"LATEST NEWS" 2005

 LINKS MAY BE INACTIVE

12/31/2005 The best sort of snow this morning.  Thick, fell slow and easy much of the night, the bare branches all fat with it.  Shoveling time is good village time, everybody bundled and scraping and pretending they're pioneers and waving - nay, hailing each other as they pass.  Then it's back inside to the satellite dish.

I'm writing steadily, working on several projects at once, hoping there will be more news to share closer to spring.  If you're swinging by to place a direct order for signed books or CDs, please note that there will be a stretch from January 1 to the end of February when we won't be shipping.  The shipping department is doing some journeying.

A day is a day, I'm happy every time I get a new one, so I'm not a big holiday celebrator, but in the spirit of this the final day of 2005, I say again how grateful I am for the notes, the emails, the kind words in passing, the faces at readings, and above all, the people who take time from the day to rest a book on one knee.  This kind of statement always winds up sounding over-earnest and goofy, but I'm happy and thankful for this little life in ways that make me mumble and stumble.

So thank you.  Thank you.  In 2006, I resolve to fix my screen door.  And paint the dang house.

12/20/2005 Been earning our winter whining stripes here the last couple days.  Below zero.  Great stuff when you need to talk tough to people not from around here.  Wind chill, wind schmill, we don't need no stinking wind chill, last night on a rescue call the sky was clear, the stars were sharp, the wind was still, and the sweat inside my non-latex gloves froze while I was standing there.  And they had to send a second ambulance because the first one hit a deer.

Listening to James McMurtry again, in particular Childish Things.  Literate and dusty I guess is how you would describe it.  Also some Oleta Adams.  She will lift you up.  This time of year, it is good to hear her sing "Get Here."  And I like her version of "Don't Let the Sun Go Down On Me."  Mainly I am just typing, typing, taking a stretch from another year on the road to catch up on writing that is owed to various friends and editors, not that the two are mutually exclusive.  I am winding up the year the way I always do, feeling a little overwhelmed and a lot grateful.

Oh.  If you sent me an email any time after mid-May, I'm pecking away.  Shnikies.

12/06/2005 Some housekeeping:
  • John Shimon and Julie Lindemann shot the covers and author photo for Population 485 and Off Main Street (which includes an essay on their vintage camera-toting ways).  Last year they did a funky book about aluminum Christmas trees and it became a cult favorite.  It being the season and all, here's a page with some sample photos, and here's information about the new edition.
  • Last winter I went mushing (dogs, not peas) with Arleigh and Odin Jorgenson.  The January/February issue of Backpacker magazine (available now, that's the way magazines work) includes an essay about the trip, along with fun photos by Layne Kennedy.
  • Ever wonder what it looks like when a guy records an audiobook?  Like a goofball sitting at a table, that's what it looks like.  Still don't believe me?  Pictures here.  Not very good pictures, because I don't know how to post them right.
11/17/2005 Went down to the basement this afternoon planning to pull out some frozen tomato paste and found the freezer plug-in got bumped sometime in the last couple of weeks.  Jiminy.  The sinking feeling I got at the idea of all that waste (a lot of this year's garden was in there, as well as some beautiful fresh salmon caught by a friend), was quickly countered by the "rising" feeling I got when I caught my first whiff of what had become a large science project fueled by leaky bags of warm fish.

There's your phrase for the week: leaky bags of warm fish.

So.  A major hazmat situation.  There are two upsides.  Number one being, it was a smallish cube freezer.  Number two being, deer season opens in two days.  The replenishing and refreezing can commence.  For now, after a number of scrubbings, the freezer is sitting unplugged and contains nothing but a pan of vinegar.

Speaking of deer season.  I know some are confounded by the practice.  I hope to write about the whys and the wherefores some in my next book.  But there is a fellow just up the road from me who has created an essential body of vernacular work on the tradition and history of deer hunting.  Although I don't recall that he and I have ever met (I could be wrong, it's been a busy stretch), I've been on his side ever since the time years ago when I saw him set up with his card table of books in a local mall.  I was on the way to my own card table at the time, and I believe we understand each other.  I see he has a new title out, and just as a neighborly thing, if you're interested, I can tell you he is currently taking visitors at http://www.mertcowley.com/.  Anyone who takes their author photo in blaze orange is OK by me.

