Bruce Guthrie Photos Home Page: [Click here] to go to Bruce Guthrie Photos home page.
Description of Pictures: Come meet our friendly authors and partake in the vibrant literary culture of Capitol Hill. With all different genres and styles represented -- from children's books to poetry, from nonfiction to mystery and romance -- there's something for everyone....
Author folks here pretty much in sequence:
Colleen Shogan, Scott Sowers, Quintin Peterson, Ben Larracey, Bob Levey, Louis Bayard, Rashin Kheiriyeh, Glen Mourning, Grant Goodman, Claire Handscombe, Con Lehane, Garrett Peck, William S. Kurtz, Bill Gourgey, Kelsi Bracmort, Laura Melmed, Katy Kelly. Jessica Childress, Sig Cohen and Carolyn Miller Parr, Abby Maslin, Daniel Stone, E. Ethelbert Miller, Yermiyahu Ahron Taub, Michael Levin, Jona Colson, Kim Roberts, Jonathan Lewis, Jonathan Riffe, Nancy Arbuthnot, Kim Prothro Williams, Paul Smith Rivas, Chris Datta, Jenny Masur, George Derek Musgrove, Patsy Sims, Jona Colson, Michael Levin, Claudia Kousoulas and Ellen Letourneau, Jon Ward, Yermiyahu Ahron Taub, and Robert Pohl
Recognize anyone? If you recognize specific people (or other things) in the pictures which I haven't labeled, please identify them for the world. Or fill in any other descriptions you can. Click the little pencil icon underneath the file name (just above the picture). Spammers need not apply.
Slide Show: Want to see the pictures as a slide show?
[Slideshow]
Copyrights: All pictures were taken by amateur photographer Bruce Guthrie (me!) who retains copyright on them. Free for non-commercial use with attribution. See the [Creative Commons] definition of what this means. "Photos (c) Bruce Guthrie" is fine for attribution. (Commercial use folks can of course contact me.) Feel free to use in publications and pages with attribution but you don't have permission to sell the photos themselves. A free copy of any printed publication using any photographs is requested. Descriptive text, if any, is from a mixture of sources, quite frequently from signs at the location or from official web sites; copyrights, if any, are retained by their original owners.
Connection Not Secure messages? Those warnings you get from your browser about this site not having secure connections worry some people. This means this site does not have SSL installed (the link is http:, not https:). That's bad if you're entering credit card numbers, passwords, or other personal information. But this site doesn't collect any personal information so SSL is not necessary. Life's good!
Help? The Medium (Email) links are for screen viewing and emailing. You'll want bigger sizes for printing. [Click here for additional help]
Specific picture descriptions: Photos above with "i" icons next to the bracketed sequence numbers (e.g. "[1] ") are described as follows:
LHBF1_190505_061.JPG: Tom Noll (Green Kids Press)
LHBF1_190505_069.JPG: DC Public Libraries
LHBF1_190505_071.JPG: User comment: Tim Krepp and his eyebrows
LHBF1_190505_074.JPG: Colleen Shogan
Colleen Shogan is a senior executive at the Library of Congress, where she works on programs such as the National Book Festival, and formerly served as deputy director of the Congressional Research Service and as a Senate staffer. She has written four mysteries in the Washington Whodunit series featuring Hill staffer Kit Marshall and her friends: Stabbing in the Senate (which won a Next Generation Indie Award), Homicide in the House, Calamity at the Continental Club and, most recently, K Street Killing. She also teaches American politics at Georgetown University. www.colleenshogan.com
LHBF1_190505_084.JPG: Scott Sowers
Scott Sowers is a DC-based freelance writer whose nonfiction work on real estate, energy, and the automotive world has appeared in The Washington Post, The Atlantic, and The New York Times. He has worked as a boat salesman, bartender, television producer, journalist, and reporter. His first foray into fiction, Life and Death at the Dog Park, was a whodunit, and his latest, Spycraft and the Lash, combines elements of mystery, conspiracy, espionage, romance, and fetishism. www.scottsowers.com
