Showing posts with label Inklings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Inklings. Show all posts

11/4/24

Inklings: October Edition

When I read that the scene for the October Inklings Link-up (Which you can find here!), was a scene with a lake, I immediately thought of the book Gone Away Lake by Elisabeth Enright. 

 

It's a book about two cousins, Portia and Julian, who find a mysterious 'gone away' lake in the woods near Julian's home.

The scene below is when they first find the old lake.

~

"What hit me?" he said.

"You hit it," Portia said. "And look, it's a rowboat! An old upside-down rowboat buried in weeds!"

"What is it doing here? You can't go rowing on a swamp! But maybe if I stand up on the thing, I can see where we are, at least."

They both climbed up on the little hulk and looked out over the tops of the reeds, a sea of reeds, beyond which, and all around, grew the dark woods. But that was not all. Portia and Julian drew in a breath of surprise at exactly the same instant, because at the northeast end of the swamp, between the reeds and the woods, and quite near to them, they saw a row of wrecked old houses. There were perhaps a dozen of them; all large and shabby, though once they must have been quite elaborate, adorned as they were with balconies, turrets, widows' walks, and lacy wooden trimming. But now the balconies were sagging and the turrets tipsy; the shutters were crooked or gone, and large sections of wooden trimming had broken off. There was a tree sticking out of one of the windows, not into it but out of it. And everything was as still as death.

"Now who would go and build a lot of houses on the edge of a mosquitoey old swamp like that?" inquired Julian. But the next time he spoke it was in a whisper. "Porsh! Those houses are empty! They're all deserted, Porsh! It's a ghost town."

"Oh, let's go, let's go!" Portia whispered back, pulling at his sleeve. "I don't like it here!"

But Julian frowned and jerked his sleeve away. "Just a minute, now. Ju-u-ust a minute. We'd better examine the situation. Case the joint, in other words."

"Oh, please come, please!" begged Portia. Her voice quavered with fear, almost with tears, but she was beyond pride.

"Sh-h. In a second," whispered Julian.

And just at that moment, in the last house on the right-hand side they heard a curious crackling sound; and then an enormous voice began to speak.

They were so startled that they fell through the boat. The wood was damp and rotten, and then perhaps the panic of surprise had added a sudden weight to them. In any case they fell through with a crash; and it was as they were hastily picking themselves out and wondering if they were hurt anywhere that they heard the words the mighty voice was addressing to the summer air. They stared at each other in amazement.

"Yes, friends-" roared the great suave tones. "Why suffer any longer from acid indigestion? Go to your local drugstore, now, today, and ask for a box of Pepso-Tabs, the wonder mint, only forty-nine cents the box. Yes, friends, in exchange for only for-ty-nine cents-your troubles are over!"

Julian was the first one to laugh.

"Whoever heard of a ghost having acid indigestion?" he said.

Portia was laughing, too. "And whoever heard of ghosts listening to radios?" she said. "It must be a radio, Jule, because I didn't see any television-tree on the roof, did you?"

"Wait a minute." Julian climbed precariously up on an edge of the boat, as Portia held onto him.

"No," he reported. "And now that I look at it, I can see that that house isn't quite as raggedy and bashed-in looking as the others. They've got a screen door, and there's a rosebush and some bean rows, and now I see some chickens and a duck. Come on, Porsh, let's go see who lives there and ask them where we are."

"Oh, I don't know, do you think we'd better?"

"Sure! It'll be all right. Would bad people keep a duck? Would they have a rosebush?"

Portia was not entirely happy about the logic of this assurance, but she had no choice except to follow her cousin, who had started forward with a determined step. In the house someone had turned down the huge radio voice; all they could hear now was a low steady babble and some little chicken-noises.

The children pressed their way among the cool leathery reeds; a few obstinate mosquitoes accompanied them, and every now and then there was the sound of a slap or an exclamation.

Julian, who paid certain penalties for persistently taking the lead, now banged his knee smartly against the corner post of a little overgrown landing dock.

"You know what I think," he said, when the pain stopped ringing. "/ think this swamp must have been a pond or a lake once upon a time. That would account for the rowboat and this dock and all-"

"And for those houses being built where they are."

"Check. But I never heard of any lake around here."

"You haven't lived here very long, remember."

They climbed up on the dock and walked it gingerly, on the lookout for loose or missing planks. The reeds that waved above their heads had been replaced by a growth of plumed pampas grass, still taller, but now as they broke through the last of this, they found themselves on raised land, close to one of the wrecked houses.

~

9/30/24

Inklings: September Edition

 When I saw that the September Edition of the Inklings link up was a scene in a kitchen, I wasn't sure what to choose at first.

