On a recent trip into Cole’s I found The Donkey Puncher’s Daughter: Folk Tales of a West Coast Childhood (Works Publishing, 2014) by Kim Allen. What caught my eye even more than the title was the image of two young children in a black and white photo standing on a rocky shore. The girl looked a bit like me at that age, with a bobbed haircut and a big smile. I would have loved growing up here in Coastal BC, but it was not to be. But at least I can read about what it was like.
Steam donkey on Museum Main, Powell Lake BC. |
I remember when Dad put me to bed I would always say, “Tell me a story.” My mom was a good storyteller based on books she read to the kids in school, but it was my dad that had the best stories. His were about camping, hiking, fishing, and growing up in Compton, California, (where we still lived) before it was swallowed up to become a Los Angeles suburb. My favourite story for some reason was when Dad was caught in an abandoned shack with a rattlesnake. It had nature, adventure, and suspense, all elements of a good tale. I must have made him tell it to me hundreds, if not thousands, of times.
Logs in a boom on Powell Lake. |
Another book that looks like a good read. Thanks for sharing this info.
ReplyDeleteThis sounds like a really good book. Thanks so much for sharing.
ReplyDeleteI miss Coles bookstores, none left around here anymore, and even the independent book store has closed :(
ReplyDeleteOur Coles has a new manager. I hope the store doesn't change its attitude towards local authors. - Margy
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