Jan
03
2009
0

WITW is MMC? - Woodinville, WA

I have fond memories of Woodinville. I was actually in Washington on business, I forget exactly what the purpose was, but I was visiting the office that my company had in Bothell before heading up to our Vancouver office. Since there was a weekend in between, I was able to attend the Annual Fool’s Day Parade, also known as the Basset Bash, in Woodinville. It was fantastic to see all of the basset hounds running, well waddling, around and all of their owners dressed up in all sorts of get ups, because after all it was the Fool’s Day parade.

Every sort of craft imaginable was on display and being sold. I am a sucker for wooden items, and when I saw a wooden ferry boat, I knew I had to get it for my aunt and uncle who live on Whidbey Island. I was actually going to be crossing on the ferry to stop and see them on my way to Vancouver anyway, so it was the perfect time to buy. I also bought a little curio shelf which has some pegs on it, and we currently use that for holding our car keys and the dog leashes.

I should stop reminiscing and tell you why I’m blathering on about Woodinville. Just prior to Christmas, Misfit McCabe made the trip from Snohomish, where it was visiting with my friend Gail (the one who took me to the Basset Bash), to Woodinville. I haven’t heard anything from the book since it left Snohomish, and I’m afraid it may have gotten buried under a snow drift. Just look at this picture from Woodinville after the snow storm they had. I think it qualifies as having a White Christmas.

Woodinville, WA

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LK Gardner-Griffie
Visit me at Griffie World
To buy Misfit McCabe, visit my store at Lulu.com or purchase at Amazon.com
To track Misfit McCabe across the country, visit:
Where in the World is Misfit McCabe?

Own a Kindle? Download Misfit McCabe in an instant.
To read book reviews by LK Gardner-Griffie, visit: The Lulu Book Review

Dec
11
2008
0

Review 6: Meet Robby the C-130

Meet Robby the C-130

Written by Beth Mahoney
Illustrated by Zachary Porter

Copyright © 2008

$18.95 Paperback
$10.00 E-Book

I can sum up Meet Robby the C-130 in two words:  Absolutely Delightful!  This children’s book is definitely a home run swing.  Meet Robby the C-130 is a book which was created to help military children handle the times when either mommy or daddy is deployed and away from home.  With the occupation of troops in Iraq and Afghanistan, absentee parents have become a way of life for many military families.  Beth Mahoney writes of what she knows well, having grown up as a child of the military, turned military wife of 17 years.  She is raising her 3 children while her husband is frequently deployed, along with running a military parenting organization.

Meet Robby the C-130 starts off by introducing the child to the C-130 airplane and describes the types of cargo that this plane carries.  It then moves on to introduce the standard crew that takes care of Robby and what they do.  Ms. Mahoney then delves into the emotional side of how Robby feels when he has to be away from his family and the things he does that help make him feel better.  Throughout the course of the story, she relates what Robby is feeling to how the children feel when a parent is absent.  At the back of the book are several pages which prompt children to draw their own pictures depicting how they feel, what mommy and daddy look like and so on.  In addition to those pages, there is a page with tips for parents on how to use the book.

While the story is cute and written to the level of the intended audience, what makes Robby such a charming book is the illustrations.  Zachary Porter does a marvellous job of capturing the essence of the words.  Just to look at the pictures of Robby makes me smile.  There is one page which describes Robby missing his family while he is deployed and the picture shows Robby with his head on a pillow, crying while looking at a picture and clutching his teddy bear.  Priceless!  I can just hear my two year old niece saying, “Poor Robby!  He’s so sad.”  And just because she is such an empathetic little person, she may even shed a tear because she is sad that Robby is sad.

Meet Robby the C-130 was created with military children as its primary market, however, I feel that the appeal of this book is much broader.  It appeals not only to military children who have to deal with mommy or daddy deploying, but also to any child who has a parent who must leave for any reason, and as a tool for teaching children who are not dealing with separation that there are children who do.  A copy of Robby will definitely be finding its way into my niece’s Christmas package this year.  It is a terrific addition to any Christmas stocking.

Orignially reviewed for the Lulu Book Review
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LK Gardner-Griffie
Visit me at Griffie World
To buy Misfit McCabe, visit my store at Lulu.com or purchase at Amazon.com
To track Misfit McCabe across the country, visit:
Where in the World is Misfit McCabe?