LHBF1_190505_088.JPG: Quintin Peterson
Quintin Peterson is a local artist and critically acclaimed author of crime fiction who served as a DC police officer for the better part of three decades. His stories have appeared in magazines and in eight anthologies, and he has written four DC-based crime novels, including Guarding Shakespeare and The Voynich Gambit, both of which are set at the Folger Shakespeare Library, where he worked as a Special Police Officer for close to 7 years, beginning immediately after his retirement from the Metropolitan Police Department. http://www.amazon.com/-/e/B002BMCR2E
LHBF1_190505_093.JPG: Ben Larracey
Ben Larracey has always loved storytelling and, during his senior semester of college, had the great opportunity to read screenplays and write coverage as an intern for Academy Award-winning producer Arnold Kopelson (Platoon, Seven, and The Fugitive). Although he has predominantly written screenplays, Ben recently made his foray into novels, with Endz Casino & Resort, a novella about a struggling musician who wakes up in a casino with no idea how he got there, and Flora 5, a dystopian sci-fi thriller being published this spring. www.benscreenplays.com
LHBF1_190505_102.JPG: Bob Levey
Bob Levey was a longtime journalist for The Washington Post, where he wrote a daily column, "Bob Levey's Washington," for 23 years. He has also enjoyed extensive careers as a radio and television talk show host and commentator, and has taught journalism at six major research universities. He has recently tried his hand at fiction with a debut novel, Larry Felder, Candidate, which follows the fraught campaign of a veteran newspaperman who decides to run for a congressional seat in Maryland. www.bobleveypublishing.com
LHBF1_190505_110.JPG: Louis Bayard
Long-time Capitol Hill resident Louis Bayard is the author of a five critically acclaimed historical mysteries -- Mr. Timothy, The Pale Blue Eye, The Black Tower, The School of Night, and Roosevelt's Beast -- as well as a novel for young adults, the highly praised Lucky Strikes. A New York Times Notable author, he has been nominated for both the EdgarŽ and Dagger awards, and he is also a nationally recognized essayist and critic whose articles have appeared in the New York Times, the Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times and Salon. His forthcoming novel, Courting Mr. Lincoln, focuses on the future president and the two people closest to him: his mentor, friend, roommate and possible lover, Joshua Speed, and Mary Todd, who has set her cap for the melancholic lawyer. www.louisbayard.com
LHBF1_190505_126.JPG: Rashin Kheiriyeh
Rashin Kheiriyeh is an internationally recognized, award-winning illustrator/author, animation director, and painter who has published more than 70 children's books in nearly a dozen countries. Winner of 50 national and international awards, she was most recently named winner of the 2017 Sandak Fellow Award, New York, and she illustrates for The New York Times, Google, and publication houses around the world. The most recent of her books, many of which are based on Iranian fairy tales, is Saffron Ice Cream. www.rashinart.com
LHBF1_190505_132.JPG: Glen Mourning
Glen Mourning is the author of Crunchy Life: Recess Detention and four other books in his "Crunchy Life" series, which he wrote to inspire young people like himself who grew up in urban America to get an education and fulfill their full potential. The first of five siblings to graduate from college and earn a master's degree, Mourning writes that he is "blessed to lead by example." He has been a fourth-grade teacher in the DC Public Schools for eight years. www.mourningknows.com
LHBF1_190505_154.JPG: Grant Goodman
Grant Goodman is an English teacher in Montgomery County who started writing action-adventure novels for his middle-school students. The DC author has now published three books in his Agent Darcy and Ninja Steve series: "Tiger Trouble" (2015), "Robot Rumble" (2016), and the newest, "Mecha-Mole Mayhem," which finds Darcy and Steve battling for control of Ninjastoria against an army of mecha-moles wielding metal claws. www.GrantGoodmanbooks.com.
