A4 THE DAILY ASTORIAN • MONDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2019 OPINION editor@dailyastorian.com KARI BORGEN Publisher JIM VAN NOSTRAND Editor JEREMY FELDMAN Circulation Manager Founded in 1873 JOHN D. BRUIJN Production Manager CARL EARL Systems Manager SOUTHERN EXPOSURE Wyn Berry Author Don Berry. Capturing the essence of the land A midst an abundance of quality Pacifi c Northwest fi ction, Don Berry presents the most vivid naturalism — bringing to mind the scent of the woods, the hollow of a log or the whisper of a dream. The writer lived in Gearhart in the 1950s and 1960s and managed to cap- ture the essence of the land and water around him, along with the heritage of the Nehalem, Clatsop and Killamook people. The story of “Trask” is almost crude in its overt simplicity — Elbridge Trask, a settler on the Clatsop Plains with his wife Hannah — wants to settle on farm- land to the south by what we now know as Tillamook Bay — then uncharted territory. Not a trip to be undertaken lightly, considered the densely packed forests, deep crevasses and tides breaking across the rock. Trask’s quixotic mission is abetted by two Native Ameri- cans — a holy man or “tanawanis,” and the ne’er-do-well Wahila R.J. who signs on as guide. MARX “It is my goal,” Trask tells the Native Amer- ican Chief Kilchis, “to make of this bay one house, of which we can all live in peace.” Berry’s descriptions are magnifi - cent, painting word images of the dizzy- ing heights of Neahkahnie Mountain to Manzanita and beyond. “Five hundred feet below,” Berry writes, “the surf crashed against the base of the cliffs with a thunderous roar, throwing white water slowly up the side.” “Jagged spires of rock” point upward, and the “base of the sheer slab was a jumble of sharp and angular pinna- cles around which the surf surged and churned.” Of the elk who wander the moun- tains, “they traveled in amiable compan- ionship, a stark contrast to the mating season in the fall, when the bulls would be trumpeting their wild challenges and fi ghting for harems.” Tillamook Bay is rendered in its prim- itive isolation: “There was a quietness in the air, and the distant thin screaming of seabirds could be heard clearly. Flights of gulls began to wheel over the fl at waters of the bay in long fl oating arcs.” Such descriptive prose is worthy of a thousand pictures. The narrative is never predictable, never a “gee-whiz” Western — although this was marketed as a paperback pulp novel in the 1960s, followed by “Moon- trap” and “To Build a Ship.” A North Coast heritage In Jeff Baker’s introduction to the Oregon State University republish- ing of the books in 2004, he describes how Berry wrote the trilogy published between 1960 and 1963 “in a spasm of sustained creativity unequaled in Ore- The last chapter of ‘Trask’ yn Berry, the former wife of that every beginning writer dreams Don Berry, lives on Vashon of. With high hopes, I took him to the Island, Washington. She looks airport. He was back the next day. back on the writing of “Trask,” and the “Well, what did she say? Will she shaping of its emotional conclusion. take it?” I pressed, the moment he got In the late fall of 1958, we were liv- into the car. ing at Peach Cove on the Willamette “No, she said I had not completed River, south of Portland. We were man- the story. She wanted me to add a aging fi nancially, but chapter,” he said barely. Three kids in tersely, “I refused. the same independent I’ll not change my school, Catlin Gabel, writing for anyone. where I taught, 40 It is as it stands.” miles away, my salary My heart sank, our only income. Berry even though I wrote obsessively in respected his stand- those years, on a por- ing up for his prin- table Olivetti type- ciples. So that was Wyn Berry that. Quietly, we writer in the old red barn across the garden Wyn Berry at Little Beach in drove home. from the Red House in Gearhart in the 1960s. But almost a which we lived. year later, Berry While preparations were underway reread his manuscript, went out to at Viking Press for Berry’s fi rst novel, the barn, and all through the night, “Trask,” to be published, his agent, bombarded by nesting peregrine fal- Barthold Fles, sent a copy to Read- cons and a young barn owl, he wrote ers Digest owner-editor Lila Wallace. the glorious last chapter. “Trask” One day, Berry received an amaz- was in galleys by that time, so he ing letter from her saying she would had to talk Viking into adding it, but fl y him to