Thursday, March 5, 2026

 


Patriotism at Home: How Americans Showed Love for Country During WWII ~ Sherri Easley

I have been retired from my corporate job for an entire 6 weeks now and finally got to my writing. Being neurodivergent, I struggle with staying on task for anything and don’t have enough space to list all of my unfinished projects, including sewing, DIY repairs, gardening, and writing. I have–no kidding- four different novels across three genres, started, and several more with draft outlines.

My current work is YA- Kathryn, and it will be book one of a 4 or 5 book series about young women during WWII who overcame the obstacles to become one of the female WASP pilots who trained in Sweetwater, Texas.

When we think of World War II, we often picture soldiers overseas. But patriotism during WWII wasn’t only fought on battlefields; it could be found at dinner tables, in backyards, in factories, and even on women’s lips.

Here are a few powerful (and surprisingly romantic) ways Americans showed their devotion at home.

Red Lipstick: Morale as a Weapon

During WWII, red lipstick became an act of patriotism.

Cosmetics were one of the few consumer goods not heavily rationed. The government understood morale mattered. Leaders encouraged women to maintain a polished, confident appearance, not out of vanity, but as psychological resilience.

  • Shades like “Victory Red” became popular.
  • Elizabeth Arden created a special red to match women’s military uniforms.
  • Even as fabric, sugar, and gasoline were rationed, lipstick symbolized strength, optimism, and normalcy.

Adolf Hitler reportedly despised red lipstick, which only made American women wear it more proudly. It became a small but visible defiance.

In a time of fear and uncertainty, red lips said: We are still here. We are still strong.

Victory Gardens: Feeding the Nation

With commercial crops diverted to feed troops, Americans were urged to grow their own food. By 1943, Nearly 20 million Victory Gardens were planted. They produced about 40% of the nation’s vegetables.

Backyards, schoolyards, and vacant city lots transformed into rows of tomatoes and bean trellises. Gardening wasn’t just practical; it reduced pressure on the supply chain and reinforced a collective mindset: everyone contributes.

It was patriotism you could harvest.

Rationing and Resourcefulness

Americans lived under strict rationing:

  • Sugar, coffee, meat, butter
  • Gasoline and tires
  • Silk and nylon (diverted for parachutes)

Families used ration books and saved bacon grease for munitions production. Women painted lines up the backs of their legs when stockings became unavailable. Clothing was mended, repurposed, and handed down.

Weddings were smaller. Celebrations were simpler. Sacrifice became a shared language of loyalty.

Women in the Workforce

With millions of men overseas, women stepped into industrial roles in unprecedented numbers.

  • Over 6 million women entered the workforce during the war.
  • “Rosie the Riveter” became an icon of capability and determination.
  • Women worked in shipyards, aircraft plants, and munitions factories.

Patriotism wasn’t passive; it wore coveralls (oversized zoot suits in Kathryn’s case) and wielded rivet guns.

Letters and Bonds

Civilians supported troops by:

  • Writing millions of letters
  • Purchasing war bonds to finance military efforts
  • Taking part in scrap metal drives

War bond campaigns alone raised billions of dollars to fund operations. Even children collected rubber and aluminum. No one was too small to serve.

Why This Matters for Romance Writers

WWII patriotism wasn’t abstract. It lived in:

  • Lipstick carefully applied before a factory shift
  • A fiancĂ© planting tomatoes alone
  • A letter folded and unfolded until the ink faded
  • A wedding postponed “until he comes home”

It was devotion, not only to country but also to each other.

And perhaps that’s why WWII romance still resonates. Love endured in a time when sacrifice was ordinary and courage was daily.

Here is a passage from the first chapter of Kathryn: Avenger Girls.

Being a bit of a tomboy myself, I relate to her a little too much.

***********

Lips all around her moved in slow motion, every smile painted in shades of Victory Red: bright, certain, impossibly composed. Sentences blurred into words, and words dissolved into a steady drone pressing against Kathryn Thomas’s ears until it was no longer conversation at all.

Just noise.

A humming, relentless sound, like bees swarming inside a hive.

The women laughed easily, their red mouths unwavering, as though patriotism and courage could be applied each morning along with powder and pin curls- a small, careful defense against ration books and headlines no one wanted to read too closely.

Kathryn slid her thumb over her bare bottom lip, the skin dry from rubbing it. The absence felt suddenly noticeable, like arriving unprepared for something everyone else understood.

She glanced once again at the clock on the mantel. The hands hadn’t moved. Of course, they hadn’t. Time didn’t pass in rooms like this. It only stretched, then stalled, before it trapped you.

