My friend Monty was always a slightly elusive presence, even in his autobiographical sketch in Amazon, written by himself:
"M. R. Montgomery, known to the various government record keepers as Maurice R. Montgomery Jr., and to all his acquaintances as Monty, was born in eastern Montana in 1938, raised partly in California, and now lives near Boston for reasons that he cannot quite explain. Over the past twenty-five years he has written for the Boston Globe on every subject except politics, a clean record he hopes to maintain until retirement. Other than fishing and a little bit of gunning, he has no obsessive hobbies, although he has been known to plant the occasional tomato and a manageable number of antique rose varieties, these for the pleasure of his wife, Florence."
He was sort of the unknown best writer I knew. ALL of his books were good, but two in particular, Many Rivers to Cross, about native trout, and Saying Goodbye, about eastern Montana and fathers and sons, are absolute classics. Saying Goodbye is the best book on eastern Montana I know.
Monty could write about anything. Though I didn’t get to know him until the 90s, I first wrote to him for advice on bird dogs in 1970s -- he replied with a column called “Find a Gentleman With a Bird Dog”. He also wrote columns I remember on rutabagas and November.
In the end I couldn't even find his obit in the Globe. Monty was erudite, kind, and generous as well as an undervalued writer. He will be missed.
Here is a fine tribute by Corb Lund about their mutual country.
1 comment:
Have not been active in quite some time, blog-wise, but obviously still read here regularly, so when I read this I of course ordered Many Rivers to Cross and The Way of the Trout. Just started Many Rivers, and it is stunningly good. I did a little Google-Fu, and you're right - he's almost completely unknown and his passing was apparently utterly ignored. Sort of bizarre. On the other hand, it's a joy to discover someone previously unknown to you, and most everyone else...
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