Tag Archives: writing

Life in the Days of Corona

Or How My Brother Lost His Head Patricia Grady Cox, April 23, 2020 My brother is not visiting me this week. He should be, but the Corona virus worries have kept him off a 7-hour flight and he remains in Vermont. He would have arrived yesterday evening, so this would have been our first day […]

Social Distancing in the 19th Century

Patricia Grady Cox March 30, 2020 We’ve all been stressed this month. We’ll be even more stressed next month from the sound of it. Some of us, being in a group at high risk of severe complications should we contract COVID-19, have been isolating ourselves for weeks already. That gives the writers among of us […]

Start with an Empty Cup

Patricia Grady Cox January 2020 We’ve all heard the question, “Is your cup half empty or half full?” It’s supposed to point out how being optimistic can change the way you perceive reality. But last night, on New Year’s Eve, while my dog was going nuts barking, growling, whining, and running around while the firecrackers […]

Happy Birthday

Patricia Grady Cox February 20, 2019   We celebrate the birthdays of Presidents Washington and Lincoln in February. Schools close, some of us get a day off from work, and the stores advertise big sales. Today I want to remember another big February birthday: The State of Arizona! When President Taft signed a Declaration of […]

Thieves and Artifacts

Patricia Grady Cox January 15, 2019 While working on my current novel, I thought it would be interesting to have my characters raid  ancient Mexican pyramids and steal anything that looked valuable. It just so happened that the Phoenix Art Museum was having a special exhibit, TEOTIHUACAN: CITY OF WATER, CITY OF FIRE with artifacts […]

When Once is not Enough . . .

Patricia Grady Cox – October 7, 2018 Every now and then I think about writing a sequel to HELLGATE, my most recent novel, set in 1880 Arizona Territory. That thought gained momentum recently as I watched a PBS documentary about the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882. Prescott’s small Chinatown (50 Chinese in Prescott according to […]

My Story to Tell?

Patricia Grady Cox February 5, 2018 I wanted to have a character in my novel who told the story of the Navajo Long Walk from a native perspective. But how? I am not Native American. I had never done more than exchange a few words with Native Americans. I’d spent a lot of time at Monument […]

Ghost Town Godfather

Patricia Grady Cox January 18, 2018 Arizona owes its existence to mining. First gold, then silver, then copper. Eventually these mines played out or flooded out and closed down. Tombstone started out as a mining town and was too tough to die. But other mining-associated towns, such as Bisbee and Jerome, became ghost towns before […]

Do It Scared

Patricia Grady Cox August 19, 2017 I have a confession to make. The first time I ever climbed up onto the back of a horse was at the ripe old age of 37. I remember well the day I stood waiting with a friend of mine for the current trail ride to return so we […]

Discovering a New (Old) Author

Patricia Grady Cox I recently discovered a new author, at least new to me. Mari Sandoz, born in Nebraska in 1896, writes about that part of the country: Native American history, biographies, short stories, and novels. In 1964 she received a Saddleman’s Award and a Western Writers of America Spur Award for juvenile fiction for […]