Readers sometimes ask what method I use to select stories- do I hunt down individual events? My answer is, when I set out to write the first book I set up one primary rule- I would not write about events that everyone else (Bowen, Boyer, Ratigan, etc.) had written about; the Great Storm of 1913, the CARL D. BRADLEY, the FITZ. etc. Instead I went for the obscure, the tiny and the forgotten events. Oddly, when researching those tiny, tiny facts that make up those forgotten events, I often stumble across other "leads" in other events. I file each of those and go back later to put the pieces together in that one- while doing that I'll always stumble across several others and so on. Thus, my method is actually one of stumbling rather than hunting.
Not all crowds are happy to come and hear ya' speak, especially when you are the guy who has published five books on Great Lakes maritime history in just five years. There are lots and lots of old-timers out there looking for the chance to smack down the young up-start. After all, they were into this stuff long before you was born! Such was the case when I did a speaking gig at a Lake Michigan coast museum in 1996. I was all ready to go out there when the lady running the show took me aside and said, "There are a bunch of local old duffers out there who are looking to show you up, so be warned." She pulled the curtain aside a bit and I saw a half dozen gray haired duffers sitting in the front row, a few of them had big yellow envelopes stuffed with all sorts of papers. Of course the kid was quicker than they expected. I told her "No problem," and I went out. At the podium I said. "First of all, I'd just like to say that I am not any sort of a maritime expert- in fact I'm sure that some of you in this audience have forgotten more about the Great Lakes than I know. What I am is a scribe. I'm a guy who researches and then takes what I find and I put it into story form. I could never do my job without the guys who came along before I was born and preserved the facts that I need to gather." One by one I saw all of the guys with the envelopes casually slide them under their seats... the lecture went on without a hitch after that. Of course I also took the time afterward to go to each guy with an envelope and say- "Tell me about what you've got there." I learned a ton that night.
In 1997 I was between pilot's jobs and working on another book of Great Lakes
shipwrecks and true ventures. But, when the folks at Avery got wind of my newfound
free time they came up with a project that would help me earn a little extra
money. It was a "list" book detailing lighthouses. I agreed to the
task, they sent me a box of research material, and I went to work. The damned
book made me crazy. I could only do five or six of these monotonous lighthouse
listings before I would begin to lose my mind and I'd switch over to writing in my
shipwreck book. Then it got to the point where I couldn't even stand to look at a
lighthouse. Finally one evening my wife took pity upon me. "You need to
get away from this stuff," she said dragging me out of the house. She took
me to the mall and as we walked around she would spot a lighthouse in a store
window and pointed out to me- I'd groan. She'd point out a person wearing a
sweatshirt covered with lighthouses- it was like someone scratching a
blackboard to me. Over and over and over this went on, finally I was nearing the end
of my sanity when she stopped me and said, "Don't you get it? Lighthouses
are everywhere… Because they SELL!” DING! The bell went off! We went straight
home and I finished the book of lighthouse lists in less than two weeks. Avery
advance sold more than a pallet of these books- "Great Lakes Lighthouses
American and Canadian" became my first best-seller.
Sometimes readers will come up to me and ask very specific questions about one of my stories. Something such as "...on page 77 you said such and such about so and so, why is that?" I have really bad news for ya' folks, I generally wipe a story from my brain as soon as the manuscript goes out the door. And often the story that the person is talking about is in a book that I composed years and years ago. One guy asked about a detail in a story that I had written 12 years earlier! By the time my newest book hits the stores I am already several months into the next book. So, if ever you have a detailed question- bring the book with you so I can reference it.
While making the lighthouse list book I had found a number of true
adventure stories involving lighthouses that I thought would be a great
addition to that book. So I place those stories in between each chapter of
lighthouse lists. When I told Avery about that, they immediately said, "No,
that's not what we want, take them out." So I did, and then I compiled those
stories into a book of true lighthouse adventures. Just before the list book
went to print, Avery asked to have the adventure stories put back in. This time
it was my turn to say, "No." Those adventure stories would be in a
book of their own and Avery would get to pay me for that too. They happily
agreed and titled the book simply, "Lighthouse Adventures."
