Tuesday, August 26, 2025

"Just Be"

Just Be
Chicoans Josh Shelton, house builder by trade and children’s book author, and artist Sam Pullenza, continue their “I Am Adventure Books” series with “Just Be” ($19.99 in paperback from Conscious Dreams Publishing; also in e-book version).

The purpose of the whimsically illustrated series is to guide “children both big and small upon a journey through many of life's timeless questions. We intend for these books to send out ripples of joy, unity, and love, while providing subtle support to the ascension and enlightenment of our human family.”

“Just Be” features bulldogs, hamsters, and a young boy, who asks: “Have you ever seen a hamster run on its wheel? / Well, that’s how the thoughts in my mind often feel!” And more: “I’ve found myself wondering from time to time, / if my thoughts are like visitors, visiting my mind? // My thoughts create / whether or not they are said! // I must become mindful / of what hangs out in my head.”

The story is a journey toward that mindfulness, told in a way that children might understand. When the boy thinks about being “still and quiet” during restful sleep, he reasons that “perhaps in between all the learning and play, / I can ‘do’ like I sleep, / but in an awake sort of way.”

In fact, he says, “It’s totally obvious! / It’ll be easy, you’ll see. / I will take time in my day / to simply Just Be!”

In the midst of busyness one can breathe fresh air; when intruding thoughts come, “greet them / and thank them / then bid them good bye.” Be in nature, look at the clouds, sit by a tree, spend time with a friend. “I can sit by the fire / for an hour or five, / and ponder the miracle / of being alive.”

Mindfulness is a kind of “dance through my day” and though future dreams beckon and we “reflect on our past, / the moment of Now / is the moment to grasp.”

Chico’s Barnes & Noble bookstore will feature an author signing with Josh Shelton and illustrator Sam Pullenza on Saturday, August 30 at 11:00 a.m.; the public is invited.



Tuesday, August 19, 2025

“Dear Dotty: A Novel”

“Dear Dotty: A Novel”
Who was Dotty Polk? For Rosie Benson, about to turn 25, her great-aunt “Dotty was the only one who could make me feel calm in the midst of my family’s chaos. She made being a misfit look easy. Fun, even. But now she was gone. Right when I needed her the most. The shoddy patchwork that was my life had ripped at the seams and I had no clue how to stitch it all back together. I needed Dotty to tell me where I’d gone wrong. She was never shy about that sort of thing.”

And so begins “Dear Dotty: A Novel” ($11 in paperback from Avon; also available in ebook format) by Chico State grad Jaclyn (Raggio) Westlake. Chosen as a summer must-read by the Gloss Book Club and First for Women magazine, “Dear Dotty” is Rosie’s personal narration, a story of loss and rediscovery. 

Rosie’s job at a tech startup is ill-fated; she’s fired by her boss, Raj, who “stood over my shoulder, watching as I boxed up the personal items in my desk—a strand of lights; a framed picture of Marcia and me from last Halloween…; a mug that read SMASH THE PATRIARCHY in big, bold letters (a gift from Dotty, of course).”

Marcia, her best friend and roommate, is little help on the consolation front (and much later when Rosie finds out Marcia has been sleeping with Raj, things turn frosty). Rosie finds out from Dotty that her parents are divorcing. And then Dotty dies.

Though Rosie had dreamed of working with animals, she lands a recruiting-agency job, and things seem to be looking up. She goes to a party with Marcia, a publicist at a big San Francisco PR firm, honoring “a young, rich, and terribly handsome entrepreneur named Donovan Ng.” Rosie falls hard. But is Donovan the Right One?

Rosie yearns for Dotty’s guidance, and as she helps prepare Dotty’s old home for sale she finds pictures and email addresses of Dotty’s friends she knows nothing about. Dotty loved martinis, other women, and nudism, and through these friends Rosie comes to know her great-aunt more deeply than before—and learns a lesson that changes her life. 



