2020 Montana Book Award Honor Book
"(These) stories should be required reading." -Montana Book
Award Committee
Tom "Harp" Harpole was a horse logger working from remote
mountain camps and living in wall tents until an accident suggested a
change of
lifestyle. He took to his other avocation - writing, and studied abroad
in
Ireland. He began publishing stories in periodicals such as Smithsonian
Air
& Space, Sports Illustrated, Crocodil, Montana Quarterly, Whitefish
Review,
and more. In 1986 his story "The Last of Butch" (Faber & Faber, London)
was
selected as The Best Short Story in the British Isles. His work has
been
short-listed for the National Magazine Award twice, and translated into
six
languages. He has been a guest reader on NPR more than a dozen times.
Harpole
writes in a voice that uses his natural wit and humor to shed light on
a
life of stories that bring readers to the edge of danger. "Tom Harpole
is what
you might call a thinking man's Evel Knievel," - Aaron Parrett, author
of Montana: Then & Now
Certain magazines that assigned Harp feature articles knew early
on that he would try anything that involved physical/emotional risks.
He
regarded himself as a Survivor's
Euphoria aficionado. His
willingness and perspective on dalliances with danger range from an
N.F.L.
record, to horse logging, to skydiving with Russian cosmonauts, to
getting a
black bear stoned, to his compassion as a volunteer EMT in rural
Montana, to
protesting Gorbachev in 1990, to driving ice roads above the Arctic
circle, and
more. This book is a collection of sixteen of his most popular stories.