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  • January notes from Purple Feather Press – Jan 15, 2026

    closeup of purple sage flower and leaves

    In spite of everything…

    I originally started this newsletter on Dec 28, intending to send it out on January 2, 2026, as a welcome to the new year letter… but then all sorts of life happened. So here it is, the middle of January, and I know I’m not the only one who feels pummeled by the atrocities in the daily news and the stresses of family and work life.

    I have drafted at least 5 different versions of this newsletter over the past two weeks, trying to find a way to say that “in the midst of it all, I have to keep looking for the good.”

    Like many, (but apparently not enough), I read Anne Frank, The Diary of a Young Girl while in junior high school. But I also did a lot of community theatre during my teens, and one of the plays we did at the Globe of the Great Southwest was “The Diary of Anne Frank” in November 1994, 31 years ago now. I played Anne’s sister, Margot, alongside my mother Terri playing their mother, Edith Frank. Our director, Lynn, was a wonderful librarian in her day job, and she guided the cast and crew through the incredible heart-wrenching storytelling of bringing a young girl’s written diary from the early 1940’s to the stage in West Texas, 50 years after Anne Frank and most of her family died due to the horrors of the Holocaust in WWII.

    We tried our best to bring such a dramatic piece of history to life on that stage every night, and I know it impacted everyone who worked that show. It is a stage play based on a young girl’s written diary, words she never expected the world to read, much less perform. Anne, scared and locked in an attic in an attempt to hide from the Nazis who were going door-to-door to take people from their homes and killing millions, was writing her hopes and fears in the only outlet afforded to her at the time.

    The current administration promised such torture, repeating the atrocity of Nazi Germany not even a century ago. And the people who voted for it are complicit in the horrors we see each day in the news – decimating societal supports like healthcare and jobs, masked “enforcers” abducting humans from their homes and jobs, beating people, harming children, and killing people in plain sight.

    This is not a stage play, this is not an attempt to bring history to life in order to learn from it and shun it. This president and his administration are killing people and they want to kill more.

    And every day it’s terrifying. Each day dawns with more fear and tears and wondering who will stop them, how will we stop them, and what can we do to stop them? This is what our country fought against, 80+ years ago.

    My heart and donations go out to the communities who are dealing with those fascist boots on the ground, kicking their doors in, breaking their windows, slamming citizens – HUMANS – to the ground. Because I know, from history, that they won’t stop there, they will keep going until they are stopped. Any one of us could be killed because a weak man feels he has been disrespected by a person who refuses to bend to their perceived authority, by a person who is trained to de-escalate, by a person who is scared and fighting to survive. It’s a scenario too many people, especially women, have dealt with over the centuries.

    It’s exhausting living through this repetition of horrible history knowing that we could do better for our communities by creating universal health care and universal education. That we could be better humans to each other, providing meals and shelter to those who need it instead of creating more starving and more unhoused.

    To me, it’s basic humanity. Apparently some people need more lessons in how to be better humans. Apparently some people don’t actually believe in the teachings of their religion they proclaim so loudly. Jesus loves the little children, but only in a nursery rhyme?

    I’ll keep editing and working with authors and creators who want to try to make a difference in the world by sharing their stories, writing the history that needs to be told, creating the art that depicts the range of human experiences and emotions. I’m not worried about losing a potential audience, because if anything, the people who voted for a rapist felon and support the atrocities that ICE and “Homeland Security” are doing are not reading anything that we produce anyway. They’re busy destroying lives, not helping communities and neighbors.

    It can be angering, depressing, frustrating, and exhausting fighting against these evils. But we have to keep going, for ourselves, and for others. And we have to keep writing and creating to share the stories of what is happening now, what has happened in the past, and guides to find and do and be better humans so that others can find some hope, and that others may learn from our mistakes and navigate a better world for all.

    As Anne said on July 15th, 1944: “It’s really a wonder that I haven’t dropped all my ideals, because they seem so absurd and impossible to carry out. Yet I keep them, because in spite of everything I still believe that people are really good at heart. I simply can’t build up my hopes on a foundation consisting of confusion, misery, and death. I see the world gradually being turned into a wilderness, I hear the ever approaching thunder, which will destroy us too, I can feel the sufferings of millions and yet, if I look up into the heavens, I think that it will all come right, that this cruelty too will end, and that peace and tranquillity will return again.”


    Goodbye to an Author

    As 2025 drew to a close on the calendar, I received news that one of our authors had passed away after his long illness. I enjoyed working with Bill Martin and his working partner and co-author Christine Gorychka on their book Occasional Papers: Teaching Writing in a Way That Students Embrace Enthusiastically over the past two years.

    Bill Martin spent his career as an English teacher and he and Chris wanted to share their knowledge and experience with other teachers so they created a wonderfully structured workbook for other teachers to use in the classroom. Their book, Occasional Papers, is a perfect guide to engage students with everyday writing and avoids the impact of the current trend of AI- or LLM- “assisted” writing, so teachers know the writing is real and personal. Bill provided some deeply fascinating insights and suggestions on their edits. It’s hard news no matter when you hear it, and I send my condolences to his family and to Chris.

