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Carolyn Mulford

Carolyn Mulford

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      • Show Me the Murder Chapter One
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    • Show Me the Deadly Deer
      • Show Me the Deadly Deer: Chapter One
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    • Show Me the Gold
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    • Show Me the Ashes
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    • Show Me the Sinister Snowman
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    • Chapter One: Thunder Beneath My Feet
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    • Blog: Historicals
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The Fun Starts Before the Writing Begins

Carolyn Mulford Posted on September 21, 2014 by CarolynSeptember 21, 2014

This is part of the September 2014 Sisters in Crime (SinC) Blog Hop. Authors answer one of several questions. I chose to write about what part of the writing process I enjoy most.

The writing process breaks into three parts: coming up with the idea, writing the first draft, and revising until ready for readers.

Each part of the process delights and frustrates me because each one stimulates a different part of my intellect and emotions. For plain old fun and excitement, though, nothing beats that first step of choosing a story’s building blocks—usually who, what, and where.

Any of the three may spark an idea, but most sparks soon go out. Writing an 85,000-word mystery takes real commitment. My enduring ideas integrate characters, plot, and setting into a story I can’t resist telling either because I can’t imagine how it will end or, more often with mysteries, because I can imagine the ending but not how the characters will get there. Whichever it is, if I don’t think the journey will entertain and satisfy me, I won’t put words on paper.

Here’s how the three building blocks came together for my Show Me series. The idea for the protagonist sprang from a news story about an outed CIA covert operative, drew on my personal experiences in living abroad, and crystallized as I planned to move back to my home state, Missouri, after being away for decades. I had my major ongoing characters and the setting in a struggling rural county.

What took more time was working out a plot that fit the major characters and the setting. I don’t know either the people or where they live thoroughly until I’ve written many pages, of course, and they change somewhat from book to book, but I had to acquaint myself with their goals, flaws, and major personality traits before I wrote the first words of Show Me the Murder.

Some writers know their characters instantly because they and their friends are the characters. I don’t find myself interesting enough to appear in my fiction. While some of my friends and family members would qualify, I wouldn’t expose what makes them so interesting to the world. I create my characters from scratch, blending pieces of hundreds of people I’ve known to create complicated beings who intrigue and amuse me. I revel in exploring the motivations, reactions, and attitudes  of those who come to life on the page.

I approach setting in much the same way. I don’t stage a crime in a real place, but I try hard to reflect the region’s cultural and economic environment, including speech patterns and attitudes.

Ideas for plots often come from conversations with people around me and the local news. That includes not just crimes (e.g., meth cooking and importation in Show Me the Murder and rustling in Show Me the Deadly Deer) but economic and social problems (e.g., elder abuse in Show Me the Gold and racism in Show Me the Ashes, the upcoming books in the series).

Another factor to consider is whether the characters and setting will foster plots that will interest me, and readers, over several books. A part of the challenge is to find an idea you can expand on with pleasure and for profit for years.

—Carolyn Mulford

For other SinC Blog Hops, go to Judy Hogan’s  http://postmenopausalzest.blogspot.com (posted September 21, 2014), and Maya Corrigan’s “Writing While I Sleep” at  http://mayacorrigan.com/smorgasblog (postied September 21, 2014).

Posted in Basic Tools, Mysteries, Mysterious Ways, News, Show Me Series, Writing

Harlequin Will Publish My First Mystery in Paperback

Carolyn Mulford Posted on September 20, 2014 by CarolynSeptember 20, 2014

Harlequin Worldwide Mystery has acquired the right to publish the mass market paperback edition of Show Me the Murder.

The first book in my mysteries series, Murder came out in hardback in February 2013 and as an e-book in August 2013. Harlequin hasn’t set a release date, but the paperback probably will come out in mid or late 2015. The words will be the same, but the cover will be new.

Harlequin Worldwide Mystery issues a number of paperback reprints each month, and many of those books are sold to subscribers to its club (http://www.book-club-offers.com/worldwide-mystery/).

Why didn’t the original publisher put out the paperback edition? Five Star/Gale, Cengage doesn’t buy those rights. My contract called for the rights to the hardcover, trade paperback (larger than mass market paperback), large print, and e-book editions. I retained (but could not sell for one year after publication of the hardcover edition) the film, foreign print, audio, and mass market rights.

I’m open to an offer for film rights.

