Books / My Oregon II

 

Full name:

My Oregon II.

Publisher: AO Creative, Eugene, Ore.

To be released: August 2009.

ISBN: 978-1-61539-438-8


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Among the stories


Oregon at 150

Steens Mountain

Naming our rain

Sprummertime

Yachats Big Band

Hayworth Saddle

Loving Eugene, kind of

Oregon in limericks

The fish packer

Elk hunter returneth

Climbing South Sister

My first “marathan”

The exploding whale

Bill Hayward

The Olympic Trials

Don’t tell me the score

Coach Shakespeare

Autzen’s Sunshine

Snip City

Paying it forward

Queen of the “Y”

Laughing off death

Mother at the cemetery

The last wish

King of the Siuslaw

Tears of Darth Vader

Shooting star

Professor Rea

Before the lake freezes

It’s a Wonderful Life

Fathers and sons

Easy Co. reunion

Night on the beach

Poison Oak

Letters to Cade

Life at 55

The Veil


OVERVIEW:

A companion collection to Welch’s 2005 book, My Oregon: 108 Register-Guard columns of his that were published from 2005 through 2009.


CHAPTERS:

  1. 1.State of Mine. 2. Seasons & weather. 3. Coast & country. 4. Where we live. 5. Out & about. 6. Looking back. 7. Games of life. 8. Olympic Trials. 9. Inspiration. 10. Losses. 11. Writers & actors. 12. Ties that bind. 13. Close to home.


DAVE FROHNMAYER former UO president:

“Bob Welch is refreshingly witty and writes without the egotism that mars the efforts of so many others.  He never fails, with grace and skill, to help the reader find the larger lesson.”


JAN ELIOT syndicated cartoonist:

“I love Welch's writing. It's accessible, authentic, warm. He has genuine empathy for his subjects. And the ability, perhaps more important than the desire, to show us the extraordinary in the seemingly ordinary people and events around us. It's a noble pursuit, and I admire him for it.”


KENNY MOORE author, Olympian:

“Shaped by Yachats fogs and treacherous geldings; half Duck, half Beaver, Welch seizes us with riveting analogies and enrapturing energy. Equal to the complexity of the world, he mulls, he gnaws, he sorts, he sees the way ahead. Three times a week, he escorts us from what we thought the trivial to the transfigured.”


ED COLEMAN UO English professor emeritus:

“Rich and provocative, evoking laughter and tears.”


DORCAS SMUCKER columnist, author:

“Welch’s work is outstanding for what it is not: sensational, wordy, one-sided; and for what it is: unpretentious, clear, honest, with just enough personal details to show us that he is deeply invested here.”


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