Readers and writers: Finding strength in nonfiction and a novel

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A quiet week with nonfiction about a woman who found strength on Wisconsin’s Ice Age Trail, and a middle-grade novel about two girls living continents apart who bring change to a village in Kenya.

Yolanda DeLoach (Courtesy of the author)

“Squatter”: by Yolanda DeLoach (Cornerstone Press, $23-$29 depending on place of purchase)

I walked the tail with a new purpose. The wishy-washy voice that so many times had said, ‘I don’t  really want to be in this relationship anymore,’ transitioned to, ‘I won’t be in this relationship anymore.’ Overnight, the trail had gone from being an enjoyable pastime, to a necessity for curing my confusing addiction. The hours and days spent on the trail so far had given me the courage to let go for good. Now I needed it to keep me from going back. — from “Squatter”

There are many ways to end a toxic relationship, but debut author Yolanda DeLoach did it the hard way. She tried to make a relationship work until she realized she was being emotionally abused by a man who shamed her for having a “mediocre” high school education, accused her of looking at other men. On a camping trip he insisted she take down her drying underwear because a forest ranger might see it. She told him to go away, to leave her alone, but he was also charming and she kept going back even though she knew he was breaking her spirit.

To end her addiction to this man, DeLoach challenged herself to hike the Ice Age Trail that wanders through Wisconsin. She was only going to do the 400 miles from her home in Wausau, in the middle of Wisconsin, to the trail’s western terminus at St. Croix Falls on the Minnesota border. But when someone asked if she was hiking the entire trail, she heard herself saying she was.

To understand the dangers and wonders this 52-year-old grandmother with five children experienced, here’s a little background. The Ice Age Trail is a National Scenic Trail stretching 1,200 miles in Wisconsin. Coming from the west it crosses the northern part of the state, takes a sharp turn to the south, then northeast ending at Door Peninsula near the city of Sturgeon Bay.

DeLoach, a palliative care/hospice nurse, had little experience camping. It took her a year of hiking to become a Thousand Miler who completed the entire trail hike during the COVID shutdown of 2020 and into 2021. She dealt with boots so wet her feet felt frozen, sometimes traversed a field of unbroken snow up to her hips, and woke up in her tent in near-freezing weather. There were times she was so tired her bones ached. Her steady companion was her truck, named Fiona, that held her camping equipment and the 20-year-old Schwinn bike she used to go back and forth between sections she hiked. Some days she put in 18 miles, starting before sunrise to bike to the place she had ended the previous day. Hikers call this section hiking, defined by counties the trail runs through.

Since most everything was shut down because of the pandemic, DeLoach had most of the trail to herself. She enjoyed being alone, figuring things out such as how to pull Fiona out of the mud. She rarely planned where to stay when it was too cold to sleep in her little tent, but strangers who had been following her journey on social media opened their homes (and garages) to her. Others who contributed lodging and rides were members of the Ice Age Trial Alliance. (Her ability to miraculously find places to stay led to her tail nickname Squatter.)

Whether DeLoach is savoring the smell of crisp fall leaves or tiredly hiking the ups-and-downs of hilly sections, she is bombarded with emails from her former lover, trying to entice her back. But this time her commitment to her trail goal keeps her from responding.

DeLoach is a graceful writer whose voice on the page is friendly. She is unflinching in her honesty about why she stayed in a toxic relationship, her childhood during which she felt she should not have opinions, and even screw-ups that cost her miles of unnecessary hiking because she didn’t read the trail guide.

Readers will learn from this well-written book, whether you are interested in the Ice Age Trail, emotional abuse or the wonders/miseries of hiking and biking long distances. And you’ll wish you had a truck as faithful as Fiona, always waiting for her at the end of the trail.

“Fetching Dreams”: by Mary Bleckwehl (Immortal Works, $16.99)

Mary Bleckwehl (Courtesy of the author)

Three weeks into the rainy season and not a drop of rain. It means more fetching, more missed school, and more lost dreams. If one of these organizations builds my village a well, I will talk to every family myself. I will teach them what you taught us. I will help them see that change is worth it if they want their children to survive. — from “Fetching Dreams”

Neyah is an 11-year-old living in a small, impoverished village in Kenya. She dreams of being a doctor, even though she hardly ever goes to school because the tribe’s tradition is that women and girls are responsible for carrying precious water. Sometimes they walk seven miles a day to fill cans from a polluted water hole that holds urine from people and animals, an occasional goat carcass and snakes. Many people in the village have died of cholera and most are sick, at least sometimes.

