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    The Bully of Order

    The Bully of Order

    3.0 3

    by Brian Hart


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    $4.49

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      ISBN-13: 9780062297761
    • Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
    • Publication date: 09/02/2014
    • Sold by: HARPERCOLLINS
    • Format: eBook
    • Pages: 400
    • File size: 1 MB

    A native of Idaho, Brian Hart won the Keener Prize for Literature from the University of Texas at Austin and received an MFA from the Michener Center for Writers there. He is the author of the novel Then Came the Evening. His second novel, The Bully of Order, was a finalist for the Chautauqua Prize. He lives in Austin, TX, with his wife and daughter.

    Interviews

    A Conversation with Brian Hart, Author of The Bully of Order

    THE BULLY OF ORDER is set in a town called "The Harbor" on the Pacific coast of Washington State at the turn of the Twentieth Century. How did you go about recreating this time and place so vividly? Do you have a personal connection with the area?

    When I first got going on the book I rode my motorcycle from Idaho to the coast a few times and camped out, stumbled around the woods, went to a couple of museums. Any excuse to get on the bike, great riding in the northwest and aside from the rain, which is in fact not as bad as Bully makes it seem, camping is fine too. The history is deep out there but it's kind of hit economically. Trees grow too slowly to fit into our timeline, without management at least. I've always liked the area though, I lived in Portland for five years and me and my buddy would take moto trips north sometimes, and as my research expanded for the book, I liked it even more. A phenomenal amount of lumber was taken out of Gray's Harbor and for a while there, around 1900, it was about as tough a place as existed in the US or anywhere.

    The prose style of THE BULLY OF ORDER is so original and distinctive. How did you come to it? Is it unique to this novel?

    My first book was barebones, during the editing process I was kind of wracked up emotionally and I'd fallen a bit out of love with the book and—I regret this now—I cut too deeply. The essence of what I was trying to do was damaged. I didn't want to have that happen again. I wanted the language to be verdant and layered, much like the world I was describing, book as ecosystem if you will.

    Can you explain the significance of the novel's title to the story and the characters?

    I cannibalized the title from a poem I wrote about a job I had framing some apartments in Bozeman, Montana during the winter of 2001. In the world of the poem I use the phrase, the bully of order, to describe the ligaments and tendons controlling the muscles in my arms and back. Now, in one of the earlier sections of the book Jacob describes the Harbor in human terms. "I see a passable mind," he says, "but cruel; a functional form, but twisted and ugly." So what controls the Harbor, what forces, economic and otherwise, hold it together and drive it along? If Bellhouse is pulling one way, then Boyerton is most likely pushing the other. In this scenario the muscles of the town would be the men working in the mills, in the woods, and shipyards. Maybe greed is the bully of order, maybe righteousness. In any case, I like the music of the words and the way it looks on the book jacket.

    There are so many rich characters in the novel—Jacob the phony doctor, his put-upon wife Nell, their troubled son Duncan, the hermit Kozmin, and the town thug Tartan, just to name a few—and the reader gets to enter the points of view of many of them. At what point in the writing process did you realize you'd have to tell the story through various points of view? Did you enjoy writing from one character's perspective more than the others?

    I've written every section of the book from different points of view. I do that sometimes, try all the angles I can to get in. For this book, the most life came from alternating between first and third. When Bellhouse was in the room I really got a kick out of him, but the book wasn't his. Sometimes it was tough to keep it that way.

    How does the environment of the Harbor shape the characters of the men and women in THE BULLY OF ORDER?

    Like I said before, I wanted the full weight of the environment to bear on every aspect of the book, from the language to the characters, even the structure.

    Why are there so few women characters in this novel? How important are Nell and Teresa?

    It wasn't a conscious choice but I would guess that the demographics of the time were about the same, 5:1. Remember, the Harbor was a boomtown, compare it to North Dakota or even Texas today with the frack boom; man camps, crime, toil, huge profits, ignored environmental impact; it's an old story. That said, Nell and Teresa are the fulcrum points for Jacob and Duncan's lives. I'd argue that Nell is the most important and possibly the most conflicted character in the book.

