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Canice
11-02-2007, 03:02 PM
Does anyone here read this regular feature on the PHC website?
Mrs. Sundberg is a listener who writes, ostensibly, about the week's show. Only she doesn't. It's musings on life. Each piece begins with "Listened to the show Saturday and it was not bad." but that's the extent of her review. Her style and tone are not for everyone, but if you like the occasional quiet, folksy tale, here's a recent column:

The View From Mrs. Sundberg's Window
In this feature, regular listener Mrs. Sundberg shares her thoughts about Saturday's show.

October 30, 2007
Night Shopping

Listened to the show Saturday and it was not bad. It was the first Saturday in a while where I haven't run out of something while I was baking. I had stocked up Thursday night, and what a trip that was. See, this past Thursday was the night of the Hunter's Moon, about the brightest moon you can imagine. It was closer to the earth than it has been or will be all year, which explains why I could see the Hansons' farm at 10 p.m. from the bathroom window and why Mr. Sundberg didn't need a flashlight to check out the noise out around the woodpile about that same time, and why, after I climbed into bed and finished the last three pages of I Will Not Die an Unlived Life and picked up the Reader's Digest and finished that, too, I just wasn't all that tired. So I got up and got dressed, found my purse and a light jacket, and went into the bedroom where Mr. Sundberg lay sound asleep. I'm going out for a while, I whispered. Be back in a bit. Before he grunted and rolled on over, I was out the door.

The clock in the car read 10:47 p.m. as I pulled into the parking lot of the grocery store. A fifteen minute drive, and here I was — Night Shopping. Not much at all like shopping in the day. It's peaceful at night. They turn the lights down. You can hear music from somewhere above, and the few store employees are humming along and up for a chat, and it's really all very pleasant. There are no children hollering for their mothers, and no one ramming their cart into yours, and no entourages of teenagers roaming the aisles. You can compare cake mixes and think about tea, and there's no one in the way if you have it in your head to rev things up and ride your cart down Aisle #4. "I'm Peter Pan!" you might call out, and there's no one around to hear.

No, just a few people here and there, hungry waitresses and nurses on their way home from work, squeezing in a bit of shopping while they still have some energy. Single men with short lists who always shop at night, for groceries and for Mrs. Right, because you just never know. Older men, married, who need to get out of the house, who need a place to wander where there's cheese, and herring, and applesauce with sugar, the way applesauce is supposed to be. And an elderly woman looking for acetaminophen, and two young guys with a cart full of pop and chips. There was one couple, come to think of it, arm in arm, strolling along behind a cart and gazing at each other. Newlyweds, I'm guessing. There were strawberries in the cart, and four large croissants, and a slab of rare, expensive cheese, and mineral water. And two raspberry Bismarcks. Hmm.

I could have spent the night there on the bench by the door, watching night shoppers pass on by. But I didn't. I headed out into the cool night and drove home along moonlit roads and carried in all eleven bags on tiptoes without waking a soul. It was nearly 2 a.m. when I folded up the last grocery bag. I poured half a glass of ginger ale and sat myself down on the back steps for a minute or two and thought about how it takes all kinds of people to make a world, and how everything was glowing — trees and pole sheds and hay bales and trucks. What a piece of work, I said out loud, to no one in particular. And then I headed on up to bed, where Mr. Sundberg lay, still sleeping soundly in the light of the moon.


Oatmeal Humdingers

1 cup butter, softened

1 cup firmly packed brown sugar

1/2 cup white sugar

2 eggs

1 t vanilla

1 1/2 cups flour

1 t baking soda

1 t cinnamon

3 cups oats

raisins, 1 cup, optional

(or throw in a cup of butterscotch chips)

Mix. Bake on ungreased cookie sheet at 350 for 10 minutes or so.

Makes about 4 dozen.

Enjoy!

leightx
11-02-2007, 03:44 PM
I like it! :) Her story reminded me of the hunter's moon we saw last week (pic posted in picture thread). And I totally dig shopping at night, for the same reasons. Although I generally get home before 2 AM...

Jazzmatazz49
11-07-2007, 05:58 PM
Canice, did you read the latest one? So sad and sweet.

beacooker
11-07-2007, 07:14 PM
Is PHC Prairie Home Companion? I'll have to check out the website. And maybe I'm being stupid, but if so, is that column really written by Garrison Keillor? It sounds like something he might have written.

