Chase Armstrong vs Luke Skywalker

Ey! Toro!Strong characters. They make a story fun to read, and fun to write as well. In developing the Dinosaur Wars series, I’ve tried continually to create and enhance the strength of character in the stories’ main personalities. Take Chase Armstrong, for example. He’s the lead male role in Dinosaur Wars. He shares many characteristics with Luke Skywalker of the Star Wars series, and not by accident. He’s by no means a copy of Luke, but like young heroes since the days of the Greek legends, he possesses certain hero qualities.

First off, he’s tall, dark and handsome. That always helps a hero appeal to young guys as a role model and to young women as a heartthrob. Luke was not bad looking, but he really left the heart palpitations to Han Solo. I think maybe Chase has an edge on Luke in that category.

Luke has the edge, perhaps, in special talents. His Jedi Knight heritage and ability to “use the force” get him some credit in the Harry Potter division. Chase doesn’t use magic powers but he’s possessed of uncanny abilities with weapons, thanks to his years of darting wildlife with a tranquilizer dart rifle, and an acquired ability to face down grizzly bears. This latter ability is put to use regularly, as when he stands off a T rex with nothing more than a stick or as shown above, bullfights a ceratopsian without flinching. Just look at the intensity of his stare. No fear!

KitDanielsAnd, lest you think Dinosaur Wars is all guy stuff, consider Kit Daniels. She’s the Princess Leia of this series and quite a looker, wouldn’t you agree? In addition to beauty, which is a requisite of all great heroines, she possesses some unique gifts herself. A rancher’s daughter who studies paleontology at college, she’s the right person to confront the difficult problem of living with dinosaurs when they return to her father’s Montana ranch lands. Sensitive to the ways of animals, Kit befriends a giant duckbilled dinosaur who in turn saves her life.

You’ll note, in the picture, Kit is packing an M-16. Like many modern female heroines, she’s not above sending out a spray of high-velocity bullets if one of her loved ones is in danger.

In the final analysis, Kit and Chase have qualities that are highly prized by us all these days: they are lovers and helpers of animals. Don’t we go on ecotours, don’t we support the preservation of wildlife, don’t we encourage the reintroduction of species that had been eliminated from parts of our modern world? Don’t we flock to whale watching tours and pet any sea creature that will let us? Don’t we look up to those folks who try to help wildlife recover and live safe from environmental disaster and society’s reckless expansion like some evil empire?

Yes, we do, most of us.

So there you have it: Chase vs Luke and Kit vs Leia, as defenders of the weak and resistors of empires. Similarities here, differences there but, all in all, heroes of the first magnitude. Might the day soon come when toystore shelves are stocked, not only with Luke and Leia action figures, but with Kit and Chase and Gar and Saurgon and a couple of Kra fighter-walkers thrown in for good measure? I think so.

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Dinosaur Wars 2 under re-construction

Counterattack coverBecause of increasing interest in my Dinosaur Wars series of stories, I recently began an extensive rewrite of the second book, Dinosaur Wars: Counterattack, to make it ready for release as an ebook. If you’ve already read the paper copy don’t worry, I’m not really changing the story. I’m just cinching it up a bit to make it read faster and hotter.

Every writer improves with age, just like fine wine or the value of a comic book. So, given my complete faith that the Dinosaur Wars stories have the potential to hit the big time, I think it’s worth the trouble of hammering on the prose and making DW2, as I call it, really sing.

Like I wrote on this blog before, there are a couple of changes that just have to be made to keep the story abreast of the current and ever-changing state of the science of paleontology. Just like with DW1 before it, I’m renaming the nasty carnivores. The megaraptor is dead! Again! As I explained before, paleontologists have uncovered new skeletal material that suggests the old interpretation of the animal as a member of the maniraptor group, which includes velociraptors and other fierce creatures, was wrong. In fact, some have even suggested that the big hooked claws they’ve dug up were on the animals’ hands, not feet.

That’s too much confusion in the scientific world for me to continue feeling comfortable about starring the creatures in my books. The new replacement, on the other hand, is a pretty nasty beast itself: utahraptor. New fossils of this animal have confirmed that it is a larger relative of velociraptor, which comes off rather wimpy by comparison to utahraptor, which got up to about racehorse size. Yikes!

