#FamilyStories Meet the Author: Margaret Krell

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 Margaret Krell, author of “Tracing My Father’s Admonition.”


Margaret Krell

Q: How has the publication of your piece influenced the work you are writing today or your writing in general?

Margaret: I like this question, because its optimism assumes the author will write. After I graduated from the Solstice program at the age of 70, I hardly wrote, probably closer to the truth, I didn’t write at all. When I started working on my piece for Family Stories from the Attic, I welcomed Christi’s thoughtful editing, but even more valuable to me was the ensuing dialogue. The dialogue with Christi nurtured and gave me confidence in what I knew and what I could do. In fact so much so that post publication, I set a writing goal for myself for the year: to complete two additional personal essays, both about my mother, whose reluctance to engage the past kept her walking a tight rope of guardedness, keeping her distant from me. One of these essays revolves around silence and obedience, and the unexpressed need to speak and to engage, which, then as a child and still as an adult, I seek in order to be and to write.

Q: What is a fun, interesting, or unusual fact to share with your readers?

Margaret: Strange as it may seem with what I have written in Family Stories from the Attic, a writer friend of mine once described me as a “woman with a hearty laugh full of mirth.” I must admit I do love whimsy, irony, turning a topic on its head and of course, punning, attributes learned from my father, too.

Related to this, I enjoy chewing the fat, especially over a hearty meal. However, my housekeeping, as my mother once described it, is ‘creative,’ a euphemism I fear, for things tossed “artfully” (?) about. So to reconcile my need to entertain with my less than adequate housekeeping, I host a potluck once a month at the UU parish house just down the street. For a full hour before the evening program, 10-14 of us fit, just right, around one substantial oak table prettied up with fresh flowers. There are no rules about cell-phones, but in that time of breaking bread, none rings. We have come to know each other so well, we have begun to tease each other and often have one conversation among the dozen or so of us there as if we were family.

All in all, I experience the world the old fashioned way: I prefer listening to a story on radio to watching it on TV. I prefer telephone to Twitter, though in my book, in person is best. I admire crafts and artistic endeavors, things made by hand, though I wish my hands would flex more to give some a try — but I must admit, even when they could, my nature is to become impatient with dropped and tiny stitches. I love theatre and chamber music, and at one time I was a pretty decent pianist. I still have my piano, and on days I receive good news, I play.

In the photo on the right, that’s my 13 year old Maltese, Toby, or as he would be apt to put it, I’m his 73 year old human.


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 CompanyAmazonBarnes & Noble and other online retailers.

#FamilyStories Meet the Author: Julia Gimbel

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 Julia Gimbel, author of “In a Sailor’s Footsteps.”


Julia Gimbel

Q: Did you write “In a Sailor’s Footsteps” with a particular person/reader in mind?

Julia: “In a Sailor’s Footsteps” was extracted from a much larger piece I am working on and was re-written for submission for the Anthology. My goal is to publish a book that blends my father’s journal entries with researched explorations of the things he discusses, bringing the war to life seven decades later. The chapters cover a wide range of topics; from cigarettes, to the GI Bill, to feeding the troops, to V-mail and more. My original intention was to write for high school and college students, but many others will be interested by this topical approach to describing life during the World War II years.

Q: How has the publication of your piece influenced the work you are writing today or your writing in general?

Julia: The inclusion of part of my father’s story in the Anthology has encouraged me to continue the larger piece and see it through to completion. One thing I’ve loved about the process is that through the experience of researching and writing, many former strangers have now become my supporters and friends. Another surprise was finding that I have plenty of things to say! When I have writer’s block on the war book, I like to scribble down stand-alone pieces about whatever happens to be on my mind.

Q: What is a fun, interesting, or unusual fact to share with your readers?

Julia: I’ve always been a person who is drawn to beaches and bodies of water. In my lifetime I’ve picked up so many seashells and smooth stones that I should probably start putting some of them back. Recently this passion inspired me to create a website where I share my blog posts, jewelry created from things found in the wrack line, and photography.

Connect with Julia

Website

Julia Gimbel (above left) writing last summer on the porch of a gingerbread cottage in Oak Bluffs – Martha’s Vineyard, MA, and one of her landscape photos (above right). 


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 CompanyAmazonBarnes & Noble and other online retailers.

#FamilyStories Meet the Author: Sally Cissna

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

WEBSITE


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 CompanyAmazonBarnes & Noble and other online retailers.