Name: Olivia “Livi” McIntyre Dennison
Thread: Escape from Happy Acres
Age: 80
Gender: female
Personality: soft-spoken, quiet, genteel. She doesn’t like confrontation and change, and does her best to soothe contention; she’s a peacemaker. She absolutely hates prunes, and loves chocolate, reading, and crocheting.
Appearance: Silver, thin, long hair kept in a careful chignon at the nape of her neck. She has pale, pale blue eyes, and wears thick glasses. She’s very skinny, with sunken cheeks and knobby knuckles. Her back is hunched over. She has blue veins up her hands, which are quite shaky. She has a hearing aid. She wears loose cotton dresses and tennis shoes, and keeps yarn and crochet hooks ever handy in her bag, along with a book—usually Jane Austen or Louisa May Alcott.
Biography: Married at 20, she had seven children by the time she was forty, and was a devoted housewife and mother, until her husband’s death from heart disease when she was sixty-eight. Her oldest daughter put her in Happy Acres five years later when she suffered from a slight stroke and was declared “unfit to live on her own” by her doctor. She's been living there since, spending her time either crocheting, reading, or looking forward to visits from her children and grandchildren.
Thread: Escape from Happy Acres
Age: 80
Gender: female
Personality: soft-spoken, quiet, genteel. She doesn’t like confrontation and change, and does her best to soothe contention; she’s a peacemaker. She absolutely hates prunes, and loves chocolate, reading, and crocheting.
Appearance: Silver, thin, long hair kept in a careful chignon at the nape of her neck. She has pale, pale blue eyes, and wears thick glasses. She’s very skinny, with sunken cheeks and knobby knuckles. Her back is hunched over. She has blue veins up her hands, which are quite shaky. She has a hearing aid. She wears loose cotton dresses and tennis shoes, and keeps yarn and crochet hooks ever handy in her bag, along with a book—usually Jane Austen or Louisa May Alcott.
Biography: Married at 20, she had seven children by the time she was forty, and was a devoted housewife and mother, until her husband’s death from heart disease when she was sixty-eight. Her oldest daughter put her in Happy Acres five years later when she suffered from a slight stroke and was declared “unfit to live on her own” by her doctor. She's been living there since, spending her time either crocheting, reading, or looking forward to visits from her children and grandchildren.