1 Preserving Love Stories
A little late for Valentine's Day, but always appropriate, here are some prompts for extracting stories from your lovd ones. http://www.genetree.com/newsletters/13
2 Before the
Archive: Trash or Treasure
I so relate to Suzanne's dilemma--how to sort the inherited archive we receive. We can't say no, but can we afford to say yes? One hint I hang onto is to keep a particular archive together and rough sort first. Later you may fine tune, but get the general sorting all done before tackling the specific files.
3 Save Every Step
"SaveEveryStep is about the passion for family nostalgia. We
are relentless in our mission to encourage the world to preserve their personal
memories for future generations." Save every step is an ongoing story site. See what Helen Spencer says about her own memoirs and then you may accept her invitation to write your own.
4 Get Your Book
Written in Little Chunks
Another invitation this time from a powerful mentor, Nina Amir, to use the "power of the little bit" to complete a memoir or a history in small pieces. Divide and conquer!
5 Barry's
Forgotten Recipes
Free collection of recipes to spice up your family history writing. Barry Ewell has many resources available on his blog. "Barry’s Forgotten Recipes is about sharing cookbooks and
recipes of our ancestors. From generation to generation, family and friends
came together for the main meal of the day and for conversation. Renew the
powerful memories of smell, taste, and sharing food. Remember the traditions
that linked generations."
Thanks for including my post in your round-up, Joy. It's always good to find a fellow archiver. And yes, it's hard to part with some of those things.
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