Visit
Annie and Andy at the General Store Web Site!
Excerpt from Annie's
afterword in Welcome Radio: Tales From the General Store
Andy, Julie, and I sat at
a table in a down-home restaurant in Fort Kent, Maine. Harlequin
had just purchased one of Julie’s books
and she was rosy with success.
“Thanks
for the CDs of your radio show,” she said, a gleam in her
eyes. “You know, you’re crazy
if you don’t write a book about this show.”
I realized she was right.
I had already penned hundreds of scripts for The General Store
Variety Show. Why not compose a book around some of them?
“Good idea,” Andy and I agreed. “Even people
who have never heard the radio show will enjoy this material.”
My love affairs with both
radio and writing began when my age was in the single digits.
My mother had the radio playing all day long. I remember listening
to the musical hits of the day while creating little eight- and
ten-page books filled with stories and illustrations.
Following my graduation
from Boston University with a BFA in graphic arts, with a minor
in English, I worked designing knitwear in a textile mill outside
of Hartford, Connecticut. My office was on the third floor with
the giant machines that chugged along, spinning the double-knit
fabric. Radio was my constant companion. One day, I walked into
my favorite station, WHCN, and introduced myself to the deejays.
Less than two years later, I traveled to Boston to take the engineering
test to get my FCC license with broadcast endorsement, and my
radio career began. After a stint on college radio, I was hired
by WHCN, Hartford. Throughout my years working on the commercial
end of the dial, I continued to volunteer on the noncommercial
end.
Due mainly to the Communications
Act of 1996, commercial radio changed quickly. Many small stations
that served local communities were purchased by large corporations
and homogenized. I hung on, working at four stations broadcasting
out of Skowhegan, Maine. Everywhere less and less of the broadcast
day was actually live. On one station, I voice tracked, that is
I entered my voice into the computer for later airplay. I’d
drive around and listen to myself back rap the music. On one computerized,
prerecorded, dedication show, there was no way to actually take
live phone requests, so I made them up. Once in a while, a listener
would snail mail an actual request to me, but mostly I created
people, relationships, and scenarios, including the start of John
and Lucy’s storyline.
Late
one snowy February night in 1999, my husband Andy and I were talking
radio. In a rant about what radio had lost and what it could be,
we came up with the concept of our program, and The General
Store Variety Show was born. We were both so excited that
we stayed up most of the night talking and planning. My intention
when designing the show was to be innovative while employing the
best elements of radio, some of them long forgotten or little
used, such as theme-based shows and a radio serial. I also wanted
to create a sense of place, somewhere the listener could visit
each week to relax and be entertained. After setting up a recording
studio in our home, we enlisted friends and acquaintances that
do theater, radio, and performances. We could never have gotten
this project off the ground without the diverse voices from the
community. The General Store Variety Show debuted on
WERU, our flagship station, in March 2000.
When I sat down to begin
writing this book, I realized I wanted to give the readers something
extra, something more than they get when listening to the skits
and characters on the radio show. After all, Andy and I only have
an hour each week on the radio. The book allows me to go into
greater depth with the location, the store, and characters, especially
Annie. Beyond this, I add a new level to life in the radio village.
I take the readers and everyone in the mythical valley of Angels’
Notch to a new place, a magical place.
Besides being a radio producer
and a writer, I am a mystic. This is a choice I made two decades
ago, and I have since been nurturing my psychic abilities and
employing them to help people. I teach people how to activate
the telepathic centers in their brains so that they can communicate
in many ways, but especially with their spirit helpers. Three
very dynamic Spirit Guides appear in this book, though I have
yet to introduce any on the radio show. Darci Stillwater deserves
special notice, because he is my personal Spirit Guide, my life
guide, and often my partner in writing. Although he has never
appeared on the radio show, he is a pivotal character in this
book.
Thank you for reading this
book and entering the world of The General Store in Angel’s
Notch, Maine.
