Blog2Print from SharedBook turns your blog into a soft cover or hard cover book. You pick the cover, add an optional dedication, then preview and you're done. Prices start at $14.95.
Tuesday, September 14, 2010
Now you can turn your blog into a book!
What a great idea! Now for a relatively inexpensive price they can publish your blog in book format. One may ask, why? Well, to keep a record for posterity or to share with those friends or relatives of ours who don't have computers or Internet access. I think this is a wonderful option and I plan to take advantage of it.
Turn your blog into a book!
Blog2Print from SharedBook turns your blog into a soft cover or hard cover book. You pick the cover, add an optional dedication, then preview and you're done. Prices start at $14.95.
Blog2Print from SharedBook turns your blog into a soft cover or hard cover book. You pick the cover, add an optional dedication, then preview and you're done. Prices start at $14.95.
Powwow this weekend!
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Brunch at the Marlborough Tavern
My former writing classmates and I took our teacher out to brunch at the Marborough Tavern on Sunday. It was so nice to see old friends some of who I haven't seen in almost two years. We made plans to form a writers group and also publish a compilation of short stories. When I attended the classes from 2004-2008 there was so much positive energy in our core group of writers and I felt that same energy on Sunday. Our teacher is amazing. He is so unassuming and supportive of each of us yet his accomplishments stand out for themselves. He is a retired college professor who headed the English Department at a US military academy, a Fulbright Scholar, and a writer who has worked for public TV, yet he still recognizes the creativity in his students and wants to see each of us succeed. I have been truly blessed to have met him and my classmates and wouldn't trade it for anything.
Friday, September 3, 2010
Billy Bob Walkabout
Sometimes a news story will affect you in a way that none have ever before. I'm sure that we were all affected by the tragedy of 911, the untimely death of Princess Diana, and the assassinations of RFK, MLK, and JFK. But have you ever read an obituary of one common individual who wasn't a political figure, a celebrity, or died as a result of a violent act but were still profoundly moved by the sheer magnitude of that person's life? I remember hearing of the death of Billy Walkabout in 2007 and after reading of his accomplishments in his relatively short life span, I was overwhelmed by the selfless sacrifices of this man, the courage he exemplified, and the neglected tributes that this brave man deserved during his time here on Earth. Perhaps if we have overlooked the tributes that this true American hero deserved while he was still alive, the least that we can do is remember him and honor his memory.
Please click on his name in the title of this entry to go to a website which provides more information about Billy Walkabout. Unfortunately, the official Arlington National Cemetery's website does not.
As a companion piece, here is a story published by NewsOK:
Published: March 11, 2007
MONTVILLE, Conn. (AP) _ Billy Walkabout, a native Cherokee whose actions in Vietnam made him among most decorated soldiers of the war, died March 7 in Connecticut.
He was 57.
Walkabout received the Distinguished Service Cross, Purple Heart, five Silver Stars and five Bronze Stars. He was believed to be the most decorated Native American soldier of the Vietnam War, according to U.S. Department of Defense reports.
Walkabout was born in Cherokee County, Okla., on March 31, 1949, and lived much of his life in Oklahoma.
At the time of his death, Walkabout and his wife, Juanita Medbury-Walkabout, lived in a portion of eastern Connecticut that is home to many Mashantucket Pequot, Mohegan and other Native American tribal members.
Walkabout's official cause of death was not given. The Native American Times reported on its Web site that he had been fighting complications of exposure to Agent Orange, a defoliant used by the military during the Vietnam conflict.
Walkabout, a Cherokee of the Blue Holley Clan, was an 18-year-old Army Ranger sergeant when he and 12 other soldiers were sent on an assassination mission behind enemy lines on Nov. 20, 1968, in a region southwest of Hue.
However, they ended up in the enemy's battalion area and came under fire for hours, during which he was seriously wounded. Several of the other 12 men were killed at the scene, while the rest later died of their injuries.
Walkabout's citation for the Distinguished Service Cross said he simultaneously returned fire, helped his comrades and boarded other injured soldiers onto evacuation helicopters.
''Although stunned and wounded by the blast, Sgt. Walkabout rushed from man to man administering first aid, bandaging one soldier's severe chest wound and reviving another soldier by heart massage,'' the citation states. ''Only when the casualties had been evacuated and friendly reinforcements had arrived, did he allow himself to be evacuated.''
He retired as a second lieutenant. In a 1986 interview with The Associated Press, Walkabout said his 23 months in Vietnam left him with disabling injuries and memories that refused to fade.
''War is not hell,'' Walkabout said. ''It's worse.''
He said he struggled with failed marriages, thoughts of suicide and years of self-isolation when he would spend six months at a time alone.
