![]() ![]() As she detailed growing up in New Mexico, land of the brilliant white desert light that lured Georgia O’Keeffe from New York, Culpepper explained how she would regale her amigas with horror stories in the bathroom of her childhood home. In January when Culpepper’s most recent, and sadly, last book, Windigo Thrall, was released from Bold Strokes Books, Culpepper wrote a blog post for Bold Strokes Books about horror and Windigo Thrall. ![]() That humor put her in a special category for me as a reader, for me as a lesbian, for me as someone battling terminal illness, as she did until Oct. She didn’t write humor–she wrote horror and fantasy–but she was, as a person, funny. And she breathed life into all around her. Humor breathes life into our days, whether we realize it or not.Ĭate Culpepper was funny. ![]() Those of us who are, and who find humor essential to managing life’s many hills and valleys appreciate other funny people. ![]()
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