Another change is the inclusion of a couple short scenes were Saurgon gets a starring role. Saurgon is a much more complex villain than I’d portrayed in the original editions of DW1 and DW2. He’s shaping up as I revise him, into a more dangerous and a much more insidious bad guy. If you’ve read the new DW1 Earthfall then you probably recognize him as the commander of the death beam from the moon, Gar’s arch rival for control of the armies of the Kra, and humanity’s worst enemy. Stay tuned. He’s got a new role as High Priest of the Cult of Wealth and a new costume: a glittering suit of armor plumed with golden feathers, not to mention that he’s become a blond, aryan supremacist kind of creature. He’s a real trouble maker, sharing traits with the great villains of all time including Darth Vader and James Bond’s nemesis, Goldfinger.

More changes are in the offing, so stay tuned. I should have the new edition done sometime in the next couple of months and I hope to release it as an ebook in the mid to late fall.

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Life in a rainforest

Mossy trunkIt’s been soggy here on Cougar Mountain lately. We hear that some people have droughts, heat waves, dust storms, wildfires and other ill effects of global warming. Sorry. It sounds like not too much fun.

I don’t suppose I’ll get much pity then, when I complain that we really haven’t seen the sun here in the Seattle area for, oh, I don’t know how long. Maybe just a couple of sunny days so far in the year 2011. That’s it.

So, when you’re sweltering in the heat and baking in the sun, give a thought to us Northwesterners up here turning into prunes. It’s about the soggiest year I can remember, and I can remember quite a few.

I guess everybody has their own personal price to pay when it comes to the weather. Either you cook, or you chill. Either you roast, or you steam. You’ve just gotta keep a positive attitude about it all.

The other day Shelley and I went out walking and I brought along my camera to capture some of the things that make all the rain, fog, and overcast seem worth it: I got some shots of our local rainforest. You’ll have to admit, it’s the real deal, complete with mossy trunks and branches, ferns, vines, and a general lushness that can’t be ignored. Click ’em for a closeup look.

Vanilla leafThis picture is one of my favorite shots from that sojourn. It catches a couple of Vanilla leaves cozying it up with some sprigs of bleeding heart. Verdant, huh? This sort of effusion of plant life is everywhere around here. The place never really quits being green. There’s no dry season to speak of. And, heat wave? What’s that?

Whatever kind of weather your region brings you, I hope it pays back with some nice compensation like this.

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Hydroplanes!

Hydroplane!It’s fun to watch the high-speed antics of the fastest boats on water. My brother Jerry and my nephew Greg are multiple record holders for speed and race victories in the sport of hydroplane racing. You really ought to stop by their Facebook page and have a look at their championship performances. Nothing short of mind boggling to those of us who’ve only crossed the waters at ferryboat speeds, or maybe ski-boat or jet ski speeds, any of which would trail a good hot hydro by 100 mph or more.

Trophy timeJerry and son have a collection of trophies that overflow their fireplace mantels, bookshelves and most every other piece of furniture they can put something on. Race victories, world speed records, you name it. They’ve been there done that.

I guess I’m a pretty proud brother and uncle.

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Ebook Cover Art

Cover ArtI’m sitting here at my writing desk, getting ideas. That’s not so unusual, but today they’re all about cover artwork. I’ve published a few ebooks now, and it strikes me that a new avenue for illustrators is at hand. I’ve created the cover art for several of my ebooks, but I’m getting a little weary of the process. Click on the cover at right to inspect an example of my best work to date. Not bad, but a pro could have done better. And I’d rather be churning out the prose and letting a real professional artist create the pretty pictures to go with it. That’s a nice notion, but not presently something that I can count on, because my production budget is zero. For major publishers, it’s no big deal to plunk down thousands of dollars for a cover painting, but that just isn’t in the picture for the titles I choose to release the ebook way.

Still, I’d love to have a real artist do my covers, but how? I’ve had a vague idea for a while that’s beginning to flesh out in my mind. Much like MP3 music, the cover art of an ebook is low resolution, typically 600 dots wide by 800 dots high (the size of the image you saw if you clicked the thumbnail above). I keep thinking, if an artist were to GIVE me a 600 by 800 dot version of his/her work for my cover, but retain all rights to sell higher resolution versions, couldn’t a mutual cottage industry emerge? The artist’s work with prominent signature could appear on my ebook’s cover, and a link inside the book could send my readers to the artist’s site.

Somewhere in here is a workable model, especially for new and unknown artists. Think about it. As I promote and sell my ebook, I’d be promoting the artist’s work as well. There are plenty of artists out there right now selling multiple giclée prints of the same painting, via websites or at art or science fiction conventions. If one of them were to bet on one of my stories and give me the right to use a 600 by 800 dot version of a piece of artwork, suppose my book went viral and sold a million copies? The artist gets no royalties, but the flow of visitors to that artist’s web site would go up dramatically.

