It is my honor to be part of Elizabeth (Liz) Gauffreau’s blog tour for her latest poetry collection, Simple Pleasures: Haiku from the Place Just Right. Liz is a wonderful poet, storyteller, book reviewer, and blogging friend. If you don’t already subscribe to her blog at lizgauffreau.com, please do so now! We’ll wait.
Okay, now that you’re back, let’s continue with the tour!
Today Liz shares photos of ruins in Pawtuckaway State Park as well as a bit of the area’s fascinating history.
Without further adieu, here’s Liz!

Thank you, Marie, for hosting me on my blog tour for Simple Pleasures: Haiku from the Place Just Right! For today’s tour stop, I’m sharing photos from a set of ruins in Pawtuckaway State Park, which is a hop, skip, and a jump from our house in Nottingham. These ruins provide the larger context for one of the poems in Simple Pleasures.

The Pawtuckaway region was originally inhabited by indigenous peoples, the Pennacook, a division of the Algonquin Natives. The Pennacook were hunter gathers, who referred to Pawtuckaway as the land of “sticks and stones” because it wouldn’t support crops. When European settlers moved in, they thought they knew better. They cleared the land of trees; built houses, barns, and stone walls; and planted crops. However, the farms were not profitable because—wait for it—the land wouldn’t support crops. The early settlers’ descendants finally abandoned their farms at the end of the 19th century and joined the westward expansion. (Source: https://blog.nhstateparks.org/tucked-away-in-pawtuckaway/)
Walking along the trail that goes around Pawtuckaway Lake, we come upon the last signs of those abandoned farms: derelict stone walls and cellar holes.







The glacier strikes again! This so-called boulder field was created 18,000 years ago when a mile-high glacier slowly moved through the area, picked up boulders from a nearby mountain and deposited them here. (Source: https://blog.nhstateparks.org/tucked-away-in-pawtuckaway)




Author Biography

Elizabeth Gauffreau writes fiction and poetry with a strong connection to family and place. Her work has been widely published in literary magazines, as well as several themed anthologies. Her short story “Henrietta’s Saving Grace” was awarded the 2022 Ben Nyberg prize for fiction by Choeofpleirn Press.
She has published a novel, Telling Sonny, and a collection of photopoetry, Grief Songs: Poems of Love & Remembrance. She is currently working on a novel, The Weight of Snow and Regret, based on the closing of the last poor farm in Vermont in 1968.
Liz’s professional background is in nontraditional higher education, including academic advising, classroom and online teaching, curriculum development, and program administration. She received the Granite State College Distinguished Faculty Award for Excellence in Teaching in 2018. Liz lives in Nottingham, New Hampshire with her husband. Find her online at https://lizgauffreau.com.
Book2Read Purchase Link: https://books2read.com/SimplePleasures
Print & Fixed EPUB for tablets and Kindle Fire
BookFunnel PDF Purchase Link: https://buy.bookfunnel.com/gef1ili6qd
For any device.
Bookshop Link (paperback): https://bookshop.org/p/books/simple-pleasures-haiku-from-the-place-just-right-elizabeth-gauffreau/21613107?ean=9781735929293
Amazon Link (Kindle Fire or paperback): https://www.amazon.com/Simple-Pleasures
My review of Simple Pleasures:
Reading this collection was like forest bathing, the photos of Liz’s favorite outdoor places filled with green mountains, blue lakes, red and yellow leaves, gray rocks, white trees, and pink-tinted and fiery sunsets. And yet the photo and haiku that stirred my soul the most was that of the snow-covered pond with a border of dark trees in the background.
the pond in winter
windswept snow, crystalline sky
frigid air, silence
I spent the first 21 years of my life in upstate New York, among farms just northeast of Albany. Although I often say that fall was my favorite season, sometimes I miss winter more, especially the silence of winter.
Simple Pleasures is a wonderful pairing of photographs and poetry. You’ll want to keep this book by your bedside or writing desk for when you want to enjoy a simple pleasure or to be inspired.

