NOVEMBER 27, 2015, KEIZERTIMES, PAGE A5 KeizerCommunity KEIZERTIMES.COM Volcanoes Stadium hosts Santa The Volcanoes and Keizer Station will host Santa Claus Saturday, Nov. 28, at noon. The Man in Red will ar- rive via helicopter at noon and will meet all the good boys and girls in attendance between noon and 3 p.m. in- side the Volcanoes team store. Parking and admission are free. E-photos are also free and Santa will have a treat for all in attendance. Arrive early for a good spot near the front of the line. A collection of World Series rings will also be on display during the event. The 2010, 2012, and 2014 San Francisco Giants offi cial World Series rings will be on display from noon to 2 p.m. Mural meeting Dec. 2 The Keizer Commu- nity Mural public meeting is scheduled for Wednesday, Dec. 2 from 6 to 8 p.m. The meet- ing takes place in the Iris B room at Keizer Civic Center, 930 Chemawa Road NE. If you live or work in Keiz- er or are a Keizer Arts Associa- tion member, you are asked to attend this meeting if you are interested in helping to create the mural on the north wall of Town & Country Lanes on River Road. During the meeting, an overview and theme of the proposed mural will be pre- sented. Anyone wanting to help with any facet of the mu- ral is asked to do so. Topics discussed during the meeting will be creating an image, transferring the im- age through various methods, color and applications. Project progression and timelines will be presented. Artists of all ages and abili- ties are welcome to attend. Gubser turns on Dec. 4 The Keizer Miracle of Christmas Lights Display will begin at 6 p.m. Friday, Dec. 4. Cars will be roaming the neighborhood from 6 to 10 p.m. through Dec. 26. The route is about 3.5 miles long, and can take several hours to complete on busy weekends. Sno Cop barricades will lead drivers through the neighbor- hood. The tradition, which rais- es money and food for the Marion-Polk Food Share, draws eyes from around the region. It’s expected that near- ly 20,000 vehicles will pass through the neighborhood. There’s no admission fee, but the event is a fundraiser for hungry families in the mid-Willamette Valley, and donations are always welcome. Cans and non-perishable food donations along with cash are welcomed. A do- nation site will be set up on Mistwood Drive NE. Organizers remind attend- ees that there are no public re- strooms available, and visitors should keep their headlights on at all times while driv- ing through. It is a residential neighborhood, so please be aware and courteous to pe- destrians and residents trying to get in and out of driveways. The display is also walkable, with sidewalks throughout the Gubser neighborhood. If you choose to walk it, please park at either Whiteaker Mid- dle School, 1605 Lockhaven Drive NE, or at Gubser El- ementary School, 6610 14th Avenue NE. Aliens, vampires and faith Keizer author takes on big questions in science fi ction By ERIC A. HOWALD Of the Keizertimes Keizerite Kathleen Whit- tam got her start telling sto- ries on her father’s lap. “Every night I would sit on my dad’s lap and we’d make up these ridiculous sto- ries with cowboys. I would be the hero and he would be the bad guy, and that probably kicked in my creativity,” said Whittam. Flash forward a few de- cades and Whittam is now on the cusp of releasing her third book, the second in a planned trilogy that got its start in September with the release of The Earth World. The story is the tale of Rose Flowers who has been selected by an invading alien race to help repopulate their home planet. Rose struggles to bridge the disconnect be- tween her own hopes and desires and the needs of her would-be captors. “It’s kind of about where we draw the line at forcing people into situations when it serves the ultimate good. I like looking at those situ- ations and seeing where it leads,” Whittam said. “Rose questions a lot about the right and the wrong of her situa- tion, and there are some an- swers she can’t disagree with even though they are hard to accept.” Whittam retired from an 18-year career as a realtor before ever sitting down to wrestle with those types of big questions on the page. “When I started this, it was the result of a conversation with my ex-broker. He sat me down and we started talking KEIZERTIMES/Eric A. Howald to my about life after retire- ment