Through This Window – Ethelene Dyer Jones – The Boy Who Danced with Rabbits by JR Collins (A Book Review)

Through This Window – Ethelene Dyer Jones – The Boy Who Danced with Rabbits by JR Collins (A Book Review)

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“Choestoe.” “A Dancing Place of Rabbits.”

 

Each time I hear the musical word, “Choestoe” I think “home” and I grow nostalgic and filled with memories.

Pronounced Cho-e-sto-e (with long o and long e) it means home to me. The place where I was born. The valley and place with that musical name lies along the upper Notla (sometimes spelled Nottely) River “between the Blood and the Bald” (the highest and next to highest mountains in Georgia). A beautiful place, home to the 20th Century Georgia poet Byron Herbert Reece, whose poem “Choestoe” was published in The Prairie Schooner magazine, Spring, 1944, and helped to make our valley, the Cherokee-named “place where rabbits dance” known far beyond the peaceful valley many of us know as home.

Now, in 2016, a just-released book entitled The Boy Who Danced with Rabbits by J. R. Collins revisits in imagination that valley as it was when the first settlers came, while the Indians still lived there. J. R. Collins, known to me and other folks in Choestoe as Joe Collins, is of the same ancestral line as I am. We both descend from Thompson and Celia Self Collins, among the first settlers to Choestoe Valley. The Collins family was there when Union County was formed in 1832 from that great north Georgia portion of land designated “Cherokee.”

  1. R. Collins told stories to his children, Alex and Emma. And from their delight with his “tales of yore,” and with encouragement and enthusiasm from his wife, Colleen, Joe began to write these stories, one by one, using the vernacular language of the early settlers, much of which we who grew up in Choestoe heard in stories at our own parents’ knees.

The stories are told from the standpoint of the main character, Jebediah Collins (“Jeb” for short), who at age ninety remembers life as it was when he was young in Choestoe Valley. The author chooses to take the point of view of young Jeb. And from that standpoint, and with enthusiasm and a fluency of Appalachian speech, Jeb tells his stories. New author J. R. Collins acknowledges assistance from a fellow worker and journalism major, Shawn Jarrard, and from his agent Jeanie Loiacono of Loiacono Literary Agency, Irving, TX. The book was published by William Conner at W & B Publishers, Kernersville, NC. The book is available in print and kindle on Amazon. Joe Collins weaves the stories he himself told his children, Alex and Emma, into a novel.

Of course this review is prejudiced, because I like anything “Choestoe.” And if a writing comes from a kinsman, I am doubly proud that it could be about “our” place. In “about the author,” we are told that J. R. Collins is now working on a sequel to The Boy Who Danced with Rabbits, his second novel, with the title, Living in the Land Where Rabbits Dance.

  1. R. Collins makes no claim to being a writer. In fact, he was urged by others to “set down” his stories and then to compile them into some order that would produce a sequential story, a novel. Thus The Boy Who Danced with Rabbits was born.

Told from the standpoint of the young boy, Jeb, whose best friend is a Cherokee Indian boy his own age named Wolf, the story unfolds gently at first. But then the multiple hardships of life of the settlers to the Choestoe Valley unfold through the narrative, namely the “Thompie” Collins family (in real-life, actual settlers Thompson and Celia Self Collins, ancestors of both the author J. R. Collins and me). The settlers are friends to the Cherokee who still live in Choestoe Valley. They learn to communicate, to share knowledge of medicine and of how to “make-do” and live in the wilderness. Escapades of the two boys make life interesting. But responsibilities, which Jeb learns at an early age, are told with tenderness and insight throughout the novel. Hunting the forests for food, planting and harvesting crops from cleared patches, overcoming ravages of a tornado, and enjoying the festival of “Killing Time” (when the community came together to butcher hogs, calves, and goats and preserve them for food) are all a part of this story. When Jeb’s older brother is seriously injured in the storm, it takes a community to get him better. The Old Medicine Woman, a Cherokee neighbor, wields her wonder with herbal and other medicinal practices to help Cain through his long recovery.

