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I write and edit stories for a variety of publications. I also help mission-driven organizations tell their stories.

Selected Writing

Warning: This Article Could Be Banned

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Photo: 64 Parishes

In Louisiana, like the rest of the country, attempts to ban books rise during times of cultural shifts that discomfort segments of society.

​     It didn’t take long for Debbie Coleman to convince the school librarian to destroy books she deemed offensive.

​     She walked into Andrew Jackson High School on a February day in 1976 and headed straight to the library. 

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Swimming with the one percenters

On posh Nantucket, even the not-so-rich can revel in the beauty and beaches.

. . .​In the Jack Willis shop (think Ralph Lauren, but British), I watched a young girl wearing a Juilliard T-shirt stomp in, look around, put her hand on her hip and loudly ask her mother, "Where's the kids' section? That's what I want to know." (There was none.) When another mother-daughter duo bickered extravagantly over a credit card, I decided it was time to find the happy people.

     We joined the line out the door at the Juice Bar, where the mood was full of summertime cheer and the ice cream was uber-rich — maybe a bit like the people waiting in line with us, though who could say when a scoop is $4.

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Photo: Kerri Westenberg/Minnesota Star Tribune

Illustration: Nuri Ducassi

Anatomy of fear

Don't let the emotion scare you. Experiencing it yields some benefits.

     Freddy Krueger is good for your well-being, not despite his melted face and razor blade-embellished glove. Because of them.

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     This book, with photos by Brian Peterson and essays by me, grew out of a series I created as Travel editor at the Star Tribune to showcase and celebrate the landscapes of Minnesota across four seasons. â€‹

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Photo: Kerri Westenberg/Minnesota Star Tribune

Bye Burch - hello grill

After shutter a favorite restaurant, chef Isaac Becker shares his secrets to perfecting steak at home.

     . . .If I can't go there to celebrate my emergence from hibernation, I have decided to do the next best thing: to create some semblance of my usual

Burch meal at home.

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Italy, in the steps of St. Francis

Hiking into the heart of rural Italy.

     On a brisk spring
morning in Rimini, I stood in
a hushed cathedral with 11
other hikers, waiting for a
bishop’s blessing. Ahead lay
days of strenuous trekking through Italy’s mountainous Emilia-Romagna region to the Sanctuary of La Verna, a Franciscan monastery in Tuscany. Together we would climb and descend for 75 miles on paths, some rugged and steep. So far, we had walked just three fl at city blocks. Given the rigors ahead, pausing for celestial aid seemed wise.

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Photo: Kerri Westenberg/Minnesota Star Tribune

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Photo: The Historic New Orleans
Collection/64 Parishes

Building with Bagasse

A Marrero company found sweet success with sugarcane fiber.

. . .The stones in those chambers originated in Italy, Germany, and France. The ceiling material traveled a much shorter distance. It came from Marrero, just down the Mississippi. 

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Photo: Mike Vacek/Minnesota Star Tribune

Appalachian Trail Magic

From Georgia to Maine, hikers pit themselves against the path.

     In the thick woods of New Hampshire, a hiker known as Old School awoke at daybreak and lay still, listening to squirrels and songbirds chirp and trill. The leaves of maples and hemlocks stirred above; the sound grew louder and faded like a wave. Slowly, the man pulled the pants he’d been using as a pillow from under his head, coaxed them to the depths of his sleeping bag and eased his legs into them. Then he emerged from his tent into the chilly morning air, testing his body’s willingness to take yet another long walk in the woods.

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High on  Rome

Photo: Kerri Westenberg/Minnesota Star Tribune

The city holds some of the world's greatest gems. To find them, start walking.

     Like hordes before us, we entered Rome through its northern gate. . . Centuries before we arrived, barbarian tribes (so named by the Romans), stormed in here and sacked the city. Martin Luther also traveled this way. He came in the early 1500s to live in a monastery, from which he observed the Church and the

Pope close-up, just nine years before he and his ideas rocked the world. Later, there was Queen Christina of Sweden, who in 1654 converted to Catholicism, abdicated her throne and rolled into her adopted city through Porta del Popolo dressed as an Amazon and riding in a chariot.

     Unlike the Visigoths and the Gauls, and unlike the queen, my family and a friend came in peace and attempted to blend in with the Romans. And while Luther may not have liked what he saw, we did — very much.

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Photo: Kerri Westenberg/Minnesota Star Tribune

Shelter for the soul

In one of the country’s poorest regions, modern buildings dot Alabama’s bucolic landscape.

. . . Who would have thought that four architecture students could design and build the literal and figurative high point of this reborn park in Perry County, one of Alabama’s poorest?

     Just such transformative feats have been occurring regularly in Alabama’s agricultural Black Belt since 1993, when the Rural Studio, part of Auburn University’s School of Architecture, launched in Hale County.

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