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Showing posts with label James Kenyon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label James Kenyon. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 8, 2023

James Kenyon Receives Certificate of Excellence from the Cat Writers Association


 James Kenyon received a Certificate of Excellens from the Cat Writers' Association for his nonfiction book, A Cat Named Fatima: Tales of 23 Cats & The People Who Loved Them. The winners of each category in the annual CWA Communications Contest will be announced on October 21. 

Congatulations, James!


James Kenyon

 

Wednesday, January 12, 2022

From the mailbox! Excerpt of A Cat Named Fatima: Tales of 23 Cats & the People Who Loved Them

 A treat for you this evening, dear readers! 

Enjoy this peek into A Cat Named Fatima: 
Tales of 23 Cats & The People Who Loved Them

Congratulations on the latest publication, James Kenyon!

Description: This is a book for ailurophiles (people who love cats). From the award-winning author of A Cow for College and Other Short Stories of 1950s Farm Life, comes 23 stories and poems dedicated to those who adore their feline friends. From a three-legged barn cat to a Siamese that loved showers, from the best cat a fisherman could ever have to a veterinary clinic’s greeter, these cat stories will warm the heart, bring laughter, and perhaps a tear or two.

Each story is illustrated by a delightful kitty sketch by the artist, Thomas Marple.

Wednesday, February 24, 2021

Excerpt: Echoes in the Hallways: History and Recollections of 102 Closed Iowa High Schools, by James Kenyon

Echoes in the Hallways:
History and Recollections 
of 102 Closed Iowa High Schools

by James Kenyon
576 pages - ISBN: 978-1-7342477-9-4
Order today direct from Meadowlark online
or print and mail this form to order. 

 

James Kenyon has followed up his popular, award-winning book on closed Kansas high schools with a book on closed high schools in his adopted state of Iowa. Enjoy this excerpt from Galva High School, one of 102 high schools featured in the book.

Buses—The first buses used were called hacks. They were wooden coaches pulled by horses. Soap stones heated at the school furnace were placed in the buses during the winter to help keep the children warm. In 1932, the first motorized buses designed by Jim Fleetwood (’32) were used to transport the students.

By 1954, the Galva Community School District had expanded to 72 sections of land and used seven 24-passenger buses. The drivers each owned their buses and the district paid them mileage.

With declining rural enrollment in the late 1970s, the district used three 48-passenger buses.

 * * *

Music—In 1932, there was a school orchestra with 14 students.

      A picture of the 1939 Girls Glee Club showed 24 girls dressed in identical dresses. These dresses had been purchased from Younkers in Sioux City for $1.50 each.

In 1962, a new band and music instructor came to Galva. Mr. Jim Inman led the band and music department for the next 18 years, until the high school closed. The school purchased new band uniforms in 1965. The dark blue and gold uniforms with Galva printed diagonally across them became known throughout the state. They were even seen in Winnipeg, Canada, as the entire marching band traveled across the border to perform at the Winnipeg Band Festival and Parade.  Between 90 to 95% of the student body was involved in some performance position including twirlers, flags, majorettes, and instrumentalists. Galva set an Iowa State record in Small Group (Class) contests with 50 Division #1s in instrument solos and ensembles.

 * * *

Sports—Football was played for the first time in 1906. For the next three years all the team’s games had to be played away as Galva had no field. The teams they played were Ida Grove, Correctionville, and Early.

Boys basketball became a school sport in 1912. All the practices were outside on a dirt court as the school had no indoor practice facility. The team’s first game was at Holstein which sported the indoor Turner Hall. The Holstein team was dressed in uniforms, but Galva only had cut-off overalls. With the indoor surroundings and the awe of the uniforms, Galva lost the game handily. 

   * * *

Events and Activities—With the outbreak of World War I, the students were involved in rolling bandages for the Red Cross.

In 1920, the Malloy house provided room and board for many of the teachers at the school. This arrangement continued for the next 30 years. The teachers staying at the Malloy house could get their lunch meal at noon. A student from school walked to the boarding house to get the hot lunch for the teacher, who was staying back at the school to supervise over the noon hour.

In 1942, the grading system was changed to drop the letter grade E, between D and F.

Kindergarten was started on March 6, 1944 on a part-time basis due to the large class that was anticipated for the first grade the next fall. Kindergarten became all day in 1950.

