Fans of Grumble Bluff have been asking for the sequels for years....and I'm sorry that they aren't published, yet. Oh, to have time to devote to this project!
In one of GB's sequels, Katherine Anne and Greta start an 'anti-bullying' group at their school. This group is called "STEERS", an acronym for "Students Tolerating, Encouraging, Enriching and Respecting Students". A kind of play-on-words...BULLies...STEERS...
Hey, the girls are only 13 years old! What do you expect? Heh...
Speaking for myself, I'd love to see junior high schools and high schools promote just such organizations, devoted to teaching tolerance and empathy between students...as well as 'survival' techniques, i.e. what to do when you're bullied or what to do when you see others being bullied. We have 4-H, Scouts, Sports Clubs, Year Book and Drama Clubs, but what could be more important than eradicating bullying? Every child deserves to attend school unmolested. And every child needs tools to encourage self-confidence and self-like, as well as learning how to safely and effectively extricate themselves and others from dangerous or degrading situations.
In order to get folks thinking about this subject, I thought I'd hold a little contest. Just submit a suggestion for naming an anti-bullying group at your local school. On July 4th I'll throw the names into a hat and draw one out. The winner will receive a copy of Grumble Bluff, autographed to the recipient of his or her choice. It's that simple!
Below is an email received 3 days ago from a new fan of Grumble Bluff:
"I have to say and I told my girls, it would have to be the most beautiful, entertaining and all time best book I've read. Honestly I'm not saying that... for any other reason except that it was. It had me in fits of laughter and in tears. You deserve so much for writing a book like that and I think school kids should read it as apart of their curriculum if only for the "Bullying"aspect."
Deb in Queensland, Australia
And now...an except from Ashes at Grumble Bluff:
I jumped off the Rommels’ porch, cut around to the
back of the house and started running as fast as I could across their back lawn
and up the hill that rose behind it.
Arms and long legs pumping I flew, up towards the ancient pine tree that
stood at the top of the mound that overlooked Greta’s home.
Of
course, she was already there – hands propped on her knees as she caught her
breath. I heard her laugh at me as I
slowed to a stop. It was a good sound,
that laughter.
“Beat
you again!” she crowed.
“Yeah,
but you cheated! I had to stay
and exchange recipes for tuna casserole with your mother before I could
leave!” I plopped to the ground beneath
the pine tree and leaned against the pitchy bark. If I’d tried that run last September I would
have dropped dead of a heart attack long before I reached the bottom of the
hill. Now, I was only pleasantly
winded.
“I’ll bet she can’t even cook!” Greta sank down beside me and made a face. “I didn’t handle that very well, did I?” she asked quietly. I elbowed her affectionately.
“I’ll bet she can’t even cook!” Greta sank down beside me and made a face. “I didn’t handle that very well, did I?” she asked quietly. I elbowed her affectionately.
“You
surprised me. I didn’t know you could be
so…witchy!” I grinned. “And here I’ve
been telling people how polite and nice you are! Hah!”
I tried to keep the moment light.
Lord knows she’d had few enough light moments, lately.
“I
shouldn’t have hollered at her.” Greta
began sifting orange pine needles through her fingers. The air was warm and smelled of pungent ferns
and pitch and soil. Briefly, I longed to
be home at Grumble Bluff; my own private woodland sanctuary. Problems always seemed more manageable at
Grumble.
“She’s
a big girl. She can handle it.”
“Actually,
she’s tiny, isn’t she? I can’t even
remember her, really -- but I never pictured her being so small. I guess that’s where I get my size.” Greta was whippet-thin and about five inches
shorter than I was, but she was still taller than her mother.
“Let’s
just hope your chest grows bigger than hers did!” I giggled. “She might as well have Hershey’s Kisses
taped under her shirt!”
“Shut
up!” Greta smacked me in the shoulder and giggled back at me. “I’m going to have massive bosoms, just you
wait and see. They’ll be even bigger
than yours, if you can believe that!”
We loved poking fun at each other because we were comfortable in our
affection. It was different than when
other people made fun of us. We’d both
been through plenty of that.
We
sat quietly for a few minutes, listening to the lazy sounds of the birds and
hearing the occasional noise of traffic as it passed in front of the
house. Finally, Greta spoke.
“What
do you suppose they’re talking about?” she asked.
“I
think Gram and Gramps are giving her the ‘old what-for’. I think they’re telling her that they love
you and they want you…and she can just forget about taking you with her. That’s what I think!” And hope and pray...
Greta
scooped the scattered pine needles into a big mound in front of her. Her hands were busy but her mind wasn’t
focused on what they were doing. She was
thinking about her mother.
“‘Pamela
Grimes’, she said. I guess that means
she remarried. So I have a
stepfather. Yuck.”
“Oh,
man,” I said, the thought just hitting me.
“Maybe you have brothers or sisters, too!” That worried me. Again, I was being selfish. But I knew how much Greta had longed for
siblings. She doted on my younger
brothers, Greg and Duncan, and had often said she was envious of me because of
them. If Pamela had other children – brothers
or sisters to offer Greta – would that make her want to go live with her
mother? I couldn’t compete with real
live siblings. And that’s what I
suddenly felt like I had to do; compete.
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