Source Via @twilightlexicon.
Chris Cook is the editor of the Forks Forum newspaper. We had the
opportunity to meet him a few years ago, and he’s a really great guy. He
knows so much about Forks history, but what’s more important is that
he’s a great storyteller. Chris has a new book out (he already has what
we consider to be the best Twilight Guide to Forks). Check out the press release.
The newest addition to Arcadia Publishing’s popular Images of America
series is Forks from local authors Larry Burtness, Chris Cook, and the
Forks Timber Museum. The book boasts more than 200 vintage images and
memories of days gone by.
Forks is a community rich in logging heritage. Situated on a prairie
between the forks of rivers, the town sits amidst the beauty of the vast
rain forest of Washington State’s Olympic Peninsula’s west end.
Settled in the mid-1870s by pioneer homesteading farmers, Forks’s
name reflects its location at the confluence of the Calawah, Bogachiel,
and Sol Duc Rivers. The town’s annual average rainfall of approximately
120 inches is legendary, making it the rainiest incorporated city in the
contiguous states.
Forks is a hub for Olympic Peninsula visitors, drawn by world-class
salmon and steelhead fishing and by the wonders of the Olympic National
Park and the sea stack–lined Pacific Coast. Most recently, Forks has
made a name for itself as the home to vampires and werewolves in
Stephenie Meyer’s best-selling Twilight series.
Highlights of Forks:
• The pioneers
• Early logging years
• Becoming a town
• Transportation
• World War II and postwar
• The pioneers
• Early logging years
• Becoming a town
• Transportation
• World War II and postwar
Available at area bookstores, independent retailers, and online
retailers, or through Arcadia Publishing at www.arcadiapublishing.com
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