

This two-hour audio program features a collection of Tom's trademark short, witty
pieces on small-town life, family life, and everyday experiences, all from
the perspective of an ex-logger and resident of Homer, Alaska - which is just
about as far as you can go "without turning around or running into a foreign
language".

from Small Places
…One positive aspect of living in a small place is that we
can adequately heat our home with a good conversation and a mood candle.
If it does get a little stuffy, opening the door for fifteen seconds
will give us a complete air exchange. The only problem is that the
exchanged air is never quite as warm as the old, so we don’t
do that very often and have a tendency to sometimes smell like what
we had for dinner the night before.
All in all it’s not so bad, and like good Americans we sit fat
and happy, and try not to think about it. It keeps us close and promotes
togetherness, much in the same way prisoner-of-war camps do. Although
I’m certain that keeping two prisoners in a cell the size of
our house would be a violation of the Geneva Convention, we call it
home and like everybody’s home, it’s almost always the
best place to be.
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