11/09/2005 If you're going to be anywhere near Alma, Wisconsin this weekend, consider swinging by the Big River Theater, where singer Billy Krause and I will be doing two shows, one at 6 p.m. and one at 8 p.m.  This should be fun...I'll do some reading and some humor for half the show, and Billy and I will do some pickin' and singing of our songs for the other half (who am I kidding, I don't pick, I strum the guitar like a man cuttin' brush).  Ticket and directions info available on the speaking engagements page.  After this, I'm going to be crawling into the writing cave for a stretch...this past year has been filled with city after city after town after town after group after group, and I hope you know how much it means to see your friendly faces, shake your hands, trade tales and spend an evening.  Just one get-together after another.  I'm a lucky guy and a grateful guy.  Thank you.
11/04/2005 Just got late word that Wisconsin Public Television will re-air footage of me attempting to kick footballs tonight at 7 p.m. on Here & Now.

Also, it's been a hectic second half of the year.  I believe I have answered all my emails up to about May.  So if you're having a hard time raising me, I apologize.  Picture me bent over the keyboard.  Wait, that didn't come out right.  Typing, anyway.

Oh, and some folks who have been good to me (to say nothing of instructive) over the years, Creative Nonfiction and Brevity, have combined to release a special issue of Creative Nonfiction magazine featuring short nonfiction pieces including a version of the "boat people" scene from Population 485.

10/31/2005 A couple of links to evidence of my Germany trip:

- Pictures from a poetry slam in a place called the Schlachthof (Slaughterhouse).  I opened with a reading and played two songs on a beat-up hand-painted acoustic guitar handed to me backstage by a roadie named Uwe.  The headliner the week previous was Motorhead.

- In her blog entry for 10/26/2005, Wisconsin poet Paula Sergi mentions the reading she and I did in Wiesbaden.  Two small-town Wisconsin nurses turned writers.  This reading was at the Schalterhalle Hessisches Ministerium fur Wissenschaft und Kunst.  Yes it was.  It was fun to hang out with Paula and talk words, words, and cheese curds.

- A picture and short note about a reading I did at the Frankfurt City Library.  The t-shirt is held up on behalf of these good people.  Prefer German?  Click here.

- And finally, an interview I did with a newspaper in Frankfurt.  I have no idea what I said. 

10/30/2005 Back from Germany.  Stacks of things to get to, but thank you to my German hosts, I had a wonderful time, I'm still trying figure out how to say "Bob the One-Eyed Beagle" in German.  More later. 
10/15/2005 I've never met Claire Zulkey (have I?), but I like her humor and I like her kangaroo.  Claire just interviewed me.  If you'd like to read the interview (including humorous visual links and a reference to illicit activities involving lefse) you can find it here.  Check out her kangaroo.
10/12/2005 Well, there are moments, and then there are moments.  I'm about to do a German book tour (Population 485 is coming out in German).  I've updated the speaking engagements page as best I can in light of the fact that I can't find the umlaut key on my computer.  I just put a link to the Schlachthof, where I am to do a reading.  They tell me Schlachthof means "Slaughterhouse."  May very well be, because look who has the gig previous to mine.   (You'll have to scroll down, and the link may expire soon)  Lemmy!
10/03/2005 Holy shnikies, the folks at Outside magazine have posted that little poison ivy essay I wrote for their current issue (October, on newsstands now).  Before I tell you where, understand that you should avoid reading this piece if: A) you object to fundamental descriptions of the final stage of food processing; B) you ever plan to shake my hand.  Disclaimers aside, here's the link: http://outside.away.com/outside/features/200510/worst-moments-8.html
09/30/2005 If you can't make it to the Shell Lake show, we've just scheduled another humor/music event for a cool little theater November 12 in Alma, Wisconsin.  These have turned out to be good fun.  A few stories, a few songs, and some laughter.
09/26/2005 Details of the Shell Lake, Wisconsin, reading and concert have been finalized.  See October 8 entry on Speaking Engagements page.
09/21/2005 If you pick up the October issue of Outside magazine, you'll find a feature titled "13 Nightmares - True Stories of Misery, Bad Luck, Suffering and Terror in the Wild".  Some of the stories are deadly serious.   Mine - involving a very personal poison ivy problem - is mostly silly and proves botany is not my strong point.
09/19/2005 If you're in the Eau Claire, Wisconsin, area October 1-3, the Chippewa Valley Museum is gathering some interesting folks to discuss rural life and farm culture. Info here.  Historians, folklorists, writers, and one alleged humorist.