She exhaled through her nose and lowered her gaze to her lap. She was still pinching a loose button between her fingers. It was the only thing keeping her from bolting out the front door. She held a threaded needle alongside the button like props, as proof she belonged here.

But she didn’t.

She’d been pretending to sew for nearly two hours. The thread still hadn’t found its way through the cloth. Not once.

Even though her hands were still, her mind was wandering. She could see the sunshine outside the window across the room, and from the way the limbs swayed on the redbud tree, a breeze must be blowing. Just thinking about feeling the warm sunshine on her face made her palms itch to be holding the handlebars of her motorcycle.

Every few seconds she bit the inside of her cheek, hard enough to sting, to bring herself back into the room with the button pinched between her fingers.

Eyes randomly flicked toward her, then away again, quick, and curious glances that felt like fingers tugging at her sleeves.

All around her, women leaned in, shoulders touching, with voices bright and easy. They stitched and chatted in effortless rhythm, laughter spilling like warm tea. Gossip stitched itself into the air as neatly as their thread: who was expecting, who was leaving, who had a boy overseas, who had a husband who drank too much and still expected dinner on the table.

They were her mother’s friends. Most likely she recruited them from the hair salon over town gossip or while trading coupons from their ration books.

Kathryn recognized a few by name heard over family dinner, but mostly they were strangers.

Still, they sweetly smiled and nodded to Kathryn as if she were simply another carefully curated artifact in her mother’s perfect world. Just another proper young lady who would eventually learn to smile and sip and nod at the right moments.

Kathryn had never felt the absence of not having any female friends. She had engines and repair manuals and quiet corners of her own. That had always been enough, at least in her mind. But. her mother treated it like a defect. Kathryn’s lack of female companionship was a flaw in the perfect design that needed to be corrected.

Hence, the weekly sewing social.

And now, here she was with the stiff chairs, the heavy perfume, the bright red mouths and the monotonous chatter, being held in place by one very small button.

Quiet misery stitched neatly into place, one endless minute at a time.

Friday, February 27, 2026

Winter Flowers by Laura Hunsaker

 If you've been around here for a while, or if you follow me on any social media platform, you'll know a husky adopted me last year. I take him out twice a day for a jog or a hike in the desert.



and the desert behind my house has gone through 4 seasons all in one month! We had a week of rain, a week of snow and wind, and a week of gorgeous weather. This weekend we'll be over 80 so who knows what the following week will hold!

One thing that's been really cool lately, is the amount of flowers in the desert. I don't think I've ever seen so many-they literally carpet the desert floor.


I've been loving the wildflowers I see every day. Who knew the desert held such beauty?





These orange ones are my favorite, so if you see them in my marketing photos, now you'll know where they came from! In my work in progress (WIP) that I'm writing right now, my heroine lives in the Pacific Northwest, rather than the desert, and I will definitely find a way to involve the beauty of the Redwoods and the forests. In this story, the heroine is woken up in the middle of the night to her roommate being murdered. She bolts and runs to get help, but help never comes. Please look forward to the next book in the Fatal Instincts series.

In the meantime, since I'm still writing that one, grab Dark Past, book 1 in the series, where it all began.



Some secrets won't stay quiet...


The small town was supposed to be safe...

Kate Landry is tired of running. Thinking she's safe, she settles in the small logging town of Chester, California to manage a cafe. She may be keeping a low profile, but she's hoping to return to a normal life.
When FBI agent Kyle Donovan visits to Chester to stay with a friend, and to recover from his latest case, he never expects to meet sexy barista Kate.

But someone is following Kate...

Kyle worries he brought trouble to her door, while Kate worries her dark past is coming after her.
With danger lurking around every corner, her safe haven isn't as safe as she'd thought. Kate will finally have to trust someone enough to tell him her secrets. Secrets that may just get them killed...



Amazon  |   Barnes & Noble  |  Kobo   Google Play Books  |  Smashwords  | Goodreads

Monday, February 23, 2026

CONFUSING LIVING WITH BEING ALIVE

                                         by Judy Ann Davis  

How aware are you of the world around you? Do you take time to hear the song of the birds in the morning or the serenade of insects at night? Do you pause to hear the far off lonely sound of a train whistle? Do you stop what you’re doing to gaze skyward and enjoy a colorful cloud formation floating across the sky? When you see a bed of vibrant flowers that catches your eye, do you stoop to touch their soft petals and smell their fragrance?

Too often in life, we are rushing through the world, heading from one activity to another, unaware of the universe around us. We become so caught up in our personal activities that we confuse being alive with living. True living means we’re connected with the universe and cognizant of it. Being alive is merely breathing and being functional, and often we erroneously confuse rushing from one activity to the next as living. It's not.