In late 1997, as the lighthouse series of my books were rolling
off the presses, my pilots career finally took a turn for the better. Having
worked my way through college and worked as a clerk in the parts department of
a Falcon Jet Service Center, and later as a "Hanger rat" at that same
service center, and then finally as a Falcon Jet mechanic (working under the
shop certificate) my dream seat had always been in the cockpit of a
Falcon Jet. I was hired as a corporate pilot
flying Falcon Jets. This new job placed me in one single situation where I found
myself to be terribly uncomfortable as the author of some seven books. My new
boss’ wife was a writer and she was also a member of a local “writer’s club”
that met monthly at a local bar /restaurant. My boss thought it would be a good
idea for him to take me to one of these meetings… ooookay. Here’s the poop-
there are a bazillion “writers” out there, and very few “authors.” Many of
those writers are dreaming, struggling, wishing and trying very hard to get
ANYTHING published, anyplace. Very few are as lucky as I have been, and that
never really soaked in until I went to that “club” meeting. They were all
milling about with drinks in hand chatting as friends do, when someone rang the attention bell and made a “big announcement.” As the room
went quiet, the lady said “I want everyone to know that Bob was published this
week in the Sunday magazine!” there was a cheer and Bob proudly boasted “Yep,
three full paragraphs!” There followed applause and a good deal of back-slapping
for Bob. I began to feel pretty uncomfortable… then my boss introduced me as a
published author. The room went silent. “How many books is that you have out
now Wes?” Every eye was on me… my only thought was “I have to get to a cave-
RIGHT NOW!” I mumbled, “Seven.” And then
tried to recover by adding “but, they’re all just regional stuff.” That didn’t
help very much. No one in the “club” approached me or even spoke to me thereafter.
Finally, after a very awkward half hour I managed to slip out and go home… my
weirdness meter was pegged.
In the wake of the lighthouse series of books I wanted to do
something to document the United States Life-Saving Service and so my 8th
book, “Keepers of Valor” was heavy with acts of heroism around the lakes. It
was also my second failed attempt at titling my own book. Avery went with my
title, but the public did not. Avery kept getting calls asking what Keepers of
VELOUR meant? Apparently many folks do
not know the difference between courage and the fabric used in the uniform
shirts from the original Star Trek- so the sales were slow. Finally in 2004,
Avery re-titled and re-covered the book while having me adjust the text
somewhat and then they re-released the book as “Great Lakes Shipwrecks and
Lighthouses.”
Doing book signings at little shops is one of my favorite thing, doing them at a mall, however is similar to watching paint dry. I call it "doing the lonely card table." One trick I learned is to take a friend or relative along with you and have them just stand there and talk to ya'. People passing by will tend to stop and talk too. I also tell the owner that I'll only be there for one hour- that way if it's dead I can split, but if I have readers, I can just stay longer. On one occasion I arrived at a small shop in the thumb and found an 11 year-old girl waiting. Her mom said she was one of my biggest readers, and she was holding a stack of every book that I had out at the time. I sat down and signed them all. Then I asked for a second chair- I told her, "You're special, and you and I are gonna do this book signing together." Between signings we talked about reading, researching, writing and publishing. It was one of my best book signings.
My pilot’s career came to an end in early 2000. I was furloughed
from my corporate job when they lost several customers who took their jets with
them. As a former airline captain, it’s pretty hard to interview with companies
and play the answer stupid questions and pretend that you don’t really mind
starting at the bottom… again, game. Finally after one interview I decided to just be
a writer. I came home, dropped my flightbag and said to my wife, “That’s it- I’m
baggin’ it.” To which she answered, “Well, it’s about time!” Her
career was going gangbusters and I had eight books in publication, so there was no reason for me to keep poking
holes in the sky and being away nearly every day. I went to work straight away
on my next book “True Tales of Ghosts and Gales.” I also took gigs speaking around the lakes
and as an enrichment speaker aboard the cruise ship C. COLUMBUS on the lakes. I
loved working the COLUMBUS, but I gained almost 20 pounds from the food they served I rode the exercycle in their spa from one end of the lakes to another- and still gained weight... I was such a piggy. For the cover of “True Tales” I had come up with
the idea of having folks in the Great Lakes community submit photos and images- it worked out great.
