Ravenstone Press Stories of Kansas and the Great Plains |
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| Jerri Garretson - Author, Illustrator & Photographer | ||
Jerri Garretson May 2006 Photo by Peter W. Garretson
Jerri writing on the Konza Prairie near Manhattan KS.
It is embroidered with Hardanger embroidery and cross stitch. Jerri won a second-place award for it in a needlework contest. The judge was from the Smithsonian Museum. Virginia 1977. Photo by Peter W. Garretson ![]() Jerri drew the horse above when she was eleven years old, on Christmas Day 1958. Luckily, her handwriting improved as she got older.
Jerri & Peter Garretson |
Jerri Garretson was born in San
Francisco, California on May 24, 1947. Her full name is Geraldine
Annette Kundiger Garretson. When she was less than two years old,
her family moved to Manhattan, Kansas, where she attended Eugene Field
Elementary school and
graduated from Manhattan High School in 1964. Jerri has one
brother, Donovan, and two sisters, Lannay and Sherie, all younger than
she is.
Jerri was a tomboy who liked to play imagination games,
pretending grandiose scenarios with her friends. They were
pirates, Indians, horses, magical beings, explorers, anything that
struck their fancy. She liked to roller skate, ride her bicycle,
swim, and play kickball and tetherball. She avidly collected rocks and
fossils and still has some of her childhood collection. She was crazy about horses and always wanted one. She and her friends had a "club" they called "The Order of White Horses" with silly rules like, "you have to wear white every day" (which was easy because they had white underwear and socks) and "you have to draw a horse every day." You can see one of her childhood drawings in the green column on the left. She loved to ride horses but didn't get to do it very often and she never did get a horse. Some of Jerri's other favorite activities were music (she played the violin and piano), dance (she took ballet, modern dance and flamenco dancing and taught dance when she was in high school), drama, arts and crafts, and Girl Scouts. She was a Brownie and Girl Scout for seven years. In high school she taught herself enough guitar chords so that she could accompany herself singing folk songs and then and later sang for parties. Jerri also loved to read. By the time she was in fourth
grade, she was reading both children's books and adult books. She
got in
trouble with her fourth grade teacher for reading when she should have
been
working on assignments. Some of her favorite books were Winged
Moccasins, the Black Stallion books, Robin Hood, Black
Beauty, and fairy tales. Because she loved stories, she liked to write her own and began making stories with her spelling words in the second grade. She still has a story that she wrote in sixth grade about Martians invading the New York subway system, and she thought it was fun to put that into her book Imagicat as one of Jeff's stories. Jerri earned her bachelor's degree in English and psychology from the University of Kansas in Lawrence in 1967. Life is full of surprises. Jerri planned to be at least 26 years old and have a PhD degree before getting married, but she met Peter Walter Garretson in the Manhattan swimming pool the summer after she graduated from high school. They got engaged four months later when she was only 17, and married two weeks after her 18th birthday on June 6, 1965. He took out their marriage license on her 18th birthday, the first day her mother didn't have to sign a form giving her permission to get married that young. A friend of hers said, "Marriage at 18 is the acid test of maturity," and predicted the marriage wouldn't last a year. Jerri laughs and says, "I must have passed the test because Peter and I are still married and still in love." Peter is four years older than Jerri and graduated from Kansas State University the same day they got married. The first three years they were married, Peter was in Law School at the University of Kansas while Jerri completed her undergraduate degree in English and psychology and went to graduate school in clinical psychology for a year. Then Peter entered the U.S. Army as a first lieutenant. Although he hadn't planned to make a career in the army at first, they both enjoyed military life and travel. Peter's 24-year career as an army lawyer took them all over the world. They lived in Germany, Japan, and Puerto Rico overseas, and in Kentucky, Virginia, Kansas, Hawaii and Illinois in the USA. One of their favorite activities is traveling, and during all of their years in these places, they got to see many interesting and unusual places. Jerri started writing professionally as a Public Affairs
Officer for the U.S. Army Engineer District in Japan, where she created
and edited their first corps newspaper, the Bamboo Bridge. It was
in Japan that she also began publishing her photos in the Bamboo Bridge
and other publications.
Her first published works for children were articles about other
cultures in children's magazines such as Highlights for Children
and Child Life. Most of her articles in children's
magazines have been
illustrated with her photos. One of them is online here. Jerri and Peter have two sons, Peter Anthony, who is a pilot
in the
U.S. Air Force, and Leif (also known as Alex), who served in U.S. Army
infantry
and now lives in Florida. Peter Anthony is married and has two
daughters
and a son. As a military wife, Jerri learned to be versatile and
flexible.
She worked as an office manager, a writer-editor, public affairs
officer, personnel manager, and preschool teacher. She earned her
master's
degree in educational technology from the University of Hawaii at
Manoa. When Peter retired from the army in 1992, they returned to
Manhattan, Kansas, where they lived in an old stone house built in
about
1886, until May 2005.
You can see part of the front porch or that house in Diane Dollar's
"snow cat"
illustration on page 134 of Imagicat.
It was fun imagining that Jeff and Mortimer lived in her house.
Jerri and Peter now live in Sun City Center, Florida. From February 1993 until June 1999 she was head children's librarian at Manhattan Public Library. She resigned to spend more time with her family and writing and to continue to develop Ravenstone Press, which she founded in 1997. To help her with book design, she went back to school at Manhattan Area Technical College and earned a degree in Graphic Arts in May 2000. From February 2004 until June 2006, Jerri also worked part time as a general reference librarian at Kansas State University's Hale Library. Jerri still loves to travel, write, read, draw and take
photos.
You'll find many samples of her writing, art and photography and
graphic design on the
Ravenstone Press website. She also designs for several CafePress
shops. See our home page for links to
some of them. In the fall of 2006, she realized a dream she'd had for
years and spent three weeks in China with Peter.
Jerri's most popular book is The Secret of Whispering Springs,
a ghost story/mystery read by all ages. Trespassing
Time: Ghost Stories from the
Prairie, published in July 2005, includes
four
of
her stories. They are her first published fiction for
adults. See the YouTube
video with Jerri reading the Afterword from Trespassing
Time. Jerri's newest book is an anthology of her three Kansas Tall Tales,
published March 2008. It includes Johnny
Kaw, Kansas
Katie and Twister
Twyla. Jerri is available for school and library visits, and presentations for organizations. Contact her through Ravenstone Press.
You may send email to Jerri through Ravenstone Press at:
raven@ravenstonepress.com Coffee
Shop Writers -- Jerri still belongs to a group of Manhattan, Kansas
authors who
write in a wide variety of genres, from fantasy to romance and
mainstream
fiction. Jerri is the only one who writes for children and young
adults.
Visit the Coffee Shop Writers' website to see what our lively
group
is publishing. |
![]() Jerri's interview at Fallen Angel Reviews (June 2006) |
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Last updated February 20, 2008