An honor roll was prepared by the high school students to commemorate and recognize the 105 Galva graduates that were serving in World War II.

The first school annual yearbook was printed in 1953 and called the Galvacade (named based on the popular radio show called Cavalacade of America).

On November 22, 1963, Kathy Wanberg Breyfogle (’67) was going to home economics class when she passed by the superintendent’s office and heard that President Kennedy had been shot. “I hurried into the home economics room and announced that the President had been shot. At first, nobody wanted to believe this freshman, but with my horrified look it finally set in,” she remembered.


Kenyon was a veterinarian for 35 years in a mixed animal practice in Iowa and a seven-time veterinarian for the Alaska Iditarod Dog Sled Race. He also served for twenty-four years on his local school board. He is the author of, A Cow for College and Other Stories of 1950s Farm Life and Golden Rule Days: History and Recollections of 109 Closed Kansas High Schools. Both books received commendations as Martin Kansas History Book Award winners. 


Praise for Echoes in the Hallways:

Echoes in the Hallway is a time machine for those who love Iowa history, or those who simply enjoy remembering the days of long ago. No matter where in the lengthy book you drop in for a visit, the pages contain sweet, funny, or memorable tales of long-ago schools and school days. And even better for those who take pride in the Hawkeye state are the stories told by the classmates or neighbors of the famous, notable, and just plain interesting folk who attended and thrived in the small schools that dotted the plains of the state before consolidation had even been heard of.

 “Although not a native Iowan himself, author James Kenyon shows a real appreciation for his adopted state, writing of the history of the small towns whose schools are no more. And while there are many topics he includes in each of the renderings of 102 ghost high schools of Iowa, he treats with the special fondness of a native the stories of six on six girls basketball and what it meant to the tiny schools that were Goliath slayers in the annual state tournament. He let the local historians sitting around the kitchen tables, in the libraries, in the parks and the history centers tell him and his readers their stories in their own words and their love and pride of their no-more schools comes through in the words he captured.

 “In all, Dr. Kenyon met with hundreds of Iowans recording memories of 102 high schools—one for each county and then three extra—that are no more. Through his vignettes, those stories of those forgotten schools have been saved forever. As a graduate of one of those schools, I thank you, Jim.”

 — Linda Artlip Weinstein, Villisca High School 1966, An administrator of Facebook’s “Forgotten Iowa Historical Society”


“Dr. Jim Kenyon’s Echoes in the Hallways gives an in-depth look at early education in Iowa.  By focusing on one high school that has closed in each county, he paints a vivid picture of secondary education across the state.  Hearing the voices of those who attended each school adds wonderful, intriguing memories that come alive in a way that only can be told by individuals who were there.

“High schools have long made up the social fabric in communities across the state, especially in rural Iowa.  By engaging with community members in the 102 schools cited in the book, Dr. Kenyon reveals the extreme pride people of Iowa have in their schools and communities.  Echoes in the Hallways showcases how Iowans have built an extraordinary education system school by school.  Because it is so well researched and written, once you pick it up you’ll have a hard time putting it down.”

— Dave Else, PHD, Professor Emeritus, University of Northern Iowa


K-12 education has an extremely rich history in Iowa.  As a result, nearly every community, large and small, had a high school, and it was a source of pride and joy for its residents.  Often, the school and its activities defined the community’s history. However, as the rural landscape changed over the years, resulting in fewer farm families, many of the smaller schools declined in enrollment.  Much to the dismay of these communities, the school districts either reorganized with larger districts or closed its buildings altogether.  A rather large number of communities were left with empty school buildings.

Author James Kenyon captures the history of 102 of these closed Iowa high schools in his most interesting book, Echoes in the Hallways.  Through interviewing people within the community who were invested in the school’s history, researching noteworthy events in the town, honoring students, teachers and staff who impacted the school, and, finally, noting the school’s final closing days, the school’s history was fittingly recorded. I thoroughly enjoyed Echoes in the Hallways and appreciate the efforts to preserve some of the history of Iowa’s schools. 

— Les Douma, Retired Chief Administrator, Northwest Area Education Agency


Wednesday, May 6, 2020

The Meadowlark Reader: 3-2-1, an excerpt from A Cow for College, by James Kenyon

Each Wednesday we will share an excerpt from a Meadowlark book. Sign up at Feed Burner to receive Meadowlark updates by email. 




