Yosemite, Dumpster Diving, & Correcting Native History - Fiction Toward Truth

Peter Brown Hoffmeister

Peter Brown Hoffmeister's new book, Graphic the Valley, wraps readers in an adventure that connects us to the Earth (Yosemite in particular), replaces the official lies of history with the truth, and introduces us to useful skills like dumpster diving, all while thrilling the reader with human foibles and triumphs. Peter connects with the outdoors, native ways, and dumpster diving in his non-fiction life as well, teaching in an Integrated Outdoor Program in Eugene, Oregon.

Other books by Peter Brown Hoffmeister:
Let Them Be Eaten By Bears: A Fearless Guide to Taking Our Kids Into the Great Outdoors
The End of Boys
Loss

Episode Number

SIA-000300

First Air Date

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Graphic The Valley

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Guest:

Peter Brown Hoffmeister

Comments

Because of the publicity campaigns for Let Them Be Eaten By Bears and Graphic the Valley, I was fortunate enough to do forty or so radio interviews this summer with local, regional, and national radio shows. So I talked to a lot of hosts, some of whom had read the books and liked the writing or the message, and were willing to promote outdoor education or literary writing in general. In many of these conversations, I realized how positive radio hosts are, how supportive they are of the arts, how much a lot of them love books and storytelling. As a group, radio hosts are good people doing a job they seem to love. So it was a fun summer for me. Every once in a while, a radio interview feels like a conversation with a friend, like a long involved talk about life and what's important to both people. My interview on Wisconsin's syndicated Northern Spirit Radio was like that. We talked about Graphic the Valley, and the host, Mark Judkins Helpsmeet, was a thoughtful and involved reader. He engaged with the novel in a way an author can only hope for. He considered the extended metaphors and had insights I hadn't considered. Plus, Helpsmeet recently made wild-rice and acorn burgers at his rural home in Wisconsin. And if that isn't something that Tenaya's parents would do, I don't know what is. Helpsmeet has a perspective on the novel that most readers don't ( he had a wandering cougar down by his canoe a while back), and that's just one of the reasons that this interview was one of my favorites.

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