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We’re All Invited to the Lighthouse

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We’re All Invited to the Lighthouse


To the Lighthouse, from the primary phrase of its title, is a novel that strikes. Right here it comes striding throughout the garden, with its hair in lengthy, curving crimps and a deerstalker hat on its head, with a bag in a single hand and a baby trailing from the opposite. It’s coming to seek out you, its face lights up, there’s something on this world so that you can do.

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I had met Virginia Woolf earlier than I ever opened her books. I knew what she appeared like and what had occurred to her; I knew that her books happened contained in the human thoughts and that I had my entire life to enter them. My premonitory sense of what her novels have been about—Mrs. Dalloway is about some woman, The Waves is about … waves, To the Lighthouse is about going to a lighthouse—turned out to be mainly correct. But I delay To the Lighthouse for a very long time, with a view to dwell in scrumptious anticipation of it. There’s a pleasure available in laying aside the classics; as quickly as you open Bleak Home, you foreclose all different prospects of what it may very well be, and there sits Mr. Krook in his unchanging grease spot, all the time to look the identical, by no means to boost a hand otherwise. So long as it stays unread, the story could be something—free, immortal, drowsing between white sheets. But in case you are a reader, this pleasure could be drawn out for less than so lengthy.

I’ve beliefs about Mrs. Dalloway—that Clarissa Dalloway ought to have been the one to kill herself, for instance. I’ve generally, picturing all of the characters in black leotards, discovered myself laughing on the first 10 pages of The Waves. However I by no means have the sense, opening To the Lighthouse, that it might have been the rest. It begins with the climate, identical to an actual day. It rises to some event, wakes with the lark to satisfy the weekend—strikes “with an indescribable air of expectation” as a result of it’ll meet somebody across the nook, and, with the shock of encounter you generally really feel in studying, you discover that it’s you.

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“That is going to be pretty brief,” Woolf wrote in 1925, “to have father’s character achieved full in it; & moms; & St Ives; & childhood; & all the standard issues I attempt to put in—life, demise &c.” A maniac’s declare, “life, demise &c.,” however she really did it. Virginia Woolf, being a kind of who can flip the Earth with one finger, picked up her personal childhood summers in Cornwall and set them down intact within the Hebrides, on the Isle of Skye.

Once I first learn this guide, I had not seen this place; now I’ve been over each inch of it, consuming its butter and eggs within the morning, blinking like a light-weight at its lakes at evening, getting backed up the highway by the dense yellow sponge of its sheep within the afternoon. We spent a number of days on the island within the spring of 2019, my mom, my husband, and I. At daybreak we drove round the entire perimeter of the novel, over the heather that retains a footprint, down by the rock swimming pools the place one thing may be misplaced. I felt I might have been using within the automobile that the royalties of To the Lighthouse purchased Virginia and her husband, Leonard, as she drove me previous all factors, on the incorrect facet of the highway and beneath menace of rain, in order that the true scenes blurred with those she had transposed on them. Virginia noticed the Godrevy Lighthouse in St. Ives Bay when she closed her eyes, although Skye, too, has a well-known one. She noticed her father, Sir Leslie Stephen, scholar, author, and mountain climber, and her mom, Julia Stephen, the tallest factor on the island, painted right here within the black-and-white stripes of somebody known as simply Mrs. Ramsay.

It’s Mrs. Ramsay herself we’re going to meet; it’s she who couldn’t have been completely different. She is the human vacation, the dinner desk laid with the whole lot in season, and she or he herself rotating within the heart of it—her personal face in season, a fruit. She has little time for books, not even books like this (and there may be solely a kind of). She has no foreknowledge, however she has intuitions: an impulse of terror when her household ceases to clean her with the sound of their speak, or when the road “stormed at with shot and shell” is carried for a second into her ear by her husband, the thunderer. Her 6-year-old, James, needs to go to the Lighthouse tomorrow, however it appears there will probably be climate.

“ ‘Sure, after all, if it’s high quality to-morrow,’ stated Mrs. Ramsay … ‘However,’ stated his father, stopping in entrance of the drawing-room window, ‘it received’t be high quality.’ ”

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“ ‘However it could be high quality—I count on will probably be high quality,’ stated Mrs. Ramsay, making some little twist of the reddish-brown stocking she was knitting, impatiently.” Together with James, from the primary web page of the guide, you might want to kill Mr. Ramsay. And together with James, trying into the likelihood and plenitude of his mom’s face, you might really feel that paradise is a fridge.

