Gramma’s screen door

My grandmother and Uncle Ben in front of her screen door.

 My gramma’s screen door
Janelle Meraz Hooper

  I fondly remember the worn-out screen door at the house my mother shared with my grandmother in Oklahoma. Vulnerable to weather patterns that alternated between scorching Southwest sun and torrential rainstorms, the screen hung on its worn hinges, frame warped and hinges rusty. The old wood frame, warped and in need of repair, hadn’t seen a fresh coat of paint in—well, never! The only mechanism it had for opening and closing was an old spring so stretched out that it sagged and barely functioned. Sometimes, it needed to be nudged to close. The door never had a latch; it stood unlocked, welcoming all who approached.   

That old door appealed to me because of what it stood for: family. Each time I visited, I heard the bottom of the door scrape on the wooden porch all day long as it opened and closed. Scrape, scrape…no one knocked. If we were at the back of the house in the sunroom, our friends and relatives called out a joyful hello as they came down the hall. During the day, any of number of relatives could come in to visit with us. The dress code was come-as-you-are with the women often wearing the latest casual fashions from the mall, and the men mostly in plaid shirts, jeans, and Western belt buckles.

They stopped by on their way to church.

They stopped by on their way to the store.

They stopped by because they were “in the area” to see if my grandmother needed anything.

Usually, the women brought something with them. In the summer, it could be strawberry ice cream or strawberry pop, both favorites of my grandmother. In the fall, they brought wild pecans or persimmons, harvested on the reservation.

During the week, the men stopped by on their lunch hour and brought their empty stomachs.

Most summer mornings, as a cool breeze danced through the rusty screen, my grandmother put on a big pot of coffee and an even bigger pot of pinto beans. If the screen door opened before the beans were ready, she’d whip up a quick batch of tortilla dough that she cut in strips, twisted, fried, and sprinkled with granulated sugar. Grandmother had made the coffee treats for years and she was so fast they seemed to appear magically on a big platter in the middle of the dining room table.

Once, Uncle Benny came in and found a living room filled with relatives. He quickly looked around and asked, “Where’s Inge?” Inge, the wife of one of my cousins, had terminal cancer. My cousin Hilbert had married her years before during a tour in Germany with the army.  Hilbert replied he had left her at home so she could rest. “Go get her. She should be with us!” my uncle urged.

Off Hilbert went, clear across town to pick up his wife. Inge walked in and my uncle greeted her as if the party was in her honor. He made a space for her to sit next to him in the crowded room and wrapped his arm snugly around her.  Without missing a beat, he reached into his bag of stories and had her laughing so hard she forgot all about her illness.

How I envied Uncle Benny’s and everyone else’s storytelling skills. Once, after one of our Hispanic-style powwows, my Aunt Norah pulled me aside and asked me why I had become a writer. She said we’d never had one in the family before. I told her that everyone in our family was a storyteller and the only difference between them and me was that I wrote my stories down. Laughing, she quipped, “We aren’t a family of storytellers. We’re a family of liars!”

The way I saw it, their tales qualified as an art form. Besides, in each story, at least a smidge of truth could be found—somewhere! And if not, what did it matter? My family loved and cared for each other, especially when things got tough. Who could want anything more?      

My Grandmother
Some of my grandmother’s visitors
More visitors!

Most of them are gone now. Whenever I think of them, I swear I can hear that screen door…scrape-scrape…lazily opening and closing all day…

Please share this story…my thanks, Janelle

My newest novel:

My newest novel:
“Trust your instincts. Then follow them.”

See a free preview on the book’s Amazon page.

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See my other books and stories on Amazon.
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Thanks for stopping by! 
Janelle

Casablanca and the Marseillaise

“Here’s looking at you, kid!”

Over New Year’s, I watched Casablanca with Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman. Again. I have no idea how many times I’ve watched it and each time I am stirred by the French National Anthem when it is sung in the bar scene at Rick’s Café American. Such passion! And such a beautiful melody! But I’ve never had any idea what the words meant.

YouTube to the rescue! To this post, I’m adding the French/English lyrics to La Marseillaise. If you’ve never heard the English translation, I think you’ll be surprised. I know I was shocked. Absolutely shocked! 

Happy New Year to all of my readers. Thanks for sticking with me!                                                                                            Janelle

See my books and stories on Amazon (most are in paperback and Kindle.)
Read free previews on the books’ Amazon pages.

My latest: On sale for $1.99 until April 1st!

“Trust your instincts, then follow them.”

How does a One-way Cruise to Africa
end up in Arizona?

A cautionary novel to warn women about the dangers of sex-trafficking in the United States. This book has NO explicit sex. It is meant only to raise awareness. Suspense/Romance/Humor. Amazon Kindle. Suitable for NA (New Adults 19-29 & up). Don’t miss the free preview on the book’s Amazon page! 

Hawaii dreaming…

Photo by Janelle Meraz Hooper

The weather here in Washington State is awful. We even had a rare tornado not far from here this week.
I took this photo when I was in Hawaii years ago doing “research”* for my romance, Bears in the Hibiscus. *read: lying around on the beach.

Notice the canoe full of fisherman in the water–they caught a big octopus! Also love all the footprints in the sand. Be still my heart!

I made this little trailer with my own two hands when I had a sore throat (I’m no quitter!). It’s one of my best sellers even though I persisted in plastering this video all over the Internet, ha!

Available on Amazon and other Internet bookstores.
Romance/Humor.
Paperback, Kindle. New Adult (NA) & up.
Read a free preview on the book’s Amazon page.

Apache turkey history

Taazslath, one of Geronimo’s wives
A Little Turkey History
(From my Old West research)

‘Tis the season for turkeys…I’ve read that Apache women on the reservation could run so fast they could chase down a wild turkey. Then, they’d tuck the still gobbling bird under their arm and take it to the post to sell it to the soldiers. At first, the soldiers were reluctant to buy it because they thought it might be stolen. But no, the women really were that fast. They wouldn’t eat turkeys or fish themselves because of a taboo of eating anything that ate snakes or worms.
The Apache women were hard workers. After their arrival on the reservation, they quickly learned that soldiers would pay for firewood and grass that they gathered on the prairie. They spent the money they earned at the trading post. Geronimo said that every time they came back from the trading post, they were a little less Apache, but he understood their attraction to pretty things they’d never seen before.

Check out my books on Amazon!

Read free previews on the books’ Amazon pages.

My newest novel! Amazon Kindle NA (New Adult)
Read a free preview on the book’s Amazon page.

Thanks for stopping by! Janelle

Christmas video, children’s

Merry Christmas! This, and all my children’s videos, are very popular and will keep a little one busy while you’re getting ready for your holiday this season!

Text: Janelle Meraz Hooper (From the Kindle book There’s a Mouse in the House!)
Co-author on the title story: Jacob Nicholas Studebaker.
Art: Sherri Bails
Music: JewelBeat.com