And whether you are a city or a country mouse, the museum's current Farm Life exhibit is tremendous.  It's been a pleasure to be a small part of this project.

09/12/2005 If you've been following the site, you know about the school bus of supplies we ("we" being a passel of friends, strangers and citizens) sent to Louisiana.  Aaron, the fellow who drove the bus after we loaded it, promised to file a report, and he has.  Except this is not a report, it is a beautiful, funny, flowing essay that will fill your heart.  Click here to read it.
09/12/2005 I have no claim on Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown.  He took the time to talk to me on the telephone once so I could write a magazine article, but that was the extent of our personal communication.   At the time, he was closing in on 80 and still playing all around the country.   When he went home to Slidell, Louisiana, he would fish from his back porch.   There was a gator under that porch, and I so loved the way Gatemouth told the gator story I included it in the magazine piece and referenced it in the subtitle of the book in which the piece subsequently reappeared -- Off Main Street: Barnstormers, Prophets, and Gatemouth's Gator.

Gatemouth was diagnosed with lung cancer a year or so ago.   He chose to forego treatment and played on past 80.  Hurricane Katrina blew away everything he owned, including the porch he shared with that gator, but he got out alive.  Then last Saturday, he died.

A few of the details are here.  Never mind death, what a life.

09/09/2005 Due to special hurricane-related editorial slate, the new video essay for Here & Now will be postponed again so the show can deal with the real world, and I say, You betcha.
09/07/2005 First of all, a mighty thanks to all who donated and helped load the bus for Hurricane Katrina relief today.  And on my behalf, a special deep-down thanks to those of you who responded to the announcement posted on this website.  The bus was full, and still folks were showing up with donations.  As I write this, the bus is making its way south through the night.   When people are good, they are so pure good it makes your heart ache for all we can be.

On a more day-to-day note, Here & Now (with my new video essay) will be on at 8 p.m. this Friday, not 7 p.m. as usual.  This is a one-time thing due to Hurricane Katrina coverage. (LATE WORD: essay will be held until a later date so they can deal with the real world, and I say, you betcha.)

Thanks again, folks.  The good people are out there.

09/06/2005 If you read this website from a chair anywhere near Eau Claire, Chippewa or Dunn counties in Wisconsin, please consider pitching in with these folks, who, on very short notice (the bus leaves Wednesday, September 7, as soon as it is full) are gathering and transporting a busload of fundamental emergency supplies to be delivered directly to rescue workers and storm victims being housed in Shreveport, Louisiana.  When all the supplies are delivered, they are furthermore donating the dang bus.  Again, more info here, at http://www.justlocalfood.com/relief/.   I'm blessed to say I am acquainted with a lot of these folks, and I trust them to deliver every single box.

Wisconsin Public Television will be running a new video essay we filmed in a graveyard.  It'll be running this Friday on Here & Now.   This is the one that got bumped last week.

09/03/2005 Still more September/October speaking engagements (and a couple music events) added.

I've mentioned Eric Taylor in my writing now and then.   Smart music, beautiful music, he's doing a rare little tour, go here and click "Tour Schedule" for Midwestern dates.

And finally, New Orleans.  Others are speaking in far greater detail and with far greater eloquence than I possess.  So I'll keep it specific.  I have a friend who fled the wind and water.  One of the lucky ones, he got out OK.  But last I heard, he has no idea what - if any - of his home and possessions remain.  It so happens he is a multi-award winning fiction writer, journalist, and one of the nation's leading authority on jazz.  If you know of any university, lyceum, chautauqua group, etc., with budget for a speaker, or someone to lead a weekend fiction workshop, please let me know ( mike@sneezingcow.com ) and I'll pass the info his way.

08/29/2005 Added a bunch of September/October dates to the speaking engagements page.
08/26/2005 If you tuned in to see the new video essay on Wisconsin Public Television, I'm told I got bumped.  But I'm happy to say that means there was room for a story about a friend of mine.  She did something brave and selfless, and we're proud of her.  The story is here.
08/25/2005 There will be a new video essay aired this Friday on Here & Now.  It involves me going to a graveyard.
08/24/2005 Appropo of nothing except that I am writing with the CD player on, if you are under the age of 45 and feeling put-upon by time, one listen to Loretta Lynn singing "Portland Oregon" with Jack White on the album Van Lear Rose ought to get you to stop whining.  I know it did me.   Go, Loretta, go.  I'll try to keep up.
08/11/2005 I am told that Wisconsin Public Television will be re-running my gardening essay this Friday on Here & Now.

