Patrick deWitt grew up in Canada,
spent years in California and now lives in Portland, but it was
during his stay on Bainbridge that his two novels were born.
DeWitt caught the literary world’s attention in 2009 with
“Ablutions:
Notes for a Novel,” a not-so-fictional tale of his years of
dereliction and drunkenness in Los Angeles.
Bainbridge is the place deWitt ended up to get cleaned up. He
worked construction here, and began work on “Ablutions” sometime
around 2005. He also began laying the groundwork for his latest
novel, “The
Sisters Brothers,” a dark comedy about sibling assassins hired
to kill a man during the California gold rush.
DeWitt told the
Edmonton Journal that his time on Bainbridge was a balance of
physical labor by day and bouts of reading and writing by
night.
“Like many writers, deWitt scribbles notes when some idea or
narrative hook strikes him. A few years back, he’d written the
words ‘sensitive cowboys’ on a shred of paper. That season on
Bainbridge Island, his sudden passion for story found release in
that simple raw premise for a novel,” Richard Helm writes in the
Journal.
DeWitt doesn’t appear to be making a stop on Bainbridge to
promote “Sisters Brothers” (Eagle Harbor Books doesn’t
have him scheduled), but he making a visit to the University
Bookstore in Seattle on Wednesday at 7 p.m. He’ll be joined for
a discussion about his book by Bainbridge novelist
Jonathan Evison.