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The strangest part about learning to fly is how quickly you forget. (Gregory Petersen, The Dream Thief)

the paperback, set on a pillow and blanket

If the surname of the quoted author sounds familiar, there is a good reason. He is my son. Greg is a consummate writer and speaker, has done stand-up comedy, and maneuvers the English language like a magician. An analogy with one exception—Gregory relays more than magic; he speaks heart language, where it beats strongest.

“The strangest part about learning to fly…” is the first line of his newest novel, published by Morgan James Publishing Company. His novel officially appears on the market on May 5. While Amazon is always available, local presses could use support. Book lovers appreciate touching the pages, walking down aisles. At least eventually. In the meantime, many bookstores offer curbside pickup. Josephbeth.com is one example.

I should have known Gregory would be a word artist. As a toddler his grammar was impeccable. Nouns. Verbs. Adjectives. In proper order. He read letters from the alphabet from the other side of the newspaper as his aunt read the front page. “How old is this kid?” she asked. “Uh, twenty-three months.”

And I thought all folk small enough to bend over and touch their feet without bending their knees, were alike.

Enough about the real-life past. The Dream Thief brings together the past and present of two friends in an unexpected, otherworld, believable way.

Step into the world of Nadine Brier. And discover forgetting, finding, and adventure.

 

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There is no real ending. It’s just the place where you stop the story. (Frank Herbert)

From my grandchildren’s point of view my published book is something like an honorary mention trophy. Nice on a shelf. When I gave my eight-year-old a copy of “The Curse Under the Freckles,” she wanted to know where the pictures were. The girls are more impressed by ice cream—chocolate chips blended in sweet raspberry flavoring. Or a day of pretend with Grandma. Touch a child’s life directly; that is what matters. The words will hit later.

My older son, Gregory Petersen, is also a writer. His book, Open Mike, was published through Martin Sisters several years ago. He is working through an agent with his next book. Greg is capable of writing thousands of words a day even though he has a full-time position that includes a leash phone; he takes his job as daddy seriously. I am more proud of him for his excellent relationship with his daughters than I am for his incredible ability with words. And his gift for expression is exquisite.

All life can be presented as a story. I often have difficulty turning that perception off because imagination doesn’t always fit the moment. For example: in the middle of the night. Oh sure, I’m told to write ideas down, whenever they come. But that doesn’t seem to be realistic when the notion isn’t a one-liner. The rolling avalanche of a plot and the inevitability of sleep deprivation are counter-productive in the long run.

Sometimes relaxation comes from reading—letting the thoughts of others feed me, especially when those thoughts lead to the profound. My sister Claire shared a book she had already read, Same Kind of Different as Me. It fits into the grab-the-soul category. Thanks, Sis.

Authors Ron Hall and Denver Moore tell a true story. Ron is an international art dealer. Denver is a modern-day slave, a sharecropper, who runs away into a life as a homeless person and decides it is better than being unofficially owned. The love of Ron’s wife, Deborah, leads toward an unlikely friendship.

Denver Moore says, “I found out everybody’s different—the same kind of different as me.” What and how he discovered that similarity, the human center-core spirit, is where the beauty of the story lives—sometimes clothed in miracles, or incredible pain, or deep sadness.

Stories never really end. The characters in my own tales develop a kind of reality. But in fiction, at least before publication, entire chapters can be erased and rewritten and then changed again. The past, present, and future are as pliable as soft clay.

In Hall and Moore’s story the facts of their lives remain solid because “The Same Kind of Different as Me” is non-fiction. At the end of the narration at almost seventy, Denver admits he has a lot to learn. The last page is not the last page.

In April Paramount plans to release a movie starring Greg Kinnear, Renee Zellweger, and Djimon Hounsou based on Ron and Denver’s New York Times best seller’s impossible journey. I did not know this until I checked the Internet for more information about the original publication.

Impossible, hidden, a forgotten acorn that becomes an oak…who knows? The story continues…Any story can continue…

same kind of different as me

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