61 responses to “Simple Pleasures Blog Tour”
I love this stop on the tour! What a wonderful place to walk in nature, where you can still see the effect of ancient glaciers, as well as abandoned ruins.
Perfect review of Liz’s book, Marie: “like forest bathing.” 💙
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Thank you, Merril! I’m glad you enjoyed the walk in Pawtuckaway.
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You’re welcome, Liz!
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Thank you, Merril, and many thanks to Liz for providing such wonderful photos.
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You’re welcome, Marie, and yes, thank you to Liz!
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Thank you for hosting me today, Marie! And thank you for the lovely review. I love the comparison of your reading experience with forest bathing. I can see how you were drawn to “the pond in winter.” I remember the day we took that picture. I didn’t want to leave.
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You are very welcome, Liz! It’s a real pleasure to host you. There’s something so magical about a winter scene, and you captured that with your haiku. Although you took the photo during the day, it reminded me of the winter nights of my youth … crossing the white expanse of our snow-covered yard, the world so quiet the crunch of my boots through ice-crusted snow filled my ears. I would sometimes pause and just take in the silence.
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Do you remember when it would get so cold that the snow would squeak under you boots?
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Indeed, I do! Funny how some memories don’t fade even after 40-some years :-)
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You’re so right about that!
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So good to see Liz here, Marie. Loved the photos and congratulations to her on Simple Pleasures. Thanks for hosting.
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My pleasure, John!
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Thank you for following the blog tour, John!
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😊
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Today’s stop on the tour includes both history and geology. I like that!
Liz, your blog tour can boast durability with many loyal followers since you began in early August. Brava to you–and thanks to Marie for hosting today. :-D
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My pleasure to host, Marian!
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Thank you, Marian! I first learned about the effect of the glacier on the topography of New Hampshire and Vermont when I was in the fourth grade, and I’m still fascinated by it.
I’ve been very pleased with how people have responded to the tour.
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What a beautiful walk in nature. I love your photos. ❤️
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I’m so glad, Colleen!
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Great photos! I loved the huge rocks!
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There is something appealing about large rocks! Must be their climbability.
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Wonderful review! It’s nice to see Liz’s fabulous poetry and great pictures getting so much attention in her blog tour, and it’s good to learn some history of her home state.
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Thank you for stopping by and reading and commenting!
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My pleasure, Marie. Thank you for your post in Liz’s name.
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🙂
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Thank you, Tim. I’m glad you’ve been enjoying the New Hampshire history!
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Being such an admirer of American Indians, I especially liked this one, Liz. You and Mr. Johnson going under that huge boulder is fantastic.
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Thank you, Tim! I’m so glad you enjoyed the post.
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Pawtuckaway State Park, the map, the trail, the images, the history all make this a most interesting slice of “Simple Pleasures.” Thank you for hosting this review for Liz,” Maria! :)
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My pleasure, Nancy! Thank you for reading and commenting :-)
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Thank you, Nancy! I’m glad you enjoyed my slice of New Hampshire life.
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Liz, thanks for the fascinating historical info and great photos on Marie’s site! The blog tour for your book has been very enjoyable!
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Thanks for stopping by, Dave! Liz’s tour has been spectacular, and I’m thrilled to have been part of it.
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You’re welcome, Dave! I’m so glad you’ve been enjoying the blog tour.
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Wow, those glacial boulders are huge!
We are still ignoring the wisdom of the Native peoples. To our detriment. (K)
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Those boulders are amazing, and, I agree, it’s our folly to ignore the wisdom of Native peoples.
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You’re so right about our ignoring the wisdom of Native peoples, Kerfe.
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Your Pawtuckaway State Park pictures are so pretty. No wonder the area inspired poetry.
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Thank you, Priscilla! I’m very fortunate to live where I do.
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So much fun to see the rest of the landscape, and all those remarkable stones!
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Thank you for coming by, Dorothy! Liz has some wonderful photos.
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When I lived in Colebrook, NH when I was a kid, there was an old logging road behind our house, and by the road was a HUGE boulder that was a hang-out place for us kids. I’ve never forgotten that boulder. I can still see it in my mind’s eye sixty years later!
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What a wonderful memory. New Hampshire has amazing rocks formations! When I was a child in Spofford, I had a massive rock by our brook shaped like a turtle. We had lots of conversations.
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I love your turtle rock story. The other big rock I remember from the Colebrook house was the huge boulder that jutted into the dirt-floor cellar.
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And they built the house around what couldn’t be moved!
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Exactly!
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So nice to see Liz’s blog tour continuing here. Thank you for hosting her.
Best wishes, Pete.
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Thank you for coming by, Pete! It was my pleasure to host Liz.
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Thank you for following the tour, Pete.
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Thank you for giving Liz such a wonderful review!!
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My pleasure! Thank you for stopping by 🙂
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I was thrilled with Marie’s review! Thank you for stopping by, GP.
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Any time, Liz!
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:)
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🩷
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Pawtuckaway, gotta love that name! And the name of Liz’s book.
It sounds like where animals go to hide their paws.
Beautiful nature! Thank you Liz and Marie!
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You’re right about Pawtuckaway, Resa! I’d never thought about it in that way before. Thank you for stopping by.
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My pleasure, Resa!
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Congratulations to Liz! What a lovely cover.
And what beautiful photos! Love the trees and massive stones.
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Thank you very much, L. Marie! I’m glad you enjoyed the cover and the photos.
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Thanks for dropping by, L. Marie! Her photos are lovely.
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