I’ve never heard of this particular model for an artist-writer alliance, so let’s say “you heard it here first.” Perhaps you will have “heard it here last,” as well, if there is some hole in the logic.

But I think the idea might just fly. Anyone want to give it a try? Speaking of flying, I’m developing the cover for a new story I’m about to release entitled “Riding Quetzalcoatlus.” A cover painting of a cowgirl with lasso flying on the back of the big pterodactyl would be appreciated.

Otherwise, said the little red hen, I’ll have to do it myself. Just remember, at the end of that story, who got to eat all the bread?

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Brian’s Book of Bastards

Brian at the Seattle Mystery BookstoreA writer buddy of mine, Brian Thornton, has just released his second book about notorious scoundrels of history, The Book Of Ancient Bastards. I picked up a copy at Brian’s book signing and release party at The Seattle Mystery Bookshop last weekend, and I’m enjoying it immensely. Brian, a history teacher by training, has a penchant for unearthing little known facts about political figures who abused their power and position, or who ran amok, killing off rivals and bringing ruin to the nations they held sway over.

In the photo, Brian is either (A) fanning his fingers to cool them down after signing so many copies, (B) calling for staff to eject a heckler, or (C) about to flip an admonishing finger at someone. I was right there at the time but somehow missed the moment. Had my nose in a book, no doubt.

Anyway, it’s incredible what you can uncover if you’ve a mind to, as Brian does. Before opening The Book Of Ancient Bastards, I’d thought there was only one Cleopatra. Au contraire, there were dozens of ’em, reigning throughout the Ptolemaic Dynasty of ancient Egypt. And as Brian so well illustrates, each new Cleo seemed a little more evil than the last. That snake-bitey little girl who ended the line really didn’t have a thing on some of her predecessors.

And, among Caesars, watch out! Most of us are aware that there were some poorly behaved fellows among ancient Rome’s ruling class, but the bounds of acceptable amounts of fratricide, patricide, matricide and what-have-you-cide were so flagrantly ignored by so many Caesars, that you wonder how Rome didn’t fall on a daily basis.

So check it out. Cool book.

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A Rave Review!

PNWA reviewOccasionally I’ll submit a story to one of the literary contests that take place each year. I’ve been a finalist a few times and even won third-place money a couple of times in the annual Pacific Northwest Writers Association competition. This year, I didn’t make the finalist list, but when I looked at the critical reviews of my story, my eyeballs popped wide open. One of the judges had given me a rave review!

This is the sort of thing that stokes a writer’s fire. Scoring my story with 98 out of 100 points, the judge said some extremely complimentary things, for instance:

“One of the best renditions of character I’ve seen in a very long time,” and, “Tense. Moving. My eyes didn’t turn away from the page even for a moment.”

If both judges had seen it this way, I’d probably have taken the Grand Prize. Unfortunately, the second judge gave it 82 points—a very respectable tally, but the kiss of death in a contest with almost 1,000 entries.

If you’d like to see the whole review, click here for a pdf copy. Following the rules of the contest, the judges are unknown to me and my name did not appear on the story, so they were unaware of whose story they were critiquing in the interest of fairness to unknown and well known authors alike. That way the story is judged without bias as to who its creator is. Everything rests on the merits of the story itself. So when the judge says it’s an “extremely well-done piece,” I know he/she is talking about the story on its own merits and judging it a hit.

So, next, I’ll consider making a couple of fine-point revisions the judges suggested, then I’ll either submit it to a magazine, or perhaps publish it as an e-book. I’ll make that decision soon and let you know. In the meantime, here’s a teaser—the first few pages of the story will give you a feel for what the judges were talking about, and maybe whet your appetite for the whole story when it comes out.

HERB SHORT’S STORY

In memory of Uncle Herb, who really lived this story.

The auditorium of Seattle’s Town Hall was filling toward capacity. It was a rainy night and the line at the coat check window was long. There were dames in pillbox hats and mink, and gals in camel overcoats and silk scarves, escorted by fellows in pinstriped suits and narrow neckties, and guys in black topcoats. It was a pretty fine crowd. The show was about to start and the evening’s attraction, Ace Riley, was already on stage. He looked sharp in his black Marine dress uniform and white cap and brilliantly shined shoes. He sat on a chair next to the podium with the mayor beside him, gabbing pleasantly. Seated beside the mayor was another man who held a key to the city in his lap. It was a gaudy looking, big fake golden thing.