LHBF1_190505_167.JPG: Claire Handscombe
Claire Handscombe is a British writer who moved to Capitol Hill in 2012, "ostensibly to study for an MFA, but actually, let's face it, because of an obsession with The West Wing." Her debut novel, Unscripted, about a young woman with a celebrity crush and a determined plan, is scheduled for publication this spring. She was recently longlisted for the Bath Novel Award and her journalism, poetry, and essays have appeared in a variety of publications, including Bustle, Book Riot, Writers' Forum, and the Washington Post. She is the host of Lit Podcast, a fortnightly show about news and views from British books and publishing. www.unscriptednovel.net
LHBF1_190505_179.JPG: Con Lehane
Con Lehane is the author of a series of mystery novels set at the 42nd Street Library in New York City: Murder at the 42nd Street Library, Murder in the Manuscript Room, and, scheduled for publication later this year, Murder Off the Page. He has also published three previous crime novels featuring New York City bartender Brian McNulty (Beware the Solitary Drinker, What Goes Around Comes Around, and Death at the Old Hotel) as well as a dozen or so works of short fiction. He is a former editor, college professor, union organizer, and bartender. www.conlehane.com
LHBF1_190505_185.JPG: Dealing with Aging Parents: Sig Cohen & Carolyn Miller Parr (Love's Way)
LHBF1_190505_200.JPG: Samuel Holliday, Steve Livengood
US Capitol Historical Society
LHBF1_190505_204.JPG: Women's National Book Assn
LHBF1_190505_208.JPG: Garrett Peck
Garrett Peck is an American historian, tour guide, and author of seven books, of which the most recent is The Great War in America: World War I and Its Aftermath. Previous titles include Walt Whitman in Washington, D.C.: The Civil War and America's Great Poet, Prohibition in Washington, D.C., and The Smithsonian Castle and the Seneca Quarry. He serves on the advisory council of the Woodrow Wilson House in Washington, D.C., and has lectured at the National Archives, the National Museum of American History, and the Smithsonian Institution. www.garrettpeck.com.
LHBF1_190505_217.JPG: Folger Shakespeare Library
LHBF1_190505_223.JPG: 826DC
LHBF1_190505_230.JPG: William S. Kurtz
William S. Kurtz has collected and edited the wartime correspondence of his cousin, John Burnham Shaw, in a book called Letters from a Soldier. The letters, which begin with Shaw's basic training in 1943 and follow him through the harrowing Battle of the Bulge to his turn for home in 1945, provide an intimate history of one man's service in World War II. Kurtz is also the author of Ben's Tale, the first in a series of children's books called the "Animal Post Office," based on traditions in the islands of northern Lake Huron.
LHBF1_190505_238.JPG: Bill Gourgey
Bill Gourgey frequently writes about science and technology and is the award-winning author of "The Glide Trilogy." He is also the author of an acclaimed series of books for young adults, "Cap City Kids," which deals with social issues facing urban teens. The series began with Capitol Kid and was followed by Attic Ward and Court Kasey. His most recent book, Castle Keep, finds his teenage hero uncovering a bribery plot that reaches all the way to the Oval Office. https://gourgey.com.
LHBF1_190505_242.JPG: Kelsi Bracmort
Kelsi Bracmort is the publisher and author of Simone Visits the Museum, about a little girl from SE Washington who visits the National Museum of African American History and Culture. A native Washingtonian, Dr. Bracmort holds both an M.S. and an Ph.D. in agricultural and biological engineering from Purdue University and serves as a reading mentor for Everybody Wins! DC, a program that promotes children's literacy. Simone Visits the Museum is illustrated by Takeia Marie and is suitable for readers ages 7–9. www.simonevisitsthemuseum.com
LHBF1_190505_254.JPG: Laura Melmed
Laura Krauss Melmed's newest picture book is "Daddy, Me, and the Magic Hour," a story about a little boy and his father who spend some quality time together in the twilight hour between supper and bedtime. She is the author of many award-winning children's books, including the interactive Doodle Washington D.C., Capital! Washington D.C. from A to Z, Lullaby, I Love You as Much, and The Rainbabies. In addition to writing, Laura likes cooking for friends and family, hiking, typing with a cat on her lap, traveling and, of course, reading. www.laurakraussmelmed.com.
