Barbie DelCamp has spent over 1,000 hours taking photographs at the Gambo Dam in Windham. After documenting the story of Canadian geese arriving, laying their eggs, and hatching goslings on the river, she has written and illustrated a children’s book titled The Gambo Way. On Saturday, November 7th, she introduced herself and her book at a press release coffee held at Starbucks in Portland.
In front of a small group, DelCamp
shared the story of how her venture began. When her mother was living with
Alzheimer’s disease, DelCamp picked up a camera as a way to distract herself
from her mother’s illness. After her
mother passed, she wrote her first book, called When It’s All Said and Done. The book, she said, is distinctly Christian,
and is a composition of living with Alzheimer’s, the mother-daughter
relationship, and the things that were going on in her life.
“It was something that I needed to do
just to process,” she said.
She started a small publishing company
named for her mother, Sweet Georgie Ann’s Publishing. The second book she
published was her first children’s book, Four
Parkway, about the Osprey on the Fore River Parkway. It was her first
attempt at a children’s book, she said, but she wasn’t quite ready to introduce
herself.
With her second children’s book, The Gambo Way, she was ready to take
that leap. She invited the press along with friends and family to the event to
share her journey and promote her books. This story of the geese came about by
accident, she said. She first ventured to the Gambo Dam to find the eagles that
a friend had said were there.
Two other books in progress were also
previewed at the event. Evergreen is
the story of geese at Evergreen Cemetery in Portland. Teeny Tiny Beach Plovers documents the hatching of two plover nests
on Prout’s Neck.
The Gambo Way is now available on
www.Amazon.com, www.BarnesandNoble.com, and the author’s website at
www.sweetgeorgieannsbooksandwhatnot.com.
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