Avery came to me with a special request in early 2002. They wanted
a book of ghost stories- something that was good to read around a campfire. I
told them that ghost stories were almost impossible to research and usually
doing so usually just debunks the story. They said they didn’t want the research-
just the fun story. Not really my trademark, but I had been told a lot of ghost
stories over the years and had found several in my normal research. I had even
accidentally taken a photo of one a year before… so I had the material. Thus,
although “Great Lakes Ghost Stories” was not pure fiction, it was largely
hear-say. It also had a cover the likes of which reminded me of a kid’s book…
but it sells, so I’m happy with it.
Somewhere around this point in my career I was contacted by a fellow by the name of Paul Newton- who was a producer for WNEM TV5 News. He was about to shoot a segment to be aired a few months later during Halloween. It was about ghosts and Great Lakes maritime. Of course I thought it would be fun and I drove to Saginaw to be a part of it. The crew consisted of myself, Paul the producer and a camera man- we all gathered at boneyard for pleasure craft near Bay City. The place was filled with abandon and wrecked boats all looking like the MINNOW from "Gilligan's Island." My role consisted mostly of sitting on a stool with the boats in the background and telling little tales that could act as soundbites. Our nemesis that day was a smoke generator that the cameraman had brought along. He thought that an eerie fog-like layer hanging around may make a good effect. Since it was a calm, late summer day; it should have worked. Unfortunately, we discovered that no matter where he placed the machine, the smoke had a mind of its own. Sometimes right in the middle of the shot, the cloud would drift over and cut my head off, or it would roll in and swallow the camera. Of course as he became frustrated and moved the machine, I started to have fun. In one take the smoke made a solid wall between me and the camera. I just kept talking, but got off the stool and went and hid behind one of the boats. When the smoke cleared I'd just vanished! Another time I went running through the cloud shouting, "Gilligan!" Eventually we did without the smoke and finished the shoot.
It aired on Halloween and my mom saw it and said it was really good. The following January I got an e-mail from Paul saying that the piece had been nominated for an Emmy. Wow. I congratulated him and said, "I hope you win." He wrote back saying that if he won we ALL won. All three of us had been included in the nomination.
Well, that jinxed Paul right there... because I never win any awards. Thus, we didn't win, but some folks seem to think that just being nominated for an Emmy is really special. I've been urged to add that to my resume... okay... I guess.
As I was finishing up the ghost book, I got
some news that would change everything for the next nine years. It was the direct result of my no longer flying and thus being home every night… I was going to
become a daddy!
When the news of the coming baby arrived, I called Avery and told
them not to expect an manuscript from me for the next three years- I was going
to be a stay-at-home dad raising our child. Of course they had no choice other
than saying “Okay.” That’s the up-side of being an author, you can take that
sort of time off and the royalties keep coming. Of course Avery would not just
sit still- they had already taken Stormy Seas and Sounds of Disaster and
combined the texts into a new book called (you guessed it) “Stormy Disasters.” Now they set about converting “Keepers of Valor” into its “new” version “Great Lakes Shipwrecks
and Lighthouses” Of course as soon as my three years were up- Avery was ready
for the next book. I’d cheated, however, and started working on the text long before.
Often I meet folks who tell me they've read all of my books... over the summer. Then they want to know when the next book is coming. I try and tell them that it takes a few years to write and publish a book and they look really disappointed. For me it's like spending a month making a great pie, and then having someone eat it in one bite! Still, I love meeting my readers. Oddly, I get my head down into this stuff and I tend to forget that people are actually out there reading it. The detective work and the reconstruction of the events are so consuming that I often have to pop my head up and remember I'm in modern times and not 1883! During the writing of my first ten books, my wife would go away on business and I'd be left at home writing. On more than one occasion I'd get up in the morning and get to working on the story and the next thing I knew it would be one or two in the morning and I'd realize I had not eaten and I was still in my P.J.s! That stuff happened more often than I like to admit.
By 2006 I was working on my first new book in several years. One
thing that had been bothering me was how much of my work had gone out of print.
“Ice Water Museum” had contained some of my best work and it was now out of
print. I gave it a lot of thought and figured that as long as I told the
readers, up front, that the chapter had appeared in a previous book and if I
updated the chapter with new information, there was no reason why I could not
reprint the text. Thus my 2008 book “Shipwrecks and Rescues” contained three up-dated
chapters from “Ice Water Museum” Once again I ran a contest for cover artwork
by way of the boatnerd.com web site.