''Everyone I went to high school with thought I was dead for years. They're amazed when they see me and they say, 'You're not dead.''' Walkabout said.
He often refused to sleep near his wife, afraid he would strangle her in his sleep or try to push her under the bed to protect her from the bombs he imagined were going off.
Over the years, however, he found solace in the Native American powwows where he often was an honored guest, leading the traditional dances in time to the pounding drums and chant of the singers.
''I'm at peace with myself,'' Walkabout said in 1986. ''I've got my dignity and I've got my pride. ... I never lost the war in Vietnam, I never lost a day of it. Even when I was wounded, I didn't lose. When I fought, I won. I won my wars.''
Walkabout's family and friends tended a round-the-clock fire in Montville after his death on Wednesday and planned to extinguish it Sunday, part of a four-day Cherokee ceremony, family members said. The smoke fire is believed to carry prayers to heaven and spiritual messages from place to place around the world.
Lisa Bernier, Walkabout's stepdaughter, told The Day of New London newspaper that he was unpretentious when asked about his time in the military.
''I'd say 'thank you' to him, and he'd say, 'What for?' He was so humble,'' Bernier said.
Please click on his name in the title of this entry to go to a website which provides more information about Billy Walkabout. Unfortunately, the official Arlington National Cemetery's website does not.
As a companion piece, here is a story published by NewsOK:
Published: March 11, 2007
MONTVILLE, Conn. (AP) _ Billy Walkabout, a native Cherokee whose actions in Vietnam made him among most decorated soldiers of the war, died March 7 in Connecticut.
He was 57.
Walkabout received the Distinguished Service Cross, Purple Heart, five Silver Stars and five Bronze Stars. He was believed to be the most decorated Native American soldier of the Vietnam War, according to U.S. Department of Defense reports.
Walkabout was born in Cherokee County, Okla., on March 31, 1949, and lived much of his life in Oklahoma.
At the time of his death, Walkabout and his wife, Juanita Medbury-Walkabout, lived in a portion of eastern Connecticut that is home to many Mashantucket Pequot, Mohegan and other Native American tribal members.
Walkabout's official cause of death was not given. The Native American Times reported on its Web site that he had been fighting complications of exposure to Agent Orange, a defoliant used by the military during the Vietnam conflict.
Walkabout, a Cherokee of the Blue Holley Clan, was an 18-year-old Army Ranger sergeant when he and 12 other soldiers were sent on an assassination mission behind enemy lines on Nov. 20, 1968, in a region southwest of Hue.
However, they ended up in the enemy's battalion area and came under fire for hours, during which he was seriously wounded. Several of the other 12 men were killed at the scene, while the rest later died of their injuries.
Walkabout's citation for the Distinguished Service Cross said he simultaneously returned fire, helped his comrades and boarded other injured soldiers onto evacuation helicopters.
''Although stunned and wounded by the blast, Sgt. Walkabout rushed from man to man administering first aid, bandaging one soldier's severe chest wound and reviving another soldier by heart massage,'' the citation states. ''Only when the casualties had been evacuated and friendly reinforcements had arrived, did he allow himself to be evacuated.''
He retired as a second lieutenant. In a 1986 interview with The Associated Press, Walkabout said his 23 months in Vietnam left him with disabling injuries and memories that refused to fade.
''War is not hell,'' Walkabout said. ''It's worse.''
He said he struggled with failed marriages, thoughts of suicide and years of self-isolation when he would spend six months at a time alone.
''Everyone I went to high school with thought I was dead for years. They're amazed when they see me and they say, 'You're not dead.''' Walkabout said.
He often refused to sleep near his wife, afraid he would strangle her in his sleep or try to push her under the bed to protect her from the bombs he imagined were going off.
Over the years, however, he found solace in the Native American powwows where he often was an honored guest, leading the traditional dances in time to the pounding drums and chant of the singers.
''I'm at peace with myself,'' Walkabout said in 1986. ''I've got my dignity and I've got my pride. ... I never lost the war in Vietnam, I never lost a day of it. Even when I was wounded, I didn't lose. When I fought, I won. I won my wars.''
Walkabout's family and friends tended a round-the-clock fire in Montville after his death on Wednesday and planned to extinguish it Sunday, part of a four-day Cherokee ceremony, family members said. The smoke fire is believed to carry prayers to heaven and spiritual messages from place to place around the world.
Lisa Bernier, Walkabout's stepdaughter, told The Day of New London newspaper that he was unpretentious when asked about his time in the military.
''I'd say 'thank you' to him, and he'd say, 'What for?' He was so humble,'' Bernier said.
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