Octogenarian Self-Publishes Memoirs

Ranked #4,503 in Books, Poetry & Writing, #167,492 overall

A New Author at 85

Gail Lee Martin taught family memory writing classes for a number of years. During that time, she started writing down her own memories of the 1930s. Some were published in magazines like Kanhistique that covered Kansas history and antiques.

Now these memories have become a book. Working in collaboration with her daughter, Virginia Allain, a retired librarian, they created My Flint Hills Childhood: Growing Up in 1930s Kansas.

Read on to learn more about this Kansas author and her book.

Just Announced - October 2010

My Flint Hills Childhood
won the 2010
Ferguson Kansas History Book Award.

Gail Martin's Author Website

Updates from the author's website.
Gail Lee Martin postcard
Gail Lee Martin by vallain
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Check out the New Paperback Version of My Flint Hills Childhood

It's a budget friendly $10.95 (plus postage) at www.gailmartin.wordpress.com
or connect directly to blurb.com with the preview below.

Preview My Flint Hills Childhood

At the end of the preview, it gives the book ordering information

Gail's Book Didn't Win in the November 2009 Blurb contest

but lots of people (over 300 one week) went to the site to preview her book

Gail Lee Martin's Second Book Is Now Out

Clyde Owen Martin: Family Memories of His Life and Times

type=textThis book covers the life of Gail Martin's husband with descriptions of his school days, growing up on a Central Kansas farm and profiles of his parents and other family members. Her daughters, Cynthia Jo Ross details Clyde Martin's years in oil field work and Virginia Allain contributes several essays about Clyde's sense of humor and his retirement years.

The table of contents is available on www.gailmartin.wordpress.com.

Preview the Second Book - Clyde Owen Martin

Gail Martin's Writing

Her Websites

Her Author Site
Preview 15 pages of her book and learn more about the author. Read an excerpt from the book: Jolly Was a Badger.
Gail's How-To Articles on eHow
100 how-to articles by Gail
Gail's Essays and Poems on Our Echo
A family memory writing site
Gail's Fan Page on Facebook
photos and news about Gail Lee Martin

Read about Other Writers in the Family

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About the Author

Gail Lee Martin

Gail Martin is an 85-year-old retired Kansas housewife and mother of six. She has written all her life "but just for herself." Gail was 4-H leader for 30 years in Butler County Kansas and led the club in publishing a club newsletter. She won first place as newswriter for the Mother's Art EHU club for three years. In the last twenty years Gail has been published in the Tower Family Book, family histories in the Greenwood and Wilson County Kansas history books as well as Kanhistique, The Golden Years and Schooner magazines.

The author researched and entered Butler County's Historical Essay contest several years and says she just loves to research and write. For example, in 1995, she wrote a fiftieth-anniversary story about the history of The Little Ranger, a doodlebug that ran from Emporia through El Dorado to Winfield and back.

Gail was appointed Kansas Authors Club archivist in 1995 and held that position for ten years.

Photos of Gail Lee Martin (click on any photo to see it larger)

Vintage (from the book) and More Recent Ones

Invent a Caption for this Photo

from the book

Are we the only ones that wore our costumes?

5 points

Don't laugh at us... I'll have my big sister beat you up!

3 points

Gail and Older Sister Melba

Halloween party in Teterville, Kansas in the 1930s0 points

I wanted to be a witch, not a clown like my big sister.

0 points

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More About the Author

At 85, Gail Martin's memories go back a long ways. She remembers living in oil field camp housing, wearing dresses made from feed sack material in the 1930s, trips to town in the family's Model A, raising her pet badger, and fishing on the Cottonwood River. Her children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren value her memories of childhood days during the Great Depression. Martin started recording them some years ago and isn't finished yet getting later memories of her life onto paper. Now her childhood memories of the Depression years have become a book. The title, My Flint Hills Childhood, plus the vintage family photo on the cover entices the reader into her homespun memoir.

Martin even taught others how to write about their family memories. A number of years, she led classes in that topic at the Shepherd Center in Wichita. "I made myself write something for each assignment that I gave the class," Martin confessed, feeling that she had to set a good example for participants. She found an additional audience for her writing when Kanhistique magazine featured many of them in the 1980s and 1990s. In the last twenty years she has been published in the Tower Family Book, contributed to the Greenwood and Wilson County history books as well as having stories in The Golden Years and Schooner magazines.

