Western Book Roundup
Why Cody, Wyoming is the New Literary Capital of America
By Jenny Shank, 2-24-10
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| Novelist, memoirist, and 0.01% of Cody's population, Mark Spragg. | |
Wyoming has the smallest population of any U.S. state, but it maintains a literary output that rivals most other places. While it’s been a quiet year so far for writers in Colorado (population 4,939,456, according to 2008 Census Bureau projections), writers in Wyoming (population 532,668) have been publishing at a good clip over the past few weeks.
Laramie’s Alyson Hagy kicked things off in early February with the publication of her fourth story collection, Ghosts of Wyoming. Claiming Ground, a memoir by Cody’s Laura Bell, is due out March 9, and it comes with glowing blurbs from Rick Bass, Kent Haruf, William Kittredge, and Mark Spragg. Haruf writes, “This is a book that compels you to the last sentence, both because of its sheer beauty and its profound meaning.” Spragg writes, “Laura Bell’s Claiming Ground is the finest memoir I’ve read.” I guess I’d better read it myself.
Knopf will publish Spragg’s third novel, Bone Fire, on March 11. Spragg is also from Cody, (population 9309), which means that .0215% of Cody’s population will publish a book in March. To put that in perspective, writers in New York City (population 8,363,710) would have to publish 179,820 books in March to keep up with Cody’s per capita output. Even if you include self-published writers, I doubt New York’s scribes could produce that many volumes, especially given that about 172,000 books were published for the entire year in the United States in 2005, the most recent year for which UNESCO’s publishing statistics are available.
The Wyoming Authors Wiki lists 52 writers with connections to Park County, Wyoming, where Cody is located. It also lists 18 deceased writers—including William “Buffalo Bill” Cody himself, author of such works as 1927’s Life and Adventures of Buffalo Bill—so even Cody’s cemeteries are packed with literary talent. And so, with the power vested in me by no one, I anoint Cody, Wyoming the new literary capital of the United States.
That’s not to snub Carbon County, where Annie Proulx was based before her recent move to New Mexico, or Teton County, where Alexandra Fuller lives, or Ucross, population 25, home to award-winning mystery novelist Craig Johnson. Wyoming-native mystery-thriller novelist C.J. Box lives near Cheyenne, and his new Nowhere to Run hits stores on April 6, rounding out several busy weeks for Wyoming writers.
If you can’t make it up to Cody next month to attend the joint book signing/tour kickoff for Mark Spragg and Laura Bell on March 9 at The Thistle (2 p.m.), don’t worry, because Cody will be coming to you. Spragg and Bell will be touring all over the region, visiting 24 bookshops in Billings (Barnes & Noble, March 10, 7 p.m.), Red Lodge (Red Lodge Books, March 12, 3 p.m.), Boulder (Boulder Book Store, March 16, 7:30 p.m.), Bozeman (Country Bookshelf, April 20, 7 p.m.), Missoula (Fact & Fiction, April 21), and many more places in Montana, Utah, Washington, Oregon, Colorado, Wyoming, New Mexico, and California. One can only hope Spragg and Bell will be hawking some sort of triumphant “We’re From Cody, Read Our Dust” t-shirt on the tour.
• Not all literary activity in the region is confined to Wyoming: several Colorado writers have been busy polishing their books and getting them into print, and this Saturday, Lighthouse Writers Workshop in Denver is sponsoring a panel called “The Story of A Book,” in which the authors will explain the process of how their books came to be. Nick Arvin, whose novel The Reconstructionist is due out in 2011, Phyllis Barber, author of the memoir Raw Edges, Jay P.K. Kenney, who wrote Great Road Rides Denver, Cara Lopez Lee, author of the memoir They Only Eat Their Husbands, and Lynn Wagner, whose poetry chapbook No Blues This Raucous Song is out now with Slapering Hol Press, will discuss the “ins and outs of the process they’ve enjoyed (or endured) in getting their manuscripts from crazy first idea and into actual print.” “The Story of A Book” takes place at 910 Arts in Denver (910 Santa Fe Drive) on Saturday, February 27 (6:30 p.m.). Lighthouse asks that attendees email their RSVP to info@lighthousewriters.org.
• My “Recycle, Compost, or Trash? A Guide,” is up on McSweeney’s. I had the idea for this one when it took me ten minutes to figure out what bin to put my used plate in at the farmer’s market in Boulder. I’m sure nobody has that problem in Cody.
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Comments
( One small correction: former Wyoming authoress Annie Proulx of Brokeback Mountain fame has since moved the New Mexico. )
You're right, Annie Proulx has moved to New Mexico, as she told the L.A. Times in this 2008 interview:
http://articles.latimes.com/2008/oct/18/entertainment/et-proulx18
But after three acclaimed books of Wyoming stories, I still think the state can claim her as one of its literary stars.
Now go out and celebrate Cody's new title by doing something arts-and-craftsy!
a must read.
I'm still trying to figure out who all these dead authors packing the Cody cemetary are. None come to mind offhand.
I'll leave you with my pet slogan :
Cody Wyoming- next to the Last Best Place
And Caroline Lockhart is not buried there either ...her cremain ashes were in a small tin can on her good friend' Vern Spencer's fireplace mantle for decades. I've held them in my hands. So those two at least are not in any local Cody cemetary.
As for the Hemingway connection ...that's real. He used to spend good time in the Cody-Cooke City-Red Lodge triangle back when we had regular passenger rail service all the way to Chicago ...writing and fishing; not necessarily in that order. Many tales I could impart. He would spend a good part of the day in the Log Cabin Saloon typing away and dispatching his manuscripts and drinking c. 1929 ; again in no particular order.
I'm a lifelong resident native of Cody , and published myself , and always involved with the media , yet I cannot name any notable authors buried in Cody ...just a few local scribes who wrote small stuff and local history , like Mary Jester Allen ( Buffalo Bill's niece and self-appointed biographer). I just looked over that list at the Wyoming Authors Wiki and nobody jumped out. Honestly. All small fry Codycentric niche selfpublishers or junior college scholars for the most part. ( Full disclosure: I've ghost written for a couple of them )
There is/was a homely farm wife about 35 miles east of here in Burlington WY who has over 30 harlequin romance novels under her apron. You'd never know it to look at her if you saw her in Wal-Mart ---you'd walk right past here---that she's probably got more general circulation titles in print than anyone else in Wyoming.
Not to bust anybody's bubble here, but this article is a fluff piece.
I appreciate all the comments by everyone with accurate knowledge of Wyoming, Cody, and its literary inhabitants.
With this post, I just wanted to point out the recent burst of good books coming out of Wyoming and mention the Spragg-Bell tour, and I thought this would be a more entertaining approach to take than to simply list the tour dates. And hey, it got all of you reading it and commenting on it, didn't it?
Yours in fluff production,
But plagiarism involves the theft of words: phrases, sentences, paragraphs. It can sometimes be extended to the theft of ideas or concepts, but only when these are truly unique -- not "Korean war veterans" or "struggling ranches" or "characters wearing sheriff's uniforms," all of which appear in hundreds of novels every year.
Please do not make such an incendiary (and, on the face of it, absurd) charge -- especially in such a generally-supportive public forum (thanks Jenny!) -- without explicitly citing the specific sentences and paragraphs you claim were lifted from your work.
As a 4th generation Cody native, I have to say that both towns would take offense at this statement. We burb to no one around here.
Cody , as we well know, is the out of wedlock child of much older Meeteetse, and Red Lodge is one of the Triplet Cities :Red Lodge , Bear Creek , and Luther.