A Fun Ancestor Activity: “My Grand Book”

Colder weather means more inside fun. My Grand Book is a craft project which creates a book about a child's immediate ancestors, up to great-grandparents. Paste in a photo. Fill in a few basics (name, birthday, hometown, likes and dislikes). After you create the book, you can tell stories about your ancestors. Your together time this holiday season can answer the question, "Who are my ancestors?"

My Grand Book is a supervised activity for children ages 4-10. It creates a book the child can take home.

Military Records

In honor of Veterans Day, Ancestry.com offered free access to military records. This weekend, my mother's cousin, Bill Teaford, found my maternal grandfather's World War I draft record. 

I am hungry for information about my grandfather, Ernest Teaford. Draft records show he was born in Norton County, Kansas, on September 22, 1894. His occupation is listed as "farmer and stock man for himself." He requested an exemption to care for his invalid father. Ernest dropped dead on July 12, 1947, after which Mother said she "felt the wolves at the door."

Fiction-Writing Techniques Improve Memoirs

 

Improve your memoirs–fast–using fiction-writing techniques.

My friend, Debra Chaves Norwood, wanted me to share my suggestions about her memoir. So here is my "before" and "after" about "Under the Samán de Guerra," her memoir about  growing up in Venezuela. 

 

BEFORE: 

I would lean out the window of our Volkswagen and strain to see ahead, excited to feel the wind against my face. It was a cool wind, brought about by the shade of many trees, bearing the smell of cedar, lemon flowers and mangoes. One by one different species of trees start to flank both sides of the carretera, the local definition of an asphalt road considered a state highway. My father quizzed me on the trees and made me single out the soft wood from the hardwood, but it was easy to tell. Only the hardwood trees were tagged with white and blue collars of paint around their trunks, the proud mark that meant: “Thou shall never cut me. I am an important tree!”  These trees were marked as property of the government. But I knew that, however important they looked, they were nonetheless relatively insignificant escorts on the road to the Holy of Holies, the glorious Samán de Guerra. (161 words)

 

 AFTER:

I strained and leaned out the window of our Volkswagen, excited to see ahead. There was a cool wind from the shade of many trees, bearing cedar, lemon flowers and mangoes. One by one, different species of trees flanked la carretera, the asphalt state highway. My father quizzed me. “Which are the softwood? Which are the hardwood?” It was easy to tell. Only the hardwood had white and blue collars. Those proud paint tags said: “Thou shall never cut me. I am important! I am the property of the Venezuelan government.” But, however important they looked, they were only sentries on the way to the Holy of Holies, the Samán de Guerra. (112 words)

 

FICTION TECHNIQUES APPLIED:

 1. Dialogue Mode

Debra's father would have quizzed her using dialogue.

2. Action Mode

Action Mode uses strong verbs to show how important events or actions happen: strained, leaned, flank.

3. Viewpoint Writing

Viewpoint Writing technique shows the world through the eyes of the memoirist. Words and phrases which label sensory experiences are deleted: to feel the wind against my face, the smell of, and knew. Debra's present-day opinion, the local definition of,  also also bbbbbbrb   brbreaks the storytelling illusion and is out. Different species of trees stays in because Debra, like her father, knows trees. 

4. Description Mode

Deletions: (1) Qualifiers: nonetheless relatively insignificant, start to, considered. (2) Repetitions which serve no narrative purpose: trees and roads. (3) Unnecessary adjectives: glorious. Strong nouns are great: sentries is better than escorts; Holy of Holies stays in.

The passage is 49 words shorter.

Better?

 

Image reprinted with permission of Clipart ETC An Online Service of Florida's Educational Technology, University of South Florida

When A Place Still Exists

An important building in the Jewett family's Civil War experience still stands. It is a church. Thanks to Vic and Dollie Masters, parents of Civil War historian Vicki Profitt, for providing the current photo. And kudos to Clay Feeter, publisher of Standup Journal, for the old photo. Side-by-side they show the Downtown Presbyterian Church in Nashville, Tennessee (on the right) and Hospital No. 8 for wounded Union soldiers (on the left). Same building. Different purpose.

My great-great-great aunt, Mary Jewett Telford (1839-1906) , was the only female nurse caring for the 600 Civil War soldiers in Hospital No. 8 for eight months from 1863-1864. When Mary first applied for a nursing position with the U.S. Sanitary Commission, she was turned down. She told no one of that rejection letter, but "throwing it into the grate made of it a 'whole burnt offering to her righteous wrath.' " With her parents' blessing, she set off from her home in Lima, Michigan, to Nashville, Tennessee.  Eventually she was offered a position as a nurse in Hospital No. 8, after proffering letters of recommendation, including one from Michigan Governor Austin Blair, her father's friend. 

After eight months, exhausted and ill, Mary resigned her commission. She returned home and married Jacob Telford. They became adoptive parents of Civil War orphan girls. She was granted an Army pension. She went on to be a founding member of the Woman’s Relief Corps, a post-Civil War veterans support organization, speaker on the temperance circuit, and activist for woman's suffrage in Colorado. 

Check out Vicki Profitt's profile of Mary on page 4 of the latest issue of Historigram, a publication of the Perinton Historical Society

Was the building originally a church before it became Hospital No. 8? Was it re-commissioned as a hospital for Union soldiers during the Civil War? Does anyone know? If so, I'd love to hear from you.

