Regular readers may have noticed that there was no Fall 2003 issue of Talking Leaves. This gap occurred mainly because the editor's (my) other, garden-program-coordination hat this summer became too large (see "Gardening Words on a Rainy Afternoon"), which meant my Talking Leaves hat had to become very small to compensate. (Both hats have now resumed reasonable dimensions, and, having learned from the experience, I am now sworn and equipped to keep them that way.)
As a side benefit, waiting to produce this special double issue, once time made itself available for the work, has resulted in a considerable savings in total printing and shipping costs, as well as what we hope to be a higher quality, more well-rounded magazine.
We plan to continue this less strictly scheduled, more "organic" approach to publishing (already announced in the summer issue), and are also implementing a number of other beneficial changes, which are discussed in the letter on the back cover. Here are some of those changes, and why we are making them:
Instead of haggling over dollars in a business that seems rigged against the small publisher (us), we've decided to take a radically different approach. We want READERS and PARTNERS in this publishing venture, not CUSTOMERS that we try to convince to pay a set amount for our product. We want everyone who wants to read Talking Leaves to be able to do so. At gatherings like the annual Bioneers Conference in San Rafael, CA (which we attended again this October), we see the level of interest in and enthusiasm for Talking Leaves, once it is made available to the people who are its natural readers. Those many hundreds of copies that we have been sending into the apparently black hole of wholesale distribution would be much better sent to people who definitely want them.
As for this issue, it evolved organically, with no pre-announced theme. Nevertheless, each piece of writing which follows does flow in some way into the next. I like this issue a lot, and hope you do too. And since I'm out of room, I'll let it speak for itself now.
©2003 Talking Leaves
Fall/Winter 2003/2004
Volume 13, Numbers 3 & 4
Voices of the Earth: People in Harmony