We all need to take time to pay attention to what is around us and make a connection to the world and the people in it. To live means seeing, sensing, and connecting with everything and everyone around us—using our five senses of taste, sight, touch, hearing and smell.  It’s taking time to appreciate our marvelous planet and its people. It’s also a wonderful way to squeeze in a few moments of calmness, awareness, and sheer enjoyment in our chaotic lives...and maybe share those moments with others as well. 

 ~ * ~ 

NEW RELEASE - Finding Love in Pine Valley  

 
 
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Friday, February 20, 2026

Come Rejoicing by Liz Flaherty

I can't write today because my brother Joe died yesterday and my mind isn't working, but he wouldn't accept such an excuse for not "doing my job," so I guess I won't, either. This is old, from August of 2023, and from my personal blog, so I'm not sure it will make sense to you, but this is for him. I think he probably liked it. Thanks for being here today. - Liz

Sowing in the morning, sowing seeds of kindness,
Sowing in the noontide and the dewy eve;
Waiting for the harvest, and the time of reaping,
We shall come rejoicing, bringing in the sheaves.

I have nothing to say today. Actually, I do. I have plenty. There are times, I admit, that I wish I wrote a political column--not one where I just get political sometimes, but a real political one.

But that's not going to happen. I don't know enough--and yes, that should be a stopper--and my skin is way too thin--and wrinkled--to survive the backlash. 

So, let's just talk.

Has that moon the past few days not been the most beautiful thing? We were coming home last night and I'm almost sure I saw the man in it!

Jan and Gary Wooten
We listen to music a lot. (One of us plays it, too.) Last night we got to listen to old, familiar songs at a friend's house on Lake Manitou. Tonight, Second Saturday, we will listen at Gallery 15. One day this week, while searching out the lyrics to an old hymn, I sang "Bringing In the Sheaves" to no one in particular while I wrote. (I take the term "joyful noise" very seriously.) 

I wouldn't be me if I didn't offer advice. If you don't do lunch with friends, you should. It's so much cheaper than therapy, you can pack a boatload of memories into an hour around a table, no one cares at all about your thin and wrinkled skin, and there isn't time for grudges. (Actually, there should never be time for grudges, but that's another column where I might need to have a teeny bit of focus to offer the subject.)

Are you planning a trip? Where are you going? My idea of travel is a new place every month and Duane's is an old place every four or five years, so you can see why I'm curious. It's called traveling vicariously. Although my friend Nan and I are going to Michigan for a few days soon and it will be so much fun, I have an itch for a new place. Where do you suggest?

I love trees. Just saying. And flowers. I want some of those "naked lady" lilies, some ditch lilies, and every purple flower that grows wild. The ones in this picture were included in my birthday bouquet. The roses are long gone, but these are still brightening up my desk. Other than kids and kittens, I don't grow things well, but if I did, I'd have those lilies and purple flowers. 

We've had the windows open this week. Although, as a survivor of hundreds of hot flashes over the years, I'd never give up central air conditioning, I have enjoyed the reminder of how much I love to hear the birds. 

So that's how I'll leave this one. I hope you've seen the moon, heard the birds, and enjoyed the flowers this week. Oh, and experienced lots of joyful noises, too. Until next time, have a good week, watch out for kids walking to school and school buses stopping--that means you're supposed to stop, too--and take the detours out there; you might see something new. Thank a teacher, hug somebody, and donate to a worthy cause. It'll not only make someone else's day, but your own as well. Be nice to somebody. 

Monday, February 16, 2026

Should We Rename February? by Joan Reeves

February is the month most people mispronounce. I blame it on January. 

You look at the word February, and your brain erases that "r" before ary—and Febuary comes out of your mouth.

Of course, if the powers that be had named the month Februa, the festival that actually inspired the name, we wouldn't have that problem. 

But no, someone decided to take the Februa and tack "ry" onto it thus giving the English-speaking world a pronunciation problem for all eternity.

WHY FEBRUA?

Februa was the ancient Roman festival of cleansing and atonement held during this time period. It was designed to prepare for the coming spring. (I guess that's how spring cleaning, for which my mother was a strong advocate, came about.)

Girl English Dictionary - Pixabay
 The word shares the Latin root with fever and fume which I read relates to the burning of sacrifices during the purificaton rites. Thank goodness that tradition wasn't passed along with the month's name.

In any event, the month is merifully short. As a famous quotation goes: "If you plan on being depressed, do it in February so it won't last very long."

All that aside, I like February. It's that bridge between winter and spring and gives the snowbound, frozen states hope that spring truly is just around the corner.

