Finton came into our lives one hot, muggy late 70's summer. My grandparents had few neighbors and we knew them by name. Just down the road was a retired university professor. He wore a starched white button down shirt and suspenders while driving his tractor. His adult daughter had seen much more of the world than most of us in that isolated pocket of Wisconsin farmland. On her travels to Ireland she had befriended a family with a son not much older than I, whom she brought to the farm for the summer.
Since the neighbors had no children, Finton found his way over to our place quite regularly where he quite regularly drove.me.crazy. He had a round freckled face, a head full of black curls, and bright blue eyes that danced with mischief. All summer I was hyper alert, never knowing what lay around the next corner. He might well be poised with one of the horses' water buckets ready to douse me. He was always asking about 'the wee lass' a nickname my family adopted with glee. That drove me nuts too. They teased that he was sweet on me. I was sure he had dedicated his life to tormenting me.
Finton loved British comedy and his family would send him little cassette tapes of his favorite comedians. I didn't really get it. He said it was a British thing and urged me to just listen one more time. I still didn't get it. Some 30 yrs later I wish I could tell him my guilty pleasure is Mrs. Brown's Boys ; ))
Finton was a Catholic and our neighbors were Protestant. I didn't realize at the time what an incredible cross-cultural connection was happening there, nor how incredible the whole exchange was, given 'the troubles' back home for him. What I knew was that Gram and I took Finton to mass with us that summer. On the drive back home one day the sky turned dark and Finton went quiet.
The neighbor shared with us later that he was dreadfully afraid of our wild summer storms, the tornado sirens, how the sky could go from blue to yellow and sickly still, then erupt. I didn't realize then how mild Irish weather is by comparison. I guess I thought it thundered fiercely all over the globe. But, it doesn't. That big boy-man trembled which softened my heart some.
I don't know what happened to Finton, but I thought about him fondly when we had our first thunder here the other day, so much closer to where he came from than from where I did. We pulled out Patricia Polacco's Thundercake and realized we had just enough of all the ingredients on hand. So we baked. And we talked about scary things and being little and getting braver and growing up and going to Ireland.
And then, the sun peeked out in time for cake. (recipe here)
Read with us? Who better to tell the story than the author herself.




I love reading some of the stories of Patricia Polacco with my kids. It made me want to make Pysanka. I am still waiting to make them…lol
Now you have me wondering what happened to Finton!
Such a fun story and lovely photos. I always feel peace when I visit your blog.
Beautiful story…thx
Lovely story! Growing up in FL I always thought of thunder and lightning as a totally normal part of a summer day. Now I know that isn’t true everywhere, and I often miss those summer downpours and light shows.
Serendipitous that you should post that link to Thundercakes video. I have that book listed to use for a writing assignment later this year and our library doesn’t have it. I thought I was going to have to buy it, but not now! Yay!
What a lovely story, I enjoyed it so much and the cake looks delicious!
And how I love our thunderstorms here!! (Tho not the tornadoes). Whenever I have lived elsewhere, oh how I have missed the rainstorms of a typical WI summer! And last summer, when we had that dreadful dought, with not one single thunderstorm, it felt surreal. But little boy finds them utterly terrifying, but I have always loved them, loved the crash and wild of them ….
(Oh dear, that should say “my little boy”)
A joy to read and the photos are lovely Kim. Thanks for the reminder! We ‘re expecting more rain in the next 3 days. God bless you and your family.