Ivan Doig photo

Ivan Doig

Ivan Doig was born in White Sulphur Springs, Montana to a family of homesteaders and ranch hands. After the death of his mother Berneta, on his sixth birthday, he was raised by his father Charles "Charlie" Doig and his grandmother Elizabeth "Bessie" Ringer. After several stints on ranches, they moved to Dupuyer, Pondera County, Montana in the north to herd sheep close to the Rocky Mountain Front.

After his graduation from Valier high school, Doig attended Northwestern University, where he received a bachelor's degree and a master's degree in journalism. He later earned a Ph.D. in American history at the University of Washington, writing his dissertation about John J. McGilvra (1827-1903). He lived with his wife Carol Doig, née Muller, a university professor of English, in Seattle, Washington.

Before Ivan Doig became a novelist, he wrote for newspapers and magazines as a free-lancer and worked for the United States Forest Service.

Much of his fiction is set in the Montana country of his youth. His major theme is family life in the past, mixing personal memory and regional history. As the western landscape and people play an important role in his fiction, he has been hailed as the new dean of western literature, a worthy successor to Wallace Stegner.

Bibliography

His works includes both fictional and non-fictional writings. They can be divided into four groups:

Early Works

News: A Consumer's Guide (1972) - a media textbook coauthored by Carol Doig

Streets We Have Come Down: Literature of the City (1975) - an anthology edited by Ivan Doig

Utopian America: Dreams and Realities (1976) - an anthology edited by Ivan Doig

Autobiographical Books

This House of Sky: Landscapes of a Western Mind (1979) - memoirs based on the author's life with his father and grandmother (nominated for National Book Award)

Heart Earth (1993) - memoirs based on his mother's letters to her brother Wally

Regional Works

Winter Brothers: A Season at the Edge of America (1980) - an essayistic dialog with James G. Swan

The Sea Runners (1982) - an adventure novel about four Swedes escaping from New Archangel, today's Sitka, Alaska

Historical Novels

English Creek (1984)

Dancing at the Rascal Fair (1987)

Ride with Me, Mariah Montana (1990)

Bucking the Sun: A Novel (1996)

Mountain Time: A Novel (1999)

Prairie Nocturne: A Novel (2003)

The Whistling Season: A Novel (2006)

The Eleventh Man: A Novel (2008)

The first three Montana novels form the so-called McCaskill trilogy, covering the first centennial of Montana's statehood from 1889 to 1989.

from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ivan_Doig"


“My books already threatened to take over my part of the room and keep on going . . . whatever cargoes of words I could lay my hands on I gave safe harbor.”
Ivan Doig
Read more
“The nature of love is that it catches you off-guard, subjects you to rules you have never faced, some of them contradictory.”
Ivan Doig
Read more
“Every soldier in the course of time exists only in the breath of written word.”
Ivan Doig
Read more
“Even when it stands vacant the past is never empty".”
Ivan Doig
Read more
“Childhood is the one story that stands by itself in every soul.”
Ivan Doig
Read more
“Life is mostly freehand.”
Ivan Doig
Read more
“I am a writer, not a transcriber.”
Ivan Doig
Read more
“The spaces between stars are where the work of the universe is done.”
Ivan Doig
Read more
“There is more time than there is expanse of the world and so any voyage at last will end.”
Ivan Doig
Read more
“Men and women are hard ore, we do not go to slag in a mere few seasons of forge.”
Ivan Doig
Read more
“Nightly awaits that sweet addressPrincipality of SleepHappy Land of Forgetfullness”
Ivan Doig
Read more