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Shave Anwee!

by William E Burleson
My name is Sybil Voss, and I am the fictional mayor of Ahnwee, Minnesota.
Iโve been asked by its author to write a thing about the new book, Ahnwee Days, which tells the story of my small, feisty, and likely doomed town.ย ย
Iโm not sure how I feel about having my and my townโs struggles chronicled in this way. Is all publicity good publicity? I guess. But an entire novel about our fight to save our town? Even good publicity can be exhausting.
I only want to save my town, and Iโll do whatever is necessary to succeed. I do not want to be a celebrity. Seriouslyโkind-of un-American, but itโs the truth. Iโm just a mayor of a town of 200 people who got the jobโso Iโm told and told and toldโbecause it was my turn.
Donโt get me wrong: Iโm proud to be the mayor of Ahnwee. I grew up here. I know every street and every soul in the town. I like the idea that as mayor Iโm giving back, or, at least, trying to give back. Iโm not sure people see it, or care, or are at least willing to acknowledge it, but I know Iโm trying.
Take our first ever Founders Day, also for some reason called Ahnwee Days in the title of the book. That was a great success. Well, success in that it happened. That counts, right? Not many people came, sure, and not many vendors set up and the ones that did didnโt make any money. But moneyโs not everything, I suppose. Sure, those stoners at Letโs Go Crazy Printz in Despar wrote โFloundersโ on the banner. But you canโt let the perfect be the enemy of the good, right?
But back to the book and my moment of fame. I donโt want it. I did understand that running for county board would provide a certain amount of notoriety. But just a tiny amount. How many of your county board members would you recognize if they were in line with you at the grocery store?
Honestly, Iโm not asking for much. All I want is for my father to snap out of whatever feedback loop heโs in that makes him only able to communicate using 1970s TV theme songs. I want my brothers to step up to the plate and help out. I want my friends to be happy. And most of all, I want people to leave my town alone.
You could say that in the book, Ahnwee is just a proxy for jillions of small towns that struggle to not fall into disrepair, irrelevance, and uselessness. Big box retailers drive main streets into ruin. That hardware store that has just the right gizmo for your old faucet? Gone. Need a washer? Go to the Ubermart and buy a new faucet. How about factory farms? We know that small farmers (the farmers arenโt actually small, just their farms) are more likely to buy local, not to mention are often better stewards of the land. Pigs rooting around in a penโgood for the pigs and good for the land. Pigs in giant buildings with manure fields holding as much waste as a small city stinking up the placeโnot so good.
Small towns are caught in a vicious cycle: Businesses leave and then thereโs fewer places to work and less to do. People leaveโespecially young peopleโand then thereโs even fewer businesses and even less to do. As a result, small towns get emptier and more and more gray.
But those are all bigger problems for someone to solve. I want to talk about Ahnwee. We have our own unique challenges, such as:
- A wind turbine that hits cars off the highwayย
- A lake that glows in the darkย
- A smell of pig poo when the wind is from the southย
None of which are exactly good for Yelp reviews, if we ever got one.
Those problems are obvious to anyone who visits our town, should someone ever do that. Less obvious but even more challenging is the townโs twin existential threats (as people like to say these days): The apparent lack of good title search companies in the area and a greedy so-in-so on the country board whoโs in the pocket of the wind turbine factory on the freeway.
As a result, it seems like everyone wants to tear down our little town.
Realistically, we may end up chaining ourselves to bulldozers before this is over.
But anyway: about the book. It was OK. I felt a bit insulted at timesโno more 30-something, 20 extra pounds shaming!โbut it got the facts right. Although, how could it not, since itโs fiction and the author made the whole thing up in his coffee-addled brain. How else can you connect balloon accidents and syphilis outbreaks in the 1800s to mobs attacking towns in the nineteen-teens, to passive aggression today? Takes a warped mind.

Join Sybils quest for the county board, and Shave Ahnwee! www.shaveahnwee.com
William E Burleson is the Author of Ahnwee Days, coming October 1, 2024.
Comments
2 responses to “Shave Anwee!”
Sybil, I think youโre great, and you really made me want to read the book! I plan to do so. Thank you and good luck, especially with the pig poo!
Right on, Sybil! If we don’t Shave Ahnwee now, there will be no Ahnwee left to Shave.
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