
" My Name is Lettie, and That Rhymes With SETI, And He Was A Great King
Too "
"
You won’t likely read about it in the books that the White Folks teach their children from, but not
all colored people were slaves and sharecroppers, although it pleases some to think so now. There were black Pharaohs and
great kings, my Nana told me so and my Nana never lied, even when it might be kinder at the moment than telling the truth!
Mary Beth and I were near to the same age. I had been born a slave but before I was weaned, we were granted our freedom. Her
father and her people had always been wealthy. Cultured, rich, and amicable. But only met that spring because of the sickness
in her lungs. It was thought that the sea air would heal them and being on an island among her own kind, of all classes and
skin colors might help to draw her out of her timid shell. The daughter of a banker as rich as her father should have felt
she owned the world and held it wrapped around her little finger, the way she did her Daddy, but she was hopelessly shy and
stuttered when she felt pressured. I would have thought God would have rewarded their kindness and generosity by giving the
Man several beautiful daughters, each as wise and desirable as Job’s own, for his goodness came from his core, it wasn’t
a garment he slipped off and on when White Folks were near, and we both learned much from him in those nine months.
I made her laugh by chanting “ My name is Nettie~ and that rhymes with SETI, and he was a great king too. “
And from that moment, when she stepped out of the shadows where I saw her for the first time, to her last choked breath
in my arms nine months later on the island in South Carolina surrounded by our own, we were as inseparable as Siamese Twins,
and I am the better person for it. "

Paper Doll Family and
Sons
A Story of hope, struggle and survival
through the times of Hurricane Katrina
New
Orleans, Louisiana ~ August 28th, 2005
Darla
Farrell is an ambitious, young Creole woman in New Orleans, soon to enroll in a course as an EMT. Her
ten-year-old brother has been living with her while their mom, Rita Reynolds, lives and works in Chicago to save
up enough money to get an home there for herself and Zack. The love of their family kept them strong. Through all their
struggles, even when her second husband was killed by being at the wrong place at the wrong time. The owner’s great-niece
Ellyn Miranda has just completed a three-year RN course and taken over Darla's place of employment, trying to force her to
quit so she can bring in her two nieces and train them as nurse’s aides "herself"; having
a low opinion of ‘certified Nursing Attendants’.
But the last week of August, 2005 turns
the world turns upside down for all of them as they wait for hurricane Katrina to made landfall a second time, having
strengthened to the fourth ever Category Five hurricane over the warmer waters of the Gulf of Mexico. By eight a.m.
on the on August 29th, the water could be seen rising on both sides of the Industrial Canal in New Orleans. But when
the air cleared and the actual storm had passed, leaving the neighborhood relatively unscathed, they all breathed a sigh of
relief, and it seemed all the warnings of impending doom had been anticlimactic. Then the levees gave way under the storm
surge and hell turned out to be in mud and salt water rather than brimstone and fire!
Alone in the two-story house with the waters rising and no one else to help her with four fragile and elderly people in her
care, the young woman finds herself challenged in ways she could never have foreseen or remotely imagined! As they struggle
against despair and the debris of shattered lives and house waiting for help that might not even come in time!