    Why do you write?

    Probably the same reason salmon swim upstream.THE BULLY OF ORDER is your second novel. How was the experience of writing this one different from your first, Then Came the Evening? What was your biggest challenge in writing THE BULLY OF ORDER?

    I wrote the bulk of my first book while I was at the Michener Center, free of any major commitments other than writing, a dream life, right? But for Bully I moved back to Idaho and got a job working as a carpenter framing custom homes fifty to sixty hours a week. For years I got up at 4:30 or 5:00, six days a week, and eventually the book turned into something. During this time I also met and married my wife, and our daughter was born in 2012. To your question, time was (and is) the biggest challenge, but I've discovered that it's always there as long as I can make myself get out of bed early enough.

    When you're not writing, what are you doing?

    I spend most of my off time with my family going to parks, taking trips, remodeling whatever house we might be living in. My daughter's two and it seems like if I blink I miss something. I like motorcycles, hunting, fishing, the usual Idaho stuff. I read a lot.

    Who are some of your literary influences?

    In no particular order: Faulkner, Portis, Vonnegut, Nabokov, Tolstoy, Ellison, Hemingway, Laxness, Ford, Ondaatje.

    Who have you discovered lately?

    Smith Henderson just came out with a ripping debut, Fourth of July Creek. Everyone should read it, now.

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    Set in a logging town on the lawless Pacific coast of Washington State at the turn of the twentieth century, a spellbinding novel of fate and redemption—told with a muscular lyricism and filled with a cast of characters Shakespearean in scope—in which the lives of an ill-fated family are at the mercy of violent social and historical forces that tear them apart.

    Keen to make his fortune, Jacob Ellstrom, armed with his medical kit and new wife, Nell, lands in The Harbor—a mud-filled, raucous coastal town teeming with rough trade pioneers, sawmill laborers, sailors, and prostitutes. But Jacob is not a doctor, and a botched delivery exposes his ruse, driving him onto the streets in a plunge towards alcoholism. Alone, Nell scrambles to keep herself and their young son, Duncan, safe in this dangerous world. When a tentative reunion between the couple—in the company of Duncan and Jacob’s malicious brother, Matius—results in tragedy, Jacob must flee town to elude being charged with murder.

    Years later, the wild and reckless Duncan seems to be yet another of The Harbor’s hoodlums. His only salvation is his overwhelming love for Teresa Boyerton, the daughter of the town’s largest mill owner. But disaster will befall the lovers with heartbreaking consequences.

    And across town, Bellhouse, a union boss and criminal rabble-rouser, sits at the helm of The Harbor’s seedy underbelly, perpetuating a cycle of greed and violence. His thug Tartan directs his pack of thieves, pimps, and murderers, and conceals an incendiary secret involving Duncan’s mother. As time passes, a string of calamitous events sends these characters hurtling towards each other in an epic collision that will shake the town to its core.

