Category: Slice of Life

  • Reading at Harriet Hancock Community Center


    Hey, what a great time Teresa and I had doing a reading and book signing for I’ll Call It Like I See It: A Lesbian Speaks Out on Sunday, December 2nd!  Had  a wonderful group of GLBT folks who laughed at the appropriate moments so always a good sign…wish all of our cyberspace friends from around the country and world could’ve been with us!

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    The Center has a Potluck luncheon the first Sunday of every month

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    It was a beautiful Sunday afternoon so we ate and talked outside

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    No need to bring flowers – beautiful ones already there

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    Book signing table with book posters for all three books

    Thanks to Harriet Hancock and her daughter Jennifer Tague and Lester Frantzen for inviting us and making us feel so welcome and thanks to all who purchased books!

    I’d love to come to your home for a house party or your book club or other venues for speaking and book signings…please send me an email at smortex@aol.com.

  • Reading at Harriet Hancock GLBT Community Center Sunday, Dec 2nd


    Following the monthly Pot Luck at the Harriet Hancock Community Center in Columbia this Sunday, December 2nd., I’ll be doing a reading/discussion of the new book and signing copies sold afterwards.   The meal is at 2:00 and the reading will start at approximately 3:00.   Would love to see you there!

    The Community Center is located at 1108 Woodrow Street in Columbia, SC 29205.

  • New Book Launch!


    Holy Moly – First Editions/Collectibles/Autographed/Ticket to Ride!!  Be the First Followers to Buy Now!!

    I’ll Call It Like I See It – A Lesbian Speaks Out is a collection of personal stories and reflections on the challenging contemporary issues of the 21st century as told by a lesbian activist with a Southern accent. Rich with the mixture of wit and wisdom that is the tradition of Texas women storytellers, no stone goes unturned. From faith to football to finance to fantasy and everything in-between – the topics are as diverse as the author’s background. Readers of Sheila’s two previously published memoirs will recognize the outspoken voice of a storyteller who is unafraid to tackle taboo topics but does so with humor and compassion.

    Sheila Morris was born and raised in rural Grimes County, Texas but called South Carolina her home for over forty years.   She is the author of two award-winning memoirs, Deep in the Heart – A Memoir of Love and Longing and Not Quite the Same.  She is an essayist with humorist tendencies and believes she inherited her storytelling abilities from her grandmother on her daddy’s side.

  • Between Hell And Hackeydam


    Seems like I’ve been off on some “heavy” topics for a good while, and I needed a breath of fresh air.  I remembered this post I had about Bubba Sage and saw that I wrote it almost exactly two years ago on October 17, 2012.  I loved reading it again and thought you all might, too.  Enjoy.

     

    Once upon a time not long ago and certainly not far away a great Texas storyteller held forth on a Sunday afternoon as his audience gathered around a small dining room table, and it  was my good luck to be there for the performance.  He was the last guest to arrive for the barbecue luncheon and proved to be quite the addition to a little band of friends and family who gathered for a traditional birthday celebration for my cousin Martin.  I should’ve known I was in for a treat when Carroll “Bubba” Sage announced his presence with an entrance worthy of royalty.  This very large man with a closely trimmed grey beard moved into the kitchen as the screen door slammed behind him.  He balanced a homemade German chocolate cake in a single layer aluminum cake  pan as he came in, and the energy in the little house went up a notch.  When he retrieved a package of coffee he’d brought and declared he never went anywhere without his own Dunkin’ Donuts coffee because he couldn’t possibly drink anything else with his cake, my antenna was up and ready for the ride.

    And what a ride it was…Bubba grew up as the younger child of parents who owned and operated what was affectionately known by its patrons in the 1950s as a “beer joint.”  He was born and raised in Navasota which was, and is sixty years later, a small town in Grimes County, Texas, a county that was dry back in those days so his folks opened their establishment across the Brazos River in Washington County which was wet.   Dry county equals no adult beverages allowed.  Wet county means go for it.  In addition to serving beer, the best barbecue and hamburgers in the state made the place standing room only for a long time, according to Bubba’s stories.  I know that barbecue from years of chasing brisket in Texas hole-in-the-wall restaurants and could visualize the scene as Bubba’s daddy cooked the barbecue outside behind the tavern on a long open pit built out of bricks with a crusty black grill to put the meat on.  I swear I could smell the aroma, or maybe that was my cousin’s chickens and sausage cooking outside in a smoker for our lunch.

