Several of my recent blog posts have been 2,000 words or more, which is way beyond where I like them to be. These are uncertain and stressful times, and some topics I have been led to blog about could not be covered in a few words.
Alas, today will be a somewhat shorter post because I did not get many books read in February; however, I have a couple of special items to share about Hurricane Helene recovery in western North Carolina, so this post isn’t as short as I thought when I started writing it.
There were several books I attempted to read or listen to, but a lack of interest or inability to concentrate meant that those books were not finished.
I only completely read two books last month, so this section of today’s post will be short.
Words to Remember: So that you don’t forget yourself, by Becky Hemsley
I discovered poet Becky Hemsley on Instagram a few months ago. Many of her postings struck a chord with me, so I purchased one of her books of poetry, Words to Remember: So that you don’t forget yourself.
This book is jam-packed with poems that inspire. I repeatedly thought about my four great-nieces (ages 20 to 27) as I read the 74 poems in this book.
If you need encouragement or you know someone – especially a young woman – who needs to be reminded that they are good enough, give them a copy of this book.
One Big Happy Family: Heartwarming Stories of Animals Caring for One Another, by Lisa Rogak
My sister happened upon this book and let me borrow it before she had to return it to the public library. What a jewel! (My sister and the book!)
This book contains 50 stories, one- to three-pages in length (including wonderful photographs) about unlikely animals who have bonded, become best friends, adopted orphans of other species, and shown a deeper understanding of empathy than a lot of human beings are capable of.
A few examples of these unlikely friends: a cat and a squirrel, a Springer Spaniel and lambs, a Border Collie and her Vietnamese pot-bellied piglets, a goat and a wolf, a cat and her chicks, a chicken and her Rottweiler puppies, a rabbit and her kittens, a bulldog and her baby squirrels, an orangutan and his lion cubs, a dog and his baby monkey.
Each story includes a “Family Fact” sidebar with an educational sentence or two about one of the species featured in that story. For instance, I learned that pigs like to roll around in the mud because they lack the ability to sweat to cool off. And I learned why Dalmatians are associated with fire trucks.
This would make a great gift for any animal lover and for a child. These delightful stories from around the world will make you laugh and smile. Just what the doctor ordered for your mental health in 2025!
This next is in the “I didn’t see that coming!” category…
Beowulf: A New Translation (translated by Irish poet Seamus Heaney)
Don’t laugh! Ann Patchett highly recommended this translation of Beowulf on Instagram on February 21, 2025. The said it was good to read when you can’t sleep because your mind is racing and worried about what’s going on. (I’m not sure now if that was a direct quote, but it is the jest of what she said.) I was pretty keyed up about what’s going on, so I decided to check it out of the public library.
Patchett seemed to be saying that reading this wonderful translation of this ancient work that I had to read in Old English as a high school student would renew my confidence that the monster will not eat me. In Beowulf, the monster (Grendel) is killed by Beowulf.
I was glad to learn that because after reading it in Old English in high school I had no idea what it was about. I didn’t even remember that it was a poem.
After bringing Seamus Heaney’s modern English translation of Beowulf home from the library, I struggled through around half of the 22-page Introduction. I eventually jumped ahead to the actual poem. If I could have read this translation as a teenager, I might have at least understood what the poem was about.
I did not read the entire translated version. Life is short. I needed something to take my mind off politics, but Beowulf wasn’t it.
In case you have a hankering to read Beowulf, this appears to be an excellent translation. The edition my county’s library system has is bilingual, with the Old English version on the left page and the translation on the facing page. It was published in the year 2000.
I gather from Patchett’s comments that the moral of this legend is that good wins over evil. I’ll try to keep that in mind as I navigate the minefield laid out by the Executive Branch of the US Government in 2025.
There are a couple of other books I started reading in March. I’ll finish them in April and tell you all about them in May.
Hurricane Helene Update
As I write this post late on Saturday night, areas from Texas to Missouri and Kentucky are experiencing major flooding. I would be remiss not to mention that flooding and the suffering of the people affected; however, as I have maintained since last September, I live in North Carolina and I will continue to blog about the Hurricane Helene recovery efforts in my state.
As of Friday, 139 roads in North Carolina were still closed due to Hurricane Helene. That count included nine US highways, 13 state highways, and 117 state roads. That’s an overall decrease of seven road since March 21.
Although the region received some rain last week, the weather turned unseasonably warm on Friday. Wildfires continued to be a problem.
I realized that I have failed to mention one 501(c)3 foundation that was born out of the devastation Hurricane Helene left in Mitchell and Yancey counties in North Carolina, so I’ll remedy that oversight today. First, I need to explain a word in the name of the foundation: hollers. If you look up the word “holler,” you will be told that the definition of that word is a loud shout (noun) or to give a loud shout (verb). That’s not what “holler” means as used by Rebuilding Hollers Foundation, based in Bakersville, NC. If you’re from the mountains of NC or anywhere close by, you know that a holler is the area at the foot of a mountain… as in “hills and hollers.” Now that you know what a holler is, here’s a link to the Rebuilding Hollers Foundation website: https://rebuildinghollers.org/page-18086. Six months after the storm and the flooding that resulted from 30 inches of rain, the need is still overwhelming.
