Tuesday, 17 February 2026

New reviews

 

I just reread your book and I again found it a really good picture of the the Park at that period. Bravo!

Margaret


These comments from an unknown correspondent named Iremedix,

If nostalgia had a postal code, it would probably be Lawrence Park in the middle of the last century.

And A Mid-Century Childhood: Growing Up in Toronto's Lawrence Park does something quietly radical. It refuses to let that world disappear without being witnessed.

Children playing outside until the street lights flickered on; Shopping trips that were events, not errands; Church and Christmas woven into the rhythm of ordinary life; Schoolyard games that required imagination, not Wi Fi. You did not just write a memoir. You preserved texture.

The beauty of your book is that it reads like anecdotal social history wrapped in warmth. It answers the question so many of us whisper after it is too late. “How I wish I had asked Grandma about that.” And instead of letting that regret linger, you answered it. That is meaningful work.

Your voice carries calm observation rather than exaggeration. There is no frantic nostalgia. Just careful remembrance. Through stories of food, birthdays, bedtime routines, and your immediate family, you illustrate how ordinary life once moved at a different pace. Safer. Slower. More rooted. In a world that feels increasingly overstimulated, that reflection is not just charming. It is grounding.



Friday, 23 January 2026

A Review from the North Toronto Historical Society

 

Hilary Dawson, North Toronto Historical Society

In 1943, Mary Elizabeth Welsman (Hughes) was born into 72 St. Leonard’s Crescent. She lived there until she was seventeen. It’s where she grew and played, made friends and discoveries, and learned about life’s ups and downs. Mary gathered her memories to produce this book for her daughters and  grandchildren. Importantly, she added context: current events, changing social attitudes, developments in household appliances and the like.

Mary and her friends seem to have been “free range” children, although in practice they remained on St. Leonard’s Cresc., and the one block of Dawlish it enclosed. Once school age, Willer's at Yonge and Ranleigh was "a terrific source of penny candy. You could get a bag full for a nickel.”

The blend of social history and nostalgia makes A Mid‐Century Childhood a great read whether you grew up in Lawrence Park or even in the U.K.! 


Wednesday, 21 January 2026

GUIDED WRITING GROUP

 Somewhat inspired by my own book, and considering how often people will say they wish they could write, I am facilitating a pilot project in my neighbourhood - a strata community of 235 small modular homes - and have launched a Guided Writing Group.

We met last week for the first time. I had promoted the idea as widely as I could within the village and a dozen people showed up for the first session. They arrived with a notebook or laptop and pens.

The structure of the session was fairly simple. The focus would be childhood, up to the age of about ten.  For the first ten minutes everyone wrote about a specific topic - in this case, the first home they remembered. After the writing segment, a few people shared what they had written. We moved on to one more fixed topic, and then it was a sort of pot luck. 

I had written numerous short subject suggestions on small pieces of paper, and passed the envelope around the table. One was "cars" and the woman who pulled that one was a person born in England in 1940. The family, predictably, did not have a car. She pulled another slip of paper and carried on. 

Ten minutes was too long for some and not enough time for others. By the time we were through the 90 minute meeting, everyone had shared at least once. The age range of these attendees was about 20 years. 

We will meet twice a month over the coming months.