q: What books are you reading at the moment?
Sally: I am an avid “books on tape” listener. I always have a book going in the car and by my bedside. An author who has influenced me (and anyone who has read her work will I’m sure agree) is Fannie Flagg, who likes to incorporate narrative, letters and news of the day and historical issues into her fun and intriguing novels. I just finished listening to–for the second time–The All-Girl Filling Station’s Last Reunion. Set in Point Clear, Alabama in 2009 and in Polaski, Wisconsin in the 1930/40s, the narrative becomes “unstuck in time” swinging back and forth between stories, until all the loose ends are tied up and explained. I also like books with ethical or social justice themes, such as the novels of Barbara Kingsolver (Flight Behavior) and Jane Smiley (Some Luck, Early Warning, Golden Age).
Connect with Sally
ABOUT THE BOOK
Family Stories from the Attic features nearly two dozen works of prose and poetry inspired by letters, diaries, photographs, and other family papers and artifacts. Editors Christi Craig and Lisa Rivero bring together both experienced and new writers who share their stories in ways that reflect universal themes of time, history, family, love, and change.
Available now from Boswell Book Company, Amazon, Barnes & Noble and other online retailers.


Motherhood is a tricky business. There are plenty of books, mind you, that detail the how-to’s, the do’s, the do-not-ever’s. But inevitably, as soon as we take that baby in our arms (first-born, second-born, it doesn’t matter…every child is different) the books fall to the wayside, the instructions we studied blur, and we begin our individual journey as Mother, Mommy, Mom.
Now it’s time to send my first-born off to college, and, while I am glad I took the advice of strangers, I am also glad I listened to my writer’s heart and took notes. For each kid, I kept a notebook in which I wrote periodic letters describing simple things—my worry of the moment, the kid’s developmental level or fascination du jour, what was happening in the world. They include a few sticky notes and ticket stubs. One particular nametag I just couldn’t throw away.
When I revisit these journals, I get a reminder of the phase when Shelby would break into singing “EIO!” to show her general state of happiness, how she went through a time where everything in the past happened “the otter day,” how she first learned to “write” her name and “read” with inflection.
So, if you have kids and no other stranger has given you this advice, let me be the first: write it down. Start with “Dear Sweet (Name)” and the date. It doesn’t need to be eloquent. Sometimes a list is all you need: Funny Things You Like to Say, What Seems to Be on Your Mind Lately, A Parenting Conundrum. Describe mealtime conversation or what you talk about at bedtime. These snapshots will not only help your kids remember what they were like at different times in their lives but will also give them insights into who you were, too. Perhaps that is the biggest gift of all.
Kim Suhr is the author of Maybe I’ll Learn: Snapshots of a Novice Mom and director of 
JoAnne: I still have every assignment I wrote back in my favorite high school class, Creative Writing. Not even looking up from reading one of my first stories, my adoptive mother would say, in a less-than-impressed voice, “That’s nice.” I don’t ever remember hearing my mother’s words of encouragement or that she ever believed in me as her daughter.