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Michael
Perry is a humorist and author of the bestselling memoir Population 485: Meeting Your Neighbors One Siren at a Time, and the
essay collection Off Main Street.
Perry has written for Esquire, The New York Times Magazine, Outside, Backpacker, Orion and Salon.com,
and is a contributing editor to Men’s
Health. His essays have
been heard on NPR’s All Things
Considered and he has performed and produced two live audience
recordings (I Got It From the Cows and Never
Stand Behind a Sneezing Cow). Perry
lives in rural
Wisconsin
, where he remains active as a volunteer firefighter and
emergency medical responder. He
can be found online at www.sneezingcow.com
Raised
on a small dairy farm, Perry equates his writing career to cleaning calf
pens – just keep shoveling, and eventually you’ve got a pile so big, someone
will notice. Perry further
prepared for the writing life by reading every Louis L’Amour cowboy book
he could get his hands on – most of them twice.
He then worked for five summers on a real ranch in
Wyoming
, a career cut short by
his fear of horses and an incident in which he almost avoided a charging
bull. Based on a series of
informal conversations held around the ol’ branding fire, Perry still
holds the record for being the only cowboy in all of Wyoming who was
simultaneously attending nursing school, from which he graduated in 1987
after giving the commencement address in a hairdo combining mousse spikes
on top, a mullet in back, and a moustache up front – otherwise known as
the bad hair trifecta. Recently
Perry has begun to lose his hair, and although his current classification
varies depending on the lighting, he is definitely Bald Man Walking.
Perry
has run a forklift, operated a backhoe, driven truck, worked as a
proofreader and physical therapy aide and has distinguished himself as a
licensed cycle rider by careening into a concrete bridge completely
unassisted. He has worked for
a surgeon, answered a suicide hotline, picked rock in the rain with an
alcoholic transvestite, was a country music roadie in
Switzerland
, and once worked as a
roller-skating Snoopy. He can
run a pitchfork, milk a cow in the dark, and say “I don’t
understand” in French, Greek and Norwegian.
He has never been bucked off a horse, and contends that falling off
doesn’t count. He is utterly
unable to polka.
2003 Wisconsin
Trails profile (scroll down to The Chronicler of "Nobbern" by Tom
Davis)
2005 Interview
with Claire Zulkey
More background info on Archives page |