    Green and blue cover for "Occasional Papers" book

    Constant reminders of why I do what I do:

    I believe that creating is one of the fundamental things about being hum

    an, and creating an independent book publishing business allows me to help other people create their own things to share with the world. It’s fundamental to being human, to being alive on this planet, despite the people yelling that we should sit down and stop rocking their boats of full of abuses and false power.

    Rock the boats. Be radicalized against the harms perpetuated by those who are angry and mean. Look for the blossoming flowers and people handing out food to those protesting for freedoms despite their own personal risk of being beaten or abducted. Look for the words that inspire you to take a stand against the rapists, the fascists, the assholes who steal and enslave and demand more.

    By being human, you are part of the community of creatures on this one planet that we call home. Why, oh why, would anyone want to spend time starving or harming anyone else? With your one life, what will you do? Destroy and cause damage? Or create and share?

    I’m looking at the projects I’m working on, the people I work with, the people who passed this past year, and I’m making sure I’m searching for and sharing the things that can make a difference to someone. Sometimes the receiving audience may only be one or two people, but I know I can keep trying to share the good and trying to be better at being human.


    A different historical journal point-of-view book

    Some of the books we have published include history books, and My Summer Vacation: The Victorio Campaign Journal of Robert Grierson 1880 is a diary/journal from a young man who followed his father, a Civil War veteran, into West Texas in the summer of 1880.

    The reason anyone keeps a diary or journal is to document daily life, and historically people jotted down their thoughts and feelings the way some people use social media or video platforms now. But having a written record from 80+ years ago, such as Anne Frank, or 145 years ago, such as Robert Grierson, allows us to learn from their first hand accounts of what was going on.

    Book cover with images of two men over a painting of Buffalo Soldiers fighting and the mountains near Fort Davis, Texas with the title My Summer Vacation: The Victorio Campaign Journal of Robert Grierson 1880 by Lawrence John Francell

    If you’ve been writing your own daily life – the struggles, triumphs, fears, and hopes that you experience – someone may read those words at some point in the future and learn from them. Or they may not! You may write for your own records, never intending to share, just writing as a form of therapy for yourself. But if there are stories you want to share, consider writing those down and creating your own book. Even just family stories need to be told to the family.


    You’re welcome to purchase via ​https://bookshop.org/shop/PurpleFeatherPress​ or review what we have on our website at ​PurpleFeatherPress.com ​

    I plan, and hope, to get this newsletter routine, but since I refuse to use funnels or icky marketing techniques, I don’t yet know if you’ll see the next newsletter in February or March! Either way, look out for your neighbors, no matter their skin color or religion, and Make Good Trouble.


    https://purple-feather-press.kit.com/posts/january-notes-from-purple-feather-press-jan-15-2026

  • Unbinding a book and end of year wrap up

    December 1, 2025Purple Feather Press

    Completed projects – so far

    It was a busy year for Purple Feather Press, and we’re still working on more to come.

    We helped author and Mitigation University founder Victoria Rusk re-launch her first book The Handbook for Mitigation as well as the Spanish translation version, El Manual para Mitigación. These are both “a practical guide for community around a criminal case” – and both are available to order at bookstores nationwide!

    We also worked with two authors who took their years of experience as teachers in a classroom to create a wonderfully detailed workbook to help other teachers keep their students engaged in writing. Bill Martin and Christine Gorychka have Teaching Writing in a Way That Students Embrace Enthusiastically available to order at bookstores nationwide!

    Available now!

    Unbinding a book

    I spent lunch hours, any free time, and any classes I could skip in the library when I was in junior high school, more content to shelve and sort titles according to the Dewey Decimal System than be around other people. One of the best librarians was a wonderfully kind woman whom I got to work with twice in my life, first with the books and several years later with aviation history at a museum. The school was slowly transitioning to a digital checkout system with a scanner and bar codes on books, and she let me enter titles and ISBNs even handle checking out other students.

    She taught me how to put the plastic jackets on certain books and magazines so they wouldn’t get as messed up from all the teenage readers flipping through them. And she taught me how to repair and rebind books that had been damaged. It’s a sacred thing, to repair these tomes of knowledge and information.

    Now here I am, decades past that junior high library and basic ability to repair or even create books, and one of my projects was to unbind a book! It gave me pause, but I knew I could do it without damaging the pages or cover, to the best of my ability.

    Sometimes, taking things apart, deconstructing how they were built in the first place, allows us to learn how to build or create something new.

    Open book with white gloved hand holding jewelr scraping tool to pull apart pages gently

    This book was a history project from over 30 years ago, and it’s now been fully scanned so it can be reprinted and updated for a new generation of readers.

    As a very small, independent publishing company, I realize every day how all the skills I’ve learned along the way impact the work I do now. I may not meet the “standards” of certain industries – book sales and data that apply to publishers that have hundreds of books and employees are vastly different than what we can achieve here, and marketing that involves videos or ai is a hard “NO” from me – but the ability to help craft good stories and create good works is still vital to this business.

