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Upon graduation from Kewanee High School in May 1960, I was a very sheltered young girl from a small town. I filled my three white, hard-sided Samsonite pieces of luggage with dreams and headed off to Iowa City to begin my nursing career. The Sixties Decade would be a turbulent ride. Sometime in 2017 I wrote the following email to my five children: "It's a World gone mad you say? I will tell you that I have seen it all before. Watts, Chicago 7, Kent State shootings, and the Black Panthers breaking into surgery while dad took bullets out of their guy. They demanded he hand them over as he…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Upon graduation from Kewanee High School in May 1960, I was a very sheltered young girl from a small town. I filled my three white, hard-sided Samsonite pieces of luggage with dreams and headed off to Iowa City to begin my nursing career. The Sixties Decade would be a turbulent ride. Sometime in 2017 I wrote the following email to my five children: "It's a World gone mad you say? I will tell you that I have seen it all before. Watts, Chicago 7, Kent State shootings, and the Black Panthers breaking into surgery while dad took bullets out of their guy. They demanded he hand them over as he pulled from the wound. Martin Luther King's assassination was followed by Bobby Kennedy's as we sat on the edge of our chairs listening to the daily Vietnam body count...." Their history is not my history. Mine began at the end of the 19th Century with the arrival of my seven-year-old grandfather on a ship from England. Theirs began at the time when the United States went to war in Vietnam and protests began. Civil Rights. Women's Rights. Political Upheaval. This memoir is but a small window of reflections over several decades. It is not about politics or protests. It is about the life of a small-town girl growing up very fast.
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Autorenporträt
Karen Jones Porter, born on St. Patrick's Day, 1942, grew up in the small, rural town of Kewanee, Illinois. Graduating from the University of Iowa with a BSN in Nursing in 1965, she and her surgeon husband, moved their young growing family twelve times before making their home in Twin Falls, Idaho. A young Vietnam flight surgeon's wife at the time of the Tet Offensive 1968, she returned to Kewanee with two toddlers to await his return a year later.Owner of a Travel Agency and Middle Fork Rapid Transit (a whitewater rafting company) she joined the Chamber of Commerce and was elected to its board becoming Vice President. She also served as the President of the Twin Falls Heart Association and on the Board of the Idaho State Board of the American Heart Association.Mother of five, Yaya to ten, she resides with her husband of sixty years in Boise, Idaho and Los Barriles, BCS, Mexico.