Our site will be undergoing maintenance from 6 a.m. - 6 p.m. ET on Saturday, May 20. During this time, Bookshop, checkout, and other features will be unavailable. We apologize for the inconvenience.
Cookies must be enabled to use this website.
Book Image Not Available Book Image Not Available
Book details
  • Genre:BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY
  • SubGenre:Personal Memoirs
  • Language:English
  • Pages:128
  • eBook ISBN:9781667878102
  • Paperback ISBN:9781667878096

The Sound of Diamonds

A Modern Anthology about Life around Puget Sound

by Bill Barker

Book Image Not Available Book Image Not Available
Overview

What does living around present-day Puget Sound in western Washington and growing up in New Jersey across the Hudson River from the Big Apple have to do with the latest awe-inspiring pictures being beamed down to Earth from the James Webb Space Telescope? Everything, according to the author of The Sound of Diamonds. This book is a collection of fourteen previously published stories by Bill Barker (along with two freshly written pieces) that provides a mix of autobiography, history, and commentary on the issues and complexities of modern-day life in the region—stories that Bill believes collectively suggest what science seems to be pointing to today: that we are all, in fact, inextricably connected to this universe as far back as we can see into it. This is an old concept, passed down through the ages. Ironically, it was perhaps an early nineteenth-century poet rather than a modern-day physicist who best described this incredible idea. In the words of William Blake (1757–1827): Each grain of sand, Every stone in the land, Each rock and each hill, Each fountain and rill, Each herb and each tree, Mountain, hill, earth, and sea, Cloud, meteor, and star, Are men seen afar.

Description

Bill Barker has had his writings widely and regularly published in the Puget Sound region since 2008. First in The News Tribune of Tacoma; then within the highly esteemed Columbia, magazine of the Washington State Historical Society; and most recently, as a regular columnist for the storied Shelton-Mason County Journal, in publication since 1886. Two of the subjects Bill has written about repeatedly over the years are McNeil Island and the USS Pueblo. Both are addressed in the first four chapters of The Sound of Diamonds. Other chapters cover the Cold War and its Cold Warriors (of which he was one, once upon a time); two longhouses located in the South Sound area; his multiple climbs of Mt.Ellinor in the Olympic Mountains; Albert Einstein and Walt Whitman in New Jersey: some repercussions from September 11, 2001, which he distinctly felt in Shelton, Washington, on that fateful day; and much more.

About the author
Bill Barker hails from the greatest Garden State (New Jersey) in our union. The US Navy sailed him out to the Evergreen State (Washington) a while back, washing him ashore as a civilian once more beside the sublime South Salish Sea (for which he is most grateful) after a somewhat exhilarating seven-year stint in its storied submarine service. He has steadfastly refused to live anywhere else ever since. Having retired from the US Postal Service, Bill now simply considers himself a "man of letters" of a different type.