—Carolyn Mulford

Posted in Media Materials, Mysteries, News, News releases, Show Me Series

Jumpstarting the Stalled Plot

Carolyn Mulford Posted on September 2, 2014 by CarolynSeptember 2, 2014

Like most authors, I spend a lot of time and energy on the opening chapters. That’s where we hook the reader with a mix of plot, character, setting, and tone. The opening presents the greatest writing challenge. It’s also offers the most fun.

A lot of books founder after that sterling opening. For me, the trickiest part of a manuscript often comes when my protagonist, former CIA covert operative Phoenix Smith, starts gathering information and identifying suspects. She’s learning about the case, and research can slow the pace. If pages contain lots of dialogue and little action, the mystery reader slips off the hook.

Having struggled with this slowdown, I celebrated when Killer Nashville organizers assigned me to a panel on jumpstarting a stalled plot. The topic forced me to analyze how I deal with this common problem.

When I begin a book, I know—vaguely—how it’s going to begin and end. I anticipate a few specific events or encounters as milestones along the way. My dead zone falls in the early middle pages—say somewhere between 75 and 150—where Phoenix is running around tricking people into giving her information and figuring out what leads to follow. She hasn’t yet become an obvious threat to the villain, so the plot lacks the inevitable fast action of the last 50 to 75 pages. (Most of my manuscripts run 305 to 335 pages.)

Usually the storyteller’s sense of timing warns me to make something happen. A key sign that I need to pick up the pace is when a chapter ends without anything pushing the reader to say, “Well, just one more chapter.”

Years ago Janet Evanovich, author of the numbered Stephanie Plum series, told writers that when she didn’t know what would happen next, she blew up Stephanie’s car. That sudden, unexpected action became a running gag in her books.

The principle of surprising the reader holds true, but most of us can’t get by with blowing up more than one car. What I usually do is draw on one of three C’s: conflict, clues, and change. All three are constants in mysteries, of course, so I mean really big ones.

Conflict takes many forms, from a physical contest—a shootout, a car chase, a trap—to a psychological dilemma—opposing personal goals, ethical questions, gains vs. losses. Whatever the conflict, it has to grow out of that particular story and the specific characters.

Fortunately any book provides multiple sources of conflict: the villain, a witness, a suspect, the police, a loved one or friend or mentor or employer. And almost any protagonist experiences internal conflicts, but at some point the conflict has to become action, often when and in ways the reader isn’t expecting. In Show Me the Murder, Phoenix dreads attending a recital at the church, and encounters a hit-and-run.In Show Me the Deadly Deer, she responds to a call about a rabid deer and becomes a hunter’s target. In Show Me the Gold, she stops to check a camera left to catch vandals in a rural graveyard and disrupts the killer’s plans.

I work hard to conceal small clues, but one jumpstarter is revealing a major piece of evidence—a license plate, a weapon, a cell phone trace, a fingerprint, an alibi—that turns the story in a new direction.

In the manuscript I just finished, Show Me the Ashes, Phoenix deals with a cold case. She can’t find new evidence. The turning point comes when she realizes what’s missing.

Often Phoenix discovers a clue that contradicts an accepted fact or casts a different light on the connections between seemingly unrelated characters.

One big lesson I’ve learned: Don’t waste characters. If I give a character a name, you can bet that person will provide a clue, often disguised in humor and seemingly irrelevant at the time.

If all else fails, make a change. The most obvious ones are point of view (switching to another person) or time (a flashback or old letter). Thriller writers like those techniques, but I rarely use them.

I prefer switching from one narrative line to another. In Gold, that means going from the main plot of the aftermath of a bank robbery to a subplot, suspected elder abuse or pressure on Phoenix to get together with an admirer.

In Show Me the Ashes, I alternate two story lines, an imprisoned young mother’s (possibly) false confession and a series of increasingly bold burglaries.

Sometimes introducing a new setting or a new person to reveal a surprising twist moves the plot forward. I also like to change the tone occasionally. That usually involves a light scene in which my main characters either spar or work together in an unpredictable way.

No one thing works all the time.

—Carolyn Mulford

Posted in Mysteries, News, Show Me Series

My School Wardrobe

Carolyn Mulford Posted on July 30, 2014 by CarolynJuly 30, 2014

With school opening in about three weeks, the newspapers are full of ads of school clothing. In the mid-20th century, school kids had far fewer clothes, but we country kids started planning our wardrobes in the spring.  We had to. That’s when we began collecting the colorful cotton feedsacks that we would turn into blouses, skirts, dresses, and shirts.

