Tag Archives: Read Across MN

Guest Post for CMLE Reads Across MN: Minnesota 13: Stearns County’s Wet Wild Prohibition Days

Minnesota is the land of 10,000 lakes, and it also has many interesting books. In this series, we are sharing some of the books we like from Minnesota, or Minnesota authors.

We are mapping our literary journey around Minnesota, so you can see all the interesting places where our books are set. Follow our progress on our Google Map, accessible by clicking that link or searching for the title CMLE Reads Across Minnesota!

This is a guest post from CMLE member Violet Fox. Want to write a book review for us? Let us know

I’m always looking for a way to feel more connected with the history of central Minnesota, and I was delighted to stumble upon a very interesting part of our history—the illicit history of moonshine!

The 2016 documentary “Minnesota 13: From Grain to Glass” (directed by Kelly Nathe and Norah Shapiro) and the 2007 book Minnesota 13: Stearns County’s Wet Wild Prohibition Days (written by Elaine Davis) both tell the story of an apparently excellent version of moonshine known as Minnesota 13. This clear distilled whiskey, made with a variety of corn developed by the University of Minnesota for a shorter growing season, was well-known throughout Minnesota and beyond. One of the old timers in the documentary tells a joke about a sailor at a bar in Hong Kong who sees a sign that reads, “If we don’t have the liquor you ask for, your drinks are free all evening”; the sailor asks for Minnesota 13, and the bartender replies, “Do you want Bowlus or Holdingford?”

The documentary highlighted many historical organizations in the area, including the archives of the Stearns History Museum, the Holdingford Area Historical Society, and the Dassel History Center. Local archivists and historians told fascinating stories of people struggling through the Depression who saw distilling moonshine during Prohibition as a way to feed their families and keep their farms. Both the book and the movie take care to place the illicit liquor trade in its historical context. Central Minnesota is an island of German Catholics, and while many Minnesotan Lutherans were teetotalers, the German Catholics saw drinking (especially beer) as an integral part of their culture. Religious leaders in the area looked the other way as their parishioners broke the law; distilling moonshine may have been illegal, but it wasn’t immoral. In fact, the documentary claims that the monks of Saint John’s Abbey ran and owned one of the biggest stills in Stearns County!

The documentary goes on to tell the story of a modern micro-distillery (11wells, based in St. Paul) dedicated to bringing the original flavor back, from growing Minnesota 13 corn from heritage seeds to distilling a whiskey inspired by the moonshine (though they use oats, wheat, and barley in addition to the original corn mash). This book and film shine light on the bootlegging stories of this supposedly sleepy part of Minnesota; if you live in this area, you’ll enjoy knowing more about its fascinating history.

Guest Post for CMLE Reads Across MN: Land of 10,000 Loves: a History of Queer Minnesota

Minnesota is the land of 10,000 lakes, and it also has many interesting books. In this series, we are sharing some of the books we like from Minnesota, or Minnesota authors.

We are mapping our literary journey around Minnesota, so you can see all the interesting places where our books are set. Follow our progress on our Google Map, accessible by clicking that link or searching for the title CMLE Reads Across Minnesota!

This is a guest post from CMLE member Violet Fox. Want to write a book review for us? Let us know

Minnesota isn’t nationally recognized as a queer enclave like San Francisco or New York City, but its lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans, and queer history is just as fascinating. Drawing on the extensive Tretter Collection at the University of Minnesota, previous Tretter Collection Assistant Curator Stewart Van Cleve wrote Land of 10,000 Loves: a History of Queer Minnesota. The 2012 book is filled with stories of devotion and passion and bravery in the face of hatred and forced invisibility, including the following anecdotes:

  • Anti-gay activist Anita Bryant, of the “Save Our Children” (that is, from homosexuality) campaign, famously had a cream pie thrown in her face in 1977. That pie thrower: Minnesota gay rights activist Thom Higgins. The political pie-ing was a turning point in the gay rights movement.
  • The Transsexual Research Project at the University of Minnesota was one of the first in the nation to dedicate substantial resources to providing sex-reassignment surgery and to study its effectiveness.
  • Here in central Minnesota, a major legal case involved Sharon Kowalski of St. Cloud who lived with her partner in 1983 when she was physically and intellectually disabled in a car accident. Courts initially gave Kowalski’s parents guardianship, but after greater publicity and the involvement of LGBTQ advocacy groups, judges listened to Kowalski’s wishes and she was allowed to live with her partner, Karen Thompson.
  • In 1970, two men submitted the first same-sex marriage application in U.S. history at the Minneapolis City Hall, which was immediately rejected. One of those men, Michael McConnell, was later hired as a head of cataloging at the University of Minnesota Libraries St. Paul Campus, but before he began working there, the university regents withdrew the offer based on “his personal conduct”—they objected to his marriage license application with another man. He sued and won his discrimination case against the U. McConnell was later hired by Hennepin County Library, retiring after 37 years.