Also - our little fire department is celebrating its 100th anniversary.  Information here.

08/04/2005 This is a sort of last-minute add: I'll be doing a reading and signing at the public library in Washburn, Wisconsin this Monday August 8 at 7 p.m.  Details on the speaking engagements page.
07/30/2005 I've just received word that the music issue of the Oxford American is now available.  Man -- the music issue has become legendary.  Last time they brought it out, the folks at OA won a National Magazine Award.  It comes with a CD of 29 songs by everyone from Elvis to Aretha Franklin's sister.  They let me write a short piece about Lightnin' Hopkins, which will run as a companion to a longer piece by the pretty much famous Sven Birkerts and another by war correspondent Joe Sacco.  I'm grateful and humbled to be in their company, and while I'm in the humbled business, let me apologize to radio host Dan Gresham of radio station KOLE in Beaumont, Texas, as he treated me to a delightful interview the other day during which I yammered about the Oxford American essay I wrote about Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown.  No.  The Gatemouth piece is in Off Main Street.   The Oxford American piece is about Lightnin' Hopkins.  The confusion can best be explained by smacking myself in the head while quoting the late Chris Farley: I'm such an idiot!
07/26/2005 As we've been saying, Mike is mostly holed up typing these days (if you've sent an email anytime since March 1, hang in there, he'll get to it), but he has played out a few times with his band the Long Beds.   Thanks to our digital friend Megan, we have a couple of pictures here.
07/21/2005 Publisher W.W. Norton has just released Short Takes: Brief Encounters with Contemporary Nonfiction.  The book includes pieces by Verlyn Klinkenborg, Jo Ann Beard, David Sedaris, Dorothy Allison, Salman Rushdie, Terry Tempest Williams, and Mark Spragg.  It also includes an excerpt from Population 485.  In particular, the essay segment about sleeping under a tree in the woods.  My brother's dog Jack is in that essay.   I'll let him know.  He will either ignore me, drool on my boots, or both.   Book ordering information here.
07/21/2005 If you're listening in the Sioux City, Iowa, area, I'm doing an interview with KSJC at 10:10 a.m. this morning.
07/12/2005 I'll be on KQMT 99.5 FM sometime between 7 a.m. and 9 a.m. Mountain Time tomorrow.  With Mark and ArcherYou can listen online.  They ask me about small town life.  I tell them what I know, but it always comes back to sneezing cows.
07/10/2005 Sometimes you have no idea.   When my editor and I were putting together the essays for Off Main Street, there was one piece in particular that I felt was a little too personal.  She convinced me to include it, and I'm glad, because now I get more emails about that one essay than any of the others.  Off Main Street was reviewed in the Boston Globe today, and I think I need to thank my editor again.   Here's the review:

...as a Wisconsin farmer's son, [Michael Perry] has spent stretches of his life engaged with manure. Nonetheless, he appreciates the American fantastic -- of which manure surfing is surely one manifestation -- and pays tribute to it in the best of these pieces. He introduces us to the neighbor who built his own airplane and writes rhapsodically on such roadside colossuses as the 9,000-pound prairie chicken that lures -- it is hoped -- people to Rothsay, Minn., and the 50-foot Jolly Green Giant who presides over Blue Earth, Minn. He is also a great and eloquent fan of the water tower and the 18-wheeler. As Dickens delighted in miniatures, so he delights in big stuff -- though not the Brobdingnagian houses that now plague the land. But the biggest object in these pieces is the smallest and certainly the most gruesome: a kidney stone. It is his kidney stone, in fact, whose agonizing journey to the outside world (to reveal itself to be the size of a chokecherry pit) he recounts most wonderfully. ''Where I used to tolerate tales of childbirth with a sort of deferential politeness," he writes, ''I now find myself nodding in solidarity."

So thank you to my book editor.  And to the magazine editor who first assigned the piece.  And perhaps most especially, thank you to my longsuffering (he has no choice, the piece cannot be retracted) urologist, who presided over the birth.

I told part of the kidney stone story on Public Radio International a few weeks ago when I was a guest on Michael Feldman's Whad'Ya Know?  You can listen to an archived version the show here.   (Scroll down -- it's the May 21 show.)

