MEET THE AUTHORS
RWM
Early in the month of May, historic Lincoln town
celebrated Heritage Preservation Month with many events, tours, presentations
and living history shows. On the evening of May 9, the public was invited to
"Meet New Mexico Authors," complete with an authentic open-air "La Junta" chuck
wagon supper.

Barbara Patterson
The presented authors were: Barbara Corn
Patterson, Betty Sims Solt, Paul Patterson and Chuck Chatneuf. These authors
have written cowboy poetry, early ranching memoirs and a variety of fiction and
non-fiction on localized subjects. Barbara of Roswell presented her first book,
a memoir, Rock House Ranch (which RWM
reviewed in a prior issue); Paul -- a longtime foreman for Robert O.
Anderson's huge Diamond A ranches -- who says he "now herds words across paper
instead of cattle across a pasture," has written several books reflecting his
chosen career; Betty is a 1990 cowgirl-hall-of-fame inductee, rancher and
cowgirl poet; and Chuck has written his first book, a period novel set in
Lincoln County. A review of Chuck's book follows below.

Betty Sims Solt
The turnout for the chuck-wagon supper was small but
intimate. Soon diners felt like long-time acquaintances. In addition to the
authors were a handful of others, from local and not so local
places.
From fairly local was "New Mexico's Bear," Joe Baker, of KNMB
radio in Ruidoso, who says, if you listen in, he "will make you feel as if you
were having a cup of coffee with him by a flickerin' campfire when you tune in
to his 'Backforty Bunkhouse Show."
Jay Barber from Lake Havasu happened to be passing through,
taking a visitor on a whirlwind tour of the west. That visitor, from India, had
been in the U.S.A. for only a month but spoke English well. During
introductions, he politely said his name was too difficult to pronounce or
remember, suggesting we adapt a portion of it that sounded nutty. He said just
call him "Nutty, you know, like the fruitcake." His keen sense of humor,
reflected by Paul thereafter calling him "Fruitcake" added dimension to the
enjoyable evening.

Paul Patterson and Nutty
An email we received May 18:
Nutty and I got home safe
and with a lot of good memories. We really enjoyed getting to know some
new people like you folks. We had a great time at the chuck-wagon/dutch-oven
cookout. If you ever get to Lake Havasu, look me up. Nutty will be returning to
his family tomorrow.
your friends, Jay Barber
and Nutty
a RWM book
review of
COBURN'S MILL
by Chuck Chatneuf

In COBURN'S MILL, Chuck Chatneuf writes a
fine western tale. It's as if writing novels has long been his forté, not like
this is his first. Chuck's style is somewhat reminiscent of Louis L'Amour, but
with a more modern writer's touch. When he writes about Tom Corkin tamping the
tobacco in his pipe for a good draw, you figure Chuck smokes pipes. When he
describes the terrain of Lincoln County, you figure the author grew up there,
spending his youth climbing all over those rugged hills and vales. If you
thought the latter, you thought wrong.
Chuck and his wife, Pat, now make their home in the mountains
near Ruidoso, but that wasn't always the case. His life began in
Connecticut and he spent his youth in Texas, which is also where he began to
earn his living. He became a machinist and along the way earned a BBA in
behavioral management, developing useful skills for his management roles in
industrial and manufacturing companies in lands beyond New Mexico's
borders.
Seeking adventure has always been his avocation. Fishing,
exploring, canoeing, hiking, skiing, skeet-shooting, motorcycling, racing sail
boats, piloting his own plane and following historic trails cut by early
pathfinders have been a few of his chosen pursuits. Since his retirement to
southeastern New Mexico, some of those have been replaced with novel-writing and
golfing. He has begun a second novel set in modern-day Ruidoso.
A recent reviewer in Writer's Digest called Coburn's
Mill "an old-fashioned western adventure in which frontier towns spring off
the page." Roundup Magazine calls it "a good read on a cold
night."
Chuck's characters are strong, complex but believable, and with
whom his readers soon feel well-acquainted. His casual dropping of a few
familiar names and places into his fiction is well-done, giving the reader a
subtle thrill of discovery.
His book is well-plotted and delivers interest and tension from
its first pages to its last. There are parts where, even if the dinner bell
rings and your stomach rumbles, you cannot put it down. Along the way he
scatters bits of detail -- like birdseed on the trail -- to harvest at its
satisfying end.
WIND
by Helen Bergmark
***
I remember snow
with white clouds
hanging overhead like some ominous
message
undelivered. And the bright, sunny
days
that play havoc with my misery
which I hold inside, like a treasure
undiscovered.
But most of all, I remember the windy
days
unleashing noise and destruction,
tugging at my soul,
taking no prisoners.