Showing posts with label Margaret and Joe Maron. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Margaret and Joe Maron. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 23, 2021

A tribute to Margaret Maron


She will be missed by many.





for forty years
the sheets of white paper have
passed under my hands and I have tried
    to improve their peaceful

emptiness putting down
little curls little shafts
of letters words
    little flames leaping

not one page
was less to me than fascinating
discursive full of cadence
    its pale nerves hiding

in the curves of the Qs
behind the soldierly Hs
in the webbed feet of the Ws
    forty years

and again this morning as always
I am stopped as the world comes back
wet and beautiful I am thinking
    that language

is not even a river
is not a tree is not a green field
is not even a black ant traveling
    briskly modestly

from day to day from one
golden page to another.

-Forty Years by Mary Oliver, West Wind, (Houghton Mifflin Company, 1997)


2015 Guest of Honor/Lifetime Achievement Honoree - Bouchercon, Raleigh, NC


Margaret with husband Joe, son John, daughter-in-law Andrea,
granddaughters Julia and Natalie
Bouchercon 2015



My heart is broken.

I know many of you feel the same way.

Margaret Maron was loved, admired and respected in the mystery community, and she will never be forgotten.

She was always accessible, always ready to reach out to new writers and always happy to meet her readers.  And always humble.  And always, always gracious.

I'm so thankful to have several pieces she wrote for Meanderings and Muses to share with you.

As many of you will remember, I would send out an invite to writers in December of each year to get the next year's Meanderings and Muses schedule set, and she was always one of the first to respond.

She wrote about everything from her mother's cookbook to over-sexed pine trees.

Those pieces she shared with us between 2009 and 2015 are still getting hits.

You can read them here:

http://www.meanderingsandmuses.com/2009/08/serendipity-by-margaret-maron.html - - - "Which is how Kaye Barley came into my life and will be in my life forever."

http://www.meanderingsandmuses.com/2010/10/taste-of-home-by-margaret-maron.html

http://www.meanderingsandmuses.com/2012/04/those-over-sexed-pines-by-margaret.html

http://www.meanderingsandmuses.com/2013/01/new-year-new-beginnings-by-margaret.html

http://www.meanderingsandmuses.com/2014/08/margaret-maron-writes-of-cameos-and.html

http://www.meanderingsandmuses.com/2015/08/when-clock-strikes-midnight-by-margaret.html


Like many of you, when my heart is broken, I write.

I have so many wonderful memories of Margaret Maron.

I may write for days.





Don Barley and I loved sitting around this table with Margaret and Joe.  

Oh, if this table could talk.  

It has served as a place of welcome for many.  

Home cooked meals, drinks, conversation, laughter, and tears.


One day sitting around that table, Margaret allowed me to interview her.  I was tickled pink that she had agreed, but a little worried knowing Margaret to be one of the most private people in the world.  But, i had no reason to be concerned, she was gracious, clever and witty, as always.

You can read the interview here:  (It was first posted at Jungle Red Writers back when I was  posting as "Oh, Kaye!")   https://www.jungleredwriters.com/2015/09/oh-kaye-interview-with-margaret-maron.html


We cannot wrap our hearts around the fact that we won't be able to spend time hearing her side of the wonderful stories she and Joe would share with us ever again.

Whether it was a meal, a drink, or pouring over photo albums of some of the trips they had taken, there was always conversation, stories, and laughter.


Because home is important to me, I always love visiting friends' homes so I can be nosey and observe how their homes reflect their personalities.

I've been in a lot of homes over the years; big and grand, small and humble.   I can very honestly say I have never loved one as much as I love Joe and Margaret Maron's.

When I've said this to them, Joe has looked at me in puzzlement and reminded me "it's just a house we've added on to a few times; rather haphazardly."  

And in Margaret's words, it is "scruffy comfort." 

To me, it's perfect. 

From that table that has welcomed so many, to the bookshelves Margaret built, to the exquisite paintings on the wall done by Joe, to the room Margaret calls her office, but I call "the room where the magic happens."

Favorite memories include some nights after Joe and Donald have turned in, and are sound asleep while Margaret and I, in our jammies, are playing Scrabble around "the table," and then move into the room where the magic happens.  Me snuggled in a comfy chair at 2:00 a.m. with an afghan tossed over my feet by Margaret while we talk about everything.  Everything.  Cooking, writing, people we knew (those we loved/those we didn't), mystery cons we had just been to, places we loved, food we loved, books (those we loved/those we didn't), poetry, politics, and what trauma I must have suffered to hate Cribbage so much (Margaret loved it).

