Sgt. Mom

Sgt. Mom
Location
San Antonio, Texas,
Birthday
February 21
Bio
Retired military, novelist and mother, sucker for animals and homebody

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JULY 27, 2009 12:12AM

What Sgt. Mom Did on Her Summer Vacation

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I went on a road trip to Fredericksburg on Thursday afternoon. It's about an hour and a bit, driving north on IH-10 as far as Comfort, and then another jaunt down a side road up and downhill to Fredericksburg. A lot of Main Street is pretty much tourist attraction - and local residents laughingly confess that they try and avoid Main Street on weekends - and in fact, all the shops that they personally shop at are anywhere else than Main Street, or at least, that stretch of it for about four blocks either side of the Marketplatz. I have noticed that the only mercantile establishment stocking items that ordinary, non-tourist shoppers might have a need for is the old 5 & 10. Which didn't have AA batteries - but that's a minor point. My daughter's camera did have enough juice for Thursday afternoon and evening, when I had a signing at the Pioneer Museum. This would be the second event that Richard Bristol, the director, has set up for me - the first being in January, when I had just launched the Adelsverein Trilogy. Although two of his ancestors (one on the paternal, and another on the maternal side) are mentioned in the Trilogy - he still hasn't had the time to read it. He is taking his own copies of the Trilogy on his vacation, a cruise to Alaska, and plans to read all three books then. When he has time. A museum director's job is never done. Blondie tried to talk him into adopting Rossi, one of our resident rescued cats, who- from the way he makes nice to male visitors - was a man's cat. No luck - but we're kind of fond of Rossi, anyway.

  Happy Hour, Fredericksburg Museum volunteer dinner

 The museum volunteers' dinner was in the old Methodist Church  parish hall: the Historical Society offices are in the facility - and the sanctuary is now available for weddings. Otherwise, it's all part of the Pioneer Museum grounds. I've done a talk there before - and it's a church parish hall, which is the sort of place which is comfortable and familiar to me. There were about fifty people there; much the largest crowd I've given a book talk to. Dinner was terrifically good - catered by a local small firm: Blondie wishes she had the chutney recipe for the grilled pork skewers. 

At the Volunteer dinner

I asked one of the ladies to take me around and introduce me to everyone: one of the ackward things about this 'guest author/stranger' things is that people are hesitant to come up and talk to you: so best ask someone else to take you around and break the ice. It turns out that about half the people present had read the Trilogy - which was wonderful for me, since most of them liked it very much. Kenn Knopp, who is a local historian and member of the Historical Society - and had read the Trilogy in manuscript - did an introduction. I had been referred to him by David and Jenny at Berkman Books, yea these many months ago, as the local history expert.  I was nervous about the Civil War portion of the Trilogy, and wanted to have someone who was pretty much immersed in local history, have a read-through. He confessed at first that he was pretty unenthused about the whole prospect of reading a MS by a relatively unknown author - and morever, one that ran to about the same word-count as Lord of the Rings - but he was won over within a very short time. After my father, Kenn is about my biggest fan; he is sure that I was inspired and guided by something divine - I insist that if anything, I was guided by the San Antonio Public Library, which provided me on loan with about every book I needed for research purposes.

And we spent that night at a wonderful local bed and breakfast, thanks to the hospitality of the owners. It's out in the country a little away from Fredericksburg - and that evening we looked at this view...

View - Rooster Springs

... while sitting on this porch, enjoying a tasty adult beverage...

Porch - Rooster Springs

I slept in this bed...

Bedroom - Rooster Springs

and my daughter in the sitting room, in this daybed...

Small Bed - Rooster Springs

And the next morning, we fixed breakfast in this little kitchen..

Rooster Springs kitchen

... enjoyed the sight of humming-birds strafing the various flowerbeds outside.

Purple Flower - Rooster Springs

... signed the guestbook...

Signing the Guestbook - Rooster Springs

The owners have this sort of rooster and chickens country-style motif going.

And then for a full day of sightseeing. We checked out a parish rummage sale, where my daughter rejoiced that she was finally able to afford to buy antiques in Fredericksburg. (She spent a whole $2.00 at the rummage sale) and I regretted that I could't afford to go much higher than $30 on a silent auction for an antique low-post bed. But we did talk up it's many fine details to another woman - hand-made, the footboard and headboard were elaboratly curved and out of a single wide plank, and it really wouldn't cost all that much for slats to rest a mattress on, and to have a futon-mattress made in 3/4 size. I think we talked her into it, for it was a very nice bed, and she would give it a good home.

Then we went off for a tour of a local cemetery, and the old and new St. Mary's church buildings...

 Old St Marys Tower

The old St. Mary's was finished during the Civil War - a sort of agreeable, unadorned neo-Gothic building. No one can put a name to the architect, or even if there was one. Apparently, the parishoners just picked up their tools and built it.  The new St.Mary's is right next door.

Interior New St Marys - Fredericksburg

It is beautifully painted - IIRC the inscription in the center arch means "I am the bread of life". The windows are all stained glass, and very ornate.

Annuciation - St Marys - Fredericksburg

Strictly speaking, this is not really stained glass, with every separate color cut out of a pice of colored glass and pieced together with lead canes - this is glass which is painted in small panels and then assembled together. My mother informs me that this is nearly as difficult as true stained glass. This is the kind of church glass that I knew from growing up. Very nice to look at, during very long and dull sermons.

We were treated to lunch at the Peach Tree... and by late afternoon, the dreaded author's table was calling.

Author Table

But the signing worked out very well, for there were other authors there to talk to, and a constant stream of shoppers in and out of Berkman Books. (They're having a sale, BTW.) One of my nicest conversations was with a nice gentleman who read the Trilogy on loan from the Harper Library, on the recommendation of the librarian - and he liked it so much, he wanted his own copies. Yes!

 Emily the cat Berkman Books_edited-1

And, as expected, my daughter made friends with Emily the Berkman Books cat...


 (Note - I posted the first version of this last night, and then deleted it, accidently erasing a comment from a fan of the San Antonio Public Library who thought that the Trilogy would make a fine gift for the parental unit! Of course I agree - the Trilogy wouldmake a perfect present for someone who loves traditional historical fiction! Sorry for deep-sixing your comment, it was an accident! )

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One of my favorite drives in Texas is heading north out of Fredericksburg to Llano, passing by Enchanted Rock on the way. Have you made that drive? I suspect you have. Great to see that the Trilogy is still receiving well-deserved publicity!
Thanks, P - amazingly, I haven't yet gone past Enchanted Rock: our favorite drive is to come back from Fredericksburg on Route 16 ... especially the sections where it hugs the Medina River. And I sense that Trilogy is just getting started: David at Berkman Books says he can't keep it in stock now, since everyone wants copies. It's at the point now that the handful of people who bought it early in the spring have now read it, and are recommending it to all their friends, and their friends are reading it ... I hope for a geometric progression of referrals from ecstatic fans!
Also, since the Trilogy is now istocked by the relevant local museum shops, and the handful of independent bookstores ... now I plan a progress through the local libraries, doing talks and bookclub meetings.