Herb Short was a thin, plainly dressed man who hadn’t bothered with the coat check line. He still wore his wet fedora and a trench coat with rain-dampened shoulders. Walking with a limp, he came to the front of the seating area and called up to the stage, “I was at Cactus.”

His voice was loud enough that the idle conversation onstage stopped. Ace Riley, whose uniform burgeoned with wings and medals, battle stars and bars, looked at him blankly.

“Cactus Air Force, Henderson Field, Guadalcanal, 1943,” Herb clarified. “Remember me?”

After a long thoughtful look, Ace said, “Nope.”

“You were my squadron leader. Took us into action against a Japanese convoy up by New Georgia Island, February 4th, three days after I got to Guadalcanal. I was a turret gunner aboard a Navy Grumman Avenger torpedo bomber. Remember?”

Ace stared at Herb a moment. “Sorry, no.”

Herb laughed uneasily. “Hard to remember someone you only knew for three days, I guess.”

Ace nodded his head in agreement, smiling kindly. “It’s been five years, now.”

“I—” Herb began uncomfortably and then stopped. And then he started again with determination. “I think my crewmates and I didn’t get proper credit. We got more Jap kills than they said we did.”

Riley thought a moment. “Things got mixed up sometimes in the heat of battle. What’d you say your name was?”

“I didn’t say. It’s Herbert Albert Short, USNR six-six-four, oh-nine, five-oh, reporting for duty sir.” He snapped a salute, just a bit wobbly from the drink he’d taken to bolster himself for this moment. Drinks. He’d had three whiskey rocks, over at the Anchor Bar.

Ace grinned and played along. He gave a desultory salute. “At ease, airman.”

“I shot down three Jap Zeros. I know I did. My buddies and I saw ’em burn and splash. All that on my first mission; my last mission. Didn’t you see it?”

“Uh-uh.” Riley’s face clouded and his smile drained away.

“You directed the whole shooting match from 14,000 feet. We made our torpedo run on a destroyer of the Imperial Japanese Fleet trying to relieve their Guadalcanal troops, right?”

“I suppose so.”

“Suppose?” Herb felt red rising on his face and neck. “Zeros were thick that day, like to blot out the sun, but we went in anyway. Still don’t remember?”

“I saw a lot of action; a lot of days when Zeros were thick.” A new thought seemed to strike Ace. He turned to the mayor. “You can use that in your introduction. One theory goes that the Japanese Empire lost the war exactly because they ran low on experienced Zero pilots.”

“And I got my share,” Herb insisted. “Three kills. They were on us like flies on shit and the turret gunner’s job was to splash ’em, and I did. But I only got credit for one kill and one probable. You were overhead with the dive-bomber flight. Didn’t you see what happened?”

“Maybe.” Ace looked uncomfortable. “Why are you asking?”

“Because I want the record set straight. Because I got robbed of my credit. Because two men died on that flight, the best buddies I ever had, and I spent the rest of the war in a hospital once I’d dragged my shot-up carcass outta that God-forsaken jungle.”

The light of recognition came over Riley’s face. “I do remember you. They brought you back from New Georgia Island in a PBY float plane a week or so later, wounded something awful. Shipped you and your pilot stateside ASAP. We didn’t think either one of you’d last long enough to make it home. Glad to see we were wrong.”

“Glad, huh? You’re glad I’m alive and right here, right now, asking you, where’s my credit for three kills?” Herb nearly shouted the last bit. The mayor stirred uneasily and looked at the crowd filling the auditorium, and then at his watch.

“Er,” His Honor interjected, trying unsuccessfully to break the lock of Herb’s eyes on Riley’s and Riley’s on Herb’s. “We’ll begin in two minutes. Mr. er, Short, will you please take a seat?”

Herb stood tall, both feet planted, the wooziness of the booze gone. “I’ll take a seat when I get credit for my three kills.” He fixed Riley’s eyes even harder.

Riley looked down at his shiny shoes, and then at Herb again with one bushy brow lowering. “Listen.” He leaned down and motioned Herb to come near the edge of the stage. Herb drew close and Ace half whispered, “Sometimes credit got shared around. You know? If someone got killed.”

“You’re saying somebody took my credit.”

“We figured you for a goner. I remember now. You got hit by flack from the ship you were after. I saw your plane trailing smoke after your torpedo run. I reported your plane lost in action.”

