A Little Ditty…about Jack and Wendy

Writer Wendy’s weekly blog

My husband doesn’t like my gingerbread house. I’m not sure why.


He got really nervous a couple of years ago, too, when I wrote a novel about a couple that ran a bookstore, and the husband died. Of natural causes, I hasten to add.

Bad Boy in the Bookstore had a plot based on real life. Jack did federal prison visits for decades, and one of the guys was an absolute charmer of a sociopath, in for murder committed during an armed robbery.

Over the months he and Jack bonded, and the guy was a tunnel master who had escaped at least three times from federal hospitality—to the point that he was taken out to classes on training officers in escape prevention.

So when Jack was trying to put a staircase into a coal chute to give us internal access to a newly-discovered basement, he started talking to the guy about it. And came home with a napkin scribbled over with diagrams and angles and a list of supplies.

I was livid. There just weren’t that many bookstores in private houses within visiting distance of the federal penitentiary. The next time this guy escaped, why wouldn’t he come straight toward us?

Jack laughed. The guy usually headed for Mexico or Alaska, where his charm would get him taken up with the wealthy set. One of his arrests was on a yacht raided because the party got too raucous.

Well, the plot about wrote itself, how this charming gentleman shows up after the male half of the bookstore owning couple dies (OF NATURAL CAUSES, so calm down, Jack!)….

It was a fun book to write, but it was, in fact, fiction. But ever since I came home with this gingerbread house, Jack keeps looking at me funny. Sorta like the time we got trapped by storms, coming back from Dublin, Ireland for Christmas. We spent two days in Chicago, and one of the films Jack watched during that time was The Shining.

If you know your horror films, you know this was about a Jack and a Wendy trapped by a snowstorm. I went for a swim while Jack watched it, but when I got back he just kept staring at me. Staring, and smiling…..

If the gingerbread house starts to show signs of possession—the heads on the little gingerbread guys start spinning, say, or we find one of the cats suffocated by gumdrops—we will take appropriate action and dissolve the house in milk.

Until then, calm down, Jack. And here, have this gumdrop…or some Wendy-made Christmas tea…

Breaking News! Listen Soon (link included) to Hear Wendy

Wendy has branched out into yet another frontier, broadcast journalism

So after six months of intense education and training as one of their newest Folkways reporters, my first Inside Appalachia story went out Sunday morning. It will run for a week, and then on to the next round.

I have three more stories in the works (no spoilers) and will be looking for more interesting ways to bring folkways to the airwaves in the future. Hint, hint….

The first of anything is usually not one’s best, but the experience was made easier because the people taking me on the hunt were Shawn Means and Amy McLaughlin. Back in 2017 I saw a small advert appear briefly on an Appalachian scholars site, offering a creative residency at Lafayette Flats, a boutique vacation rental in Fayetteville, West Virginia. They gave you all-utilities and one of the flats free of charge; you would buy your own food, have a good time, make art.

The instant I saw it, I wanted to be that artist, but it was competitive, so there was no sense in getting my hopes up–until the day Shawn called to tell me the good news.

I wrote my first novel there (Bad Boy in the Bookstore, Sidekick Press) and have kept up with them casually since then. They were nature enthusiasts even then, so when the mushroom topic came up, I knew where to turn. And my friend Beth O’Connor introduced me to Den Hill. I’m planning to buy an inoculated log from them this winter.

So it went well, and there’s a real kick to hearing something you’ve worked hard on being enjoyed by people. It’s kinda like writing with sound, this radio work. And I look forward to doing more of it. Meanwhile, please enjoy the entire episode, including my mushroom story, via this link, and remember: there are old mushroom hunters, and there are bold mushroom hunters, but there are no old, bold mushroom hunters. Be well and safe!

https://wvpublic.org/mushroom-mania-soul-food-and-aunt-jeanie-inside-appalachia/: Breaking News! Listen Soon (link included) to Hear Wendy