It’s high time for another recipe before I catch you up on Tessa and her sister and also happenings with ECHOES. January has always been my favorite soup month. Many years ago while traveling with my husband, Al, a good friend shared his recipe for Manhattan Supper Soup and we enjoy it often. The good news — it is super easy to make. It’s a form of vegetable soup. Check out my modified version of Al’s recipe in my recipe section. I promise you will love it. Serve it with French bread and a green salad and – get ready for lots of praise.
TESSA AND CLAUDINE: Tessa is bummed out in chapter three. She’s in the hospital after a car accident. Her sister, Claudine, comes to visit, as does her boyfriend, Ben. Claudine has the nerve to flirt with Ben in Tessa’s hospital room and leaves minutes after Ben makes his exit. Tessa is sure Claudine’s chasing after him. Not only is Tessa a bruised, banged up mess. Now, her sister is after her boyfriend. Can things get worse? Count on it.
ECHOES: The reviews for the poetry book my granddaughter, Rachel, and I collaborated on, are positive. We are pleased to say the least. Readers love the concept of our parallel poems. A teacher friend is using our poetry book as a teaching tool for her poetry unit. My sister Deb ordered a copy for her school library, which is great. I hope to get it in a lot of schools. I’m out on the marketing trail. Today I took an ECHOES press release to a local magazine hoping they will publish an article.
It’s rather chilly in Savannah as I know it is in many parts of the country. It’s time to read some good books, get some exercise, and make some of that yummy soup.
If you try out the soup, let me know if it’s a big hit.
Lisbeth
Happy New Year. May good things come your way in 2010
It’s time to introduce you to ECHOES
Here is the blurb I helped write for the catalog description for the American Library Association conference which will be held next June: “From a grandmother – granddaughter tandem comes a poetry book, ECHOES, authored by Lisbeth Thom and her granddaughter, Rachel Nelson. This collection presents a collaboration of parallel poems, written on similar subjects. Both spent the summer bouncing poems back and forth, turning their dream of creating a book together into a reality. Enjoy their poetic banter and differing thoughts on life in this unusual book.”
Rachel and I kept our poetry book a secret so we could give it as a Christmas gift. We had such fun over the summer working on our project. I love writing poetry and now that I am back working on TESSA AND CLAUDINE, I still find time to take a break and work on poems.
I’ve recently written several poems that relate to stay at home moms and plan to continue that trend. My next poetry book maybe titled STAY AT HOME MOMS. For years, I kept a journal, and now looking back through those journals gives me ideas. Sometimes all I have to do is let those memories fall off the shelf. After all, those days of staying home with small children are still vivid in my mind. I well remember those days. I had three little ones under the age of four. I had to remind myself not to have negative thoughts about things I could not control. Instead I tried to focus my energy on the positive present moment. THAT DID NOT ALWAYS WORK…. sometimes I whined. I tried to keep a smile on my face or at least stick my face in a book as often as possible. I kept an open book in every room in the house. That was my escape. Like, go ahead and have a temper tantrum. I am going to the Trevi fountain with…
I often get reminders of those fun and frustrating days from reading blogs about moms who write. Kate Hopper, a young mother, teacher, and writer has a great blog. Check it out at: www.motherswhowrite.blogspot.com
Let me hear from you other writers, poets, and moms out there.
Happy writing. Lisbeth