JLC Pulliam is a painter, Improv actress, novelist, ESL teacher, and Quaker peace activist. She has two grown children and divides her year between Arizona and Georgia, where she lives with her ecologist husband.
Her novel Falling Through the Cracks is available from amazon.com as well as from her at various readings, book signings, and festivals. She is a member of Southern Scribes.
Comments on: "About" (6)
Janice–How wonderful for us to finally be old enough to have all those wonderful memories come flooding back. I like the flow of your thoughts. Chickens have been much on my mind because our youngest grandson is nuts about them. He has three little silkies. One is named Popcorn. they were hatched out in an incubator and the kids got to see them come out of the eggs.
So cool that you have a novel coming out. I’m looking forward to reading it. Way to go.
By the way, is this” chick lit” (Couldn’t resist the pun. Sorry.)
Your piece about the fizzies brought back some vivid memories for me, Janice. The way I and my brothers would eat fizzies was by putting them straight into our mouths to feel the sensation of the fizz and laugh at each other as the stuff bubbled out of our mouths. But of course, as always, boys will be boys!
Hi, Janice! Thanks for sending me your blog address. Will put it in my FAVORITE PLACES and keep checking your entries. Enjoyed the childhood memories and the chicken story. You know I keep chickens, too, don’t you? I have a new flock of young hens—one white Auracana (the South American breed that lays blue eggs) and five New Hampshire Reds. When you ever come to Huntsville, you have to come see them. And me!
I can’t wait to read your novel!
Love and Peace,
Reese
Hi Janice – I just wanted you to know I did bookmark this site at Mom’s so she can read it, or have somebody read it to her. We are looking forward to reading your novel !
Hi Kiddo,
I enjoy looking at your blog and am thinking a great deal about the Southwest these days for some reason. Carl’s dad, an expert fly tier in his day, begged me to grow Rhode Island Reds whose ‘necks’ sold for amazing fees and were components of the world’s best fly fishing flies. Where we live now in Colorado you can keep 2 chickens only, but Carl can fly fish daily. He needs to win once in a while. And my garden is doing very well this year. I miss youse. love, jb
Your blog on symmetry brought to mind the ying and the yang, the left and right brains, producer and consumer (from ecology). I hope you get your body organized — don’t want your appendages competing with each other.
ha ha
dac