While sitting down to write the post, however, the perfect book came to mind! It is called The Rose Round by Meriol Trevor.

The main character Matthew's sister is a cook in an old English home, and I had remembered some warm sunny scenes taking place in the the kitchen. While skimming through the pages though, there weren't as many 'at least a few paragraph' long scenes taking place in a kitchen as I thought. At least, not any happy scenes.

I ended up choosing the introduction to the real owner of the house (manor?) where the main character's sister works.

It doesn't really take place in a kitchen, but it begins and ends in one.

-------------------

"Salad!" said Caro, when Matt told her. "Oh, that reminds me, Matt, do be a darling and fetch me a garlic."

"Where from?" 

"Out in the yard, third door along. It's a little shed where the gardener hangs onions and things." 

Matt went out into the yard, which was cool and quiet in the gathering dusk after the heat and bustle of the kitchen. He counted the doors. The third one was open so he went straight in, right into someone who was kneeling on the floor with his back to the door. Matt fell over his legs and crashed into his back, which hardly seemed to shake the man at all, but caused Matt to fall sideways to the floor, where he lay, quite dazed with surprise. 

The man jumped up, knocked his head on a beam, swore mildly and then bent over Matt.
"Where did you come from?" he said, surprised.

"I'm awfully sorry," said Matt, sitting up. "I didn't see you at all."

It was dark in the shed, and he could not see the man very well now, except to see that he was very big.

"I was looking for something I dropped," said this man.

"What sort of thing?" Matt asked.

"Well, a key as a matter of fact."

Matt got on hands and knees and peered round. So did the man he had fallen over.

"There it is," said Matt, seeing something shining dully in the gloom. He picked it up and handed it over. The big man took it with his left hand, the other seemed to be in a sling.

"Thank you," he said. "Now what were you looking for?"

"Garlic," said Matt.

"Garlic?" said the man, surprised. "What on earth for?"

"My sister's making a salad," said Matt. "She's doing the cooking here. Her name's Caroline Rendal.”

"l haven't met Miss Rendal yet, because I've only just come," said the man. "What's your own name?"

"Matt. Matthew."

"A very good name to have," said the man. "Mine is Theo."

"Oh," said Matt. "Are you Mr. Theodore Ayre?" 

"Yes."

"Oh," said Matt again, not quite sure what to do next.

"So that big horse is yours, that black one."

"Nero? Yes, he is."

Caro's voice called out for Matt. 

"She wants the garlic," Matt said. 

"She has a nice voice," said Mr. Ayre, kneeling on the floor, listening. 

Matt saw the garlics on a shelf and took one.

"I'd better go," he said. 

"We shall meet again," said Mr. Ayre, nodding.

Matt went back to the kitchen.

"I met Mr. Ayre in there," he said. 

"What nonsense!" said Caro. "As if he'd be in the shed!"

"Well he was."

4/21/24

Inklings Link-up: April 2024

 

This is my entry for Along the Brandywine's April Inklings link-up

The prompt was a scene with a cake from a book or movie.

I chose two connected scenes from Big Little Island by Valenti Angelo.

 

The illustrations in this book are so beautiful!

It is a children's book written in 1955 about the Italian American Leoni family, who run a bakery in New York. Their nephew Lorenzo has to adjust to his new life in the United States after the Leoni parents take him in when he is orphaned in WWII.

The two scenes I chose to share show Lorenzo using his artistic abilities to decorate cakes.

And the Leoni's youngest son Peter comes up with a plan to show kindness to his older brother Nick, who is leaving the family soon to join the navy. 

 

Lorenzo went right to work. He pressed the container gently with his hand, and a thin white string of icing flowed from the spout onto the cake. As he guided the spout round and round the cake, the thought ran through his mind, "I must do it well. Peter is watching, and so is my uncle." He made a crisscross pattern of lines over the top of the cake. In its center, by turning the spout in circles, he spun three nests. 

He looked up. 

"Those are for the doves,'' he told Peter. 

Both Peter and his father were amazed at Lorenzo's handiwork. 

"By donkey! You are almost professional, said his uncle. "You will make a first-class, A-number-one cake decorator. It's the truth. Angelina! Come here. Take a look at this- Oh, I remember, she went shopping. Is she going to be surprised!"

There was no end to Papa Leoni's praise. "Here. Try another cake, Lorenzo."

"Wait, I am not finished." Lorenzo zigzagged a pattern along the side. "There."

Peter said, "I'll get the doves and put em on." He laughed. That much I can do." 

