Residents of Attic City
Attic City
2 Comments / Blog /
By admin
The house Tom and I grew up in was
tall and narrow, with two regular floors and then a basement and an attic. Our
bedrooms were small so the attic became our place to play as younger kids. Mom
put a linoleum rug on the floor to keep us from getting splinters in our feet,
hands, and knees from the wooden planks of the floor. The red flowered
linoleum became Attic City.
Between the two of us, we had quite
a few dolls and stuffed animals. Dolls, all girl dolls, were then married off
to various stuffed animals who we made all boys. Bookshelves with the
books removed were apartments for couples. We had a sort of real-sized wooden
dog house that had been made in Dad’s shop at school, and this became the home
of the mayor of Attic City. The mayor, named Happy, was a stuffed beagle toy
with open and close eyes, and a toy Tom really liked. A small child sized
table became a home for my entire family of Ginny Dolls (before Barbie was
invented). I had sisters Mary and Muffy, three teen dolls named Sharon
and Jill and Marian, and a baby doll named Ginette. They all had real wooden
beds, with pillows and blankets. Marian was the Mom of this little family. Jill
was nice. Sharon was always getting in trouble.
On rainy days, we played Attic City.
We would make up stories for the characters in the town. Tom always wanted
there to be a robbery or a murder. I never wanted anything bad to happen. I
preferred stories with weddings, or going to school, or playing games.
On the other side of the attic, Tom
had his Lionel Trains set up. Two big tables in the shape on an L, one table
being the city with little houses and trees, and the other table being the
country with barns, cows, and fences. The best part, in my opinion, was the
train whistles. Tom had two. Sometimes we would blare both of them.
We played Attic City for years. Our
last game, we had made our town its biggest yet. We thought Attic City needed
lights, so we got into the boxes of Christmas ornaments. Tom strung 6 strands
of lights back and forth across the attic ceiling, then did something to make
them all blink, and then added the blaring train whistles.
Right about this time, probably
responding to the noise, Mom came up the stairs. She was not pleased. She
made us take down the lights, put them away, and clean up Attic city.
That was the end of it. But then Tom was getting too old to play with a little
sister anyhow. Tom still has Happy, the mayor of Attic City on a bookshelf in
his home. I visit both of them at his house each year.
As a retired teacher and professor of literacy, I now in my retirement spend time writing novels, poetry, creative nonfiction, radio essays, and picture books. My foremost audience is young readers ages 11-14. But I also write stuff for grown-ups.
After years of academic writing for textbooks, chapters, and refereed journals, AND years of being Associate Editor of The Reading and Writing Quarterly, sitting on various editorial advisory boards, reading and critiquing hundreds of article drafts, mentoring my own grad students and junior faculty - I decided there needs to be a place to go and learn. Learning what you need to know to succeed can pave the path for a very successful career. You'll find some on my website.
View all posts by wendyckasten