After the National Council of Teachers of English (NCTE) Convention concluded in Boston on Sunday, my husband and I rented a car and started a loop through New England so that we could see a little more of the northeastern United States. Since we didn’t take a vacation anytime earlier this year, we decided to take a trip this week and enjoy some time away to relax and recharge.
I might be a pain as a travel companion. I’m pretty sure I am, because there was frost on the top of the car and I urged my husband to get up and watch the sunrise with me. On the rooftop of a hotel. When the wind was blowing so hard the seagulls were forced into changing course.
I can’t help it. There’s something exhilarating and soul-renewing about the way the sun casts a glow at the top of the day, as if it’s pouring the world a glass of orange juice to serve up energy for all the day brings.
We woke up in Kennebunkport, Maine this morning and did some exploring in that coastal town before driving across New Hampshire to Woodstock, Vermont to do more adventuring in another state.

We’re enjoying watching places decorate for Christmas. We found some men with a ladder decorating a tree in the middle of the street right in the heart of Kennebunkport. There was another crew hanging garland over the bridge, and still more putting out a reindeer with lights and a sleigh and a Santa and a snowman. Snowflakes with lights were hanging at the tops of buildings, and the festive feeling of Christmas was in the air. Some homes had pumpkins on the front porches and wreaths on the front doors, and I feel like I learned something important from that.
My favorite stop of the day was the U.S. Post Office. I’d broken my own rules by taking 17 books from NCTE with no plan whatsoever for how to get them home in just the carry-on and personal bag I brought along. So I asked my husband to find a Post Office, and one was right down a side street from the middle-of-the-road Christmas tree. I purchased a box, the kind that you peel the sealing tape off the side, scribbled my address in the TO space, and mailed these signed volumes home to myself at the book rate.
The fun came in the place and people, and I’m convinced that the actual Post Office is a character all by itself, with its very old doors that I wished had a register of all the people who’d ever entered and exited. I felt I’d stepped back in time to the 1940s. My next goal is to research the history of the building with its tiny mailboxes and the feeling of nostalgia here that had me wondering if ten thousand ghosts weren’t waving to me from the ceiling space. I saw live people coming and going, but the feeling of past was powerful here, kind of like mediums must feel when giving a fortune telling.
Then there was the man in line behind me, a gentleman of about 80, who was as kind and curious as humans come. He suggested I sit the box down when he saw me holding it so long, but by that time, I was next. He said it looked heavy, but I told him it was all books – and then he got interested……especially when I told him who’d signed them all. Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, Kate McKinnon, Bryan Stephenson, Ada Limon, Sy Montgomery, Matt Patterson, and more.
I kept wondering what was taking so long – – until I got to the window and figured it out. The Postmaster was a character, too – maybe the main one. He was about 70, hilarious with his jokes and fun. His piercing blue eyes and his mannerisms took ahold of me. He had to read the whole script, asking me if I had…..”anything perishable…..any batteries….anything liquid…” even though I kept saying no and had read the screen and pushed the NO button. He smiled a little and peered up over a raised bushy eyebrow atop the rim of his glasses so I would know it was a game. Then, when I asked for elves holiday stamps to mail postcards to the grandchildren, he told me they’d just gotten those in from Graceland, handing me two books. “You know, where all the Elv(i)s live!” I laughed the corny joke laugh, smiled what felt like the realest smile I’d smiled all year long, and wondered why every place couldn’t feel this unhurried and fun. Especially at such a busy time.
Then I stepped back out the doors into 2024.
My husband’s favorite stop of the day was the Bush compound, and we caught sight of three people walking. We couldn’t tell who they were, but we know someone was home since the flag was up to indicate their presence – plus, we saw several cars including the tell-tale Secret Service black SUV. This was an unplanned stop on the route, but one we both enjoyed. Even though we didn’t get that invitation to come in for a cup of hot chocolate that we stood there hoping for.
When we finally arrived in Woodstock, we went to The Vermont Flannel Company on the suggestion of a friend, who had been during her fall break last year and loved the place.
The bad news: I couldn’t buy a blanket because…… only a carry-on and a personal bag.
The good news: I couldn’t buy a blanket because…….only a carry-on and a personal bag.
I could live in their shirts and wrap up every night in those cozy blankets. And I see why the flannel is such a hit here. It’s freezing. And the Georgians? Yeah, we brought denim jackets and thin nylon windbreakers but no coats……that’s the other bad news. (I awoke early, and below is the forecast for today):
But onward we march, freezing and having a wicked good time.








I love how you captured that Post Office visit. So many characters. And as I read it, I see you, another character, who is so welcoming and observate and excited about all the little details. You made that moment special because of your wonder point of view. So glad to briefly be with you in person. SO glad I get to “see” you here, too. Enjoy your continued adventures up North. Happy Thanksgiving. I am thankful to know you.
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Our posts go hand in hand. I canāt believe we are so close to each other. Yea itās cold but not freezing here on the coast. Low 40ās. The key is to layer! We have not seen any sunrises because sleeping in is the most luxurious part of vacation. Traveling mercies as you continue your journey.
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Kim,
I love the post office story. It should be a picture book. Iām feeling the urge to visit Maine again. I have a cousin who lives there. I wish Iād known you didnāt have a coat for your travels. I would have loaned you mine. I had a puffer jacket Iād bought in Iceland and a long raincoat. I stuffed the puffer in my bag going home. I have a new puffer from Peru and many other coats. Youāre gonna need a coat if youāre. traveling a while.
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Glenda, thatās so kind of you! So far, Iām hanging in there with a few layers, a hat and a scarf. If it drops any lower, I may give in and get a coat.
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I love how you captured the majesty and characters of new England as well as the many challenges of traveling with just your carry on bag! I must admit that more than once, I have spent MORE on sending packages home than I spent of said packages. Sigh, I envy your self control!
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I felt as though I was traveling with you and your husband on this trip! Thank you for providing me with a mini-vacation! I loved reading about your visit to the Post Office and it made me wonder if I’ve ever really looked at our Post Office, which is an older building.
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Oh Kim! Glad you go to venture up north. Kennebunkport and Woodstock are two of my all time favorite places!
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You made a GREAT vacation of New England and went to a couple of my favorite towns. Love how you capture the cold and the warmth they presented you. Love how you also shared your experiences with the people you met by way of books and signings. I bet they remember you, as well!
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Kim, I’m going to go back and read all your posts. They are so rich in detail. I enjoyed this, like the 10,000 waving ghosts and this beautiful description of the sunrise: “Thereās something exhilarating and soul-renewing about the way the sun casts a glow at the top of the day, as if itās pouring the world a glass of orange juice to serve up energy for all the day brings.” Just gorgeous!
Thanks, Kim, for all the joy and fun you and B brought to Boston. You were truly more of my highlights–the dinners together, tea on Sunday morning, presenting with you, and your sweet care of your friends.
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Thank you, Denise! The same is true of my highlights – those moments of quiet pause with others are where I find the most joy, and while NCTE was hectic, just the sitting, the talking, and the conversation we were able to have together meant so much more than the mad dashes to get to the next places. The more I think about a writer’s retreat, the more I think we would all love the gathering of this kind, mid-country somewhere. š
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