Parenting involves a modicum (read: perpetual avalanche) of correcting, warning and reprimanding. But to connect with our kids – and gain influence – we must encourage their strengths and potential. We can only encourage what we truly believe in. Therefore, as parents, we must periodically allow ourselves the essential luxury of basking in our sprogs’ […]
All the World’s a Page (The Power of the Notebook)
All things are created twice. First in the mind, and then physically, in the world. Stephen Covey, The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People Before ideas make their way into the world, for many writers, there is a vital intermediate step: Creation by notebook. The Bible backs me up on this: “In the beginning was the word.” Words […]
The Sprog Log: A Parent’s Odyssey
November 20, 2010: I was walking to the post office with Ali, musing nostalgically that this is our last month of constant mum-and-son togetherness before the Yuletide arrival of his baby sister, when a woman walked past, pushing a Bugaboo. Ali burst into tears, blurting in anguished outrage, “EVERYONE has their baby already except ME!” […]
Dispatch to Malory Towers
Has there ever been a better time to escape into boarding school literature? With a return to virtual learning, the end of Christmas holidays brought no change of scene – only, at best, a change of screen. “I wish I were taking the train to Cornwall to go to Malory Towers,” my daughter, Isla, remarked […]
Birthday Spell!
Happy Tenth Birthday, Isla! Every year, my daughter requests a homemade card for her birthday. It must include a word game, and it must be at least as good as last year’s. Every year, in the run up to the special day, I ride the emotional roller coaster from — “What’s wrong with Hallmark?” — […]
Phoenix Turns Eight – Let’s Celebrate!
Two decades ago, at the end of my first gruelling semester of law school, my torts professor, Peter Schuck, proved himself to be, as I’d always suspected, a fellow undercover wordsmith. We had spent the term litigating the fictional libel case of Sands v. Mudd, and were waiting for him to render a final verdict. […]
Re-Imagining a Friend’s Childhood
I recently befriended a beguiling six-year-old named Susie Simpson. My all-grown-up friend, Susan Lennox (nee Simpson), introduced us. Susie lives in a tucked away drawer in Susan’s chest of memories. Susie Simpson used to love to sing Christmas carols in July, wear tights with rainbow stripes and hopscotch her way across the street. But since […]
Letting Down My (En) Garde!
“Of course you can’t beat me. I’ve been fencing half my life,” my son consoled me, after another of our lopsided bouts. “The question is, can you beat you? At the end of your lesson, can you thrash the fencer you were when you began?” How did I find myself cast in this generationally reversed […]
A Year in Squiggles
T’was the night before Christmas, and in my bright kitchen, I sat at my table, a scribblin’ and skitchin’. I wrapped up the skitchin’ (or rather, sketching) around midnight, and eight hours later, my kids (aged 9 and 13) discovered this under the tree: So begins my new annual tradition of tracking their year […]
It Takes a Village to Make a Story . . . And Vice Versa
Writing is a solitary activity, and like most writers, I have a strong reclusive instinct. But I also thrill at the unexpected directions a project can take when others contribute their ideas, talent and life experience. So when a local junior school teacher invited me to deliver a workshop on fractured fairy tales, I asked […]