Dude Weather Subscribe to Secrets Minneapolis / St. Paul

The Rake: Magazine

Why My Novel Is Set in Minneapolis

Share

I lived in Minneapolis for a few years, some years ago, and during that time I came to love the town and the quaint Midwestern customs of its citizens. People smiled at you on the street—without asking for money. If you were lost, they gave you directions—without asking for money. They even assisted the elderly across the street; in DC, we use them as decoys for the onrushing traffic.

Minneapolis was especially inspiring for me as a writer. You could write about the Human Drama of Snow. Or use Snow as a Metaphor for the Universal Condition. Or hurt your back shoveling Snow so that you had more Time to Write.

As Shakespeare wrote:

Snow is the Winter of our Discontent.

But during my residence there, the aspect of Minneapolis that I loved most was the chain of lakes inside the city limits. The prevailing theory is that a glacier created the lakes, though this story is less than credible to me since never once during my stay did a mile-high wall of ice come down from Canada.

Two separate paths circumnavigate the lakes of Minneapolis. The Outer Path is for Speeders: bikers, inline skaters, and other mobility enthusiasts. While I admired their balance, dexterity, and tight clothing, I always thought it was odd to be in such a hurry when you are traveling in a circle.

The Inner Path around the lakes is for Footers: joggers, walkers, and plodders like me. The Inner Path often floods during the spring thaw, forcing both Speeders and Footers onto the same ground. This is a recipe for disaster. There's just no getting around me.

I lived in the top two floors of a Victorian house only two blocks from my favorite of the lakes: Lake of the Isles, known for its urban wildlife. In the winter, around the south side of Lake of the Isles, you could sometimes sight the rare Snow Serpent, a Norse American cousin of the Loch Ness Monster who hibernates in summer and prowls the icy lake in winter. Many a snowman has been devoured by this sly leviathan. In the spring, an armada of Canadian geese invades the lake. Each evening, the royal navy embarks from the lakeshore to their island harbor, a squadron of goslings in regal tow.

Lake of the Isles is also known for, well, isles-two of them near the northwest lakeshore. The island closest to land is very close; I always felt that I could jump across the narrow channel, or in January, slide across. But I never did, because there was a small sign standing akilter near the shore and nearly covered by the tall grasses. The sign read 'Game Preserve', in wavering letters that might have been painted by webbed feet.

Of course, in my imagination, Game Preserve referred to some place magical and forbidden, to a Velveteen Rabbit, Puff the Magic Dragon, Chutes and Ladders sanctuary in a clearing hidden deep in the interior of the tiny island. How I wanted to ignore the sign and explore! But I never did.

After I left Minneapolis, the magical island continued to feed my imagination. I could never forget the lake, and the sign, and my urge to break the rules, step onto the island, and discover that forbidden sanctuary just beyond the tree line. So finally I created a character who could.

I wish there had been a bench, there where the path curves and the shore and the island almost touch. I think I might be there still.


Stephen Evans is the author of The Marriage of True Minds, a novel set in Minneapolis, to be published in May by Unbridled Books. He will be reading from his new novel on Saturday, June 7, 2008, 7 p.m., at Magers & Quinn, 3038 Hennepin Ave. S., Minneapolis.

0 Reader Comments

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <i> <b> <strong> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd> <img> <br> <p>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.

More information about formatting options

CAPTCHA
By entering in the words in the captcha image, you help us prevent automated spam submissions and keep the site tidy.

Blogs

Sports

Baseball:
Warning Track Power by Alex Halsted
Sports:
On the Ball by Britt Robson

Society

Weather:
Dude Weather by Jimmy Gaines

A&E

Fiction:
Write Now! by Terry Faust

Retired

Hockey:
Spazz Dad by Todd Smith
Style:
Hook & Eye
Misc:
Is This News?
Fiction:
Yo, Ivanhoe by Brad Zellar
Food:
Consider the Egg by Stephanie March
Wine:
Beyond the Cask
Food:
Food Fight!
Media:
To the Slaughter
Misc:
Outrage by Staff
Food:
Chef's Table
Guest Commentary:
Just Passing Through
Humor:
Spazz Dad by Todd Smith
Cars:
Road Rake by Chris Birt
Commentary:
Read Menace by Tom Bartel
Society:
The Adventures of Melinda by Melinda Jacobs
Politics:
Defenestrator by Rich Goldsmith
Food:
Breaking Bread by Jeremy Iggers & Ann Bauer
Books:
Cracking Spines by Max Ross
Music:
Hear, Hear by Staff
Art:
The Vicious Circle by 6 Critics
Secrets:
Secrets of the Day by Kate Iverson
Theater:
Seen in the City by Staff
Film:
Talk About Talkies by Staff