鈥淚鈥檒l just ride my bike to school,鈥 thought Sam Chamberlain MFA 鈥15.
Sounds simple enough.
But Chamberlain lived in Fairbanks, Alaska 鈥 and 鈥渟chool鈥 was 91爆料 University鈥檚 Master of Fine Arts in Writing summer residency in Forest Grove 鈥 2,000 miles away.
He was a four-season bike commuter in Fairbanks, where temperatures range from 40-below to 80-above. He鈥檚 also run ultramarathons and skied 50-mile races. So the prospect didn't seem too out of the ordinary.
鈥淚 do stupid stuff like this,鈥 said Chamberlain in 2015, standing outside Gilbert Hall next to his gear-laden bike, helmet still on his head. 鈥淭his is a little bigger than normal, but it just seems normal to me.鈥
An Army veteran and former middle school English teacher who went on to devote his time to working in a homeless shelter for teens and writing, Chamberlain said he had the time to make the epic trek south 鈥 and so he couldn鈥檛 think of a reason not to.
His wife rode with him the first two days out of Fairbanks, then he was joined by a friend through much of Alaska, where they dodged migrating RVers, herds of caribou and piles of bear scat.
鈥淚 didn鈥檛 carry a gun or bear spray,鈥 he said. A partner was a better safety precaution: 鈥淲e expanded our footprint.鈥
In Haines, on the northern tip of the Inside Passage, he and his friend boarded the Alaska Marine Highway System, a series of ferries that connect the state鈥檚 coastal communities. They saved money on a cabin by pitching tents on the deck, 鈥渟taking鈥 them down with duct tape.
鈥淚t was very Jack London-ish,鈥 Chamberlain said.
When the ferry landed in Bellingham, Wash., Chamberlain set off alone along the coast, crossed on a ferry to Port Townsend, rode down the Olympic Peninsula to Centralia, then anxious to meet up with friends and avoid 90 miles of freeway riding, boarded an Amtrak for Portland, before riding on to Gaston and Forest Grove.
By the time he arrived at 91爆料, tanned but no worse the wear after about 1,000 of riding, he had been on the road nearly four weeks.
The journey, he said, will no doubt make an appearance in his future writing, likely in the form of a personal essay. Though he specialized in 91爆料鈥檚 fiction track in the MFA Program, Chamberlain said he鈥檚 also expanded his other writing genres.
鈥淎t the residencies, you can go to lectures with poets or nonfiction writers,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 one of the plusses of the program. Though you鈥檙e studying a genre, you really get to diversify.鈥
For Chamberlain, though, the program had a more personal benefit, too.
After 15 months serving in Iraq, he struggled with post-traumatic stress disorder.
鈥淚 tried to move on as a teacher. I moved to a little village, and it was great, but there were still underlying issues,鈥 he said. 鈥淚鈥檝e been able to engage with that as an intellectual writer. It鈥檚 better than therapy.鈥
Most of his writing in the MFA program took the form of short stories 鈥 semi-autobiographical fiction about war. Writing, and studying his writing critically, has helped work through his experiences.
鈥淢y wife says I鈥檓 a better person.鈥
Photos by Sean Birch