Wednesday, July 30, 2025
Inner Voice Choice: Homeward Sound
Wednesday, January 12, 2022
A Spark in the Dark
Some call him cheesy. Or maudlin. Or even a misogynist (that was me). But even so, Nicholas Sparks remains one of our most gifted writers. His novels of love and loss are universal, embroidered with the kind of idiosyncratic details that make you feel like you're there. And his latest, The Wish, takes us on the most off-the-beaten-path journey yet. A frame story told through flashbacks and letters, The Wish jumps seamlessly between the mid '90s and the present to tell a tale that's old-fashioned yet timeless.
When sixteen-year-old Maggie Dawes ends up pregnant, her parents ship her from Seattle to the Outer Banks to live with her aunt, an ex-nun lesbian. Scared and sullen, Maggie finds Ocracoke rundown and boring. But then she gets to know her aunt -- and meets her tutor-to-be, Bryce Trickett. It's her relationships with both -- and seeing the world through Bryce's camera lens -- that transforms Ocracoke into a haven.
Inspired by Bryce's passion for photography, Maggie begins taking her own pictures. And it turns out to be a therapeutic outlet, helping her through her pregnancy the way that painting helped the teens in her aunt's convent:
"I imagined pregnant girls in a bright, airy room in the convent with wildflowers blooming outside. I thought about how they felt as they lifted a brush, adding color and wonder to a blank canvas and feeling -- if only for a brief moment -- that they were like other girls their age, unburdened by past mistakes. And I knew that they felt the same way I did when I stared through the lens, that finding and creating beauty could illuminate even the darkest periods." (229)
Photography evolves into Maggie's North Star, guiding her into the future. At the same time, the events that unfold for her and Bryce elevate coming-of-age angst to a new level. In telling their story, Sparks weaves his magic to celebrate life's fragility.
And although much of this story is indeed sad and dark, his metaphor of photography reminds us that pictures -- like life -- are all about catching the light.
Wednesday, September 2, 2020
Garden Garments: A Shout-out to Shorts and Shrubbery
Tuesday, August 20, 2019
Outer Banks Thanks: Sparky Spark and the Funny Bunch
Speaking of hats . . . this is the Hatteras lighthouse. The guide made it sound like it would be impossible to climb, and for a millisecond I worried that my exercise-averse self might have a heart attack if I tried. But then I remembered that the guide was just a public servant on a power trip and that he had to make it sound scary as a disclaimer in case of lawsuits. So up I went, and it was fine. A couple of other people freaked out once we got inside, though. I think they were afraid of heights.
The husband suggested that one day we get up to see the sun rise. Now, like Mindy Kaling (as she says in one of her books), I was pretty sure that I could live my entire life without ever seeing such a phenomenon. I worship sleep; on weekends, I don't stir until noon. Still . . . I was curious. And I figured it was the least I could do for the husband after making him take all these pictures. So I set an alarm, then set out for the docks. And I have to admit that the sun bursting through the darkness was nothing short of amazing, all orange and purple and like a Disney cartoon, only better (I was wearing a Little Mermaid tee at the time). And it was all the more awesome because I got to go back to bed once it was over.
A lot of the shops and restaurants in the Outer Banks have horse sculptures out front. This picture was taken outside an art gallery.
And these fish were swimming upstream while we enjoyed breakfast.
It was fins, fins, and more fins during our rainy day at the aquarium. Even if this pic is just plants, plants, and more plants.
This room was like an underwater disco. How cool are these black-lit jellyfish?
Once the rain cleared, it was back into the oven to surf a wave,
- My nephew 1) singing "People are Strange" (by The Doors, Aunt Tracy!), "Zombie," and his ABCs and 2) saying that my watermelon sandals were "so juicy" and that his new Mrs. Potato Head was "so cute."
- Going to The Bird Store with the husband. He picked out a duck decoy and I got this tile:
- Browsing Belk department store. At the height of "Sex and the City" mania, they had a Kristin Davis line because she's from North Carolina.
- I said it before, but I'll say it again: the shrimp!
Surprise, surprise, the beach didn't make the cut-off. I spent most of my time there under a canopy, wearing a hat, swaddled in a towel, and dousing myself hourly with Neutrogena dry-touch sun block. I couldn't help but feel like Mary Anne in Baby Sitters Club book #8, Boy-Crazy Stacey, except I didn't wear zinc oxide on my nose. (Stacey, of course, had no such anxieties and got as tan as a turkey.) The few times I ventured out, my sister quipped, "You're out of your tent, and you don't look happy about it."