Gleason, Wisconsin

In April (16-25, 2025), I booked a trip ‘home’ to Gleason, Wisconsin, as my older sister, Arlene, a resident of Pine Crest, was ill. It is always better to visit the near and dear before rather than after they pass away. It turned out she was just fine. The issue was a pain medication-proportion-balance issue for a deep forearm wound. Assured Arline was alive and kicking, it became seven days of storytelling in two-hour sessions, touring the homeland, and examining a plastic storage box of old black and white and faded color photos (more on this further on).
I flew from Paris Charles de Gaulle to Minneapolis, the Delta flight filled with Minnesotans of Norwegian descent returning home. They were gruff, big and kindly Norwegian men settling their families and helping tiny Indian and Pakistani women get their stuff in the overheads. And so many of these gruff men and kindly women were (morbidly) obese. I am uncertain whether this was true when I lived in Wisconsin, if I didn’t notice it, if it’s a Minnesota Norwegian phenomenon, or if Midwesterners have suddenly become overweight. I am at the moment sitting in a cafe overlooking the main square in Semur-en-Auxios, teeming with tourists and natives. I see very few overweight, much less obese people.
[ I won’t do an EU-USA comparative obesity study, but obesity rates in America have been increasing, with nearly 43% of adults classified as obese. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Obesity ]
The second thing I noticed was how wealthy and orderly Merrill and Gleason appeared to be. Wealthy? Well, it was the massive pickup trucks towing motorcycles and/or camping trailers. These are $50,000-$70,000 rigs, and with trailers, the total cost could top $100,000. I did not check whether these rigs were owned or bank-owned, but there were plenty of expensive rigs. The large implement dealer sold lawn tractors; the farm implement dealer was closed. The old home town was looking good.
(Poverty, memory, and a box of old photos)

Looking through that box of photos, Gawd, I realized, how poor we were. ! I just didn’t remember it that way. We kids ran the farm while our father worked in Chicago (returning north once every two weeks). My sisters remember the loneliness, isolation, and hard work. I remember glorious sunsets, towering thunderheads and quiet woods.
n 1951, around 11:30 PM a fire broke out in the chicken house when everyone was asleep. Earl Kressel, leaving the tavern at midnight, saw the northeastern sky aglow. He woke us, called the fire department, and we survived. The rest is history.

I am revising/republishing my five-novel Long War series, the first volume, Spirit Falls, set in a landscape similar to Lincoln, Oneida and Vilas counties. Spirit Falls, dramatic though it may be, upon rereading, is optimistic. The novel explores family dynamics. Tolstoy’s War and Peace explored family dynamics. In a later essay, Lev Tolstoy had wondered how is it that one family, despite all advantages, becomes dissolute, the children wastrels, whereas in another, raised in poverty, dissolution, and disadvantage, thrives? The Townsend children by minutes escaped a ten-word 1953 Merrill Daily Herald news notice and going on to witness war and peace and live long lives with children and grandchildren.
Patrice and I live in a 16th century farmhouse in eastern France where, I expect, we will stay for a long while.


Somewhere I read that your ‘hometown’ is where you want to buried. My hometown is Gleason, Wisconsin..