His debut was
Red Earth, White Earth, about a native Minnesotan returning to his home town due to conflicts between white farmers and local
Native Americans. It was made into a
CBS-TV movie in 1989. His 1989
short story collection,
A Gravestone Made of Wheat and Other Stories, won many awards, including the Minnesota Book Award for Fiction. The title story was produced in 2006 as the independent feature film
Sweet Land, featuring
Ned Beatty. Weaver has also written many stories for
young adults, including the Billy Baggs
baseball novels. These include
Striking Out,
Farm Team, and
Hard Ball. He has also written
Memory Boy,
Claws,
Full Service, and
Defect. Saturday Night Dirt, the first of a series on dirt-racers, was released in 2008 followed by
Super Stock Rookie. He is the winner of both the
McKnight Foundation and the
Bush Foundation prizes for fiction. In addition to writing, Weaver taught creative writing at
Bemidji State University in
Bemidji, Minnesota; he has since retired. He resides in the Bemidji area with his wife Rose, who is formerly a
professor at Bemidji State, and his teenage children. In April 2014, he recorded an interview with Peter Shea in which he talked about his life and work. == Bibliography ==