Moving Forward Through Writing
The past year has for me, as for so many people, been a trying time. Hurricane Dorian laid waste my home on Ocracoke Island in September of 2019 and it is still not habitable. As I struggled to find a way forward Covid struck. The Black Lives Matter movement brought forth a new awareness of how racially divided and unjust our country has been, along with the incentive that we might in the near future change that. Then there is the election, still in peril...
Through it all the one silver lining for me has been that I have had time and inspiration to write, and that is what I have done and am doing. I am thrilled to say that I have published several new books, including "Birchbark Chronicles," which combines journal entries from a year I spent living in a log cabin in the Adirondack Mountains and stories from my life. "Letters from Old Bone; An Unsolved Civil War Mystery," is the true account of letters found in the lap of a dead Confederate soldier and their 75 year journey to return home. "My Shining Palace.; a love song to Ocracoke Island 1985 and 2019" describes the first year I lived there and the struggles the island and I have had since the hurricane and now in the pandemic. I am now working on another book about the three years I lived and taught on the Havasupai Indian Reservation at the bottom of the Grand Canyon.
Re-living these experiences has been very moving, recreating both their joys and sorrows for myself and my readers.
Through it all the one silver lining for me has been that I have had time and inspiration to write, and that is what I have done and am doing. I am thrilled to say that I have published several new books, including "Birchbark Chronicles," which combines journal entries from a year I spent living in a log cabin in the Adirondack Mountains and stories from my life. "Letters from Old Bone; An Unsolved Civil War Mystery," is the true account of letters found in the lap of a dead Confederate soldier and their 75 year journey to return home. "My Shining Palace.; a love song to Ocracoke Island 1985 and 2019" describes the first year I lived there and the struggles the island and I have had since the hurricane and now in the pandemic. I am now working on another book about the three years I lived and taught on the Havasupai Indian Reservation at the bottom of the Grand Canyon.
Re-living these experiences has been very moving, recreating both their joys and sorrows for myself and my readers.
Published on November 12, 2020 09:41
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Winter at Ocracoke
The past three days have found me slogging through marshes and sand dunes, rescuing endangered, cold-stunned sea turtles. I will head out to the beaches to search for more in a little while. A warm D
The past three days have found me slogging through marshes and sand dunes, rescuing endangered, cold-stunned sea turtles. I will head out to the beaches to search for more in a little while. A warm December and early January encouraged many young green and Kemps Ridley turtles to stay in Pamlico Sound. When temperatures plunged a few days ago, cold-stunned turtles began washing up on the beaches. I am part of a team working under the license of the nonprofit "NEST," and we have found thirteen so far at Ocracoke. Many more have been rescued on the beaches north of us, on Hatteras Island. Most have been alive and have been shuttled up to the sea turtle rehab center on Roanoke Island, where they will spend the winter. Come spring, they will be released back into their natural environment. Stories of my volunteer work with the National Park Service, assisting nesting loggerhead sea turtles, is part of my first book, "Ocracoke Wild."
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