Is it ridiculous that what I bear in mind most about Skye is wandering the grocery retailer with my very own mom, by the chilly breath of the dairy aisle? My mom isn’t any Mrs. Ramsay—she seems at you not with tenderness, however as if a volcano is exploding behind you—however she has the reward of placing newspaper headlines on the day, of setting Tomorrow earlier than you as if it have been one thing to eat. We walked up and down and we selected, as if we have been selecting one another.

Ringed by water, issues on an island have the halos that objects put on in still-life work. The whole lot acquainted was a bit completely different there: fruit, flowers, ourselves. Randomly we purchased an enormous melon; possibly this was the place the place we might lastly be the individuals who would crack open a melon for breakfast. Rain started to spatter as we emerged into the car parking zone, which ought to have fearful us however didn’t—driving on the incorrect facet of the highway by tough climate was a chance my mom had waited for her entire life. We pulled squealing out of the lot, and we talked of what we might do, because the melon rolled thunderously from one facet of the automobile to the opposite. It was raining steadily now. The forecast stated it might proceed, however my mom drove us between drops, as if nothing that got here from the sky might matter to us. Perhaps she has some Mrs. Ramsay in her in spite of everything.

“I bear in mind it rather less fantastically,” my husband stated tactfully, as those that weren’t Virginia Woolf might have remembered these St. Ives summers. “We walked into the grocery retailer quarter-hour earlier than it closed. We had by no means been so hungry in our lives, so time was of the essence, however your mom began to malfunction, looking for midwestern treats and luggage of ice in order that she might formulate the liquid that saved her alive and that nobody on this a part of the world would acknowledge: iced tea. You have been strolling by the chilly breath of the dairy aisle in order that your mom might yell on the unpasteurized milk, which she thought-about harmful. Each of you turned deranged within the produce part and began grabbing fruits at random”—“That melon had that means to me,” I interrupted, however he went on. “Everybody knew she was your mom, and everybody knew you have been American.” Nicely. I’ve usually known as him my Leonard, however I really feel he’s somewhat more durable on me.

You might write about Mrs. Ramsay for a very long time; anybody might. That’s how the world will get a Virginia Woolf, possibly. Woolf lays her out not like a determine however like a spectrum. Sitting knitting by the window within the shabby drawing room, Mrs. Ramsay feels waves, winds, pulses of suspicion about her personal nature:

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She appeared out to satisfy that stroke of the Lighthouse, the lengthy regular stroke, the final of the three, which was her stroke, for watching them on this temper all the time at this hour one couldn’t assist attaching oneself to 1 factor particularly of the issues one noticed; and this factor, the lengthy regular stroke, was her stroke. Usually she discovered herself sitting and searching, sitting and searching, together with her work in her arms till she turned the factor she checked out—that gentle for instance.

Her work was the form of a stocking, and hospitals, and guaranteeing that the milk got here to the doorstep nonetheless white and clear. And saying tomorrow could also be high quality; we might but go to the Lighthouse.

You might write about Mr. Ramsay, too, the scholar and professor. Probably the most beneficiant lady of the age, as Woolf noticed it, may be married to essentially the most bottomless gap, who should commonly be assured “that he too lived within the coronary heart of life; was wanted; not right here solely, however all around the world.” Mr. Ramsay’s gentle strokes over one thing, however it isn’t the pageant of those that surrounds him; it’s the alphabet of his personal thoughts, which he fears goes up solely to Q, whereas another person’s would possibly attain all the best way to Z. Certainly, he may need made it to Z had he not married, he thinks. Nicely, a idiot would possibly depend fruits in paradise.

“He’s absorbed in himself, he’s tyrannical, he’s unjust,” thinks Lily Briscoe, a pal of the household, together with her eyes down, as a result of solely when her eyes are down can she see the Ramsays clearly. “Instantly one appeared up and noticed them, what she known as ‘being in love’ flooded them. They turned a part of that unreal however penetrating and thrilling universe which is the world seen by the eyes of affection. The sky caught to them; the birds sang by them.” Paradise, and a idiot pacing by it with the sky caught to him and the birds singing by him, considering he would have written higher books if he had not married.

