Author Archives: Jennifer Reed/ bookjunkiez

About Jennifer Reed/ bookjunkiez

My Niece and Nephew joke that I could open a used book store with all the books that I own. I love to read, that is my addiction. I can't go a week without going to a book store. I love crocheting. I love to write stories and poetry. I also love my family, even though they make me crazy at times. I am a huge Donald Duck Fan.

Dear Mom Virtual Book Tour

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(A letter I will never send, to a mother who would never read it
anyway)

 

Non-fiction / Memoir

Date Published: 06-01-2023

 

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None of us were raised by perfect mothers, nor can we ourselves be perfect
parents. But some mothers sure do know how to ruin a life, well, almost. I
say almost because, although my mother’s parenting left severe damage in its
path and, regrettably, and inevitably, shaped some of the decisions I made,
I am grateful to have realized the issues I was facing. So, I now have the
opportunity to properly address those issues, to minimize their  impact
on my life.

This book holds the words I would express to my mother, if I thought she
cared to acknowledge my feelings at all.

Many others have been “raised” by narcissistic mothers and have
been deeply affected. But it is still possible to live happy lives, free of
Mom’s burden. Writing has helped me immensely in this regard.

Dear Mom tablet

EXCERPT

Depression can, without exaggeration, be described as an insidious enemy. I feel sorry for anyone who has to live with it, in constant combat. Over the years, I have dealt with a wide array of symptoms such as hopelessness, feeling lost, or being extremely sad and not knowing why. Many times, I would find myself crying hysterically for seemingly no reason and struggling with an ardent desire to die. I wish I could describe how odd that was, to feel something so real but at the same time not be able to identify its source. How peculiar that the human psyche can pick its own dangerous mood. 

The toughest moments over the years have often started with an inability to concentrate and a loss of interest in things I had previously found pleasurable. In those moments, I simply wanted to be left alone to die. It didn’t seem like an unreasonable request. As the days passed, my mind would become inundated with thoughts of death. At times I felt like I deserved to die, like that was what was supposed to happen.

Was I worth anything to anyone? That was the question I asked myself quite often. Eventually, I decided that the answer was no. I was worthless. Everyone in the world would be better off without me. My being alive was hindering others from reaching their full potential of happiness. However, I did imagine that if I ever ended my life, people would cry and feel pain temporarily. But they would quickly recover. 

That would be because, even for those who were kind and maybe loving to me, the kindnesses that they showed weren’t truly specifically for me, young Eva Branch. I always felt like people showed the obligatory amount of attention that good manners would prompt a respectable person to show. In essence, they did things for me out of a sense of formal duty and formed no emotional attachment to me. 

If indeed that was the case, it might have been for good reason. I likely didn’t seem like a person who wanted people to draw closer to me. Maybe that is because, for many years, I myself was unable to form real emotional attachments. How did I realistically expect others to respond? 

Perhaps I was giving off an air of aloofness. So, naturally people might have drawn the line at basic human compassion because they thought those were my boundaries. Despite their kindness, real or not, though, I didn’t think anyone besides Dad and my brother genuinely cared about me. And I still felt like I was a measure of a burden to them. 

Although I was a loner emotionally, I formed physical “attachments” easily. To be blunt, I had sex quite freely. As I mentioned earlier, I started having sex at the age of 14, shortly before I started getting periods. Incidentally, I don’t think you even knew when I got my first period. At the time, I didn’t see a reason to tell you. You weren’t going to help me understand it or cope with it. Or would you have tried? I’ll never know. But I digress.

Needless to say, I was utterly unprepared for puberty. And, in general, I didn’t know what to expect from or to be expected to contribute to sexual or romantic relationships. However, I think part of me thought these types of connections would perhaps cure my depression. What a foolish notion. 

Little did I know that I would actually be traveling further down the rabbit hole with each physical act of “intimacy” with others. As I was having sex with more partners who didn’t genuinely care about me, I was feeling worse and worse emotionally and mentally. My desire to die was growing. But I kept finding sex partners who would hopefully provide that coveted happiness.

I’ll start from the beginning. I remember the outfit I was wearing the day I “lost” my virginity, as the saying goes. I especially remember the surprised look on my boyfriend Harold’s face when I offered to have sex with him. I previously had shown or felt no interest in being sexually intimate with him. We kissed and held hands, but that was it. Oddly enough, unlike other boys his age, he behaved like a gentleman and accepted those minor displays of affection. In retrospect, that made me feel safe and in control of things.

