Only in Santa Fe

Every year I have a sort of tough job. I motivate myself to get on with it because somebody’s got to do it. For one week, each July I go to Santa Fe, the capitol of New Mexico, for nights of opera, chamber music, choral singing, and museum hopping. But that’s just the frosting on the cake. Because I work for an arts-oriented public radio station, KSJE-FM in Farmington, N. M., I get to interview the curators, musicians, singers, and theater techies who make the art happen. The fact that I’m dealing with superior minds doesn’t escape me when I talk to these people. It’s a “tough” job all right. I love every minute of it.

I love it for several reasons. First, I’m getting to be old enough to see trends. When I was a kid in art school in New York, I darned near got myself shot for suggesting that word and image could coexist in the same space.

Racing out of the range of bullets—well okay derisive laughs that felt like bullets–made me keep my opinions to myself for the rest of my school career, and question my sanity for suggesting artistic ideas could blend. Of course I was too young to realize that in the 1950s, while I was playing with the first fashion dolls with high heels–Revlon Dolls that pre-dated Barbie by several years–grownup artists were busy separating themselves into little boxes. (Little Boxes on the Hillside–like the old song goes?) Painters went in one container. Composers popped into another. Journalists hid out far away from novelists.

I still haven’t figured out why this happened, and if anyone has any idea, I’d like to hear. Anyway by the time I was 19, words were words and pictures were pictures. Never the twain would meet. No more could a Debussy be influenced by a Renoir, as happened early in the 20th Century.

Since then, I’ve–thank goodness–seen change. Words and images live together in museums now, right on the same canvas sometimes, or in wonderful wall text beside a painting. Maybe Gertrude Stein was right. We live in circles–and circle around, not only on earth, but in our collective and individual minds, thoughts, and ideas. We begin in one spot, leave, and come back.

The second reason I love Santa Fe is the level of art going on there–well actually in the whole state. Some people tend to think of New Mexico as the wild west. Well, okay, it was for a time–from about 1870 to 1890. But even at its western wildest, New Mexico was connected to the rest of the world. From Santa Fe south, one could ride the El Camino Real all the way to Mexico City. The royal highway followed Indian trails existing for thousands of years previous to anyone on this side of the world hearing of the Spanish.

A few generations later, a busted wagon wheel prompted painter Bert Phillips to start the Taos Society of Artists, after he trained at the Acadamie Julienne in Paris. He, his classmates, and their followers painted Native American Pueblos, buttes and mesas, and cattlemen rounding up mustangs in the latest Cubist, Expressionist, Modernist, or Impressionist styles.

The Native Americans added their lines, colors, and forms to the mix. Pablita Velarde blended the sense of design she inherited from her native Santa Clara Pueblo with point perspective in the 1930s.

The Spanish brought in their Moorish influence, carved and painted saints, and filigree jewelry, then added tin work, snatching lard cans the U. S. Cavalry cast off, and making mirror frames, candle sticks, and whatever else they could think of. Today the tradition passes through families.

As of 2007, New Mexico has artists who happen to be Indians, Hispanics, Germans, or–turtles, and who create things they love unrelated to their origins. New Mexico also has Indians, Hispanics, Germans, or–turtles who happen to be artists, and recreate the richness of their ethnic, racial, and cultural experiences, on canvas, in orchestra pits, and on stages.

The music is another whole story. Internationally-known artists and composers work at the Santa Fe Opera, and perform with the Santa Fe Desert Chorale and the Santa Fe Chamber Festival. All scale systems and theories are fair game, Native American to Chinese.

The diversity of expression creates an energy that radiates around the state. The contrasting ideas also forge public characters. That’s the final reason I love Santa Fe. As a writer, all I have to do is stroll downtown to the plaza that’s been around since 1610, and I’ll find someone who might eventually end up in a book. This summer, I discovered a tall man in faded jeans and tee shirt, with a bushy beard and thick gray hair, lounding on the sidewalk on San Francisco Street, the original narrow main drag that starts at the plaza, and in a sense, ends up in Mexico City, by hooking up with the Camino Real.

At the lounger’s feet sprawled a large, black, white, brown, and orange-flecked mutt with heavy fur. I have no idea what sort of canine he was, except to say he was big boned, massive, and probably a blend of several breeds, with no distinct features of any. He flopped, head on paws, watching the world from relaxed, brown eyes.

On his back, stretched a gorgeous, fluffy gray-and-white cat with a green, translucent, gaze that stared into mine. I stared right back, like I’d found the bottom of her soul through the luminicent globes of her eyes. I had the feeling she’d found the bottom of my spirit as well. In an instant, we checked each other out, and engaged in the cross-species communication of a gentle look.

On top of the cat, nestled a white rat. With nose a-wiggle, she surveyed the street from merry red-dot eyes, and seemed to be laughing at the whole situation, her round belly, all but bursting with babies, and shaking like Santa Claus’s.

Everybody on the sidewalk–including me–stopped dead in their tracks when they saw that combination. The fellow made a few bucks for his show.

