“When
you're a writer, you're always looking for conflict. It's conflict that drives
great stories.” –
William Kent Krueger
Born
in Torrington, WY on Nov. 16, 1950, Krueger grew up in the Cascade Mountains and
many of his books – especially the Cork O’Connor series – have an “Old West”
feel even though he’s made his home in St. Paul, MN for decades and sets his
books in Northern Minnesota.
I
first met Krueger in the early 2000s when I was teaching and doing public
relations at Augsburg University in Minneapolis and he would stop over to visit
with English classes there. After
hearing the “back story” on his own writing career as well as how he created O’Connor
and the cast of characters that surround him, I was hooked on his writing. I have long been amazed that Krueger doesn’t
have any Ojibwe blood, since he does a remarkable job of incorporating great
detail about Ojibwe culture into his stories.
With
each of the 20 books in the series, beginning with Iron Lake and up to
this year’s offering Spirit Crossing (he’s also written 5 stand-alone
novels), I’ve learned much, much more about the Ojibwe, something Krueger says
he very much enjoys researching and writing
“Readers
anticipate that a significant element of every story will be additional
exposure to the ways of the Ojibwe,” he said. “The truth is that I enjoy this
aspect of the work. Although I have no Indian blood running through my
veins, in college I prepared to be a cultural anthropologist, so exploring
other cultures is exciting to me.”
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