It was December of 1965. I'd just turned nine a few weeks earlier. Daddy explained he was going to go away for awhile. He was leaving before Christmas. He wouldn't return until shortly before my tenth birthday. He said he was leaving to fight for[..]
It's been nearly two weeks since three little girls were discovered murdered at a campground outside Leavenworth, Washington. I first learned that the girls were missing when my own daughter, Ashley, called me. She is friends with the family and had joined them in searching[..]
On the hill above Hebden Bridge is a community known as Heptonstall. The community's population hovers around 1,400 people. We met one local on our walk through the area this week. Ian wore a black knitted cap, atop of which sat a Google camera linked[..]
Even Korea, it seems, has their Yankees. All I got to say is you can tell that Kim Jong-un isn't from SOUTH Korea. Kim Jong-un is more of a Maine or Vermont type of Yankee. You know the type: That person who prides themselves on[..]
Karen Spears Zacharias is an Appalachian writer, a former journalist, and author of numerous books, both fiction and non-fiction.
She holds a MA in Appalachian Studies from Shepherd University, Shepherdstown, West Virginia, and a MA in Creative Media Practice from the University of West Scotland, Ayr, Scotland.
Her debut novel Mother of Rain received the Weatherford Award for Best in Appalachian Fiction from The Loyal Jones Appalachian Center at Berea College, Kentucky.
Zacharias was named Appalachian Heritage Writer in 2018 by Shepherd University.
Her work has been featured on National Public Radio, CNN, the New York Times, Washington Post and in numerous anthologies.
She lives at the foot of the Cascade Mountains in Deschutes County, Oregon, where she’s an active member of the League of Women Voters and Central Oregon Writers Guild. She is a member of Phi Beta Delta and Phi Kappa Phi. A Gold Star daughter, she is a fierce advocate for democratic principles and women’s rights.
Zacharias taught First-Amendment Rights at Central Washington University, Ellensburg, Washington, and continues to teach at writing workshops around the country.
Her forthcoming novel No Perfect Mothers will be released by Mercer University Press, Spring 2024.
For more information on Karen and her books, click here
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