I’m home from Santa Fe now, and back to work, but that image stays with me. It will end up in a book, if I live long enough, I’m sure. Personal encounters have led to most of the characters for my stories.

if you pick up one of my novels, ‘A Mouthful of Shell,’ or ‘Snap Me a Future,’ you’ll find folks I ran into at some point, in some fashion. Okay, I snipped and clipped them to make them fit my fiction–to drive my plot or set my mood–but way back when I first saw them, they were real–every one. I can describe the moment I met them.

They’re not really auto-biographical. My heroines, Betsy Craig in ‘A Mouthful of Shell’ lives in the mountains of Pennsylvania, which I never did, and Shelby McCoy in ‘Snap Me a Future’ got shot. I didn’t.

But there is some of me in both. They’re arts-oriented people. With me living in New Mexico, what else could they be? Everybody’s an artist here. Not always a good one, but New Mexicans do art the way people in New Orleans do jazz–for the joy of it.

And those artists who are professional, are competing in the second or third largest art market in the country–depending on who you talk to.

So there’s a lot of good material in my wanderings around this place west of Texas, east of Arizona, south of Colorado, and north of Mexico we call The Land of Enchantment, as well as New Mexico. I hope you’ll take some time to check out dlsijpress.com and enjoy ‘A Mouthful of Shell’ and ‘Snap Me a Future.’ I hope you’ll come to New Mexico. It’s a fun place to get in touch with your inner scribbler, paint-slosher, performer, or plain ol’ people watcher.

Santa Fe Painted Pony

Summer Reading

I’ve been reading a collection of short stories by Lee Smith. Me and My Baby View The Eclipse. Good stuff! I read her novel, Saving Grace, while we were vacationing at the beach. I love everything by Lee Smith. She writes about real people. Not just how she thinks real people live, but how they really live. I enjoy the occasional novel about politicians, debutantes and doctors, but I find myself lured toward meaty novels about common people that could be living right next door to me. I can connect wholeheartedly with these stories–not necessarily stories with extreme plots. I just love reading a book for the writing and nothing else. I’m a sucker for descriptive language. Give me a Faulkner novel and some time to actually read it, and I’ve died and gone to heaven.

Kelly Clark Baugher is the proud mommy of a three year old and six month old, and the author of Finding Lilies, a Southern romance novel.

Visit her at www.kellyclarkbaugher.com

Finding Lilies is available at www.dlsijpress.com and www.amazon.com

Sunny Side Up featured at The Romance Studio

The Romance Studio has done a very nice feature of Sunny Side Up for the month of August. If you want to check it out, go to http://theromancestudio.com/who6.php
Let me know what you think. It was a lot of fun and they’re a great bunch to work with. They also did a book giveaway and the results were fantastic — lots and lots of entries and people who want to be added to my mailing list. You can bet I’ll be keeping in touch. :)

The Call of the Fairy Tale

“The fairy tale journey may look like an outward trek across plains and mountains, thorough castles and forests, but the actual movement is inward, into the lands of the soul. The dark path of the fairy tale forest lies in the shadows of our imagination, the depths of our unconscious. To travel to the wood, to face its dangers, is to emerge transformed by the experience.” Terri Windling, intro to Snow White, Blood Red.  

Once upon a time –before Victorian writers and Walt Disney film producers introduced helpless princesses and happily-ever-afters — fairy tales were dark visions not meant for children. They were filled with evil hearts, dark betrayals and the dangers of journeying alone through the deep woods. They told of the price of magical transformations, of duplicitous bargains with fey folk and of greedy fools hoist on their own petards. They didn’t all end happily, but princesses in the early versions were more likely to survive by their wits than to wait idly for a knight in shining armor to rescue them.

I’ve long been a fan of these hand-me-down tales. As a child, the stories that caught my attention were the ones with the too-literal bargains, like the one about the woman who asked to live forever, but forget to mention that she wanted to be young forever. I also remember the impossible tasks, like the girl who had to remain silent for a length of time if she hoped to redeem her bewitched brothers (much as I love my brothers, I was far too chatty as a kid to even contemplate that one!). And all those stories about doors that mustn’t be opened! I am far too curious for my own good and I completely emphasized with all those unfortunates that couldn’t leave well enough alone.

Even now –decades after I first heard them — I’m intrigued by the power that these old tales hold in our psyches. Filled with representations of universal archetypes, they have a longer shelf life than many of today’s bestsellers ever will. For the last few years, I’ve been combing used books stores for the classic tales by Grimm, Andersen and Lang, as well as similar stories from other lands and cultures. I suppose it’s inevitable that – surrounded by volumes of such stories – I’ve finally decided to try my hand at writing my own book of modern fairy tales.

When I wrote Eternal Café, I delved into my Catholic childhood to re-create my peculiar version of Purgatory. As I work on my book of urban fairy tales, Sisters Odd, I have to return to my childhood and re-visit the lessons I learned from my favorite stories: Be careful what you ask for because you might get it. A true friend stands by you even after you’ve been cursed. Be careful how you treat strangers because they might not be what they seem. Always carry bread crumbs in your pocket and wear clean underwear when you venture far from home (hmm…that wisdom may not all be gleaned from fairy tales).  And never, ever, open a door when the lord of the manor tells you not to!

