"Kiss Your Elbow" — A Kentucky Memoir

by Deanna O'Daniel


Formats

E-Book
$3.99
Softcover
$17.99
$14.99
E-Book
$3.99

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 7/14/2010

Format : E-Book
Dimensions : E-Book
Page Count : 392
ISBN : 9781452041797
Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 392
ISBN : 9781452041780

About the Book

You’ll want to spend every minute of your time with the O’Daniel Family, experiencing their simple adventures in a way that only this oldest daughter can weave them.  Written with a sense of hope and an amazing capture of mid-twentieth century detail, you will enjoy the opportunity to:

 

  • Revisit big department stores again, when Louisville’s only place to shop was downtown
  • Spend a delightful day at Fontaine Ferry, Louisville’s famous amusement park
  • Be part of the quarrels, love and joy – feeling the bonds of this close knit era, when dependence on family members and neighbors was essential.
  • Experience farm life in the suburbs. Deanna’s classmates jumped rope in  subdivisions while the O’Daniels slopped hogs, killed chickens, and hoped  they went to school without smelling like the animals they tended.

 

Only a few can tell their story coherently like Deanna does with this touching memoir. First born in a large rural family, she relates her passage through childhood with charming and accurate descriptions of life in Kentuckiana. A chronicle of many customs and places that are fast slipping away from our collective memories, such as her description of the country store in Nelson County, Kentucky. A book you will tell others, “I’m so fond of this one.”

John Allen Boyd, Emerson Avery, That Latin Teacher

 

 

Deanna’s story is of dedicated parents and (eventually) 11 children. They migrated near Louisville, Kentucky when Deanna was five. Her stories about those formative years paint a portrait in glowing colors, depicting struggles and love that molds and endures. You will love Deanna and her story.

Terry Cummins, Feed My Sheep

 

O’Daniel, a gifted writer who tightly weaves her life’s journey through stories that makes growing up on a farm sound like sunshine. She shares the daily toil, angst and rivalry associated with a large family in a humorous, but realistic way – tugging at your heart for a piece of those bygone days.

Corrider Jones, A Backward Glance


About the Author

Deanna O’Daniel considers herself fortunate to have grown up after World War II, during America’s greatest period of prosperity for the middle class. This was also the period of America’s greatest migration – from farm to city life. O’Daniel’s father, being a consummate farmer, desired to have it both ways: a farm on the edge of Louisville, Kentucky. This made for an interesting and busy life for his children, particularly, Deanna, as the oldest daughter.

 

Spending many hours alone doing monotonous farm chores lead her to become reflective and creative. Reading, and exploring the countryside that she loved at Hikes Point, then a rural area dotted with farms, were her greatest joys. She started a hobby of writing and illustrating her own novels as early as the fourth grade. However, life interfered, and she did not return to writing until after her mother died in 2001.

 

Born in 1941, and being a few years older than the Baby Boomer Generation, Deanna was able to take advantage of a scholarship program offered to college students in order to help handle the huge population explosion that the Boomers put on the classrooms. After just two years in college, Deanna started teaching when only twenty years old. She taught for almost thirty years between 1961 and 1997.

 

Although, she loved teaching, she tried her hand at other careers, in order to explore more of the world. She became a bank teller, an accounts payable clerk, a real estate agent, a motivational therapist, and is now a counselor in mind and body therapies.

 

She owns a Company called, SelfSeek Spiritual Center. In this company, she works to help people better their lives in areas of stress management through leading retreats, yoga, and meditation. She also counsels clients to release addictive behaviors such as smoking, etc.