Starting in June, I will fly the Mississippi River from the source at Lake Itasca to the Gulf. In order to accomplish this adventure, I will need to fly from my base, Panola County Airport, to Bemidji, Minnesota. Then I will start my adventure following the turns and straightways of the river. I plan to join the Ladies Love Taildraggers in Hannibal, Missouri then fly to Baton Rouge, Louisiana with the club in 7 days. I will then fly down to the Gulf and back to Panola County Airport. Boy, will my arms be tired. 😃
Maggie Reads
My Mission...Not Impossible...Make Mississippi Read!
Tuesday, January 02, 2024
Flying the Mississippi River 2024
Wednesday, February 03, 2016
Secret Garden (copy)
I grew up in
a neighborhood of all boys. My cousin, Sheila, lived three blocks north and my
friend from school was one block south, but she only wanted to play indoors. Ferrell,
my older brother, sometimes allowed me to tag along. But, more often than not,
he would ditch me the first chance he could. Tags: Booktalk
Wednesday, January 20, 2016
The Last Season (copy)
Tags: Booktalk, Mississippi Author
Wednesday, January 13, 2016
A House Divided
Monday night
was host to the game of a lifetime in the Moran house. The SEC championship between
Clemson and Alabama put Pete and me at opposite goal posts. I was proud of
Clemson for the undefeated season, but Pete was over the moon. He graduated
from Clemson with a bachelor in economics back in 1979. I gathered a master’s
degree at Alabama in 2005.Tags: Booktalk, Mississippi Author
Wednesday, January 06, 2016
Resolve to Read, Mississippi
Tags: Booktalk
Wednesday, July 08, 2015
The Wright Brothers (copy)
Tags: Booktalk
Wednesday, June 03, 2015
The Boys in the Boat (copy)
Tags: Booktalk
Wednesday, April 22, 2015
Monument Road (copy)
Leonard Self made a promise and today he must honor
it. His lovely wife, Inetta, died on this date one year ago and before passing
she made him promise he would carry out her request. She asks that he take her
ashes and toss them over the side of Artists Point cliff. He remembered her
saying, “Me and Jesus’ll be watching, and I want to float for a while.”Tags: Booktalk
Wednesday, April 15, 2015
Dead Wake (copy)
May 7, 2015, marks the 100th anniversary of
the tragic sinking of the Lusitania off the coast of Ireland by a German
submarine torpedo. Eric Larson has written, Dead Wake: The Last Crossing of
the Lusitania, that revisits the tragedy that pulled us into the first World
War Tags: Booktalk
Wednesday, April 08, 2015
The Buried Giant (copy)
Axl and Beatrice are being denied a simple flame to
keep them comfortable at night. They live in a mud cave of many chambers on the
side of a hill amongst their small Briton community. Described as looking
similar to a rabbit warren, the elderly couple have the smallest room. They
seem to remember having lived in the center of the community, but now are at
the end with the room connected to the community and the outside.Tags: Booktalk
Wednesday, March 25, 2015
Freeze Tag! (copy)
I got an exciting email last night from Dr. Sue
Clifton. She is one of 37 talented writers who will be appearing at the Author
Rodeo Roundup this Saturday, March 28, from 2:00 p.m.to 4:00 p.m. on the
Senatobia campus of Northwest in the R. C. Pugh Library. Tags: Booktalk, Mississippi Author
Wednesday, March 18, 2015
Whispers (copy)
One of the most exciting times for a woman is
pregnancy. The questions that are never ending start to form in her head as her
body does some really strange things. Naturally, she immerses herself in making
the perfect nest and her family and friends shower her with well wishes and
gifts. She is about to take on a lifetime of love and she works hard to make it
perfect. Tags: Booktalk, Mississippi Author
Wednesday, March 04, 2015
My Magnolia Memories and Musings (copy)
This past weekend, I finished the Little Rock Marathon
with a person I met that morning who literally changed my thinking process for
the whole race. A select few (super slow) runners were allowed to start the
race Sunday morning at 6:00 a.m. while the rest slept in until the 8:00 a.m.
