Archive for Friday, March 23, 2007
‘Catfish Cookies’ born in the Kaw
March 23, 2007
Advertisement
Barbara Higgins-Dover reads from her new book, "Catfish Cookies."
None
Where to find it
You can buy "Catfish Cookies" for $12 at the Raven Bookstore, 6 E. Seventh St. Eventually the book also will be available at the Kansas University Natural History Museum.
Barbara Higgins-Dover remembers her grandmother making cookies one morning when she was a child. But her grandmother used a key ingredient not likely found in most cookie recipes: catfish lard.
It might sound unusual, but it made sense for Higgins-Dover's grandparents, Richard and Theda, who learned that being resourceful had its payoffs.
The Higgins family lived off of the river and used fishing to provide food and income. They owned a bait shop and fish market in North Lawrence, and Higgins-Dover's grandfather fished in northeast Kansas and northwest Missouri during the middle of the 20th century.
Higgins-Dover, a Lawrence author and educational curriculum design specialist, drew inspiration from her grandparents' lifestyle for her new children's book, "Catfish Cookies."
"I saw a lot of resourcefulness in both of my grandparents," Higgins-Dover says.
"Catfish Cookies" tells the story of Rippler, a little blue catfish who lives in the Kaw River near Bowersock Dam. The catfish faces big, mean catfish who bully him, but Rippler finds a way to get through teasing and taunting by believing in himself. Higgins-Dover relates Rippler's story to the resourcefulness she learned from her grandparents.
"It's a representation of inner strength depicted in a social-environmental context," she says.
Higgins-Dover published the book by partnering with the Kaw Valley Heritage Alliance. The alliance has made "Catfish Cookies" the first publication of its River Roots Series, a collection of books that combine a children's story with environmental awareness.
"The way the story is woven shows you different parts of what is in the river," says Alison Reber, executive director of the alliance and developmental editor for the River Roots Series.
The book incorporates historical and geological aspects of the river and the dam, biological details of the fish used in the story and others native to the river, background on Higgins-Dover's grandparents, instructions on how to catch your own fish and a recipe for cookies - catfish lard optional.
Reber hopes the book will get the community excited about the river.
"Sometimes people talk about the river," she says, "and they are not as excited as they could be, not as aware as we once were."
More like this
- 'Catfish Cookies' author to sign books September 23, 2007
- 'Catfish Cookies' author to give reading, signing July 19, 2007
- Artist noted 1 comment / March 30, 2007
- Books for cookie bakers December 21, 2004
- AFTER STARTING HER OWN NATURE SCHOOL AND THEN CLOSING IT, ALISON REBER, 27, IS AGAIN TURNING HER ENERGIES TO ENVIRONMENTAL EDUCATION THROUGH HER INVOLVEMENT WITH THE KAW VALLEY HERITAGE ALLIANCE. November 16, 1998
Top ads RSS
Marketplace
Arts & Entertainment · Bars · Theatres · Restaurants · Coffeehouses · Libraries · Antiques · Services
- Reese's Pieces: Kitty Reese screen-prints designs with a darker ‘Holly Hobbie Country Rainbow Brite’ aesthetic November 29, 2009 · 2 comments
- Obama is a unique president for a unique time November 29, 2009 · 29 comments
- Blog: If This Is The End, How Will Mangino Be Remembered? November 29, 2009 · 46 comments
- Suicide numbers climbing November 29, 2009 · 30 comments
- Miserable ending November 29, 2009 · 33 comments
- Suicide survivors mourn together November 29, 2009 · 6 comments
- Family Promise going strong after 1 year November 29, 2009 · 3 comments
- Jobless recovery will haunt Democrats November 29, 2009 · 38 comments
- Two arrested after altercation at Henry's November 29, 2009 · 32 comments
- FINAL: Ressel's last-second field goal gives MU 41-39 victory over KU November 28, 2009 · 89 comments
- Lawrence church continues offering joy of the nativity November 29, 2009
- Lawrence women's chorale announces holiday concert November 29, 2009
- Victim ID’d in fatal car-cycle crash November 29, 2009
- Suicide numbers climbing November 29, 2009
- KU teams hone ultimate Frisbee skills November 29, 2009
- Long, winding road leads to 'family' March 11, 2001
- Inmates escape from Kansas prison November 29, 2009
- Strip deals wry Pearls of wisdom December 24, 2006
- EXCESSIVE SILT STILL A PROBLEM WITH WATER IN RURAL DISTRICT January 8, 1990
- 6News reporter decides to follow father’s footsteps November 28, 2009


23 March 2007
at 7:26 a.m.
Suggest removal
Permalink
just_another_bozo_on_this_bus (Anonymous) says…
Too bad that “catfish cookies” made with the lard of Kaw catfish would be too toxic to eat these days.
24 March 2007
at 2:34 p.m.
Suggest removal
Permalink
8muddyboots (Anonymous) says…
Bozo - go back and re-read the double speak - carcenogenic not toxic; besides cookies should be eaten in moderation…we're in the midst of an obesity epidemic for goodies sake.
24 March 2007
at 2:46 p.m.
Suggest removal
Permalink
8muddyboots (Anonymous) says…
I don't know why it wasn't mentioned but there's more about the book at http://www.catfishcookies.org.
As usual, the Kaw Valley Heritage Alliance has been out there quietly doing some nice work. This river organization is doing more than just going along for the canoe ride.