Memoirs and history treat her write
A Newport Beach resident since 1976, Mary La Haye, has always been
fascinated with literature and writing.
When she was a freshman in high school, she tried unsuccessfully
to get a job at the local newspaper. She went on to college at Mount
St. Mary’s College in Los Angeles, where she majored in English and
took creative writing classes. After getting married, she temporarily
let go of writing in order to focus on her family -- but she saved
all of her notes.
She completed her first self-published book after her husband
passed away years ago, a book about her father opening the first pay
parking lot in Los Angeles, “It Started with a Nickel.”
La Haye, who turns 83 today, recently finished another
self-published book about her aunt and uncle’s experiences living in
Samoa in the late 1930s.
The Daily Pilot’s Lindsay Sandham recently caught up with La Haye
to get the story on what’s next for the local writer.
What exactly is your book, “Letters from Samoa,” about?
They’re letters from my aunt [Anna] and uncle [Wray] -- he was a
pharmacist in the Navy -- and they were stationed in the village of
Luma on the island of Ta’u and that was the same village that
Margaret Meade was in, in the ‘20s, and they were there from 1936 to
1939. She wrote these fabulous letters home and he did too, where
they covered the culture, the habits, everything, the typography, the
history. So I found these letters in my mother’s desk after she died
and went through them and edited them.
So you have excerpts from the letters in the book, and you did
some research of your own?
I did a lot of research ... the last half of the book -- I went
there in 1994 and I stayed with the chief and his family on the
island. Their stories are in there and the stories that Anna told.
What would you say inspired you to write books?
Well, I’ve always been interested in memoirs and family history
... I’ve always had this interest in literature. I found that I was
enjoying biographies better -- I think it was because I didn’t have
to make anything up -- and so when I was in college, Sister Marie ...
she had the creative writing class and she worked with each of us one
on one. She had me do an essay-biography type of my background, of
the German background and the Italian background, and we were in
World War II and we were fighting my ancestors ... so that inspired
me.
But in the meantime, I taught school, then I got married and that
became much more important -- raising my family -- but I always had
this in the background and I always kept my notes, I never threw
anything away. So after my husband passed away, which has been about
23 years, I concentrated and I finished the book about my father, “It
Started with a Nickel.”
You mentioned that you had always been interested in writing and
that you tried to get a job at the local paper when you were in high
school, so when you went to college, did you major in writing?
I was an English major, and part of that was the creative writing
classes. That was funny, the day I just walked in there, what was I,
14 years old. There was a comic strip called “Brenda Starr.” She was
a redhead reporter and she was very glamorous ... so I think I walked
into the Montebello News thinking I was going to be the Brenda Starr
of the century or something.
Do you have plans to write more books, now that you’re finished
with “Letters from Samoa”?
Yes, I have a book started about my brother and the family
connected with our business ... it’s going to be the story of my
brother who is an inventor. He lives up north. He invented the first
automatic pool cleaner ... a hose fell in the pool one day and he saw
the force of the water going against the pool and cleaning, so he got
under the house and set all these things up and it took him, I don’t
how many years it took him, but he’s very thorough. My dad always
said, “Someday that boy’s going to invent something.”
What do you hope to accomplish, who do you hope to reach with your
books?
One of the things I want to stress with what I’m doing, and
especially my interviewing my grandparents and mother and dad, is the
younger generations, children in school, have to go and talk to their
grandparents. They have to get the story out of their grandparents. I
wanted the next generations to know about it and to appreciate
family.
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