That particular day though, I noticed the look on his face as his best friend Eugene was walking into his girlfriend’s house. We both knew what they were going to do. They were going to engage in some type of sexual activity, whether intercourse, oral, anal, or whatever teenagers did at the time. 

But both I and Harold knew it wasn’t happening between the two of us. I simply had no interest. And he had graciously accepted that his girlfriend would remain a virgin for at least the near future. So, the moment I saw that look on his face, a downcast look I had never seen before, I decided to surprise him. I grabbed him by the hand and asked him to walk with me to the house. From the way I marched determinedly down the street, with him in tow, he eventually realized my intentions. 

As we walked up the stairs to the bedroom, he asked me if I was sure this was what I really wanted. Well of course. I was absolutely sure (at 14 years old). I couldn’t have him feeling snubbed – his best friend was having sex but he wasn’t. That was preposterous. 

And there we have the start of me sharing my body because it was what my partner needed or desired from me. I felt like it would make me feel appreciated and wanted. But no such feeling ever came, not from sex anyway. I had sex with over 40 boys and men before I got married. And not one of those instances made me genuinely feel the least bit wanted, valued, or less depressed. 

In fact, it would be a few years before I started to enjoy sex and actually want it for myself. Until then, I took part, seemingly wholeheartedly, because that is what I thought was expected of me. That was what I believed would cause someone to really love me and stick with me.

Perhaps if I could have talked to you about how I was feeling, you could have helped me see my real worth. Maybe you could have even talked to my doctor about what I was experiencing mentally and emotionally. I definitely needed some type of treatment, whether therapy, medication, or both. But it would be many years, and 1 more suicide attempt, before I sought treatment.

I know teenagers are notorious for not listening to their parents’ advice. So, the thing is, I might very well still have chosen to sleep around, cut classes, use drugs, and do everything else I did as a young person. But, since we cannot go back, we will never know what my young life would have been had you noticed my feelings of depression and talked to me, listened to me, loved me.

 

About the Author

Eva Tillman

Eva Tillman published her first work in 2023. However, she has enjoyed
writing since she was a teenager.

She lived in several regions of the United States before she finally
settled in the West with its palm trees and almost constant sunshine. She
loves to read, eat, and help others feel good about themselves.

Many people, including Eva, have faced trauma of different types.
Unfortunately, the hands of time cannot be turned back. But it is possible
to live happy and successful lives, contentedly coping with the slowly
dissipating effects of the trauma.

In her most personal work, “Dear Mom”, Eva does her best to
express herself as she would if she were writing to Mother herself. Perhaps
one day Eva will deliver the book to its rightful recipient. For now, she
enjoys the liberation of having poured out her true feelings.

 

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Death’s Despair Virtual Book Tour

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Kassidy Simmons, Book 3

 

Urban Fantasy

Date Published: June 6, 2023

Publisher: Acorn Publishing

 

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Born to a family of witches, Traci Leeds has always been connected to
magic. A direct descendant of the goddess of witchcraft, she was destined to
succeed her mother as leader of her coven. Her powers were dormant until
trauma resulting from being kidnapped activated her abilities. Dissatisfied
with their development Traci tapped into magic forbidden by those in her
line.   Kassidy Simmons, the Death God, continues her quest to
return lost souls to their proper place in the afterlife. She and her
Reapers are charged with maintaining harmony between life and death, but a
recent decision to resurrect a soul has shifted that balance. A rising blood
moon and supernatural occurrences involving witchcraft send Kassidy on a
journey to the steps of the Underworld where she learns of the darkness
surrounding Traci’s decision to tap into forbidden magic..
With an ancient prophecy looming and nightmarish visions of the apocalypse
haunting her waking mind, Kassidy must rise up and withstand the fury of a
Titan to save all she holds dear.

 

Death's Despair tablet

EXCERPT

“Dude,” began the Suburbanite, “let’s get the fuck outta here. You know she’s gonna call the cops.”

Kassidy sensed a great deal of fear in him. Even without the benefit of her supernatural empathic abilities, that was clear. So, at least he was smart. Switchblade was different. There was fear there, but there was also, stupidity, determination, and . . . arousal. Not so much inspired by her, but by the violence. He wanted to be a badass. He got off on it. It was likely that this entire night was more about showing off in front of the Suburbanite than asserting himself against a woman alone in the park.

It was unfortunate that they chose this night.

More unfortunate that they chose her.

“Bro, shut the fuck up and let me handle this,” said Switchblade.

“You really should listen to your boyfriend,” said Kassidy.

