From Edie: Honor the “living libraries” in your life by listening well and preserving their stories. Discover how recording family history captures wisdom, faith, and legacy—before precious memories are lost.
by Eva Marie Everson @EversonAuthor
In the same way, you who are younger, submit yourselves to your elders (1 Peter 5:5).
I received a call from my 95-year-old uncle, the oldest and only surviving brother of my mother. He had questions about my immediate family. Dates of marriages. Dates of births. Dates of deaths. “And how do you spell . . .”
“Uncle Jerry,” I shouted into the phone so my nearly deaf uncle could hear. “What in the world are you doing?”
“But don’t we have books and books on that?”
“Yes,” he said, “but this is a more detailed account of Mother and Daddy’s family. Us three kids. Their kids and grandkids.”
This was to be the first of many calls. Finally, he admitted, “I’m handwriting this. No one is going to be able to read it.” The defeat in his voice crushed my heart.
“Uncle Jerry,” I soothed. “How about I come up there and help you with this? I am a fast typist. We can do this together.”
Thrilled doesn’t begin to express his new emotion. I booked a flight. A few weeks later, I packed a bag that included my laptop and left for the airport.
As soon as I arrived at his Stone Mountain, Georgia home, he brought out scrapbooks, the pages he’d been working on, and family history books. I settled my laptop onto the kitchen table, created a new document, and got to work.
Both he and I enjoy studying our family’s rich history, so much that he had for me was information I already knew. But what I learned left me open-mouthed. For example, when I transcribed the part where our ancestor, Allen Strickland, ran off and married Mary Jones. When they returned home, her incensed father hauled them down to the courthouse to have the union annulled. Imagine his fury when he learned that, because they had “spent the night together,” he couldn’t do anything to legally tear asunder what God had joined together. In retaliation, Mary’s father adopted Allen. This meant that Mary was now married to her husband and her legal brother. I’m not sure what this meant for their many children.
Then there was the story about our widowered ancestor who married his son’s wife’s sister-in-law (I swear, there are branches of our family tree that just don’t fork!). This meant that he became both the father-in-law and brother-in-law of his son-in-law!
At other stories, I wept. For example, when I typed the story of the life Uncle Jerry and his first wife were creating in 1959. With two children—one about five and the other about fifteen months—they were in the process of moving from an apartment to their first purchased home when the phone rang. The voice on the other end relayed the message that my aunt’s father had just passed away. With half of their furniture in one place and half in another, they left for Manassas, Georgia where her parents lived. Two days later, they buried her father, then left for her sister’s home for the “family dinner” where they gathered around the kitchen table. My fifteen-month-old cousin sat in his 27-year-old mother’s lap. She asked someone for a glass of tea, then fell over dead.
“So,” I said to my uncle as tears spilled down my cheeks, “her mother buried her husband one day and then, a few days later, buried her daughter.”
My uncle swallowed hard as he whispered, “Yes.” Nearly seventy years have not lessened the pain.
My uncle—as well as any and all of our elderly—are our living libraries. They have stories. They have memories. They experienced parts of history we can only read about. When I wrote The One True Love of Alice-Ann (2017, Tyndale), a story about World War II Stateside, I interviewed family members (including this uncle), friends, and family members of friends who had lived through that era. I learned things that I may not have gleaned from a book, a document, or a Ken Burns video.
Although I was alive in 1962, I was a child. So, when I wrote Miss Beth Bettencourt (2026, Kregel), I repeated the same investigations. Hearing stories from those who are significantly older gathers more than just the facts; it also collects the emotions. The joy. The grief. The ties that bind.
What stories might you hear the next time you venture into a living library’s home? Grab your phone, ask the question, video the stories within the answers. Then listen . . . and listen good.
Eva Marie Everson is the CEO of Word Weavers International, the Director of Florida Christian Writers Conference, and the Director of The Selah Awards and the Foundation Awards (BRMCWC). Her works of both fiction and nonfiction have received numerous awards including an ECPA Gold Medallion. In 2022 she received the Yvonne Lehman Award and the AWSA Lifetime Achievement Award. Set in 1962, her next novel, Miss Beth Bettencourt (May 2026), explores familial tragedies and healings during the era known as Camelot.


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