07/06/2005 Just updated site to note that the audio version of Population 485 (read by Mike and including seven essays from Off Main Street) is available as a download at Audible.com (they also partner with Amazon).   I take no pride in the fact that I am apparently the last person on the face of the earth without an iPod.

Also updated the speaking engagements page.  For mid-July: a few new radio interviews, a signing, and some Long Beds music events.

Other than that, the garden has yielded some delicious peas.  My annual squirrel problem has abated, replaced with footloose cats who leave well-formed presents buried between the cilantro and the summer savory.  I have taken to making wild-eyed charges from around the corner of the garage while hissing like a puma.  The effect is startling and impermanent.

06/24/2005 Still writing.  Balancing the coffee and late hours with salad picked fresh from the garden every day.  Just found out we're sneaking one more event into July.  A combination reading/concert July 15 in Grand Marais, Minnesota.  Details on the speaking engagements page.
06/15/2005 These days I am for the most part locked down at the desk trying to meet deadlines.  I have baggy eyes, bad posture, and smell of coffee beans.  Emerge just often enough to pull weeds from between the peas.  It looks like I'll be crawling into the open air pretty rarely over the next several months.  I did just find out I'll be skulking out to play some music at a coffee house north of Hayward, Wisconsin, on July 14.  Details on the Speaking Engagements page.
06/05/2005 Heather Lende should be out on book tour right now.  Her book about small-town life in Alaska, If You Lived Here, I'd Know Your Name, was released last week.  I like that book.  Unfortunately, on April 7 Heather was hit by a truck while riding her bike.  Her head is fine, but the rest of her took a beating.  She's got a long recovery ahead of her and won't be able to go on book tour for a while.  But you can click and go visit her here.
05/26/2005 Someone just sent me this link to photos of the live Whad'Ya Know? show: http://wpr.org/regions/eau/wyk.cfm.   What a blast.  You can listen to an archived version of the show here (it's the May 21 show).
05/25/2005 Wow.  More great news.   The Summer 2005 Book Sense Paperback Picks have been announced, and Off Main Street is #10.  You can view the entire list here.   A big ol' bookmarked thank you to the independent booksellers, without whom this would not have happened.

Also, if you're in range of Milwaukee's WUWM, Mike's interview with Jane Hampden airs this Friday (5/27) at 10 a.m. and 10 p.m.  The show is called, coincidentally enough, "At 10."

05/23/2005 Well.  What fun I had on Michael Feldman's Whad'Ya Know? Saturday.  We covered my kidney stone from every angle.  You can listen to an archived version the show here.   (It's the May 21 show...it hadn't been added to the site yet when we posted this entry, but it will be soon).  I love doing live radio, but after you're done, you always remember something you meant to say or something you got wrong, especially if it's about your hometown!  As such, I should mention that the Pickled Trout is now the Larabee Lodge, and that TJ's Food-N-Fun is a great place to get a burger for lunch or supper, but isn't open for breakfast.  A lot of folks get breakfast at the Corner Store out on M and 40, or the Sunshine Cafe on Main Street.  When you live in a town of 485 people with four restaurants, you need to get it right or they'll put eggshells in your omelet, as well they should.

Backstage at Whad'Ya Know? we were talking about John Hildebrand's new book, A Northern Front: New and Selected Essays.  John's writing is powerful and I owe him a great debt for all the time he has taken to help me with mine.