“What? He’s not my boyfriend, bitch.”

“Oh, I’m sorry. Right, that was insensitive. I meant to say partner. You should really listen to your partner. I’m old school. I just use girlfriend or boyfriend. I’m getting better though.”

“Bitch!”

“There’s that word again,” said Kassidy.

Switchblade lunged at Kassidy. In the corner of her eye, she saw the Suburbanite back away. She was growing impatient and felt a sense of urgency to get her true mission accomplished. Normally, she wouldn’t use her powers in front of mortals. Well, that wasn’t always true. She’d certainly had some fun at the expense of others in her teens when she was just a Reaper. Back then, she didn’t care if anyone said anything. She’d already been dubbed Krazy Kassie by her classmates, so in her mind, it didn’t hurt to fuck with them. She had power. True power. And the power she had back then paled in comparison to the power she had now. Using it against these two idiots wouldn’t bring as much joy as it had in her teens, but as was the case back then, she knew these two wouldn’t be telling anyone.

And if they did, who’d believe them.

As Switchblade came at her, Kassidy shimmered out of view, reappearing behind the Suburbanite. She grabbed a handful of his hair with her left hand and grabbed at his throat with her right. When the bewildered Switchblade spun, trying to figure out what had happened, she willed her right hand to transform into an onyx sickle, the tool of a Reaper. As she touched the tip into Suburbanite’s neck, she felt, more than sensed, his fear. His heartbeat was a jackhammer competing with the sound of the wind sweeping through the park.

“What the fuck are you, lady?” asked Switchblade, his eyes wide.

“I’m the one politely asking you both, one last time, to get the fuck out of here before I get really pissed,” replied Kassidy.

Kassidy closed her eyes, knowing that her next bit of magic would likely close the deal. In the Reaper ranks, when a psychopomp—a being that ushered souls to the afterlife—used their power, their eyes would shine silver. Kassidy’s had been silver for decades when she powered up. A couple of times in life, they’d shown black, the mark of the Wraith. Similar to Reapers, Wraiths had been created to be the secret police of Azra-El, the former Primus or Angel of Death, right hand to the original Death God, and Kassidy’s father, Thanatos. After Kassidy dispatched Azra-El she became the new Death God, in the absence of her father. Now, when she powered up, her eyes shown a metallic, unearthly blue, the mark of a god.

That’s what Switchblade saw when Kassidy opened her eyes.

“Run!” she screamed.

And he did.

 

About the Author

Dennis K. Crosby

Dennis K. Crosby is the award-winning author of the Amazon bestselling
urban fantasies, Death’s Legacy and Death’s Debt. With a degree
in criminal justice, he spent six years working as a private investigator.
His love of learning about people led him to pursue a master’s degree
in forensic psychology. A staunch advocate of mental health reform, he has
worked in social service for over a decade, promoting social justice and
efforts to combat homelessness.Dennis completed an MFA program at National
University, and since the release of his first novel, he has served as a
speaker at the Southern California Writers’ Conference and as a
panelist at Comic-Con and the Fox Cities Book Festival. He’s been a
guest on a number of podcasts and has published seven short stories in
various anthologies. Death’s Despair is book three in the Kassidy
Simmons series. A self-proclaimed geek, the bourbon-loving Chicago Cubs fan
and deep-dish pizza connoisseur lives and writes in San Diego, CA.

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Scarred Dreams Virtual Book Tour

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Historic Romance

Date Published: 12-12-2022

Publisher: The Wild Rose Press

 

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In 1944, a German artillery shell destroyed Milt Greenlee’s future in
professional baseball. His hideously scarred face and useless arm require
him to relearn and recondition. But no amount of rehab will restore his
looks or his self-confidence. There’s no chance a
“cripple” like him could catch the eye of the stunning Nurse
McEwen
 

Army Nurse, Annie McEwen dreams her voice will take her far away from her
hateful, overbearing father. She hopes Milt, a patient who fought in Sicily,
might be the one who can help her find closure with the death of her cousin.

As their attraction grows, how can their relationship survive Annie’s fears
and Milt’s secret?

 

Scarred Dreams tablet

 EXCERPT

Milt stirred from half-sleep when he heard a commotion near the door. A starched-white nurse murmured instructions to an orderly who juggled a metal tray loaded with supplies. A second orderly, also holding a tray, managed the door. Once inside, both men obediently followed the nurse to the first bed in the ward, just to Milt’s right.

When the nurse flashed the patient a smile, Milt’s breath caught. With those red lips curving up, her cheek dimpled and, even across the few feet between them, he saw the twinkle in her eye.