Stubborn and angry, Neyah questions why she and other girls have to fetch water when her four brothers run off to school in new uniforms. She wears a tattered dress to fetch from the distant river in the dry season, pulling 40-pound cans up a slippery bank. Neyah’s mother loves her daughter, and she knows the village girls make a dangerous journey to water because the path is a haven for bandits. But she has to make hard decisions about how to divvy up the precious liquid. Should it go to the cow to keep milk coming? To the garden for vegetables that provide much-needed nutrients? For cooking? If they want to survive, they must have water.

When Neyah can go to school she loves to study science. Her kind teacher, a former Peace Corps volunteer, lets the students look through a microscope at the bacteria in the pond water. They are aghast and Neyah vows to somehow get a well of clean water for her village, ending constant deaths and freeing girls to go to school and their mothers to work in the gardens.

Thanks to her teacher’s Peace Corps connections, Neyah is assigned a pen pal in the U.S. Smart, friendly Abby is from an upper-middle-class family, so different from Neyah’s circumstances. But they bond through letters, and the most touching parts of the book are how they learn about one another and share secrets. Neyah, for instance, doesn’t know what “sleep over” means or how water can come out of a pipe. Abby has never heard of girls not going to school.

Abby, who has a brain tumor, helps Neyah overcome her shyness and unwillingness to speak and urges her Kenyan friend to begin a letter-writing campaign to dozens of NGOs and the government of Kenya, begging for funding for a well.

Hovering over the story is Neyah’s father’s severe illness and his scorn for the idea that unseen bugs have anything to do with sickness. He loves his daughter, too, but he is head of the family, responsible for their well-being, and the only way he knows how to do this is to marry off Neyah in exchange for more cows. She can only hope her beloved paternal grandmother will not allow this.

This is a riveting story that would make a fine supplementary text for social studies classes.

Bleckwehl, who lives in Northfield, has written four picture books, five nonfiction books and “The Worry Knot,” a novel about a 12-year-old boy who’s responsible for his autistic brother at school, leading to his stomach constantly in a “worry knot”

We are blessed in Minnesota with so many fine middle-grade authors. Add Mary Bleckwehl to the list.

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Skywatch: The winter hounds

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There are three dog constellations in the night sky, but the best known are Canis Major and Canis Minor, the constellation Orion the Hunter’s faithful hunting dogs. Canis Major and Canis Minor are Latin names that translate to English as the greater and lesser dogs, respectively. Most stargazers refer to them as the big dog and little dog. Orion is one of the best-known and recognized characters in the night sky. He’s undoubtedly the king of the cold winter heavens, surrounded by a gang of bright stars and companion constellations, including his faithful hounds.

Sirius (Mike Lynch)

According to Greek and Roman mythology, Orion was a nocturnal hermit hunter with superhuman strength and abilities, giving him a huge advantage over the beasts he hunted. His only weapon was his mighty club, which he would use to take out the critters he skillfully stalked. Of course, every good hunter has his faithful hunting dogs, and Orion’s best friends were Canis Major and Minor, who accompany their master on his nightly westward prowl.

Orion’s big dog, Canis Major, is easy to find. From our view, it’s just to the lower left of Orion, and as you can see, it resembles a dog standing on its hind legs begging for food scraps from his master. Canis Major always reminds me of a dancing Snoopy from Charles Schulz’s classic “Peanuts” comics. Sirius, the brightest star in the night sky, marks the dog’s nose in most interpretations. Just use the three stars in a row that outline Orion’s belt as a pointer to the lower left, and you’ll run right into Sirius. To the right of Sirius is Mirzam, a dimmer but distinct star that marks the hound’s elevated paw. To the lower left of Sirius, you can’t help but notice the triangular pattern of stars that outline Canis Major’s hind end, hind leg, and tail.