Photo of Mary Jewett Telford

Courtesy of Floris A. Lent

He Was A Statistic. He Was Also A Person.

Check out Di's blog memoir: He is a statistic. He is also a man. She writes about her grandfather, one of the 850 WWII vets who die every day:  "He was special in the sense that every kind and wonderful person is special. And he deserves to be remembered." In my blog about Frank McCourt, I said that his memoir, Angela's Ashes, taught us that we are all ordinary. But our memoirs can be extraordinary. Do you have an ordinary grandfather? Have you written something extraordinary about him? HHH  H

Free Memoir Form: My Dossier

Here’s a free memoir form—a Dossier á la James Bond. I’ve been a 007 fan for a long time, starting with Ian Fleming's books and Sean Connery's movies, though I'm not crazy about Daniel Craig's 007 (way too brutal for me). Tom Hardy, recently in Inception, would be better. 

This past week marked the publication of The Secret History of MI6: 1909-1949 , the official history of the British intelligence service, the real-life inspiration for James Bond. Author Keith Jeffery writes that Ian Fleming based James Bond on MI6 spy Commander Wilfred Dunderdale and that the scene from Goldfinger where Sean Connery comes out of the water, unzips his wetsuit, and reveals his tux underneath is based on a real-life MI6 spy.

Even if you haven't had as much cloak-and-dagger adventure as 007, you will still find the Dossier entertaining, with topics such as "My Last Meal Would Be" and "Most Fun I've Ever Had." A lot of people have trouble getting started on their memoirs. The Dossier jumpstarts the process. It's easy. You just fill in the blanks. Instant memoir.

I bet when you're done with your Dossier, it will include at least one thing no one else knew about you, even if it wasn’t "Top Secret." 

Technique: Paint Your Life Story

Everyone recommends The Elements of Style by Strunk and White. But do you know the artist who illustrated it? Her name is Maira Kalman and she isne recommends The Elements of Style by Strunk and White. But do you know the artist who illustrated    itO, The Oprah Magazine (page 62). She also authored The Principles of Uncertainty (2008) which Francine Prose called “the ultimate picture book for grown-ups.” A retrospective of her art is on tour in the U.S. (currently at the Contemporary Jewish Museum in San Francisco until October 26, 2010). Her new illustrated book And The Pursuit of Happiness     itO, The Oprah Magazine (page 62). She also authored The Principles of Uncertainty (2008) which Francine Prose called “the ultimate picture book for grown-ups.” A retrospective of her art is on tour in the U.S. (currently at the Contemporary Jewish Museum in San Francisco until October 26, 2010). Her new illustrated book And The Pursuit of Happiness (about American democracy) is due on next month. Memoirists: tell your stories through painting or drawing if that's your cup of tea. Maira Kalman's art is delightful.       feat    featured in the October 2010 issue of O, The Oprah Magazine (page 62). She also authored The Principles of Uncertainty (2008) which Francine Prose called “the ultimate picture book for grown-ups.” A retrospective of her art is on tour in the U.S. (currently at the Contemporary Jewish Museum in San Francisco until October 26, 2010). Her new illustrated book And The Pursuit of Happiness is due out in October.

Image "None of us is perfect." from Elements of Style © copyright 2005 by Maira Kalman.

Purple Cow Author Plugs In Direct

Bestselling business book author Seth Godin announced in yesterday's Wall Street Journal that in the future, he will bypass his commercial publisher, Portfolio (Pearson PLC's Penguin Group USA, headed by Adrian Zackheim). The author of Purple Cow and other business bestsellers also discussed this decision in a recent blog, which he says is read by 438,000 people. Godin says he knows who his audience is and has a direct customer relationship with that audience through the Internet.

So what?

Here's the quote in the Wall Street Journal piece that got to me: "Publishers provide a huge resource to authors who don't know who reads their books." And he continues, "What the Internet has done for me, and a lot of others, is enable me to know my readers."

Do you know your readers? Who are they? Who is your audience? You'll find it easier to write your memoir if you know who your readers are, who you are writing for.

Here are some questions to answer before you begin writing your memoir:

  • Who is my audience?
  • Who are my readers?
  • Who am I writing memoirs for?
  • Am I writing memoir topics for the record, for family, or for myself?
  • Do I want to share my memoirs? 
  • If yes, with whom?
  •  If yes, how do I want to share them? 
  • If no, what am I going to do with them?

Then when it comes to publishing your memoir, you can have a direct customer relationship with your audience on the Internet.

Go for it!

Memoir Tip for People Who Hate to Write

Want to tell your story, but hate the process of writing? Here's a creative idea: you can talk into your computer using voice recording computer software. That's what inter-network marketing specialist Jerry Clark recommends in his recent blog. He says, "You can get a no cost voice recording app known as 'Audacity,' from  audacity.sourceforge.net."

He has two other helpful suggestions: 

  • You can record onto mp3s the significant events in your life.
  • Don't be judgmental of your recordings.

Memoir Tip: Look At Old Magazines

I've blogged  about how your stuff  and a bridge can be a memoir. But as I was reading a Family Circle letter to the editor , I thought of something else. 

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