By Sean Dietrich
I was 15 years old. I walked into the rural library. My father was freshly dead. I was a middle-school dropout. We were poor. It was Christmastime.
The small, public library was decorated for the holiday season. There was plastic holiday crapola everywhere. It was cold outside. I had no winter coat.
I stepped into the library with a blast of sleet and rain. I was wearing a T-shirt. My hair was soaked.
âWhereâs your coat?â said the librarian.
âI donât have one.â
âYou donât have a coat!? Itâs 30 degrees outside!â
Shrug.
The librarianâs name was Miss Terry. She was old enough to predate the Roosevelt administration. Her hair was cotton white. Her shoes were Reeboks. Her embroidered sweatshirt read: âDear Santa, I can explain.â
The library was a converted residential house. And I was a regular here.
âYou canât go around without a coat,â Miss Terry said. âYouâll freeze.â
Shrug Number Two.
I wandered to the fiction section. Fiction was all I was interested in. I read fiction each morning, afternoon, and night. It was escapism, I see that now. And I was a classic escapist. But then, there were very few happy things in my life. Who wouldnât want to escape?
That day, I checked out two Louis LâAmour books, a few Dick Francis novels. When I brought my selection up to the counter, Miss Terry just looked at me with warm eyes.
âI have a book I want you to read,â she said.
âYou do?â
She placed a leather-bound book atop my stack of books. Written by Lucy Maud Montgomery.
âI think youâll appreciate this one.â
âIt looks like a girl book.â
âTry to keep an open mind.â
I took the books home, I read them the way I always read books. Ferociously. But when I read the Lucy Maud Montgomery book, time stood still. And my heart moved sideways in my chest. I had never read a book with more tenderness.
When I returned to the library a week later, Miss Terry asked how I liked the book. I told her it was maybe the best book I ever read.
I returned my books, and checked out more. This time, she placed another book atop my stack. This one was written by Laura Ingalls Wilder.
I took the books home. I read them in a frenzy, just like before. But Laura Ingalls Wilder was immediately my favorite.
I brought the books back to the library.
âHow did you like the book I gave you?â she asked.
âI read it twice.â
She smiled.
Then it happened. After Miss Terry accepted my stack of books, in return, she gave me a gift-wrapped box. The box was wrapped in glittery red paper, with a green ribbon.
âWhatâs this?â I asked.
âItâs for you,â she said.
âIs it another book?â
âJust open it.
I tore the paper. There was a coat inside. Warm and fluffy. I cried when I put it on.
âWe canât have you catching a cold and getting sick,â she said. âThere are too many books left for you to read. You might even write one of your own someday.â
I wiped my face. âOne day Iâm going to grow up and write a book,â I told her. âAnd when I do, Iâm going to write something about you, and how you gave me this coat.â
She smiled and straightened the collar of my jacket. âYou wonât even remember me when youâre all grown up.â
Well.
I showed her.




























































