Submitted photo Kay Buesing and Jim Mockford at the World Kite Museum with the Chinese dragon kite trophy Mockford won in 1987. Jim Mockford presenting his children’s book, ‘The Kite That Touched the Sky,’ to Alexis Hood at Ilwaco Timberland Library. Continued from Page 6 things. She soon became the go-to person, working a kind of worldwide kite diplo- macy, and put Long Beach front and cen- ter in the international kite community. For Kay, being involved in every aspect of the festivals and the museum was her life.” A memorial for Buesing was planned for the Washington State International Kite Fes- tival in 2021, but was canceled due to the coronavirus. “But I wanted to do something,” Mock- ford said. “I thought sharing my love of kite fl ying, as illustrated in ‘The Kite That Touched the Sky,’ would encourage and help children know the joy that we both knew so well.” Mockford donated his children’s book, “The Kite that Touched the Sky,” to the Pacifi c branches of the Timberland Regional Library. Alexis Hood, library assistant at the Ilwaco branch, said Mockford simply walked into the library with his books and asked what the process might be to make them available to young readers. “We were certainly excited about it,” Hood said . “The book has beautiful illustra- tions of our local area that kids will be sure to recognize. It’s a book that needs to be in our community.” Mockford’s intergenerational storybook was inspired by his four grandchildren, two of whom live in China, and all of whom he calls the “newest generation of kitefl iers.” The book exemplifi es that kite fl ying knows no cultural boundaries. It is available in both Chinese and English languages. After a month of library system process- ing, “The Kite That Touched the Sky” is now in circulation in the library children’s sections at Ilwaco, Ocean Park, Naselle, Raymond, South Bend and Shoalwater Bay. ORIGINAL FINE ART on the waterfront port of ilwaco, wa marie-powell.com 360-244-0800 THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2021 // 7