The Ramsays come to Skye each summer time with their eight kids: Prue, Nancy, Rose, Cam, Andrew, Jasper, Roger, and that engine of want, younger James. They’re surrounded as a lot by guests as they’re by the panorama, as a result of Mrs. Ramsay requires attendants of various colours and inclinations; she is a grasp within the flower-arranging of individuals, which likes a stem or two of one thing wild. And so we’ve the handful gathered right here nearly by probability—Lily, who needs to color and by no means marry; the widowed botanist William Bankes; Charles Tansley, a scholar; the younger couple Paul Rayley and Minta Doyle; Augustus Carmichael, the poet and nearly afterthought. They may have been anybody. Even we, in the fitting time and place, might have been there.

We’re maybe considerably like Lily, striving and unformed, a tamer flower than she needs to be, who tomorrow could possibly make the paint transfer, who feels the agony of getting her portray checked out. She is attempting to seize the home, with Mrs. Ramsay and James within the window. She is required, by the lengthy upright afternoon of the novel’s first part, to face in a single place in entrance of her easel in order that she will be able to register the passing of the horizontal by the vertical, the kitchen desk by the pear tree, the march of time by Mrs. Ramsay. Tomorrow, Lily tells herself, considering of her canvas, she should transfer the tree extra towards the center.

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We’re maybe extra just like the “little atheist” and groveling admirer of Mr. Ramsay, Charles Tansley, who fairly swiftly finds himself shunned by the kids and in uncomfortable thrall to Mrs. Ramsay, beneath whose affect “he was coming to see himself, and the whole lot he had ever identified gone crooked somewhat. It was awfully unusual.” He grew up with out sufficient love or cash and so, as a person, doesn’t know the best way to cry out “Allow us to all go to the circus!” with any spontaneity, which causes Mrs. Ramsay appreciable marvel. It’s not tough in any respect to go to the circus! It’s not tough to go to the Lighthouse. If different individuals would solely cease saying it weren’t attainable, she would carry them there.

Mrs. Ramsay’s work is to make individuals magnificent—to make them consider in themselves, make them assume they will do something, which can also be the way you get a Virginia Woolf. Mrs. Ramsay’s work is to make individuals fall in love together with her, in order that they will marry different individuals. “William should marry Lily,” she thinks, and such is the pressure of inexperienced sap within the thought that it nearly involves flower. (Probably not, however there’s a second after we assume, Perhaps? )

Woolf’s mom, Julia Stephen, was a unprecedented lady, with eyes like cups and a mouth that turned down and a chin you’ve gotten seen in a dozen work. She was a mannequin for the artists Edward Burne-Jones and George Frederic Watts, and her aunt Julia Cameron, a photographer, made greater than 50 portraits of her. In her photos she presides, as in case you are her from the kid finish of a really lengthy desk. Her hair streams and a light-weight glow generally comes from the highest of her head. Within the 1981 introduction to the guide, Eudora Welty writes that “the novel’s conception has the energy of a Blake angel,” and it’s arduous to ascertain this angel with out Julia Stephen’s face. In case you have seen her, staring with compassion and with out mercy in black-and-white, maybe you think about Mrs. Ramsay this manner. Maybe you image your individual mom.

It’s the eyes from which Virginia proceeds, and the nostril like an arrow. Folks actually do come from different individuals, unusual because it might sound. To her kids, Mrs. Ramsay stated, “You shall undergo with it. To eight individuals she had stated relentlessly that.” Julia and Leslie had 4 kids. The Woolfs had none, but to her numerous readers Virginia stated the identical factor, and relentlessly that: You shall undergo with all of it.

