Wednesday, February 11, 2015

First Interviews with Friends of the Park Family

I owe many people a big hug for helping me with this process.  I called upon my Van Buren friends from my high school days to see what they remembered about growing up with Sam Hugh and Linda Park.  I met at the Van Buren Library with Joyce Patton, Nancy Baker, and P. D. DuVall.  Each told what they remembered.  I showed them the information I had already gathered, and we discussed my growing file in which  their information would be added.

Next I met with Rusty and Linda Myers in their lovely home on North 8th Circle in Van Buren.  We sat together a total of four different times, and it was through them that I obtained my most valuable item: the scrapbook.  It was found in a home in Van Buren that was scheduled to be torn down.  Rusty was contacted by the person who found it and it had been in Rusty's closet for a long time.  He gave it to me, and I took it home.  I spent days going through each page.  There were many, many pages devoted to Sam Hugh.  The first picture of Linda was entered with no fanfare at all.  It was just a picture of Linda at age seven standing in the snow with he father, Hugh Park.  All the pictures had captions written by Ruie Ann Park in white ink that was written on the black construction type paper that compiled the scrapbook.

Kay Kincheloe Lynn was a good friend of Sam Hugh Park and she graduated with Linda in the class of 1959 from Van Buren High School.  Kay is a writer also, and she actually wrote down in her own words some of the scenes I used in the book.  She also is responsible for the title of my book, Blind Rage.


 

Saturday, January 24, 2015

The Family Album



This photo of Sam Hugh standing on the front porch of the home on Logtown Hill came from the family album.
 
Since 1981, the date of Ruie Ann Park's death, and now, the year 2015, a lot has happened to me.  I wrote a fiction novel about the Park murder, but I couldn't get an agent to represent me.  I wrote four more books, and I had the same result.  I taught writing classes at Westark, the community college that is today the University of Arkansas at Fort Smith, or UAFS for short.  Because of those classes, I began to get assignments for various local magazines, and now I write a monthly book review and an occasional article for Do South magazine, out of Fort Smith.  The assistant editor of Do South, Marla Cantrell, took her first writing class from me, and we've been friends ever since.

My husband died of his own hand in 1996, and I went to work at the Fort Smith Public Library, where I managed Miller Branch Library for almost fifteen years.  When I retired, at the urging of Katy Boulden, the former owner and my part-time employer, of Vivian's Book Store, I returned to my original goal of writing about the Park murder.  But this time, I was going to tell the story for real.  It would be a true-crime novel.

I re-read In Cold Blood by Truman Capote and studied the way he told that story of the Clutter family massacre.  I went to the Crawford County Court House and got pertinent records.  I interviewed many people who knew the Park family, in particularly those who were friends of the Park children, Sam Hugh and Linda.  Rusty and Linda Myers gave me the Park family album that they had rescued from an abandoned home scheduled for demolition.  That album told me much about the Park family, and I studied each picture.  That album told me more about the Park family than I could ever find out from anybody. 

And then I was ready.