Smithers Photograph Collection, courtesy of the Butte-Silver Bow Public Archives

Wide Open Town: The view from Big Butte Hill

[John] was looking down upon Silver Bow, steel and gray and violet beneath him in the oncoming twilight. Far away, towards the south, he could see the glistening ribbons of Silver Bow Creek, shaped like a bow, the creek from which the town had taken its name. And way beyond that, to the south and east, the Flats rolled way to the mountains. To the northeast, he could see the mines, their frames rising out of the somber hill workings. A whole plateau had been scarred and bled to produce the endless streams of copper that were first shipped to the smelter in Anaconda, and then to the refineries in Great Falls. (86-87)

Brinig, Myron. Wide Open Town. Helena, MT: Farcounty Press, 1993.

About the Book

Wide Open Town

First published in 1931, Wide Open Town is one of Brinig’s most beloved works. The story takes place in Butte (fictionalized as Silver Bow) in 1910, and features John Donnelly, an Irish immigrant fond of fresh air and ocean breezes who labors deep in the town’s dark mines, and Zola, the love of his life, who works the dark side of town until she tries to enter John’s world.

Many thanks to Ellen Crain and Aubrey Jaap at the Butte-Silver Bow Public Archives for their assistance in curating the Wide Open Town literary map.

While the settings in Wide Open Town clearly reference actual locales, it is understood that the book—including its places—is ultimately the product of the author’s imagination. The intent of this literary map is to enrich the reading experience by interpreting those places, not to render them literally or definitively.

About the Author

Myron Brinig

Born in 1896 to Romanian parents, Myron Brinig was raised from a young age in Butte, Montana. Brinig published his first novel—Madonna Without Child—in 1929, and would go on to publish another twenty novels over the next three decades, including Singermann (1929), Wide Open Town (1931), This Man Is My Brother (1932), and The Sun Sets in the West (1935)—all of which depict miners, labor organizers, farmers, and businessmen settling and developing Montana. During his early career Brinig was praised by critics and lauded as one of the leading young writers in America.

One of Brinig’s best-selling novels, The Sisters, was adapted into a feature length film in 1938, starring Bette Davis and Errol Flynn.