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Thursday, June 25, 2009

Grandma and the Prince - Part 8


<==Grandma at 19

Something happened to me the year I turned twenty-six.

It was 1976, our Bicentennial year, a year of history and memory. A year of looking back to discover how we came to be. I suppose my family is as representative of the U.S. in the 20th century as any family could be.

Three of my four grandparents were born in other countries. Only one, my mother's father, was born in this country and he was halfChippewa.

I started thinking a lot about how my family evolved during that year, trying to weave together the disparate stories into a whole I could understand. And who better to start with than my garrulous, storytelling grandmother El?

Grandma was living in a small apartment in Elmhurst, Queens, the New York City neighborhood where I'd grown up. It wasn't much as far as apartments go, more a glorified studio than anything else. You entered into a dark and narrow hallway. The bathroom was off that hallway, along with a huge walk-in closet that also held Grandma's chifferobe and secretary desk. Everything else had been lost in the fire two years earlier that destroyed the Woodside building where she and her daughter Mona had both been living.

The moment she smelled smoke and heard the fierce sibilant hiss of flame, she grabbed her strongbox of old photos, her bankbook and jewelry, and climbed out onto the fire escape in her nightgown. The metal rungs of the ladder were slick with ice but that didn't stop Grandma. She ordered the firemen to keep their hands to themselves and made her way down two flights to safety.

When the smoke cleared, she learned she'd be traveling much lighter through life. Paintings, framed photos, furniture, clothes--gone, all of it. These days they call it simplifying your life but it was more than that. It was a tragedy.

So much of her past was lost in that fire, so many clues to her heart and soul. Of course, none of that mattered to me in 1976. I was only twenty-six and my grandmother was going to live forever. She was my constant, my North star. And she was ready to talk.

We decided I'd drive in early Sunday morning for breakfast and conversation. I had my questions all planned, fresh batteries in my cassette recorder, and a curiosity so intense that I was willing to brave the Long Island Expressway on a July Sunday in order to satisfy it.

No matter where Grandma lived, the place always looked like her. I remember the Prospect Avenue house with the steep front steps and angled roof. The small ranch house on Eckhardt Terrace with the apple trees in the back yard and the pinball machine in the basement. The address didn't matter. You'd know who lived there the second you walked through the door. She hated this apartment, her last, but still she'd made it her own. She'd found a loose pillow-back sofabed at a thrift store and stitched up a slipcover in a slightly tatty chintz fabric that seemed to give off the faint scent of Tigress. She had paintings on the walls, oils and watercolors and prints, street scenes, rainy vistas, all of them in ornate frames hung suspended from thick velvet cords. They weren't the pictures she'd carried with her from home to home but still they fit. I can see each of her homes in my mind's eye.

Grandma and I talked for hours that summer day. She was instantly comfortable with the whirring of the tape recorder, so much so that she would ask me to stop the tape when she wanted to say something incriminating or downright bitchy. But I can’t remember the words.

I remember the room and the heat and the smell of toast and bacon and the feeling of having turned a corner, of being accepted in her world as an adult and not a child. I remember the narrow little table pushed against the wall, the way you could reach the sink from your chair without even stretching very far at all. I remember the sound of people talking beneath her window, of the gentle ticking of her anniversary clock.

Whatever we talked about, I captured ninety minutes of it on tape. I remember the
cassette. Capitol Records made the blank tape and packaged it in a cardboard box
decorated with a Peter Max drawing that was all curves and primary colors. The label was red and white.

The tape is old now and a little flukey with age. I popped it in an ancient cassette player and was jolted from my chair by the sound of our laughter. I didn't remember the laughter. Isn't that ridiculous? But I remember now.

It wasn't easy but I transcribed the tape about ten years ago and while the
omissions are telling (like forgetting her first husband, the man who was my biological grandfather) the content is downright fascinating and I hope to share it with you next month.

(The photo above is Grandma El at 70.)

* * * *

Today's my birthday and to celebrate I'm giving away a signed ARC of my August
book, LACED WITH MAGIC. All you have to do is leave a comment and I'll choose one winner (thanks, Random Number Generator) on Sunday night and announce it right here and on my blog.

