Don Berry (1931–2001) was an American artist and author best known for his historical novels about early settlers in the Oregon Country.
He was born in Minnesota but moved to Oregon as a young man and came to think of himself as a native of that state. He attended Reed College in Portland, Oregon. During college his housemates included the poet Gary Snyder, who shared Berry's interest in Eastern metaphysics. Berry began a lifetime of pursuing his many passions: playing down-home blues and composing synthesizer music, sumi drawing and painting, sculpting in bronze, exploring theoretical mathematics, and writing for prize-winning films.
In 1960 he published Trask, a historical novel about Elbridge Trask, an Oregon settler in the 1840s who was the first white homesteader on Tillamook Bay. It was followed by two sequels, Moontrap and To Build a Ship. The novels have collectively become known as the "Trask novels."
Berry was also an early adopter of the use of the Internet for writing, creating a large body of literature that exists only in cyberspace.
AOS Other Nautical Fiction |
||
Series: n/a | ||
Year | Book | Comment |
To Build a Ship | With the survival of a new settlement threatened, they decide to build their own schooner |