The majority of the entries are centered on the history of white gay men in the Twin Cities area because those are the people who have the most resources within the LGBTQ community and therefore are able to maintain the most well-documented histories; the materials in the Tretter collection reflect that bias. I appreciated the author’s acknowledgement of this and efforts to focus on less well-documented histories, like that of trans people and LGBTQ people of color. It’s astonishing that he was able to recover so many stories, given that queer people often communicated among themselves via only word of mouth or in code, since their safety was often at risk from a hostile society.

Van Cleve also takes care to recognize the changing terminology in the past 150 years of queer history, discussing how, for example, while berdache was a commonly accepted term (among settlers) that French explorers used to describe Native Americans who were born male but identified and accepted as females, Native American scholars and activists have rejected the term as being derogatory and now prefer their own terminology such as Two Spirit or tribe-specific terms.

Dip into the intriguing stories in Land of 10,000 Loves, or even better, take a queer history-focused walking tour with the author via the Minnesota Historical Society tours, and learn more about the hidden stories of Minnesota!

Guest Post for CMLE Reads Across MN: Gratia Countryman

Minnesota is the land of 10,000 lakes, and it also has many interesting books. In this series, we are sharing some of the books we like from Minnesota, or Minnesota authors.

We are mapping our literary journey around Minnesota, so you can see all the interesting places where our books are set. Follow our progress on our Google Map, accessible by clicking that link or searching for the title CMLE Reads Across Minnesota!

This is a guest post from CMLE member Violet Fox. Want to write a book review for us? Let us know!

If you’re a library worker in Minnesota, you definitely need to know about Gratia Alta Countryman! Gratia Countryman: Her Life, Her Loves and Her Library by Jane Pejsa, is a biography based on Countryman’s correspondence, effectively conveying the dynamism of this impressive woman.

The biography is also a great way to learn more about Minnesota history, as Pejsa takes care to provide context about the significance of Countryman’s actions. Gratia’s father took a chance on settling the family in Nininger, a heavily-marketed “dream city” whose founders hoped would become a regional hub and maybe even state capital. The Panic of 1857 ended this dream and Gratia’s family struggled, though Gratia’s parents worked hard to provide opportunities for their children. Eventually Countryman attended the University of Minnesota, where she and friends founded “Company Q,” a military drill team for women, after objecting to the fact that the U didn’t offer any options for physical education or sports for women.

Based on her initiative at the U, Countryman was hired in 1889 as a library assistant for the brand-new Minneapolis Public Library. Her work creating and organizing the library’s catalog earned her a place as Assistant Librarian, and in 1904 she was voted in by the library board to the position of chief Librarian. She was the third Librarian of the Minneapolis Public Library and the first woman to head a major library. Her salary was one third less than her predecessor, reflecting the qualms of the board in promoting a woman to such a high position.

In her work she found a common mindset with T.B. Walker, founder of the Walker Art Center and president of the Minneapolis Public Library Board, as they both believed that the library should not be reserved only for “serious intellectuals” but should look to serve the common citizenry. Her efforts in expanding library services included supporting reading rooms in places where destitute people congregated as well as placing small circulating collections of books in businesses throughout the metropolitan area, to encourage workers to read. Countryman was well-respected locally and nationally as an effective leader in her long tenure as head of the library, from 1904-1936; she served as president of the American Library Association in 1934 and received the first honorary degree awarded to a woman by the University of Minnesota.

Read the Pejsa biography to learn more about the “library mafia” that Countryman established in library leadership (she relied heavily on her circle of friends to fill open roles), as well as her close relationships with women and her very sweet relationship with her adopted son. And follow along as “Gratia” tweets about Minnesota library history at her new Twitter account @MnLibHistory!

CMLE Reads Across MN: Minnesota’s Own

Minnesota’s Own: Preserving our Grand Homes, by Larry Millett

Minnesota is the land of 10,000 lakes, and it also has many interesting books. In this series, we are sharing some of the books we like from Minnesota, or Minnesota authors.

We are mapping our literary journey around Minnesota, so you can see all the interesting places where our books are set. Follow our progress on our Google Map, accessible by clicking that link or searching for the title CMLE Reads Across Minnesota! (We are locating this book in Duluth, for the arbitrary reason that I’ve been to Glensheen, which is the concluding chapter of this book.)