A feedsack apron

A feedsack apron

The process began with the arrival of cartoon-cute baby chickens. The chicks lived in a sweltering brooder house, and you had to check the heat, water, and feed frequently.

When you bought the feed, you picked out the prettiest sacks and continued to collect them as the chicks grew into fryers and layers. A dress with a full skirt could take most of three sacks. Often feed buyers liked the same prints, so getting the ones you wanted could be difficult.

Every summer from nine to fourteen, I endured a 4-H sewing project using the feedsacks and, later, the new synthetic fabrics. Once we had the material for the clothes, we chose  patterns. These came on a flimsy paper easy to tear as you pinned the coded pieces to the cloth to cut out. Battle strategy is no more complicated than figuring out how to place the patterns on cloth so pieces will match and you waste no cloth.

Once you’d cut the pieces out, you pinned them together and then fit them. That usually required me to stand on a kitchen chair in my underwear and rotate as my mother moved the pins to get a proper fit. She always allowed a bit for growth. I basted some seams to rid of the pins before going to the sewing machine.

In some ways sewing resembles writing. You redo it until you get it right. But sewing machines take hand-and-foot coordination and have no delete button. The seams had to be perfect. That meant I ripped out almost every one at least once. The most frustrating parts were sleeves and zippers.

The final step was ironing out the many wrinkles. Ironing on a hot, humid day gives you a preview of hell. Today I buy nothing that requires ironing.

–Carolyn Mulford

Posted in News

“Show Me” Books Win Awards

Carolyn Mulford Posted on April 14, 2014 by CarolynApril 14, 2014

The Missouri Writers’ Guild presented the Walter Williams Major Work Award to me April 12 for Show Me the Murder. The presentation took place during the Guild’s 99th annual conference. The Guild president noted that a nonfiction book usually receives this award.

The award goes to a publication or production judged “to be worthy of special recognition because of the research or high literary quality involved in its creation.” The award held special significance for me because Williams founded not only the Guild but also the University of Missouri School of Journalism, my alma mater.

Show Me the Deadly Deer, the second in the series, received Honorable Mention in the “Show Me” Best Book (fiction, nonfiction, or poetry) category.

Both books were eligible for awards because they were published in 2013.

—Carolyn Mulford

Posted in News, News releases, Show Me Series

Reviews of Show Me the Deadly Deer

Carolyn Mulford Posted on April 11, 2014 by CarolynApril 11, 2014

Below are excerpts of reviews of Show Me the Deadly Deer with links to the full reviews. 

Kirkus Reviews, November 15, 2013

“Small-town Missouri again proves almost as dangerous to a former CIA agent as European back alleys. Mulford’s second provides plenty of excitement as readers wend their ways through a slew of suspects.”

https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/carolyn-mulford/show-me-deadly-deer/

 

St. Louis Post-Dispatch, December 21, 2013

“Mulford’s depiction of north-central Missouri will surely displease many people who live there. … raising the rural region’s murder rate close to that of St. Louis. Still, the local color can be colorful indeed.”  —Harry Levins

http://www.stltoday.com/entertainment/books-and-literature/reviews/show-me-roundup-seven-books-with-missouri-ties/article_43e015e4-16c3-5232-b6c1-7a02749ce519.html

 

Suspense Magazine, “Inside the Pages,” January 2014

“A mark of a good mystery series is when you can pick up any volume as a starting place and not feel lost. That test is passed by “Show Me the Deadly Deer,” the second entry in Carolyn Mulford’s enjoyable Show Me series, set in rural Missouri.

“Carolyn Mulford has crafted a satisfying mystery with enough twists to keep the reader turning the pages. She captures the flavor of the rural life, where everyone knows everyone’s business, but where deadly secrets can still remain hidden.” — David Ingram

http://www.suspensemagazine.com/files/Suspense_Magazine_January_2014.pdf

 

Gumshoe Review, January 2014

“Tying all the clues together takes time. An exciting climax places Phoenix and Annalynn in danger. Overall, Mulford provides interesting characters and a good mystery.” —Mel Jacob

http://www.gumshoereview.com/php/Review-id.php?id=4015

 

Columbia Daily Tribune, “Ovation,” January 26, 2014

“With decades of life experience behind them and healthy independence, none of the women in Mulford’s books could be described as one-dimensional, weak or foolish. They are fully human, with complex personalities and dynamic interactions with the world and one another.”

