May 2009 - John Daniel

Born in South
Carolina and raised in the suburbs of Washington, D.C., Daniel has lived in the
West since 1966. After attending Reed College, he worked as a logger, railroad inspector,
rock climbing instructor, hod carrier, and poet-in-the-schools. He began to write
in the 1970s while living in south-central Oregon. In 1982 he received a Wallace
Stegner Fellowship in Poetry at Stanford University, where he then took an M.A.
in English/Creative Writing and taught five years as a Jones Lecturer in Creative
Writing and a lecturer in Freshman English. He now makes his living as a writer
and itinerant teacher in workshops and writer-in-residence positions around the
country.

Daniel's newest book,
The Far Corner: Northwestern Views on Land, Life, and Literature,
published in April 2009 by Counterpoint is a collection of personal essays that
casts an eye on various subjects in the human and more-than-human worlds—from old-growth
forest to death and dying, from the joys of life on the move to the satisfactions
of putting down roots. His narratives seek to define Daniel's allegiances to his
home places and the wholeness of life itself. This book extends the work that he
collected in The Trail Home, published in 1992 by Pantheon Books and winner of the
1993 Oregon Book Award for Literary Nonfiction.
He is also the author of the 2006 PNBA Book Award winning
Rogue River Journal: A Winter Alone , which blends three nonfiction
narratives into an account of a four-and-a-half-month experiment in solitude in
a remote Rogue River cabin. John Daniel lives with his wife, a couple of cats, and
usually a packrat or two in the Coast Range foothills west of Eugene, Oregon.
Works by John Daniel
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Looking after : a son's memoir
Daniel, John, 1948-
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Oregon rivers
Olson, Larry
N., 1951-
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Rogue River journal : a winter
alone
Daniel, John, 1948-
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The trail home : nature,
imagination, and the American West
Daniel, John, 1948-
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Winter creek : one writer's
natural history
Daniel, John, 1948-
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