Mother introduced me to Gladys’ books in the 1990’s. So nice to read that Gladys Tabor’s books are still touching lives. I know my mother is smiling down on all of us as we chat about her favorite author. If you want to know more about Gladys, here is her page at Wikipedia. Still meadow, Gladys’s wonderful 1690 farmhouse in the Connecticut countryside. So if this seems like your cup of tea, it’s only $20 a year for four “sturdy” issues of about 40 pages each, sent out in March, June, September, and December a mere pittance for the wonderful job they do of carrying on the true tradition of what Gladys Taber was about. They have what they call a “minimal” web site (due to everything being volunteer, having no funds particularly, just a lot of heart), but you can go there to request membership information - they would love more people to know about Gladys Taber. Illy is gone, but her spirit and heart continue to inspire The Friends of Gladys Taber Newsletter. Gilly and I wrote to each other until her death in 2008. She gave me the black and white photos you see at the top of this page… she took them when she visited Gladys in 1955. We visited in the backyard, under the rose arbor she was like a link to the past for me. We’d been pen pals for years, but this was our first in-person meeting. N a beautiful June day in 1999 the beloved “Editor-in-Chief Emeritus” of the Friends of Gladys Taber Fan Club, Gilbertine “Gilly” Moore, stopped by my house on Martha’s Vineyard to say hello. ‘ve also corresponded with some of Glady’s other “Friends” and without really “knowing” them, it’s easy to feel an instant connection between kindred spirits because of our mutual admiration for Gladys Taber, which extends right out to each other. Afterward, you feel the way you do when you open all the doors and windows on the first spring day after a long cold winter! It’s real mail, the kind you save and read with a cup of tea. For years I have received their wonderful snail mail newsletter that still thrills my heart every time I see it in my mailbox. As soon as I found out about it, I joined the Friends of Gladys Taber Fan Club. I feel like I just missed her, she died on Cape Cod at 81 years old, the year before I moved to the islandīegan collecting her books finding them almost lit up, like little torches in dark and dusty used bookstores. The book was Best of Stillmeadow, where I read the words “April in New England is like first love.” and fell in first-love myself, with Gladys. I found her waiting for me on a shelf of old books left behind by the previous owner of the first little house I bought on Martha’s Vineyard. She also wrote the Diary of Domesticity column for the Lady’s Home Journal in the late 1930’s, and Butternut Wisdom for Family Circle through the 1960’s.Īny people inherit their fondness for the writings of Gladys Taber from their mothers or grandmothers. Her books are filled with practical advice and her common sense view of the way things are. She loved everything I love, which is why I love her! Through her eyes, we experience the passing seasons from her 1690 Connecticut farmhouse share in her passion for animals, gardening, cooking, and homemaking. Ladys Taber was born in 1899 and spent her life writing about the every-day simple things in life for her wonderful Stillmeadow and Still Cove books. I think I learned everything I needed to know about her when I read this: I’ve been asked many times who she is and how to find out more about her. Ots of you have noticed that some of the most wonderful quotes I put in my books and calendars are attributed to Gladys Taber.
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