Sunday, November 11, 2012

GIVING THANKS


As it does every year about this time, the calendar has kicked into overdrive, like a horse smelling the hay in the barn. I find myself beset by big editorial and publishing projects that are demanding most of my time. And I’m in the home stretch of a novel I’m writing, one that means a lot to me. I also know, happily, that the season of family is about to start. My son Morgan and his kids will visit us next weekend. Susan and I will have the pleasure of her sons’ company for Thanksgiving, and shortly thereafter will come our annual Christmas holiday with family in Las Vegas.
For these reasons, I won’t be tending to my blog until after the first of the year. I wish all of you happy holidays in the weeks to come. I also wish you great pleasure and success with your writing. I want to hear from you from time to time, so send me progress reports.
Meanwhile, here, a week late, are the Thanksgiving stories sent to me for my November blog. Good work, writers! I am so thankful for your contributions to my blog!
I’ve also tacked on at the end a 99-word story of my own. It’s not a Thanksgiving story exactly, but since this year Thanksgiving falls on my birthday, November 22, I offer a somber memory of my 22nd birthday, in 1963. It’s an important day to remember.
See you next year!


•••

A Special Sense of Thanks
by Jerry Giammatteo

It was a time for contemplation as well as thanks. The usual guests arrived. My dad and his wife, my in-laws and my brother in-law, wife, and our two nieces joined Laura, Chris, Scott and me at our table of plenty.
I felt a gratitude and spirituality around the table. Also, a sense of melancholy and vulnerability not felt before. But any break from my job in lower Manhattan was welcome.
We talked, joked and feasted as usual. I felt particularly thankful for the presence of family. On that day, November 22, 2001, Thanksgiving was just a bit different.

•••

Thanksgiving Plans
by Phyllis Povell

She was not a cook. She ate in restaurants. But that Thanksgiving she decided she was going to invite guests to her home and make everything from scratch. Store-bought invitations were not good. She wrote twenty invitations with calligraphy.
She made lists: all the fixings for antipasto, homemade lasagna, of course the turkey, mashed and sweet potatoes, veggies of all colors, and who could forget the pies? She shopped and decorated.
The guests arrived. That’s when she discovered she hadn’t lit the oven. No Thanksgiving turkey; but lots of laughs, good friends, and family for whom to be thankful.

•••

A Chicken Is Still a Bird
by Annie Bux

With Martha Stewartesque aspirations, the newly married hopeful decided to host Thanksgiving dinner. She vowed to cook every aspect of the meal, including the illustrious bird, which at her house would not be a turkey, but a chicken. Her family always agreed the turkey to be dry and over-abundant. A chicken is still a bird, after all.
Her in-laws, however, had always eaten turkey on Thanksgiving, so this choice in poultry posed a problem. And so it was when she opened up her door to see her mother-in-law roll in a large cooler carrying—what else, but a turkey.

•••

One Thanksgiving
by Joseph M. Bonelli

After cocktails Mom announced, “You can gather around the table.”
My brother John said, “We’ll be sitting for hours.”
The average adult consumes 4000 calories on Thanksgiving.
Finishing our appetizers, turkey, stuffing, vegetables, desserts, and cranberry liqueur, we could barely move. Just at that moment, the doorbell rang.
Matt was 43, the youngest, and the only one with enough strength to stand and answer the door.
We heard “Pizza delivery.” The teenager had the wrong address. Who could have pizza?
Matt looked back at us, grinned, and then told the kid, “Yeah, this is it. Bring it in!”

•••

An Alternate Use for Mayonnaise
by June Kosier

I was a freshman in High School and had a crush on a boy named Tony.
Mom let me invite him to Thanksgiving dinner.
Everything went well until just before he left. We had Thanksgiving dinner at noon and at 5:00 we had turkey sandwiches and potato chips. That is when it all went bad.
As we were putting mayonnaise on our sandwiches, my grandmother said, “When I was a girl, we used mayonnaise to moisturize our faces.”
I was mortified. That was the end of my crush on Tony. I could never look him in the face again.

•••

Things Fall Apart: 11/22/63
by John M. Daniel

The morning of my twenty-second birthday, I drove to class, groggy from last night’s jug wine.
Ahead, a pickup was loaded high with scrap lumber for that night’s football bonfire. Boys rode on top, grinning, shouting, tossing beer cans onto lawns.
“We interrupt this program.…”
My radio gave me the news, establishing a universe far more complex and frightful than the one I’d known at twenty-one.
The boys on the truck were singing, shaking cans, squirting foam at each other. Their program would be interrupted soon. Thereafter they would always remember the November morning they heard the news, learned things fall apart.

10 comments:

  1. I enjoyed the stories, John, but was sorry to hear you wouldn't be posting until after the first of the year. I always enjoy your posts.
    I've been a bit out of touch myself lately. Ever since my mom fell and broke her hip in September, things have been, well, different. Then, she fell again on November 1st and shattered everything they just fixed. She's in rehab now and it looks like Thanksgiving this year will be a visit to her there. I ask for your prayers for Mom this Thanksgiving.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you so much, Pat, for visiting my blog and for your gracious comment. I am aware of your mother's condition (though I missed that she had another awful fall!), and I have thought about her a lot in the past few weeks. And about you, because taking care of our elders is something that is difficult but must be done. I send good thoughts and best wishes to both of you, and hope you both have quiet but pleasant holidays. I hope the rehab facility provides some good food and warm joy.

      Delete
  2. "See" you next year, John--though I have no idea where this year has gone--I'm still in Spring, while time has moved on to winter! Have wonderful holidays!

    And Patricia, my mind and heart are with you!

    Madeline

    ReplyDelete
  3. John, thank you once again for sharing your brilliance, so we have to wait once again 'til the first of the year, well I can do this (lol). Have a great holiday with wife, family and friends, we'll see you again here next year. Augie

    ReplyDelete
  4. Thanks so much, Madeline and Augie. Happy trails to both of you. See you in 2013!
    John

    ReplyDelete
  5. Thanks for this, John, and thanks to Jerry, Phyllis, Annie and Joe -- all students of mine -- for some great short short stories. I wish you all a wonderful holiday season.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Eileen, thank you for sending writers this way. You must be a wonderful teacher.

      Delete
  6. I love these short shorts, as I think Liberty magazine, or maybe Esquire, called them. They're an inspiration for how to write brief and tightly and yet include all plot elements. Love the punchline element as well. Happy holidays, John, and see you in the New Year.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks, Melanie. Yes, I'm a fan of short shorts (in this case, short short shorts), too. I've used them as a teaching device for years, to show the power of economical writing. Happy Holidays to you, too!

      Delete
  7. Love the short shorts. I still have the anthologies of The Fairest Of Them All and Yellow Bricks & Ruby Slippers you published in which Sunny, JoAnne and I have our stories. Fond memories.

    ReplyDelete