When she turned to take something from one of the trays, he studied her face: pale skin, perfectly shaped, delicate nose, and auburn hair pulled back and tucked underneath her white nurse’s cap.

The singer! Could it be her? In his ward?

She hadn’t been here yesterday. She must have been off duty for the show.

She plunged a needle into the soldier’s exposed buttock. Her face winced as if she was on the receiving end of the stabbing pain. When she withdrew the needle, she vigorously rubbed the site of the injection and gave the patient an apologetic smile. He grinned back at her like a guilty schoolboy who’d taken his just punishment.

“We missed you, Nurse McEwen,” the patient said.

“Thank you,” she replied.

Returning the hypodermic to one of the trays, the beauty dressed in white moved away from the first bed and approached Milt.

“Good morning, soldier.” She met his gaze and for an instant he saw recognition before she shut it down as if she’d never seen him before. “Time for your penicillin shot,” she said. Her melodious speaking voice almost matched her singing voice.

“Sure,” Milt replied, making an effort to smile despite his pounding head. If she didn’t want to acknowledge their brief encounter the previous day, why should he care? It didn’t mean he couldn’t enjoy having a beautiful singer as his nurse.

“Which side?” she asked.

“Huh?” Had that sound come from him?

“Which side do you want the shot in? Right or left?”

He watched her lips form the words. Soft, expressive lips. He blinked, knowing he had to reply. “Uh, left is okay.” The cast on his left arm stuck out so much it made it near impossible to roll onto his left side to expose his right cheek. Which made the left as his only choice. In the last few weeks, he’d gotten so many shots in his left butt cheek it probably looked like a purple pin cushion.

“All right. Just roll over and push down your pajama bottoms.” She turned to retrieve a hypo from one of the trays.

Embarrassment bloomed at the thought of this beautiful woman perusing his exposed bottom. Shots in the butt were routine, he told himself. But they weren’t usually administered by a lovely red head who sang like an angel. And who had a shapely figure hidden underneath that white uniform. He had to distract her and himself.

“Are those your backup singers?” he asked, finally grasping a coherent thought.

“What?” She turned back to face him. “What did you say?”

Determined to make an impression on her, he turned on the charm. “Your backup singers. Aren’t you gonna sing for us?”

Her eyes crinkled up into a shy smile and pink spread across her face. “Not today, I’m afraid.”

“That’s a shame. I really enjoyed your singing.”

She inserted the hypodermic needle into a vial of medicine. “Thanks.” Her reply sounded a little distant as she concentrated on getting the exact amount of medicine into the syringe.

Milton lay there watching the vision in white and remembering the sexy blue dress she had worn on stage.

Her gaze returned to his but this time a frown marred her features. “I said to roll over, soldier.”

“Oh, yeah.” Milton pulled the cover aside with his right hand and rolled his body while keeping his gaze fixed on her face.

“And push down your pajamas,” she instructed.

Milton glanced at his casted arm jutting out toward the ceiling and bent at the elbow. His fingers protruded from beneath the hard stuff but remained useless.

Her face flushed crimson as she realized the futility of her request.

“I’m so sorry. Here, let me help you.” Her gentle voice conveyed understanding.

He felt the heat rising and looked away before she saw the tell-tale color.

Her cool fingers brushed his skin as she pulled the waistband of his pajamas down to expose his rear end for all to see, including her.

He closed his eye tight and waited for the pierce of the needle. Instead, he felt her gentle touch.

“Just relax.” She spoke so softly it felt like her words were just for him. Then he heard her humming the same tune she had sung on stage. His mind drifted back to that vision of loveliness, only this time she sang just for him. He barely felt the needle prick.

“There. All done.” She gave the site a gentle massage then pulled his pajamas back into place.

When he rolled back over to face her, a smile lit up her face, not to make fun of him, but to convey her understanding of his awkwardness.

He managed a nod when she patted his leg. Then she and her accomplices moved on to the next bed.

“Come back any time.” Milt flashed his most winning smile. She rewarded his effort with a deeper blush. Their gazes locked for a fraction of a second. He wished he could extend that connection indefinitely. Already her attention had shifted to her next patient.

