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I am a Westerner, blood,
bone and soul. I am more at ease on a horse than in a vehicle. I belong
to the land, not the land to me. I am an outcropping in human form of
the spirit of this wild, fierce, overwhelmingly beautiful part of planet
Earth. I live on a ranch crossed by a creek lined with beaver dams and
populated with most of the wildlife originally found here including an
occasional wandering cougar. My family has horses and cattle and sheep
and goats as well as the whole compliment of fowl. A flock of wild
turkeys makes it's home with us and flies home to roost atop the
chickenhouse every evening. We produce almost all our own food and
usually have a year's supply stored around the place.
My white ancestors came west in
covered wagons and lived at peace and mixed with the Native people they
found here, so, in the parlance of Sherman Alexie, who comes from the
neighboring Spokane reservation, I am from the "Little Bit
Tribe"; - I'm a little bit Indian. Among my children are two
dark and beautiful half-Native daughters and I consider it an honor to
be their father. It was not the people of the Earth, the farmers and
ranchers who were driven to exterminate the elder peoples here but the
urban people, the politicians and merchants who saw them as
impediments to hegemony. To us they were our neighbors and relatives and
still are. Almost half the population of our region is Native and
the Colville Reservation in my home
county
of
Okanogan
is 1.3 million acres - a good-sized
sovereign nation. After seven years at the
University
of
Washington
in
Seattle
getting what my cowboy grandfather
described as "more education that a person needs," I returned
home. I have since been involved in salmon and environmental recovery,
working with landowners to design and fund river restoration projects.
I am currently working on a book about that complex experience,
called "Fishy Business".
My
writing reflects my intimate association with the physical world. The
environment is not a background for my human characters but an active
presence. My characters are drawn from the people I have known in my
life in the west and you would not be surprised to bump into one of them
on the street but there is more to these people than you may have
imagined. There is much in my writing of the Earth-centered wisdom of
our Native elders but my novels are not "preachy." I have
often been told that my stories are "too real;" to be fiction
which I take as a great compliment. They are fiction, but fiction that
grows out of real life lived by real people in real places. Yet
sometimes that reality is not the same reality that most of us see
around us every day, but a reality imbued with the natural magic that
flows from the heart of our mother, the Earth. |