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The
Write Stuff: Retiree gives insight into second career as an author
By Richard Volesky
"Writing one's own story leaves a legacy for generations
yet unborn, footprints to gauge their own paths." -- Dr. Edward
Keller
Syrup sandwiches, homemade cottage cheese, sod houses, good times
and bad--those are the things of which stories are made.
Dr. Edward Keller, a Dickinson dentist who retired in 1996, knows
that very well. He has created a fulfilling second career by writing
seven books and self-publishing five of them, resulting in a total
of 25,000 copies. In the works is a new children's book receiving
final touches from David Christy, a Fargo illustrator.
The books mostly relate to Keller's German-Russian roots and his
early years while growing up near Strasburg, where he was born in
1927. The stories are memory pictures of his life while on a farm
and attending a one-room country schoolhouse during the Dust Bowl
era.
"Memories are times and places that connect our lives,"
said Keller. "I feel that lives are viewed too modestly by
their owners. But lives are precious pieces of time and are as unique
as fingerprints."
Keller's first book, "As I Remember," is a biography
of his brothers, sisters and parents. "I just wanted to tell
people how they (my family) influenced my life," said Keller.
A relative who was influenced by that book was a granddaughter
of his sister who lives in Colorado. The granddaughter gave a school
report based on the book, and the girl's teacher took the time to
write a letter to Keller to tell him about the benefits the girl
received from the book.
"Then I got the idea, `Why can't I write about the family
and about the other families and how we interacted?' which led to
the book, My First World," said Keller. The editor of the Emmons
County Record in Linton reviewed the book and asked him to write
weekly memory stories or columns for the newspaper. Keller continues
to write the weekly stories, an effort that's been ongoing for nine
years. Some of the stories have been compiled into books.
Writing Spans The Generations
"I like to paint word pictures," Keller said of his writing
style. Word pictures refer to his including descriptive adjectives
to bring the subject of the story to life.
For example, while remembering the arrival of newborn farm animals,
Keller wrote, "Some of the most cheerful days on my farm featured
the farm animal newcomers, newborn colts, staggering on gangly legs,
maturing into frolicsome frisky show-offs ..." Or while recalling
difficult times, Keller wrote, "Dirt clouds blackened the sky
during daylight hours. Mounds of dust gathered on the thistle stuffed
fences making it possible to walk right over the fence ...during
blizzard days, there was a constant dust between one's teeth, in
one's nose and ears."
Keller said he writes one short story at a time. "Otherwise
it would be too overwhelming," he said. First, he writes everything
by hand - about five times until he has a final version of a story.
His wife Shirley reads everything before it's printed. A Smith Corona
typewriter, not a computer, is his preferred typing tool.
While he instead could be fishing or vacationing, Keller said he
just naturally wanted to remain busy in his retirement. "I
wanted to work. I learned at an early age that work is honorable."
He said he thoroughly enjoys putting together his stories. "I
love to evoke in myself a sense of history and live within the memory
...," he said in one of his book entries. "To be warmly
accepted for work that fills a genuine need in readers is most inspiring.
Writing one's own story leaves a legacy for generations yet unborn,
footprints to gauge their own paths."
He's learned that his stories have in fact become a tool to help
reconnect the generations.
Two books which do just that are "My Mother's Apron,"
and "My First Grade 1932." While geared toward children,
the books can be of interest to anyone of any age, said Keller.
His upcoming book is titled, "Trixie, My Shetland Pony."
The books are being sold to nursing homes and schools. About 2,000
libraries across the country have them on their shelves. They are
even being used in an Alzheimer's unit. The illustrations are so
vivid that they help evoke memories in Alzheimer's patients, said
Keller.
The books have also led to Keller's speaking to elementary school
classes. He has read at more than 70 North Dakota schools. Pat Kilber,
a fourthgrade teacher at Lincoln Elementary School in Dickinson,
was the first to invite him into a classroom.
Kilber said she had seen Keller selling his books at the local
shopping mall. She figured he would make a good speaker, considering
the books he writes are about early North Dakota life and that her
fourth graders study North Dakota history. She also suggested to
Keller that he create children's books.
"It was the concept of the early pioneers that I liked, and
kids like to know what it was like years ago in a one-room schoolhouse,"
said Kilber. "He's fun to listen to. He gets the kids' attention."
Acquiring a Thick Skin for Writing
Keller has taken his writing endeavors so far as to write, "Amateur
Writers," a book that describes how he wrote his books and
how he went through the self-publishing process. The book is intended
to help other aspiring writers. Self-publishing is quite common.
About 78 percent of all books today are self-published, or are published
by a small publishing company, he said.
He likes to encourage people to write because doing so has several
positive effects. Writing can be therapeutic, help people know themselves
better, feel useful or that they are not neglecting their talents,
and that they are providing enjoyment to others, among other benefits,
said Keller.
Becoming a successful author wasn't entirely easy. "It's persistence
and a thick skin," said Keller. "There also have been
critics, but no statues have been built to critics."
A key seems to be just getting one's foot in the door, or at least
one book on someone's shelf. Once the interest is there, buyers
want to know what Keller will create next. "They like this
frank writing I do," he said.
What the Future Holds
Keller said he doesn't plan to give his notebooks or his trusty
typewriter a rest anytime soon. "As long as I am able, I'll
never quit." he said. "I have a whole bunch more stories."
Richard Volesky is the owner of Dakota Fair Press, a journalism
business in Belfield, North Dakota.
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