05/15/2005 Just got some great news.  Mike will be a guest on Michael Feldman's Whad'Ya Know? this Saturday.  Last time Mike was on this show, he and Mr. Feldman discussed the untimely death of an emu.  This will be a special "road" edition of the show, broadcast from The State Theater in Eau Claire, Wisconsin, upon which boards Mike has trod, more than once while wearing tights.   This show airs all across the United States, broadcast information here.  If you'd like to attend the live taping, ticket information is here.  All kidding about tights and emus and emus in tights aside, Michael Feldman is a public radio legend, and I (Mike in the first person) am thrilled and a little nervous over the whole deal.  Still, it can't be any worse than a kidney stone.  I wonder if Michael Feldman has ever had a kidney stone.
05/12/2005 Mike will be on Wisconsin Public Television tomorrow night (Friday the 13th) at 7 p.m., with a new "End Insight" videoessay on "Here and Now".  This one is about culverts and my childhood friend Ricky.
05/12/2005 I have previously mentioned the debt I owe John Hildebrand for all those hours (formal and informal) he spent teaching me about great writers and writing.  John's own writing is profound in its clarity and grace, and I'm thrilled that he has a new collection out.  A Northern Front: New and Selected Essays, ranges from Alaska's northern slope to the bottomlands of the Mississippi.  John writes about the complicated local politics involved in drilling for oil in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, deer hunting with Hmong immigrants, and the preservation of the family farm.  At one point he eats roast squirrel.   Several of these pieces originally appeared in Harper's Magazine.  Information on the book here.
05/03/2005 Wow.  We here in Nobbern are tickled as turbocharged turtles to announce that the National Rube Goldberg Machine Contest has just concluded, and the national title has been awarded to - New Auburn High School.  In particular, a group of New Auburn High School students who competed against teams from all around the United States to design a machine that could remove used batteries from a flashlight, replace them with new batteries, and turn the flashlight on, all in a minimum of 20 steps.  So here's a tip of the seed corn cap to Mr. Skuban and his crew of Chippewa County irregulars, including instructors Tim Lambele and Pat Rufledt and students Brandon Baldry, Eric Gass, Tony Bischel, Garrett Stilley, Andy DeWilde, Merrit Super, Espen Grindhaug, and Max Mukhtarov.  I'm not sure how long these links will last, but here we go:

- Newspaper story describing the contest and machine (includes complete listing of the 24 steps required to light the flashlight).

- Another newspaper story describing the contest and machine.

- Blog describing the victory (umm, you might need your Norwegian/English dictionary...this blog is written by Espen Grindhaug, a foreign exchange student and member of the team) (the team also included exchange student Max Mukhtarov of Azerbaijan).

Congratulations, team.  Innovation and ingenuity, right here in Nobbern.

04/28/2005 Mike will be on Wisconsin Public Television Friday (th 29th) night at 7 p.m., being interviewed for "Here and Now".  More info and haircut info here.
04/25/2005 If you're looking for information on the combination reading/concert (featuring Mike's band The Long Beds), click here.
04/24/2005 Book tour rolls on.  I'm in Madison.  Getting close to home.   Thank you to all the folks I've met, even if just for a smile and a handshake.   Said it before, I'll say it again: I am a lucky, grateful guy.
04/22/2005 Still out on tour.  About to check out of a Sleep Inn in Flat Rock, Michigan.  Covering a lot of miles, and in my favorite part of book tour, getting to say thank you to people face-to-face.  Getting lost only about twice a day, all driving/no flying from here on out, lookin' at the world through a windshield.  Happy to be here.  By fun coincidence, an editor and writer from my childhood newspaper happened to be in Little Rock when I was there.  He wrote a nice piece about the visit (I am reminded I need to change my boot laces), and for a while, you should be able to find it here:

http://www.chippewa.com/articles/2005/04/21/news/news1.txt

Off to Lansing.