“Show Me the Deadly Deer flows with deceptively simple language and a satisfyingly complex plot.” —Amy Wilder

http://www.columbiatribune.com/arts_life/ovation/covert-world-small-town-missouri-come-together-in-mystery-series/article_6a269d4a-8630-11e3-b4a9-10604b9ffe60.html

—Carolyn Mulford

Posted in News, Reviews of Carolyn’s books, Show Me Series

April Is the Busiest Month

Carolyn Mulford Posted on April 3, 2014 by CarolynApril 3, 2014

 

Writers welcome the spring with conferences, and readers delight in going to programs and signings without worrying about snow and ice.

During April 2014, I’ll be speaking, reading, and signing at the following events. In most of these the main topic will be Show Me the Deadly Deer, the second book in my Show Me mystery series.

9:30-11 a.m., Friday, April 4: I Could Write a Book, Osher Lifelong Learning Institute, 1905 Hillcrest, Columbia, MO

2 p.m., Sunday, April 6: Book Talk on Steps in Traditional Publishing, Columbia Chapter of Missouri Writers’ Guild, Unity Center, 1600 West Broadway, Columbia, MO

Friday and Saturday, April 11-12: Missouri Writers’ Guild Conference, Ramada Plaza Hotel, St. Louis, MO

10 a.m.-4 p.m., Saturday, April 19: Panel discussion at 10 a.m., signing at 2 p.m., Local Authors’ Day, Daniel Boone Regional Library, 100 West Broadway, Columbia, MO

2-4 p.m., Saturday, April 26: Signing and chatting, Hastings, 1800 North Baltimore, Kirksville, MO

—Carolyn Mulford

Posted in Events, News, Show Me Series

Launching My New Mystery—Finally

Carolyn Mulford Posted on January 20, 2014 by CarolynJanuary 20, 2014

From idea to publication takes years in traditional publishing. That’s why I’m inviting readers to celebrate the launch of Show Me the Deadly Deer at Columbia Books, 1907 Gordon Street, Columbia, MO, at 2 p.m. January 25.

The book launch won’t be fancy: a short reading and Q&A, light refreshments, a lot of chatting and browsing through the store’s inviting inventory of new, used, and antiquarian books.

I began work on Deadly Deer about the time I moved back to Missouri, summer 2007. With The Feedsack Dress coming out and the move, I didn’t get much done for a while. Researching Deadly Deer helped me reacquaint myself with farming in my home state.

By late 2009 I had a solid draft. But I had to sell the first book in the series, Show Me the Murder, before I could sell the second book. That didn’t happen until late 2011, and Murder didn’t reach bookstores until February 2013.

In summer 2012 I submitted the final draft of Deadly Deer. Five Star/Gale, Cengage, which publishes four mysteries a month, put it on the schedule at the earliest available date, December 18, 2013, too late for Christmas sales. The Kindle edition became available December 18. Most stores and libraries didn’t receive the hardcover until early January.

Winter ranks low on my preferred time for a book release. Cold, snow, and ice combine to keep people off the streets locally and to discourage travel by road and air to other places.

The snow date for the book launch is February 1.

—Carolyn Mulford

Posted in Events, News

A Writer’s New Year’s Resolutions

Carolyn Mulford Posted on January 1, 2014 by CarolynJanuary 1, 2014

Every year brings the unexpected, but here’s what I intend to do.

Reorganize my files, both paper and computer, and discard at least some of the interim drafts and research notes of published books.

Take my laptop to the furniture store and find a recliner comfortable for writing.

Complete the fourth book of my Show Me mystery series, decide whether to write a fifth, and promote the first three.

Read the manuscript of my beloved MG/YA historical novel again with an objective eye, revise as needed, and find a publisher or publish it myself.

Pick up my clutter, give away the books that won’t fit on the shelves, and hire someone to clean my house.

Travel somewhere—preferably Norway and Argentina/Chile—without attending a writers’ conference.

Celebrate my milestone birthday by starting a new writing project, perhaps that MG set in World War II that I’ve been thinking about for four years.