I see a three-fold value in this novel by new author J. R. Collins. First, it gives from a young settler’s viewpoint information about how life was in the early 1830’s when self-preservation and living off the land was a way of life. It was “do or die,” and all worked hard to produce their part in the survival struggle. Second, the novel gives a look (though fictional, researched, and authentic) of friendly relationships between Cherokee and settlers, and how they helped each other before that dreadful edict, ‘The Trail of Tears’. And third, throughout the novel, Jeb’s strong faith in the Lord Jesus Christ is woven into his musings and his dialogue, revealing that both the settlers and the Indians (who already had influences from early missionaries to the Indians) trusted in the Great Spirit.

In his signed copy to me, author J. R. Collins wrote, “To Ethelene Dyer Jones, who has, all her life, danced with the rabbits in our beloved Choestoe!”

Congratulations, Joe Collins, on the advent of your notable book. I read it with joy, and with remembrance of similar stories that I heard as a child. Thank you for thus saving in printed form our noble heritage.

John Flynn, author of Intimate Bondage, Intimate Disclosure, Everything I Know About Life I Learned From James Bond, and Future Prime: Top Ten Science Fiction Films to be at DRAGONCON!

John Flynn, author of Intimate Bondage, Intimate Disclosure, Everything I Know About Life I Learned From James Bond, and Future Prime: Top Ten Science Fiction Films to be at DRAGONCON!

J Flynn65 Everything I Know About Life I Learned From James Bond Future Prime Top Ten Science Fiction Films Intimate Bondage Intimate Disclosure

General Info
Website: www.dragoncon.org Dates: September 2 – September 5 (Fri – Mon)
Important Contacts
Senior Director of Guest Operations
Tom Gennaro 256.591.7177
Guest Ops / Programming Escorts
Tracey Carlson 678.327.1263
Mac Sandridge 770.241.5163
VIP Badge Pick Up VIP Badge Pick Up – Marriott L508
Thursday 10am – 10pm
Friday 8am – 10pm
Saturday 8am – 9pm
Sunday 8am – 9pm
Monday 8am – 12pm

Please note, there will be several times that the Marriott will be closed to badged individuals only. If you arrive during one of the times, it will be necessary to instruct the security personnel on the doors that you are going to L508 for VIP Badge Pick Up. To ensure that you do not have any challenges getting in to pick up your credentials, we encourage you to print out this sheet to provide upon your arrival.

To help ensure that our VIP badge pick up is the best it can be, please understand that the following policies will be enforced:

  • All guests and attending professionals will be required to pick up their own packet (with the exception of agents) and show state issued ID in order to do so.
Event Location The event is spread across 5 hotels and the AmericasMart.

The Marriott Marquis 404.521.0000
265 Peachtree Center Ave.
Atlanta, GA 30303
Hyatt Regency Hotel 404.577.1234
265 Peachtree Street NE
Atlanta, GA 30303
Hilton Atlanta – Downtown 404.659.2000
255 Courtland Street NE
Atlanta, GA 30303
Sheraton Atlanta Hotel 404.659.6500
165 Courtland Street
Atlanta, GA 30303
Westin Peachtree Plaza Hotel 404.659.1400
210 Peachtree St.
Atlanta, GA 30303
AmericasMart Atlanta
Building 2
230 Ted Turner Drive
Atlanta, GA 30303
Panel Info Title: Majestic 12 – New Information from the Release
Time: Fri 05:30 pm Location: Valdosta – Sheraton (Length: 1)
Description: Dr. John Flynn discusses the reveals and newest information in the MJ-12 documents.

Title: Our Favorite Cult Films
Time: Fri 07:00 pm Location: The Learning Center – Hyatt (Length: 1)
Description: We’ll be looking at the greatest cult films. They may be twisted or bizarre–or maybe they are just hard to find. But we’ve found them. We’ll cover the movies you have to see and probably haven’t and put them in context.

Title: The Legacy of Hammer Horror
Time: Sat 02:30 pm Location: Fairlie – Hyatt (Length: 1)
Description: Hammer Horror changed film and particularly the genre of horror. We’ll look at how it rose, its effects, and where it shone brightest before it faded. We’ll look at some of the big films, and some you might be less familiar with.