Own a Kindle? Download Misfit McCabe in an instant.
To read book reviews by LK Gardner-Griffie, visit: The Lulu Book Review

Dec
04
2008
0

WITW is MMC? - Durango, CO

Book 1, the Purple line is moving along in Colorado. It started off in Bayfield and has now made the short jaunt through the mountains to Durango to visit in Miss Pam’s class. They are definitely enjoying the book - to check out what they have to say about Misfit McCabe, read the comments on the Book 1 page of Where in the World is Misfit McCabe?

Here’s what Misfit McCabe would have seen had it come in on the Durango & Silverton Narrow Guage Railroad.

Silverton-Durango Train - Coming into the station at Durango, CO.

Nov
28
2008
0

WITW is MMC? - El Paso, TX

Actually, Book 7, the Pink line, arrived in El Paso quite some time ago, around the same time as the Brown and Teal lines, but I forgot to post its arrival, mainly because it has been so quiet I think it might be doing a little sightseeing before settling down to be read. To give you a visual of something it might see in El Paso, here is the mission of Guadalupe.

Guadalupe Mission

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LK Gardner-Griffie
Visit me at Griffie World
To buy Misfit McCabe, visit my store at Lulu.com or purchase at Amazon.com
To track Misfit McCabe across the country, visit:
Where in the World is Misfit McCabe?

Own a Kindle? Download Misfit McCabe in an instant.
To read book reviews by LK Gardner-Griffie, visit: The Lulu Book Review

Nov
25
2008
0

Happy Thanksgiving

Just a quick little post to wish everyone a very Happy Thanksgiving.

Thanksgiving is a very special time because it allows us all the opportunity to review our lives and realize all of the wonderful things which we have been given. I even think back on those things that were negative in nature and find something to be thankful for in that situation. For example, earlier this year I had abdominal surgery for a suspected tumor. I am very thankful that the doctors did not find a tumor (no cancer) and that they performed the surgery when they did because, to be blunt, my insides were a mess and things were caught before I had serious problems. I was very fortunate even though I was laid up for a few weeks, and had to battle post surgery infection. So for that I am thankful.

I have a good life, good family, and good friends. I have published Misfit McCabe, come up with an exciting plan to send it to be read in as many places as possible (Where in the World is Misfit McCabe?), and I am working on the sequel. Through the process of getting the word out there about Misfit McCabe, I have met a dynamic writer, Shannon Yarbrough, who champions self-published authors and have begun writing reviews for him for the Lulu Book Review, all of which are very positive activities and I am thankful that I can take part and thankful for the opportunity.

Along the lines of the first Thanksgiving, I am thankful that I have survived thus far and live in a country where I am free to pursue my dreams.


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LK Gardner-Griffie
Visit me at Griffie World
To buy Misfit McCabe, visit my store at Lulu.com or purchase at Amazon.com
To track Misfit McCabe across the country, visit:
Where in the World is Misfit McCabe?

Own a Kindle? Download Misfit McCabe in an instant.
To read book reviews by LK Gardner-Griffie, visit: The Lulu Book Review

Nov
22
2008
1

Review 4: Size 12 Is Not Fat

Size 12 Is Not Fat
A Heather Wells Mystery
by Meg Cabot

Copyright © 2006
$ 12.95 Paperback
$   8.40 Kindle Edition
$ 23.35 Library Binding

368 pages
ISBN: 978-0060525118

I have been trying to get an opportunity to read some of Meg Cabot’s work.  She is a prolific writer and I have always heard good things about her books, but haven’t been able to find the time to read any of them, while trying to get Misfit McCabe launched, write the sequel, read material and write reviews for the Lulu Book Review, and oh, there’s that little thing called the full time day job (which usually ends up being full time and a half).  With a title like Size 12 Is Not Fat, I decided that I had to start there because the title just grabbed me.  For someone who struggles daily battling the weight issue, I was looking forward to reading a book with a heroine who was not built along the lines of a toothpick.  Not that toothpicks are bad, but they are much more prevalent between the covers of our favorite books than they are walking the streets.  Also, I figured that with only 3 books in the series so far, I could catch up much more quickly than with The Princess Diaries series, which is getting ready to launch book number 10.  Plus, I like mysteries and the bulk of my “for pleasure” reading is light weight mysteries. 