—Carolyn Mulford

Posted in News

What This Writer Did in 2013

Carolyn Mulford Posted on December 29, 2013 by CarolynDecember 29, 2013

Making notes for my annual letter, I realized almost everything I did in 2013 involved my Show Me mystery series. The series—with four books in different stages—took over the year.

In January I submitted the third book, Show Me the Gold, to the publisher. A day or two later the content editor emailed her comments on the second book, Show Me the Deadly Deer. Only minor points, but they took time and care. In warm weather that manuscript came back to me two more times, for a check of the copyediting and for proofing before it went to the printer.

The first book, Show Me the Murder, came out in hardcover February 15. (The Kindle edition was released in August.) In early February came the year’s biggest thrill for me: reading the first review. It appeared in Kirkus Reviews. Just the fact that Kirkus bothered to review my book was positive, and so was the review.  Then came good reviews in Library Journal and other publications. Happy times.

After struggling to find a publisher for years, I was relieved and gratified by the reviewers’ comments. I put snippets of those on the invitations to my book launch in March.

From then on I spent a lot of time promoting Show Me the Murder. One bonus for those efforts: I introduced The Feedsack Dress to new readers. While promoting challenged and rewarded me, the process bores anyone else. I’ll just say that I sent out review copies to Missouri publications (the publisher sends to national ones), gave talks at libraries and other places, served on panels at three mystery conferences, taught three writing workshops, and did signings with and without readings. I’m used to public speaking and always prepare well, so these events were no big deal.

Only one appearance worried me, a regional Young Authors’ Day in Warrensburg. The organizer sent me 10 second graders’ winning stories, essays, and poems to comment on both in writing and orally after each child read his or her piece before peers and parents. Plus I had to invent a writing exercise for them. I really dreaded opening the envelope containing their work and coming up with helpful, positive comments.

To my relief, they wrote much better than I expected. I was able to write genuine editorial comments. I consulted with friends who had taught elementary school. They warned me some kids would be afraid to read in front of strangers. No one suggested a great writing exercise. I really wanted to back out.

It went great, though one little girl faced me rather than the audience and read so softly that only I who could hear her. And none of the kids knew what I was talking about when I mentioned a teeter-totter in an analogy. Apparently it has been banned from playgrounds.

Through the winter and spring I stewed over the next book until a plot and theme held my interest. I made notes, did some research, named characters, and, in May, started to write Show Me the Ashes. I’m still writing.

In November, Kirkus gave Deadly Deer, its first review, a good one. I was happy but not overjoyed. Nothing equals that first time.

—Carolyn Mulford

Posted in Events, Mysteries, News, Show Me Series

Show Me the Deadly Deer Released

Carolyn Mulford Posted on December 23, 2013 by CarolynDecember 23, 2013

 

The second book in the Show Me mystery series has been released in Kindle and hardcover editions. I’ve already received a reader’s comment on the Kindle edition (my cousin loved it), but the hardcover won’t reach stores and libraries for a few days.

Show Me the Deadly Deer features the main characters introduced in Show Me the Murder. Former CIA covert operative Phoenix Smith tells the story, which begins when Acting Sheriff Annalynn Carr Keyser enlists Phoenix’s help in looking for a missing farmer.

You can read a teaser summary and the first chapter on the Show Me the Deadly Deer page.

Kirkus Reviews published the first review, its summary saying, “Small-town Missouri again proves almost as dangerous to a former CIA agent as European back alleys. Mulford’s second provides plenty of excitement as readers wend their ways through a slew of suspects.”

St. Louis Post-Dispatch reviewer Harry Levins notes that the book depicts the murder rate in rural Missouri as urban high but says, “Still, the local color can be colorful indeed.”

Hardcover prices at online bookstores vary from day to day, so if you want to order a copy online, check more than one site.

—Carolyn Mulford

Posted in Mysteries, News, Show Me Series

Personal Experience Prompted My Historical Novel

Carolyn Mulford Posted on December 3, 2013 by CarolynDecember 3, 2013

For many years I made my living as a nonfiction writer, striving to gather the essential facts and present material objectively.

Then, after traveling around the world, I came home and marveled at how life in rural Missouri had changed. My generation was the last to grow up in a nation made up of small, diversified, family farms, the ones growing most of their own food (vegetables, fruit, and meat) and a variety of crops to feed their animals and to sell for what they couldn’t produce.