Title: Phantom of the Opera: Music, Masks, and Madness
Time: Sat 08:30 pm Location: Chastain I – Westin (Length: 1)
Description: The legacy of Gaston Leroux’s immortal novel and its many adaptations.

Title: Military Uniforms
Time: Sun 11:30 am Location: 302-305 – Hilton (Length: 1)
Description: From historical to futuristic, real or imagined, we discuss the look and feel of military uniforms as costumes: What distinguishes them from other types of uniforms, what are the necessary components needed to successfully create an original piece, and where to find resources will be discussed.

Charity Each year, Dragon Con selects a different Charitable Organization as the recipient of all funds donated at that year’s show. Funds are raised at several charity events throughout the weekend. The 2016 charity is the Atlanta Center for Self Sufficiency, and Dragon Con will once again be providing matching funds up to $50,000. The ACSS’s mission is to empower homeless individuals to achieve self-sufficiency and lead the fight in breaking the cycle of homelessness in Greater Atlanta and beyond by providing a hand up – not a hand out. The ACSS is the largest and most successful provider of Workforce Development resources to homeless men and women in Atlanta. Since 2010, more than 1,700 people have been served by their programs and more than 1,300 have obtained full-time employment!

Since 2005, Dragon Con has raised and/or donated over $800,000 for various charitable organizations. Some past recipients have been the Lymphoma Foundation, the Atlanta Community Food Bank, American Diabetes Association, the American Heart Association, the Georgia Chapter of the Lupus Foundation, the National Inclusion Project, The National Alzheimer’s Association, Noah’s Ark Animal Sanctuary, and the Georgia Conservancy.

Each guest agreement requests two donations to our Charity Auction. This is your friendly reminder that YOU have the opportunity to make a difference and help us raise money for a great cause. We get a lot of questions on what to donate, so we are happy to provide some ideas to help you: autographed headshots from our Walk of Fame Guests, any show memorabilia they may own (this has brought in *huge* dollars in past auctions), signed artwork, autographed sides (episode notes from shows), autographed scripts, or autographed movie or television promo posters. Want to give something personal that fans would go wild for? Try auctioning off a meal with a fan while at the show. For the authors out there, signed books certainly work, but if you prefer a more creative approach, we’ve had great success auctioning off Tuckerizations.

Items can be dropped off in VIP Badge Pick Up or in the Charity Auction booth at the Marriott.

 

Representative Bryan Spencer endorses Bank Notes: The True Story of the Boonie Hat Bandit by Caroline Giammanco

Bank Notes is an eye-opening true account of how the recession of 2007-2008 led a mild-mannered middle-class father to become one of Missouri’s most notorious criminals. It follows the Boonie Hat Bandit through federal and state proceedings and into the world of prison. A gripping must read. Insightful and thought-provoking, Bank Notes delivers.

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  • Representative Bryan Spencer District 063, Republican

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Murder for profit stops for no man when you’re Nurse Blood.

Murder for profit stops for no man when you’re Nurse Blood.

Nurse Blood by Rebecca Besser is being released on August 23, 2016.
One last harvest is all Sonya and her team need to put their murderous past behind them…
A family with the rarest blood type in the world is the only thing standing between Sonya and retirement. David McCoy and the FBI are hot on their trail, though, and multiple targets make this the most complicated harvest yet. Will David unravel Sonya’s wicked plans in time to avenge his brother and save an innocent family? Or will Sonya cash in her final kill and escape for good?

CHARACTER STUDY – SVECHKA, MOLDAVIA

CHARACTER STUDY – SVECHKA, MOLDAVIA by Rochelle Wisoff-Fields, author of Please Say Kaddish For Me and From Silt and Ashes

“More pogroms. And so close.” Rabbi Yussel Gitterman’s sightless eyes filled with tears.

Eighteen-year-old Arel Gitterman pulled his coat around his ears and shivered, partly from cold and partly with rage. What had they done to make the Christians hate them so much? “We should retaliate. We should gather all of the young men—”

“Shah! Such nonsense!”

“Ouch! Papa, is it unreasonable for men to protect their homes?”

“Remember, my son. A soft answer turns away wrath.”