As I keep saying- one of the best aspects of this author job is meeting and talking to the readers. Most of these folks are from the north central states near the lakes and they all have a story to tell. On occasion those stories can lead me to a terrific history discovery- so no matter how boring some may consider it to be, I always listen intently while signing someone's book. In the case of Mildred, who I met while signing books at a Lake Huron lighthouse, she told me about a "Big piece of wood " jutting from the sand in the yard of her son-in-law's shore-side home. I agreed to drop by there and take a look. Sure enough, there it was- I started digging around it by hand and her husband Ray said "You ain't gonna uncover it like that." So I asked for a shovel, and in short order I have unearthed a huge wooden rudder. I informed Ray that it was from the scow schooner A. LINCOLN. He asked how I knew that, and I replied that it wrecked almost exactly at that location on September 29, 1872. As I said, my readers are very important to me, especially when they have stories to tell.
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My 14th book also contained three up-dated chapters
from my now out of print books. Yet by way of the Internet, research is getting
easier and easier. Now instead of sending a letter to another researcher and
waiting weeks for a reply- I was simply able to send an e-mail. Likewise,
nearly everyplace has cell coverage- so I can make calls to people and catch
them away from their home or office. So book 14 was nice and fat. Again I held
a contest for cover art. Avery dropped the standard cover scheme that had been
used since “Sounds of Disaster” for full jacket photos and I told the folks in
the contest that there would be two winners- each on the front cover. The
problem was that after the folks at Avery selected the cover, Wells Chapin, the
owner of the company, found a photo that he liked and insisted it would be on
the cover- so it was… on the back cover- thus, we had three winners. The book came out titled
“All Hands On Deck” and my only problem with that is there is apparently a
pornographic novel on Amazon dot com by the same title!
It’s always something.
Okay... Book 15 came out in the spring of 2013. I had a lot of fun writing it (as usual). The book contains some fun stuff such as highly detailed cutaway drawings of an old whaleback passenger liner. These were copied from the actual shipyard drawings of the early 1890s and show couches, skylights and even the restrooms! I also put in a sort of beginner's guide to identifying shallow water shipwrecks as well as a tour of the modern day self-unloader, SAM LAUD.
Of course I did not title it, but what I really like about the title is that there are no X-rated books on Amazon with the same title... at least, not yet.
So many, many good writers strive unsuccessfully for so, so many years to try and get something- anything, published. A simple paragraph in their local newspaper's weekend magazine is celebration. Thus, I feel somewhat guilty about how my 16th title came to be published.
In the summer of 2013, Avery's president contacted me by e-mail wanting to know when the next book would be coming. I sent him back an e-mail saying that at that time the manuscript was on schedule to be delivered to them on October 31, 2014. That was in pace with my usual one book every two years normal writing schedule. Later, in mid-November of 2013 I got an urgent e-mail from him, "Where's the book?!" Writing back to him I said that the book would be delivered on the date that I had put in the previous summer's e-mail.
It turned out that he had misread my e-mail and thought that they would have a book from me in November 2013 rather than 2014! Now they had a real problem, because they had left a space in their catalog for a book by me. What to do?!
The answer came from a phone conversation that I had with Avery, also in the previous summer. They were wondering what they could do with the half dozen or so books of mine that are out of print. At first they suggested that we simply release them under a new cover and new title with old contents. My head did not explode at that idea, but I firmly rejected it saying that our readers HATE that. I suggested that we should try a "Best Of" book. Hell, I have a dozen best of albums from musical groups that I like, and they all have songs that I already have, but I don't mind. Avery said that they would "think about it." Well, November 2013 with them having a hole in the next year's catalog where my name should be settled that issue.
Thus, I got to pick out and update a whole bunch of my personal favorite stories and Avery made a "Best of" book. Of course having my name in huge letters on a bronze plaque that appears riveted to the cover was not my idea. I complained to my wife that this was "a bit too much Wes." She said, "Tough rocks." I grumbled to Avery that it was a bit too much "Wes." They had the same response as my wife... "tough rocks."
