List of fiction set in Oregon
|
|
This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia's quality standards. (Consider using more specific cleanup instructions.) Please help improve this article if you can. The talk page may contain suggestions. (May 2009) |
The following are authors, filmmakers, musicians, and other performers, and their products, associated with Oregon.
Contents |
[edit] Literature
[edit] Authors
- Speculative Fiction writer Kate Wilhelm lives in Eugene, Oregon. Many of her books take place in Oregon, most notably, her entire Barbara Holloway series. Barbara Holloway is an attorney in Eugene, Oregon. She is intelligent, courageous, and compassionate. Along with her semi-retired lawyer father, Frank Holloway, and a cast of supporting characters, Ms. Holloway uncovers the truth and fights for justice. These mysteries combine detective fiction with courtroom drama.
Barbara Holloway Novels: 1 Death Qualified: A Mystery of Chaos (1991) also appeared as: Variant Title: Death Qualified (2002) 2 The Best Defense (1994) also appeared as: Variant Title: The Best Defence (1996) 3 Malice Prepense (1996) also appeared as: Variant Title: For the Defense (1997) Variant Title: For the Defence (1997) 4 Defense for the Devil (1999) also appeared as: Variant Title: Defence for the Devil (2000) 5 No Defense (2000) also appeared as: Variant Title: No Defence (2001) 6 Desperate Measures (2001) 7 Clear and Convincing Proof (2003) 8 The Unbidden Truth (2004) 9 Sleight of Hand (2006) 10 A Wrongful Death (2007) [NG] 11 Cold Case (2008)
- Children's author Beverly Cleary set many of her stories in Portland, and used many references to the city in them. Henry Huggins, for instance, lived on Klickitat Street, while Ramona Quimby was named for Quimby Street.[1]
- Ursula K. Le Guin, Grand Master author of speculative fiction, has lived in Portland since 1958. The Lathe of Heaven, one of her most renowned novels, is set in a future Portland.
- Author Jean Auel currently lives in Portland with her husband. She attended both Portland State University and the University of Portland.[2]
- Fight Club author Chuck Palahniuk wrote an alternative travelogue of the city titled Fugitives and Refugees: A Walk in Portland, Oregon.[3]
- Author Steve Perry writer of a number of movie adaptations, Batman cartoons, Conan novels, Star Wars novels, and a series called "The Man Who Never Missed" and numerous other projects and short stories. He enjoys teasing his editors by leaving situation references in his books from other works he has written. Scattered through a number of his works are the names from Portland and other locations throughout the Pacific Northwest.
- Novelist Chelsea Cain has written three best-selling thrillers set in Portland, where she lives: "Heartsick" (2007), "Sweetheart" (2008), and "Evil at Heart" (2009). The fourth book in the series, "The Night Season," also Portland-set, is scheduled for publication in March 2011.
[edit] Other books
- The Ancient One by T. A. Barron – set in fictional southwestern Oregon town of "Blade"
- Blue Like Jazz by Don Miller – a semi-autobiographical book by a Portland author, concerning Christianity and "…[drawing] heavily on Portland's deep pool of oddballs"[4]
- The Bridge of the Gods: A Romance of Indian Oregon by Frederick Homer Balch – published in 1890, is the earliest novel set in Oregon[citation needed]
- Doomsday Plus Twelve by James D. Forman
- The Emberverse series by S. M. Stirling
- Geek Love by Katherine Dunn, who also lives in Portland[5]
- Gone, But Not Forgotten by Phillip Margolin
- The Hawkline Monster: A Gothic Western by Richard Brautigan
- Honey in the Horn by H. L. Davis – this sardonic look at pioneer life in rural Oregon won the Pulitzer Prize
- One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest by Ken Kesey, set in an Oregon insane asylum
- Our Lady of the Forest by David Guterson
- Paranoid Park by Blake Nelson
- The Postman by David Brin – set largely in the Willamette Valley, with a notable scene in the University of Oregon's Erb Memorial Union "fishbowl"[citation needed]
- The Shack by William P. Young
- "The Shy Stegosaurus of Cricket Creek" and its sequel, "The Shy Stegosaurus of Indian Springs" by Evelyn Sibley Lampman, a pair of children's books about a talking stegosaurus that lives in eastern Oregon.
