HEART-TO-HEART from author Bette A.
Stevens
Find out why I wrote PURE TRASH &
read an excerpt!
As
a baby boomer that grew up in an average middle-class family in America
during the 1950s and 1960s, poverty was not something I had to dwell on or even
think about as a child or as a teen. For me, poverty was a hidden concept.
As an adult, I learned what living in
poverty was like from friends and acquaintances that grew up in this invisible (to
me) world―one where being poor was an accepted part of life for those who lived
it. I became intrigued by some of their stories. They didn’t want to be there
or ask to be there. It was just their lot. It was a tough way to grow up, but
they made the most of what little they had. Some didn’t realize that they were poor, until someone from an
upper class pointed out their obvious lacks. Some thought they were pretty well
off, even a bit superior, when they met someone who had less. Some even took
opportunity to lord their newly-discovered social superiority over those less
fortunate. Regrettably, this ill-conceived notion of being superior to others
continues to exist throughout the rungs of society’s class-based ladder.
As an elementary and middle-school
teacher (since retired), I was an eye-witness to the direct effects of
poverty’s aftermath on kids. What hit me the hardest was the way those who were
among the haves would ignore,
belittle or bully the have-nots.
Don’t be disheartened, though. I’ve seen students, teachers, counselors,
librarians, volunteers, administrators, parents, as well as church group and
other community members who have made and are still making a difference in the
lives of the poor and “different” among us.
As a reader, I can’t begin to count the lessons I’ve
learned from reading historical fiction—life lessons. As a writer, I hope to
advocate for children— to raise awareness of the plight of children living in
poverty today. That’s why I wrote PURE TRASH. I believe that caring readers can
make a difference, too.
I started with a short
story that could be used in the middle-school and high school classroom, so
that young people today could take a peek into poverty in the past. This short
story is a prequel and appears in the novel I’m working on right now.
SUMMARY: Experience
the joy of a carefree Saturday and the blistering pain of feeling not quite
good enough as you hop on a bike and ride into town with two delightful young
boys who find adventure at every turn. Shawn and Willie Daniels live in the
woods with no indoor water or plumbing. Dad spends most of his hard earned
money on beer. Prejudice, class division, alcoholism, poverty, injustice, and
bullying are cleverly woven into this 1950s adventure short. PURE TRASH
is a prequel to the author’s upcoming debut novel.
PURE TRASH
Short story EXCERPT:
By Bette A. Stevens
http://www.Amazon.com/author/betteastevens
Saturday morning. I could see a patch of
sunshiny, bright blue sky peeking out through the torn curtain as I
yawned good morning to my little brother. Willie was six. I was nine. No
school, I thought, as I smiled and plotted our course for the day. Sometimes I
wished Saturdays would last forever.
“Good morning sleepyhead,” Mum said. She
smiled at me as I stretched my way into the kitchen. “Get yourself dressed,
Shawn. Run out and split some firewood and bring it on in. I’ll fix you some
hotcakes.”
I slipped on my overalls, grabbed the ax
from behind Mum’s rocking chair and headed straight for the outhouse. Sometimes
I wished we had an indoor bathroom and hot and cold running water like most
folks did. I had to go bad. Didn't
know if I'd make it. Whoopee, I managed to hit that darned two-holer just in
time. I always liked to use the hole where Dad sat. It was warm from the
morning sun shining through the crack in the door. I whistled as I thought
about what a great day this was going to be. Willie and me were going to ride
our bikes into town, and I was sure we’d find some empty bottles, maybe enough
to buy some soda pop. Willie loved his Coca-Cola.
The birds chattered back and forth in the maple branches that hung down over
the old two-holer as I sat and thought. Sun streaked across my lap. It was
going to be a great day.
I split the wood just the way Mum liked
it done. Stacked it in the kitchen near the cook stove, grabbed the pails and
headed out to the well to haul in water for the day. Mum had laundry to do and
baths to get ready for us tonight. Yes, it was going to be a great day all
right.
Chores were all done and Mum’s hotcakes
were waiting for me by the time I finished up outside and sat down at the
table. Willie finished his breakfast in a flash and ran off to watch TV with
Dad.
“Gee, Mum, can we go now?” I asked, as I
gulped down the last forkful of hotcakes smothered with maple syrup that Mum
boiled down from this winter’s sap.
“Now, Shawn, you be careful. Willie
hasn’t gone out on the roads much, so you let him ride ahead of you. Keep a
good eye on him. You hear?”
“Sure, Mum,” I said as I headed for the
living room to get Willie.
Dad sat in the big brown chair, feet
propped up on the worn hassock. Beer bottle in hand, all he heard or saw was
his TV. It was Saturday, and Dad loved his baseball. Though I knew he’d find
time to take us boys to do some fishin’ later—after he got good and drunk he’d
be able to hold his mouth just right. Dad always said that you had to ‘hold your mouth just right’ or
the fish wouldn’t bite. He’d have enough beer in him by the time we got back so
he’d be ready to catch his limit. The games should be over by then. We’d run
down to the brook, walk out into the cool swirling water and catch some trout
or brookies for supper. Yes, it would be a great day all right.
