Donna Sinclair’s book, “Black Woman in Green: Gloria Brown and the Unmarked Trail to Forest Service Leadership,” was released in February 2020, but — thanks to the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic — the Washougal resident and the book’s namesake and co-author, former United States Forest Service (USFS) Forest Supervisor Gloria Brown, were only able to participate in one in-person event after the book’s launch, which severely limited their promotional opportunities, Sinclair said.
The book generated positive reviews and sold well despite its ill-timed debut and the absence of Brown, who died of cancer in September 2021. Now, nearly three years after the book’s initial release, Sinclair has been pondering the possibilities of bringing the book — and Brown’s inspirational story — back into the limelight.
“I was just thinking about that not very long ago — we didn’t really do those kinds of promotional book tours in person,” said Sinclair, an adjunct professor at both Washington State University-Vancouver and Western Oregon University. “It was No. 9 on the Pacific Northwest bestseller list the first year that it came out, so we did pretty well that first year, but sales have definitely gone down, and it hasn’t really been promoted in the way that it certainly would have been if Gloria were around. I would love to promote it more. I’d like to see her story get out there, and I would like the word to get out in the professional forestry industry a little better.”
The book, published by Oregon State University (OSU) Press, details Brown’s journey from her hometown of Washington D.C., where she joined the USFS as a dictation transcriptionist, to Missoula, Montana, where she served as a public affairs officer for the USFS’ regional office, and finally to the Pacific Northwest, where she became the first Black woman to supervise a national forest.
“It’s a story that’s told through the lens of her rise in the Forest Service,” Sinclair said. “It’s a pretty gripping story. It’s a really sad story, but it’s also a story of determination. For Gloria, her goal was really to motivate other people, to let them know that they have the capacity to change their lives.”