I wanted to preserve the record of what life had been like in the mid 20th century, but what could I write that people would read? The topic exceeded the bounds of a feature article. I lacked both the expertise and the desire to write a socio-economic tome about the country’s transition. My childhood was too uneventful for a memoir in the mode of Laura Ingalls Wilder’s Little House books.

That left fiction. I had vivid memories of edging from childhood toward adulthood in the 1950s, and I wanted to reach readers going through that mix of elation and misery. I read social histories of the period that brought home how much the whole nation changed after World War II.

On our farm, the big change came with the arrival of electricity in the late 1940s. I decided to focus on that period, a time of transition for our farm and for the nation. Then my story should feature a transition for the main character. The big one came when a g country kid finished the eighth grade at a one-room rural school and entered a much larger junior high in town.

The idea for The Feedsack Dress began to form. I began to make a slow transition from nonfiction to fiction.

—Carolyn Mulford

 

Posted in News, The Feedsack Dress, Young Adult

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Celebrating Jane Austen’s 250th Birthday

Carolyn Mulford Posted on October 1, 2025 by CarolynOctober 1, 2025

This year Janeites around the world are celebrating Jane Austen’s 250th birthday (December 16, 1775). Although she wrote only six polished novels before her death in 1817, she has become one of the most popular novelists in history. (If Pride and Prejudice is the only title you can remember, refresh your memory at https://carolynmulford.com/writing/vacationing-with-jane-austen.) She may be more popular now than ever. That’s partly because the movie and TV adaptations of her books over the last 30 years have drawn and delighted readers not doing assignments. Another factor has been the proliferation of novels imagining the life of Austen’s characters … Continue reading →

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Creating a Canine Character

Carolyn Mulford Posted on August 28, 2025 by CarolynAugust 28, 2025

To help a friend worrying about “interviewing” pets for a community newsletter, I dug up my old guest blog for Wicked Cozy Writers on portraying a dog as a supporting character. Here’s an adaptation. Planning Show Me the Murder, I spent weeks envisioning three old friends reunited in their hometown: Phoenix, a wounded former CIA operative; Annalynn, a do-gooder whose husband died in a sleazy motel; and Connie, a struggling singer/music teacher. Mid book, a Belgian Malinois named Achilles popped up as a plot point—the only witness to a crime. Phoenix finds him shot, starved, and tied to a tree. … Continue reading →

Posted in Mysteries, Show Me Series, Writing

Celebrating July 4th by Making Ice Cream

Carolyn Mulford Posted on July 3, 2025 by CarolynJuly 3, 2025

In the 19040s, we celebrated July 4th by making ice cream. My mother saved extra milk, cream, and eggs to mix and heat with the junket, sugar, and vanilla.  She started soon after breakfast because the mix needed to set. Meanwhile my father cleaned up the green-painted wood freezer keg, and my younger sister and I brought a panful of cattle salt from the barn. Then the three of us took the pickup to the ice house in town to buy a 50-pound block of ice. My father used ice tongs to carry the ice to the pickup and, once … Continue reading →

Posted in Historicals, The Feedsack Dress, Young Adult

4-H and Sewing in the 1940s

Carolyn Mulford Posted on June 30, 2025 by CarolynJune 30, 2025

4-H came to my rural community about two years after World War II ended. We had no other youth organizations available, so 4-H, led by two wonderful (female and male) county Extension agents, made a huge impact on us children—and our parents. As I recall, the whole community met at New Hope School (grades one through eight) to hear the agents describe the program and recruit adult volunteers to lead projects teaching practical skills ranging from sewing to raising calves. Then all the dozen or so kids nine or older signed up, elected officers (an unfamiliar task), and took the … Continue reading →

Posted in Historicals, The Feedsack Dress

I Am a River

Carolyn Mulford Posted on April 19, 2025 by CarolynApril 19, 2025

Each week I lunch with a group of friends and discuss a topic. Last time the coordinator posed this question: What is the shape of your life? The answers included a rectangle, a vase, a cloud, and an octagon. Usually I wing it, but this time I wrote my response. The Shape of My Life I am a river, Birthed in a puddle, Nourished by rain, Pushed to overflow And grow broader And deeper.   Springs and creeks fed my flow. Widening waters gathered force, Thrusting me against unyielding barriers And cascading me over rocky falls.   Other streams joined … Continue reading →

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