Fred Haefele

Fred Haefele received his MFA from the University of Montana in 1981. His stories have appeared in Epoch, Missouri Review, Prism International and other magazines.  His essays have appeared in Outside, the New York Times Magazine, Salon.com, Wired,  Big Sky Journal,  Newsday, American Heritage and others. He has received literary fellowships from the Fine Arts Work Center, the NEA, Sewanee and Stanford University.  He is the author of the award-winning memoir, Rebuilding the Indian (Riverhead Books, 1998, Bison Books, 2005).  He recently published Extremophobia, a collection of his non-fiction writing. Haefele has taught creative writing at Murray State University, the University of Montana and at Stanford, where he was a Jones Lecturer. He lives in Montana with his wife, the writer Caroline Patterson, and their two children.  Visit his website at fredhaefelecom


6 entries by Fred Haefele

Book Review

The Son: A Novel

By Philipp Meyer

The Son: A Novel

The saga of a powerful, larger-than-life Texan family is told through the voices of three generations.

Book Review

Kurt Vonnegut

We Are What We Pretend to Be

In two novellas that bookend the writer’s career, the styles are dramatically different but the themes resonate as strongly as ever.

Book Review

Alyson Hagy

Boleto: A Novel

A novel set in the New West, where the right horse can be a trainer’s ticket or “boleto” to a better life.

Feature

Seeking Ken Kesey, Part II

Fred Haefele discusses his connection with Ken Kesey, author of One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest.

Feature

Seeking Ken Kesey, Part 1

Fred Haefele discusses his connection with Ken Kesey, author of One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest.

Book Review

Jim Harrison

The Great Leader

On the cusp of retirement, a Michigan State Police detective chases after a mysterious cult leader in this new novel by the author of "Legends of the Fall."