Twice Charmed by Portland, Oregon
The Pacific Northwest city captivated the author first when she was an adventure-seeking adolescent and again as an adult
- By Katherine Dunn
- Photographs by Robbie McClaran
- Smithsonian magazine, November 2010, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
We’re polite here. Just say “thanks,” or “you too,” and you’re fine.
I’d focused on what made the city different from rural, small-town life. The newcomers reminded me that not all cities are alike. In 1967 I left Portland for other places, urban and rural, and on different continents. A decade passed and my son was ready to start school. I’d been missing the rain, and the Portland of my memory was an easy place to live, so we came back.
Portland’s population has mushroomed since I was a kid. The perpetual tug of war between preserving and modernizing saws back and forth. Urban renewal ripped out communities and poured in glass, steel and concrete, but some of the replacements are wonderful. The town is better-humored now, more easygoing. That feel of the old hobnobbing with the new is more amiable. Of course the blood and bones of the place never change—the river, the hills, the trees and the rain.
Mount Hood still floats 50 miles to the east, a daytime moon, ghostly or sharp depending on the weather. It’s been 200 years since Hood’s last big eruption. But when Mount St. Helens blew her top in May of 1980, I walked two blocks up the hill from my house and got a clear view of it spewing its fiery innards into the sky. Volcanic ash fell like gray snow on Portland and took months to wash away.
People who come here from elsewhere bring good things with them. When I was young, exotic fare meant chop suey or pizza. Students from New York City begged their parents to ship frozen bagels out by air. Now restaurants offer cuisines from all over the world.
Many of my neighbors love being close to hiking and rafting, skiing and surfing. But the steep miles of trails through the trees and ferns and streams of the city’s 5,000-acre Forest Park are wilderness enough for me. I love standing on the sidewalk and looking up at clouds wrapping the tall firs in a silver wash like a Japanese ink drawing.
The weather here is not out to kill you. Summers and winters are generally mild. Sunlight comes in at a long angle, touching everything with that golden Edward Hopper light. No one loves the sun more than Portlanders. Café tables spill onto the sidewalks and fill with loungers at the first glimpse of blue sky.
But the rain is soft, and I suspect it fosters creativity. Although Portland harbors doers and makers, inventors and scholars, athletes and brilliant gardeners, what touches me most is that this town has become a haven for artists of every discipline. They are reared here, or they come from far away for mysterious reasons. Their work makes life in Portland richer and more exciting. Several theater companies offer full seasons of plays. If you’re not up for the opera, ballet or symphony, you can find stand-up comedy or dance and concert clubs in every musical genre. Animators and moviemakers burst out with festivals several times a year. Most surprising to me are the clothes designers who bring an annual fashion week to a town best known for plaid flannel and Birkenstocks.
Rain or shine, it’s just a 15-minute stroll from my door to that beautiful library, and after all this time every step of the way has layers of history for me. The oddest thing is that I’ve grown old over the past half century while Portland seems brighter, more vital and younger than ever.
Katherine Dunn’s third novel, Geek Love, was a National Book Award finalist, and her most recent book, One Ring Circus, is a collection of her boxing essays.
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Comments (7)
IT IS TRUE: No one loves the sun more than Portlander's do. When the sun comes out, I say I am SOLAR POWERED and bask while it is there...it is so lovely, healing and warm penetrating and restoring to the soul. Love your writing, Kathryn.
Posted by Myra Harrell Fleming on November 10,2010 | 03:15 PM
Loved Katherine Dunn's article on Portland. It brought back some great memories. A third generation Portlander, I grew up on the near east side, Alameda district, and went 3 years to Grant High school where we ate at Yaws Drive-In for their famous french fries smothered in gravy and an incredibly juicy hamburger secret that the Yaws family would never reveal. Then there was the Tick-Tock Drive-In in that famous diagonal intersection with Burnside, Sandy Blvd. and some other street I can't remember where for a time the waitresses roller skated out the orders. Then there was the Saturday night "dragging" up Broadway to show off the latest sparkle or custom wheels on your car, a right of passage later later shut down by the police. And the old restaurants in downtown, the Jolly Joan, Larry Hilaire's, and Manning's coffee shop, all gone now. And the Central Library, ah yes, in the days before computers and word processors, a term paper assignment there was a real chore. Row upon row of musty smelling card catalogues from which we produced hundreds or 3X5 note cards, hoping somehow to put together a great report. I do remember the Gypsies and their huge families. I could never seem to get a clear answer from my parents as how exactly they made a living. Yes, a lot is gone, but as Katherine so poignantly states, a half century later (since high school), Portland really does seem brighter and more younger than ever.
Posted by Bernard R. Kliks, MD (ret) on November 1,2010 | 10:09 PM
What a wonderful, truthful and insightful comment on Portland. I fell in love with Historic Portland when I visited my daughter for a week, in the middle of July.
As I walked her beautiful Golden Retreiver mix,total strangers would greet the dog by name and ask,"Hello, Girlee, who's walking you today?" As I passed a coffee shop, the owner came out with a dog biscuit, and a bowl of water, so, of course I had a coffee and bagel.
The air there is so clean, the flowers fragrant, and the people casual, and friendly. I fell in love with the area also, so much that my husband and I are retiring about 3 hours from Portland next May. Can't wait!
Posted by Gloria Beucler on October 29,2010 | 11:21 PM
Reading this I saw Portland what a beautiful article it makes me want to go back again and again.
Posted by Deborah R on October 29,2010 | 03:06 PM
Spent my first fifty years on the west side of Oregon, close to Portland. We are now in a small town in far North East/Oregon. Loved this article. Took me straight back to the "soft" side of the state.
Thanks!
Posted by Kate on October 28,2010 | 02:11 PM
What a treat to return from visiting my daughter in Portland to find this article. It was only my second visit and I think I'm starting to fall for the place. We ate at PorQue No (pictured in article), the Virginia Cafe which features napkin art and lip print winners from annual Valentine's Day contest (judged on size, color, shape and allure), then crossed the street to the beautiful library, where I even found my name in the zine section! (is it a sign?) Also enjoyed the bright and sunny Slappy Cakes where you can cook your own pancakes right on the table (try the sweet potato batter filled with bacon, vegan sausage and goat cheese), Blue Moon cafe where we played free pool and ate killer clam chowder by the fire place, and Coffee Time which was visited by a group of bloody zombies. Got to see my heroine Lynda Barry at the Portland Art Museum then spent 2 days on Mt. Hood in a cozy cabin, got in some hiking and delighted in irish coffees at the Timberline Lodge where they didn't even ask if we wanted whipped cream- just gave it to us. Sky Way Restaurant in Zig Zag was a funky joy where we filled up on comfort food (they're famous for their mac & cheese) and grilled salmon on spinach salad. Did the corn maze and pumpkin patch on Sauvie Island and everywhere we went people were fun, friendly, and READING. Katherine, thanks for the article Geek Love is one of my all-time faves.
Posted by Donna Otter on October 26,2010 | 09:55 PM
Ms Dunn's story is a wonderful discription of her love of Portland,OR. The words she used were so colorful & honest & I loved the whole article as it took me right into the area she was discribing & I could almost smell the odors she was & the sweet rain & the disappointment of her "paycheck" that she had worked hard for. I'm only a days drive from her Portland & if I get there again, I'm sure going to enjoy the pleasures she has.Great job, Lady!
Posted by Janet Nead on October 24,2010 | 04:15 PM