Winston "Win" Borden, a state senator in the late 1970s from Brainerd and also every bit a farmer, lawyer, and writer, has died.
Borden died Monday night after beating cancer last fall but succumbing to infections in his liver and a kidney, said farming partner J.R. Duncan. Borden was 70.
Borden's final years were spent farming organic vegetables, flowers and herbs near Merrifield, Minn., on land that has been in the family since the 1880s. He kept his political and contemplative fires burning late in life through a dialogue on his Facebook page with the old wood-fueled stove in the farm's kitchen.
"Yesterday his mind was totally clear," Duncan said Tuesday. "One of his sons, Chris, said yesterday, 'Dad, can you recite the whole Gettysburg Address?' He opened his eyes and said, 'Of course.' He said the whole the Gettysburg Address while his son Googled it on the Internet and read it along with him."
Duncan said Borden recently finished two books and was working to have them published in the spring.
One, "Cancel My Funeral, I'm Staying," draws on quotes from various writers about growing older, "loving and living and cherishing each day that you have," Duncan said.
The other, "Stovetop Cooking," draws on his love of cooking on his mother's old wood stove, which he used as a storytelling device to kick around the political topics of the day and whatever else came to mind.
In his final Facebook dispatch from the farm, posted Dec. 11, Borden held one of his typical revealing back-and-forths with the old wood stove, which was ignited by Borden singing, "To dream the impossible dream …" and shifting to "That's life, that's what the people say …"