LHBF1_190505_266.JPG: Katy Kelly
Katy Kelly grew up on Capitol Hill and is the author of two popular series of books for kids that are set here. Four of her books star the inimitable Lucy Rose -- Here's the Thing About Me, Big on Plans, Busy Like You Can't Believe, and Working Myself to Pieces and Bits -- and six feature Adam Melon, also known as "Melonhead": Melonhead, Melonhead and the We-Fix-It Company, Melonhead and the Vegalicious Disaster, Melonhead and the Undercover Operation, and the most recent, Melonhead and the Later Gator Plan. katykellyauthor.com.
LHBF1_190505_272.JPG: Jessica Childress
Jessica N. Childress is a DC attorney whose first book for children, "The Briefcase of Juris P. Prudence," served as the springboard for the Juris Prudence Academy, a DC-based legal educational program for kids 8-12. In Childress's latest book, "Juris P. Prudence's Holiday Gift," the lessons that Juris and her friends are learning in their contract law class result in a lesson in compassion -- and an accompanying workbook called "Juris P. Prudence's Kindness Contracts." www.jurispprudence.com.
LHBF1_190505_287.JPG: Carolyn Miller Parr
LHBF1_190505_295.JPG: Sig Cohen and Carolyn Miller Parr
Sig Cohen and Carolyn Miller Parr are the co-authors of Love's Way: Living Peacefully with Your Family as Your Parents Age, a guide to the legal and emotional hurdles faced by families dealing with end-of-life issues. Sig Cohen is a retired United States Foreign Services officer and community organizer who serves as a mediator. Carolyn Miller Parr is a retired judge, mediator, writer, and public speaker who practices peacemaking through her mediation practice, Beyond Dispute, and Tough Conversations, with Sig Cohen. www.toughconversations.net
LHBF1_190505_302.JPG: Magination Press
LHBF1_190505_314.JPG: Capitol Hill Books
LHBF1_190505_325.JPG: Ben's Tale by William S. Kurtz, read by illustrator Elizabeth Thottam (3-5). The inhabitants of Many Tree Island are excited to share the news: A child recently arrived just may be the reader they long for. Set in the islands of northern Lake Huron.
LHBF1_190505_347.JPG: East City Bookshop
LHBF1_190505_356.JPG: Louis Bayard (Courting Mr. Lincoln)
LHBF1_190505_367.JPG: Abby Maslin
Abby Maslin is a writer and public school teacher whose book, Love You Hard: A Memoir of Marriage, Brain Injury, and Reinventing Love, tells how she and her family coped after her husband suffered a traumatic brain injury during a mugging on Capitol Hill. Through her speaking and blogging, she hopes to bring awareness to the challenges of traumatic brain injury and caregiving. She lives on the Hill with her husband and children. www.LoveYouHard.com
LHBF1_190505_376.JPG: User comment: Garrett Peck, author of "The Great War in America."