Rosie hurried downstairs into the bakery. She said, "Papa, I've sold all the almond slices. I'm running short of cakes too, Everything is going like hot cakes. Whew!"

Then she saw Lorenzo at work.

"Why, I didn't know you could do that. Lorenzo, you're super! Where did you ever learn to decorate cakes like that?"

"From your father," he replied, and went on with his work. 

From that moment Papa Leoni pronounced him chief cake decorator of the Leoni Baking Company. And to make the event even more regal, he went to a closet and returned with a snow-white baker's cap, which he placed on Lorenzo's head. "This will make it legal," he said.

"Oh, Dad," said Rosie, "don't make a fool out of him." 

Lorenzo said, "I do not feel foolish, Rosie. I like it. I do." 

Papa Leoni went up to the shop with Rosie, to see what was needed, Peter stayed to watch his cousin. He stood beside him, admiring Lorenzo's work and offering advice and suggestions.

"Write 'Happy Easter' on the next one, Lorenzo. Can you write with the squeezer? Can you?" 

"Sure," said Lorenzo. And Lorenzo wrote, "Happy Easter to Everybody."

"I'll tell you what," said Peter. "Nick is going to camp next week, see?" He looked around the room to see if his father had returned. "'We-I mean you-ought to decorate a special cake for Nick." 

"That will be very, very nice, Peter. Something special, yes?"

"Yes. Let me think." Peter scratched his head. "I think he likes chocolate layer cake, I'm not really sure. Maybe it's vanilla. Or is it butter-cream-pecan?"

Peter searched through the cakes and picked out the largest. He lifted the top layer. The white frosting on its top wrinkled a little. This one is vanilla. It'll have to do. Go ahead, start." 

"What shall I write?" asked Lorenzo.

"Let me see. Write: NICK LEONI, U.S. NAVY, BON VOYAGE." 

"That is French, is it not?"

"Just the "bon voyage' is French." 

"That is quite a lot to put on, Peter. How do you spell 'bon voyage'?"

Peter spelled out the words. "And don't forget the flag and stars. I wish we could have a battleship on it. That would be perfect."

"I do not think I can do it, Peter. This cake is too, too small."

"Never mind then. Do the best you can. But make it good."

As luck would have it, Papa Leoni came back in time to see Lorenzo putting on the finishing touches. He looked at the cake a long time, Then he cleared his throat and he said, "It is a fine thing you have done, boys, a very fine and thoughtful thing. I know that Nick will appreciate it very much."

~~~~      

Then everyone sang.

"Happy birthday to you. Happy birthday to you. Happy birthday, dear Peter-rrr. Happy birthday to you-u-u-u."

When Peter saw Nick wheeling a red bicyele into the room he was speechless. Finally he found his tongue.
"Thanks a million, Dad. Oh boy! Thanks!"

"You must thank everyone, Peter," said his father. "All of us donated."

"Thanks, Rosie and Lorenzo and Nick and Ma and Dad. Thanks a lot."

After examining and admiring every detail of the new bicycle, Peter sat down, and with a single puff he blew out the twelve candles on his cake. Then suddenly he stood up again. "Hey! Wait a minute," he cried, "Nick is in on this deal too."

He turned to Lorenzo.

"Okay. You know what I mean. Go after it."

"What's the deal?" said Nick. He looked at his younger brother. "It's your birthday, not mine."

Lorenzo disappeared down the basement stairs. Peter grinned at his brother. "You'll see," he said.

Mama Leoni looked away, smiling. Papa Leoni took a sip of wine, then coughed more than was nccessary. Rosie was undecided whether to wait for Lorenzo or start cutting the cake. When Lorenzo dashed into the room Peter stood up. His eyes were aglow.

"Put it down here, Lorenzo. Quick!" Then he looked at his brother Nick. "For you, from all of us," he said proudly. "I hope you like it."

For all his eighteen years, Nick Leoni was a child at heart. He looked at the cake Lorenzo had decorated, and its greeting, and he hardly knew what to say. 

"It's--it's swell. Well-you know what I mean," he stammered.

"Yes, we know what you mean, Nick." Papa Leoni spoke for the others. ""Well, now which cake shall we cut?"

"Cut Nick's, Dad. It's the best."

Papa Leoni arched his eyebrows. "What do you mean, Peter? All of my cakes are the best." Then he cut a thick slice of Nick's cake for each of them.

 "Let me tell you, son, I doubt if you'll find baking of this caliber in the Navy," he boasted. "Eat up."

Although Nick was fonder of chocolate cake than of vanilla, he consumed two large pieces without saying a word.

 

I really appreciate the kind, loving families that are found in Angelo's books!

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