Published: Thursday, December 30, 2010
A fanciful Bigfoot tale starring Sultan
The author of an award-winning short story set in Snohomish County has never been to the Northwest, and city officials hope hell visit.
Ian Schimmel has never been to Snohomish County.
In fact, hes never set foot in the Pacific Northwest.
That didnt stop the Boston-area literature professor from spinning quite the tale about a Bigfoot sighting near Sultan.
His most recent work of fiction, What Is Known, follows the misadventures of a Snohomish County Police Department cop and his buddy, a corrections officer. Their small-town lives unravel after they spot Bigfoot on a backwoods road off of U.S. 2.
Earlier this month, Schimmels story was announced as a finalist in The Chicago Tribunes 2010 Nelson Algren Short Story Awards. The awards celebrate the importance of fiction and literature in todays society.
In addition to bragging rights, Schimmel gets a $1,500 prize, he said.
The idea for What Is Known started brewing in 2008, he said. It took him about 10 months and lots of research to write it.
He picked the Pacific Northwest as the setting because thats where most Bigfoot sightings are reported. Sultan caught his eye as a good petri dish for a mystery story, he said.
I saw these pictures of just tremendous amounts of snow and an almost kind of gothic, almost sublime landscape, he said. It was a wild place. A lot of local towns make an appearance in the story, including Monroe, Gold Bar and Index.
The story explores themes of life in rural America and shows how people in the wilderness stick together, Schimmel said. The fictional Snohomish County Police Department symbolizes consequences in society, he said.
It all starts with a press conference at the Sultan Town Hall in October 1986. The tired Snohomish County police chief has to explain to reporters why one of his troops is telling people he saw Bigfoot.
The wild tale spreads, and media across the country run wild with it to the chagrin of the Sultan townsfolk.
The story wanders around the state before ultimately ending in a cave deep in the Cascades.
Sultan city officials got a kick of the story when they read it Tuesday night.
Mayor Carolyn Eslick is planning to invite Schimmel and his family to come see the real Sultan, city administrator Deborah Knight said. Theyd love to meet him and talk to him about why Sultan inspired him.
There were some facts that were obviously wildly inaccurate, but there were some things that were surprisingly close, Knight said.
Schimmel was a bit sheepish about some of the holes in the story, but theyre part of the fun, he said. He teaches literature and writing at Newbury College in Brookline, Mass.
He grew up in rural Connecticut, and bits of the story are based on his experience knowing all the police officers in his town, he said.
Thats what the storys about, he said. Its about being in a place where youre alone and youre at the edge of a wilderness, and youre looking for other people out there.
The full version of What Is Known is posted on The Chicago Tribunes website.
Rikki King: 425-339-3449; rking@heraldnet.com.
In fact, hes never set foot in the Pacific Northwest.
That didnt stop the Boston-area literature professor from spinning quite the tale about a Bigfoot sighting near Sultan.
His most recent work of fiction, What Is Known, follows the misadventures of a Snohomish County Police Department cop and his buddy, a corrections officer. Their small-town lives unravel after they spot Bigfoot on a backwoods road off of U.S. 2.
Earlier this month, Schimmels story was announced as a finalist in The Chicago Tribunes 2010 Nelson Algren Short Story Awards. The awards celebrate the importance of fiction and literature in todays society.
In addition to bragging rights, Schimmel gets a $1,500 prize, he said.
The idea for What Is Known started brewing in 2008, he said. It took him about 10 months and lots of research to write it.
He picked the Pacific Northwest as the setting because thats where most Bigfoot sightings are reported. Sultan caught his eye as a good petri dish for a mystery story, he said.
I saw these pictures of just tremendous amounts of snow and an almost kind of gothic, almost sublime landscape, he said. It was a wild place. A lot of local towns make an appearance in the story, including Monroe, Gold Bar and Index.
The story explores themes of life in rural America and shows how people in the wilderness stick together, Schimmel said. The fictional Snohomish County Police Department symbolizes consequences in society, he said.
It all starts with a press conference at the Sultan Town Hall in October 1986. The tired Snohomish County police chief has to explain to reporters why one of his troops is telling people he saw Bigfoot.
The wild tale spreads, and media across the country run wild with it to the chagrin of the Sultan townsfolk.
The story wanders around the state before ultimately ending in a cave deep in the Cascades.
Sultan city officials got a kick of the story when they read it Tuesday night.
Mayor Carolyn Eslick is planning to invite Schimmel and his family to come see the real Sultan, city administrator Deborah Knight said. Theyd love to meet him and talk to him about why Sultan inspired him.
There were some facts that were obviously wildly inaccurate, but there were some things that were surprisingly close, Knight said.
Schimmel was a bit sheepish about some of the holes in the story, but theyre part of the fun, he said. He teaches literature and writing at Newbury College in Brookline, Mass.
He grew up in rural Connecticut, and bits of the story are based on his experience knowing all the police officers in his town, he said.
Thats what the storys about, he said. Its about being in a place where youre alone and youre at the edge of a wilderness, and youre looking for other people out there.
The full version of What Is Known is posted on The Chicago Tribunes website.
Rikki King: 425-339-3449; rking@heraldnet.com.
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