San Francisco if he’d come they did. and talk with her about the book. The “Trask,” in the timeless, profound, possibility of a lucrative publica- popular book it has become, was pub- tion with the popular Digest was truly lished in 1960. Berry refused to send exciting! this fi nal version to Mrs. Wallace. He Needless to say, Berry decided to could not admit to being wrong, but go and hear what Mrs. Wallace had he had realized it, and completed the in mind. This could be the big break book after all. W gon literature. … Berry while restaurant server. believed fi ction could Wyn, reached via tell larger truths as email from her home in effectively as history.” Vashon Island, Wash- Cannon Beach art- ington, recalled a ist Rex Amos knew happy time in Gearhart Berry as a colleague with family and friends and friend. “Don was a in the early 1960s. painter before becom- Don Berry met ing a writer,” Amos Gearhart’s Graham and said. Bunny Doar while at Berry lived in a college at Reed, and cabin in Gearhart, then the Doars introduced had a log cabin on the him to the North Coast. Nehalem River, Amos (Graham Doar was a recalled. “One day I recognized TV and sci- Wyn Berry ence-fi ction author dropped in on him and Don Berry in Gearhart after a trip whose short story “The he came to the door with a bloody apron on. to France, New Zealand and Hong Outer Limit” — a He had just shot a bear Kong. One of his sumi drawings is “close-encounter” story in the background. and was making bear written in 1949 — was jerky. Long story there; rewritten and readapted sort of Hemingwayish.” throughout the 1950s.) Their acquaintance was launched in Graham’s daughter, also at Reed, the 1960s, set up by a mutual friend, Wyn Berry said, met Don at the Reed Friedrich Peters, fi rst director of Deut- Bookstore where he was working, heard sche Sommerschule am Pazifi k — a Ger- him talk about wishing he could talk to man summer program then in Manzanita a published writer, and Jane said, ‘Pops and now offered from Lewis and Clark writes for Saturday Evening Post and College. Esquire — why don’t you go to Gearhart John Allen of the Pacifi c Way Cafe and talk to him?’ He did, and thus began recalled Berry as a legend in Gearhart. a long friendship, quickly followed by While he never met Berry, he knew Ber- the addition of (the Berrys’ children) ry’s wife, Wyn, as a journalist and erst- David, Bonny, Duncan and myself. Both A 1960s paperback cover of Don Berry’s ‘Trask.’ An entry in the Western trilogy with ‘Trask’ and ‘To Build a Ship.’ Graham and Bunny considered the kids to be their own grandkids.” The Northwest’s rainy glory “Trask” was researched at the Tilla- mook County Museum and written in a barn on a farm in Peach Cove on the Willamette River, Wyn Berry recalled. The last chapter was written in a cabin built in the Coast Range forest. Berry loved the Northwest in all its rainy glory. He spent many days wander- ing or hunting all over Clatsop County. He was one-eighth Native American — Fox — and always had an affi nity for “wildness.” Berry walked every step of whatever way he wrote about, from Hug Point, in “Trask,” to Sawtooth Mountain past the Lewis and Clark River, she said. He was lucky enough to have an agent, based on his years of award-win- ning science fi ction, who took “Trask” to publishers. Trask’s contract asked for and got fi rst refusal on any subsequent book, and “off he went,” Wyn Berry said. “He wrote ‘Moontrap’ in southern France, collected the galleys in New Zealand, and proofed them in Hong Kong. Then (he) came home, went to the cabin, and wrote ‘To Build A Ship,’ again based on early jour- nals. Last time I looked, his cedar cabin was still there.” Don Berry’s books earned immedi- ate recognition by the public and crit- ics quickly, she added, and the author enjoyed the accoutrements of success: glowing reviews, writers workshops and travel. “Trask” won a Library Guild Award; “Moontrap” was nominated for a National Book Award and won the Golden Spur Award, given by the West- ern Writers of America for best historical novel that year. Berry moved on from the area to develop a long career in Portland, San Francisco, the Caribbean and Vashon Island, in a career that is exotic as it sounds. Berry eventually gave up writing except on the internet, Amos said, of which Berry was considered (appropri- ately) “a pioneer.” R.J. Marx is editor of the Seaside Signal and Cannon Beach Gazette, and covers South County for The Daily Astorian.