Hardcovers or paperbacks?
Don’t forget to leave a link to your actual response (so people don’t have to go searching for it) in the comments—or if you prefer, leave your answers in the comments themselves!

Hardcovers or paperbacks?
Don’t forget to leave a link to your actual response (so people don’t have to go searching for it) in the comments—or if you prefer, leave your answers in the comments themselves!
Comments Off on Covers
Tagged Wordpress
…. or, how MV came to be in our lives.
(my mother — my grandmother)
This post is about my mother and my grandmother, the two women who are responsible for our connection to the Vineyard.
My grandmother, Albra Mae Flewellyn Littlefield Grant Baird, was born in Maine. She was widowed twice, her third husband, Arthur Baird Sr was an Islander who was left to raise two sons, Floyd and Arthur Jr, and a daughter, Hattie, after his first wife died. My grandmother and my mother Maude came to live on Martha’s Vineyard in Oak Bluffs and thus began our connection and love of the Vineyard.
I don’t know a lot about my grandmother’s life after moving to the Vineyard except that she was busy raising four rambunctuous children, keeping house for her husband and being active in community projects with her friends. She died before my parents were married so I never knew her but I feel a closeness to her whenever I’m on the Vineyard. She is buried in Oak Grove Cemetery in Oak Bluffs.
My mother, Maude Louise Littlefield Freeman was born in Waterville, Maine on March 11, 1907.
the picture below is one of my most favorite pictures of all time…
Raised on Martha’s Vineyard
my mother and grandmother – Oak Bluffs 1924
Moved to New Jersey after graduating from Oak Bluffs High School. She met and married a Jersey boy… Joseph Albert Freeman
and had a Jersey girl (me)…
The next to the last Mother’s Day I spent with my mom was May 1975. My parents were vacationing on the Cape and she was unaware that we were driving up to surprise her for the weekend. I gave her the book ‘Mostly On Martha’s Vineyard, A Personal Record’ by Henry Beetle Hough, as I knew she’d know some of the people mentioned in the book. I am so glad I did that because after reading the book she decided she wanted to sail over to the Vineyard to visit her mother’s grave. It turned out be her last trip to her beloved Vineyard.
Comments Off on Vineyard Connection …
Tagged Family, Martha's Vineyard, Photographs
Splinters of Light by Rachael Herron
This book is a heart-breaker, make no mistake. There’s absolutely nothing good about the main dilemma here–Nora, a single mother in her early 40s being diagnosed with early-onset Alzheimer’s. It’s a horrible subject, a miserable, tragic, awful thing … which is why I hesitated to pick it up. I’m in the middle of watching my best friend’s mother disappear under the inexorable weight of Alzheimer’s and it’s a sensitive, difficult subject. So, how could it possibly make for a good novel that would be anything other than depressing and grim?
Well, Rachael Herron manages beautifully. I’ve been reading her books from the very beginning, and have watched her writing getting stronger and better all the time, but I admit I had doubts that she would be able to pull off something of this scale. A subject matter this heart-wrenching? With such important and sensitive issues and ramifications? I knew she would do a decent job, but really, it would take a master to do it the justice it deserves.
Apparently, Rachael is a master, because as heart-breaking as this is (and make no mistake, parts truly are), it’s also beautiful. The reactions of Nora, her twin, and her teenage daughter to this devastating diagnosis are right on the mark, and–while I wouldn’t dream of giving anything away–this ended as perfectly as such a story can. In clumsier hands, this would have been a disaster, but in fact, it’s a wonderful book. I’d give it four and a half stars if I could–and the half I’m taking off is primarily because of the devastating subject matter. It’s not an easy book to read, if only because you know there can be no miracle cure at the end. It’s not easy, but it’s excellent.
Highly recommended … though you’d do well to have tissues handy. You can get your copy at your local bookshop or at Amazon.com.
Comments Off on Review: Splinters of Light by Rachael Herron
Tagged Book Review
Splinters of Light by Rachael Herron
This book is a heart-breaker, make no mistake. There’s absolutely nothing good about the main dilemma here–Nora, a single mother in her early 40s being diagnosed with early-onset Alzheimer’s. It’s a horrible subject, a miserable, tragic, awful thing … which is why I hesitated to pick it up. I’m in the middle of watching my best friend’s mother disappear under the inexorable weight of Alzheimer’s and it’s a sensitive, difficult subject. So, how could it possibly make for a good novel that would be anything other than depressing and grim?
Well, Rachael Herron manages beautifully. I’ve been reading her books from the very beginning, and have watched her writing getting stronger and better all the time, but I admit I had doubts that she would be able to pull off something of this scale. A subject matter this heart-wrenching? With such important and sensitive issues and ramifications? I knew she would do a decent job, but really, it would take a master to do it the justice it deserves.
Apparently, Rachael is a master, because as heart-breaking as this is (and make no mistake, parts truly are), it’s also beautiful. The reactions of Nora, her twin, and her teenage daughter to this devastating diagnosis are right on the mark, and–while I wouldn’t dream of giving anything away–this ended as perfectly as such a story can. In clumsier hands, this would have been a disaster, but in fact, it’s a wonderful book. I’d give it four and a half stars if I could–and the half I’m taking off is primarily because of the devastating subject matter. It’s not an easy book to read, if only because you know there can be no miracle cure at the end. It’s not easy, but it’s excellent.
Highly recommended … though you’d do well to have tissues handy. You can get your copy at your local bookshop or at Amazon.com.
Comments Off on Review: Splinters of Light by Rachael Herron
Tagged Book Review
It’s been kind of a rough week for us, so I’m sharing some of the things I’ve been enjoying lately and taking a rest. Have fun, and feel free to share some of the stuff making you happy this week.
1. I received a wholesale catalog from The Unemployed Philosopher’s Guild at the day job today. I can’t sell anything out of it in my stores, but there was something on every page I could see selling spectacularly in some other type of shop. See especially, planet plates, disappearing liberties mug, and Freudian slippers. What’s not to love? (There was also a Miyamoto Musashi plush doll that doesn’t appear to be available on their website yet, but how cool is it that there’s a Musashi plush? It doesn’t look like Toshiro Mifune–who played Musashi–which is a little disappointing, but I might have to buy it anyway someday.)
2.I don’t think I can eat cheese anymore. It’s sad, because I love cheese, but lately, it makes me feel sick and twisty on the inside. Enjoy your cheese while you’ve got it, people. (Yeah, there’s no link here. Please visit your local dairy instead.)
3. Right now I’m knitting Buckhorn Cowl with the current PFA KAL. It’s a fun, quick knit. I should cast it off tonight or tomorrow.
4. When I finish with the cowl, I’m going to swatch for the Mesmeric Cardigan. It might be the most complicated sweater I will ever knit.
5. Did you know my husband also has a blog? He’s building a video game called Dig, Robot, Dig!
6. Since my husband gets me, he sometimes sends me stills from Toshiro Mifune movies while I’m at work. Here are two of his latest, from Scandal
(Have I ever mentioned that I studied Japanese in high school and college?)
7. This led him to starting another tumblr of Mifune gifs. They are magnificent.
Comments Off on Some Links for Tuesday
Tagged Uncategorized
![]() |
me wearing everyone's hats, purses, and accessories at Oktoberfest |
Comments Off on Friends at Camp
Tagged bootcamp, collaboration, interview, MATS