She and Joe would always take us around for a tour outside to see what was growing (and to say "Hey!" to the flamingos).


Another fun memory is the weekend we spent in Seagrove, NC where Margaret introduced me to many of the potters who were so helpful with research she did for her "Common Clay."  I came home with a few pieces of pottery that I cherish for their beauty and for the memories attached.

She surprised, and honored, me more than once by putting me in her books as a very minor character, but you should have seen the look on Donald's face when he found out he was mentioned in "Designated Daughters" (more than once) as "the handsome Donald Barley."


A true highlight was to be at The Weymouth Center for the Arts to see Margaret inducted into the North Carolina Literary Hall of Fame - along with Carl Sandburg and Clyde Edgerton.  

I wrote about it here (along with a LOT of photos!):   http://www.meanderingsandmuses.com/2016/10/north-carolina-literary-hall-of-fame.html






You'll find lots of little stories I've written about Margaret and Joe here at Meanderings and Muses.  Some of those include the book launches we attended.  One of which (again, with LOTS of photos) was her last book launch at Quail Ridge for "Take Out."   http://www.meanderingsandmuses.com/2017/07/sigrid-harald-news-and-margaret-maron.html














One of the things I most admired about Margaret was her willingness to stand by her beliefs.  She did so without proselytizing, but she stood proudly and firmly for the things she strongly believed in.  She loved her home state of North Carolina.  Enough that she felt she needed to speak up along with dozens of other well-known North Carolina writers when they gathered at the state Capitol to protest policies they said were hurting public education, access to health care and voting rights.  http://www.meanderingsandmuses.com/2016/03/some-north-carollina-writerssome-north.html




One of my favorite passages:

Sunday, July 17, 2016

The First Annual Girls' Week at the Beach

Surf City, Topsail Island, North Carolina
July 9 - July 16, 2016


Our First Annual Girls' Week at the Beach was perfect.

We're already talking about the second.




I started out in a vacation state of mind with my Mocha Frappe


cool tunes to sing along with

and,

my traveling buddy





Started the trip off just right with a visit with my friends Joe and Margaret Maron.  And as usual, they sent me off the next morning with a full tummy after serving up some French Toast and bacon.

I love visiting with the Marons.

Besides feeding me well, I know I can count of interesting conversations and delightful stories in one of the most comfortable homes I've ever had the pleasure of visiting.






I was the first to arrive at our house at the beach.  

The very first thing I did was step outside to take a deep breath, smell the salty air and listen to the welcome from the waves.





These two owls kept their wise and watchful eyes on us for a week, and were fine company.






Isn't our house adorable?  Its name is Whale Song.







Dindy and Vickie arrived a little later.

Dindy treated us to a delicious Low Country Boil for dinner.












And, for dessert . . . 
this beauty.

Maryglenn couldn't join us till Monday, but she sent this.


Best. Cake. EVER





We had dinner at Beauchaine's the next night.  
Heavenly












and we did a little exploring and picture taking









































Paid a visit to one of my favorite trees and Vickie got a super picture of me and "my tree."




And we went to Quarter Moon Books.

One of the best indie bookstores I've ever been to.


It will never stop being a total thrill to find my Whimsey on a bookshelf.







And we did some deck sitting


Dindy



Vickie



And lookie - our Maryglenn arrived 



Another delicious dinner at home.  We love this little screened-in porch.  Tonight we had ham (prepared by moi), corn on the cob, cabrese salad and peas, grown and prepared by our Vickie.  It was to die for.



And then, Maryglenn fixed us lemondrops.

oh.  my.

This was my first ever lemondrop.

I think I'm in love.





And then for breakfast the next morning she fixed us mimosas and bacon crackers.

I could learn to live like this every single day, I do believe!





And what could possibly be better than coffee on the deck looking out over the ocean?





































Not being a sun-worshiper any longer, I was either under this umbrella while on the deck, or in the screen porch





































Oh, look.

Another morning, another mimosa





And another visit to Beauchaine's






We had doves as part of our little party also.


 


Our final evening as a foursome, we went to Home Port, wearing our "First Annual Girls' Week at the Beach" scarves







And Vickie and I said our goodbyes to Dindy and Maryglenn the following morning







Then I did a little shell seeking in my jammies while it was early and cool







Vickie and I went out to do a little more shopping (we did some good shopping)  and to the park and to snap some pictures of the old swing bridge which will be replaced before next summer rolls round.



And the next morning, we said goodbye




With the most perfect sunrise imaginable.



And we'll be back next year