LHBF1_190505_390.JPG: Daniel Stone
Daniel Stone is a writer for National Geographic and a former White House correspondent for Newsweek. His work has appeared in Scientific American and The Washington Post, and on CBS's 60 Minutes. His most recent book is The Food Explorer: The Adventures of the Globe-Trotting Botanist Who Transformed What America Eats, which tells the story of David Fairchild, a late 19th-century food explorer who introduced diverse crops into the U.S. A botanical writer, he lives on Capitol Hill, where he notes that he tends a modest garden but doesn't have room for a tractor. www.danielstonebooks.com
LHBF1_190505_395.JPG: Tom Sherwood, Garrett Peck
LHBF1_190505_397.JPG: (Standing) E. Ethelbert Miller, Yermiyahu Ahron Taub, Michael Levin, Jona Colson
(Seated) Kim Roberts, Jonathan Lewis
E. Ethelbert Miller
E. Ethelbert Miller is a writer and literary activist who is the author of several collections of poems, including The Collected Poems of E. Ethelbert Miller, and two memoirs. He serves on the board of the Greater Washington Community Foundation and, in 2015, was inducted into the Washington DC Hall of Fame. He currently serves on the faculty at the University of Houston/Victoria and hosts a weekly morning radio show, "On the Margin," which airs on WPFW-FM. His most recent book of poetry is If God Invented Baseball, which The Washington Post called "a delightful collection [full of] humor, compassion, and undimmed enthusiasm." www.eethelbertmiller.com
Kim Roberts
Kim Roberts is an award-winning poet, teacher, literary historian and co-editor of "Beltway Poetry Quarterly" and the "Delaware Poetry Review." She is the author of five books of poetry, including Animal Magnetism, Fortune's Favor: Scott in the Antarctic, and The Scientific Method. Most recently, she edited A Literary Guide to Washington, D.C., which provides a walking tour of sites associated with the famous (and not-so-famous) literary lights of the nation's capital. www.kimroberts.org.
Jonathan Lewis
Jonathan Lewis is the author of Babel On, which won the 2017 L+S Press Mid-Atlantic Chapbook Series contest. He is a recipient of a DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities fellowship, a two-time finalist for the Anna Davidson Rosenberg Poetry Award, and a winner of the Golden Haiku DC award. His poetry has appeared in a variety of publications, most recently Beltway Poetry Quarterly and the Washington Post. Lewis lives in Washington, DC, where he judges the DC City-Wide Spelling Bee, edits The Federal Poet, and hosts the annual Poets' Corner reading at Tunnicliff's.
LHBF2_190505_005.JPG: Poetry Reading by Michael Levin (3-12). Come feed your soul on the verse of Michael Levin.
LHBF2_190505_010.JPG: Jonathan Riffe
Jonathan Riffe was a lieutenant with the Washington DC Fire Department and chief of the Huntington Volunteer Fire Department. He currently serves as a firefighter with the Annapolis Fire Department and an adjunct instructor with the University of Maryland Fire and Rescue Institute. He has written a number of articles related to his field and recently published Thomas Sweatt: Inside the Mind of DC's Most Notorious Arsonist, about a serial arsonist who set more than 300 fires, terrorizing Capitol Hill and other parts of DC until his arrest in 2005. www.thomassweattbook.com
LHBF2_190505_025.JPG: Nancy Arbuthnot ("Wild Washington Animal Sculptures A to Z")
LHBF2_190505_031.JPG: Kim Prothro Williams
Kim Prothro Williams is an architectural historian with the D.C. Historic Preservation Office. For more than 20 years, she has been researching and writing about historic buildings and communities in D.C., Virginia, and Maryland, with her primary focus being to evaluate buildings for listing in the National Register of Historic Places. She has written three books, two of which address the transformation of the agricultural landscape, as well as several articles and heritage trail brochures. Her most recent book is Lost Farms and Estates of Washington, D.C, which explores the pastoral history of the nation's capital.
