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Beauty on the Backroads

Stories of grace for life's unexpected turns

Archives for January 2013

Saturday Smiles: Milestone year edition

January 12, 2013

Every year as the new year approaches, I take time to transfer birthdays from the previous year’s wall calendar to the next year’s calendar. As I’ve gotten older, I’ve paid more attention to people’s ages and anniversaries, especially as I’ve added friends and family as they’ve come into my life.

This year, as I wrote the names in the 2013 calendar, I noticed a trend: milestone birthdays. 5’s and 0’s are wild this year, and I’m not exactly sure why it stood out to me. Maybe because yours truly turns 35 or because family members who still get carded are turning 50 (you know who you are!) or my husband’s great-aunt will be 100 (woman of valor!).

One of the hardest things for me in the last four and a half years of living out of state from the rest of the family is the number of family birthdays and get-togethers and celebrations we’ve missed. If the birthdays or celebrations have fallen during one of our two to three visits per year, we do our best to make it.

So it was with great joy that we ended our most recent trip home with birthday celebration after birthday celebration after birthday celebration.

We cooked a meal for my mother-in-law on Thursday for her milestone birthday.

Today we celebrated our nephew’s first birthday …

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

… and ended the day with a birthday dinner at our favorite Mexican restaurant with my uncle, aunt and cousin for my uncle’s milestone birthday (which would be significant in its own right but is more meaningful because of what happened to him last year).

Our visit has been full of family, which is typical when we come home to visit, but for some reason this time, I’ve felt the love more OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAdeeply. Twice, we’ve been a party of 9 at a restaurant, and while I don’t tend to seek out large crowds, my heart has swelled with an emotion I can’t quite capture when so many people with a common bond of love have gathered around the same table.

Watching my husband be an uncle has been another love-inducing experience. It’s different, somehow, than watching him be a dad, and I love him more and differently than I did before this week.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAI wish I could record and replay all the moments these weeks have brought us. Because it will be months before we have more of them. While I love the memories we make as a party of four, our lives become richer when we open them to others who love us.

Maybe I wouldn’t appreciate the moments as much if we were here all the time. Maybe it doesn’t do any good to wish we were here for all the milestones or wonder what our lives would be like if we didn’t live so far from family.

Maybe it’s just better to be thankful for the times we have.

For family dinners.

For three Christmas get-togethers and a van full of presents that show love.

For shared memories and laughs about days that have passed.

For unplanned lunches out with family we bump into at the store.

For catching up with friends and finding out we’ve changed and grown in a lot of the same ways.

For a place to be who we are despite who we’ve been.

We’re leaving again in the morning, and my heart will tear, as it always does when we leave one place for the other.

It will mend and break many times more. To paraphrase C.S. Lewis, if I want to love, I must risk pain and heartache because my only other option is to love nothing and let my heart turn cold and dark.

I refuse the latter.

Shoot. This was supposed to be a post about what makes me smile. Instead, I’m close to tears.

Sometimes the two aren’t all that far apart, I guess.

Filed Under: holidays, Saturday smiles Tagged With: celebrations, christmas, family get-togethers, milestone birthdays

Fairy-tale makeover: Review of The Merchant's Daughter by Melanie Dickerson

January 9, 2013

TheMerchant'sDaughtercoverI’m just going to come right out and say it: I love Disney’s Beauty and the Beast, but Melanie Dickerson’s take on the fairy tale, The Merchant’s Daughter, is far better. (And isn’t that a great cover? Beautiful and full of detail.)

Do you hate me?

A couple of months ago, I learned of Dickerson and her novels through an online fiction scavenger hunt (which is SUPER fun even if you don’t win the whole thing) and thought the idea of retelling classic fairy tales was clever and creative. (Besides Beauty and the Beast, Dickerson’s books feature Sleeping Beauty and Snow White. Her next one, about Cinderella, releases later this year.)

I didn’t expect to like the book as much as I did, but I’d call it one of my best reads of 2012.

In The Merchant’s Daughter, set in medieval England, Annabel, the daughter of a deceased merchant is forced to work at the home of Lord Ranulf to pay her family’s debt. The new lord is disfigured and rumored to be beastly in temperament. Annabel considers working for Ranulf more favorable than following through with a marriage, arranged by her brother, to Bailiff Tom, an unkind, lecherous man who also works in the manor house. Time and again, Ranulf comes to Annabel’s aid when the bailiff tries to harm her.

The development of the relationship between Annabel and Ranulf is breathtaking and sweet. I literally couldn’t keep myself away from this story, and it stuck with  me for days afterward.

Even if you consider Beauty and the Beast an “old” story, I’d recommend this story. It’s a fresh take that stands on its own apart from any other version of the fairytale.

I’ll be seeking more of Dickerson’s work.

And maybe I’ll watch that Disney version again, too.

Filed Under: Fiction, The Weekly Read Tagged With: beauty and the beast, Christian fiction, fairy tales, historical fiction, medieval England, retelling fairy tales

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Hi. I’m Lisa, and I’m glad you’re here. If we were meeting in real life, I’d offer you something to eat or drink while we sat on the porch letting the conversation wander as it does. That’s a little bit what this space is like. We talk about books and family and travel and food and running, whatever I might encounter in world. I’m looking for the beauty in the midst of it all, even the tough stuff. (You’ll find a lot of that here, too.) Thanks for stopping by. Stay as long as you like.

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