 

About the Author

Barbara Whitaker

Barbara Whitaker was born in the wrong decade. She loves everything about
the 1940’s and WWII, so she decided to write about it. Her historical
romances embody that fascinating era in history. Visit Barbara’s website
www.barbarawhitaker.com

 

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The Scars Have Returned Virtual Book Tour

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Historical Romance

Date Published: November 28, 2022

Publisher: Mindstir Media

 

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Lord Stephen Cornwall is the most sot after Duke in England. His family
heritage is also the most gossiped about with his mother being a Gypsy. On
his morning escape from the world, Lord Cornwall finds a little morsel
dismounting in a most unladylike manner. This, for sure, is when he lost his
heart and now he must prove his love and save Lady Hastings from the man
that is after her family’s riches.

Lady Lisa Hastings has become a spoiled little brat that has only been in
the world of society’s rules for a couple of years. It is her year of coming
out into the adult world of society and she is determined to prove to her
father that she can do this. Then she meets the beast in the park that
steals her heart.

 

 The Scars Have Returned tablet

EXCERPT

    CHAPTER 1

             Standing there with her hands on her hips in that sassy little pose that she has developed so well in the last couple years, Lisa stares at Flora as if she is the one that is doing something wrong. “I cannot believe the thought of telling on me now should even be entering your mind.”

                        “Yes, my Lady I am, you cannot be out running around on that creature of yours without a guard when we are in the middle of London.” Flora announces trying to act just as defiant as her Lady. 

                        “I am only going for a ride in the park,” Lisa moans as she throws her riding habit onto the bed. “Besides it is way too early in the day for anyone else to be out and about. So I am sure a guard is not needed. Now if you would please help me into this before others do start rising.”

                        “If I get in trouble for helping you do this again I will, I will sit and write every indiscretion I have ever kept a secret for you and give the list directly to your father.” Flora declares as she comes to Lisa and reluctantly begins helping her dress.     

                        Knowing that Flora is doing nothing but threatening her because she does not know how to write Lisa quietly exclaims, “It’s a deal now if you could please speed this up before I run out of time.”

                        As soon as Lisa was completely outfitted, including one of her favorite hats of course, she was out the bedchamber door as if her sanity depended on this simple ride in the park. She took the stair steps two at a time and was out the back door of her father’s townhouse in but a moment. Looking around like a thief in the night Lisa made sure no one was around to catch her on her little escapade. Finding no one to stop her Lisa made her way to her beloved Luscious’ stable.  

                        Luscious started to prance around as soon as he smelled who was in the stables. “Please stop, my love, you must keep still till we are out on our own.” Lisa whispered as she slid her tiny little hand down the side of his neck.  At the same time, she went up on her tippy toes so she could reach the harness on the hook next to the stall door. It took a bit of effort before it finally came down but as soon as it did Luscious had his head down ready for her to put it on. Then she grabbed the saddle she kept hidden in the back of the stall. This saddle was lighter than the others so she could put it on her horse with ease.

                        Lisa had been taught how to prepare her horse on her own by the stable hands at the castle not long after her father had given it to her. This was her escape from what she called her boring life at her father’s townhouse. It was not long before she had her horse ready and was starting for the stable door.

                        “My Lady, if you do not mind my asking, what you are doing?” Aaron, the stable boy, asks as he comes up behind Lisa wiping the sleep out of his eyes. “You should not be out here doing this on your own at this time in the morning.” Lisa about jumped out of her skin as soon as Aaron’s voice made it to her ears which made Luscious start to squirm and prance.

                        “I did not think you would be up Aaron,” Lisa declares as she proceeds in calming Luscious down, “and would appreciate it if you would not sneak up on me as if I am doing something wrong.”

                        “My Apology’s my Lady but I did not sneak up on you,” Aaron answers, “and I do believe that you are doing something wrong.”

                        “Well, I am not, so if you do not mind, I would like to be off.” Lisa says as she tries to lead her horse out of the stall.

                        “And just where do you think you are going, my Lady, if you do not mind me asking?” Aaron asks putting himself in her way.

                        “For a ride in the park,” Lisa says trying her hardest to wiggle her and her horse around him.

                        “I am sorry my Lady but this I cannot let you do alone.” 

                        “I know, I know we are in London, and it is not safe. I have heard this a hundred times already and would prefer not to hear it again.” Lisa utters again trying to get around him.

                        “Your father finds out that I have let you out like this and I will be flogged for sure.” Aaron states.

                        “Not if he does not know, now be on your way like I was never here.” Lisa says again trying to wiggle her way around him.

                        “I have been with your father many years my Lady and am not going to lose my place here now for lying.” Aaron declares enthusiastically. “If you could wait but a moment, I could have a horse ready and come with you myself.”