One of the most fun things about this series is discovering some of the fun new Minnesota books I didn’t know about; so thank you to everyone who is sending in suggestions!! This week’s book is another suggestion from a library person, and it is really fun! Post suggestions below, or email them in to us.

I love to look at old houses, and of course it’s always fun to see huge, beautiful homes we will never own but are important parts of the culture of an area. This book looks at 22 houses – not necessarily  the “best” in the state (how could you even decide that?) but definitely among the best of mansions you can see in Minnesota.

Each house is a separate chapter, loaded with beautiful photos of the interior and exteriors. There is information about the history of the house, how it was built, and the families who lived in the homes.

Many are located in Minneapolis, St. Paul, or areas around them. The David Park House in Bemidji is featured, along with the George Draper Dayton House in Worthington, Quarry Hill in Rochester, and the William Windom/Abner Hodgins House in Winona.

I definitely enjoyed reading the final chapter, on Glensheen in Duluth. At the 2016 MLA, we were fortunate to have a private event at the lovely Glensheen – my first visit. If you were there, you remember how nice that was; and if you have visited it at other times, you know how lovely the house is.  And if you have not yet had a chance to go – do it!

You may not be able to tour all these homes, but you can enjoy reading this book and seeing how lovely they are! (And, at this time of year, I feel so grateful to not have to pay to heat these huge spaces! Reading about it is much easier and more fun.)

Description from Amazon:

“Stripped of its original Tiffany light fixtures, lamps, and stained-glass panels, a Lowry Hill mansion was returned to its original grandeur after an owner bought back many of these furnishings. A family in Winona has spent three decades slowly uncovering a landmark Victorian’s hidden beauty. Minneapolis graphic designers have meticulously restored a Frank Lloyd Wright gem, even fabricating never-before-built cabinets, furniture, and rugs Wright originally designed for the home.

In Lost Twin Cities and Once There Were Castles, Larry Millett retrieved Twin Cities architecture vanished in time, giving us a view into buildings and homes lost to demolition, accident, and neglect. In Minnesota’s Own, he and photographer Matt Schmitt invite us into homes from across the state that have been lovingly preserved, saved so that they can remain jewels among the state’s living architecture.

From Duluth to Bemidji, Red Wing to the Twin Cities, Millett and Schmitt travel throughout Minnesota, highlighting homes designed by architects such as Edwin Lundie, Frank Lloyd Wright, and William Purcell and George Elmslie and with sumptuous ornamentation by local craftspeople including interior decorator John Bradstreet and woodcarver Johannes Kirchmayer. Homes originally owned by Daytons, Hills, and Ramseys find themselves in new hands that have taken great care in their upkeep and preservation.

Minnesota’s Own welcomes readers into twenty-two of these homes through over two hundred color photographs and Millett’s captivating stories of their construction, original owners, and restorations.”

CMLE Reads Across MN: The Vanishing

Minnesota is the land of 10,000 lakes, and it also has many interesting books. In this series, we are sharing some of the books we like from Minnesota, or Minnesota authors.

We are mapping our literary journey around Minnesota, so you can see all the interesting places where our books are set. Follow our progress on our Google Map, accessible by clicking that link or searching for the title CMLE Reads Across Minnesota!

One of the most fun things about this series is discovering some of the fun new Minnesota books I didn’t know about; so thank you to everyone who is sending in suggestions!!

The Vanishing, by Wendy Webb
This week’s book is one of several by Minnesota author Wendy Webb, all in the “spooky country house” gothic genre. As the days are getting shorter, and the cold Minnesota nights are long and dark, it’s fun to have a spooky story set here in northern Minnesota!

From Amazon: “Recently widowed and rendered penniless by her Ponzi-scheming husband, Julia Bishop is eager to start anew. So when a stranger appears on her doorstep with a job offer, she finds herself accepting the mysterious yet unique position: caretaker to his mother, Amaris Sinclair, the famous and rather eccentric horror novelist whom Julia has always admired . . . and who the world believes is dead.

When she arrives at the Sinclairs’ enormous estate on Lake Superior, Julia begins to suspect that there may be sinister undercurrents to her “too-good-to-be-true” position. As Julia delves into the reasons of why Amaris chose to abandon her successful writing career and withdraw from the public eye, her search leads to unsettling connections to her own family tree, making her wonder why she really was invited to Havenwood in the first place, and what monstrous secrets are still held prisoner within its walls.”

If you like this story (and I’m not finished with it yet – so don’t tell me how it ends!), Webb has a few other books in the same genre that also sound like fun to read.

If scary stories, or the idea of scary stories, may be your new book reading interest, be sure you check out our book group podcast episode on the Horror genre. We have a giggling fun time talking about podcasts, fanfic, and books that are all part of the happily-spine-tingling genre!