Sonya Zalubowski
Sonya Zalubowski is a journalist whose work took her all over the globe. Her specialty was Eastern Europe. As a correspondent first for the Miami Herald and later the Chicago Sun-Times Field news service and Seattle Post-Intelligencer, she had a front seat at history. Sonya's reporting covered the spectrum, from the rise of Solidarity in Poland to the fall of the Berlin Wall.
After returning to the Pacific Northwest and family, she worked for Newsweek magazine and The Oregonian newspaper. She has studied fiction writing with author Tom Spanbauer's Dangerous Writers and has published several short stories, including in the Alimentum food journal, VoiceCatcher and BellaOnline.
Sonya's latest direction is a return to travel and travel writing and her blog can be read at seniortravelswithsaz.blogspot.com
By Sonya Zalubowski*. The red dust of Tanzania's iron-rich soil still clings to my athletic shoes. I've been loathe to clean them, wanting in this small fashion ...
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My Delilah and A New Law Restricting Pet Stores To the Sale Only of Dogs, Cats and Rabbits From Animal Shelters & Non-profit Rescue Operations
Sonya Zalubowski writes: Her name was Delilah, intriguing, especially for a dog that didn’t even weigh six pounds. Was she named after the Biblical tale of Samson and Delilah, the temptress that helped lead to the strongman’s downfall? Besides my own pop culture ignorance — I’d never heard of the song — I had no idea because she was a rescue dog that I found online. Someone else named her. That was just the beginning of the mystery about to unfold for me, the mystery involved in adopting such a dog, both the joys and sorrows. more »
Iberia: Reminders that Power Can Vanish and What Turns Out to Be Important is How You Can Live Today
Sonya Zalubowski writes: One of the most thrilling moments was our visit to the Alcazar in Segovia, the castle with foundations that date to Roman times, where Isabella and Ferdinand reigned in the 15th century. We stood in the very throne room where Christopher Columbus once knelt before her. The people are surrounded by remnants of a succession of cultures ranging all the way back to prehistoric to Roman, Visigoth and Moorish, to the kings and queens whose rule dominated Europe as they sent out Portuguese and Spanish explorers, to 20th-century despots and finally present day governments more »
How I Joined the Revolution in New Body Parts
Sonya Zalubowski writes: First, it was just a hitch in my step, then my legs began to feel sore and weirdly hollow during my daily walk with my dog, especially if I lollygagged along the way and spent time standing and chatting with friends we met. By the time I’d get home, down a steep hill, my right hip outright throbbed with the aching. I was young, my early 70s, and had had only one operation in my whole life. Some 30 years before. I had miles to go, no room for a hip replacement. more »
Joey: An 'Ominous' and Heartbreaking Diagnosis and a Last Walk Together
Sonya Zalubowski writes: I go into the bedroom, to check on Joey. He’s curled in a ball in his little bed. He only half-raises his head. Weaker than just a day ago. His nose is dry, hot. Sharp in my chest when I try to draw a deep breath. It hits me. The foolishness that I could even try to outrace both our maladies. That they won’t catch up with us before we reach the county line. That Joey would die in even more pain. That I will experience even more myself of the burning grind of my bone on bone hip. more »