It took a while, but Atina Diffley has finally broken her habit of dressing like a farmer.
"I don't get up in the morning and put on dirty clothes anymore. I kept doing it for three years," she admitted with a hearty laugh.
Now the organic farmer turned writer, teacher and consultant has to get her exercise at the gym. She's even started wearing makeup, a concession to promoting her just-published memoir, "Turn Here Sweet Corn." "I've had to shift my image of myself," Diffley said.
"She kept saying, 'I don't believe in makeup. I am what I am,'" said chef and author Beth Dooley, Diffley's writing mentor. So how did Dooley finally persuade her? "I told her it was no different than garnishing a plate."
Filling people's plates with delicious, healthful food has been Diffley's lifelong passion. Protecting the land that produces such food is the beating heart of her book, which the University of Minnesota Press is promoting as "a master class in organic farming, a lesson in entrepreneurship, a love story and a legal thriller."
Diffley won a David vs. Goliath battle against an energy conglomerate that wanted to put a crude-oil pipeline on her land, a dramatic episode recounted in her memoir. That victory helped cement her stature as a "rock star" in organic farming circles, as she was introduced at her recent book-launch party, where she received two standing ovations.
'Superheroes'
"It's such a powerful tale: Atina and Paula [attorney Paula Maccabee] vs. the Koch brothers," said Audrey Arner, co-owner of Moonstone Farm near Montevideo, Minn. "It makes it feel like a supernatural story, like they're superheroes."