 Jeff Green
On the 90-minute commute from Cheney to Pullman to attend
graduate school, Laurie Carlson’s eyes often strayed from the road
to the cows grazing the rolling hills of the Palouse.
Carlson, who was completing her Ph.D. in history at Washington
State University, found herself wondering what the animals were
eating, how they were fed, and what their days were like.
To answer her questions, she decided to raise them.
Her interest in the animals also inspired her to write
Cattle: An Informal
Social History, looking at the symbiotic roles of cattle
and humans.
It’s often like that. She recently published a children’s book
about Thomas Edison, a notion that came from a visit to her
eight-year-old grandson’s elementary class. The result is a
biography of Edison filled with activities and experiments for kids
to try.
As a child, Carlson mailed stories to magazines. As an adult,
before she dared to do her first book, she attended a romance
writer’s conference just to be around the other writers.
“I didn’t know what I was doing,” Carlson says. “I thought I
could write romance. I thought I could write fiction.” Instead, she
realized that to be a writer she needed to go with her strengths,
teaching and history.
After several years of teaching first grade, her creative drive
led her to write her first children’s book, Kids Create,
still her best seller. Encouraged by her success in the children’s
genre, Carlson wanted to expand her audience. But “I was scared to
write for adults,” Carlson says. “I didn’t feel I had enough
education.”
Her fear pushed her into completing a master’s degree in history
from Eastern Washington University in 1998. Once that was done, it
just made sense to go after a Ph.D. in history.
By the time she got to WSU, Carlson was a confident grad
student, says associate professor of history David Coon. She was
more accomplished in her professional career than most doctoral
students, having been a published author for many years. Her
dissertation was about WSU’s first agriculture scientist, William
Jasper Spillman, a suggestion from Coon. In 2005 her research
yielded William J. Spillman and the Birth of Agricultural
Economics.
“She is relentless in her pursuit of information,” Coon says.
“She’s fearless in the sense that nothing dissuades her from
writing a book about a subject.”
Carlson has written 20 books so far—ranging in topics of the
Whitman Mission to the history of the sewing machine—and has
garnered reviews from the likes of Atlantic Monthly and
New Yorker.
Carlson’s kitchen table is covered with magazines and
yellow pads scribbled with notes, some of which may make it into
Carlson’s next book, which has the working title of The Sunlight
Solution: How Indoor Life is Killing Us. The idea was spawned
by one of her family showing the symptoms of rickets, which is
caused by vitamin D deficiency.
Her creative drive and love for the environment and good food
led to her start a magazine, Field and Feast, in 2005. She
is the editor, photographer, and designer of the quarterly
publication focusing on food and how it gets from farm to
table.
Carlson fills her days cultivating her interests, whether
raising chickens for organic eggs—another idea inspired by simple
curiosity—researching her next book, or planning to relocate her
farm to the Willamette Valley. Carlson will keep adding to that
list, because once something interests her, it’s hard to keep her
from pursuing it.
–Amy Trang ’06
Click here for information on
history books by Laurie Carlson. For information about Carlson's
books for children, click here.
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