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Aulne native publishes book about farm life on the prairie

Book signing is Monday

Don Larsen of Livermore, Calif., will be at Marion City Library at 7:30 p.m. Monday to discuss his two published books.

Larsen grew up three miles south of Aulne and graduated from Marion High School in 1944. He became an educator, teaching at Aulne and Peabody before moving to California.

His first book, I've Never Been an Old Man, published several years ago, portrays in an upbeat manner the challenges of aging.

The second book, The Prairie Tides, was published this summer.

Larsen aptly gave the book the subtitle: The Ebbs and Flows of an Era. It colorfully depicts the developments and changes that have taken place in rural Kansas from the time Larsen's 20-year-old grandfather, Andy, arrived from Denmark in 1882 to the present.

Little towns, farming, and community life rose to their height in the middle of the 20th century, only to ebb into other means of livelihood and commerce.

The book contains a lot of Marion County history portrayed in an interesting manner.

Larsen relates numerous humorous and not-so-humorous incidents which make the book fascinating to read. He also gives detailed descriptions of how things were done on the farm.

In one chapter Larsen writes about the mules used by his father, Louis, for farming. Following is an excerpt from that chapter:

"Some mules had an ornery streak. Dad heard a pig squealing bloody murder one day. He ran around the barn, with the dog along for assistance, to locate the problem. Halfway out the lane toward the pasture stood a mule with its eyes closed, holding a pig by the ear in its mouth. The pig was off the ground, gyrating, and squealing at the top of its lungs."

Larsen tells of one incident in which a farm boy trapped a skunk, removed the odor gland, and threw the gland into Marion High School's internal ventilating fan before school:

"The horrible smell filled the whole building. The culprit was caught, and although school was dismissed for the rest of the student body, he was caught and kept in school all day."

In a unique final chapter, Larsen places himself back in Kansas, driving through Peabody when he spots his Grandpa Andy crossing the street. The two take a trip through town and the surrounding countryside, where they visit familiar places and note the changes that have occurred.

Later, by himself on the return flight to California, Larsen muses:

"I suddenly wondered how John Deere would feel if he could come back for a day as Andy had. . . What if Captain John Fremont or Zebulon Pike could be up here with me looking down on the signs of activity in their Great American Desert?"

"The Prairie Tides," a soft-cover, 144-page book, is available for $14.95 at Marion Health Mart, Don's Drug Store, Peabody, Thee Book Store, Hillsboro, and The Harvey House, Florence.

The book also may be obtained at Active Books, 358 Lincoln Ave., Livermore CA 94550, 1-800-981-7638. The website is www.active-books.com.

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