On page one, Ms. Cabot had me.  The story opens with Heather Wells in a dressing room struggling into a new pair of jeans she wants to purchase.  In another dressing room, a girl with a voice like a chipmunk inquires as to whether there is a size smaller than zero.  Heather immediately dubs chipmunk voice “Less than Zero” and continues to refer to her by that name.  I could feel the giggle starting from my toes on that one.  To come up with a character named Less Than Zero and take a dig at vanity sizing at the same time was brilliant.  For that reason alone, I was ready to dive into the life of Heather Wells and see where I ended up. 

The character of Heather Wells is modeled after Britney Spears in a what if fashion.  What if a pop sensation lost her recording contract, her boyfriend, gained a dress size or two, and her mother ran off with her manager to another country stealing all of her money, while her father was in jail?  Oh, and because she was performing for much of her teenage years, she didn’t have any formal education to fall back on when everything blew up.  Heather somehow wangles a job working in a primarily freshman residence hall for New York College, and lives a couple blocks away with her ex-boyfriend’s brother, Cooper Cartwright.  She helps organize and keep track of Cooper’s expenses and does his billing, for which he lets her live in his 3 story pink stucco brownstone in the Village.  The back drop of the residence hall is filled with realistic detail which comes from Ms. Cabot having worked in a New York freshman residence hall after graduating with an art degree, and finding no jobs that would pay the bills.  Like Heather Wells, one of the main draws to the job was the offer of free tuition, so she could get a degree in something that would enable her to earn a living.

The character Heather Wells is portrayed as a 28 year old of arrested development and self-esteem issues due to the circumstances surrounding her formative years.  Her maturity level is much younger than her years, and is closer to the level of the freshman residents of Fischer Hall.  As we have seen through the eyes of the media and all of the attention on Britney Spears, that Britney certainly does not operate at the maturity level her years would lead you to expect.  Neither does Heather Wells.  She has a major, adolescent crush on her landlord, boss, and ex-boyfriend’s brother, Cooper and fantasizes about him throughout the book, but is unable to communicate her feelings for him in adult manner.  She also doesn’t seem to know how to handle the attentions of Jordan Cartwright, the ex-boyfriend, who keeps coming around trying to reconcile with her, which confuses Heather because he just announced his engagement to someone else.

Against this background, the female students of Fischer Hall seem to be dying off at the rate of one a week, doing something so unfeminine as elevator surfing.  Heather is especially suspicious because it would appear that the girls were elevator surfing alone, which never happens, and the girls in question would seem to be the least likely people on the planet to take up elevator surfing.  And of paramount importance to Heather, one of the girls liked Ziggy, and no one who liked Ziggy, the uncoolest cartoon character of all, would EVER elevator surf.  Of course, when no one else thought that there was anything to investigate, Heather decides to investigate events on her own.  Move over Nancy Drew, Heather’s on the case now and she doesn’t like anyone killing her girls.

Size 12 Is Not Fat is an easy and fun read.  Meg Cabot draws colorful characters which surround Heather and provide her with a sense of family, albeit an odd one.  Through the dint of not being able to let go of the mystery surrounding the deaths of the freshman women of Fischer Hall, Heather ultimately prevails in solving the mystery, and in the process nearly gets Jordan Cartwright killed as well as herself, but learns something about herself along the way.

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LK Gardner-Griffie
Visit me at Griffie World
To buy Misfit McCabe, visit my store at Lulu.com or purchase at Amazon.com
To track Misfit McCabe across the country, visit:
Where in the World is Misfit McCabe?

Own a Kindle? Download Misfit McCabe in an instant.
To read book reviews by LK Gardner-Griffie, visit: The Lulu Book Review

Nov
16
2008
0

Death of the Book - Not Yet

Being an author, I love books, although it seems somewhat axiomatic to say so. I enjoy holding them in my hands, turning the pages and diving into the world that the writer has created for us. That being said, with the advent of e-book readers the world of books as we know it is changing. There may, one day, be no page to turn, except in a virtual sense.  Now, some people I know are actively against using an e-book reader, but I will admit that I can’t wait to have my own Kindle.

My reasons are simple, yet many. I really like the aspect of being able to carry an entire library around with you in the size of a single paperback and not even the same weight in most cases. With the Kindle as well, there is the ease of downloading new material pretty quickly. I can shop, preview the material and have it as soon as I need it. No having to wait to get home from the store or if you are the point and click variety of shopper like I am, no waiting for the book to ship. That’s another plus, no shipping costs. Since I have severe dust allergies, an e-book reader removes the factor of dust caused by page decomposition over the years, plus the amount of dust that collects (and so quickly too) on the number of books that I own.  The reduction of the carbon footprint is also a draw; fewer trees will be needed to produce paper, fewer chemicals will be processed to make the ink, warehousing requirements are reduced or eliminated.  Theoretically, that should mean either an increase profit margin to the publishing company who should then share the wealth with the author, or pass the savings along to the customer, or a combination.

