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“People think he's a misfit, no question, but they like the energetic omnipresence of the raconteur-about-town
who spouts nonsense engagingly…
”

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Buy Now (from Amazon)
$16.00 (paperback)
$25.00 (hardcover)
$9.00 (e-book)

Redbat Books Pacific Northwest Writers Series

First Edition: September 5, 2017
ISBN 978-0-9971549-5-5
 
Distributor: Ingram
Trade Paper
338 pages
6" x 9"

Also available:
Hardcover: ISBN 978-1-946970-99-2
E-book: ISBN 978-1-946970-00-8

Published by 
redbat books
La Grande, OR

​Book Design by redbat design
BOOKSTORE ORDERS—please click here
Distributed through Ingram. Also available online through Amazon and Barnes & Noble.

Fair Shine

A Novel by Llawren Bird
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Doddson Kooper-Boon doesn’t see himself as a hero, but he does consider himself a genius at a few things: he can collect junk and create bricolage sculpture, bum free coffee and live in his defunct car. He’s experienced at these tasks; he’s been an outsider for thirty years. People think he's a misfit, no question, but they like the energetic omnipresence of the raconteur-about-town who spouts nonsense engagingly. A few of them worry about him, though.
 
What is his problem? Doddson Kooper-Boon doesn’t have one, until he finds a random object on a bench and decides it won’t work in his current project. This singular “find” initiates a direct confrontation with Boon's long-held view that freedom to be creative is all he needs. Like it or not, apparently he needs substantive relationships, even with those who are considered mainstream, and they line up one by one, grab Boon by a reluctant ear, and drag him into a life review session that won’t quit. He’s game, he’s always game, but he’s getting too old for radical change. He likes to live in the present, something he’s always prided himself in being really accomplished at doing, but the past is a double bass and the future is a blaring trumpet. Boon likes people; he likes everybody, and he has to appreciate the people playing these instruments. They, too, are artists! It’s all about art.
 
However… Well, Boon is Boon, and though he thinks the suppression of eccentricity translates, always, as mediocrity, he dons his coping mechanisms, which are long on humor and short on propriety, and tries to conjure up a new mix for himself. He adds liberal doses of practical wisdom and bright ideas as they come along, and moves forward without too many threatening compromises. But how far can the rangy, fifty year-old Boon go on adrenalin and spontaneity? Boon isn't lazy in mind, body or spirit and he doesn’t lack courage. What we wonder is this: does he know what he’s doing with the rest of his life? It’s a hard call to make, especially for Boon.

CLICK HERE TO READ A SAMPLE


About the Author

Llawren Bird hesitates when asked, “Where are you from; what do you do?” Though she now lives in the rural Pacific Northwest, she was born in Kansas, spent her early years on the reservation in North Dakota, graduated from high school in eastern Montana and attended college and university in Colorado. She’s worked in Denver, Los Angeles, Guadalajara, and in many smaller, found communities. Her background extends from agriculture to advertising, college teaching  and volunteering on behalf of the disenfranchised. A generalist, she moves through shifting paradigms as a contemporary and writes it down, telling the truth as she finds it in fiction, and only in fiction. She wouldn’t write a memoir if you paid her. 

Photo by Douglas E. Young
​
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JANUARY 2021:
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