In case you have not learn the guide but, cease right here and are available again later, as a result of I’m going to speak concerning the feast. No abstract shall ever stand rather than the expertise. Rereading the guide, I needed to pause a complete day earlier than that scene, when the guide’s first day and all of the individuals in it come collectively. I used to be in an agony of anticipation, as if it have been an precise occasion. I had to decide on my jewels! Would I be capable to converse? Would the boeuf en daube be overdone, or correctly timed? Would the fitting phrases come to my lips? Then tomorrow got here and the worst occurred: I used to be studying it badly, in scraps and fragments, nothing coming collectively. I used to be failing—together with the little atheist, I needed to get again to my work. However I had forgotten that this was the way it was written, to make you are feeling this manner. It was written in order that when the candles have been lit, “some change without delay went by all of them.” Immediately,

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they have been all aware of constructing a celebration collectively in a hole, on an island; had their frequent trigger towards that fluidity on the market. Mrs. Ramsay, who had been uneasy, ready for Paul and Minta to return in, and unable, she felt, to settle to issues, now felt her uneasiness change to expectation.

The dish of fruit, of individuals, is undamaged, the occasion all of a form for a second, till a hand reaches out to take a pear. And I used to be unhappy; I had not stated what I’d needed to say.

You can not ever replicate your first studying of this scene. However upon getting learn it, you’ve gotten it, and it goes on without end in a room inside you: the low lights, the faces glowing of their sugar, the carrying of the boeuf en daube to the desk. It’s the place the motion of the title lastly sweeps you up and makes you part of it. You, too, have been invited, regardless of your imperfections and your pretentious costume; your unhealthy concepts about artwork and your lack of ability to color the world as you see it; your alternative of husband or spouse; the truth that you’ll by no means marry, that you’ll die within the warfare, that your thoughts can not make it during to Z. You have been requested to return and you’re there.

Woolf notes, after ending To the Lighthouse, that hardly a phrase goes incorrect on this scene, and it’s true. The issues of the Earth float in orbit round Woolf; they proceed one from the opposite in a montage of transformation. “It couldn’t final,” Mrs. Ramsay knew, “however in the intervening time her eyes have been so clear that they appeared to go around the desk unveiling every of those individuals, and their ideas and their emotions, with out effort like a light-weight stealing beneath water in order that its ripples and the reeds in it and the minnows balancing themselves, and the sudden silent trout are all lit up hanging, trembling.”

Virginia Woolf shouldn’t be like her mom, not like Mrs. Ramsay. However she has the middle that holds, and you’re feeling with full pressure what she declared in 1925, not lengthy after she first noticed To the Lighthouse in her thoughts, circling like a fin far out at sea, that she was “the one lady in England free to jot down what I like.” The churn of paint that can take over The Waves completely begins right here. To the Lighthouse asserts the summary portray as figural: Listed below are the mom and youngster, a triangle on Lily Briscoe’s canvas, amongst curves and arabesques. What Lily needs for is what Woolf should have wished for, what each artist should want for earlier than they start: “that very jar on the nerves, the factor itself earlier than it has been made something.”

It’s attribute of Woolf that you may use almost any elemental metaphor to explain her results. Shall I communicate of paint and canvas, or the tick of minutes in an empty room, or the wind in a hole shell? Something is feasible. You’ve gotten solely to decide on, as she selected from amongst her individuals. Shall I look now by the painter, the scholar, the kid? It’s she who likes a stem of one thing wild, she who has invited one in every of all types to return to the desk, in case she wants their eyes, their ears, the clear water operating by their thoughts.

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“I’ve an concept that I’ll invent a brand new identify for my books to supplant ‘novel,’ ” Woolf wrote in her diary whereas engaged on To the Lighthouse. “A brand new — by Virginia Woolf. However what? Elegy?”

Within the novel’s brief interlude—“Time Passes”—earlier than the household returns to the island 10 years later, Mrs. Ramsay dies in brackets, Mr. Ramsay’s arms reaching out for her. Prue is given in marriage and dies in brackets. Andrew is blown sky-high in them; the brackets are the arms the place we aren’t. The home is left empty, and molders. The cranium of an previous pig nonetheless hangs on the wall, and the scarf that Mrs. Ramsay wrapped round it to maintain it from scary Cam swings from side to side like Time. The warfare has occurred, and Mr. Carmichael has written his poem. Lives—the Ramsays’, and our personal—have eroded; a number of extra grains of us are gone, after we’ve completed studying.

