Bus Stop

     Just like in that 60’s song, Ted and I met at the bus stop. We didn’t have an umbrella, but a gust of hot wind scattered his papers across the sidewalk and we chatted after chasing them down. We discovered we were both waiting for the shuttle to Allen House, an apartment complex near downtown Houston that catered to young professionals. The shuttle was a major amenity for the residents, not only because we could save on downtown parking, but also because it provided a venue to meet others in the days before online dating; as such, we called it “The Love Bus.”

     Our offices were on opposite blocks of the same street, and we crossed paths that July day only because I had worked a bit later than usual, while Ted had skipped out a little early. The next day we followed the same routine; I hung around the office for an extra half-hour, while he watched out the window and bolted from his drafting table when he saw me at the corner. We both tried to make it look coincidental.

     After several days of this charade, things seemed to be going in the right direction until he told me he was moving to a new place and wouldn’t be on the bus after the end of the week. That Friday, a crisis kept me at the office even past my new departure time, and the bus whizzed by as I hurried along the street toward the stop. I wanted to cry when I saw the bus. There it went, with Ted aboard for the last time, and we hadn’t exchanged numbers. That’s it, I thought, I’ll never see him again.

     I walked on, kicking myself for not paying attention to the time. Then, I looked toward the bus stop and there he was, sitting on the bench, watching me. I couldn’t believe it… it was just like a scene in a movie. I swear, music even swelled in my head. I hurried toward him and said, “The bus just went by… I thought you were gone!”

     He just smiled and said, “I waited for you.”

     Twenty-four years later, I still have the slip of paper he gave me that afternoon with his name and phone number written on it. I had to ask him how to pronounce Kollaja; little did I know then how well I would learn it myself. I keep the note pinned in a glass shadow box between Alex’s Boy Scout ribbon and a beaded bracelet reading ‘Mom’s Girl’ that Sophie made for me when she was five. I see the paper, and the mementos of our life together, every day and am glad, so glad, he didn’t get on that bus without me.

Audiobook Review-Animal, Vegetable, Miracle

Audiobook Review-Animal, Vegetable, Miracle by Barbara Kingsolver
Click on Elaine's Reading Review Link at Right

Book Review- The Piano Teacher

Here's an experiment-I'm always talking with friends about books I've read, so I've added a link to a separate blog (http://www.scratchpaperbooks.blogspot.com/) for reviews of books, stories, or other interesting material I've read.  I hope you will leave your own comments about the books, and suggest other interesting reading for the rest of us.





The Piano Teacher  by Janice Y.K. Lee


     I read this debut novel straight through in a couple of days, trying to finish it before the author’s lecture at the DMA yesterday afternoon. The novel tells the story of Will Truesdale and the two women who are in love with him; one in 1941 as the Japanese invade Hong Kong and the other 11 years later as the city rebuilds. Though there are a few gaps in the plot which require the reader to fill in the blanks, it is a well-written historical novel with interesting characters and unique cultural insights about a time and place which hasn’t previously gotten much print attention.

     The author is a young Korean-American woman living in Hong Kong with her husband and four kids (including twins born two days after she sent the final manuscript to her publisher!) I was truly inspired by her account of the writing process and was impressed by her poise in dealing with questions from the audience, including one from a nitwit who basically gave away the primary plot twist of the book! Not everyone in the auditorium had read (or finished) the book at that point, and an audible gasp went up from the crowd when the proverbial beans were spilled. Instead of calling the woman a clueless moron, which is what I probably would have done in the same situation, Ms. Lee just said “Well, for those of you who haven’t read the book yet—just forget you heard that” and moved on to a more discreet questioner.

     Ms. Lee signed books after the lecture and graciously thanked each person for being there. I was watching, and imagining how it might feel to sit at a book-signing table myself someday.

     I’d recommend this book as a good weekend or book-club read, although probably more women than men will enjoy it (sorry, guys.)