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Moments Rooted in Gratitude
Posted by Literary-Titan

Field of Memories is a memoir told through a long chain of short, self-contained stories sharing moments from all stages of life and touching on themes of gratitude, faith, and remembering. How did you decide which memories belonged in the book?
Choosing which memories to include was one of the most challenging aspects of writing Field of Memories. Ultimately, my guiding question became not which memories mattered most to me, but which ones might resonate most deeply with a reader. I included recollections that carried universal emotions and experiences—those common threads of humanity that connect us across age, circumstance, and belief. By focusing on moments rooted in gratitude, faith, and remembrance, I hoped to create stories that felt both deeply personal and widely relatable.
Why are sensory details—cars, smells, objects—so important in your storytelling?
Sensory details anchor my stories in a specific time and place. They allow me to translate what I see and feel so vividly in memory into language that the reader can experience. By layering these details into my storytelling, I invite the reader to move beyond observation and into immersion, to not just read the story but to travel alongside me through it.
How has your understanding of grief evolved over time?
It has been essential for me to honor my grief, not as something to overcome, but as a spiritual journey deserving of reverence and patience. Grief is the deepest evidence that love existed—that it does not disappear when someone is gone. Over time, my understanding has softened and matured. Healing has arrived in quiet, incremental ways, not because the loss has faded, but because I have learned how to carry love and loss together. Grief no longer feels like an interruption to life; it has become a companion that has expanded my capacity for compassion, presence, and meaning.
If you could add one more vignette today, what would it be about?
I would include a vignette about an influential elementary school math teacher who made it his personal mission to ensure I truly understood fractions and percentages. I struggled at first, but instead of letting me fall behind, he was determined to help me build both the skills and confidence I needed to succeed. Through his patience, unwavering kindness, and individualized attention, my understanding grew—and so did my belief in myself. By the end of the year, I was an A student. Mr. Smith’s dedication transformed my experience with learning, and his compassion left a lasting impression.
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Norris’s writing is imbued with a profound sense of nostalgia, celebrating the warmth and comfort of family bonds, the innocence and wonder of youth, and the resilience that emerges from overcoming loss. The stories span several decades, beginning with the author’s earliest years and progressing through significant coming-of-age moments, family traditions, and historical events that have left an indelible mark on her life. Central to the narrative is the enduring influence of the author’s mother, whose presence and guidance serve as a touchstone throughout the collection. The joys and sorrows of growing up are explored with sensitivity and insight, highlighting the universal experiences that connect us all.
A key theme in “Field of Memories” is the importance of preserving family stories for future generations. Norris emphasizes how these stories serve as a bridge between the past and the present, allowing us to honor our heritage and pass on valuable lessons to those who come after us. The narrative is enriched by vivid character sketches, introducing readers to a cast of neighbors, teachers, friends, and relatives who each contribute to the rich tapestry of the author’s life. These characters are portrayed with warmth and authenticity, reflecting the complexities and nuances of real human relationships.
Throughout the book, Norris reflects on universal experiences such as childhood innocence, friendship, grief, forgiveness, and the bittersweet passage of time. Her stories are interwoven with poems and reflections, offering readers moments of both laughter and tears. The inclusion of poetry adds a lyrical quality to the narrative, deepening the emotional resonance and inviting readers to pause and contemplate the themes presented.
Ultimately, “Field of Memories” is a celebration of legacy, love, and the power of storytelling to connect generations. Norris’s writing encourages readers to reflect on their own lives, to cherish the memories that have shaped them, and to recognize the enduring value of sharing stories with others. The collection serves as a reminder that our experiences, both joyful and sorrowful, contribute to the fabric of who we are, and that by honoring these memories, we can find meaning, healing, and connection.
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, biography, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, D.L. Norris, ebook, Field of Memories, goodreads, historical biographies, history, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, memoir, nonfiction, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, short reads, Spirituality 103 The Forgiveness Code: Finding The Light In Our Shadow, story, writer, writing
Field of Memories
Posted by Literary Titan

Field of Memories is a memoir told through a long chain of short, self-contained stories. Childhood in 1950s California. The family moves to Idaho. A parade of neighbors, pets, cousins, choir trips, candy trucks, and church mornings. Later, marriage, grief, travel, Auschwitz, dementia, and the slow ache of saying goodbye to parents and friends. Each vignette is small in scope but big on feeling. Together they form a life story that leans hard into gratitude, faith, and the power of remembering.
I found the story to be very smooth and polished. The tone stays warm and steady even when the subject is painful. The language is plain, almost conversational, and that gives the stories a kind of kitchen-table honesty. I liked how often a scene hangs on one concrete detail. A blue Studebaker. The smell of Toni home perm solution. A chipped tablecloth chewed by the neighbor’s dog. Those small bits made the memories feel lived in, not staged. I appreciated how confidently the prose leans into sentiment, and how many of the endings clearly spell out the lesson, almost like the comforting moral at the end of a fable.
The ideas underneath the stories resonated with me in a gentler, slower way. The book circles again and again around kindness, the cost of cruelty, and how ordinary people carry each other through time. The chapter about Matthew and the teacher who says, “stay with your own kind,” made my stomach knot, because the racism is so casual and so early. The Auschwitz visit in “Never Forget” pulled the lens wide and dropped the whole earlier world of penny candy and Levi’s into a much darker frame. I appreciated that shift. It kept the book from drifting into pure nostalgia. I also felt a strong spiritual thread. It shows up in quiet moments, like the customer-service call that turns into a mini sermon about grief, or the way the author talks about her mother “changing addresses” instead of simply dying. I responded to that mix of tenderness and steadiness, even if now and then it brushed close to sentimentality for my taste.
I would recommend Field of Memories to readers who enjoy reflective, faith-tinged life writing, especially anyone who grew up in mid-century America or loves stories about close families and small towns. If you like to sit with a cup of coffee and dip in and out of short, heartfelt pieces that celebrate parents, grandparents, neighbors, and the strange beauty of getting older, this collection fits that mood very well.
Pages: 188 | ASIN : B0G72F556R
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: author, autobiographical, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, D L Norris, ebook, family, Field of Memories, goodreads, historical biographies, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, memoir, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, short stories, story, writer, writing




