Out and about with ‘Woman, Captain, Rebel’!

Margaret at Third Place Books in Seattle
First talk at Third Place Books in Seattle

One of the wonderful parts about writing a book is sharing it with others, and this I have been doing over the last two months. After a Zoom talk for the Icelandic League of the United States, I had my first in-person presentation here in Seattle at Third Place Books Ravenna.

So much fun! Lots of people, including supportive friends, lots of interesting questions.

I also gave a talk at Village Books in Bellingham, where I did an interview for KRME Radio.

Sourcebooks, my wonderful publisher, sent me to the East Coast for talks that included one at the A Likely Story Bookstore in Sykesville, Maryland, where the owner sold an astonishing 102 books! Then on to Dartmouth College (Hanover, NH), a place I have grown to like very much, where they did a video recording of my presentation.

And two other incredibly exciting bits of news …

One is that Woman, Captain, Rebel  in now available in Iceland. I’m so very happy that Icelanders can now get it. (I hope one day it will get translated into Icelandic!)

Finally, for Women’s History Month, Hudson News, the world’s largest operator of airport newsstands—yes, the bookstores that also sell those last-minute peanuts and other snacks we all buy—has selected Woman, Captain, Rebel as one of their featured books to be displayed at all their airport stores in March!

My brother saw this display when he recently caught a flight at Sea-Tac Airport.

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Tulips, Events, and the Joys of Survival

Spring, glorious spring!

The garden is exuberant. Our cat Mister stalks through it pretending he is some kind of spotted panther.

Mister amid the tulips
Mister skulking among the tulips.

Some exciting news is that University of Washington Press has found a European publisher for the Seawomen book — Museum Tusculanum Press in Copenhagen, Denmark. The UW Press says the book should be out here in the U.S. mid-to-late May and in Europe about a month later…..and, most unfortunately, not available in Iceland until a few weeks after that; the European publisher has to send the books from Copenhagen to Iceland.

Events relating to the Seawomen book are starting to take shape. Few are finalized yet, but they will be soon. For starters, the Icelandic National League of North America is having their annual convention at the end of April just south of Vancouver, Canada, and they have invited me to speak! (The Events page will have the latest details.) That should be very interesting; I will be intrigued to hear the questions people ask.

It is very soon after the transplant for me to be in public and among crowds, however, since I will still be on immune suppressant medicines. I told the organizers I could do it if we are just open and let the audience know that I cannot be around anyone with a cold or flu, and that I will be cautious about shaking hands—and sadly will not be able to share lunch with them (a big room full of people is too dangerous yet, boo hoo). The Seawomen book won’t even be out yet, but I will at least have flyers for it.

But it is wonderful to be planning future events at all—with an emphasis on future. There is a certain camaraderie I see now among people who have had, or are going through, treatment (chemo, radiation, etc.) for cancer or other medical conditions such as mine. We have all had to face death as an immediate possibility. We can talk together—and find interest in—details of our often horrific treatments (even macabre bragging rights … “You think your chemo was bad? Wait ‘till you hear what I had to go through…..”).

I ran into a friend on the street this morning with whom I have worked at the university. We had not seen each other for some time. When I told him I had been ill, he responded by telling me that he had recently had surgery for colon cancer. He was doing fine, he said. We gave each other a hug, looked at the flowering plum tree above our heads, and smiled–smiles that reflect our shared knowledge of the joy of each spring dawn.

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A Journey of a Different Kind

The final writing of my book on Icelandic seawomen took a strange turn almost a year and a half ago, when I noticed I was uncharacteristically getting short of breath while riding my bike uphill on my daily commute home. On New Year’s Eve, 2014, at the insistence of friends, I went to the emergency room to get it checked out. The next thing I knew, I was being whisked to another hospital in an ambulance, and being given blood transfusions. 

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