LHBF2_190505_044.JPG: Paul Smith Rivas
Paul Smith Rivas is the director of Smith Rivas Study Skills & Academic Coaching and author of This Book Will Not Be on the Test: The Study Skills Revolution. He studied literature in Mexico City, backpacked from Spain to Syria via Morocco and Wales, performed stand-up comedy in Spanish in Buenos Aires, and traveled from Argentina to the United States by bus. He lives on Capitol Hill with his wife and dog. www.smithrivas.com
LHBF2_190505_053.JPG: Chris Datta
Chris Datta is the author of two Civil War novels -- Touched With Fire and Fire & Dust -- as well as a supernatural thriller, The Demon Stone, and a movie script. He is currently finishing a detective novel and another movie script, both due out later this year. Most recently, he published a memoir, Guardians of the Grail: A Life of Diplomacy on the Edge, that deals with his long career as a civil conflict specialist with the U.S. State Department, last serving in the newly established embassy in South Sudan. @ChristopherDattaAuthor
LHBF2_190505_085.JPG: Inspiring Life-Long Readers: authors Grant Goodman (middle school teacher), Glen Mourning (fourth-grade teacher), Paul Smith Rivas (high school study coach), and Colleen Shogan (college professor)
LHBF2_190505_087.JPG: Jenny Masur
Jenny Masur is a native Washingtonian and author of the new book, Heroes of the Underground Railroad Around Washington, D.C. She worked for seventeen years for the National Park Service as National Capital Region manager for the National Underground Railroad Network to Freedom. Her doctorate is in anthropology, and her interest in individual lives dates from the book Jewish Grandmothers, which she co-edited while in graduate school. Her respect for the heroes of the Underground Railroad continues to grow.
LHBF2_190505_096.JPG: George Derek Musgrove
George Derek Musgrove is associate professor of history at the University of Maryland Baltimore County, where he teaches courses in post-WWII US history with an emphasis on African American politics. He is the author of Rumor, Repression, and Racial Politics: How the Harassment of Black Elected Officials Shaped Post-Civil Rights America (2012) and co-author with Chris Asch of Chocolate City: A History of Race and Democracy in the Nation's Capital (2017). He earned his PhD in US history from New York University and frequently writes on post-civil rights era black politics. He is currently working on a new project, "The Black Nationalist Resurgence and the Changing Nature of Black Protest in the Post-Civil Rights Period." www.gdmusgrove.com
LHBF2_190505_111.JPG: Patsy Sims
Patsy Sims is an award-winning journalist and author of three nonfiction books, including The Klan, and Can Somebody Shout Amen! Inside the Tents and Tabernacles of American Revivalists, which was named a noteworthy book of 1988 by The New York Times Book Review. She is also the editor of Literary Nonfiction: Learning by Example and coauthor of the narration for the Academy Award-nominated documentary The Klan: A Legacy of Hate. She is most recently editor of The Stories We Tell: Classic True Tales by America's Greatest Women Journalists, a collection of literary nonfiction by twenty notable female writers.
LHBF2_190505_116.JPG: Jona Colson
Jona Colson's debut poetry collection, Said Through Glass, published in the fall of 2018, won the Jean Feldman Poetry Prize from the Washington Writers' Publishing House. His poems have appeared in The Southern Review, Ploughshares, Subtropics, The Massachusetts Review, and other venues, and his interviews and translations can be seen in The Writer's Chronicle, Prairie Schooner, and Tupelo Quarterly. He teaches at Montgomery College in Maryland and lives in DC. www.jonacolson.com
LHBF2_190505_143.JPG: Michael Levin
Michael Levin is a lawyer, solar energy developer, and award-winning poet whose work has appeared in more than 50 periodicals or anthologies. The Washington Independent Review of Books named his first collection, Watered Colors, a Best Poetry Book for May 2014, and his newest book, Man Overboard, a Best Poetry Book for December 2018. A third collection, Falcons, will be published this spring. In addition, he and his wife, Nora Jean Levin, co-authored and co-produced Two Pianos -- Playing for Life, a play with live classical music recreating concerts performed by two female Jewish pianists under the Third Reich. www.michaellevinpoetry.com
LHBF2_190505_163.JPG: The Flowerbed by Tom Noll (K-3). Get a sneak peak at the latest in Tom Noll's "Trash to Treasure" series. L.T. reduces waste by creatively recycling items.
