MARCH 2021 /March2022

 Deanne Burch  Alaska  February 27, 2022 8 Minutes

When I started writing this story, I could not have envisioned the tragedy that is happening in the Ukraine right now.  I was feeling bright with hope. The world was beginning to open up after almost two years of people being isolated from each other. Have we learned nothing as humans, after two years of semi-isolation, about how to treat our neighbors with dignity and respect?  I think not and this is very sad! As I go to publish my blog and muse on what last March brought for me, I wonder what this March has to bring for the world…..

View from my deck 2021

 A year ago, my birthday coincided with the publication of my memoir: Journey Through Fire and Ice*. Covid gave me the opportunity to launch my book. However, the virus extinguished the celebration of my significant birthday. Starting last March, many of us were slowly able to be vaccinated against Covid, hoping to regain some normalcy to our lives; to some of us it meant being able to travel again. For me, the vaccine, simply meant I could see some family. My older daughter and grandson flew in from California in July. During her visit, Trudeau announced that on August 9, all vaccinated people could cross the Canadian border.  My younger daughter, youngest granddaughter and I went to Canada in mid-August for three glorious weeks. It was a joy  to be up there! I was overwhelmed when my two brothers and their wives graciously hosted a delayed “Big Birthday” and happy to celebrate with family and old friends. 

March of 2022 marks the one year anniversary of my book. For me, writing this memoir, was a journey that was several years in the making. I started writing it after my husband died, not sure if I would ever publish it or even if I wanted to. When the book was finished, I knew I wanted  to publish it. I felt women should learn they could deal with a life that was very different than the life they were brought up in. My life in Alaska would show others an example of how to adapt to the triumphs and tragedies that happen along the journey called life.

Holding my copy of memoir

Publishing was more difficult than I expected. I had sent the memoir out to a few agents with little response. About two years ago, my brother called and said “Deanne, life is short, you really need to get this published”. In the end, I took the self-publishing route, hiring Authority Publishing, a non-fiction company to publish the book for me. They helped me all the way through the publishing process. On March 1, 2021, I had a copy of my book in my hands. It was an exhilarating moment! Of course marketing a book is never easy…I had a social media expert, Cheryl Callaghan, help me as well as a PR agency. This has led to radio interviews and podcasts which were interesting for me, and I hope for others as well. 

Woman on right is one I correspond with.
She is now in her seventies
Kivalina as it was in 1964
parka made for me by one of Facebook Friends:Sonja Barger

Since writing the book, many of  the Inupiaqs who live in Kivalina have been in touch with me and are friends of mine on Facebook. This has been the greatest benefit of all. I often wondered what happened to  the people I knew and loved when I lived there. Most of them are deceased but their children and grandchildren are still living in Kivalina. I live their life through their posts and photos on Facebook. When we lived there the population was 150 people and it has exploded now to 450. However climate change is forcing this village to move upriver. By 2025, the island of Kivalina will be underwater.

For those of you who have not read Journey Through Fire and Ice, it takes place in 1964-1965 and is a short period in my life. Kivalina is a place  where I learned that life is not a fairy tale. At the time, I had to live with a different culture, in a village with no plumbing, electricity or running water. My life, on a small island 83 miles above the Arctic Circle,  was different than anything I could have ever dreamt of:  a white city girl cutting up seals, living under the midnight sun and suffering through the minus 30 below weather when darkness set in. I became the woman I am today because of the triumphs and tragedies during my life there. If you haven’t read my memoir, come and take the journey with me and you will understand why Kivalina will live in my heart forever. This memoir is only part of my story. 

Writing  this blog, I never intended to end this as wish for peace. Today all eyes are on Russia and Putin’s takeover of the Ukraine. I wonder how our country can just stand by and do little to help this proud country. The sunflower, a flower full of happiness is the national flower of the

National Flower of Ukraine

Ukraine. For those of us who are on Facebook, please post photos of sunflowers in support of and prayers for this country. They never asked for this war and don’t deserve the horrible act of aggression that is taking place now. 

* Authors Note: This coming  month, to celebrate the one year anniversary of publication, the kindle version of the  memoir will be selling on Amazon for $4.99 instead of the regular $9.99 so if you have friends who  havent read it or if you havent read it, I hope you will consider buying it. I have been happy with the reviews and have been surprised to find that although I thought my market was primarily women, men enjoyed it as well. Reviews are very important and I appreciate all of you who have taken the time to write a review for me.

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Author: Deanne Burch

Deanne Burch was born and raised in Toronto, Canada. She obtained a B.A.in liberal arts from the University of Toronto as well as a B.A in social work from the University of Toronto. She moved with her husband Tiger(Ernest Burch Jr.) in 1964 to a primitive village eighty miles above the Arctic circle in Alaska. After 1965, Deanne and her husband lived in several different places including Winnipeg, Manitoba and Kotzebue, Alaska, before settling permanently in Harrisburg, PA. She now lives in Lemoyne, PA. and has three adult children and seven grandchildren who live in different parts of the country. Her husband is deceased. Deanne spent thirty years as an internationally renowned photographer. She taught and lectured in United States and Canada. During this time, she published several articles in photography journals and magazines. After retiring in 2014, she has devoted her time to writing. She enjoys writing short stories and children’s stories. Deanne has just completed a memoir titled Journey Through Fire and Ice which will be published soon.

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