Today, November 18, 2018, Latvia celebrates the 100-year anniversary of its proclamation of independence. This does not mean that Latvia has enjoyed 100 years of freedom. Far from it. The story of Latvia is riddled with long periods of German and Soviet occupation. Freedom from Soviet rule was restored in 1991.
On Proclamation Day, and as we look forward this week to Thanksgiving, I am grateful for the freedom we have in the United States and am reminded that it should never be taken for granted. My late father, as a teenager, was a displaced person during World War II, when Nazi and Soviet troops clashed, literally in his backyard. My father, his sister, and their parents joined the thousands of Latvians who fled. I can hardly imagine the trauma of being ripped from your country, your home, and everything you know, to be a refugee, to make your way in another country, not able to go back. My experience of these events has been secondhand, through the stories of my late father and late aunt. I wish I had asked them more when they were still on this earth!
As I so frequently experience, my imagination takes hold of bits of fact, and expands and embellishes them until they explode into story. My story collection Your Pick, comprised of reader favorites from previous collections, opens with a reprint of “My Latvian Aunt,” a story that won an award and has garnered much interest over the years. I think this story is compelling because my late aunt’s voice can be heard in its pages. I incorporated bits of our conversations and wove historical facts about Latvia and WWII into the story. I did some of the same in a murder mystery with a Latvian protagonist that takes place during the Cold War. “Dzintra’s Tale” has been accepted for publication by Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine, and I’ll be sure to let you know when it appears in print!
Your Pick: Selected Stories, launches on November 23. Click here if you’d like to enter a giveaway on Goodreads for a free copy of Your Pick in e-book!
I too have a runaway imagination but not your gift as a writer! I am going to enjoy your up coming work!!!
Thank you, Annette!
Nice that many people are celebrating Latvia’s 100th. However I like to remind that the work to make Latvia a free country isn’t finished. The Latvian Parliament and Justice Department have been controlled by four Kremlin-connected oligarchs (Kargin, Krasovitsky, Skele, Lembergs) for 27 years and those people have become billionaires by privatizing the state to themselves. They never get prosecuted even when details of massive corruption and homicides appear in the Media. We can do better by insisting on a higher level of service from elected officials (service to the voters, not service to the oligarchs) and Latvia’s next 100 will hopefully be much better!