OWU professor’s novel honored again

Alex Emerson

Transcript Correspondent

aaemerso@owu.edu

An award-winning, Civil War era-novel about a boyā€™s search for his father led by a mysterious black horse and written by an Ohio Wesleyan creative writing professor has once again been honored.

The Ohioana Library Association chose Robert Olmsteadā€™s book ā€œCoal Black Horseā€ as one of 90 books by Ohio authors to celebrate the organizationā€™s 90th anniversary. The winners are divided by decade on the ā€œ90 Years ā€¦ 90 Booksā€ list going back to the founding of the library association. The books can be found on the organizationā€™s blog.

Olmsteadā€™s book is on the list for 2007, the year it was published. Ā He said he is in good company.

ā€œI have a good relationship with Ohioana. Looking at the list, itā€™s surprising to see how many great authors are from Ohio,ā€ said Olmstead, an English professor and OWUā€™s director of creative writing.

This isnā€™t the first time ā€œCoal Black Horseā€ has received critical acclaim. The book received the 2007 Chicago Tribune Heartland Prize for Fiction. In 2008, it earned an Ohioana award for fiction and the American Library Association award as the Best Book for Young Adults.

Olmsteadā€™s story takes place during the Civil War in the wake of the battle of Gettysburg after a boyā€™s mother has a premonition her husband was killed. She sends her 14-year-old son out to search for him astride an unusual black horse, which leads and protects the boy throughout their journey.

Olmstead said he happened upon the idea for the plot while living in Gettysburg.

ā€œIā€™m more interested in what runs through the history than the history itself. I was living in Gettysburg as a tourist and had no intention of writing a historical novel,ā€ Olmstead said. ā€œBut as I explored the town, its history drew me in irrevocably.ā€

The book was aimed at focusing on the relationship between American people and war.

ā€œMore Americans died in the Civil War than in all of Americaā€™s following wars combined,ā€ he said. ā€œThis legacy of war, this inheritance of violence literally passes down through families. America has been fighting wars as long as my students have been alive.ā€

ā€œCoal Black Horseā€ is the first book of a trilogy. The second novel is ā€œFar Bright Starā€ and the third is ā€œThe Coldest Night.ā€

ā€œFar Bright Starā€ has also received recognition. Chauncey Mabe, a writer for the Chicago Tribune, said it is ā€œguided by Hemingway,ā€ and that ā€œa writer as skillful and subtle as Olmstead deserves to be judged on his own merits, influences be damned.ā€

The last two books continue to explore an inheritance of violence. The protagonist in each story is the child of the protagonist from the last book, living through a different war, Olmstead said.

Olmstead plans to publish more books in the future.

(Editorā€™s Note: after this interview our correspondent enrolled in Olmsteadā€™s fiction writing class)