A Pioneer History of Becker County, Minnesota

A Pioneer History of Becker County, Minnesota
Author: Alvin H. Wilcox
Publisher:
Total Pages: 772
Release: 1907
Genre: Becker County (Minn.)
ISBN:

A historical book providing a brief account of Becker County's natural history, along with numerous articles written by various early pioneers relating to the history of the county.

Murder Under the Loon

Murder Under the Loon
Author: Gerald Anderson
Publisher: Llewellyn Worldwide
Total Pages: 241
Release: 2011-10-08
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 0738720259

In the good old Minnesota town of Fergus Falls, murder is about as common as shorts-wearing tourists in January. But even in quiet Nordic towns, strange things can happen in the dead of winter. Eager to retire, insurance company owner "Pinky" Hofstead had grand plans to announce the appointment of his new president at an all-employee winter weekend retreat. But after a night of snowmobiling in sub-zero weather, Hofstead is found the next day—as cold and stiff as a piece of dried lutefisk. Puzzled by how Hofstead's body could be lying beneath a concrete loon with his snowmobile abandoned fifty feet away, Otter County Sheriff Palmer Knutson and his upstart rookie detective suspect that this is more than just an accident. With possible motives of greed, ambition, and jealousy, could any of the four employees or their spouses be cold-blooded enough to ice the boss? Uffda! There's a murderous chill in the air!

Abandonings

Abandonings
Author: Maxwell MacKenzie
Publisher: Elliott & Clark Pub
Total Pages:
Release: 1995
Genre: Photography
ISBN: 9781880216347

Abandonings: Photographs of Otter Tail County, Minnesota, chronicles a vanishing manifestation of the American dream. In this extraordinarily evocative pictorial essay, photographer Maxwell MacKenzie revisits the place of his birth, an agricultural community on the edge of the Great Plains. Now standing in ruins are the barns, houses, and schools erected by the Swedish and Norwegian immigrants who settled the region in the second half of the 19th century and began to desert during the Depression years. With a photographer's eye, an architect's insight, and a native son's passion, MacKenzie has recorded these eloquent "abandonings" in breathtaking full-color panoramas. The images speak to anyone who appreciates the simple beauty of America's rural landscape.