Leslie leyland fields biography of martin

          In brilliant prose, Leslie Fields tells her story of adapting to life on a wilderness island without running water, telephones, or other 20th century.

        1. This is a wonderful true, faith-building story by author Leslie Leyland Fields.
        2. Leslie Leyland Fields is an American author and editor from Kodiak Island, Alaska.
        3. An inspiring memoir of one woman's life on the far edge of America and her struggle to find home amid the isolation, work, risk and beauty of the Alaskan.
        4. Five hundred years ago, Martin Luther eloquently addressed this in “An Open Letter to the Christian Nobility.” He named “a cobbler, a smith.
        5. Leslie Leyland Fields is an American author and editor from Kodiak Island, Alaska....

          Leslie Leyland Fields

          American author and editor

          Leslie Leyland Fields is an American author and editor from Kodiak Island, Alaska.[1][2]

          Her books have been translated into Chinese, French, Polish, Korean, Ukrainian, Slovak and German and reviewed in the (London) Times Literary Supplement, The Chicago Tribune, the Utne Reader, Sports Illustrated for Women, The Portland Oregonian, The Seattle Times, Women and Health, Oregon Review, and many others.

          Her essays have appeared in numerous publications, including The Atlantic Monthly, Orion, Image: Art, Faith, Mystery, Books and Culture, Best Essays Northwest, Christianity Today, It’s a Girl: Women Writers on Raising Daughters, On Nature: Great Writers on the Great Outdoors, A Mile in Her Boots: Women Who Work in the Wild, America and the Sea: A Maritime History, and many others earning her Pushcart nominations, the Virginia Faulkner Award, and a Genesis Award.

          She was a founding faculty member of Seattle