I posted this about five years ago and came across it again. I thought it was a sweet picture and couldn’t resist reposting it.
When my sisters and brother and I were little, we lived in a newly built, but unfinished house on the edge of town. The streets weren’t even put in place yet. Our road was just a track through a field of yellow grass. But it was perfect for us to play cowboys and gallop our pretend horses around the trails and up and down the hills of dirt that were not yet backfilled to the new house. We pretended to be characters from the western movies of the day — Annie Oakley, Gene Autry, Roy Rogers, and Dale Evans. But Annie was my favourite. My sister, maybe almost three years old, was really too little to keep up with us as we tore around on the hills of dirt, so she played Annie Oakley with a toy shotgun and guarded the house while the rest of us were out on the range.
I don’t know what is wrapped around her right hand, and I just noticed for the first time in decades that there is a doll peeking out from behind her left shoulder.
Fast forward to more modern times. When the Captain and I were on one of our trips to Baja California, we stopped to do some shopping in Ensenada. I found a puppet-style doll that I couldn’t live without. She was the Mexican version of Annie Oakley.
What made me even happier, was buying the doll that had to be her partner. He is pictured here.
The store proprietor told me that this doll represents the hen-pecked husband, the Honeydew man (Honey, do this and Honey, do that), but in Spanish they called this fellow a “mandilon,” because he is ordered about, and, in the original version of the word, probably wore an apron (a mandil). What woman would not want a mandilon to do things for her? I had to have this doll!
*****
In my novel Orion’s Gift, Sylvia is all alone in the world. It seems that her life has taken a sudden turn and everything has been going wrong for her. Her husband is all about himself, and would not understand the news she just received in a letter.
She is trying to outrun her problems by escaping what she once thought was a perfect life near San Diego. She leaves everything behind to “run away” to Baja California where she plans to live in her VW van.
Baja seems to be a place for runaways. She meets Kevin at one of the campsites, and although there is an immediate attraction, Kevin has problems of his own.
Sylvia really needs moral support, so I gave her a mascot to lend her strength. Below is a short excerpt from Orion’s Gift, telling about how Sylvia came to adopt Annie.
Excerpt:
In one shop, handmade puppets on strings hung from the ceiling. Each doll had a unique character and, like orphans hoping to be adopted, seemed to call, “Take me with you.” I fell in love with a Mexican Annie Oakley. She held a mini six-gun in each hand and radiated confidence and self-reliance. I paid for her and happily carried her home to my van. I rigged up a spot on the curtain rod behind the seat for Annie to watch over me at night. She’d be my mascot, a reminder that I was strong and could take care of myself.
You can read Sylvia’s story in my novel “Orion’s Gift.” She’s going to need Annie’s strength to face some of the challenges of being a woman travelling alone in Baja.
The e-book version is marked down to only 99 cents on amazon.com for the next few weeks. 



January 25, 2025 at 8:00 am
Orion’s Gift was a very entertaining read. I thoroughly enjoyed the book from start to finish. Love that photo on your post, and in order to solve the mystery, it is my Annie Oakley doll snuggled in behind me.
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January 25, 2025 at 10:20 am
Thanks, Sonja. You do look so cute in that picture. A diamond in the rough.
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January 25, 2025 at 8:41 am
Orion’s Gift was so good, from Page One to Page Last. What a treat. Honeydew–I’d forgotten that. What memories. And Annie–Husby has taken to calling me that for the same reasons.
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January 25, 2025 at 10:17 am
Thanks, Jacqui. Sylvia (in my book) didn’t live too far away from you before her world fell apart.
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January 25, 2025 at 9:23 am
Your novel appears to be very interesting. Perhaps you have woven in some personal experiences?
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January 25, 2025 at 10:19 am
We have done some trips to Baja, dry camping, so yes, I had lots of local knowledge to draw on. It made the book fun to write and I knew that the info was accurate from having been there.
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January 26, 2025 at 12:05 pm
As a child, I loved the move “Annie get your Gun,” and it made me want to be like her. I was a good shot when I was young. Can’t see worth a darn now. 👀
I enjoyed your book Orion’s Gift and recommend it.
P.S. Those puppets are adorable.
P.P.S. Though my Gary would do anything for me, I’m not a big fan of a “yes dear” husband. At least have a little spine.
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January 26, 2025 at 12:15 pm
That’s true, about the “yes, dear husband,” but I was thinking more of the kind that pitches in to do things, probably without me having to point the gun at him (I’m speaking hypothetically, of course – not from experience).
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January 26, 2025 at 1:29 pm
I get it. Like my Gary automatically does the grocery shopping. I’m not a shopper.
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January 26, 2025 at 2:01 pm
We are the same here. Gary does a lot of the shopping and then I do the few extra missing things about every fourth shop. It sure helps to have that job out of the way.
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