Roger and Louise,
Louise's enlightenment on Nevada Barr's prowess as a mystery writer makes this 
non-fiction only reader want to at least read "Blind Descent". I also found 
Roger's recounting of his association with her at book signings and the 
astronaut tie in to be most informative. Roger and Louise both seem to have had 
many interesting and even historical experiences in their lives or that of 
their family. I for one enjoy these on and off topic interesting posts. Thanks.
Fritz

________________________________
From: CaverArch [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Thursday, August 28, 2008 8:41 AM
To: Patrick Shaw; Louise Power; Texas Cavers
Subject: Re: [Texascavers] Nevada Barr's "Blind Descent"

Nevada Barr is not just an excellent writer.  She is a wonderful speaker, as 
well, and it will be well worth the time of any fan to attend an event at which 
she speaks.  I had the second such opportunity at the signing for her latest 
book, Winter Study, at "Murder by the Book," the Houston independent mystery 
bookstore.  (The first was a lunch event hosted by the store after the 
publication of Blind Descent.)  There was a caving connection in the talk that 
I had to write up for the Greater Houston Grotto mailing list that I will share 
with the Texas list now that her name has come up:

"I attended the Nevada Barr signing for her new Anna Pigeon mystery at Murder 
by the Book last night, and it was delightful.  Ms. Barr was an actress before 
becoming a National Park Service law enforcement ranger like Anna, and this 
experience helps her to be a very funny, talented, and completely at ease 
speaker, as well as a writer.  But apart from that, I must report on the 
cave-associated aspect of her visit to Houston!  Some years ago she met and 
befriended an astronaut named Chapman (I think) and his wife when Barr and 
Chapman both spoke at an educational function in Georgia.  They have visited 
periodically and remained in contact via phone and e-mail, and consider 
themselves close friends.  He and his wife had spent time with Nevada on this 
visit, but came to the book talk for a special reason.  Mr. Chapman (also a 
talented speaker) was a member of a late 1990s astronaut class that was 
nicknamed the "penguins" because they were "all dressed up, with no place to 
go, and they would never fly."  Well, happily, he was finally able to fly for 
about 150 days on the International Space Station recently.

He contacted Nevada before lift-off to say that he wanted to indulge in an 
astronaut perk and take something into space for her.  It would have to be 
something small, light, and very personal to her.  She selected something 
appropriate and Mr. Chapman chose the book signing to publicly present this 
personal treasure to her.  This item of great meaning, but light weight, was a 
black bat finger puppet from Carlsbad Caverns National Park that she had been 
given while there to research Blind Descent, her Lechugilla-centered Anna 
Pigeon novel.  The astronaut's seven-year-old daughter had named the bat 
"Flaps," so he was accompanied by an official NASA certificate authenticating 
Flaps' record-breaking bat flight.  (Ms. Barr, at my request, inscribed her new 
book as "From Nevada Barr and Flaps," and then added a cute bat sketch of her 
own creation.  She had included my NSS number in the inscription for Blind 
Descent at the earlier event.)

Ms. Barr answered questions after her brief, but hilarious lecture.  A question 
about Blind Descent provoked her most detailed answer, and gave insight into 
the average reader's reaction to her vivid descriptions of caving.  The 
questioner praised her ability to describe how one moves through a cave, and 
voiced the chills (outweighing the thrills) that most non-cavers probably felt 
on reading these sections.  Nevada is a self-described claustrophobic, so the 
real-life caving experiences (culminating in a trip in Lech) that constituted 
her typical hands-on research for this book were very difficult for her.  She 
said that she came to enjoy the sensations of physical movement through caves, 
and of course appreciated the beauty of cave formations, but that her 
claustrophobia always kept her ill at ease.  Ranger Pigeon felt this same 
distress, which introduced another level of tension into the novel.  Writing 
about the subterranean world so effectively rekindled this discomfort in Ms. 
Barr that she had to abandon her original intention to have the entire novel 
take place underground: she simply found the prospect too nerve-wracking.  
While we cavers crave the very environment she finds so unnerving, I certainly 
admire Ms. Barr's courage in subjecting herself to such disconcerting 
experiences, both in real life and inside her own mind.  She, like Anna, is one 
tough lady in a charming package. "

Roger Moore,
Greater Houston Grotto

In a message dated 08/27/08 19:33:28 Central Daylight Time, [email protected] 
writes:
Yes indeed - a fine tale, and I was amazed that in the whole book I don't think 
the words "spelunker" or "spelunking" appear once!

Louise Power wrote:
I don't know how many of you are mystery fiction fans, but Nevada Barr is one 
of the best and probably the only one in her specific genre--mysteries taking 
place in National Parks. In 1993, she published Track of the Cat, the first of 
fourteen novels with Anna Pigeon, a park ranger, as her protagonist. This novel 
took place in Guadalupe Mountains National Park, her second posting with the 
Park Service.

In 1998, she published Blind Descent, her sixth in the series, which took place 
in a highly disguised Lechuguilla Cave, Carlsbad Caverns NP:
Blind Descent, the sixth in the Anna Pigeon series, is set in Carlsbad Caverns 
National Park. Lechuguilla, the cave the action takes place in has been largely 
fictionalized both for plot and because, to preserve it, the NPS has closed the 
cave to visitors. Blind Descent was nominated for an Anthony Award.

Dale Pate was her escort through the Park. The book, a tense murder mystery, 
was excellent and provided me with more than a couple of empathetic moments 
(flashes of claustrophobia). All of her books are good. As another federal 
employee and former Carlsbad Caverns employee, I can tell by what she says and 
how she says it that she is NPS. If you like mysteries, you'll like this 
series--even though they don't take place in caves.
________________________________
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