                        Lisa turns to Luscious for a moment before turning her face back to Aaron with that, oh so innocent, look on it she says, “That would be fine, now if you could please help me on mine and I will wait for you beside the gate.

                        Thinking that he has won this battle Aaron helped Lisa into her saddle and was quickly off to retrieve his own horse. Aaron was but two steps away from her when Lisa throws her leg over her saddle and took off like a man on the run. “My Lady please stop you must wait for me.” Aaron yelled but got no reply. Seeing that she was in no way going to listen to him, Aaron took off like a bat out of hell to get a horse and catch up to her as quickly as possible, thinking to himself, ‘That girl is going to get me flogged this time for sure.’

                        Lisa let Luscious run like the wind through the empty streets loving the cold air on her face as she whipped around the street corners without anyone in the way. She has been to the park quit a few times in carriages with different family members, so she had no problem finding her way. As soon as she entered the park she felt as if she was free of all the binds that her new life kept around her suffocating her more and more every day. After letting her steed have a good run Lisa took him to the pond in the back area of the park.

                        Seeing no one else around Lisa decides to dismount off her horse and let him drink for a bit. She finds a boulder big enough for her to use to dismount. Dismounting from her horse onto the rock and then to the ground in the same improper way she would at one of her father’s castles. Lisa gets caught off guard and almost falls to the ground when she hears a voice sounding as stern as a general bellowing an order, to his own horse behind her.

                        Grabbing ahold of the rock to steady herself she turns to find out just who has the nerve to interrupt her morning absolution. Lisa gets the sun in her eyes and the silhouette of what looks like a statue of a creek God sitting on a massive beast.

                        “So, if you don’t mind me asking young Lady, is this how the ladies of society dismount these days?” Stephen asks staring down at the most beautiful thing he has ever seen.

                        “It is none of your business how I dismount my horse. Is so rudely sneaking up on women how you always approach them?” Lisa asks sharply as she puts her hand up over her eyes trying to see the arrogant man that has invaded her morning ride could be.

                        “Oh no my dear it is so much more enjoyable to watch the wanting develop on a woman’s face when they know I am coming in their direction.” Stephen says as he dismounts from his beast of a horse and starts to come around and stand directly in front of her but before his body could block the sun for her to see him Aaron came up behind them making Lisa turnaround to see who else was going to destroy her outing.

About the Author

Kim Anderson,

Kim is a mother of three, with two beautiful granddaughters. She has had a
couple of different careers in her life, like fixing jets, driving trucks,
and being a cosmetologist. She has gone through many ups and many downs. The
one thing that she enjoyed doing most in life is writing. It seems to be the
one thing that she enjoys no matter what.

 

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Our Song Virtual Book Tour

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Memoir

Date Published: 10-11-2022

Publisher: She Writes Press

 

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In 1972 rural Pennsylvania, the author, a white college student, fell head
over heels in love with an African-American friend of a friend. With their
schools hours apart, they forged an intimate connection such as neither had
ever had through letters. But racist parents, a jealous friend, and their
own mistakes caused them to lose each other. Forty years later, they might
have another chance.

 

Our Song paperback

EXCERPT

On a cold January morning, I woke in his bed and knew that I could, I would, I had to make him love me.

 

My high school friend Hannah had introduced us the previous September. She’d invited me to a dance at their small private school, Moravian College, in our hometown of Bethlehem, PA. I had noticed that more than one friend wanted to introduce me to a “cool” black guy they knew. Probably because I was involved with Will, a black guy from Philly who was spending the year studying abroad. I wondered if Hannah was attracted to JT herself but was afraid to date someone black; most of the boys in our local pool were descended from white immigrants, especially German, “Pennsylvania Dutch.” Along with my friend Sharon, I was the one in our group who had started clubbing outside Philly, where we met guys from different backgrounds.

 

Yet I was curious about this Johnny Thomas, the Big Man on Campus. Outside the local area, few had heard of Moravian, but his skills on the basketball court were putting the school on a wider map. It wasn’t so much JT’s modest fame that intrigued me. It was the way Hannah spoke about him, like he was a religion that you’d want to convert to. Smart, funny, charming, handsome, and oh yeah, genuinely nice. He was the whole package, and maybe one that none of us, no matter whom we had dated, had yet to open.

