1/30/2009

Susan Tweit

Susan Tweit and Jim Steinberg came to Craig to sign copies of their book. December 2008. Susan will have her memoirs, Walking Nature Home, released in March 2009. It is a beautiful, haunting book. I recommend it.



Walking Nature Home: A Life's Journey (Louann Atkins Temple Women & Culture Series)
by Susan J. Tweit
Without a map, navigate by the stars. Susan Tweit began learning this lesson as a young woman diagnosed with an autoimmune disease that was predicted to take her life in two to five years. Offered no clear direction for getting well through conventional medicine, Tweit turned to the natural world that was both her solace and her field of study as a plant ecologist.

Colton Dotson

This is a picture of Caroline's youngest son, Colton, at the bookstore Christmas Party, 2008.

Me and literacy

Check out this article about me and literacy.

1/11/2009

It's snowing here...

...and we think it's lovely.

This is me and Sadie at the golfcourse ski trail along the Yampa River. This was Winter 2008, but I'll look like that again.

1/10/2009

Caroline and her sister-in-law: Miss Sunshine White


I liked this picture because the two women are dressed for winter in Craig. This was taken on Christmas Eve, 2008.

1/09/2009

A Poem

CAUTION: CONTAINS THE WORD MASTURBATE.

Email from my friend Alana
By Carol Valera Jacobson
December 2008

(I met Alana in 1999 when we were both English students at Metro State College. She had been a pole dancer in Grand Junction when she was young. Then, as now, she is writing erotica.)

This is cool,
I think.
She is writing erotica.
She is re-creating herself
Again with a raw honesty
that intrigues me,
frightens me,
makes me wonder.

I read her lines:
walking home through snow
that clings to her jeans,
stripping down in a warm room,
masturbating,
coming in 51 seconds.

This frightens me
a little bit because
I think to myself,
that could be me.

Oh
-my
-god!

That could be me
coming home through the deep snow,
stripping down, masturbating,
making dinner for my husband,
reading a book,
then
sleeping curled up around him.

1/02/2009

2008 Blessings

December 18, 2008
Dear Friends and Families,
This is my best and worst of 2008: blessings and challenges. What are the ten best things that happened to you in the last year? Let me know.
1. Being married to Terry with whom I share so many things. This year, we found a new passion: geocaching. He loves it for the mapping adventure, and I love it for the chance to get out of town and into the wilderness of Moffat County.
2. My children always are a blessing. My middle son, Adam, is getting married in May to the divine Miss Rebecca. I love that girl! They’ll be married in Massachusetts so we will take ten days to visit the east coast. AJ is in LA working in the fashion industry, and Isaac is temporarily unemployed in Denver after a busy summer of landscape contracting.
3. Terry built me a greenhouse that is just wonderful. He finished it in October so I’ve only planted a few seeds of lettuce and spinach but can’t wait to see what I can do with it next year.
4. We traveled to Tucson (in March to see the Sonora Desert) and Taos (in July for a writing workshop for both us—I think Terry had more fun than I did). Both were wonderful driving adventures. We travel well together and saw beautiful country.
5. Terry retired from Trapper Mine this year, exactly 30 years to the day. After a month, he took a job as the Sportsman Information Specialist at the Chamber of Commerce. He works part time and loves it!! After all those year of working heavy equipment, he has a desk job that allows him to talk about his love of the outdoors.
6. I am teaching the best classes, ever. Oral History, English 121 (freshman English) and Memoirs. There are 19 students in the Memoir class, most over 70, and we have a great, helpful and healing time together. I’ll start other memoir classes in Baggs and Hayden in 2009.
7. I learned a lot about gardening in the dry West. Mostly I grew potatoes and carrots. The potatoes were the most fun; from cutting the seed potatoes apart, to watching their tough green stems emerging, to turning the black earth to reveal the round brown potatoes. I’ve had little bug holes and slugs and frost, and I still got some beautiful potatoes.
8. My little bookstore that I run with Caroline Dotson, is doing fine. We may never make a lot of money, but we are having a grand time.
9. Charlie the-cat-who-bites is still alive after being hit by a car. He had a broken leg and pelvis, and after five weeks in a splint, he is becoming his normal, biting, predatory self.
10. I live in Moffat County with some of the most spectacular landscape ever. Check my blog : http://bookladyincraig.blogspot.com/. For pictures look under Moffat County.
The challenges:
1. Sadie has cancer. It was diagnosed in January. She is still active, perky, prone to run off, and loves to sniff the cats. She is teaching me, as she has always taught me, about being alive. She does not know she has a terminal disease. She’s a dog; she wants to know what is for lunch and when are we taking a walk. Because she has challenges with her bowels, she has now become an outdoor dog, and the challenge is to keep her warm on the back porch.
2. We lost a source for our favorite brand of coffee (Zapatista), and it has taken almost three months to find a reasonable, if not good, substitute.
Enough news.
I love you,