“How can you say that, Papa? Last night innocent people were murdered in their beds all over the countryside. Did they have time to make an answer—of any kind?”

Hershel Levine’s green eyes flashed. “The lad makes sense, Yussel. There is much cruelty in the world. Sometimes one has to wonder what the Almighty is thinking.”

“So, Hershel, my old friend, do you think the three of us, an old cantor, a blind rabbi and a boy who’s barely able to squeeze out a whisker are going to seek revenge on those animals with their guns and Czar Nicolas, may his name be blotted out?”

Arel gritted his teeth. “Reb Pinkas said he heard the Christians burned down a synagogue. A rabbi died trying to protect the sacred scrolls. Papa, it could just as easily have been you.”     

“Reb Pinkas is up early bearing his tales. Yes, it could have been any Jew in this land, my Son.” Yussel patted his shoulder. “It’s dangerous to be a Jew in this Pale of Settlement. But now let’s tend to matters at hand. It’s Shabbes, the Sabbath, and we have a synagogue to prepare for morning services.”

“Yes, Papa.” Arel knew from experience arguing with his father would not accomplish anything. Still his anger boiled because they were Jews who lived in poverty under the tyranny of the Russians. Prisoners in their own country, unable own land and denied education beyond their Hebrew schools.

For the next few moments Yussel’s cane tapping along the frozen ground was the only sound. Each man lost in his own thoughts, they approached the synagogue, the largest building in the Jewish quarter of Svechka.

To call a backward village “The Candle” was a contradiction. Arel supposed at some point in time the Russians considered it a place of enlightenment.

~~Taken from Please Say Kaddish for Me by Rochelle Wisoff-Fields

YUSSEL GITTERMAN -Original Artwork © Rochelle Wisoff-Fields

YUSSEL GITTERMAN -Original Artwork ©Rochelle Wisoff-Fields

Published by Argus Publishing

Represented by Loiacono Literary Agency

***

To the best of my knowledge, the shtetl or village known in Please Say Kaddish for Me as Svechka only exists in the author’s imagination. Like Anatevka in Fiddler on the Roof it represents the many villages scattered throughout Eastern Europe during the 19th and early 20th centuries.

HERSHEL LEVINE - Original Artwork © Rochelle Wisoff-Fields

HERSHEL LEVINE – Original Artwork ©Rochelle Wisoff-Fields

Shtetl is Yiddish for “little town.” These villages ranged in size from several hundred residents to several thousand. The Jews usually lived within the town while the Gentiles tended to live on the outskirts. Central to the Jewish community was the Synagogue and Kahal, the community council. Most of the shtetl Jews were artisans and shop owners while the scholars were the revered minority. Both Arel and Havah, the children of rabbis, have grown up in their respective shtetls, Natalya and Svechka, as members of the elite part of their societies.

Framed Arel in Svechka

AREL GITTERMAN -Original Artwork © Rochelle Wisoff-Fields

 

 

Framed Havah at 16

HAVAH COHEN – Original Artwork © Rochelle Wisoff-Fields

Enjoy a little taste of what their world was like. 

 Note: If you’ve read and enjoyed either or both of my books, please leave a review on Amazon.com and any of the other sites. I ask for Amazon primarily because of the scope of influence. Thank you.

Shalom,

Rochelle

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Amazon  Angus & Robertson  B&N BAM  BookWorld  FishPond  Shelfari The Book Depository  Waterstones GoodReads  iDreamBooks  HPB Hudson Book Sellers   IndieBound  Powell’s Books

Amazon AU  Amazon UK  Amazon Germany  Amazon Italy  Amazon France Amazon Spain

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COMING SOON!

COMING SOON!

Check out my author page on the Loiacono Website.  For all of the character studies thus far, click on the link Rochelle Wisoff-Fields Art and Blogs or my websiteRochelleWordArt

THREE opportunities to meet Joan Early, author of The Other Two-Fifths!

THREE opportunities to meet Joan Early, author of The Other Two-Fifths!