    Along with the books, which includes cover design work, editing, layout, alignment, and sending it all to the printers, I’ve also been working on research for a few different genealogy projects, website and brochures for small businesses, and design work for a museum and a regional historical group. It’s all fascinating stuff and I’m loving all of it! And it all lets me be creative and support other small businesses, organizations, and authors as they create their things to share with the world.

    Into 2026 we go…

    Upcoming projects include a memoir, another couple of history books, two genealogy books, hopefully a script, more museum display design/content, and a book about mediation.

    See you next year!

    Sincerely,

    Heather – Purple Feather Press

  • Back to School with Occasional Papers

    Green and blue cover for "Occasional Papers" book

    Back to School with Occasional Papers: Teaching Writing in a Way That Students Embrace Enthusiastically

    There used to be a nostalgia for back to school, with fall leaves drifting down and shiny apples on teachers desks as images stamped into our memories of decades past. Now, with computers the size of index cards and artificial systems culling millions of purloined books and papers, educators have more to contend with than they ever thought possible when they were students themselves.

    Teachers teach because they see the need to help share knowledge or because they feel the drive to help shape a better, more educated, future for new generations. But how does a teacher know their students are engaged in this learning, and how do they know the students are understanding any of the discussion?

    Occasional Papers: Teaching Writing in a Way That Students Embrace Enthusiastically offers an excellent approach to this quandary.

    Written by teachers, for teachers

    Bill Martin and Christine Gorychka bring their years of classroom experience teaching English and writing to high school and college age students to this book. Every teacher knows that engagement is more than just repeating facts, it’s about understanding and application.

    This comprehensive workbook provides reflective questions, different ways to use Occasional Papers, samples and examples, and guides for classroom application.

    Purchase your copy at one of the following sites today!

    Purple Feather Press is proud of the work that authors Bill Martin and Christine Gorychka put in to writing, revising, editing, and now publishing their creative workbook about Occasional Papers, so they can help teachers everywhere teach writing in a way that students can embrace enthusiastically!

  • Now Available – My Summer Vacation

    Announcing: “My Summer Vacation: The Victorio Campaign Journal of Robert Grierson 1880” by Lawrence John Francell is now available!

    Author Larry Francell takes you through Fort Davis, Texas and beyond in his latest history book, a comprehensive look at what happened during the Victorio Campaign in the summer of 1880 with Col. Benjamin Grierson and his son Robert Grierson.

    “Deeming it my duty, I camped directly in their line of march [the Apache Chief Victorio and his band], and at the only water for a long distance north. I had with me only First Lieutenant William H. Beck, Tenth Cavalry, one non-commissioned officer, five privates – two of whom were teamsters – and my son Robert K. Grierson, who, just through high school, was out in search of adventure and suddenly found it.”

    Thus, Colonel Benjamin Henry Grierson, Tenth Cavalry, describes the stand he made at Rattlesnake Springs in July 1880 during that summer’s campaign. Accompanying his father was son Robert, a bright, articulate young man who, in search of adventure, documented that summer with his father chasing Victorio through West Texas.

    During the Victorio Campaign in 1880, Colonel Grierson was tasked with pursuing the Apache Victorio and his Apache warriors across West Texas, Mexico, and New Mexico. This book covers the history of the campaign from several viewpoints including Fort Davis historians Barry Scobee and Larry Francell, Colonel Grierson’s own report to the Secretary of War, the field journal of his son, Robert Grierson, as he accompanied his father and the troops, as well as a description of the campaign by First Sergeant John F. Casey.

    The first-hand account of Robert Grierson, written from July 1880 to September 1, 1880, includes the day-to-day travels and interactions along the trails and canyons through Fort Davis and the Chihuahuan Desert region, the Sierra Diablo Mountains, and the Guadalupe Mountains. He documented everything: the desert sights, hunting expeditions, sleeping arrangements, travel companions, weather conditions, trail meals, the newspapers and books he was reading, and letters he wrote to his friends and family back home in Jacksonville, Illinois.  

    This account of a young man on his search for adventure is truly a fascinating look at some of the real people during a period of United States history that is sometimes swept up like the desert sands in a summer storm.       

    Larry Francell is an author and historian living in Fort Davis, Texas. His other books about the region include: Fort Lancaster: Texas Frontier Sentinel; Planning for the Move of a Museum Collection; How Indian Emily Saved Fort Davis; What’s in a Name: Why Fort Davis Was Named for Jefferson Davis and Why the Name Was Never Changed; Amid Shot and Shell of a Hundred Battlefields: The Life of Samuel Percival Greene;The Scenic Loop: Davis Mountains State Park Highway, plus numerous articles on local history and museum operations.  

    Books can be purchased in local stores such as Javelinas & Hollyhocks, The Paint Box, and the Fort Davis Historical Society. Books can also be purchased through PurpleFeatherPress.comBookshop.org/shop/PurpleFeatherPressBarnesAndNoble.com, and Amazon.com.