Although the e-book concept has not yet caught on as much as some would have hoped, I believe that it is an idea that will continue to grow in popularity until the majority of books which are published will be published in printed and e-book format, and will continue along the spectrum until the e-book is the given publication and the publisher will consider whether or not to go to the expense of the printed book.  Until the e-book reader format has been improved to provide a full color page capability, there will be a segment of books for which the e-book format is not practical.

Once the full color e-book reader has been established, will that then mean the death of the book?  Will it be within our lifetime that printed books become a memory?  While no one can answer that with any degree of accuracy, my bet is that there will be fewer and fewer printed books over time and an increase in e-books.  But, until Fisher Price, or another company of that ilk comes up with a relatively inexpensive, indestructible e-book reader for children, printed books will be alive and well in the Children’s section of your virtual bookstore.
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LK Gardner-Griffie
Visit me at Griffie World
To buy Misfit McCabe, visit my store at Lulu.com or purchase at Amazon.com
To track Misfit McCabe across the country, visit:
Where in the World is Misfit McCabe?

Own a Kindle? Download Misfit McCabe in an instant.
To read book reviews by LK Gardner-Griffie, visit: The Lulu Book Review

Nov
12
2008
0

Contacting Schools

Tonight I started sending emails to middle school language arts teachers to let them know about the Where in the World is Misfit McCabe? project so that they can utilize it in their classes if they would like to. After all, it’s hard to use resources you don’t even know about.

I started with local schools, and by that, I mean schools where I grew up, namely in the Placentia/Yorba Linda area. Hopefully at least one email will spark some interest. What was kind of fun to note was that one of the teachers that I sent a note to taught at the school when I was a student. I do still remember her as well. I never was in her class, but she is still there teaching, although at this point, she is discussing retirement. Or at least it mentions it on her teacher page as she states that she has taught many of the students parents, but would retire before their children had a chance to attend the school.

Tomorrow I’ll have to cast a wider net and keep throwing it out there. I’m trying to get some packages out to schools as well, but figure that it is faster (and far less expensive) to send some information out via email and then for those who express an interest I can send a marketing package out.

All for now - more emails to write.
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LK Gardner-Griffie
Visit me at Griffie World
To buy Misfit McCabe, visit my store at Lulu.com or purchase at Amazon.com
To track Misfit McCabe across the country, visit:
Where in the World is Misfit McCabe?

Own a Kindle? Download Misfit McCabe in an instant.
To read book reviews by LK Gardner-Griffie, visit: The Lulu Book Review

Nov
09
2008
0

Review 3: More Than Dust in the Wind

More Than Dust in the Wind
by Donald James Parker
Copyright © 2008
$12.95 Paperback
$ 5.00 E-book
208 pages
ISBN: 9780615214375

 

As a band member in high school every year I would attend band camp.  While there are several memories that stand out in my mind from that time, the one thing that I could count on, aside from the inter-school rivalries that flourished, was that at least one night during the week long camp an argument would errupt over which religious denomination was better, Catholic or Protestant.  Of course, at band camp the discussion usually included a third denomination of Mormonism thrown in just to keep the discussion lively.  When I started reading More Than Dust in the Wind, these discussions came flooding back to me in full force, to the point where I could almost smell the camp fire as it slowly burned down to embers.  These heated discussions would invariably take place at night and were usually ended abruptly by the playing of taps, which signaled it was time to go to our cabins.

Lance (Bambi) Masterson is the captain of his college basketball team, Dakota State University, and the story opens in the last few seconds of the game that could send his team back to the locker room for the season, or on to the national championships for Division III colleges in Kansas City, MO.  Bambi is able to execute a risky play as the ball leaves his hands just prior to the buzzer and the shot is good.  In the aftermath of such an emotional win, Bambi’s first action is to rush to his cheerleader girlfriend, Lisa and propose marriage.  Since the cheerleaders are traveling with the team and they have a four hour bus ride home after the game, Bambi and Lisa start to discuss their future together.  Things between them begin to disintegrate when Bambi brings up the question of whether he will leave his Catholic church or whether Lisa will leave her Protestant church once they are married.  By the end of the bus ride, the two are no longer talking to each other and Lisa gets a ride with one of her friends, refusing to even say good-bye to Bambi or let him know of the change in plans.

