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What we know about George Washington Carver is peanuts

Colorado Springs publisher talks about Carver’s brilliance and prescience in an interview with RMR

By Shannon Lawrence | February 20, 2025
“I think the biggest roadblock [to Carver’s work being better known] was actually economics. That it was about, ‘We can make money doing this, but we can’t make money by teaching people how to feed themselves, to preserve food and forage.'” — Sandra Knauf, publisher of the 80th anniversary edition, George Washington Carver: An American Biography by Rackham Holt
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Remembering life on the run

An interview with legendary author Joanne Greenberg about her 21st book, a memoir of her time as a volunteer emergency medical technician in the Colorado Rockies

By Suzanne Macaulay | December 12, 2024
“I felt myself sinking into the local geography and climate as deeply as though I had spent my childhood there. We began to know, within the limits of our district, the ten or fifteen mini-climates of the hills we lived in, places where the snows melted earlier, or the wind made the way crusty and precarious, pockets of chill, pockets of calm.” — Joanne Greenberg, On the Run
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Briefly Noted


Behold the Bird in Flight: A Novel of an Abducted Queen

Terri Lewis
She Writes Press, releases June 3
336 pages
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Terri Lewis grew up in Colorado, was a ballet dancer with a German opera company and worked in a circus. It may come a surprise, then, that her debut novel is about the life of Isabelle d’Angoulême, the 11-year-old French noble abducted by England’s King John (yes, that King John—the Magna Carta and all), taken back to England and made queen. As the novel progresses, we realize that Lewis is also a trained historian and an excellent researcher with a passion for medieval times.

The narrative is lively and compelling. Drawing on scant primary sources and historical records, Lewis creates Isabelle as a rich, complex character. Lewis renders Isabelle’s development from a silly child into an effective queen and independent agent able to direct her own destiny, thus fashioning a believable heroine immersed in a believably detailed world.

The story opens in 1198. Isabelle is betrothed to Hugh de Lusignan, who is appreciative of her future dowery but smitten with someone else. Isabelle senses that something is amiss and decides to play at courtly love by flirting with the Plantagenet king. King John, in turn, is smitten by young Isabelle and spirits her away. Her childish fantasies of true love and life in a beautiful castle are quickly dashed when she discovers how cruel her new husband really is. The narrative, while centered on Isabelle, offers the changing perspective of Hugh, and it incorporates the historically well-known characters, Eleanor of Aquitaine (John’s mother) and Richard the Lion Heart (John’s brother) as secondary characters in the Plantagenet drama.

As was the case with most noble women in the 12th and 13th centuries, Isabelle is initially a mere pawn for the men around her—expected to bring her husband a rich marriage settlement and then breed heirs. Learning from the formidable Queen Eleanor, as well as from the exceptionally strong women from the servant classes, this coming-of-age story reveals a more nuanced path than one might initially expect. Isabelle’s increasing autonomy and her growing skill at navigating the complexities of the court and surrounding society make for an exciting read. Although the last few chapters seem a bit rushed, this novel will charm fans of historical fiction and remind us all of the many lesser-known women who have shaped history and, thus, ourselves.

— Perrin Cunningham