Novelist spans life in Alaska and Minneapolis
by Euan Kerr, Minnesota Public RadioOctober 6, 2009
St. Paul, Minn. — Until recently, writer Mattox Roesch split his time between Minneapolis and the small village in rural Alaska where his wife grew up.
So it's not surprising that he set his first novel, called "Sometimes we're always real same-same," in that village.
What is somewhat surprising is his narrator is a young gang member.
Roesch says that part of the story came from his time in Minneapolis when he discovered that a young friend was in jail. Roesch says he had no idea the teenager was a leading a double life.