(Mike Lynch)

On the both sides of Canis Major are noteworthy stars. Sirius, at the nose, is not only the brightest star of the constellation but is also the brightest star in the night sky. Sirius is a Greek name that translates to “the scorcher” in English. Its brilliance is partially because it’s a star larger than our sun but mainly because it’s so much closer than most other stars. Sirius is only eight light-years away, while most other stars we see at a glance are an average of 100 light years away. By the way, just one light year equals almost 6 trillion miles.

At the other end of Canis Major is Aludra, the star at the end of the big dog’s tail. It’s certainly nowhere near the brilliance of Sirius, but it’s one heck of a star! Astronomers estimate that Aludra is almost  50 million miles in diameter, over 50 times the diameter of our sun. It is reasonably humble in our sky because it’s almost 2,000 light-years away. The light you see from Aludra tonight left that great star around the birth of Christ.

As majestic as the constellation Canis Major is, Orion’s little hunting dog Canis Minor is a joke by comparison, in my opinion. It’s basically just two stars, Procyon and Gomeisa, and that’s it. It’s easy to find. Just look for the next brightest star you can see in the sky to the upper left of Sirius. That’s Procyon, the brightest star in Canis Minor. Gomeisa is a fainter star to the upper right of Procyon. How those two stars outline a dog is anybody’s guess. Maybe it’s a wiener dog!

The constellation Orion and his hunting dogs contribute to one of the coolest configurations in the sky, the “Winter Triangle.” In your mind’s eye, draw a line from the bright star Betelgeuse at the armpit of Orion the Hunter to Sirius in Canis Major and then up to Procyon in Canis Minor. You’ll easily see that those three bright stars make up a perfect equilateral triangle from our vantage here on Earth.

Enjoy the hounds of heaven!

Mike Lynch is an amateur astronomer and retired broadcast meteorologist for WCCO Radio in Minneapolis/St. Paul. He is the author of “Stars: a Month by Month Tour of the Constellations,” published by Adventure Publications and available at bookstores and adventurepublications.net. Mike is available for private star parties. You can contact him at mikewlynch@comcast.net.

Starwatch programs

Saturday, March 16, 7:45-9:45 p.m, North Oaks, Chippewa Middle School. For more information and reservations, call Moundsview Community Ed a t651-621-0020 or visit www.moundsviewschools.org/communityeducation.

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Literary calendar for week of March 10

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FOUR POETS: Diana Khoi Nguyen, Cindy Juyoung Ok and Douglas Kearney read from their latest works. 6 p.m. Tuesday, March 12, Next Chapter Booksellers, 38 S. Snelling Ave., St. Paul.

LEE HENDRIX: Discusses “Peep Light: Stories of a Mississippi Riverboat Captain.” 7 p.m. Wednesday, March 13, Magers & Quinn, 3038 Hennepin Ave. S., Mpls.

RICHARD LENTZ: Presents “Accidental Journey” in conversation with Leslie Morris and Brian Duren. 7 p.m. Monday, March 11, Magers & Quinn, 3038 Hennepin Ave. S., Mpls.

MIDSTREAM READING: Poetry and prose read by Freya Manfred, Anthony Cebellos, Marion Gomez and Joel Turnipseed in Midstream reading series. 7:30 p.m. Thursday, March 14, Unity Church-Unitarian, 732 Holly Ave., St. Paul.

JAMES RAMOS: Author who grew up in Minnesota chats with a bookseller about their new young adult novel “Daniel, Deconstructed!” involving a nerdy teen that is an ode to movie tropes, meet-cutes and LGBTQ+ love. 6:30 p.m. Wednesday, March 13, Red Balloon Bookshop, 891 Grand Ave., St. Paul.

RIDDIOUGH/SUMNER: Hamline University MFAC graduates Lisa Riddiough and Elja Sumner launch their new nautical picture books, “Pie-Rats!” and “The Good Little Mermaid’s Guide to Bedtime!” Virtual event presented by Red Balloon Bookshop in St. Paul. 6:30 p.m. Thursday, March 14. Information at redballoonbookshop.com.

