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In Other Words, Leadership

How a Young Mother's Weekly Letters to Her Governor Helped Both Women Brave the First Pandemic Year

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Maine Governor Janet Mills' leadership inspired this "remarkable story of work, worry, art, faith, community, life, and hope. An instant classic.”  — Heather Cox Richardson, author of Democracy Awakening

“I have spent the better part of my career listening to loud men talk tough to disguise their weakness,”  — Maine Governor Janet Mills

Two unforgettable women from opposite poles of power in Maine forge an uplifting bond through good, old-fashioned letter writing that helps them navigate the COVID crisis

Both women bring civility, grace, wit, and wisdom to the challenge of protecting those who depend on them — in other words, leadership

This trip to the “Vacationland” of Maine — where the state motto is I Lead — offers an inspiring tale of civility and purpose, of doing the right thing and not just surviving, but prevailing.
The first woman to serve as governor of Maine, Janet Mills, had been in office a year when COVID-19 reached the United States. The recently-widowed 72-year-old wrote in her journal there is “no playbook for a pandemic” as she imposed unprecedented restrictions on her state.
When early support for the governor’s response curdled to rampant opposition, a young mother named Ashirah Knapp sent a letter of support from a remote homestead in the woods of Maine. Ashirah’s handwritten dispatch detailed how the public health emergency was upending her family’s life and livelihood, and she promised to keep writing “every week until we are through this time” to remind the governor how many Mainers supported her despite the disruption.
Ashirah’s letters, with their simple wisdom and striking penmanship, stood out in a flood of correspondence Governor Mills was receiving that ranged in tone from appreciative to furious. They helped keep her grounded as she made wrenching, often unpopular choices.
Shannon A. Mullen weaves from these two women’s letters and the governor’s journal, which were never intended for publication, an intimate and compelling true story that is a celebration of civility and compassion in the face of rancor and of resolve in the face of adversity.
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    • Kirkus

      April 1, 2023
      How an unusual correspondence buoyed two Maine women through the uncertainty of the first several months of the Covid-19 pandemic. At first glance, the women couldn't have been much more different. Ashirah Knapp was a homesteader living off the grid in a tiny town situated literally at the end of the road; Janet Mills was in the middle of her first term as Maine's first woman governor. But the women share a deep humanism, and the connection New Hampshire-based journalist Mullen teases out of the former's letters and the latter's journal entries and public addresses provides a neat structure for the narrative. Observing the angry resistance to the Democratic governor's pandemic restrictions, starting in May 2020, Knapp took it upon herself to write weekly letters to Mills to "keep reminding you of the many people who agree with the path you are choosing for our state." For the next year, Knapp never wavered, even as Mills' emergency orders hamstrung her family's small business. It was largely a one-sided correspondence, but Mills took heart from Knapp's missives, even referencing them in her 2021 annual address to the state legislature. While Knapp wrote to Mills, the latter kept a daily journal, recording her sorrow over the pandemic's rampage, her distress at the difficulty of managing it, and the relief she found in Maine's outdoors and her circle of (safely distanced) friends. Mullen nods at the confusion some of Mills' policies promulgated, but the account is unabashedly admiring. Like-minded Mainers will find it a heartwarming record; those further flung will recognize much while encountering uniquely Maine variations, not least of which is the state's unlikely love affair with its pandemic-era Maine CDC director, Dr. Nirav Shah. The author quotes her subjects and other sources liberally and diligently, but too often the inclusion of unremarkable text slows readers' passage. Still, her earnest approach will keep readers engaged. Readers will find both governor and homesteader sturdy pandemic companions.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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