Showing posts with label Vampires. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vampires. Show all posts

Monday, August 6, 2018

... books, magic, vampires, and the authors who bring it all to life...


It was early May 2004 when I walked into the public library and discovered Charlaine Harris’ Southern Vampire Mysteries. I checked out Dead Until Dark and within days, I checked out the rest of the series including Living Dead in Dallas and Club Dead. I loved them. Then I had to wait, fortunately not very long that first year, for the next book to come out in the series. I purchased Dead to the World and kept anticipating these books each May, published right around the time my coursework was concluding before summer break. I even pre-ordered the books at Borders, which I never do for any books… still! The clerks at Borders would tease me because many of them knew that I was writing my doctoral dissertation at the table in the café while sipping chocolate coffee. I miss Borders but that’s another story.

The Southern Vampire Mysteries were fun; Sookie didn’t just fall down, she fought back; and, she owned a house, something that I desperately wanted to do back then. Some of the storylines were silly; others were quite serious. I loved them all. When True Blood was even hinted at as a possibility, I went out and bought a television and later figured out how to order cable, specifically HBO. The television series was very different but I enjoyed it so much in the beginning and then like a loyal fan, watched it to the very end and cried. I kept reading those Sookie books, including the novellas and short stories that were offered usually around winter break.

I’m not a book series person. In fact, now if I walk into a bookstore to find a description noting a trilogy I abandon the book. Yet, every now and then I’ve fallen into a series. The Southern Vampire Mysteries was one of them. They were there published at the exact time I needed a break from academia and needed to lose myself into a story. I don’t come from a family of academics. In fact, my parents did not attend college. But, they were readers. My mom read, and still reads, novel after novel. My dad was more of a non-fiction devourer of texts. He also has a photographic memory, which I did not inherit sadly. Books were supposed to be fun but in grad school everything changed. I no longer seemed to have time to read for pleasure and when I did sneak in some reading I always felt guilty about it since I should have been reading some Proust or whatnot. The only time that I was able to comfortably put down the academic texts was at the start of summer break.  

I wish I could go back to recreate the feeling but just as one can never step into the same river twice, one can never recreate the magic of reading a book for the first time. Nevertheless, with so many books stacked up in my to-be-read pile, I finally have my very own copy of Dead Until Dark and I’m planning to give it another go.

Some of my favorite books of all time were library books. Oh, I wish that I had stolen that copy of Dracula the first time I read the book. I remember the cover and if I think hard enough I can almost smell the book. Old books have the best smell. Fortunately, my new copy of Dead Until Dark is pretty much the original cover art, which I adore. Now, I even have a signed copy!
Yesterday, I attended the 5th Annual Suffolk Mystery Authors Festival about two hours from my home. For the price of a $20 ticket, which also offered a tote bag full of free books, I attended the VIP Reader event right before the festival was open to the public. There, I met Christine Trent (and may have been a little stalkerish), as well as Julie Moffett, Alice Loweecey, and Aimée Hix. 

For me, the most exciting part was meeting and thanking Charlaine Harris for keeping reading fun during a time that I really needed it to be light and fun.

Saturday, June 3, 2017

...cemeteries, funeral homes, nails, conferences, and being...



You must live in the present,
launch yourself on every wave,
find your eternity in each moment.
Fools stand on their island of opportunities
and look toward another land.
There is no other land;
there is no other life but this.

~ Henry David Thoreau, Walden

Oakwood Cemetery, Fort Worth, Texas

What happened to May? It’s always a busy month for me but in addition to the end of the semester madness and commencement, I have been chairing our department’s search committee for our next faculty member, and I agreed to teach our first session of summer school (9-1 M-F for three weeks). AND, there was the Hollywood Cemetery Annual Picnic, the Red Vein Army’s Spring-o-ween, developing and giving the Hollywood Cemetery Rose Tour for the Heritage Rose Foundation conference, and the World Dracula Day Symposium in Texas. AND, replacing our central AC system and food poisoning. Oh, and a new computer since my old one died right at the beginning of summer school.

May was hectic but I did so many fun things (minus the food poisoning and those last few expensive purchases that had to be made) that I found myself whispering. “Be in the moment.”

Sayers and Scoville hearse model 390 circa 1900 and the second formal hearse to be used by J.F. Foust Sr. located in Grapevine Texas at a funerary artifacts exhibit
For me, especially, that is easier said than done. In therapy, I learned that I was a “do-er” and not a “be-er.” There are so many fun things to do and I also have a problem saying “No” to others. I’m working on that; I will always be working on that. My fella also teases me that “everything is a blog post” because blogging is therapeutic but it does require time.  

For about a week before World Dracula Day Symposium, all I wanted to do was have my nails painted for the event; but, I couldn’t seem to make it happen. There just wasn’t any time. My plans for the symposium was to arrive early and check out some local cemeteries (because apparently teaching a cemetery course with four cemeteries in three weeks has not been enough for me!) When I landed in Dallas, I picked up my rental car and to go check out some cemeteries on my list. Instead, I called The Gaylord to see if their spa had an availability. They had an appointment within twenty minutes if I could make it in time; I could and I did. After having a manicure and pedicure, and spending 40 additional minutes in a place called the slumber room, I finally left to go check into my hotel. It was completely worth it. My nails looked great; I felt great. I still was able to see some cemeteries before I left Texas but I also took some time to just *be*.

My cemetery course has been considering secondary land uses for cemeteries; this funeral home is already on top of that!
I have tons to share but I am still processing the whirlwind of the last month. For now, this is just a little glimpse into my world. I still have some grading to do before Monday; and then, of course, I have a chapter to revise and a presentation at the end of the month to prepare for but I won’t be commuting and I’ll officially be on vacation (which still means there is work to do but that I can do it in shorts 😝).