I have reported a lot of bad news and scary news in my blog over the last couple of weeks, so I am delighted to share some uplifting news with you today! This next story makes my heart sing! Yancey County hasn’t received as much media attention as Buncombe County (where Asheville is) because that’s just the way it is when any natural disaster happens. For instance, New Orleans got most of the attention after Hurricane Katrina, although neighboring small towns on Mississippi’s coast were devastated. That’s just the way it is, but I recently learned about an amazing way the carpentry students at the only high school in Yancey County are actively aiding recovery after unprecedented destruction.
The students in the Advanced Carpentry Class taught by Jeremy Dotts at Mountain Heritage High School in Burnsville, NC are building a tiny house to be given to someone impacted by Hurricane Helene. What a wonderful way a public high school is empowering students who were themselves affected by the hurricane! Thank you, Mr. Dotts, for teaching your students empathy and compassion while also teaching them carpentry skills! Here’s the link to a story a TV station in Raleigh-Durham did on the project: https://abc11.com/post/high-school-carpentry-students-turn-homebuilding-storm-victims/15903556/.
But that’s not the complete story, by any stretch of the imagination! I wanted to look deeper and I discovered that tiny house is just one part of the story. First, I found an article from 2022 about the carpentry program (https://www.ednc.org/the-construction-of-a-yancey-county-carpentry-program/) and then I found a website that gives details of how carpentry isn’t the only skill or trade the students in Yancey County can learn in high school and how course completions can transfer into credits at Mayland Community College. (https://mhhs.yanceync.net/page/skilled-trades/.)
Wouldn’t it be wonderful if every high school or at least every county in America could have a program like this? After all, everyone can’t excel in science or math. Some people excel in carpentry… and those of us who don’t have woodworking and construction skills rely on those who do every day of our lives.
Until my next blog post
I hope you have a good book to read. Find something to read that will calm your nerves and enable you to escape the stresses of life for at least a few minutes every day.
Savor your memories of and time with friends and family.
Remember the people of Myanmar, Thailand, Ukraine, and western North Carolina.
Janet





Much to digest in this delightful post, but especially fond of Seamus Heaney
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Hello, Paul! Good to see you again. Somehow, your blog has disappeared from my feed. It must have taken incredible skill for Mr. Heaney to translate Beowulf. Sadly, it just wasn’t a time that I could concentrate and read through it. Reading it in Olde English in high school only served to be one of those things we had to do that we can lord over the heads of the younger generation to try to convince them that they have it much easier than we at their ages. There were too many distractions here for me to read anything that required concentration in March. April isn’t looking any better as our democracy continues to unravel.
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I love the high school initiative. My small-town high school had a carpentry program like the one you’ve described. I’ve never read Beowolf. My British lit prof in college said pretty much, it’s been done before. We’ll give it a pass.
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Yes, I love that high school initiative. When I was in high school, students could opt to take bricklaying or cosmetology classes. When they graduated from high school, many of them were able to immediately start their own successful businesses. Then STEM came along and students were told they were losers if they wanted to learn a trade. Very sad! All I can say is you got off light if you didn’t have to read Beowulf in Olde English! It’s a wonder any of us finished high school! Of course, both of my parents… who went to one-room schoolhouses until high school… had to pass a State Latin Exam in order to move from the 7th to the 8th grade! It’s difficult to get any sympathy for having to read Beowulf when your parents had to learn Latin in the 7th grade! My mother (who was 8th of 10 children on a farm) graduated from high school (which was just through the 11th grade) in 1928 when she was 16. Her father died of cancer that fall, which meant she didn’t get to start college until second semester. She went on to teach French and English on the high school level. She often said that early background in Latin helped her. I only wish she had taught me French when I was a little girl when it might have been fun. All I learned then was “Row, Row, Row Your Boat” in French and I can still sing it! I never took a French class. Instead, I took Spanish. I didn’t set out to go into all that, but there it is and I don’t want to delete it.
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Your mother sounds like a remarkable woman!
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Thank you, Liz. She was! I didn’t realize just how remarkable either of my parents were until they were gone. Daddy died when I was 24 and Mama died when I was 40.
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You’re welcome, Janet. I was fortunate to realize how remarkable my parents were while they were still living.
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Hooray for Yancey County Advanced Carpentry class and all they are doing! Makes you feel good to hear good news!
Jim G.
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Jim, that story made me so happy. I read a 2022 report online that said at that time they had partnered with Appalachian State University to build a new farmers market. The ASU students were going to design the building and the high school students were going to build it. I haven’t had/taken the time to dig deeper into that to see if it got to happen.
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