- Sometimes a Great Notion by Ken Kesey, about loggers of Oregon's coastal forests
- The River Why by David James Duncan
- The Torn Skirt by Rebecca Godfrey
- Trask by Don Berry – Elbridge Trask, former mountain man, is the first to farm the grasslands along Tillamook Bay
- Tucket's Home by Gary Paulsen
- Violence of Action by Richard Marcinko
- Wildwood by Colin Meloy
- Winterkill by Craig Lesley
- Everville by Clive Barker - set in the fictional Oregon town of Everville
- L'âme du mal by Maxime Chattam
- Maléfices by Maxime Chattam
[edit] Musical
- Shanghaied in Astoria (Musical) by the Astor Street Opry Company
[edit] Film
[edit] Filmmakers
- "Se7en","Zodiac," "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button" and "The Social Network"director David Fincher graduated from Ashland High School.
- Director Brad Bird graduated from Corvallis High School.
- Director Todd Haynes lives in Oregon.
- Director Gus Van Sant has achieved commercial and critical acclaim for his films, including My Own Private Idaho, Drugstore Cowboy, Good Will Hunting (which earned Van Sant a best director Oscar nomination) and Elephant (which won the Palme d'Or and a best director award at the Cannes Film Festival).[6]
- Film editors Joe Hutshing and Jeffrey M. Werner graduated from the University of Oregon.
- Will Vinton Studios, a famous producer of animated films (especially clay animation); noted for the feature film Return to Oz, the California Raisins television commercials of the 1980s, Eddie Murphy's television show The PJs.[7]
[edit] Films
[edit] Television
- Matt Groening, who graduated from Portland's Lincoln High School, is responsible for creating two of the most popular animated television series of the last two decades, The Simpsons and Futurama. Many of the character names in The Simpsons are taken from street names in Portland (Flanders, Rev. Lovejoy, etc.)[8]
- Nowhere Man - filmed largely in and around Portland, Oregon
- The situation comedy Hello Larry was set in Portland.
- The O.C.'s season 2 premiere is partly set in Portland ; Seth was there all summer.
- LOST had an episode named Not in Portland, and the main villain Benjamin Linus was born in a forest just outside of Portland.
- Under Suspicion, crime drama starring Karen Sillas, lasted one season.
- "Life Unexpected" is set in Portland, even though filmed in Vancouver.
- Portlandia uses Portland as the central subject of the show's sketch comedy, which alludes to the city being frozen in the 1990s pop culture decade.
- Leverage (TV series) is set in Boston and elsewhere but films in Oregon.
- Free Agents (U.S. TV series) is set in Portland but films in Los Angeles.
- Grimm (TV series) is set and filmed in Portland.
- Eureka (TV series) is set in an undisclosed location in eastern Oregon, but is filmed in British Columbia.
[edit] Video games
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ Beverly Cleary, Age 90 (2006 Newsweek Interview)
- ^ article from LiteraryArts.org
- ^ JOHN MARSHALL (July 18, 2003). "Palahniuk paints a lovingly twisted picture of the not-so-rosy Portland". SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER.
- ^ Dundas, Zach (February 2, 2005). "Confessions of a dangerous mind". Willamette Week. http://www.wweek.com/editorial/3113/5974/. Retrieved 2007-06-21.
- ^ article in Willamette Week
- ^ DAVID WALKER (March 9, 2005). "The camera man: how Gus Van Sant made Portland cool". Willamette Week.
- ^ AARON MESH (June 20, 2007). "Toon town". Willamette Week.
- ^ Hamilton, Don (2002-07-19). "Matt Groening's Portland". Portland Tribune. http://www.portlandtribune.com/news/story.php?story_id=12392. Retrieved 2007-04-28.