"Two, three, one, Please . . . Hello, is Barbara there?” This was the ritual with my brother. Claudie was smitten with his fifth-grade sweetheart. He never looked at another girl or thought of any other love in his life. Since he was thirteen years older than me, there was not much playtime or brotherly interaction. The telephone was his lifeline to reach the object of his infatuation who lived in the county seat town nine miles away. I heard Barbara’s phone number over and over each day from the time I was old enough to walk.
Our family had a crank phone on the wall in a stained oak box. We were on a party line. The caller would pick up the receiver which was on the end of a cord attached to a Y-shaped hook on the side of the telephone box. The caller held the receiver to his ear to listen if one of the other seven neighbors was using the line before cranking the small metal handle on the right side of the phone box to get the operator. The bell at the top rang and an operator answered and said, “Number, Please.” It was not important to know from where and who this operator was, but she somehow took our line and plugged it into a circuit bank opening to the sprocket of the number we were calling. When this connection and electrical current were completed, that person’s phone rang in their home. Since we were in such a rural area, the party line

Tuesday, October 8, 2019

Nelson Poetry Book Award and Martin Kansas History Book Award Presented to Meadowlark Authors at 2019 Kansas Authors Club Convention


Two books by Emporia publisher, Meadowlark Books, received honors at the annual convention of the Kansas Authors Club held this year in Wichita on October 5-7, 2019. Both the Nelson Poetry Book Award and the Martin Kansas History Book Award went to Meadowlark titles.

photo of Roy Beckemeyer and Duane Johnson
Roy Beckemeyer receives the Nelson
Poetry Book Award from Duane
Johnson, VP Kansas Authors Club,
for Stage Whispers (Meadowlark, 2018)
Stage Whispers, by Roy J. Beckemeyer, was the recipient of the Nelson award. Judge Paul Hawkins wrote, “The scope of subjects covered in the collection of poems is engaging and interesting. Each of the 90 poems is an invitation to read, speak, listen and see. Topics range from the Anderson Creek fire in Barber County, Kansas to the psychology of bullying to the civil war in Syria. Beckemeyer’s adeptness as a poet is illustrated through word choice, image and dialogue. He generously shares his experiences and understandings about life. Through his poems a sense of trust and honesty is conveyed to the reader.” 

Since 2002, a Kansas poet has been honored with Nelson Poetry Book Award. The prize was started by Dr. Raymond and Margaret Nelson in 2002. The couple served the organization in various offices, including terms as president for each of them, beginning in 1979.

The Martin Kansas History Book Award went to Golden Rule Days: History and
photo of Cynthia Ross and James Kenyon.
Cynthia Ross (Gail Lee Martin Family)
presents James Kenyon with the
Martin Kansas History Book Award
for Golden Rule Days
 (Meadowlark, 2019)
Recollections of 109 Closed Kansas High Schools
, by James Kenyon
. This is the second history book award for the author, who also received the Martin in 2018 for his first Meadowlark book, A Cow for College and Other Stories of 1950s Farm Life.

From the judge, Virginia Allain: “A remarkable amount of research went into compiling Golden Rule Days. Just the collecting of personal stories for each school and weaving them into the history reflects several years of work. There are tidbits from yearbooks, memories from former students, and other bits of information collected by the author. A brief history of each locale is followed by notable graduates, memories of teachers, activities and events, athletics, triumphs and tragedies plus the reason the school closed. This is a solid Kansas history reference title for public libraries and makes fun browsing for students seeking memories of their school days.”

The Kansas Authors Club has been recognizing books for excellence in preserving Kansas History for decades. The family of Gail Lee Martin donated funds to continue the award in 2018 when the Ferguson family, supporter since 2001, retired from the task. Martin was a more than 25-year member of the organization and served in the position of State Archivist from 1995 to 2005.

photo of Jenn Bailey, Grant Overstake, and James Kenyon
Jenn Bailey, author of A Friend for Henry, recipient of the Kansas Children's Book Award.

Grant Overstake, author of The Real Education of TJ Crowley, recipient of the J. Donald and Bertha Coffin Memorial Book Award and the "It Looks Like a Million" Design Award.

James Kenyon, author of Golden Rule Days, recipient of the Martin Kansas History Book Award.

Three additional awards for published books were given at the annual convention. 