“So, who took credit for my other kill?”

Riley sat back straight in his chair. His face worked like thoughts were percolating that he hadn’t had in years. “Look,” he began. “Some other guys got killed that day, right?”

“Yeah? So?”

“Well, to make their families feel like their sons hadn’t died in vain, we’d sometimes give ’em some credit. You understand? Now, I saw you go down in flames on New Georgia. I didn’t figure anybody could survive that crash.”

“But I did, with shrapnel in my skull and a fractured backbone and a Jap Zero slug stickin’ right outta my breastbone, right over my heart. I dug it out with a stick, and I buried one of my best friends—” His voice broke and he started to cry.

“Easy now, buddy,” the mayor soothed, looking again at his watch. Just a hint of fear colored his expression.

“Who—” Herb stopped and wiped a drip from under his nose and tears from the corners of his eyes. “Who’d you give the credit to?”

“Well… Uh… Let’s see. I— I don’t remember.”

Herb watched Riley’s eyes shift as he spoke and it all came clear. “It was you! You took the credit. You gave my kill to yourself. My kill made you an ace!”

“We figured you for a goner. You were missing for more than a week.” Ace sounded almost apologetic.

“It was nine days in hell!” Herb shouted, making the auditorium ring. Every conversation in the place stopped. “You son of a bitch! You lousy goddamn son of a bitch!” Things that had been a mystery to Herb for five years were suddenly in focus. A wave of nausea rolled through him. He’d had three shots of whiskey at the Anchor Bar while waiting to come here, but tonight three shots were not enough to keep the memories from rushing back, clattering through his mind like Jap machinegun bullets clattering through the Avenger.

Herb glared at Riley. “A guy once told me you hot-shot dive-bomber pilots got the glory by sending us Avenger airmen in first. You knew we’d go in low to drop our torpedoes and the Zeros would follow us down and shoot us up. That left you wide open to come in from above. I’m starting to think that guy was right. You sent us in to die while you got the glory.”

Ace nearly came out of his seat. “Don’t believe it. Going in low was your job. I only told you to do your job and you did it.”

“So why no credit for my kill?”

“Like I said,” Ace replied more quietly, leaning nearer again. “We thought you’d been killed. We’d already reported the kills by the time you crawled out of the jungle and got airlifted back to Cactus. Can you blame me for not wanting the trouble of telling brass we’d misreported kill credit? I could see you were too shot up to ever fly with us again, so I let it ride.”

“Let it ride, huh? My credit for a Jap kill. You let it ride? Credit that Joe and Frank died to get? I buried Frankie in the mud.” He sobbed and wiped at tears with the back of a wrist.

When Herb looked up again, Riley shrugged.

“You fucking piece of shit!” Herb shouted, silencing the buzz that had restarted in the crowd. “You’re up there with the mayor, getting awards when it was me and Joe and Frank getting shot to hell that got you one of the planes you claimed? You stayed above it all, and you’re still up there right now, looking down at me. But you’re not fit to shine the shoes of guys like Joe and Frank and me, the guys that really took those Japs down.”

Now Riley was on his feet, thumbing his chest pugnaciously. “I took down plenty of Japs myself. I would have made ace anyway!”

The mayor was up, beside Riley. He waved for someone in the wings. A cop appeared, followed quickly by another. Herb had no time to react before both cops were on him. One grabbed him by the coat collar while the other wrestled his arm up behind his back in a hammerlock. “Ow!” Herb cried. “Take it easy buddy. That arm’s full of flack.”

“Yeah,” mocked the first cop, whose ruddy fat face looked familiar. “Next you’re gonna say don’t punch me in the chest, ’cause my breastbone’s got a Jap Zero slug in it.”

“That’s damn right—” Herb began, but the second cop wrenched his arm higher and hissed in his ear. “We know who you are, buddy. We’ve had to take care of you a couple-a times lately.”

“You piece-a shit!” Herb bellowed at the first cop the way he’d bellowed at Ace Riley. He wrenched himself sideways, trying to break the second cop’s hammerlock, but that only made the guy twist his arm up higher and set the first cop on him too. They shoved him over backwards and came down heavily on top of him. When the back of his skull smacked down on the wooden floor, Herb saw a glaring flash of white light like he’d seen when the Avenger slammed into a giant banyan tree on New Georgia Island.

