Howard Frank Mosher near his home in Irasburg, Vt., on Sept. 21, 2015. Mosher is the author of 13 books, mostly fiction that features the Northeast Kingdom. (Valley News - Kristen Zeis) Copyright Valley News. May not be reprinted or used online without permission. Send requests to permission@vnews.com.
Howard Frank Mosher near his home in Irasburg, Vt., on Sept. 21, 2015. Mosher is the author of 13 books, mostly fiction that features the Northeast Kingdom. (Valley News - Kristen Zeis) Copyright Valley News. May not be reprinted or used online without permission. Send requests to permission@vnews.com.

Acclaimed Vermont author Howard Frank Mosher has died. Mosher, 74, succumbed to cancer at his home in Irasburg.

His stories celebrated the Northeast Kingdom as the last bastion of a people and a way of life that has all but disappeared from Vermont.

Mosher and his wife, Phillis, were fresh out of college when they came to the Northeast Kingdom in 1964.

They were looking for teaching jobs and planned to stay only for a year or two. Fifty-plus years, eleven novels and two memoirs later, Mosher was still there.

โ€œWhat we found in the Northeast Kingdom was just a gold mine of stories that no writer had ever told before, and I pretty much dedicated my life to telling them,โ€ Mosher told VPR in 2010.

It began with a story their landlady told them about making moonshine whiskey with her husband on their farm during the depression.

When a well-dressed federal agent turned up to shut them down, she told him theyโ€™d lose the farm. The man went away โ€” but years later, after she was widowed, the landlady answered a knock on her door. The well-dressed man was back, but not to arrest her.

โ€œHe said to her, โ€˜No maโ€™am, this time Iโ€™ve come to marry you.โ€™ โ€ And he did, Mosher recalled.

Hearing that story was a transformative moment.

โ€œPhillis and I looked at each other and we knew that … one way or another, I was going to write the stories of the Kingdom,โ€ Mosher said.

Phillis went on teaching and Mosher set to writing. He reimagined the Northeast Kingdom by creating his own world, called Kingdom County, and telling the stories of its people in books such as Disappearances, Where the Rivers Flow North, Stranger in the Kingdom and Northern Borders.

Kingdom County, like its real-world counterpart, is, as one of Mosherโ€™s narrators tells us, โ€œa little known fragment of a much earlier Americaโ€ and a way of life that by the mid-20th century was nearly at an end.

โ€œIt was the area that had not yet been encroached upon, had not yet been developed, had not yet been gentrified,โ€ said Vermont filmmaker Jay Craven, who worked with Mosher to adapt his stories for five films.

Craven says Mosherโ€™s โ€œhistorical imaginationโ€ was rooted in a keen sense of the people of the Kingdom.

โ€œHe described one of the characters in Stranger in the Kingdom as having โ€˜flytrap ears,โ€™ and thatโ€™s sort of what Howard had. He picked up cadences of language, he sought out people where they were,โ€ Craven said.

Part of what made Mosherโ€™s stories so enjoyable was their tall-tale quality.

But despite the rollicking, can-you-believe-it events he created, there was a reality to characters such as Sojourner Kitteridge, Alabama Jones, the Kinneson family and Marie Blythe.

They were heroic and flawed, stubborn, independent and self-destructive.

Author Jeffrey Lent, whose books explore a similar terrain and time, remembered reading Mosher more than 30 years ago when he was living away from his native Vermont.

โ€œActually, I think when I first discovered him, it irritated me, because I felt that was the territory I was headed for,โ€ Lent said.

The two writers met years later when Mosher showed up at one of Lentโ€™s readings. It was the first of many times they would get together.

โ€œIn a line of work thatโ€™s quite rather filled with overstuffed egos, Howard is one of the most generous and gracious and gentle souls that Iโ€™ve ever met,โ€ says Lent.

Northeast Kingdom native Scott Wheeler, who publishes Vermontโ€™s Northland Journal in Derby, said Mosher sought out the unvarnished stories.

โ€œHe didnโ€™t go out to look for people who were going to extol the Northeast Kingdom as this quaint Never-Never Land. He interviewed the people who truly make this area rich,โ€ Wheeler said.

Mosher was one of the first to encourage Wheeler when he decided to write Rumrunners and Revenuers, a book about prohibition in Vermont.

โ€œHe believed in me before I believed in myself. He (lent) his support to aspiring writers and Iโ€™m not the only one. Thereโ€™s many stories of how Howard helped people,โ€ Wheeler says.

That was another side of Mosher. Those who knew him say he was a tireless booster of new writers and a champion of independent bookstores and budding publishers.

When Dede Cummings started Green Writers Press in Brattleboro four years ago, Mosher spent a day driving her to Vermont bookstores.

โ€œHe would take me into each bookstore and introduce me to the booksellers, and they all knew he was coming because he had arranged this whole thing for me,โ€ Cummings said.

Cummings worked with Mosher on the newly-established Howard Frank Mosher Book Prize for emerging novelists. The first of the awards was made in January to writer Jackson Ellis of Burlington.

Mosher loved the North, Jay Craven said. And he lived a Kingdom life โ€” hunting, fishing and exploring the woods.

In the past month, as his health quickly deteriorated, Mosher posted a message on Facebook, thanking his โ€œbookseller friends, writer friends, reader friends and friends in general.โ€

He has a new book called Points North, which will be released sometime in the future.

โ€œI am happy to leave you all with the gift of what may be my best book,โ€ Mosher wrote. โ€œEnjoy it with my compliments.โ€

Mosher is survived by his wife Phillis and his two children, Jake and Annie.

His passing follows the deaths in 2016 of writer David Budbill and poet Leland Kinsey, whose work was also rooted in life in the Northeast Kingdom.