Grant Overstake, author of The Real Education of TJ Crowley (Grain Valley Publishing), was the recipient of the J. Donald and Bertha Coffin Memorial Book Award for best Kansas book, as well as the “It Looks Like a Million” Design Award for the same title. The young adult historical title takes place in 1968 Wichita and addresses racial conflict and civil rights during a time when integration laws were taking effect.

The Kansas Authors Club Children’s Book Award was given to Jenn Bailey of Lenexa for her children’s book, A Friend for Henry (Chronicle Books). The illustrated book is told from the perspective of a boy on the autism spectrum.

The Kansas Authors Club has been supporting writers since 1904. Each year the organization honors the best in Kansas books, as well as holding contests for adults and youth in prose and poetry writing. Information in membership in the club can be found at www.kansasauthors.org.

###

Wednesday, June 26, 2019

Opportunities to visit with James Kenyon, author of Golden Rule Days

“You’ll read this book and quickly become absorbed in the stories, the people, and the buildings. . . James Kenyon did a phenomenal amount of research to gather all of this information to be saved and savored for decades to come. I am grateful to James for bringing one last bit of glory to all of these small schools that once meant so much to our communities.”
-Marci Penner, director/author, Kansas Sampler Foundation


James Kenyon is looking forward to visiting with the public about his book, Golden Rule Days: History and Recollections of 109 Closed Kansas High Schools

Upcoming Dates:
August 3, 2019 - Cimarron City Library, 11:00 AM
August 3, 2019 - Plains Kansas High School Reunion, 9:00 AM
August 4, 2019 - McCracken Kansas Community Center, 3:00 PM
September 29, 2019 - McCune Kansas Museum, 10:00 AM
October 19, 2019 - MeadowLark Hills, Manhattan, 7:00 PM

James Kenyon made twelve trips across Kansas to visit every county in the state, collecting stories of former Kansas high schools as he went and sharing his appreciation for small town life. Born and raised on a third-generation family grain and livestock farm near the town of Bogue, Kansas, population 300, his roots make him a natural candidate for recording the histories and stories of these schools. From his grandfather, John Gibbins, who was the superintendent of four high schools in Kansas and a college professor, to his three aunts and two sisters who were teachers, James was raised in a community that valued education.

James is the author of A Cow for College and Other Stories of 1950s Farm Life, Meadowlark Books, October 2017, winner of the 2018 Martin Kansas History Book Award.


“. . . a fascinating book for the countless Kansans who were heartbroken when their high schools closed . . . I was pleased that my own hometown, Pawnee Rock, was one of his highlighted schools. It was a painful time for our community. Those who were directly affected by these closures will treasure this book, and the nuggets of small-town history will make this a treasure for anyone interested in the Kansas experience.”
-Cheryl Unruh, author of Flyover People: Life on the Ground in a Rectangular State,
Waiting on the Sky: More Kansas Essays, and Walking on Water

Wednesday, May 29, 2019

Updated: What's Next on the Meadowlark Bookshelf... and next, and next, and next

A note from the publisher's desk: Tracy Million Simmons


File this entry under "good problems to have!" Selecting manuscripts for publication in 2019 was difficult! We had so many quality submissions this year. The following manuscripts are currently in the queue at Meadowlark and we look forward to sharing these titles with our readers in the coming months.  (Post updated 5/29/2019)



Now Available
James Kenyon's, Golden Rule Days: History and Recollections of 109 Closed Kansas High Schools, is now available! Coming in at 388 pages, this has been a project many months in the making. We are so proud of this gorgeous book!

James Kenyon has created a fascinating book for the countless Kansans who were heartbroken when their high schools closed. He has done extensive research and has interviewed former students of 109 Kansas communities who lost their high schools, many due to a Kansas school consolidation law passed in 1963. He’s featured at least one school from each of the 105 counties and tells a brief story of the school, the community, and its people. I was pleased that my own hometown, Pawnee Rock, was one of his highlighted schools. It was a painful time for our community. Those who were directly affected by these closures will treasure this book, and the nuggets of small-town history will make this a treasure for anyone interested in the Kansas experience.
~Cheryl Unruh, author of Flyover People: Life on the Ground in a Rectangular State, Waiting on the Sky: More Kansas Essays, and Walking on Water



We are also thrilled to be at work on the poetry collection, A Certain Kind of Forgiveness, by Carol Kapaun Ratchenski, winner of The Birdy Poetry Prize in 2019. We expect a fall delivery for this book.