During the week as they are getting ready to play in the national championships, Lisa continues to freeze out Bambi and makes herself completely unavailable to him.  He figures that he will be able to make her talk to him once they are at the national championships because there won’t be anywhere else for her to go.  The cheerleaders will have to stay with the team.  What Bambi doesn’t count on is a woman’s capacity for shopping at malls, especially malls that they have never been to before.  Of course, that would be some and not all women, as I am a confirmed point and click shopper and can actually break out in a rash if you keep me at a mall for an extended period of time.  Bambi’s friend Donnie invites Bambi to attend a Protestant church service since they won their game against the number one team and will be in Kansas City on Sunday.  Bambi starts off by negatively comparing the church to his home church and is critical of the way the service is being handled.  As the service continues, he experiences a change of heart and feels that the minister is speaking directly to him.  By the end of the service, Bambi views the differences between the religions in a very different light as he realizes that the important issue is to put God first and everything else will fall into line.

In his next game, playing some close town rivals for the opportunity to play in the finals, Bambi is injured and the team loses.  This is something that earlier would have been a bitter pill for Bambi to swallow and he would have been severely depressed and angry about the outcome.  He is oddly calm and can only think about getting the opportunity to talk to Lisa so he can straighten out the argument that has led to this estrangement.  Lisa is trying to get to him through the throng of people so that she can help shore him up because of the loss as she has done so many times in the past.  She is delighted to learn that he has determined that the Catholic doctrine is not important enough to keep them apart and that he will willingly attend her church with her. 

The second book in a series of five, More Than Dust in the Wind takes the reader through 30 years of life with Bambi & Lisa Masterson, through the good times, as well as the bad.  Donald James Parker includes those milestones in life that many people go through.  The agony of searching for a job and hoping that you find the right one, the loss of a child, the birth of another, career changes, dealing with cancer, and through it all keeping your faith strong.  In fact, on many levels, I find parallels in my own life.  My husband is in the midst of a career change after having served 20 years in the US Coast Guard, and is currently searching for a job, we lost a child during pregnancy, I lost my father to cancer, and yes, have faced all of these trials daily working to keep my faith strong.  Perhaps it is because of these parallels that I felt that Mr. Parker tried to put too much into one book for the length.  Thirty years is a lot of time to cover within 208 pages, and because of that there is a feeling of skimming the surface rather than getting into the depth of the characters and situations.

There are a few weaknesses in More Than Dust in the Windthat are challenging to read through.  Mr. Parker, in his passion for trying to get his message across, at times becomes a little didactic with his writing in a way that I feel harms the flow of the story.  For example, when Lisa and Bambi are debating the Catholicism vs. Protestantism question, there is a five page section of almost pure unadulterated dialog.  At this point in the story, the two of them are on a bus filled with exuberant basketball players who just won a very tight game at the last second to put them through to the round of national championship games, and yet there is no discussion of noise, running up and down the aisles, no creaking of the bus, and having been on team buses myself, no description of the smells that can be present.  No one’s sock or jock strap went sailing through the air to interrupt the conversation.  The dialog was taking place in a vacuum, which causes it to come across as preachy or sermonizing, and the entire conversation felt forced.  As a reader, I want to see the confusion on Bambi’s face as he is trying to sort through what Lisa is telling him.  I want to feel the cracked vinyl of the bus seat as an uncomfortable silence is forming as neither will back down from their position.  I believe that the message that Mr. Parker is trying to convey would come across much better by slowing down the pace and using more description interspersed with action.   I also feel that those times throughout the course of the story where the characters were experiencing grief were a little glossed over.  My impression was that Mr. Parker did not want to allow his characters to show too much grief as it might come across as lacking in faith.  Unfortunately, that caused the situations to come across as not realistic and painted the characters as being lacking in feeling, which I am sure was not the author’s intent.  An illustration of this is that when Lisa was hospitalized from being in a car accident, and had just learned that she lost the baby she was carrying, as soon as their tears were dried, Bambi is returning to work so that he can work with his team to get them ready for the game, and is doing so because Lisa insists that she doesn’t need a babysitter. 

