More From Linda DuVal

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Colorado’s premier cookbook still going strong with over a million copies sold

Colorado Cache satisfies appetites over generations

By Linda DuVal | September 19, 2024
The Colorado Cache Cookbook started out as a venture to make a little money for charity but ended up as a recipe for a philanthropic powerhouse. The hefty spiral-bound cookbook, first published in 1978 by the Junior League of Denver, has sold more than one million copies, with its proceeds benefiting dozens of various charities in the Denver area.
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About Linda DuVal


Linda DuVal was an award-winning reporter/feature writer/section editor at The Gazette in Colorado Springs for 32 years. She has been a freelancer for the past 20 years and has co-authored a guidebook (Insider’s Guide to Colorado Springs) and published a novel (The Lightkeeper) as well as hundreds of articles for various newspapers, magazines and online sites.

Linda DuVal

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The Last Animal

Ramona Ausubel
Riverhead Books, paperback 2024
276 pages
The Last Animal by Ramona Ausubel

Fort Collins-based author-wizard Ramona Ausubel’s most recent novel, The Last Animal, released in 2023 and out now in paperback, makes leaps of imagination across continents and millennia seem perfectly plausible. The story involves single mother Jane, a frustrated grad student in paleobiology, recently widowed; and her two teenage daughters, Eve and Vera, The Last Animal opens with this codependent family unit on a scientific expedition to Siberia where the girls, on a typically boredom-filled afternoon, stumble upon the bones of a 4,000-year old woolly mammoth. That’s just the beginning. Mother and daughters, through a series of subterfuge-fueled moves, end up at an exotic animal farm in Italy where the DNA of their fossil is implanted into an elephant with the goal of resurrecting an extinct species. What happens beyond that is a series of tender, hilarious, heart-rending and suspenseful moments that testify to the unbreakable ties of family, for better or worse, alongside the loneliness and impossibility of thriving without connection. Smart, beguiling, touching and entertaining, The Last Animal peers into our shared animal souls, at once raising pertinent questions about the limits of bioengineering and taking the reader on a helluva good ride. — Kathryn Eastburn