Everything I Know Came from the Bunkhouse

by Lois Hodgson


Formats

Softcover
$14.49
Softcover
$14.49

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 8/7/2008

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 5x8
Page Count : 216
ISBN : 9781434384966

About the Book

Here’s to Agnes and Loy,     

 

whose lives spanned the era of joy

 

from Old Barney to Leonard Nimoy.

 

 

These stories were written about a time that was, a family that was, and a valley that still is. The winters are still harsh and, though the roads are greatly improved since the time in these stories, they have never been paved. There is no sense in washing your car if you live out in Benewah. After a trip out of the valley behind a logging truck it will just be covered with dirt again. The eight-grade school was closed years ago and, unlike when I was attending school, a bus joggles out from St. Maries to pick up the students every day. Benewah students expect more “snow days” than the kids living in Town. The women’s club is going strong and residents formed a Benewah Valley Association that purchased the old school to be used as a community building. They sponsor many interesting activities each year to raise money for maintenance and improvements on their beloved building.

            I wrote the first story for my granddaughter and found I liked writing, especially  about that time and those remarkable pioneers. If I don’t tell their story I feel it will be as lost as if it had never been.          

                                                                                                       Lois Hodgson


About the Author

Lois Hodgson loved reading from an early age and as a teenager gleefully rhymed almost everything that came out of her mouth.  Some of those rhymes were written down on pieces of paper and stuffed in a dresser drawer. She always wanted to be a writer and a painter but thought to be either one of those things, a person must be especially gifted from god. Any way, soon enough, life got in the way of persuing them as she fell in love with a returning WWII soldier that she met the first day of college and in 1949 they were married. She worked at jobs to supplement the barely adequate VA allotment while he got his masters degree. In a scant sixteen months they produced two fine boys. They moved to Filer, in southern Idaho, where he taught school and they added a baby girl to their family. Eighteen years passed before she had the opportunity to resume her college education. She and her eldest son, Kevin, started attending classes at Twin Falls Jr. College in 1968 and they graduated together with AA degrees with in 1970. It was a year later when her husband died and twenty years passed before she had the opportunity to go back to college again.

            In 1992 she took both writing and painting at Washington State University and graduated in fine arts in 1995. Her writing instructor told her she was a writer and it was there in writing class that she wrote the prologue to this book. She joined a critiquing  group called Writers Bloc and continued to write stories of her early childhood. One of the stories “The Morning From Hell” was awarded an Honorable mention from Writers Digest in their 73rd annual writing competition.