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The author's father was gone selling hogs to market when her mother fell into an old abandoned well on a secluded farm in Braham, Minnesota. The year was 1951, and they had no phone. As a 5-year-old, Barbara Sellers watched as her 8-year-old and 9-year-old brothers performed a miraculous rescue. In another short story, as a young, single lady when Sellers first moved to Tacoma, Washington, she met serial killer Ted Bundy. Several years later, after she went through a divorce and started dating again, she met Gary Ridgway, the Green River killer. After being in a vehicle with two of the worst…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
The author's father was gone selling hogs to market when her mother fell into an old abandoned well on a secluded farm in Braham, Minnesota. The year was 1951, and they had no phone. As a 5-year-old, Barbara Sellers watched as her 8-year-old and 9-year-old brothers performed a miraculous rescue. In another short story, as a young, single lady when Sellers first moved to Tacoma, Washington, she met serial killer Ted Bundy. Several years later, after she went through a divorce and started dating again, she met Gary Ridgway, the Green River killer. After being in a vehicle with two of the worst serial killers in American history, how was she able to survive unharmed? When the author started her first full-time jobs in Tacoma, she got hired twice and fired twice in one hour. How did she do that? These three true short stories are included in Sellers's second book That's Life in Poetry and Short Stories. If you read her first book, Get Tough or Die: Why I Forgave My Parents for My Abusive Childhood, you will want to read this book, too. Some of her 10 short stories also contain belly-laughing humor. For poetry lovers out there, the first half of Sellers's new book includes love poems, religious poems, family poems, character sketches, and more. Each section is introduced with photos from the author's life.
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Autorenporträt
Barbara Sellers was the sixth born in a family of 14-seven girls and seven boys-and grew up on a 400-acre farm in Glenwood, Minnesota. Sellers attended Glenwood Public School from first through 12th grade and credits her grandmother, Marian Brewster, for encouraging her to write. At large family gatherings, Grandmother Brewster would read the comical segments of Sellers's letters aloud to everyone's amusement and cheer. Two days after graduating from high school, Sellers left the farm with her "Best Typist of the Year" award and one weekend suitcase half filled with books. When she arrived in St. Paul, she only had $4.16, but a friend was kind enough to let her stay with them until she got a job with Minnesota State Parks. A few years later, Sellers moved to Tacoma, Washington, to escape snow and cold weather. There she worked as a Girl Friday at Richard's Commercial Photography Studio. About a year later, she met her first husband at Tacoma Roller Bowl when he tripped in front of her, and she fell on top of him. He was in the U.S. Navy, so their lives were transported across the states from San Diego, California; Norfolk, Virginia.; Bath, Maine; Portsmouth, Rhode Island; Jacksonville, Florida; Bothell and Tacoma, Washington. After Barbara became a single parent, she graduated from the University of Puget Sound with a Bachelor's in English-Writing (Journalism). She then worked at the Army post for 27 years, mostly in the Public Affairs Office as a reporter, photojournalist, and editor of the Northwest Guardian newspaper. While there, Barbara won 32 individual and staff journalism awards, including the Thomas Jefferson Award twice for Best Metropolitan-sized newspaper in all branches of the military. Barbara is also a 32-year member of Toastmasters International and won 30 speech competitions.Since she retired in May 2009, Barbara was in a TV commercial for DealDash and wrote her first book, Get Tough or Die: Why I Forgave My Parents for My Abusive Childhood.