04/15/2005 When people ask me to sign copies of Population 485, I usually write "Welcome to 'Nobbern'", because that's how we locals refer to New Auburn.   For Off Main Street signings, I started out by putting a thought bubble over my grumpy author picture and filling it with the quote, "I'm the happiest girl in the whole U.S.A.", a reference to an embarrassing moment in Population 485.  As short as that quote looks, it takes a while to write if you're signing a bunch of books (bookstores often give you the opportunity pre-sign stacks of'em), so I had to come up with something else.  Now I just put the thought bubble up there and leave it empty.  I figure this gives the owner of the book the opportunity to plant thoughts inside my head, where most of the space is occupied by static, echoes, and caffeine fumes.  So if you come across a copy of the book with an empty thought bubble, feel free to fill it in.  And if you'd like to tell me what you wrote in there, send an email.  Maybe we'll post some of them.
04/14/2005 Out on tour.  I'm in Blytheville, Arkansas right now.  It's warmer than Wisconsin.  Updated tour information here.   Also, we've updated the archives section with some new goodies.
04/10/2005 The HarperCollins press release describing Off Main Street can be viewed here.
04/09/2005 The ordering page has been updated.  You can now order the new essay collection Off Main Street and the audiobook version of Population 485 from this site.  Please note: The official release date of both items is April 12, so prior to that day, bookstores and online stores will only be able to place pre-orders.  Also, since Mike will be on book tour through the end of April, there may be a slight delay on the delivery of items ordered through this site, as he signs all books before they're mailed.  Orders can be placed here.
04/08/2005 Just found out Wisconsin Public Radio will be running the "Litter" video essay we did last year, in which Mike runs around in the rain picking up broasted chicken boxes, talking to the cow on the Cow Crossing sign, and stalking the elusive beer turkey.  This will air on Here and Now tonight at 7 p.m., air time and station information here.
03/23/2005 Mike and his band The Long Beds will be playing at the Acoustic Cafe in Eau Claire, Wisconsin, this Saturday night.  We are pleased to be opening for Elliston, a band from Chippewa Falls   More information about the gig and about Elliston here.  Mike Perry and the Long Beds will play from roughly 8:15 p.m. to 9:30 p.m., then Elliston will take it on home.
03/18/2005 I rarely post photographs because I simply can't keep up with all the ones I receive.  But I posted these because one is of a fabulous babe I met in a bar after a reading, the other is of me modeling my favorite hunting hat while speaking to students in Boyceville, Wisconsin.  Thank you to Evy for sending these.  Click here.
03/00/2005 Book tour dates added to Speaking Engagements page.  One of my stops will be at Athena Books in Kalamazoo, where right now on their website it says: After this March you're going to deserve more than yardwork, and we have an April worth coming inside for. (And wait till you see May.) Our most popular author from last year, volunteer fireman, EMT, small-town boy and dandy writer Mike Perry (Population 485,) will return to Athena on Saturday, April 23 at 7 p.m. Last year he drew 60 people downtown on a January Monday night, and not one of them left dissatisfied. This year he'll read from his new book, Off Main Street: Barnstormers, Prophets & Gatemouth's Gator (the pieces on riding with truckers and country-music singers are good, the ones on passing a kidney stone and on going bald are a joy to read, but our favorite is still the one on small-town water towers.)

That's nice.  I remember that night in Kalamazoo.  It was dang cold.  I sat in the back room and went over my notes.  Bookstore back rooms are wonderful places, all stickered and stuck with notes and author quotes and cartoons related to literature and posters from book tours long gone, and of course, piles and piles of books.  Before a reading, it is this perfect little quiet place to gather your thoughts and drink enough water so that your bladder will prompt you to wrap up the yapping before the audience members develop numb hinder disorder.

02/27/2005 I happened to be rolling through Madison, Wisconsin, last Friday and had a chance to listen to Dean Bakopoulus reading from his new novel at A Room of One's Own bookstore.  Afterward I went to Nick's Rrestaurant with Dean and a platoon of his friends.  The vintage booths at Nick's are inscribed with boomerang graphics designed by the same man who designed the International Harvester logo for my beat-up old pickup truck.  The world is a web.  I had been on the road and up for nearly 36 hours, so I begged off early, and have just now realized I didn't pay for my club soda.  Owe you one, Dean.
02/21/2005 Sure had a good time speaking at the Dane County EMS Banquet.  My original EMT instructor was there.  It was good to see her.  To think of all the calls I've made since she taught me how to KED somebody in a library chair.  Wish she'd have told me how to KED somebody while a cow was peeing down my bike shorts.  I shall approach the curriculum committee.

I'll be in Madison Wisconsin this Wednesday and Thursday to take part in Madison Area Technical College's "Reading Together" program.   There will be several events open to the public.  More information on the speaking engagements page, and also here.

02/09/2005 If you're in Eau Claire this Saturday (February 12), and you find yourself filled with love, looking for love, or just flummoxed by love, you might swing by the Eau Claire Regional Arts Center Gallery (316 Eau Claire Street) at 7 p.m. for Laurie Bieze's 10th Annual Valentine's Day Poetry Reading.   Poets performing will include Beth Bretl, Alan Jenkins, Jenna Kulasiewicz, Andrew Patrie, Jason Splichal, Sarah Thompson, and a special set by Laurie Bieze herself.   You can see Laurie's magical art glass here.   When I think of Laurie, I think of sweetness and light...and a radiant power that can warm your spirit or knock you on your hinder, whichever you deserve.  More comprehensive info about the reading here.

Me, I'll be off on the other side of the state in the middle of Lake Michigan, doing a reading at the Red Cup Coffee House on Washington Island.  The reading is at 7:30 p.m.  The coffee house is beside the Post Office.  If you can't find it, ask.   If the person you ask doesn't know where it is, they are either lying or not from there.  If you're planning to drive, bring a paddle.

