Creekbank Blog

The writing blog of Curt Iles and Creekbank Stories. Our mission: To connect hearts to God by using stories of encouragement and inspiration.

Thursday, May 07, 2009

* see additional entry at bottom of blog page.

My Mom's Best Gif
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(Photo above) A Texas bookmobile circa late 1950's.

My mother, Mary Iles, always described where we lived as "out in the sticks."
we didn't even really live in the small village of Dry Creek, but out in the nearby woods on the "wrong side of the creek."

Our rural location at the dead end of a dirt road is the reason I still smile about the day the Bookmobile came to our house.

We moved to Dry Creek (from DeRidder) when I was four. We lived a year in The Old House while my parents built a house nearby.

We were in our new house (that Daddy named "Poverty Knob.") on the day the Beauregard Parish Library Bookmobile made its first trip to our home.

I've always wondered what strings Momma had to pull to get the library van to come to our house each summer. We were far off the beaten path with just my sister Colleen and I as patrons. (Sister Claudia had just been born.)

During muddy weather our road could become nearly impassable. More than once, we got stuck on it. To call it a gravel road was a gross exaggeration, it was a dirt road... and dirt roads become a mess when "rutted up" after a rain.

A '57 Pontiac stuck on a Dry Creek road near Morrow Bridge.

I'll always remember these trips onto the Bookmobile.

The sound of it driving up every other Tuesday. I'd sit on the front steps awaiting its arrival.
Hearing it coming up the last hill before our house, I knew what vehicle it was. No one ever came down our road unless they were coming to see us or were lost.

The Bookmobile was coming to see us.

I recall the feel of the hot sand as I ran barefooted to the Bookmobile's steps.
The hot Louisiana humidity was quickly offset by the cool interior of the Bookmobile.
It was air conditioned!

In the early 1960's, very few people had electricity. Only a few stores in DeRidder had it. Our church, the camp, and nearly every home in Dry Creek was AC-less.

But the Bookmobile had air-conditioning. and I was determined to take advantage of every bit of the cold air. With Momma's help, we went through the shelves selecting books. It was such a happy time in my childhood.

The library lady would kindly remind us that she had to leave in "a few minutes." We'd wait as long as possible to leave the cool confines of the van.

Carrying an armload of books, we'd step back out into the June heat and wave as the Bookmobile disappeared around the curve, leaving a cloud of dust lingering long after its sound died away.

I knew it'd be back in two weeks, and I would then trade my stack of books for another stack, all selected from the shelves of the wonderful Beauregard Parish Library Bookmobile.

You may ask, "What does this bookmobile have to do with Mother's Day?"

In my heart, it has a definite connection. My mom made sure we had every opportunity available to learn, grow, and read. It was a gift she gave to us.

To me, arranging for the Bookmobile to come to Poverty Knob was a strong sign of how strong that love was. This opportunity to get free books for reading left an impression on me. I believe it was the beginning of my writing career.

I was at Mom's yesterday. She is now in her mid-seventies, but just as full of life as ever. Still reading. Still looking for the best in me.

Right next to her house is the old log cabin where I've now written most of my seven books.
I'm thankful for Mom's gift. The gift of books and reading that is a gift that keeps on giving.

I'm convinced that the Parish Bookmobile is where I fell in love with books and reading. It is a passion I still have forty-five years later, and that passion was kindled in the driveway of the house where my mother still lives.

In 1990, Momma sent off a story I'd written about the death of my grandmother. When I wrote a "A Pair for Life", publishing it was never a thought in my mind. I simply wrote it as a gift to my grandfather and his youngest daughter, my mom.

Without asking, Momma sent it off to Home Life magazine. Amazingly, they publishing it. From there (in spite of dozens of subsequent rejection letters that followed on other projects) my true writing career began.

Once again, my sweet momma was the catalyst for this.

So on Mother's Day 2009, once again I say "Thanks Mom for all of the love you showed Colleen, Claudia, and I growing up."

That love was never more clear that when a visible sign of her love for us-- the Bookmobile-- drove up every other Tuesday.

Happy Mother's Day.

Curt Iles

* So many readers replied with their bookmobile/library memories. On my recent African I took a suitcase full of books- some were copies of my books that I gave away. The other half were requested books by the missionaries in Rwanda. They told me, "There are no libraries in Rwanda. Bring books. We'll read anything but pornography."

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