I still have trouble with that last one…

My New Book and Other Stuff

Thought I’d give you a heads up on the sequel to Snap Me a Future. Shelby McCoy is chasing an art thief now, and it may just be Charlie again, or it may be somebody else. Sam will be there with his Setter-Labrador energy to help her figure out who……

I’m slowly making proof prints from my Thailand trip. That’s going to be a long loving process…..

There’s a web site that makes banners and internet announcements for authors. Check out the concept at www.previewthebook.com Some of you might be interested. They’re just getting their business started. They’re not inexpensive, but you can work out a deal that won’t leave you eating beans either.

The National Federation of Press Women 2007 Contest is over, and my radio documentary Miracle in the Desert: The Story of the Santa Fe Opera took second place in the category of special radio programming. My freelance career is booming. The Durango Herald is picking up my arts articles. That’s Durango, Colorado.

Meantime enjoy Snap Me a Future and a Mouth Full of Shell, and I’ll be back to you, after a run to Santa Fe to cover the summer arts there on behalf of KSJE FM, and the Four Corners Free Press.

Another good review for Sunny Side Up

Somewhere between Heaven and Hell and San Antonio, Texas - Present Day

Sunny Acres — yes, that is her real name — is a true blue Texan girl with beauty queen looks and an infamous roller derby past behind her. So when she’s plucked from her bed and taken to Paradise by the heavenly gorgeous Jakeh and then told that she’s been chosen by God to fight demons and hold off the End of Days, Sunny thinks she’s had one too many shots of tequila. But it doesn’t take long for Sunny to accept her destiny — seeing the real Hell will do that — and accept that she’s been given a job she can’t refuse.

In that same extraordinary night, Jakeh takes her to Iraq to witness the first tear in the veil between our world and Hell and teaches Sunny how to weave it shut. He also points out the three American military men who will soon team with her to form the Armor of God. With orders to avoid showing off her new abilities lest the demons come hunt her before her men arrive, Sunny manages to stay out of trouble until Fiesta time arrives in her hometown of San Antonio.

Out partying with friends, Sunny is the only one who sees a fissure open and demons pour out in all shapes and sizes wreaking havoc all over downtown San Antonio. Knowing she can’t weave the veil shut without help, Sunny uses her newfound power to spiritually “open” her friends’ eyes and, together with a couple of biker dudes, they manage to save the day. Unfortunately, Sunny also manages to land herself on the national news. Just as she’s packing to get out of town, the cavalry arrives and Sunny is finally reunited with her team: Major Aaron “Stoney” Stone, Sergeant Jack McCleery, and Captain Daniel Troy. Talk about perfect timing since the demons and other assorted bad guys now know about her powers and want a piece of her ass. Come to think of it, so do Jakeh and Stoney. Could Sunny’s life get any more complicated? You bet.

In what will hopefully be the first of many Sunny Acres Adventures, it’s Buffy meets the Fantastic Four with a heavy dose of Old Testament thrown in. The story starts off a little slow, caught up in an excess of narrative and repetitive descriptions, but it quickly gains momentum, and the characters you meet more than make up for it. Sunny is one hell of a heroine (pun intended), funny, bold, and quite practical when she needs to be. From the swoonworthy Major Stone to the deliciously decadent Jakeh, each of the men is unique and charismatic and will leave readers wanting to know more about them. Other characters pop up here and there and are sure to make return appearances in future books.

Ginger Rodgers — yes, that is her name — has started a great new series and readers should waltz on over to DLSIJ Press and grab themselves a copy of this paranormal treat.

Reviewed by Isabelle Spencer for Romance Reviews Today

A great book review for Sunny Side Up

Sunny is simple country girl, living on her farm in Texas with dogs and goats. She enjoys going out to the local bar and having a good old time with her friends. She was even at one time a roller derby girl. That is why she finds it so hard to believe she is one of the four chosen to save the world from a coming evil. With three others she is a part of the Armor of God with special powers to fight demons and keep them from destroying the world. This is the story of how the meet and begin their adventure.

Sunny Side Up by Ginger Rodgers is a wildly fantastic paranormal adventure. A story of an ordinary girl who stands up when called to save the world from evil. Sassy and funny, Sunny does not take things lying down. She has a fiery temper. Together with three hunky guys and a thousand year old dark haired man in another dimension they work together to fight the sorcerers opening the portals to hell. Each member of the Armor of God has special powers for their mission. They battle the horrors and demons coming through the portals. This is a story filled with amazing action. There are also steamy, sexy scenes featuring Sunny and others.

Ginger Rodgers’ story is creative, action-packed. and filled with passion and adventure. It feels like a thrilling action movie.

Reviewed by Anita for The Romance Studio

Bad Boy Bill

Bill the Randy Billy Goat
Hello all. I’ve finally got what everybody has been asking for — a pic of Bill, the rowdy billy goat. Don’t let his cute, purple flower-munching face fool you — he’s a real butthead.
Ginger Rodgers