So many gifts – so little time.
I reached out to my network of
friends about their ideas for the best Wyoming-oriented Christmas gifts and it
was an inundation!
Wow, what a great selection. Let’s hope I can do them justice by listing a
bunch of them here.
Books were mentioned a lot with Cheyenne’s
Steve Horn having a new Sam Dawson mystery out that is getting rave reviews.
Two former colleagues of mine published books.
Charlotte Dehnert published Lester
Callaway Hunt, which started as a series she wrote for the Wyoming State Journal back in the
1970s. Gail Schilling wrote a wonderful
book called Do Not Go Gentle – Go to
Paris, which has the great tagline “Travels of an uncertain woman of a
certain age!” Jean Haugen is pushing
Sara Wiles’ new books about the Arapaho Tribe called The Arapaho Way. These are great gals and great books, too.
Jim Hicks of Buffalo touts products
from Mountain Meadow Wool Mills in his hometown.
Also hailing from Buffalo is a
State Poet Gene Gagliano, whose great book C
is for Cowboy is promoted by Paul McCown, who says it was great for his
kids and for him, too, since he is a newcomer to the Cowboy State. Susan Guy’s
artwork is splendid.
Thanks Paul for also suggesting
people buy some coffee table books by some local named Sniffin. Eric Molvar also touts his coffee table book
called Red Desert, which is splendid.
Lauren Throop suggests Wyoming
Migrations, a terrific book that tells the stories of the work involved in
discovering migration routes of Wyoming native animals
A truly great book with
international historical significance is From
Fidel Castro of Mother Teresa by long-time AP reporter Joe McGowan, who
served Wyoming for a long time.
Incredible adventures of our own.
Ray Hunkins’ new coffee table book
is a great read, too. It is called The
View from Thunderhead. The Louisa B.
Swain Society published it. She was the first woman to ever vote in an
organized election, in Laramie 150 years ago.
Of course, any books by Ron
Franscell, Craig Johnson, and CJ Box make wonderful Christmas presents. Pete Illoway of Cheyenne also touts Doug
Chamberlain’s new book Bury Him: A Memoir
of the Viet Nam War. Chamberlain is a former Wyoming legislator. Another terrific book about Vietnam is from
former Wyomingite Bill Jones, called The
Body Burning Detail. Riveting. Former
Wyomingite Scott Farris wrote an amazing book called Inga: Kennedy’s Great Love, Hitler’s Perfect Beauty, and J. Edgar
Hoover’s Prime Suspect. He also wrote a great book about early Wyoming
filmmaker Tim McCoy.
Candy Moulton’s latest book is The Mormon Handcart Migration. Well
received. A timely new book here during the state’s 150th
anniversary of women suffrage is Esther
Hobart Morris by Kathryn Swim Cummings. It is published by Nancy Curtis’
High Plains Press of Glendo.
The recent blizzard reminds us of
the Snow Chi Minh book by John
Waggener, a true history of why Interstate 80 is built in such an awful
place. Jerry Kendall of Hudson is
promoting his book Wyoming Treasures.
A timely book is A History of the Wyoming
Capital by Stanley Talbott Thompson and Linda Graves Fabian.
Tammy Green of Lander promotes all
good people, all good projects, and all good things. Among her favorites are works by Joy Woods,
Chris Hulme, Verna Burger Davis, Tina Brown Jones, Shawna Cargile-Pickinpaugh,
Lennie Poitras, Bill Yankee, Lane Nelson, Scott Robison, and all the folks at
Alchemy in Lander.
Robb Hicks is promoting Margo’s
Pottery and Fine Crafts in Buffalo. Bonnie Cannon loves mywyodesigns.com, based
in Riverton.
Nancy Ebbert raves about Sweetwater
Studio with Jenny Reeves, Noelle Weimann Van Dijk, and JC Dye. Christine Marie endorses Brown Sugar Coffee
of Riverton.
One of the state’s finest
photographers Daryl Hunter of Jackson promotes lots of wonderful gift retailers
from his web site fineartamerica/packstring-wyoming.
Marsha Redding of the famous
Spanky’s in Evanston touts Samantha Hartman on all her hand made items.
Ron Gullberg of the Wyoming
Business Council suggested you could always refer people to Made in Wyoming
too: madeinwyoming.org. He also reached out to their regional folks who came up
with this list:
- Surf Wyoming-Big Horn Designs in
Sheridan fulfills several Wyoming companies with logo apparel (and Big Horn
Designs recently opened a shop in Cheyenne too).
- Bison
Union in Sheridan roasts their own coffee beans and sells locally made gifts.
Also Merlin’s Hideout in Thermopolis.
- Creativity-cards in Wright makes fun, snarky
greeting cards and coasters on an antique paper press. Website:
https://www.creativity-cards.com/pages/where-to-find-us
- Sheridan Soap Company sells locally made products, EK
Jewelers in Gillette sells beautiful handmade jewelry, PDB Bear Pottery Art in
Buffalo, Fish fossils from Kemmerer, and Casull firearms from Freedom Arms in
Freedom.
Many craft brewers now around the state. http://www.wyocraftbrewersguild.com/
Also craft distillers such as vodka from Cowboy Country Distilling, Jackson
Hole Stillworks, and Backwards Distilling.
And finally, we need to support all
our local merchants in our Wyoming cities and towns this season. I love the
attitude taken by Central Wyoming College President Brad Tyndall: “I
feel my broader family includes all the great folks in our county with small
shops. It`s fun to try to make it to as many as I can to buy a thing or two for
presents and stocking stuffers. In going up and down main streets in Riverton
and Lander you can find so many good things that are either from Wyoming or our
Fremont County neighbors.”
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