The Hardy Boys

I can hear you now: ‘WTF is this boomer talking about??” Fiction was king in the 60’s. No, I’m not talking about fictional tabloid stories about the English monarchy or Hollywood actresses. I mean books. JFK even endorsed Ian Fleming’s Bond novels. There have always been English crime novels, led of course by the prolific… Continue reading The Hardy Boys

No Bumper Stickers (poor us)

Oh, how embarrassing….. Everywhere you look in schools today, there are banners with slogans telling kids how great they are and how they are welcomed. Not in the sixties–no banners, no nothing. The teacher welcomed you first day and that was it. You had low self-esteem, deal with it. A school’s job is not to… Continue reading No Bumper Stickers (poor us)

Band

A Boy and his Music Going into fifth grade, I sat through a presentation by the elementary school band ‘guy’ (not to be confused with the music teacher, the snotty pathetic weasel of several prior posts). I decided to take up the trumpet. Almost immediately, I was enrolled in private lessons 15 minutes away. My… Continue reading Band

Tickle, Tickle!

Hark! Doth that be a whispering hormone? As I started sixth grade, something shifted. A small seismic crack…lava bubbling. I noticed a girl in fifth grade. And noticed. And looked at her in a way that was kind of different. And totally mystifying. Unsettling to feel something weird that made no sense. Music on the… Continue reading Tickle, Tickle!

Sixth Grade

Poised on the sharp edge of a knife Your cardboard report card had a place on the back where the teacher wrote in your name “is/is not promoted to ___ grade for the 19___ school year.” Very ominous. Black ink. Everybody held their breath. The sixth grade teacher was the best. He was a statewide… Continue reading Sixth Grade

Goodbye to the Cop

A Man’s Got to Know His Limitations…. From the time I was small, there was one cop for our wee hamlet. Which is all it needed. Nothing ever happened except speeding. No car accidents, no fires, no break-ins. He got older, as did we all. He lived around two blocks away–they lived alone, and seemed… Continue reading Goodbye to the Cop