There is a worldliness in these poems, the kind of grit that accompanies a strong heart. There’s awareness--of the self, of the world. And the poems are populated with the magical, husky things of this earth: warm beer in Berlin, rice in a bowl in a monastery, and stains from fresh cranberries. These are poems we can savor, now and again.
  ~Kevin Rabas, Poet Laureate of Kansas, 2017-2019





Valentine, poems by Ruth Maus
Coming to a bookshelf near you!
A second collection of poetry forthcoming is Valentine, by Ruth Maus, of Topeka, Kansas. Ruth was
a finalist in The Birdy Poetry Prize competition.








































Edna Bell-Pearson's much awaited memoir, Headwinds, is going to be coming soon to a bookshelf near you this summer.

Edna’s stories, articles, essays, and poems have appeared in hundreds of magazines, newspapers, literary journals, and anthologies world-wide. She has published six books. She is noted for Fragile Hopes, Transient Dreams and Other Stories, a Southwest Kansas saga, which was chosen during Kansas sesquicentennial year, as one of “150 Best Kansas Books.”  

Headwinds tells the story of one Kansas family's experiences during the early days of the "Air Age."






We are looking forward to publishing our first true crime story, a page-turning gem by Mike Hartnett of Lawrence, Kansas, formerly of Illinois, titled And I Cried, Too. Mike will be one of the seminar leaders at the 2019 Kansas Authors Club convention in Wichita in October. Learn more about his project here.



We are very excited our first YA book, a story by Julie Stielstra, of Lyons, Illinois, called Opulence, KS. We fell in love with this story from first read. In fact, I (Tracy) quickly dropped my plans to preview the first 20 pages of all submissions for that day and stayed with the story until I was finished, cover to cover. It is a delightful read, and one we think our readers are going to love, too.

From Julie's submission letter:
Opulence, KS germinated from a seed in a book of Kansas history, describing the 19th century town of Runnymede–founded by a wealthy Irishman who was going to teach the younger sons of British gentry how to farm. It didn’t go well, but some remnants of that project linger in the prairie. Add in some aspects of my adopted hometown of Ellinwood, and Opulence was built, a prairie town where a big-city girl finds herself for the summer in the aftermath of her wealthy father’s death. Katie Myrdal is abruptly shifted from one form of opulence to another, from urban to rural, from material wealth to emotional richness, from a land of vertical skyscrapers to a sweep of horizons and uninterrupted sky.  



Family Plowing, a collection of poetry by Duane L. Herrmann, will be our third book of poetry for this season. Duane is a native and poet of Topeka, Kansas. His poetry, histories, memoirs, fiction and children’s stories have appeared in a dozen countries in four languages and can be found in libraries on three continents. He has received prizes or recognition from the Kansas State Poetry Society, Kansas Authors Club, Writers Matrix, Ferguson Kansas History Book Award, Kansas Poets Trail, Kansas State Historical Society and he appears on the Map of Kansas Literature. We look forward to sharing Duane's poetry with our Meadowlark Readers.



There are also plans to work with Caryn Mirriam-Goldberg on a collection of poetry at year's end or possibly next year's beginning titled How Time Moves: New and Collected Poems. If you have not already read Caryn's recent interview at Written in Kansas, by Cheryl Unruh, please take a moment to do so now!


There is one more non-fiction read on our list of books to be published, tentatively titled, The Land that I Love: Rural America at Four Miles per Hour.

Lisa D. Stewart is a Kansas City-based writer and horsewoman who has combined her two passions in a forthcoming memoir about her 500-mile horseback ride through the Midwest, on her horse, Chief.

In 2012, Lisa Stewart, with her horse, War Chief Lobo, traced the gravel roads of Kansas and Missouri, alone, in the region where she first came of age—the mythical land of meth, guns, and religion.  Through the weeks in wind and sun and ceaseless sway of her horse’s walk, Lisa reconstituted the independent, fearless girl she once had been, and, more surprisingly, met women along the way who helped her explore a deeper question: What does it mean to be a woman in her middle years?  This journey celebrates those and other discoveries, in a land she found even more beautiful and profound than when she left it decades earlier. 

We invite you to read more about the book at www.lisadstewart.com.



We look forward to sharing our progress!