So it is that while others struggle to get nothing published, I get my 16th title published because my publisher misread an e-mail. Indeed it is a strange world.
Of course the book that I had been working on when the board room at Avery mis-read my e-mail was the one that came out in 2016 as "Wooden Ship and Deadly Seas."
What's unique about this book is that as I was writing it I was also writing a six book series of books on spaceflight that I self-published on Amazon. So, I wrote 7 books concurrently over 3 years.
When I told my wife that I would be writing 7 books in 3 years she said that if I wanted to impress her, I'd clean my bathroom more often. Hey, give her a break folks... she's been with me since my first book way back in the 1980s and she's Japanese, so she's hard to impress.
One thing about publishers is they tend to come up with book ideas of their own. Of course authors beg "Please, please DON'T have any ideas for me!"
Book 18 World War II & the Great Lakes
So it was that in the spring of 2016 I was happily strolling around Washington DC with my wife and kids enjoying their spring day when my cell phone rang. It was the folks at Avery and they had a concept for my next book. Initially it sounded like a good idea- a book about all of the aircraft lost on the Great Lakes- but the more I looked into it, the more it slid toward that "Great Lakes triangle" nonsense. Soon it became a frustration and one day as Teresa and I were on a long road trip I began venting. "Hell, most of those aircraft were lost off the two training aircraft carriers that the Navy used on Lake Michigan," I scoffed. My wife, who is one of the most brilliant people I've ever met, looked at me and said simply, "Well, why don't you write the next book about that... the Great Lakes during World War II?"
DING! DING! DING! The bell went off in my head, "There were bombers, iron ore vessels, submarines, war ships... YEAH!"
I got right on the phone and talked to my publisher about the new concept that my wife had conceived. The moment I said "submarines" I thought he was gonna come through the phone! "OH! OH!" He exclaimed, "I served on one of those subs when I was in the Navy! Do it! Let's do it!"
Although I'm a career pilot with a BS Degree in Aeronautical Science, World War II and bombers and submarines are not in my writing expertise, neither are tanks, POWs and Axis war machines. I'm a specialist in obscure shipwrecks and such. My learning curve was VERY steep for the WWII book. I was constantly on Amazon buying books and reading as well as purchasing documentaries on the war. I downloaded tons of .PDF documents and wormed my way into the Library of Congress web site where I hunted photos on many a late night. Yet, my skill was not enough to keep the book from sliding into the suckisphere. I needed someone with my same knowing of the lakes yet an additional knowledge of military equipment in WWII to tune the manuscript. Enter Chris Rottiers- a person whose name I'd known for nearly three decades, yet never met. Every time I'd visit the great collector Ralph Roberts he would always say to me that he had to get Chris and I together, because we'd really hit it off. Then in late April, 2016 Chris "friended" me on FaceBook. Ralph had passed away a few years earlier and Chris became the manager for Ralph's collection of Great Lakes historical material. Chris and I exchanged messages and soon got around to the subject that all books have some errors. He had a lot of technical proof-reading experience as well as being a Great Lakes history expert. In December of 2016 I invited Chris to edit my next book... the poor guy had no idea what he'd gotten himself into... 75,000 words in the manuscript and more than 90 historic photos and captions when it was all done. Luck for me, Chris is a tank buff and has a Navy background. We quickly learned to work together very well, but coming into my author's world made for a very long 8 months for Chris. Thanks to his input, "World War II & The Great Lakes" avoided the suckisphere and came out as a far better book. Whew!
My 19th book came on the coattails of the success of the first book that wrote on WWII. Avery wanted another WWII book and they wanted it before I wrote another shipwreck book.