LHBF2_190505_189.JPG: Claudia Kousoulas and Ellen Letourneau
Claudia Kousoulas and Ellen Letourneau are the co-authors of Bread and Beauty: A Year in Montgomery County's Agricultural Reserve, a compendium of stories, essays, recipes, and photographs focusing on the people who work the land in this productive corner of Maryland. Claudia Kousoulas is a writer and editor whose freelance work covers architecture, design, cooking, and culinary history, and who worked as a land use planner in Montgomery County for more than 20 years. Ellen Letourneau lives and works in the Agricultural Reserve, where she is an event planner, weaver, and baker. www.breadandbeauty.com
LHBF2_190505_205.JPG: Three authors all published by The History Press. (Jenny suggested the photo.)
Jenny Masur, Kim Prothro Williams, Garrett Peck
LHBF2_190505_209.JPG: Writer's Center
LHBF2_190505_211.JPG: Jon Ward
Jon Ward has covered American politics and culture for two decades, as a city desk reporter in Washington D.C., as a White House correspondent who traveled aboard Air Force One to Africa, Europe and the Middle East, and as a national affairs correspondent who has traveled the country to write about two presidential campaigns and the ideas and people animating our times. He is a senior political correspondent for Yahoo News and has been published in The Washington Post, The New Republic, The Huffington Post, and The Washington Times. His new book is titled Camelot's End: Kennedy vs. Carter and the Fight that Broke the Democratic Party. www.johnwardwrites.org
LHBF2_190505_227.JPG: Library of Congress
LHBF2_190505_250.JPG: Michael Fry Memorial Talk on Local History: George Derek Musgrove (Chocolate City)
LHBF2_190505_272.JPG: Jane Levey
LHBF2_190505_282.JPG: Yermiyahu Ahron Taub
Yermiyahu Ahron Taub is the author of six books of poetry, including Prayers of a Heretic, Uncle Feygele, What Stillness Illuminated, and The Education of a Daffodil. He has been nominated four times for a Pushcart Prize and twice for a Best of the Net award. His most recent book is a short story collection, Prodigal Children in the House of G-d, and he has also co-translated a volume of short stories by Blume Lempel from the Yiddish. www.yataub.net
LHBF2_190505_296.JPG: Robert Pohl (right) and neighbors
LHBF2_190505_331.JPG: Writer's Center
LHBF2_190505_355.JPG: Garrett Peck, Robert Pohl
LHBF2_190505_361.JPG: Chuck Beck
LHBF2_190505_368.JPG: Bob and Jane Levey
LHBF2_190505_395.JPG: Abby Maslin (Love You Hard)
LHBF2_190505_406.JPG: (Standing) Samuel Holliday
(Seated) Chuck Beck, Steve Livengood
US Capitol Historical Society (USCHS)
LHBF2_190505_412.JPG: Woman's National Book Assn
Limiting Text: You can turn off all of this text by clicking this link:
[Thumbnails Only]
Bigger photos? To save server space, the full-sized versions of these images have either not been loaded to the server or have been removed from the server. (Only some pages are loaded with full-sized images and those usually get removed after three months.)
I still have them though. If you want me to email them to you, please send an email to guthrie.bruce@gmail.com
and I can email them to you, or, depending on the number of images, just repost the page again will the full-sized images.
2017_DC_DocHist1F_170428 DC -- Celebration of the publication of the last volumes of the Documentary History of the First Federal Congress @ Society of the Cincinnati
2019 photos: Equipment this year: I continued to use my Fuji XS-1 cameras but, depending on the event, I also used a Nikon D7000.
Trips this year:
a four-day jaunt to Massachusetts (Boston, Stockbridge, and Springfield) to experience rain in another state,
Asheville, NC to visit Dad and his wife Dixie,
four trips to New York City (including the United Nations, Flushing, and the New York Comic-Con), and
my 14th consecutive San Diego Comic-Con (including sites in Utah).
Number of photos taken this year: about 582,000.