ETA, I looked at the Prairie Home site, and found this:

Dear Garrison:
For some reason or other I have just discovered the link to Mrs. Sundberg in your weekly emails concerning the upcoming shows. She seems too good to be true and I am wondering if she is a real person, or are you writing these comments and stories? The woman seems like she could be coming right from your homespun heart. If she truly is real, tell her I wish she was my Mom.

Thanks,

Maureen P.
Linden, MI

This is what happens when a man gets a reputation for creating fictions — people question every shred of reality around him. Well, I'm deeply honored that you think I could be writing Mrs. Sundberg's columns, but no, she is a real live person who lives in a small town in Minnesota, and if she seems too good to be true, well, the same could be said for a lot of Lutherans. We allowed her to take a pen name so that her kids wouldn't know she was talking about them, and I suppose that's all I should say.

Canice
11-07-2007, 07:46 PM
Canice, did you read the latest one? So sad and sweet.

Off to fetch it now.

Canice
11-07-2007, 08:00 PM
Oh my. :(


November 5, 2007
Keep a Short Story Short

Listened to the show Saturday and it was not bad. It was kind of cool out, and very windy, and Stephanie Davis was singing "Harvest Blues" as I cleaned up the kitchen after a really fine meal of hot beefs and garlic smashed potatoes and corn bake followed up with a plate of those ochocolate caramel bars Dolores Salveson always brought over on Halloween. You know the ones.

As I said, Dolores Solveson, who lives just down the street across from the Murphys', has made a habit of bringing bars over on Halloween while the kids are out trick or treating, so that they'll have a snack waiting for them when they return. She really simply wants the company, and we generally sit and talk a good two hours, answering the door every now and then and passing out candy to the rabbits and the ballerinas and the trolls. It was odd how Dolores didn't show up this year. Every time the doorbell rang and I held out the bowl of candy, I took a gander down the street where her porch light was not on and her garage door was shut. I called three times and left three messages. I called Ruth, her best friend, and asked whether she'd heard from Dolores. "Heck, no," she said, "I been at deer camp all week and I'm headin' back out in the morning."

So after the kids were in bed, I grabbed a flashlight and a handful of snack-size candy bars and headed on over to Dolores'. No answer after several knocks, so I tried the door and it was open and I went in. I didn't even have to holler. There she was, all curled up, her silver-bunned head resting on her right forearm which rested on the arm of the couch. She was wearing a pink gingham apron over her brown dress. There was a large bowl of candy and a few wrappers on the coffee table. She was smiling a bit and didn't stir and I knew before I got to her that she wasn't about to, either.

To keep a short story short, Dolores had died sometime Wednesday afternoon, and what I can tell you is that while I waited for the police to arrive, sitting there holding Dolores' hand, the strangest warmth washed over me. I remembered how she'd planted pralines in her backyard, hoping they would grow, and how she washed out and kept used plastic bags in the hall closet. I remembered how she'd always wanted to fly a plane, and how deeply she missed Leroy, her husband, after he died of flu complications a year or so ago. And I remembered how Dolores always said that change is good, and that the seasons really are quite a blessing, unlike some places where everything is in a kind of limbo at times. They give us something to focus on, something to remind us we're moving forward, not back, and imagine what it would be like if nothing ever changed. "We'd all be lumps," she said, "and I'm not down with that movement. I've got places to go." That's what brought me to smiling on Saturday, when the moon was a sliver and the phone never rang, and three children had the presence of mind to find their mittens ahead of time, and lay them out on the counter for the morning. There were light flurries in the forecast, and they didn't get here 'til Monday, but they got here. Now I have to find the shovel. The big red one. Never know what's comin', and I've got places to go.


Those Chocolate Caramel Bars (Dolores Solveson's prizewinner)

1 package light caramels (about 32)
1/3 c evaporated milk
Combine and cook over low heat until melted. Set aside.

1 pkg. German chocolate cake mix
3/4 c butter, melted
1/3 c evaporated milk
1 c chocolate chips

In large mixing bowl, combine cake mix, butter, and evaporated milk. Mix with your hands until dough is together. Pat half of dough into greased and floured pan. Reserve rest for top. Bake at 350 for 7 minutes. Sprinkle chocolate chips over crust. Pour caramel over chips. Drop rest of batter over caramel mixture. Return to oven for 20 minutes at 350.

Enjoy!