    And my, oh my, talk about entertainment.  The Sage Place had music on the weekends and Bubba’s daddy played fiddle in the band.  As Alabama sings, if you’re gonna play in Texas, you gotta have a fiddler in the band.  The women’s petticoats swirled to the fast music and then swayed to the slow tunes as they danced the Two-Step.  The female patrons particularly liked the little boy who was always there and let him wear their costume jewelry sometimes when they saw him eyeing it with lust in his eyes.   He was in heaven.

    The young boy grew up and became one of the teenagers that puffed the Magic Dragon in the middle of the Brazos River at a place he and his friends appropriately dubbed Smokey Point.  They also created a theater of sorts at Smokey Point and Bubba developed a reputation as the Star of the Brazos.  I was mesmerized by this big man’s recitations at our dining table.  He took me totally by surprise when he began quoting a section of Young Goodman Brown, an obscure short story by the nineteenth century novelist Nathaniel Hawthorne.   I could picture him at Smokey Point as the Brazos River flowed past the dramatics.

    As all good storytellers do, Bubba threw in a few words and phrases to grab his listeners’ attention and he grabbed mine when he said, “I’ve had  close calls and been caught between hell and hackeydam more times than I like to remember.”   Excuse me I said as I interrupted him.  But what does that mean and how do you spell it?   Bubba laughed and said it was like being between a rock and a hard place and a phrase his family used but that he had no idea how to spell it so I’ve spelled it phonetically and will now use it as if I’d thought it up myself.

    The lunch was delicious.  Bubba’s German chocolate cake was the best I ever tasted and that includes both of my grandmothers’ efforts so that’s high praise.  I stayed to play dominos after we ate and then began to say my goodbyes and thanks for the day when the game was over.  As I cut a piece of cake to take with me, Bubba made one final rendition in the kitchen.  He recited portions of “The Hill”  from Edgar Lee Masters’s Spoon River Anthology which ends with the line, “… all, all are sleeping on the hill…”

    Honestly, does it get any better than that?

  • In Remembrance


    I mentioned in my most recent post that I wandered in 1968 to the Pacific Northwest and lived in Seattle, Washington two separate times when I was in my early twenties.  The first time I moved there was in the fall so September 30, 2012 marked approximately the 44th. anniversary of that seismic change of scenery in my young life.  I learned last night it was also the day I lost a good friend  I met there, a friend who died suddenly in a Seattle hospital from a brain aneurysm.

    Sherry’s partner Maggie notified me via this blog actually, and I approved the comments she made but responded to her personally elsewhere as soon as I saw her message.  Maggie and Sherry had been together for 27 years, and I marvel at both the length of time and quality of their devotion to each other during that time.

    I remember Sherry as a woman who adored her partner, her children, her dogs, and the memory of her mother who died not long after I met her.  She was passionate about her faith and struggled with her religion.  She was a native Texan but loved Puget Sound more than the west Texas prairies and was never tempted to return to Abilene after she moved to Seattle in 1967 as an adult in her late twenties.  She was quick to laugh and slow to anger, but didn’t shrink from her temper, either.  Resilient.  Compassionate. Determined to the point of stubbornness.  A flair for the dramatic.  A woman of character who was truly a character.

    My friendship with Sherry has been an intermittent constant in my life for as long as I can remember.  In March of 2011, she came to visit me in Texas for a few days.  We laughed some, sang some and talked nonstop like old friends do who don’t see each other frequently.  She exerted a tremendous effort to make that trip happen, and I am very grateful for it today.  I think we need to see each other, she’d say every year and I’d agree, but she followed through.

    I’m glad I wandered into her world a lifetime ago, and I fear Seattle will never be the same without her – at least not to me.