01/26/2005 Our fire chief was recently recognized as a Hero of a Lifetime by the local Red Cross chapter.  I won't use his name, because just having to locate his suit coat and stand at the podium to accept his award nearly put him into a terminal panic attack, and plus, if he gets upset with me I won't get batteries for my pager (your reward for attending the monthly meeting), but I do want to say he was recognized for his thirty-plus years of service to the department.  He would never ask for this honor, but he richly deserves it.  And because we on the department hold him in such high regard, we never bring up the time Our Certified Hero completely missed the garage door and backed the brush rig into the new steel siding on the fire hall, or ran out of gas on the way to a call, or backed the tanker in too far and punched a brick out of the back wall, or -- and this is only the vaguest of aged unreliable rumors -- once parked a pumper in the ditch wheels-up.
01/19/2005

Howdy folks.  If you’re looking for all the “Latest News” posts from 2004 and previous, you’ll find them here.

  Well, jeepers.  Here we go, 2005.  This is probably a good time to say thanks one more time for all the kind words that have come my way as a result of the book Population 485.  Since the book came out in October 2002, I have received scores of letters, several thousand emails, and countless other kindnesses, many while I was far away from home.  That little book has allowed me to meet all manner of people in all manner of places – from Midwestern libraries to Mississippi taverns, from Manhattan bookstores to a Los Angeles soiree where I ate cheese balls alongside Mary Martin and Heidi Fleiss, which is a spectrum of sorts.

  It's been fun to sign books in Blytheville , Arkansas , or Kalamazoo , Michigan , or Bellingham , Washington , and have someone say, "Your town is just like our town."  I think that says something wonderful and hopeful about humans, no matter our shape, color or location.  The irony is, I wrote a book about my love for a certain place, and as a result, I've been on the road pretty much nonstop ever since, and have fallen way out of the running in the informal “most calls per year” contest down at the fire department.  But every time I pull off the four-lane at my favorite exit in the whole wide world and point the car up Main Street , that water tower still looks like a long-lost friend.  I get in the house, find my pager, switch the button to “on”, and I am home.

Because of the book, people ask me if I'll live in New Auburn forever.  Nobody can answer a question like that, and I have an incurable travel jones.  When you get to that horizon, wrote singer/songwriter Steve Earle, there’s always someplace else to be.  But for now, I’m still living on Main Street, and to paraphrase a passage from Population 485, I can say without reservation that wherever I am or wherever I end up, New Auburn is the place I will always call home, no matter where I stand at the time I invoke the name.

***

One more note of thanks.  To all the Fire/EMS people I have met and continue to meet as a result of Population 485, you have added a dimension to my writing experience that I never anticipated.  It is a privilege to be considered one of your number.  I do a lot of public speaking, and I have yet to leave an engagement wishing I hadn’t taken it.  But Fire/EMS crowds are extra fun because I get to do jokes about S.A.M.P.L.E. and overzealous extrication techniques.  I am often asked if I will write another book about firefighting or emergency medical services, and for now, the answer is a respectful no.  I did my best to convey what “we” do and see out there, no matter the size of our service or level of our training and experience, and I hope I got it mostly right, but I am just one of thousands, and everyone who has ever run lights and sirens has their own book’s worth of stories.  Somewhere someone is writing their version, and we will read it one day.  But in the meantime, I think of you-all out there, hanging out for five minutes after the call, or having a smoke-and-joke after the monthly meeting, or standing around the rigs yapping between training exercises, and I grin, because I know, those stories, they’re getting told.

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In other news, HarperCollins will be releasing a collection of my essays and magazine pieces in April.  The collection is titled Off Main Street : Barnstormers, Prophets & Gatemouth’s Gator.   At the same time, HarperAudio will be releasing an audiobook combining portions of Population 485 with several selections from Off Main Street .  We’ll post more details as things get closer and you can sign up with their author tracker if you like.  Book tour and speaking dates will be posted on the Speaking Engagements page when they are confirmed.

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In the meantime, I’m currently under deadline for several magazine pieces and finishing my next book, which is tentatively due out in early 2006.  Because of all these deadlines, and because some of the magazine pieces require that I travel on assignment (nothing all that exotic, although on one occasion I will be required to smuggle myself across the Minnesota border), I am having to back off on the number of speaking engagements I accept.  What might look like open days on the speaking calendar are actually days in which I am typing through the dark hours, all hollow-eyed and amped up on Zebra Cakes and double Americanos.  To say nothing of the fact that my screen door still isn’t fixed.