By the time my mom and I had unloaded our armfuls of insane groceries on the Wee Croft Home—we have been really staying at a spot known as the Wee Croft Home, on a picturesque finger of land referred to as Sleat—it was too late to prepare dinner, so we discovered ourselves driving again into city, again once more towards the ocean. Once we acquired to the restaurant, the rain had stopped and lightweight and shadow moved in nice mammalish shapes exterior. The melon was nonetheless intact, as it might stay for the remainder of the journey, by no means touched or tasted; we don’t dwell the lives that we imply to dwell, in these elevated moments within the produce part after we attain out a hand to decide on. It ended up in a Dumpster, in a chapter I prefer to name “Time Passes.”

Once we sat down close to the window that gathered up the view, a murmur rose throughout us, in order that the room was united in its theme and objective. Fried fish and hamburgers of their halos have been set down in entrance of individuals nearly unnoticed. We appeared round uneasily, not but part of issues. It was the day when Notre Dame was burning, and at each desk a baby was displaying the movies to his dad and mom on his cellphone.

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The fathers have been impatient; both they have been firefighters in their very own minds, or else to them, Notre Dame had burned down a very long time in the past. The moms took the telephones and cradled them, lighting candles with their eyes. Maybe they have been probably not listening to the information; maybe the voices got here to them as they got here to Mrs. Ramsay that evening when the whole lot surrounded her, flowers and fruit and household: “very unusually, as in the event that they have been voices at a service in a cathedral.” I knew that if I confirmed my mom a video of a burning church, she would scream out loud—we don’t all have a Mrs. Ramsay—so at our desk we sat listening to the wholeness of the scene, its colour and its sample and its music, whereas a single rhythm swept our faces from far out at sea. We talked of whether or not tomorrow can be high quality, after we would rise, what we might try this day. Exterior the window, on the finish of a protracted spit, stood the Lighthouse.


This text was tailored from Patricia Lockwood’s foreword to a brand new version of To the Lighthouse. It seems within the April 2023 print version with the headline “We’re All Invited to the Lighthouse.”


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Retired Virginia police officer sentenced in deaths of wife and stepdaughter

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Retired Virginia police officer sentenced in deaths of wife and stepdaughter


RICHMOND, Va. — A retired Virginia police officer has been sentenced to 150 years in prison for killing his estranged wife and stepdaughter and firing gunshots at law enforcement officers.

Richard Colon Crowder of Henrico was sentenced Friday in Henrico County Circuit Court.

Diane Crowder was moving her belongings out of the couple’s home and stepdaughter Carrie Szaksz was helping her in July 2022. While moving company employees were upstairs, Crowder shot the women multiple times outside the home, according to court records. Richard Crowder then barricaded himself inside the home and fired shots that struck two Henrico County police vehicles.



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University of Virginia reaches $9 million settlement with families of 2022 mass shooting. But they say it’s not enough | CNN

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University of Virginia reaches $9 million settlement with families of 2022 mass shooting. But they say it’s not enough | CNN




CNN
 — 

The University of Virginia has reached a $9 million settlement with the families of three college football players who were killed in a 2022 mass shooting after a school field trip, school officials and attorneys for the families and victims announced Friday.

Attorneys told CNN in statements on behalf of the victims’ families the settlement does not bring them any closure and strongly urged for the results of the attorney general’s independent review of the shooting to be released.

University spokesperson Brian Coy said a judge in the Albemarle County Circuit Court approved settlement agreements between the university and the estates of football players Devin Chandler, Lavel Davis Jr. and D’Sean Perry.

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The three men were killed on November 13, 2022, when a fellow student opened fire on a bus returning to the Charlottesville campus from a class field trip to Washington, D.C. where the class had seen a play.

Two other people, Marlee Morgan and Michael Hollins, were injured by the gunfire. Suspect Christopher Darnell Jones Jr., a former football player, faces three counts of second-degree murder and three counts of using a handgun in the commission of a felony, UVA Police Chief Tim Longo said.

He also faces two counts of malicious wounding, each accompanied by a firearm charge, said Albemarle County prosecutor James Hingeley. The motive behind the killing of three UVA Cavaliers remains a mystery, the university’s president said.

An attorney for the Perry family, Elliott Buckner, told CNN the settlement will be paid by the Commonwealth of Virginia “pursuant to its Division of Risk Management Plan.” The families of Chandler, Davis and Perry will each receive $2 million and $3 million will go to Morgan and Hollins, Buckner said.