Being the second book in the series, there are some references to situations which occurred in the first book, which is always the case when dealing with books in a series.  There is a need to provide some back story with the subsequent books in the series so that readers who pick up the series in the middle are not out to sea.  While Mr. Parker does provide some back story details that give insight to the character of Bambi and some of the situations that have caused him to be the man he is at the start of book 2, some items remain in question.  Why does Lance go by the name of Bambi?  I understand that it is a nickname, but it is sufficiently outside the normal realm for nicknames, that there should be some explanation as to why the character chooses to be called such an unusual name for a man.  Several times during the course of the story, Bambi refers to the Bulldogs of Victory and the Dogs of Victory compact.  It is obvious that this is something that is fully explained in the first book of the series, but with the number of references to the compact, there should be a modicum of explanation in the second book as well.  There is even a scene where Bambi determines that it is time to explain the compact to his daughter Maria, but does so outside the presence of the reader.  Other than those two exceptions, Mr. Parker does a nice job of dropping bits of information into the story which provide the back story information from the first book rather than giving it to us in summary style.

Despite some of the issues with More Than Dust in the Wind, Donald James Parker is a good solid writer.  The relating of the basketball games pulls the reader straight into story and the writing flows easily.  I especially enjoy his characterization of the relationship between Bambi and his daughter Maria.  Their interactions with one another, even down to the corny phrases that can irritate a young teen-age daughter, rings true.  One of the things that Mr. Parker does the best is painting the picture of Bambi as a man facing his own mortality, unwilling to give up, but fighting to the bitter end.  My own father carried that same attitude toward life and death, and it took cancer 33 years and five iterations to finally bring him down.  Even then, he played tennis the week before he died as he simply refused to let the illness get the better of him.  Parker builds a nemesis, Angela Hawkins, for Maria to give the counterpoint to her father’s fight against illness.  Maria and Angela are considered the best two runners in the state, but Maria loses to Angela year after year, which just strengthens Maria’s resolve to beat her the next time out.  The culmination of this rivalry comes at a time when Bambi is so ill, he is no longer able to walk, but continues to support his daughter at the track meets in a wheel chair.  The following passage brings tears to my eyes.

     The voice over the loudspeaker said, “Ladies and gentlemen, I now direct your attention to the head of the track where Maria Masterson, winner of the 3200-meter and the 1600-meter race in a state record of four minutes and fifty-nine seconds is taking her victory lap.  Due to the number of events that we have to run through here in the state meet, we normally do not permit victory laps, but this is a special case. Maria’s father, Lance Masterson, a former all-stater in basketball, an NAIA all-region team selection at Dakota State, and a former high school coach is engaged in a struggle with pancreatic cancer.”
     A hush fell over the crowd.
     “Maria has the privilege of sharing this victory lap with her father, the man who taught her to run and taught her how to live life to its fullest.  Would you please stand and give it up for this dynamic duo?”  The crowd stood and roared its approval as Maria pushed her father across the finish line, breaking the tape that the officials had ordered stretched across it.  Bambi looked up and saw Angela Hawkins looking on with a scowl on her face. He winked at her.  When Maria got past the finish line, she veered off to the right and pushed Bambi off the track and back onto the sidewalk.

Reviewed for the Lulu Book Review.

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LK Gardner-Griffie
Visit me at Griffie World
To buy Misfit McCabe, visit my store at Lulu.com or purchase at Amazon.com
To track Misfit McCabe across the country, visit:
Where in the World is Misfit McCabe?

Own a Kindle? Download Misfit McCabe in an instant.
To read book reviews by LK Gardner-Griffie, visit: The Lulu Book Review

Nov
08
2008
0

WITW is MMC? - Bayfield, CO

Misfit McCabe, Book 1 (the Purple line) arrived in Bayfield, CO just in time for the long weekend. Bayfield is a small town in southwest Colorado of approximately 1,800 residents located not far from the four corners of Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona & Utah. It is in the midst of the Pine River Valley and sits at an elevation of 6,900 feet.

To give a little peek at Bayfield, here is a picture of the Newspaper office.

Newspaper office in Bayfield Colorado

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LK Gardner-Griffie
Visit me at Griffie World
To buy Misfit McCabe, visit my store at Lulu.com or purchase at Amazon.com
To track Misfit McCabe across the country, visit:
Where in the World is Misfit McCabe?

Own a Kindle? Download Misfit McCabe in an instant.
To read book reviews by LK Gardner-Griffie, visit: The Lulu Book Review

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