In that first WWII book I'd pretty much done a macro look at the things that took place during the war- it was sort of like picking the low-hanging fruit. This second and final book about the war took a much closer look at the people who were involved in the war. While I was back in Michigan doing a book tour for the initial WWII book, my cousin Dale brought over a pocket address book that had been carried through the entire war in the Pacific by my uncle Jack. Dale allowed me to photograph every page of that book which contained the names and addresses of all of his buddies or their next of kin. That entire book, is now in this book. At that same time I'd been contacted by a fellow by the name of Don Booth who lived in Bay City and said that his dad had been a WWII fighter pilot and he had a lot of pictures and information. So, while on a research trip up to Bay City I dropped in on Don. It turned out that Don's wife Jo and I graduated together from Freeland High School! It also turned out that he had a treasure trove of photos and information. One photo was so compelling that it had to be on the cover! Later a young lady by the name of Alison, who is a WWII "living historian" had a line on someone who was a WASP and she put me in touch with that lady's daughter who in turn put me in contact with Jane Doyle. She had actually served as a Woman's Army Service Pilot during WWII. I fell in love with Jane on the phone, she was so sweet and kind and still as sharp as an arrow. We talked pilot to pilot for a very long interview. Jane passed away just three months after my interview with her- and thus to her this book is dedicated.
Unfortunately, the book was released just as the COVID 19 lockdown took place, and sales tanked.
When the COVID lockdown of 2020 began I decided to use it as an opportunity to do what my grade school teachers complained that I always failed to do... make good use of time. My concept was a book that would deal with some of the scores of other shipwrecks that had taken place on or around the date of November 10th- which is the date that the famed EDMUND FITZGERALD had been lost with all hands. Just looking at the Swayze database a quick search showed more than 40 wrecks on that exact date. When adding a single day on each side of that date, the number raised exponentially. It was a good concept, and the title was one that I have not been able to get out of my head since first hearing the Gordon Lightfoot song, "The Wreck of the EDMUND FITZGERALD" way back in 1976. That song quite literally laid the side track that would change my entire life. In order to fully pay tribute to the brilliance of Mr. Lightfoot and thank him for all of the records of his that I have bought, I used a lyric from that song. And the book project, before a single word was written became, "The Witch of November."
Thus, I contacted my Great Lakes publisher, Avery Color Studios in Marquette, Michigan and proposed that the shipwreck book that I had scheduled for 2022 be moved up to the spring of 2021, by which time, hopefully, the lockdown would be lifted. They doubted that the book could be done in just a single 12 month time-frame and that there were enough November 10th wrecks to make a book. I assured them that both were easy to do. Next, I needed a cover- and I sure as hell was not going to use some photo of the FITZ that had been seen published a bazillion times.
For the cover I knew EXACTLY who I wanted. There was one and only one artist whose work would make this cover happen and that genius is Tony Strublic. He is a quickly rising star in Great Lakes maritime circles and I have admired his work since the first time I saw any of it. His pencil drawings are so detailed that they could easily be mistaken for a photograph. Right down to the bolts and lamp housings- he gets it all. I'd had his work in my some of my previous books and on the back cover of my WWII book. I contacted Tony and asked if he was willing to do a FITZ for my cover? He was excited, saying that he had drawn her so often and now he had the excuse to draw her from a totally new perspective. I asked that the image should jump off the cover at the reader and he said it was no problem. There was, however, one rider in this contract- Tony could not reveal the image to anyone until the book was released. That was a tough one (especially when I saw the finished product in October of 2020) but Tony kept his word. I also insisted that Avery MUST use Tony's image on the cover- and, even though they wouldn't see it until autumn, they agreed. We were not sorry. This was the first cover image that I ever saw that actually, in my opinion, looks a bit better on the book than in the print that I have on my office wall.
Everything was ready nearly two months before the lockdown was lifted in Michigan, yet we ran into one unexpected snag. Because of COVID, the printer was both short of staff and backed up on work. So the book that should have come out in mid-May was delayed until late June. Avery was in a near panic as the tourists were flocking to the U.S. Great Lakes (because Canada was still locked down) and the July 4th holiday week was looming, but the books had not yet been delivered. They all had their noses to the window waiting for the delivery trucks from the printer.
The books arrived just in time!
Much to my delight, Avery has re-released one of my best works. Ghost Ships Gales and Forgotten Tales came out back in 1995 and did pretty well in sales. Of course few books remain in print forever, and after about a half dozen years this one went out of print. In 2022, however, Avery gave the book a snazzier cover and re-released it.
Considering how well my Ghost Ships and Gales book is selling, I asked Avery to re-release my 5th book, "Mysteries and Histories" except this time I had them send me the original manuscript so I could up-date it. That took a full week- but wow... it is going to be better. When the new cover comes out, I'll post it here.