24 September 2012

Childhood Memories


Jan GrapeThis week I opened a quart carton of orange sherbet. Yum. I've had orange sherbet through the years yet, somehow, this time my childhood memories flooded back (maybe old age kicking in, who knows?) I suddenly felt as if I were eleven again, visiting my dad for the summer in Fort Worth, Texas. My parents divorced when I was young. Both parents remarried and during the whole school year, I lived with my mother, step-dad and two little sisters, out on the high plains of Texas, forty miles from Lubbock in the small town of Post, TX. Post then had a population of about three thousand folks and this was back in the olden days when ice cream was only available in grocery stores and drug stores. The most flavors I remember were vanilla, chocolate, Neapolitan, and strawberry. In the summer, when I went to visit my dad in the big city of Fort Worth for a couple of weeks, one of the first things we did was to drive over to Baskin Robbins where, at that time, they offered thirty-one flavors of ice cream. I'd look at everything they had and every single time order the same thing...orange sherbet, served in an ice cream cone. I have no idea why. They had banana nut, peppermint, chocolate mint, cherry vanilla, regular vanilla, chocolate, strawberry, peach, Neapolitan, and something with nuts, maybe butter pecan. They also had orange, lime and pineapple sherbet. I don't remember any of the other thirty-one flavors but for some strange reason orange sherbet really seemed like the best of the best to me and that's what I'd buy.

This nostalgic trip got me thinking about my childhood memories of reading. I honestly don't remember not liking to read and really not sure when I began reading. A little before first grade and then from first grade on I read and still read as much as I can now. I lived with my grandmother in Houston for my first grade and then my mother remarried and I moved to Post, TX when school was out. I spent a lot of the summer playing outside, but I also spent a lot of time reading...sometimes reading outside. My parents bought me books. Post didn't have a library then but there was a small library at our church. Most of the books at the church were biographies but written for children. So I learned about George Washington, Abraham Lincoln, Thomas Edison, Ben Franklin, and George Washington Carver from these bios. At home mother bought, Heidi, Black Beauty, Grimm's Fairy Tales and Bible Story books. I loved the Bobbsey Twins and a series called The Sugar Creek Gang, which was about a boy and his pals but I liked adventures and the boys were always having those.

I probably started reading Nancy Drew when I was nine or ten years old and devoured those. I think I tried the Hardy Boys, and Trixie Belton, but Nancy was my idol. She had a really cool dad, an even cooler convertible and she solved mysteries. But my big love for mysteries really grabbed me totally when I was twelve and my father handed me a stack of his paperback books: Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer, Richard S. Prather's Shell Scott and Erle Stanley Gardner's Perry Mason and his Bertha Cool and Donald Lam detectives, and John D. MacDonald's Travis McGee. I thought Private Eye books were awesome and Perry Mason was so exciting by the revelation of the murderer in the trial.

Soon I matriculated to high school and devoured as many of their mysteries as I could find...Daphne du Maurier, Edgar Allan Poe, Raymond Chandler, Ross MacDonald, Mary Roberts Rinehart, Agatha Christie, Dorothy L. Sayers, Dashiell Hammett, Rex Stout. I could go on and on but you get the idea. I still read spies and thrillers, Ian Flemming, John le Carre, Alistair McClain and I soon discovered John D. MacDonald wrote other books besides the Travis McGee series. In the meantime, Post TX got a public library and my mother became one of the volunteer librarians and when they were able to hire a librarian full time, my mom got the job. She had only gone to the 8th grade in school but she had gotten a GED and she took some college classes by correspondence. She took many of the continuing education classes the library offered. That was her dream job and also helped add to my "have read" growing list of books. Is it any wonder that I wound up writing mysteries and owning a mystery bookstore?

In exploring my childhood memories which I decided to share with each of you I reveal how I managed to fall in love with mysteries and private eyes in particular. What about you?

Now if you'll excuse me I'm going to the kitchen to have a bowl of orange sherbet.

6 comments:

  1. Jan, a nice look back at your early years which bear a strong resemblance to mine in both tastes--sherbet and reading. I had a high school friend who worked at an ice cream parlor. We created a sherbet banana split with orange, lime, and pineapple sherbets--delicious!

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  2. Little wonder they made your mom librarian… most of the books were at your house anyway! Good for her.

    I like orange sherbet too– something about that sharp, clean taste. And I followed much of the same path into crime literature, mostly thanks to my Aunt Rae.

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  3. I was never that in to orange sherbet, but to this day I can remember the very first time I tasted Hawaiian punch (school yard, third grade, right after a softball game.) I also remember discovering the Hardy Boys -- Disney's Mickey Mouse Club ran a serial and when I discovered there were books with more stories -- I was hooked. I used to fret about how Franklin W. Dixon had written books over so many years and then was a little crestfallen to learn that the books were written out of a writing stable -- the same one that produced the Nancy Drew books.

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  4. For me it was vanilla soft serve cones, and a library that was just small enough so that I really believed that some day I could read all the books there were... Sigh. Happy days.

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  5. My home tonw didn't have a library. (Too small). So I had to resort to the rather limited selection at school. No mysteries that I recall. But our teacher read us a chapter of Bobbsey Twins every day. (I didn't care for it). In spite of it, I loved to read--and write, of course.

    As for ice cream, I loved the little dixie cups. Half chocolate and half vanilla, with a picture of a movie star on the lid. I wish I had saved them

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  6. I remember the enormous satisfaction I felt when I got almost to the end of the first Frank and Joe Hardy book, the one with the water tower by the train tracks, and figured out the mystery just before it was revealed. The beginning of my passion for the genre.

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