Lögberg-Heimskringla


Lögberg-Heimskringla - 01.04.2019, Qupperneq 9

Lögberg-Heimskringla - 01.04.2019, Qupperneq 9
VISIT OUR WEBSITE LH-INC.CA Lögberg-Heimskringla • 1. apríl 2019 • 9 Bloodflowers. I bumped into Dr. Frank Scribner just after the book came out. He’d read it. He said he’d really enjoyed the stories but he said there is a mistake in one of them. “In that story that is based on your father having pneumonia, you say the doctor bought him pills in a plastic vial. There were no plastic vials. I would have brought those pills in a cardboard box or a wooden cylinder.” For him, my not getting that right undermined the authority of the narrator. You also have to care about the people you write about. If you don’t care about the people you are going to write about, you aren’t going to be able to get anyone else to care. That goes for your heroes and your villains. When I lived in a small city in southern Missouri, there was a tiny shopping mall on the edge of town. On Saturday evenings the mall stayed open and many of the hillbillies from the hollers came in to shop. The area was very poor and there wasn’t much money for treats. Two regulars were elderly sisters. They wore fluffy flowered dresses that I would expect to see at a high school prom. They always ordered a coffee and Danish each. The elder sister carefully counted out change from a black pocket purse. The younger sister had ill-fitting false teeth and, before she ate her Danish, she put her teeth on the table, unwound the end of her pastry, dunked it into her coffee, and happily proceeded to gum it. These sisters were a writer’s treasure. When I was growing up in Gimli, the most important day of the year wasn’t Christmas or Easter. It was Íslendingadagurinn. The ceremonies and the speeches, the poetry, the dedications to Iceland and Canada – these were not about the distant past. My great-grandmother, Friðrika Gottskálksdóttir, was alive until I was fifteen. She came with her parents in 1876. These are the people whose stories were told and retold. The long weekend was filled with storytelling. One of the strongest images of my childhood was of the dead of 1875 being laid out on the roofs of the houses while underneath were the ill and the dying. Of 100 people, 34 died. The other was the story of how my father got his name. He was named after two of his uncles, Alfred and Herbert, who drowned along with three other young people when their sailboat was caught in a Lake Winnipeg storm. One of the brothers was found tied to the mast. Alfred Herbert Valgardson. I never heard him called that. It was always Dempsey, the guy who would rather fight than eat. It’s been a long journey since I came to Arborg to sell Bloodflowers. My latest book is In Valhalla’s Shadows. I wrote it, just as I wrote The Girl With The Botticelli Face, because of a personal shock. It is being promoted by the publisher as a gothic murder mystery. I guess it is, but I hope it is much more than that. As usual with my writing, it deals with a number of social issues. When I lived in Missouri, my next- door neighbour and landlord was a highway patrolman. We became friends and he used to take me patrolling with him. I got to have coffee with other patrolmen and go to parties with them. I heard their stories. I learned to use a pistol on their range. It was a great privilege. And when I came back to Canada and an officer with PTSD committed suicide, I knew I had to write something. In May, I will be eighty years old. It seems impossible but when I check my birth certificate it says I was born in 1939. Recently, The Icelandic Connection asked me to fill out a one of those forms, you know, what makes you happy, who do you admire, etc. At the end, it asked, “What do you live by?” My response was, “Make use of the abilities God has given you.” And when I think that, I think about all the people in the Icelandic community who have done that: Nelson Gerrard, Elva Simundsson, Katrina Anderson; all the people who have written songs and played alone and in groups, conducted choirs like Rosalind; my friend Dennis Olson jumps to mind, and Johnny and His Musical Mates, and my friend Mattie Gislason, Solli Sigurdson, and Glen Sigurdson, and Einar Vigfusson with his carving; and the people who wrote bóndi on their immigration forms although no one had farmed in Iceland since Viking times, and had to learn to clear land, break it, plant it, harvest it, and whose triumphant success is in Nelson’s records of crops on Hecla Island and now Fridfinnsons’ vast acres of crops we never imagined as possible when I was young. “Make use of the abilities God has given you.” And the image that comes to mind is David Gislason singing on the ten-part series by Egill Helgason and David Arnason reading at the A-Spire Theatre, and Lorna Tergesen, who has done the impossible in creating a bookstore in a small Manitoba town and made a place for all those writers both here in Ameríka and in Iceland. No man in an island. And in the Icelandic Canadian community he doesn’t need to be. Bless you, all of you, those I’ve mentioned and all those I’ve not had room to include. This is the text of W.D. (Bill) Valgardson’s address at the Þorrablót sponsored by the Esjan Chapter of the Icelandic National League of North America, which was held at the Royal Canadian Legion in Arborg, Manitoba, on Saturday, March 16, 2019. Mail Cheque or Money Order to: Lögberg-Heimskringla Inc. 835 Marion Street, Winnipeg MB, R2J 0K6 Tel: (204) 284-5686 Fax: (204) 284-7099 Toll-free: 1-866-564-2374 (1-866-LOGBERG) or subscribe online www.lh-inc.ca MC VISA Card Number Expiration Date Phone Authorized Cardholder Subscribe now to L-H the perfect investment in your Icelandic heritage Name Address City/Town Prov/State E-mail Post/ZIP Code Phone Fax Cheque Money Order (payable to Lögberg-Heimskringla, Inc.) Donation in addition to subscription $ (Charitable Reg. # 10337 3635 RR001) Canada $60 Online subscription $45 CAD USA $60 US An online subscription is available FREE to all print subscribers. Call or e-mail for details. International $70 US HEIMSKRINGLA LÖGBERG The North American Icelandic Community Newspaper . Since 1886 24 issues a year Donations are published periodically in L-H. Permission is required to publish donations and donor names. Amounts under $500: donor name will be published, amount will not be dislcosed. Yes No Preauthorized credit card payment option available on monthly basis$30.00 for the boys 2 piece set 88% cotton - 12% spandex $40.00 for the stretch velvet girls nightgown 90% polyester - 10% spandex Available sizes XS (4-5), S (6), M (7-8) Made special for Lögberg-Heimskringla Little boys and girls pj´s with a unique image of Icelandic children in traditional dress To order contact L-H: (204) 284 5686 | 1-866-564-2374 | LH@LH-INC.CA or shop online at WWW.LH-INC.CA Artwork by Slyencer Sewing by SEAMS&BEYOND “You also have to care about the people you write about. If you don’t care about the people you are going to write about, you aren’t going to be able to get anyone else to care. That goes for your heroes and your villains.” “

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