J.R. Olson (Courtesy of Macmillan Publishers)
David Bruns (Courtesy of the author)

ROSEMOUNT WRITERS FESTIVAL/BOOK FAIR: David Bruns and J.R. Olson, retired Navy officers who co-wrote national security thrillers including their latest, “Covert Action,” will keynote the eighth annual Rosemount writer’s festival and book fair featuring 60 authors and vendors, including David La Vaque, John Noltner, Susan Thurston, Brian Lutterman, Chris Norbury, J.J. Harrigan, Lynne M. Kolze, Alan Miller, Mark Ristau, Mary Perrine, Alice Schwab and Amy Zellmer. Local publishers showing their latest books include Kirk House Publishers, Calumet Editions and Sigma’s Bookshelf. Twelve writing-related workshops will also be available. Book fair is free; $15 for the keynote address, $15 per workshop. (Go to rosemountwritersfestival.com/events-workshops.) 9 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Saturday, March 16, The Steeple Center, 14375 S. Robert Trail, Rosemount.

EDWARD SELLNER: Signs copies of the newly revised version of his book “Celtic Saints and Their Animal Friends: A Spiritual Kinship,” first published three years ago. He will be part of a St. Patrick’s Day celebration with music and all things Celtic. Signing 11 a.m.-12:30 p.m., Saturday, March 16, St. Patrick’s Guild, 1554 Randolph Ave., St. Paul.         

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Floating attraction: Hudson readies new boardwalk/wharf along downtown riverfront

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Boaters on the St. Croix River will have another spot to tie up this summer as construction is nearly complete on a 670-foot floating dock along the river in downtown Hudson.

“It is a great addition to our lakefront,” Hudson Mayor Rich O’Connor said. “It is a great addition to the enhancement of our identity as a river city.”

The new dock – O’Connor favors calling it a boardwalk, while the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources calls it a wharf – rests along Lakefront Park, between the Hudson boat ramp and the Hudson dike road.

The floating dock, or boardwalk, is believed to be the longest public dock on the St. Croix River. Minnesota Department of Natural Resources officials confirmed it would be longer than any public mooring dock on their side of the river.

The dock caps off years of planning for O’Connor, who identified it as one of his first priorities when entering office. Soon after he was elected mayor in 2016, he enlisted Tom Zeuli, then Hudson’s director of public works and parks, and contacted the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources about riverfront docking options. After getting information from the DNR, he brought the idea to downtown stakeholders.

The boardwalk was a key part of Hudson’s “Waterfront Vision Study” in 2018, which outlined several different ways the city could better utilize the riverfront.

Walking, fishing, boating

O’Connor has been enjoying the St. Croix River since 1966, he said, and the floating boardwalk allows people to walk the riverside and feel the sensation of the moving water. Many residents and visitors already enjoy walking the dike road, and he said the new structure will provide a natural extension to those leisurely walks. The boardwalk also includes bump-outs for fishing and is wheelchair accessible.

O’Connor envisions that the dock will be an asset for the downtown business community, as boaters stop in for a bite to eat at a restaurant or to restock their supplies at downtown stores.

It’s another way for people to enjoy the St. Croix River, he said.

“I just always have had such an affinity for the water. My grandparents had a place up on Forest Lake, but you can only go around the lake so many times,” O’Connor said. “One of the intriguing things about being on the river is that you don’t have to stop. I’ve always said the most difficult thing about being on the river is that you have to turn around.”

“We have the most gorgeous valley anywhere,” he said. “I just love our St. Croix Valley.”

A floating solution

Previously, the city had tie-up spots on the river wall, but as the St. Croix River rises and falls through the summer, the variance makes it untenable for boaters. Since this dock floats, rising and falling with the water level, it provides a more stable solution, O’Connor said.

The floating dock itself will cost about $1.2 million and additional funds are going toward renovation of the downtown boat launch. A grant from the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources is covering nearly $400,000 of the wharf project. The city is covering the rest, along with the boat launch improvements, with about $1.2 million from the city’s downtown tax increment financing district.

Record high temperatures this winter have provided construction crews with an earlier timeline to work on the project. Traditionally, construction on the riverfront is prohibited from March to June to allow for fish spawning season.

A city subcommittee is just beginning the rules process for what size boats will be allowed to tie up to the wharf, O’Connor said. He figures that boats between 12 and 30 feet would be best suited at the dock. The tie-up spots will be free, but the city will not allow overnight parking.

City officials are hoping for the dock to be officially open by April.

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