Living Stories
Story
Story · Writing

Writing, D.C., and Public Voice

A story for Kristin's public writing, podcasts, D.C. home material, college references, and public-profile links.

WritingD.C.BGSUPodcast

Overview

This page is where Kristin's public writing, college context, D.C. voice, travel writing, books, and podcast/public-communication references belong.

The pillar says Kristin's story includes writing and public voice. This story explains what that means. The references point in several directions: a personal essay on Medium, a BGSU finding aid and student-newspaper PDF, Roll Call and D.C. context, Goodreads and book culture, an FAA podcast transcript about international travel, and a National Geographic travel article about Zanzibar.

These should not be crammed into the pillar. They are a story because they share a pattern: Kristin appears as someone who works with language, place, public communication, and reading communities. Some references are authored writing, some are profile or archive records, and some are public-media appearances. The archive should keep those roles separate while showing why they belong in the same story family.

Story Threads

Medium's Human Parts essay "Nothing" is a public writing reference for Kristin's voice and personal essay story.
Human Parts / Medium · writing item · review for excerpt permissions
The BGSU finding aid and BG News PDF belong to the college and archive thread, connecting Kristin to Bowling Green reference material.
The FAA podcast transcript is a public communication thread around international air travel guidance and travel expertise.
FAA: The Air Up There · podcast/transcript reference
The National Geographic Zanzibar article is a travel-writing thread and should feed the writing timeline after review.
National Geographic Travel · travel writing
Goodreads and public profile links are book and public-identity references. They should support context, not replace evidence-backed narrative.
Roll Call, We Love DC, and the Washington Post hometown reference belong to the D.C. public-life and home-place story.