This sketchbook story is the second in a summer trilogy of illustrations from my grandfather’s sketchbook. Read the first one here.
“I can climb way up in the hemlock trees and see across the valley. On rainy days I play underneath them and it’s like little houses, ‘cause the branches come right down on the ground. Oh, no…I’m not lonely, ever.”
—From The Color of the Country by my grandmother, Barbara Webster
My father, an only child. His parents, authors and artists. Growing up, he roamed the family farm. Reading nook in a hemlock tree; secret hideout in the old stone barn.
I was also an only. My siblings, characters from the books I read beneath the crabapple branches of the treehouse my father had built. At 13, my status changed when he remarried: a brother, another mother, another family.
At our core, we were solitude seekers, my father and I. Alone, but not lonely.
He passed away last June, just shy of his 90th birthday. He was not alone. At his side, my stepbrother and I.
Not lonely, ever.
Hmm, solitude seekers. I like that! My reading room was branch of our weeping willow, out by the garage. Miss it.
I love you sharing your rich family history of creativity! There should be a club (that almost never meets) for those of us who are alone but not lonely.