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    To eke out an existence for his new family in a lawless, turn-of-the-century Pacific coast logging town, Jacob Ellstrom pretends to be a doctor, armed with little more a medical kit and his native wits. Not surprisingly, his ruse failed with the first infant delivery; his fakery exposed, he abandons himself to the streets and alcohol. Left to support herself and her family on her wits, his wife Nell finally accedes to a tentative meeting with her husband, but that too ends in disaster and flight. (P.S. Brian Hart's novel of a multigenerational family scraping by in frontier times won strong support among Discover readers.)
    Library Journal
    09/15/2014
    In Hart's second novel (after Then Came the Evening), Harbor, WA, 1886, is an untamed logging camp, "a big wet mess of a place" filled with a menacing set of outcasts. Jacob Ellstrom, the town doctor, has a questionable medical degree but is nevertheless accepted until he bungles a baby delivery. His brother, the cowardly, swindling Matius, steals Jacob's money and convinces Jacob that he killed his own wife, Nell, while drunk. Jacob's son, Duncan, grows up without direction, falling in and out with town thugs Bellhouse and his henchman, Tartan, who impose their own brand of cruelty. Duncan knows only violent behavior, injuring his girlfriend, Teresa, and her brother, Oliver, before murdering their wealthy father, a despicable man who rules the saw mill with an iron hand. A union vs. management dispute, haunting stories of the first Russian settlers, and a powerful fire that consumes half the town more than crush these rugged settlers' belief that their future rests in Harbor. VERDICT Not a writer of half-measures, Hart brilliantly re-creates the rugged life in the Pacific Northwest logging camps of the 1890s. A riveting, powerful tale.—Donna Bettencourt, Mesa Cty. P.L., Palisade, CO
    The New York Times Book Review - James Scott
    Throughout, Hart remains conscious that if he stops to admire the horror it will take root, and the tale, in turn, will stall. The violence is meted out as punishment for slights, perceived and egregious both, and therefore never feels exploitative. The plot moves apace. The characters speak to one another in terse phrases, saving their breath, and their reference points and in-jokes become lingua franca without explanatory pauses. This crackling, lightning-bolt energy and patient attention to even the lowest of characters recalls the work of Denis Johnson…Between the pickpockets, orphans and street urchins, Hart has created a Dickensian portrait of the barely settled Pacific Northwest that rewards the stout of heart. The proper approach to The Bully of Order is best put by Duncan Ellstrom himself: "Here she comes, and I'm going in with my fists up."
    Dallas Morning News
    Ambitious and beautifully harsh . . . Hart’s stunning language builds into a textured and wonderfully thorny book. . . . Its huge scope and panoramic sympathies make it compelling and immersive...Bully of Order warmed and saddened and wondered me like the life of Huckleberry Finn.
    Austin American-Statesman
    Brilliant… Hart paints a vivid picture of the brutality and venality of the old Northwest Territories.
    High Country News
    THE BULLY OF ORDER possesses a strange magnetism…its irresistible, multi-layered plotline will tug you all the way through a story that captures the gritty lawlessness of the Northwest’s beginnings.
    New York Times Book Review
    This crackling, lightning-bolt energy and patient attention to even the lowest of characters recalls the work of Denis Johnson…helped along by an energizing sense of humor and a virtuosic control of plot…Hart has created a Dickensian portrait of the barely settled Pacific Northwest.
    Smith Henderson
    A very robust story about where I’m living now, Oregon. It’s about sheer madness and effort that went into logging in that area of the country in the 1800s. It’s really an epic historical tale, and he’s a fantastic writer.
    John Dufresne
    An epic novel of violence, depravity, and mayhem…Brian Hart writes like Cormac McCarthy in overdrive. What talent, what nerve, what a wondrous and spellbinding book. THE BULLY OF ORDER is part creation myth, part apocalyptic thriller, and it’s peopled with charlatans, swindlers, and murderers who will haunt your dreams.
    Philipp Meyer
    After a relatively quiet debut, Brian Hart has come back with a stunning second novel-a work would qualify as a lifetime achievement for most writers. You do not have to read very far to see that Brian Hart has vaulted squarely into the first rank of American novelists.
    Kevin Powers
    Brian Hart’s THE BULLY OF ORDER does what only the best works of fiction can do: it brilliantly imagines those parts of life that history all too often fails to record. This is a thoroughly engrossing story told in mesmerizing prose. I highly recommend it.
    James Magnuson
    Brian Hart writes like a dream. In this haunting, often brutal tale of failed fathers and abandoned sons, set in the logging industry a century ago, are scenes of aching beauty.
    Amanda Coplin
    Mesmerizing…Hart has conjured a singular, searing world. When you step into this novel you submit to its dream… you believe in his large gift that leaves you stunned and breathless. A wonderful, unique portrait of a particular landscape I now see anew.

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