Good luck!

21 comments:

housemouse88 said...

I love reading about your grandmother. Having just lost mine recently, it brings a tear to my eye and a hug on my heart. Thank you for sharing this part of your life with us. Have a great day.

Unknown said...

Your grandmother has a beautiful soul, I loved hearing this tiny bit and look forward to a beautiful rendition of her life.

Thanks

Dottie :)

CrystalGB said...

Happy birthday Barbara. I hope you have a good day.
I am enjoying all that you are sharing about your grandmother. It is great that you got to record a conversation you had with her.

traveler said...

Barbara,
What a wonderful post. I am captivated with your stories about your grandmother and what a treasure trove of beautiful and amazing recordings that preserve this forever. Thanks for this glimpse.

KR said...

I lost my Mom in February. I regret not taping her stories and not knowing who these wonderful old photos are of.

mj.coward[at]gmail.com

Dorthy said...

That is great that you got 90 min of recorded time with your Grandma, and now you can enjoy it for a long time. you could get it transfered to CD or to you computer and then it would deteriate slower.
I wish I would have thougt of doing something like that with my grandparents.

Oh, and Happy Birthday! I hope its a great one for you.

Estella said...

I am so enjoying the story about your grandmother!

Happy Birthday!

Unknown said...

A BIG HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO YOU! I love hearing about your grandmother! I don't know many tails on my grandmother. I love hearing about the old people in our lives.

Pat Cochran said...

I am sad! I kept saying for years that I would tape interviews with
Mother and other older relatives. I
never got around to it, now they
are almost all gone. There is one
of Mother's sisters (she has severe
Alzheimer's) and one of her cousins. On my Dad's side, there are one aunt and one uncle left. I'll have to get with them to get family history recorded. Thanks for reminding me!

Pat Cochran

Julie said...

Happy Birthday! I have been enjoying your Grandma El stories.

macbeaner said...

Happy Birthday!!

Michele L. said...

I wish you a fabulous birthday Barbara!

What a peach of a grandmother! Your loving reminisces of her are so touching, funny, and entertaining. You are so generous to share your stories of her with us!

My grandma lives on in my heart also. Mine would share poetry with me. I have such fond memories of spending summers with my Grandma was so much fun! We would play bunco, drink iced tea with fresh mint leaves picked from her garden, walk to the dime store and buy candy, and take walks around the block at dusk when it was cool.

Thanks again for another enchanting installment!

Anonymous said...

Happy Birthday!!!! Loved the post and the story about your grandmother.

The Brunette Librarian said...

Happy birthday Barbara!

I've really enjoyed reading about your Grandmother..She looks like she'd be a lot of fun!! :D

Hope you have a great day, Rach :)

rachie2004 AT yahoo DOT com

Laurie G said...

You are so lucky to have captured all these treasured memories!! Both of my grandparents, my husband's grandparents, my father and my mother-in-law have all passed away without us writing anything down.

Alison said...

I love reading about your grandmother. My mother is now a grandmother to my daughter and there's something satisfying but sad about seeing the generations move on up.

Alison said...

I love reading about your grandmother. My mother is now a grandmother to my daughter and there's something satisfying but sad about seeing the generations move on up.

Barbara Bretton said...

Congratulations to Michele L! The RNG chose your #, Michele. Now all I need is your mailing address and we're in business. You can reach me at barbarabretton@gmail.com

And thanks, everyone, for the wonderful comments and memories of your own grandmothers. Listen to their stories while you have the chance! Take notes! Make recordings! You'll never regret it.

Michele L. said...

Hi Barbara,
Woohoo! I am so excited to win your book! I have all your books on my keeper shelf!

Thanks again!

Mari said...

I like the cover with the black cat on it. I am a cat fancier.
Love your books!

Kytaira said...

I have really loved reading about your Grandma and the Prince. Thanks for the real life serial.

And Happy Belated Birthday!

lynda98662 at yahoo dot com