“Come on, Willie,” I said. “Let’s go!”
Willie nearly knocked me down as the two
of us raced for the door. Mum reminded us to be careful. “Yes ’um,” I hollered
back. We jumped on our bikes and pedaled hard up the driveway.
Mum said it was three miles to town. I
kept my eyes on Willie as we pumped up the first hill. We coasted down the
other side with the cool wind brushing our faces, ready to head up the next
hill.
“Pull over, Willie,” I hollered when we
got to the top of Andover .
Pedaling up the half-mile hill was a lot
of work, but it was worth it, and not for just the empties. Flying down the
other side gave me the best feeling in the whole wide world. I guess that’s how
that old chicken hawk feels when he soars above the pines at the edge of the
field out back of the house.
Once we reached the peak, we plopped our
bikes on the ground and threw ourselves onto the soft, damp bed of leaves at
the edge of the woods. It was so peaceful. My mind wandered into the sky and I
dreamed about the ride down the other side and the 10 cent Orange Crush I’d buy at Stark’s General Store.
“Hey,
Willie,” I finally asked, “did ya bring the slingshot?”
“Sure
did, Shawn. Whatcha wanna shoot today?”
Willie’s
brown eyes looked as big as Mum’s pan fried donuts and his smile pretty nearly
filled his round face as he jumped right up from his leafy bed and hovered over
me like a bear.
I
helped Willie make that slingshot out of rubber bands I’d sliced from one of
the old inner tubes piled out by Dad’s rusty Ford Roadster. That Ford had
headlights on top of the fenders and the “old jalopy,” as Mum called it, was
just rottin’ away out back of the two-holer. We broke a crotched limb out of
the choke cherry bush to use for the handle. I tied the rubber band and the
handle together with string from one of the flowered chicken feed sacks that
Mum used to make her house dresses. That string was real strong and I was good
at tying knots. Willie was proud as a peacock when it came to showing off that
slingshot.
“How
about we find some old tin cans and pile them up like a tower?” I asked Willie.
“Better yet, let’s both make towers and see whose gets knocked down first.”
“Yes,
siree!” Willie hooted as he made a mad dash to grab as many of the rusty cans
as his chubby arms could hug together at one time.
We
played on that hill, building at least a hundred towers. All shapes and sizes,
some looking like castles. Every now and then we’d take a shot at a passing
squirrel or chipper. It was a great day, all right. We found more empties than
ever. This was the first sunny day in a long time.
The sun was high
over the trees across the road before we piled the last of our empty bottles
into the huge chicken-wire basket I’d made for my bike last fall. Willie’s bike
had a regular basket, but it didn’t hold much. We ran back to grab a few more
and stuffed as many as we could into our overall pockets. I shoved the last two
down the front of my shirt and tucked it in good and tight.
We
were off! What a feeling. Flying into the wind, I could see Willie’s hair
whirling in a hundred different directions while my own whipped around my ears
and face. Mum would sure take the scissors to the two of us tonight. Then we’d
hop into the big metal washtub filled with steaming water from her cook stove.
That bath would feel good, too.
Brakes, bike tires and a cloud of dust announced our
arrival in the gravelly sand covering Stark’s parking lot. I was feeling like
David right after he conquered the giant Goliath. That’s when I looked up and
spotted Mr. Wentworth pointing over at Willie and me from his brand-spankin’
new 1955 Ford pickup. That red truck shined just like the candied apples Mum
made for us kids in the fall. I could hear his deep-throated laugh as he stared
at us boys from across the lot.
“There’s
Eddy Daniels’s boys, regular chips off the old block,” I heard him telling Tom
Matthews, the town barber.
### END OF EXCERPT ###
Find Bette’s books at http://www.amazon.com/author/betteastevens
You can find out more about Bette’s perspective on
poverty and prejudice in her guest post on author MCV Egan’s blog: http://ishistorytheagreeduponlie.blogspot.com/2013/10/poverty-prejudice-yesterday-today.html
Thank you for stopping by!
Thank you for stopping by!
This has been a wonderful journey with you, Bette! Thank you for supporting and hosting her, Dormaine!!
ReplyDeleteYou are welcome and it was my pleasure
DeleteHi, Dormaine. Thanks so much for hosting me on your lovely blog. I've got my copy of CONNOR and can't wait to read it.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Marlena, for your faithful support... My SPOTLIGHT journey has been a sensational one!
Blessings to all,
Bette
You're welcome. I'm just glad to be a part of this journey.
DeleteThank you for hosting Bette on her Spotlight Author blog tour Dormaine. Congratulations Bette.
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome and yes congratulations, Bette!
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