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Sunday Letter~ 05.17.26

May 17, 2026 By Talya Tate Boerner Leave a Comment

Hello, Sunday Letter readers!

In case you were wonderingโ€”no, I havenโ€™t fallen off the face of the earth. Iโ€™m still here, and Iโ€™m glad you are too. Lately, Iโ€™ve been busy in the garden and doing a little traveling. In between all that, I read and write. Thatโ€™s pretty much my life these days, and honestly, Iโ€™m not complaining in the least.

Yes, Iโ€™m still plugging away on my next book. I hope to have a completed first draft by June 30. Iโ€™m a slow writer, partly because of all the aforementioned ways I like to spend my time, and partly because I tend to let a story unfold in its own sweet time. Have no fearโ€”Iโ€™ll keep you updated on my progress along the way.

Central Library, Little Rock

On Friday, I taught a Phenology and Backyard Journaling session at the Arkansas Library Associationโ€™s InfoBits Conference. It was held at the fabulous Central Library in Little Rockโ€”truly a wonderful place to spend a beautiful spring day.

A library is so much more than books. In fact, I challenge you to visit libraries wherever you travel and pay attention to their non-book offerings: the art and history displays, community bulletin boards, yoga classes, curated exhibits, quiet corners, and local treasures. Every library is a gem in its own way.

A few things that especially grabbed my attention were the display of David Paul Cookโ€™s nature and landscape art, the original library columns, the stunning views from nearly every window, and a series of old photographs from The Butler Center for Arkansas Studies.

Old photographs fascinate meโ€”especially photos of places tied to my own memories.

One image showed that the Osceola Furniture Store once sold coffins and caskets. Naturally, this sent me tumbling down a Google rabbit hole to learn the difference. It turns out caskets are rectangular, while coffins are six-sided (or sometimes eight-sided), wider at the shoulders and tapered at the head and feetโ€”historically known as a โ€œtoe pincher.โ€ Caskets are primarily used in the United States, while coffins remain more common in the United Kingdom.

Who knew? Certainly not me.

Our New Old Chairs!

Speaking of old things, Iโ€™m excited to tell you about our new old chairs.

This project has been a long time coming. About ten years ago, we purchased these wonderfully comfortable antique club chairs from French Metro Antiques here in Fayetteville. Nearly everything at French Metro has been imported from Paris, and our chairs date back to roughly the 1920s.

I like to imagine Ernest Hemingway and Gertrude Stein sitting in them, smoking cigarettes and listening to jazz.

John and I always intended to have them recovered, but for years we struggled to find anyone willing to tackle the project. Time passed, as it tends to do, and the chairs slowly drifted to the bottom of the priority list. Finally, this year, we found a local upholstery companyโ€”Holmberg Upholsteryโ€”happy to take them on.

Rather than replace the worn brown leather with more leather, we chose a beautiful dark green chevron fabric instead.

Before:

Iโ€™m fairly certain guests wondered why we even kept them in the house. Horsehair and coconut-fiber stuffing poked out everywhere.

 

During:

While dismantling the chairs, the upholsterers discovered scraps of brightly colored fabric stuffed inside the cushionsโ€”probably added long ago for extra firmness. Even more surprising, they also found several well-preserved acorns tucked deep inside.

Iโ€™d like to think this wasnโ€™t the work of one of our modern squirrels, but honestly, who knows?

Acorns were once considered emergency food during times of famine and scarcity, so perhaps someone tucked them away for safekeeping and simply forgot about them.

We may never know how those acorns ended up hidden inside the cushions, but I love that these old chairs carried their own small secrets through time.

The upholsterer also discovered French hairpins and the wrapper from a well-known French embroidery thread.

 

After:

Sunday Letter

Now theyโ€™re ready for the next hundred years.

If I Were a…

If I were a finch, Iโ€™d build my nest in the honeysuckle.

If I were a box turtle, Iโ€™d hide beneath the maple tree among the wild violets.

If I were a tree frog, I’d perch on the windowsill.

If I were a possum, Iโ€™d forage in the garden and live beneath the front porch.

If I were a skink, Iโ€™d make my home in the rock wall.

If I were a squirrel, I’d nap on the gatepost.

Or maybe Iโ€™d curl up in the viburnum and spy on my humans from above.

But since Iโ€™m just a humble human, Iโ€™ll simply be grateful to share this garden space with all of themโ€”and say hello whenever we cross paths.

Just pleaseโ€ฆ keep your acorns outside.

“Nature is not a place to visit. It is home.” โ€” Gary Snyder

(P.S. I saw all these critters within a two week period.)

Speaking of Nature

I highly recommend the latest Ken Burns documentary, Henry David Thoreau, now airing on PBS. Itโ€™s informative, beautiful, and deeply inspirationalโ€”and George Clooney provides the narration.

And this is an actual photograph of Walden Pond. I believe I could write a few words there.

โ€œHeaven is under our feet as well as over our heads.โ€ โ€• Henry David Thoreau, Walden or, Life in the Woods

Things Momma Says:

The one thing I can still do is hear pretty good.

***

Thatโ€™s all for today, folks. I hope you found my ramblings illuminatingโ€”or at the very least, worth the few minutes it took to read them.

Talya Boerner
Grace Grits & Gardening
Farm. Food. Garden. Life.

 

Filed Under: Sunday Letter Tagged With: garden surprises, home decor, Library, Little Rock

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Hi! I'm Talya Tate Boerner. Writer, Reader, Arkansas Master Naturalist / Master Gardener, Author of

THE ACCIDENTAL SALVATION OF GRACIE LEE (2016)

GENE, EVERYWHERE: a life-changing visit from my father-in-law (2020)

BERNICE RUNS AWAY (2022)

THE THIRD ACT OF THEO GRUENE (coming 2025)

Recent Ramblings:

  • Sunday Letter~ 05.17.26
  • Sunday Letter: 03.29.26
  • Sunday Letter: February 22, 2026
  • Our Garden Mission Statement
  • Goodbye, 2025. Hello, 2026.

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