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Wednesday
Jul182012

Response to readers

I’ve had lots of questions from readers.  Here are a few of the most frequently asked questions and my answers.  Stay tuned for more in the days ahead.

Q.  How long did it take you to write the book?

A.  I began jotting down some first thoughts in 2005, with strong encouragement from the Agros board.  At one point in 2007 the board even excused me from some board duties to give me more time to concentrate on writing.  Progress came in agonizingly slow increments, and I was getting nowhere with the book.  In the summer of 2009 then board chair Susan Moulton and husband Paul, then President Hans Theyer and wife María Fernanda, conspired with my wife Cyd and came as unexpected dinner guests one night.  I knew something was up when they walked through our front door.  The message delivered to me that night:  “Skip, if you don’t get serious about writing the book, we’ll ask Cyd to write it.”  That was a not-so-subtle blow at my ego; it was also effective.  I did get serious, and began writing in spurts.  Then in November 2011 I realized the book would never get finished if it continued to be a part-time or spare-time effort. I told my law firm partners I needed the time to concentrate on finishing the book.  Instead of going to the office every morning, I stayed home to write, and did my legal work for clients through email and phone calls. I finally finished a first (and very rough) manuscript in March 2012.  Then came the editing and publishing process, which took another three months.

Q.  When did you find the time to write at all?

A.  Prior to the final push in November 2011, I mainly wrote during early mornings.  I have long been an early riser, and those pre-dawn or early dawn moments have been my best times of the day.  My mind is clear, the house is quiet, and there are no distractions.  I also wrote while traveling – on airplanes, in hotel rooms.

Q.  Did writing the book come easily to you?

A.  Not at all. I am by nature an essayist.  From 1998-2009 I wrote op-ed columns for the Seattle Post-Intelligencer.  Those 750-word columns, and occasional longer Sunday pieces, came without great effort.  Early on when I wrote segments for the book and showed them to Cyd, she gave me some devastating critique:  “You’re writing like a blankety-blank columnist!  This is supposed to be a story!”  That was a huge wake-up call for me, and I realized that this book-writing business would be a completely different challenge from anything I had encountered before.

Q.  Did you ever consider handing the job over to a ghost-writer?

A.  For about three seconds.

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Reader Comments (1)

Skip, you have done an outstanding job with this book. I couldn't put the book down after I started reading it. While I have been closely associated with Agros for 17 years, there were many parts of the book that I didn't know. I really appreciated getting the full story. My biggest attraction to the Agros program was summarized in one line in your book--" Dignity does not come through handouts, but by achieving something as significant as land ownership by the sweat of their own labor". Thanks for all your effort and devotion. Many lives are greatly improved as a result of your commitment.

July 19, 2012 | Unregistered CommenterBarney Reynolds

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