Joan Early photo The Other Two-Fifths

August 21st, 1-4pm @ B&N Westheimer Crossing, 7626 Westheimer, Houston, Texas 77063 http://stores.barnesandnoble.com/store/2635

Talbots Westmont Shopping Center, 408 Dowlen Road, Beaumont, TX 77706, Friday, August 26, 2016, 11am-1pm

September 10th, 1-4pm @ Beaumont B&N, Parkdale Mall 4155 Dowlen Rd, Beaumont, TX 77706 https://stores.barnesandnoble.com/store/2127

National Black Book Festival October 27-29, 2016 at Fallbrook Church, 12512 Walters Road, Houston, TX http://www.nationalblackbookfestival.com/exhibitors.htm

 

Vietnam Wall facts – Les we forget

Vietnam Wall facts – Les we forget

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The Wall

A little history most people will never know.
Interesting Veterans Statistics off the Vietnam Memorial Wall.

 

There are 58,267 names now listed on that polished black wall, including those added in 2010.

The names are arranged in the order in which they were taken from us by date and within each date the names are alphabetized. It is hard to believe it is 57 years since the first casualty.

 

The first known casualty was Richard B. Fitzgibbon, of North Weymouth, Mass. Listed by the U.S. Department of Defense as having been killed on June 8, 1956. His name is listed on the Wall with that of his son, Marine Corps Lance Cpl. Richard B. Fitzgibbon III, who was killed on Sept. 7, 1965.

 

There are three sets of fathers and sons on the Wall.

39,996 on the Wall were just 22 or younger.

 

8,283 were just 19 years old.

 

The largest age group, 33,103 were 18 years old.

12 soldiers on the Wall were 17 years old.

 

5 soldiers on the Wall were 16 years old.

 

One soldier, PFC Dan Bullock was 15 years old.

 

997 soldiers were killed on their first day in Vietnam ..

1,448 soldiers were killed on their last day in Vietnam ..

 

31 sets of brothers are on the Wall.

 

Thirty one sets of parents lost two of their sons.

 

54 soldiers attended Thomas Edison High School in Philadelphia . I wonder why so many from one school.

 

8 Women are on the Wall, Nursing the wounded.

 

244 soldiers were awarded the Medal of Honor during the Vietnam War; 153 of them are on the Wall.

 

Beallsville, Ohio with a population of 475 lost 6 of her sons.
West Virginia had the highest casualty rate per capita in the nation. There are 711 West Virginians on the Wall.
The Marines of Morenci – They led some of the scrappiest high school football and basketball teams that the little Arizona copper town of Morenci (pop. 5,058) had ever known and cheered. They enjoyed roaring beer busts. In quieter moments, they rode horses along the Coronado Trail, stalked deer in the Apache National Forest . And in the patriotic camaraderie typical of Morenci’s mining families, the nine graduates of Morenci High enlisted as a group in the Marine Corps. Their service began on Independence Day, 1966. Only 3 returned home.
The Buddies of Midvale – LeRoy Tafoya, Jimmy Martinez, Tom Gonzales were all boyhood friends and lived on three consecutive streets in Midvale, Utah on Fifth, Sixth and Seventh avenues. They lived only a few yards apart. They played ball at the adjacent sandlot ball field. And they all went to Vietnam . In a span of 16 dark days in late 1967, all three would be killed. LeRoy was killed on Wednesday, Nov. 22, the fourth anniversary of John F. Kennedy’s assassination. Jimmy died less than 24 hours later on Thanksgiving Day. Tom was shot dead assaulting the enemy on Dec. 7,Pearl Harbor Remembrance Day.
The most casualty deaths for a single day was on January 31, 1968 ~ 245 deaths.
The most casualty deaths for a single month was May 1968 – 2,415 casualties were incurred.
For most Americans who read this they will only see the numbers that the Vietnam War created. To those of us who survived the war, and to the families of those who did not, we see the faces, we feel the pain that these numbers created. We are, until we too pass away, haunted with these numbers, because they were our friends, fathers, husbands, wives, sons and daughters. There are no noble wars, just noble warriors.

