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Ethan Neville's avatar

Beautiful!

Here’s a little tribute to my amazing Nana:

My grandmother Emily was always a pioneer especially for the empowerment of women. She studied economics at Brynn Marr. Was the first copy girl at any New York City newspaper. Which is where she met my grandfather Glenn Neville who was the editor-in-chief of the New York Daily Mirror. She Wrote the 1963 Newberry award winning book “ It’s Like This, Cat” while raising 5 kids. Became a single mom when my grandfather died of a stroke. My mother was only 16 years old attending the school performing arts in New York City. A short two years later I would come along, my mother was 18 unwed and it was my grandmother who stepped up to care for both of us which I am forever grateful!

This pioneering woman also decided that writing novels wasn’t enough so at the age of 50 she went to law school and passed the New York bar and became a practising lawyer mostly representing under represented prisoners who could not afford representation and also established the first league of democratic women voters and battered women’s rights for rural women in upstate New York.

Nana …story

One day her roommate came downstairs this would’ve been in 1983 I believe or so. And my grandmother Emily had written in her beautiful handwriting probably on a yellow lined paper which she always wrote on.

“I am driving to California in a car that doesn’t have reverse. But I’m going forward!”

My grandmother drove that car without any reverse gear from upstate New York to San Francisco and Los Angeles! She left the car on the west coast. She came through Colorado and visited on her way and I seem to have some vague memories of trying to find just the right parking places when she was visiting as she did indeed drive a car that had no reverse gear across the entire country by her self. Growing up my grandmother lived in a small town in upstate New York in the heart of the Adirondack mountains called KEENE Valley. She always had a dog sitting in the front seat beside her and she was always generous with her space and her ability to accommodate the vicissitudes of life. She said at the end of her life that she lived for three things to walk, read and write. She walked every day rain or shine snow or sleet. She walked around the small town or through the forest and up and down mountains when she was younger. She said she lived to walk into the world around her, and then secondly she lived to read, which she did voraciously there was not a single evening I did not see my grandmother sitting most likely with a cocktail reading a book until the night enveloped us. Finally she said she lived to write. We are so fortunate to have her stories these words from the past observations and beautifully constructed sentences. A literary lens into the mind and heart of Nana.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emily_Cheney_Neville

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queerstars's avatar

Today is my mom's birthday too.

She was a gentle soul and I adored her. XO

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