GREAT MONTH FOR WRITING

I don't know why, but I find February to be a great month for writing.Maybe it's because I'm raring to go on a new book or finishing one in progress. I feel a burst of energy that makes me want to get out and do something—but the weather outside is usually too lousy to actually do that. So I focus that energy on writing. I'll confess that I also seem to read a lot in February.

Patience Strong said, "In February there is everything to hope for and nothing to regret." I agree with that. What about you? How do you spend the month?


Drop by and visit me online:
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Saturday, February 7, 2026

Pebbling: Or Why I’m the Woman Who Hands You a Handmade Gift Five Minutes After Meeting You~ Sherri Easley

 

I recently learned there is an actual word for something I’ve been doing my entire life. It’s called pebbling.

 Apparently, penguins will offer small stones to one another as a sign of affection. It’s their way of saying I choose you, I like you, you matter, and possibly, let’s build a life together and raise little penguin babies who waddle dramatically into the sunset.

And when I read about this, I had one immediate thought: Oh, no. I’m a penguin.

 Not the cute, sleek kind either. I’m the overly enthusiastic, emotionally attached penguin who shows up with a rock and makes it weird. Because if you have met me- truly met me- then you already know this about me:

 I am that woman you barely know. That woman you just met. That woman you made awkward small talk with at the checkout at Walmart, or at work, or at a craft event… and then somehow, within a week, you are holding a handmade baby gift.

 And you’re standing there thinking: Who is this woman? Why did she do this? Is she… okay? Does she have a basement full of fabric and secrets?

 Well, yes. Yes, I do, and no, I am not okay. But I am delightfully not okay.

 And this, dear friends, is pebbling.

 Pebbling is the act of giving small gifts, often simple things, often unexpected, not because someone asked, not because I want anything back, but because I saw something and thought: This belongs to them.

 Some people pebble with coffee.

Some people pebble with memes.

Some people pebble with compliments.

Some people pebble with stories.

 I pebble with bags.

I pebble with purses.

I pebble with baby blankets and little handmade things.

 I used to wonder why I do it. Why I love giving things away. Why do I spend hours sewing something beautiful, only to hand it to someone else as if it’s no big deal?

 It makes me feel like the world is still soft in places and in a world that can be harsh, chaotic, exhausting, and heavy… softness is a kind of rebellion.  

It’s about joy. It’s about connection. It’s about being able to say: “I can’t fix the entire world, but I can make something that makes your day a little better.”

 We all have something we’re meant to offer the world. And yes, sometimes it’s a story. Sometimes it’s singing in the choir. Sometimes it’s a handmade purse. Sometimes it’s a baby gift for a woman you met twice and only know vaguely through mutual acquaintances.

That sharing is not “too much.” That is sharing your light. And I will die on this hill, probably holding a spool of thread and my best pair of scissors.

 

 

Monday, January 26, 2026

It started with K-Pop by Laura Hunsaker

Hi Everyone! I wanted to write about physical media today. I have gotten back into CDs, and if you follow me on Threads or Twitter, you'll already know that. I definitely need a shelf or CD holder now! 

It started with K-Pop...

My daughters have been fans for years, but one of the coolest things about K-Pop has been seeing the physical albums make a comeback. I didn't quite get it, at first but the same CD/Album will have many different versions. I kept thinking, "Why does she need two of the same CD?" Readers, it's not just about the actual CD. It's about all the fun things that come inside the album. The photo cards, the posters, the stickers, the post cards, the extras. Each one is a different experience. It's so fun and cute! And now that I'm a huge fan, I've joined in.

What that has done for me, is now I want more CDs. I come from the time we had CD holders on our car visor, however, in this time of Apple Car Play, my car no longer has a CD player. So I bought one for my Nightstand.

I think I really enjoy just popping in a CD and hearing the album. No worrying about my phone battery life, or the AirPods not connecting, or whatever other "back in my day" type of complaint I can make. I think I'm going to go low-tech with Blu Rays again too. I think I want to own my media again. Which, this of course brought me back to books. 

I love ebooks. I don't have to store them, I get instant gratification when I want the books, and a Kindle or my phone are just easier on my hands than a physical copy. But not all ebooks have a paperback option, either. That being said, I don't love how now when I purchase an ebook, it tells me that I'm only purchasing the license to read the book, I don't own it.

But also, I don't have the space for a full library (isn't that the dream?). So how do you decide which books you buy the physical copies of, and which books you don't? And how do you feel about movies/music/books? Does it matter to you which format you own?



My cute little CD player-it lights up, connects to Blue Tooth, headphones, all that jazz. And it has a good speaker! link here, in case you want to twin with me! 


And while many of my books do not have physical copies, the Hockey series I write as Kenzie MacLir does! Here's a link to all 3 of the books we've written so far (new one coming out soon!)

Kenzie MacLir The New York Empires