Tuesday, August 12, 2025

“The Outlaw From Newville: A Game Warden Henry Glance Novel”

“The Outlaw From Newville: A Game Warden Henry Glance Novel”
It began quietly enough, on June 25, 1912, with the marriage of Preston Radcliff and Molly Bryer in Sacramento. Soon they drove to Orland and “headed west for twenty-two miles on a narrow dirt road. Crossing over Stony Creek, they wound through the foothills of Glenn County, and as the sun dipped below the mountains to the west, arrived in the tiny, picturesque hamlet of Newville.”

They are good people, but their son Willie, born four years later, is a bad seed. Cruel, self-centered, he loves to shoot just about any animal, especially deer out of season and big game in any season, and ignores the rules on fish catches. Years later, in the 1970s, he will cross paths with warden Henry Glance, who with wife Anne (whom he met at Chico State), lives in an old farmhouse west of Gridley.

Willie’s criminal enterprises, fueled by a big inheritance, will in the end involve destruction of a magnificent animal, one of about 150 existing on earth; an international incident involving the then-Soviet Union; and murder most foul. It’s all told in “The Outlaw From Newville: A Game Warden Henry Glance Novel” ($18.95 in paperback from Coffeetown Press; also available in ebook format) by Steven T. Callan (steventcallan.com).

Callan, a Palo Cedro resident, spent his high school days in Orland, graduated from Chico State, then in Shasta County concluded a thirty-year career as a game warden. 

Part One of the book features alternating chapters detailing Willie’s growing greed and Glance’s successful strategies as a game warden. The histories of both converge in Part Two, and the intricacies involved stretch all the way from the Butte County Jail to Far Eastern Russia. Callan presents mesmerizing procedural details of Glance’s investigations for the Department of Fish and Game (as it was named then). Glance can think like a poacher.

The wardens’ physical danger makes comeuppance all the sweeter.

Callan is Nancy Wiegman’s guest on Nancy’s Bookshelf on Northstate Public Radio, mynspr.org, Wednesday, August 13 at 10:00 a.m., repeated Sunday, August 17 at 8:00 p.m. He’ll be signing books at Chico’s Barnes & Noble on Saturday, August 23 at 11:00 a.m.



Tuesday, August 05, 2025

“Across Yosemite’s Wilderness: A Trailblazing Woman’s Career Protecting The Park’s Backcountry”

“Across Yosemite’s Wilderness: A Trailblazing Woman’s Career Protecting The Park’s Backcountry”
Laurel Munson Boyers was born in Yosemite Valley. In 1903 her great grandfather, who ran a way station for park visitors, welcomed Teddy Rosevelt and John Muir. Her parents lived near Ansel Adams, and after she joined the park service in 1976 Boyers guided former First Lady Laura Bush and companions through the backcountry (the two becoming longtime friends).

Having served the park for more than thirty years, “the first female full-time mounted wilderness ranger” and a decade as “Yosemite’s first female wilderness manager,” Boyers recounts her life in a two-part memoir, “Across Yosemite’s Wilderness: A Trailblazing Woman’s Career Protecting The Park’s Backcountry” ($22.95 in paperback from Falcon Guides; also for Amazon Kindle).

Dozens of photographs celebrate the park’s grandeur and its dedicated workers, with artwork by brother Lex Munson, who lives outside Nevada City. Boyers herself still lives in the park with husband Darell but writes me that “my nephew, his wife, son and daughter (named Laurel Ann after me) live in Cottonwood.”

The book’s first part is “a telling of my last wilderness patrol, an expedition across the entire length of Yosemite National Park in 2007, when a group of us took a 10-day backcountry journey all the way across the park.” Part two “holds essays about the years that led up to that remarkable patrol … caring for that part of the park that is beyond Yosemite Valley.”

Though she recounts scary experiences leading horses and mules in slippery environments and hearing strange sounds when she is all alone in a backcountry cabin, Boyers focuses on what she calls the timeless benefits of the wilderness: “witnessing the wonder of nature, of intact ecosystems, of living and breathing and enjoying open space and wildness with one another, or even while alone.”

Just as Chicoans do with Bidwell Park, she wrestles with just how human-accessible to make Yosemite’s backcountry. “We need to maintain humility and understand that we don’t have all the answers,” yet “we need to eliminate the impact of humanity’s presence on the nonhuman world as much as possible to allow these systems … to evolve naturally. Our future may depend on it.”