Nov. 25: Celebrating Brian Doyle's Big, Bold Oregon Legacy

Published: Nov. 21, 2017, 8:44 p.m.

b'This week on "State of Wonder," some of the Northwest\'s most prominent writers come together to share stories and memories of the man the "New Yorker" called "the Portland sage."

It\\u2019s hard to imagine a more quintessentially Northwest writer than Brian Doyle. He was not from Oregon, but he was of Oregon.

His tales of off-kilter small towns played out in an Oregon where the land and the animals speak, sometimes metaphorically, sometimes literally. He was famously nominated for eight Oregon Book Awards in four categories, before finally winning one.

No less than the writer Ian Frazier immortalized Doyle\\u2019s place in the literary landscape in a 2016 poem for the \\u201cNew Yorker,\\u201d writing: "The Brian Doyle, the Portland sage;/His writing\'s really all the rage."

Brian Doyle died in May after developing a brain tumor.

Several hundred people attended a memorial for him Sept. 21, including some of the region\\u2019s most prominent authors. Listening to them talk, we fell in love with Doyle anew, and wanted to share the event with you. So today, in partnership with Literary Arts, OPB presents memories and readings from that memorial from the following friends and writers.

The poet Kim Stafford, one of Doyle\\u2019s longtime friends and master of ceremonies for the evening - 4:00
Robin Cody, author of Richochet River - 5:54
The writer and environmental philosopher Kathleen Dean Moore. (Love her writing as much as we do? Listen to our interview with her around her Oregon Book Award\\u2013nominated "Great Tide Rising.") - 9:57

Chip Blake, the editor-in-chief of "Orion Magazine" - 17:01
The Oregon Coast writer Melissa Madenski - 22:45
The award-winning nature writer and lepidopterist Robert Michael Pyle - 24:56
Ana Maria Spagna, an author living in the North Cascades in a remote town you can only reach by foot, boat or float plane - 33:59
David James Duncan, the author of the bestselling novels \\u201cThe River Why\\u201d and \\u201cThe Brothers K\\u201d - 37:56'