The Greatest Generation

Candace Simar Reads Greatest Generation   Our veterans deserve the best.  During my nursing career I cared for veterans from all of America’s  20th century wars.  I even knew one patient who  served in the Spanish American War as a young teen who lied about his age.   I was pleased when KAXE Radio out of […]

Writing Retreat at Annunciation Monastery, Bismarck, ND

  Recently I visited Annunciation Monastery in Bismarck, North Dakota  where  I spent an entire week in personal writing retreat.  Any writer will tell you how hard it is to find blocks of uninterrupted writing time.  I am nearing completion of a book of linked short stories and desperately needed time and space to work […]

Western Writers of America Convention coming up soon

Gary Midge, a writer friend, encouraged me to join Western Writers of America a few years back.  My historical novels set in early Minnesota are not typical westerns but WWA includes frontier with the western genre.  Western Writers of America has been a good fit for me. I attended the 2011 WWA convention in Bismarck […]

Red River Ox Cart at the Grant County Museum in Elbow Lake, Minnesota

       It’s difficult to imagine that simple wooden carts pulled by oxen could settle a territory but they did.  The Red River ox carts brought goods from Canadian settlements and the northern plains down a long trail to pioneer St. Paul, Minnesota.  The carts, filled with supplies and furs, stretched across the prairies in long […]

Lauraine Snelling at the Minot Hostfest

   Reading Lauraine Snelling’s Red River of the North Series back in the 1990s gave me permission to celebrate my Scandinavian roots.  I remember the euphoric feeling I experienced when I read about her characters’ immigration to America and their subsequent struggle to get established in Minnesota and North Dakota.  Her stories reminded me of […]

1863 Murders at Fort Pomme de Terre after Sioux Uprising

This week marks the one hundred fiftieth anniversary of the  Fort Pomme de Terre murders.  Union solders were stationed at the newly-built Fort Pomme de Terre, after the 1862 Sioux Uprising.  Letters from homesick soldiers talked of the monotony of the isolated outpost along the Pomme de Terre River between present-day Elbow Lake and Ashby, […]

Farming Seems Easy

“Farming seems easy when your plow is a pencil and you are a thousand miles from the corn field.” -Dwight Eisenhower I laughed today when I read this quote.  I’ve done a lot of research about early farming practices and immigrant life.  My historical novels tell of the Herculean efforts required to get a foothold […]

Grant Application Successful

Last fall I had a very interesting consult with Springboard for the Arts, a non-profit organization whose mission is to help artists make a living at what they love.  The consultant suggested several things I could do to promote my writing career.  One suggestion was for me to write a Five Wings Art grant to […]

Fort Pomme de Terre 1863

The U.S. Army hastily put up a fort around the stage station at Pomme de Terre immediately after the 1862 Sioux Uprising.  The goal was to provide back up support to Fort Abercrombie farther west in Dakota Territory.  Fort Pomme de Terre was a small garrison consisting of troops marched in from Fort Ripley in […]

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