Bio for Bruce Hoppe
The work of Bruce Hoppe serves as a good example of bringing
the best of ones life to the page. His writing conveys the experience of one
who has lived a broad and deep life, adventurous and spirited.
“She was smiling through her tears.
‘But I don’t think he ever let a single pretty day get by. He was in every one
of them to the fullest.’ She pointed out to the expanse of tableland that
stretched beyond the cliff; so vast the earth’s contour verified by the camber
of the far horizon. ‘It’s what this is for,’ she said. And Joe couldn’t tell
whether she meant the rolling grassland below, now bathed in the fiery hues of
the sunrise, or the planet that embraced it all.”
(from
Don’t Let All the Pretty Days Get By)
Born and
raised in the Polish community in Chicago,
Bruce is a third generation American and the first of his extended family to
graduate from college. He enrolled at Kansas State
University aiming at a
career in equine veterinary medicine but switched to a B.S. in biology after
discovering that “What I was really interested in was the other end of the
horse.” Graduation was followed by a two-year stint in the Peace Corp. The
eruption of the Biafran/Nigerian civil war in mid-tour as a high school science
teacher necessitated an ad hoc evacuation. Reassigned to Kenya, Bruce talked his way into assisting in
wildlife field research at Serengeti
Plains National
Park.
Upon
completion of his Peace Corp service Bruce went west and has remained there
ever since. He has lived and worked at a wide range of jobs in thirty years of
beating about the backwaters of the western high plains from Texas
to Montana.
He built a log cabin in Montana,
cowboyed on ranches from border to border and trained cutting horses
professionally for the past twenty-five years. He is also known to have played
guitar and performed in a honky-tonk band or two along the way.
Having
finally pronounced his life research sufficient to think he might, at last,
have something to say, Bruce applied for and was accepted in the M.F.A.
Creative Writing program at Antioch University Los Angeles. “Even if I don’t
produce a New York Times bestseller,” he’s quick to point out, “I can always
payoff my student loans with my social security checks.” He graduated from Antioch in June 2004.
In addition
to holding an MFA degree Bruce was a journalist for a newspaper in rural New Mexico for five
years where he won nine New Mexico Press Association awards for writing. A firm
believer in the importance of humor in literary fiction, Bruce is fond of
quoting Mark Twain. “The truth must be told through humor…otherwise people will
kill you.”