MLLE, New Mexico, 1992 |
Mari Lou's young adult novel, Otherwise Known as Possum, will be published by Scholastic Press and available February 28. It can be pre-ordered now. https://www.amazon.com/Otherwise-Known-Possum-Maria-Laso/dp/0545927951
Here's a synopsis: Possum Porter has had it with change. First she lost Mama, leaving a
hole nothing can fill. And now, instead of trying to return to some kind
of normal, Daddy's sending Possum to school. A real school, where you
have to wear SHOES. Where some Yankee teacher will try to erase all the
useful things Mama taught Possum during their lessons at home.
So Possum comes up with a plan. If she can prove that she already knows everything worth knowing, Daddy will let her quit school and stay where she belongs. She won't have to deal with snooty classmates, or worry about tarnishing Mama's memory.
But unfortunately, Possum doesn't shoot to the top of the class like she expected. Even worse, the unmarried Yankee teacher seems to have her eyes on someone . . . Possum's Daddy. With time running out, Possum decides to do something drastic to get away from school-and get Daddy out of Ms. Arthington's clutches-or risk losing everything that's keeping her broken heart glued together.
So Possum comes up with a plan. If she can prove that she already knows everything worth knowing, Daddy will let her quit school and stay where she belongs. She won't have to deal with snooty classmates, or worry about tarnishing Mama's memory.
But unfortunately, Possum doesn't shoot to the top of the class like she expected. Even worse, the unmarried Yankee teacher seems to have her eyes on someone . . . Possum's Daddy. With time running out, Possum decides to do something drastic to get away from school-and get Daddy out of Ms. Arthington's clutches-or risk losing everything that's keeping her broken heart glued together.
Amazon includes this author's note: A former journalist, Maria D. Laso was a
beloved creative writing teacher in Orange County, CA, where she helped
people from teens to senior citizens find their voices. She completed
her debut novel, Otherwise Known as Possum, shortly before her death in 2015.
When I returned to Southern California in late 2014, I began to attend Mari Lou's Poets and Dreamers writing class, the Tuesday Morning Group. That group had outgrown its original home at the Orange Senior Center, graduating to a conference room at Our Saviour's Lutheran Church. Sometimes I'd substitute for her when Mari Lou was too ill to prepare an assignment for the group. Mostly, though, I looked forward to my role of student,
Mari Lou, Orange Senior Center, 2010 |
Once Mari Lou asked me where I'd found the inspiration to become a writer. Here's my answer.
I Owe It All to Jo
“The creative mind plays with the objects it loves.” –Carl Jung
As a child I’d often curl up on the sofa and watch Grandma
create pretty dresses for me on her treadle sewing machine. All through
elementary school I’d dream of the day when I’d be creating my own wardrobe.
I’d clip drawings of countless gowns from her dog-eared Sears and Roebuck
catalog, and then flip through its pages in search of matching accessories. I’d
imagine designing an outfit for my high school prom. Maybe even my own wedding
gown.
Then, when I got to junior high, I nearly flunked my seventh
grade sewing class. I couldn’t sew a straight seam, no matter how hard I tried.
Stunned, I realized I’d never be clever with a needle like Grandma. I lacked
whatever skill that pursuit seemed to require.
Some dreams, though, die hard. My dreams had always involved
succeeding at something that I loved doing. I’d love sewing, just like Grandma.
But struggling with unraveling crooked seams began to feel like work, not play.
When the school year concluded, I decided I’d spend my summer seeking another
endeavor…and another mentor.
Soon, after reading a book about Anna Pavlova, I began to
dream anew. I longed for a tutu and ballet slippers. After I stumbled through
half a dozen three lessons, I realized I couldn’t hold an arabesque without
toppling over. Next I raced through a book about women athletes, and stared,
fascinated, at a photo of Gertrude Ederle, the first woman to swim the English Channel. It took nearly the entire summer for me
to accept that if I couldn’t manage ten laps across the Harvard playground pool
without becoming winded, I’d never churn my way across the English
Channel. It didn’t matter how cute I thought I’d look in swim
goggles. It wasn’t going to happen.
So…if I couldn’t be like Anna Pavlova or Gertrude Ederle,
not to mention my own grandmother, who could I emulate? Where could I find
someone to model my life on? Then, one afternoon as I reread my favorite book, Little Women, it became clear. I caught
my breath when read Jo March’s ringing affirmation in Chapter 14. She’d just
sent off some stories to a potential publisher.
"There,” she
proclaimed, “I've done my best! If this won't suit, I shall have to wait till I
can do better."
I smiled. Maybe a role model didn’t have to be an actual living
person. Maybe a fictional character would do. I certainly could identify with
Jo’s initial hesitation and subsequent bravery. I, too, had attempted to write
stories, but aside from a letter on the children’s page of the Portland
Oregonian, I’d never been published.
First published 1869 |
But it might not be too late, I decided. When school began
again in September, I asked my counselor if I could take journalism as an
elective. I’d always enjoyed writing essays in my English classes. Maybe I could
become a reporter for the school paper, The
Naturalist.
This time I met with success. I appeared to have the
aptitude to pair with the attitude. I particularly relished taking my turn at
writing the continuing column, “Silhouettes.” These were profiles of teachers
and student leaders. I’d try to flesh my stories out, to make my subjects
appear to dazzle, like the characters Jo and her sisters admired in Charles
Dickens’ The Pickwick Papers. If my
teacher or fellow students criticized my stories, Jo’s words would echo in my
mind…”If this won’t suit, I shall have to wait till I can do better.”
I never had to wait long. If I reread my own work a few days
later with a critical eye, I’d almost always be able to do better. That’s when
I realized that the secret to good writing, as Jo knew, lay in rewriting.
In high school and college I continued to write, never
failing to delight in playing with words…like Jo. When I transferred from a
community college to a state university, somebody scribbled in the upper right
hand corner of my transcript in a space for comments, “Said to be creative.”
Over the years I’ve wondered who it was that wrote that
cryptic comment. It’s always been a mystery. Nobody ever used that word to my
face, not a teacher or a counselor. I wonder if that anonymous annotator
realized that all I’d ever wanted to do was to succeed at something I loved,
while I played. Like Jo, I’m convinced that writing involves play, playing with
ideas, playing with words, playing until I can play better, arranging...and
then rearranging.
Unlike Jo, I’ve never written a play or even a novel. I’ve
stuck to shorter pieces, essays, commentary, reviews, and true stories for
anthologies. Writing remained my lifetime avocation, my source of joy, with a
blank page always my playground.
When friends inquire about “writer’s block,” I claim I’ve
never really encountered it. Jo’s spirit always remains with me…she never
thought of writing as work, as something to suffer through, as something to be
endured. Oh, no! For her it was always play.
Jo never doubted her ability. She never hesitated to retreat
to her attic, assemble her words, and enjoy herself. She remains my
inspiration. Her playful spirit never deserts me.
So early on I’d been forced to set aside the dreams of
sewing my own prom dress, dancing in the chorus of Swan Lake, and coating myself with oil to cross the English Channel. Nonetheless, I’d never allowed defeat to
discourage me from trying something else. Through trial and error, I’d finally
found where my talents lay…in persistently playing with words.
Oh, sure, there have been times when I’m trying to write a
story and the patterns fail to form, or the message remains elusive, or I begin
to feel too frazzled to dazzle. When it doesn’t feel like play, I put the piece
away. I owe myself a break. I take that tip from Jo. I wait until I can do
better. It’s the best advice I ever came across.
It’s never a very long wait.
Your positive attitude and willingness to try again inspires me. Sadly, I lost my dearest friend on this day, two years ago. I can relate.
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