 

My state college, Slippery Rock in western PA, was hours away, but I was home for the weekend. That Saturday night I got myself together to go to the Moravian dance. I washed and brushed my long dark hair, pulled on my one pair of bell-bottoms that weren’t patched and faded, and slipped into some faux Frye boots (I couldn’t afford the real ones). I was ready, but for what exactly? At the dance Hannah produced him rather ceremoniously: “Lynda, this is JT.” As if I had been waiting for him all my life. She was grinning and dimpling, clearly pleased, like she could take a giant bite out of him herself. She was right about him. Tall and rangy, big Afro, high cheekbones, expressive eyes. Dressed like a jock in a windbreaker, shirt, and pants. We made small talk, and he leaned over so I wouldn’t have to strain my neck looking up. I asked him if he wanted to dance, but he ruefully shook his head, “I might be the only black guy who doesn’t dance.”

 

Even if JT didn’t dance, his eyes did. They twinkled in a way that told me he knew exactly what was going on. I wasn’t sure what Hannah had told him about me. I wanted to be up front, so I managed to slip my upcoming holiday visit to my boyfriend in England into the conversation. We chatted a bit more, the dance ended, and we all said goodnight. The next day, on the bus back to my school, I wondered how Will, my boyfriend across the sea, was spending his Sunday at Durham University. Studying, probably, since he didn’t have the money to do much else. The realities of his life seemed very far away, so my thoughts soon turned back to JT. For some reason, a song from one of my roommate’s albums was stuck in my mind. Blood, Sweat & Tears, a song called “40,000 Headmen.” The song’s words didn’t speak to me, but the instrumental bridge was both haunting and hopeful. It stirred me, and without words I began to lay down my own story, like wondering whether I would ever see JT again. I found myself picturing JT’s dancing eyes, hearing that refrain repeat in my mind as the highway blew by.

 

I got busy with classes. Partied as usual, celebrated my twentieth birthday. Made plans to visit Will in England at Christmas. A big deal because I’d never traveled farther than family car trips to visit relatives or drives with friends to the Jersey shore. I worked in the cafeteria to save money and borrowed the rest from Colleen, my best friend from high school. Then came the holiday break, and it was time to travel across the ocean to be with Will. The size and bustle of the Philly airport was overwhelming. The speed and noise of the flight’s takeoff was terrifying to me. Every time there was turbulence, my heart leapt and my palms started to sweat, as I knew there was nothing but the deep black sea beneath. After six hours of that, I was able to catch my breath once the plane landed. Then there was a new challenge, would Will be at the airport waiting for me? His university was a five-hour train trip away, and mail was sometimes slow. I wasn’t even sure whether he had received my travel plans. But there he was, sporting a happy grin.

 

We spent two weeks together that included my first exposure to a whole new world, the culture of Great Britain. To me, it seemed like I’d stepped into the Shakespeare I’d read in school. In local pubs, the young Brits were drawn to Will’s ’fro and army jacket. They were curious about America and liked to brag that their society didn’t have the racial prejudice problems we had. But when we hitch-hiked to visit Will’s friends in Birmingham 150 miles away, we spent much of the next eight hours standing in the rain with our thumbs out. Hitching was common to our youth culture, even worldwide, but it was still rare to see a black man and a white woman hitching a ride together. When it was time for Will and me to say good-bye, he looked devastated. I stood there feeling only slightly melancholy even though it would be another six months before we’d see each other again. My lack of sadness confused me, and during the flight back, I wondered for the first time whether I really loved Will. When I arrived home, my parents asked no questions about my trip. They didn’t approve of my black boyfriend.

 

I finished the semester and then went home again for winter break. During the day I hung out with my little sister Barbie, now seven and always ecstatic to have me there. I liked to buy things for her that matched the way I dressed, like a big, floppy suede hat—“hippie chick” clothes she called them. At night I got together with my local hometown girlfriends, usually Sharon or Hannah. Then on the weekend, my best friend, Colleen, was home from the University of Pittsburgh. On our last Saturday night before Colleen and I would head back to school, she and Hannah and I were going to hang out.

 

Hannah called and told me that she’d heard JT was arriving back at Moravian that day. The winter athletes came back early to start practice for the upcoming games, so she’d hatched a plan: “How about if we three girls go visit his dorm with some wine and a trivia game?” I’d met Hannah through Colleen during our senior year of high school. Both Colleen and I had left town to go to school, but Hannah had stayed in the area. She and I started hanging out more when I came home for holidays and summers. Still, Colleen was the one I considered my best friend. Back when I’d started tenth grade, lonely because my junior high best friend had moved away, Colleen had reached out to me. From that point on we talked on the phone every day and did everything together.