 

CHARACTER STUDY – JUDGE WILLIAM H. WALLACE – taken from As One Must, One Can

CHARACTER STUDY – JUDGE WILLIAM H. WALLACE – taken from As One Must, One Can by Rochelle Wisoff-Fields (2016)

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Judge William H. Wallace
Original Artwork © Rochelle Wisoff-Fields

With his elbow on the counter, he [Arel] rested his chin on his hand which he used to cover his left cheek. He waved his other hand over an official looking sheet of paper in front of him.

“What’s that?” Havah asked.

“It’s an indictment from His Honor Judge Wallace. I could go to prison.”

“What crime did you commit?”

“I’ve opened my shop on Sunday instead of Saturday.”

“And this is a crime?”

“According to him and his Sunday labor law, we’re required to observe the Christian Sabbath or pay a penalty. We may open our shops, but if we sell anything, we are in violation.”

“I don’t understand this man. Ulrich and Dr. Florin call themselves Christians and even go to church on Sunday. They are kind and gentle—nothing like that judge.”

A lump formed in the pit of Havah’s stomach. “Arel, you don’t suppose…” She envisioned the police smashing the window. They beat Arel with their clubs while he pled for mercy. Next they came after Rachel.

Havah shook off her grisly daydream and remembered her chance meeting with President Roosevelt at Ellis Island. Imagine, the ruler of the United States taking the time so speak with a Jewish peasant girl from Moldavia. Such a man would never allow another Kishinev or Odessa to happen in his great country.

She took the indictment in her hand and crumpled it in her fist. “Every ass likes to hear himself bray.”

Taken from As One Must, One Can (2016)

***

In this last book of the trilogy, Havah finds a formidable nemesis in Judge William H. Wallace who was described by the Kansas City newspapers as a crusader for the Sunday Blue Law. During his tenure as criminal court judge, he handed out over a reported 7,000 indictments. At odd times his deputies arrested cigar dealers, druggists, and even music conductors in the midst of performances if they fell on Sunday. No one was exempt.

One article quotes him as referring to the Jews as evil for their observance of Sunday on Saturday. It was only natural for Havah to fear a pogrom in her new country. She had experienced Antisemitism at its worst and recognized the signs.

***

This article, as written below, appeared in The Kansas City Journal, October 3, 1908

NOW HE TARGETS THE JEWS.

Judge Wallace Says Jews Must Keep Their Stores Closed on Sunday.

Not only is Judge Wallace going after the theater managers, pool hall proprietors, barber and tobacco dealers, but from now on his righteous wrath is to be visited upon the wicked citizens of Jewish extraction who keep their second hand clothing stores open on Sunday.

According to his special prosecutor it makes no difference to Judge Wallace that the religious belief of these dealers does cause them to observe Saturday as the Sabbath and that their places of business are tightly closed that day — they will be prosecuted just as vigorously if they open on Sunday.

When the Wallace Sunday closing crusade was started a statement was authorized by the court to the effect that provided the Jews of the city observed Saturday as Sunday they would be exempt from prosecution, but it is now stated that there has been a misconception as to this statement. Why the misconception has not been corrected before does not yet appear.
“Under the law,” said the court’s spokesman, “if the Jews observe Saturday as Sunday they are exempt from prosecution so far as labor is concerned, that is, they may work on Sunday; but this exemption does not allow them to sell goods and they are to be prosecuted if they do. Already two indictments for this offense have been found by the grand jury and the offenders will appear in court the first of next week.”

Therefore, if the Jew merchants of the city are so disposed, they may keep their stores open on Sunday, but if they sell anything, the heavy hand of the law will be laid upon them.
The explanation of the law as interpreted by Judge Wallace in this matter does not include a clear view of the fine distinction between what is called “work” and selling second-hand clothes.
That this new interpretation of the law will work a distinct hardship on the Jew dealer whose religious scruples will not allow him to do business on Saturday goes without saying for it effectually shuts him off from selling his goods on two days out of seven.

“I think the Sunday law will be pretty generally observed tomorrow,” said the special prosecutor. “In fact, I think 98 per cent of the places which have heretofore been in the habit of doing business on Sunday will be found closed. The grand jury will proceed with its work Monday morning, at which time the rest of the theater managers whom we did not have time to arraign this week will be brought into court.

Published by Argus Publishing

Represented by Loiacono Literary Agency