and he encouraged me to write. It was almost like someone needed to give me permission. I hadn’t seriously considered it until I had that conversation,” Whittam said. Her fi rst novel, released in fall 2014, is titled Now and Eternity. It also tackles a big question. “I wanted to look at how far someone can go before they can’t be forgiven,” she said. Now and Eternity tells the story of Kara and her love for two men: a vampire, Nate, and Fred, a mortal. The book examines issues of what fam- ily means and what purpose it generates, even for the un- dead. Whittam publishes her work using Amazon’s Cre- ateSpace, a suite of self-pub- lishing tools and services. She knew from the outset that the publishers of Christian books likely wouldn’t touch her work because of the sexuality and mayhem they encompass, but her faith is a large pres- ence in her work. “With science fi ction, Retired realtor Kathleen Whittam has released two books in the past two years and is on the precipice of sending her third out into the world. there is something about bringing up questions con- cerning what reality is. Faith tackles those same questions,” Whittam said. For a fee, CreateSpace offers her access to editors and cover designers that she would otherwise have to come up with on her own. “You pay for everything you do, but you work with a team and they come up with cover option and layout op- tions,” she said. “It’s a little overwhelming at fi rst, but it’s not so bad once you’re into it.” She made use of editorial services for the newest book and feedback from an editor has given her a lot of fodder as she’s worked on the fi nal book in the trilogy. “I realized in the third book that there has been no mention of one of the main characters, so I went back and added a whole section that to the second book that includ- ed him,” she said. Writing has opened up new doors into her own views on the world, usually in the best ways. She said, “One of the things that I really started be- lieving as a result of writing is that none of us are perfect people and, even though we have imperfections, so does everybody else. We can’t dwell on our imperfections nor judge somebody else.” These days, Whittam tries to spend about two hours a day on her writing, but she’s gone as long as six or eight hours in marathon sessions. “Another thing writing has helped me with is in real- izing I don’t have to have the answers immediately. I can play with different concepts or ideas in all sorts of ways in writing and in life, and fi nd the ones that suit me,” she said. In a way, it’s like going back to those days in her dad’s lap playing pretend. Whittam’s books are avail- able in e-book and dead-tree editions at amazon.com. Christmas Trees items of 5 OFF ANY ONE ITEM (on $20 or more) $ Nobles • Grands • Douglas • Nordmans Up to 12 feet | Wreaths 985 Broadway St NE, Salem • 503-363-6033 Mon-Fri: 8 AM - 6 PM, Sat: 9 AM - 4 PM, Sun: Closed www.jkcarpetdesigncentersalem.com Hot Beverage Bottles (OSU, UofO and Seahawks designs!) Mon – Sat, 9 am – 8pm | Sun 10 am – 7 pm (Nov. 27 – Dec. 15) 750 Commercial St. NE (Former Honda of Salem lot) Formerly Martha Louise’s Trees 503-856-9177 WorshipDirectory These Salem-Keizer houses of worship invite you to visit. Call to list your church in our Worship Directory: (503) 390-1051 John Knox Presbyterian Church JOIN US FOR SUNDAY WORSHIP 8:30 am • 10 am • 11:30 am • 6 pm PEOPLESCHURCH 4500 LANCASTER DR NE | SALEM 503.304.4000 • www.peopleschurch.com Celebration Services Saturday Evening 6:00 pm Children’s Programs, Student and Adult Ministries 1755 Lockhaven Dr. NE Keizer 503-390-3900 www.dayspringfellowship.com Sunday Morning 9:00 am and 10:45 am 452 Cummings Lane North • 393-0404 Father Gary L. Zerr, Pastor Saturday Vigil Liturgy: 5:30 p.m. Sundays: 8:15 a.m. & 10:30 a.m. La Misa en Español: 12:30 p.m. Rev. Dr. John Neal, Pastor Worship - 10:30 a.m. Education Hour - 10:00 a.m. Nursery Care Available www.keizerjkpres.org Jason Lee UMC 820 Jeff erson St. NE Salem OR 97301 Dr. Jon F. Langenwalter, Pastor The church with the purple doors 503-364-2844 Worship at 9:30 am • Child Care Available Faith Lutheran Church 4505 River Rd N • 393-4507 Sunday Schedule: 9:00 a.m. Children’s Church 9:15 a.m. Adult Bible Study 9:30 a.m. Children’s Activities Pastor Virginia Eggert 10:30 a.m. Worship with Communion