start time. Tags: Booktalk, Mississippi Author
Wednesday, February 18, 2015
Yazoo: Integration in a Deep-Southern Town (copy)
Tags: Booktalk, Mississippi Author
Wednesday, February 11, 2015
Simply Weight Loss (copy)
Tags: Booktalk, Mississippi Author
Wednesday, February 04, 2015
The Night Train (copy)
Jayrod could hear the bell his teacher, Mrs. Snitch,
wielded with great enthusiasm off in the distance. He was stuck to the earth
unable to make a decision. In front of him was a deep gully full of honeysuckle
and briars. On the other side stood the class bullies led by Horace Plunk and
his cronies, Bobby Greenhall and Tony Farse. Tags: Booktalk, Mississippi Author
Wednesday, January 21, 2015
Flight of the Sparrow (copy)
Mary Rowlandson’s life is in jeopardy. Two weeks ago
she was shot at and taken as spoils of the siege on her small village in Bay
Colony, Massachusetts called Lancaster. Her husband left the night before the
ambush to get help from a Boston militia. She still awaits his return.Tags: Booktalk
Wednesday, January 14, 2015
We were Liars (copy)
The Sinclairs have money. Tipper and Harris have so
much money that they own an island off the coast of Massachusetts called
Beechwood. Each summer the whole clan, consisting of three divorced daughters
with eight children and one friend, boat out to the island to join the
Sinclairs.Tags: Booktalk
Wednesday, January 07, 2015
Unbroken Movie vs. Book (copy)
Tags: Booktalk
Wednesday, December 10, 2014
Rumble (copy)
Tags: Booktalk
Wednesday, December 03, 2014
Going Over (copy)
Tags: Booktalk
Wednesday, November 19, 2014
Ankle Soup (copy)
Seeing the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade is on my
bucket list. It is now in its 88th year as a parade, but in 1924 it
was called Macy’s Christmas Parade complete with animals from the Central Park
Zoo. If one does the math, 2014 minus 1924 equals 90 years. In 1942, the rubber
used for the balloons was need for the war effort and the parade was suspended
for two years. Wednesday, November 12, 2014
Through the Woods (copy)
Edgar Allan Poe lives! I read Through the Woods by
Emily Carroll and could not help but think of the great poet. From her first
story, readers will get the unmistakable feeling of a descent into madness by
the characters that haunt this debut graphic novel fated for awards. Tags: Booktalk
Wednesday, November 05, 2014
The Girls of Atomic City (copy)
It was a hot humid day in New York City when Celia
Szapka climbed into the packed train at Union Station. She had splurged and bought
a new black and white dress that looked fairly smart on her 24-year-old figure, just
for the trip. She was also sporting her Times Square find, I. Miller shoes that
she had to do some quick maneuvering to keep clean in the crowd.Tags: Booktalk
Wednesday, October 29, 2014
Walking on Air (copy)
Willie Morris once said, “He must always be a stranger to the place he loves, and its people.” I met one such stranger last night in my reading who shaped civil aviation in our country and lived just west of Como back in the 1950s. Yet, today, her name is virtually unknown and her love, lost.
Phoebe Fairgrave began her aviation career after watching – in awe – President Woodrow Wilson’s plane fly over Cleveland during a campaign stop. Rushing back to Mechanical Arts High School, she could not wait to tell classmates she was going to be a pilot.
After school and on weekends, Phoebe could be seen staring at the Orioles and Jennies through the chain linked fence at Curtiss Northwest Flying Field. Although, she felt sure someone would offer her a ride it never happened.
Finally, she slipped through the fence and told one of the men near a Jenny that she was interested in buying it. Again Phoebe was thwart. The man let her look around even allowing her to sit in the Jenny’s seat, but said she would have to purchase the plane if she wanted a ride.
She needed $3,500 to buy the WWI refurbished airplane. Unfortunately, her odd jobs after graduation in 1920 were not enough. Being a fan of The Perils of Pauline series, she visited the Fox Film Corporation that had a branch in Cleveland. Pauline did lots of outrageous stunts and Phoebe convinced them into allowing her to parachute from an airplane dressed as the character.
With money saved and a loan based on the parachute contract, Phoebe finally had enough to purchase her “big beautiful Jenny!” The salesman not only gave her the first ride, but threw her around in the cockpit with a “quick, violet shake” that resulted in a stall and spin. What was meant to scare her away only thrilled her more.
Ironically, Phoebe now owned a plane that no one would teach her to fly. Her first and seemed like last flight was that cold day in January. It was late spring before she finally found a “25-year-old veteran of the Great War,” Capt. Vernon Omlie. He stood tall and handsome next to the Jenny as she told him all about the “contract.” That day, she listened as he explained the art of wing walking.
Walking on Air: The Aerial Adventures of Phoebe Omlie by University of Memphis professor, Janann Sherman is a thrilling then sad ride. Although, the new Memphis Air Traffic Control Tower at Memphis International Airport bears her name, she still remains a stranger.
Tags: Booktalk, Southern Bio