The author won the Butler County's Historical Essay contest several times and says she just loves to research and write. In 1995, she wrote a fiftieth-anniversary story about the history of The Little Ranger, a doodlebug that ran from Emporia through El Dorado to Winfield and back. Martin was appointed Kansas Authors Club archivist in 1995 and held that position for ten years.

Although some seniors rest on their laurels, Martin tackled the internet some years back. Her diligence in posting essays and poems on the Our Echo website caught the attention of the web designer for the site. He so greatly appreciated her efforts in encouraging the other writers on Our Echo, that he asked her to serve as the site's webmaster. She selects and changes the Editor's Choice and Featured Comments section of the site's homepage. Another responsibility Martin handles is regularly adding members' postings to the Wall of Fame on the site.

This octogenarian, a resident of El Dorado, has several other books underway. Her daughter, Virginia Allain, converted Martin's written memories into a book at the print-on-demand site, Blurb.com. "Mom's been great about dredging up the old family photos and emailing them to me in New Hampshire for the book," said Allain. At first, Allain thought the book would merely become a treasured family keepsake. "As I arranged the stories and photos, I realized that my mother's memories of the 1930s were both an endearing and valuable snapshot of early days in Kansas," Allain added.

The second book, currently underway, contains Martin's writings about her husband, Clyde Martin. It includes his years of working in the El Dorado oil industry, and his family's history stretching back to Kansas pioneer days. Supplementing Martin's memories for this second book are essays contributed by two of Martin's daughters, Cynthia Ross of Towanda and Virginia Allain.

It seems that Gail Martin's example of writing family memories has spread through the whole family. Last year, her sister, Carol Garriott published her own memories using the lulu.com website. Garriott's book, called Curve of the Coast, covers her life's journey from Greenwood County, Kansas to her current home along the Texas Gulf Coast.

Martin still needs to get more memories onto paper, according to her daughter. "She hasn't written about her wartime job at Boeing or about surviving a rattlesnake bite," said Allain. Allain intends to prod her mother to keep writing. "Mom worries about getting a swelled head from all the attention about the book," reported Allain, "but hopefully it will inspire her to further writing."

Preview the first fifteen pages online, of My Flint Hills Childhood by Gail Lee Martin, at the Blurb Bookstore where it's available in hardback or paperback.

Kansas Flint Hills Region

Depression Era Memories on YouTube

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Leave a Message for Gail Lee Martin

  • PaulOnBooks Feb 4, 2012 @ 11:44 am | delete
    A very interesting lens indeed. I'd love to post my grandmother's life story but my mother would kill me!
  • jimmyworldstar Dec 19, 2011 @ 11:32 am | delete
    I'll have to pick up this book, I've read The Grapes of Wrath and heard from some people who lived during the Depression about how difficult life became. It's hard to think that it was only around 80 years ago.
  • KarenTBTEN Aug 15, 2011 @ 2:21 am | delete
    Congratulations on the book award.
  • lollyj Mar 25, 2011 @ 7:55 am | delete
    Your mother is a delightful, inspiring woman. Lensrolled to my writing and writer-related lenses.
  • Margo_Arrowsmith Oct 19, 2010 @ 6:05 am | delete
    Lenrolled to "The Oldest People Who Have" AND Arrowsmith Printing.
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Gail's Book Promotional Items on Zazzle

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A Worthy Cause

First Book provides new books to children in need, addressing one of the most important factors affecting literacy—access to books. Since 1992, First Book has distributed over 60 million free and low-cost books in thousands of communities.

by

vallain

I've learned a lot in 2009, helping my mom put her memories into a book. Now there's two books and we're working on a third one.
I'm a retired libra...
more »

Feeling creative? Create a Lens!

Thinking about Writing Your Own Childhood Memories? 

If You Like Gail Lee Martin's Book, Try This One 

Addie of the Flint Hills: A Prairie Child During the Depression (1915-1935)

Amazon Price: $25.00 (as of 05/27/2012)Buy Now

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