 

Hannah’s plan sounded fun, but I did wonder about the dynamics. Hannah was pushing me toward JT, but her crush seemed obvious. Did he feel that way about her? Why wouldn’t he—Hannah was petite with an hourglass figure, thick black hair, and an impish grin. And Colleen was cute with her red-gold hair, big blue eyes, and flirty demeanor. Why wasn’t Hannah pushing JT toward her? Maybe because, although U Pitt had plenty of men (that’s where I’d met Will), I’d never heard that any of Colleen’s dates was black.

 

And what about me? Was I just curious about JT, or would I actually cheat on Will? And because of something so shallow as JT’s minor stardom or extraordinary good looks? Or was there a deeper magnet pulling me to him? I found myself humming the melody of that BS&T instrumental, imagining those dancing eyes. Lastly, what did Johnny Thomas want? Hannah said that he wasn’t known to be dating anyone, but I was sure he had plenty of opportunities. I wondered what he’d thought of me at our first meeting. And was this just a cheerful last hurrah of a group of college kids before having to get serious about our studies again? Or was something more about to happen?

 

At around seven o’clock we knocked, and JT’s eyes widened when he opened the door. I realized that if athletics were his priority, he might actually send us away. But no, he invited us in. Was he flattered that three young women had so obviously schemed to waylay him for the night? Or was he just used to this kind of attention? If he was, he didn’t show it. He seemed humble, a happy smile playing about his mouth.

 

He put on a Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young album, Hannah and I poured the wine into plastic cups, and Colleen pulled out a joint. Amidst the talking, laughing, and self-conscious jockeying for our social positions, I saw JT’s eyes keep dancing back to me. Soon it became clear: JT was mine, at least as far as that night was concerned. Nervous, I used my fallback strategy: project an air of quiet mystery, a good hiding place for my shyness. I could still flirt with my eyes and smile.

 

We played the trivia game. Whereas I was drawing questions with answers like “Mesopotamia” (answers I didn’t usually know), JT kept getting the vocabulary questions that I would have done well on. But JT was also good with language. “What’s a four-syllable word beginning with T?” “Tantalizing,” said JT, smiling at me. I leaned forward just enough to tantalize with a bit of cleavage. A little while later he drew the card again: “What’s a four-syllable word beginning with T?” It seemed even funnier stoned, and we girls all just fell out laughing. JT didn’t miss a beat. “Titillating,” he said, his eyes locked on mine. I titillated back with my mysterious smile.

 

Hannah sent me an approving look and private wink. Colleen watched him, her eyes bright with admiration. But seeing his attention like a beacon on me, she stood back.

 

I’d just about given up any hope of shining in this game, when suddenly a gift appeared in the form of sexual perversion. “Name a famous doctor starting with K.” Confident because I’d learned it in a psych class, I gave my answer, “Krafft-Ebing.” The others just stared. I explained that he was a psychiatrist who’d written the first reference book about sexual psychopaths, but they had never heard of him. “You made that up,” said Colleen, poking my shoulder. Hannah and JT agreed, and they all denied me the points. I grumbled but conceded, hoping that JT might at least suspect I had a vast array of intriguing sexual knowledge, which I most certainly did not.

 

At one point when we sat quietly after the game, JT put on a Blood, Sweat & Tears album. I was taken aback when “40,000 Headmen” began to play. As the instrumental bridge swelled to a beautiful crescendo, JT’s eyes again met mine. I knew he couldn’t know that the song had previously made me think of him, but I saw that he was just as moved as I was by the ways that music could touch us.

 

It was getting late. As we girls were leaving, JT gently pulled me back inside. “You don’t go back to school till Monday, right?” he asked. “Yeah, right.” He casually took my hand and looked down at his fingers playing with mine. “I have practice during the day tomorrow. Do you wanna come up later and hang out?” My heart clashed like the school marching band, but outwardly I played it cool. “Yeah, sure, why not? I’ll see you then.”

 

I caught up with the girls, who managed to hold it in until we were out of earshot. “What did he say?” “What does he want?” They both spoke at once, and I laughed. “Oh, just to see me tomorrow,” I said innocently, pretending it wasn’t the most important event of the night, the most thrilling thing that had happened to me in ages. But I couldn’t pretend for long; he probably heard our screams echoing down the hall.

About the Author

Lynda Smith Hoggan

Lynda Smith Hoggan is Professor Emeritus of health and human sexuality at
Mt. San Antonio College in Southern California. Her work has appeared in the
New York Times, Los Angeles Times,  Westwind UCLA Journal of the Arts,
Cultural Daily, and more. This is her first book.

 

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