Writing Prompt Winner: Janet Muirhead Hill

October 2024: Janet Muirhead Hill

“the eggs weren’t real”

The feeling of panic when she first realized she was lost had long since been replaced by quiet desperation. Sh’d leaned she could survive cold nights. She’d found water enough to survive. But, she was sure if she didn’t find food soon, she would die. Food. It’s all she could think of, all that filled her hazy brain. As she plodded down a grassy hill, she spied a large brown nest with the biggest egg she’d ever seen She rushed to it, thinking of how she’d poke a hole in the end and suck out the contents, which would give her strength to go on. But as she reached for the egg, stumbling forward she fell, and the egg was gone. Vanished. A trick of light. She lay her head on the next that was no longer there and cried for the egg that wasn’t real. 

Hill writes from her rural Montana home which she shares with her husband, two cats, and two ponies. She writes for the joy of writing as she learns about life and herself through the characters in her novels and in the random poetry she occasionally pens. www.janetmuirheadhill.com

Whatcha Readin' September 2024

Whatcha Readin’: No time for reading

Every month, I post a column in The Sanders County Ledger about the best books I read the previous month. Here is last months article: https://www.scledger.net/story/2024/10/03/opinion/whatcha-readin-no-time-for-reading/11346.html Enjoy!

Also, if you’re interested in purchasing any of these books, I’ve made a handy list you can purchase from here: https://bookshop.org/lists/september-2024-sunday-dutro I receive a teeny tiny kickback if you purchase from my list AND you support independent book stores YEAH!

Also, be sure to check out my monthly Book Talk in collaboration with Thompson Falls Public Library:

Writing Prompt Winner: Cammie Basseri

September 2024: Cammie Basseri

“those in our periphery”

It was past my bedtime when momma swung the rifle up onto her shoulder, but to be honest I couldn’t see much with the porch light shining in my face. I was pulling on her arm like a frantic animal, my brother at her other side doing the same. We were all bathed in the buggy beam of light, but momma kept her eyes pointed down the barrel of the gun—it lead straight to the cab of my stepfather’s Chevy pickup as he tried to back down of the driveway just below us. I looked back up at my momma, then the cab, then back up again, and then mid swing of my head I heard a boom that knocked me to the wooden deck, my ears ringing and everything else falling away from me. Gun powder swirled in front of my mother’s swollen face. Stunned, I laid there beneath her and turned my head to see the break of the windshield through the porch railing, glass crumbling out in cubed fragments. I sat back up into the chaos, crawling around my mother’s legs and onto the darkness of the porch steps, recalling the time I sat there once and fed wild raccoons bits of dried cat food from my hand. Those in our periphery—the memories I mean—always find a way to shuffle back into view.

Sometimes to remind us. Sometimes to keep us safe.

Cammie Basseri is a Creative Nonfiction writer who grew up off the grid in the untamed wilderness of Yosemite, where she was immersed in the rhythms of nature and the seasonal flow of tourists from around the globe. Her forthcoming memoir, It Must Have Been Beautiful, draws its title from the phrase most often heard in response when she shares the story of her unconventional childhood. Basseri’s writing has been published across the web and print publications including The Manifest Station, The Woolfer, Half Moon Bay Review, Medium, The Rumpus and East Bay Times. Find out more at: www.cammiebasseri.com Follow at: facebook.com/cammiebasseri

Sunday's Snapshots

Sunday’s Snapshots: Tantrums vs Meltdowns

There’ve been some interesting conversations on Facebook about my most recent Snapshots column, which you can read here. People find both terms dismissive and/or invalidating. I have yet to hear a term that isn’t one of those though and I haven’t come up with my own word that works. The main point here, the thing I’m really hoping to relate, is that it doesn’t matter what you call them, what matters is your reaction: do you provide empathy or do you chastise?