We TeachingAuthors are writing about the view from our
offices during these long, hot summer days.
I look out my office window and see a flowerbed full of beautiful
black-eyed Susan flowers. Butterflies
gently land on one bloom, then another.
Hummingbirds flit around the feeder on and off all day.
Outside my office window. |
I’ve written here before that I’m writing a new book about
the enslaved people who lived and worked at Mount Vernon. The working title is BURIED LIVES: THE
ENSLAVED PEOPLE OF GEORGE WASHINGTON’S MOUNT VERNON. Holiday House will publish it in the fall of
2018. This summer I’ve been working on
revisions on the book.
In BURIED LIVES I’m concentrating on the lives of about six
specific enslaved people. I’ve gotten to
know them really well over the last two years.
While rewriting the same paragraphs over and over to get them right—not
good enough, but right—I’ve looked out at those black-eyed Susan flowers a lot
this summer. I’ve watched them sway in
the hot breeze, but often I didn’t see them at all. Instead in my mind’s eye I’ve seen Mount
Vernon as it was in the 18th century. I’ve imagined sweeping the stairs with
Caroline; working in the stable with Peter; making perfect stitches with Oney Judge; riding with William Lee
during the Revolution; caring for George Washington’s clothes with Christopher
Shields, and cooking in an open hearth with Hercules.
As a nonfiction writer, the people I write about must be
real to me before they can come to life through words on the page. The enslaved people whose lives I’ve been
studying are very real to me. I can’t
wait to introduce readers to them.