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Tamie

Tamie

Tamie Parker Song is an essayist and improviser who grew up between Jerusalem, Alaska, and the American Midwest. A recent essay, “The Fifth Direction,” won the 2020 Terrain Editors’ Choice Award for Nonfiction. Another essay, “Manhandled,” was shortlisted in Best American Essays 2016. She has been published in New Ohio Review, terrain.org, The Baltimore Review, Selkie Zine, Literal Latte, The Episcopal Cafe, and KQED, and her photos were published in Spiritus, a journal out of Johns Hopkins University Press. She is a punishment abolitionist, a believer in the transformational capacities of ordinary humans, and she loves walking very much. Tamie has an MFA from the University of Southern Maine, and an MSW from the Silberman School of Social Work in New York City.
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slare

To saunter, to be slovenly (The Dialect of Cumberland – Robert Ferguson, 1873). Rarely used in Cumbria now but has a meaning of to walk slowly, to amble, to walk with no particular purpose. Used for example in the ballad Billy Watson’s Lonnin written by Alexander Craig Gibson of Harrington, Cumbria in 1872 “Yan likes to trail ow’r t’ Sealand-fields an’ watch for t’ commin’ tide, Or slare whoar t’Green hes t’ Ropery an’ t’ Shore of ayder side “(Translation: One likes to trail over to Sealand Fields and watch for the coming tide, Or slare over to where the Green has the ropery and the Shore on the other side) Billy Watson’s Lonning (lonning – dialect for lane) still exists and can be found at Harrington, Cumbria.

Added by Alan Cleaver
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