In an email to CNN, Coy said both parties reached an agreement “in principle on the terms of the settlement” and said it was approved by Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin and Attorney General Jason Miyares before the court’s approval.

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University President Jim Ryan and Rector Robert Hardie said in a statement: “Since November 13, 2022, the families of Devin Chandler, Lavel Davis Jr., and D’Sean Perry—whose lives were tragically cut short—have been ever present in our minds.”

“We will forever remember the impact that Devin, Lavel, and D’Sean had on our community, and we are grateful for the moments they spent in our presence uplifting UVA through their time in the classroom and on the football field,” they said.

CNN reached out to the attorney general and the governor for comment.

Kimberly Wald, a lawyer for The Perry, Hollins and Morgan families, told CNN the court finalized the $9 million “global settlement in this case” with the families of the three students who were killed and the two who were injured.

Wald said the results of the independent investigation into the shooting, launched by Miyares, have not been released.

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Families demand release of external probe

Miyares announced days after the tragedy he would begin an independent review at the request of Ryan and then-rector Whitt Clement of the university’s response to the shooting, as well as the efforts it undertook in the period before it.

The attorney for the victims’ families said they are “demanding the release of the information to understand what happened and why it happened and then initiate reforms across the U.S. at college campuses to save lives.”

Victoria LaCivita, Miyares’ spokesperson, previously said the AG’s office will enlist special counsel to assist in completing the work.

“A public report will be shared with students, families, the larger UVA community, and government officials at the appropriate time,” LaCivita said. “The Attorney General will work with deliberate speed while ensuring that all necessary resources remain devoted to the criminal investigation being conducted by state and local authorities.”

Perry attorney Buckner echoed Wald regarding the independent review, telling CNN the settlements approved by the court “do not bring the families any closure.”

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“The families still do not have all of the facts about what happened to their sons. It is time for UVA and the Commonwealth to release the Report. The families deserve to know what happened,” Buckner said.

The suspect was denied bail during a hearing in a few days after the shooting that revealed he was charged and convicted of a reckless driving and hit-and-run in 2021 and had a concealed weapons charge the same year. He received suspended sentences for all the offenses.

Jones bought two guns, a semiautomatic rifle and a pistol, in separate purchases in 2022, according to the owner of Dance’s Sporting Goods in Colonial Heights, CNN previously reported.

But Jones also had twice unsuccessfully to buy a firearm there, Marlon Dance told CNN in an email. In 2018, he was younger than the legal age of 21 to buy a handgun and was denied a purchase. Three years later he tried to buy a rifle, but failed a background check, according to Dance.

In an email to CNN, Virginia State Police Spokesperson Corinne Geller said an investigation into the attempted purchase on July 8, 2021, revealed the state police firearms transaction center denied Jones’ request based on an ongoing legal matter.

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CNN’s Joe Johns, Aileen Graef, Amir Vera and Holly Yan contributed to this report.



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Last stop, Fargo: Virginia woman runs half marathon in all 50 states

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Last stop, Fargo: Virginia woman runs half marathon in all 50 states


FARGO, N.D. (Valley News Live) – Saturday is a big day for runners in the community.

It’s the 20th anniversary of the Fargo Marathon. For one Virginia woman, the race means a little more.

“This is really emotional for me because I didn’t know my friends were going to show up. I just really love and appreciate them,” Dawn Marshall says. “About 16 people have come out here to run or support me.”

When Marshall crosses the finish line Saturday morning, she will have run a half marathon in all 50 states. It’s taken her 11 years and it hasn’t been easy.

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The 59-year-old is a cancer survivor. She continued her running journey through seven round of chemo treatments.

“This means a lot to me. There were days when I didn’t want to train. I’ve been out in the cold, snow, injured,” Marshall says. “There’s not a lot of people that have run in all 50 states. I’m here to say that regardless of what your ailments are, you can do it if you put your mind to it.”

Marshall is representing the group “Black Girls Run.” She says the best part of running is the people she meets along the way.

“Go out and do the best you can, even if it’s just walking. I just want people to know you can stay healthy regardless of your injuries or anything you’re dealing with,” Marshall adds. “The takeaway is get out and do the best you can.”

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