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Hopp and Woods

Hopp and Woods profileI was pretty pleased the other day when my son called from college. In fact, I’m usually pretty pleased when he calls, because as a 21 year old college junior he’s understandably too busy with many other things to get in touch with the old man—those other things being, you know, parties, being “of age,” going places and doing stuff, exploring all the things kids of his age explore, and um, what else? Oh, yeah, studying.

This call was about a biochemistry class he’s been taking. Seems they were studying computerized methods of analyzing protein structure (of what? you ask). Never mind what that means, it’s all so techno that even an old salty dog biochemist like I can get a bit lost in it. But what was cool was, he was doing his class exercises on his computer and stumbled across my name. Seems that his professor was using one of my old, published and patented scientific methods to teach new, young whippersnapper college biochemists how to analyze protein molecules.

It’s a technique I developed years ago that has spread around the world in laboratories analyzing dozens of different human diseases and conditions where a protein gone bad is the culprit. My method, most often called the Hopp and Woods Algorithm in recognition of my PhD thesis advisor and me, can figure out a lot about a particular molecule, like how it sticks to other molecules, how it is changed or degraded by other molecules, and on and on into a technological smorgasbord of possibilities too numerous to tell of here. Just as an example, the image above, called a Hopp and Woods Hydrophilicity Profile, shows, at its center, the identification of part of a protein called a histocompatibility antigen that plays a major role in kidney and heart transplant rejection. It starts to get pretty interesting when you realize people’s lives depend on getting answers to how such things happen, no matter how techno they may be.

The Hopp and Woods methodIf the foregoing wasn’t already too techno for you, then you might want to click on the image at left, the cover page of my original scientific paper on the subject, and follow the link to read all the gory details of my creation of the method. It was a heady time, when I first figured out how to spot the evilest parts of evil molecules like the influenza hemagglutinin (the molecule that allows flu bugs to get inside your body) or the hepatitis B virus surface antigen (the molecule you get immune to with a hepatitis B vaccine shot). As with some of my other discoveries, there was a bit of controversy surrounding this one, and you can read about that too if you’d like.

My scientific career has had its ups and downs but it’s nice to think that a scientific method I developed decades ago as a young whippersnapper biochemist myself, has become a standard teaching tool for up-and-coming biotechnologists of the future. It makes a fellow feel that his life in the sciences has stood for something, all said and done.

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Avenger Pilot Found!

Torpedo's Away!As I’ve posted here before, I’ve been researching the exploits of my uncle Herbert Albert Hopp during World War II, when he flew as the turret gunner in a Navy Grumman Avenger torpedo bomber. His plane was shot down while attacking a Japanese convoy in the Solomon Islands of the South Pacific in 1943.

I’d already identified his unit, Scouting Squadron VGS-12, out of Sand Point Naval Air Station in Seattle. However, I could find little to help me sort through the long list of names, several hundred men, to identify Herb’s two flight crew mates, who both perished from injuries suffered when the Avenger crashed in the jungles of New Georgia Island. What was needed was a stroke of luck to help me pare down the names until Herb’s unfortunate buddies where found. For the pilot, that day has come. His name was Ensign Richard N. Yeager of Longview Washington.

Here’s how I found him: while googling around for information, I stumbled upon a new listing for Herb that I hadn’t seen before, on a new website, Footnote.com. After sniffing around the site I decided it was worthwhile to pay their subscription fee and then download whatever records included Herb. In particular, something potentially useful turned up in some old, streaky, and dark microfiche pages Footnote obtained from the National Archives: a listing of all wounded soldiers and sailors taken aboard the USS Solace hospital ship on February 28, 1943, a date I knew from Herb’s medical records. He’d been transferred that day from Guadalcanal’s “Cactus” field hospital #3 to the Solace.

Sure enough, there was Herb’s name annotated with the comment, “VGS-12 T Sqd via Naval Base Hosp. #3.” In a listing of 348 injured men taken aboard that day (the battle for Guadalcanal was raging in its last throes then) I realized Herb’s pilot, who was rescued by Herb with the help of island natives but died after returning to the States, ought to be listed. I scanned through the long list and incredibly, only one other man was listed on that day for VGS-12. That was Ensign Yeager.

New Georgia Island greeting committee
Left: A friendly island native of the kind who canoed Herb and Richard Yeager back to safety in 1943 (okay, so this one doesn’t look too friendly — they were cannibals and headhunters, but dined on Japanese more than Americans in those days).

Finding Herb’s pilot is pretty big news because the more I learn about Herb and his crewmates, the more I am convinced they are war heroes and their story ought to make a good book or movie. Next steps include getting more information on Yeager to flesh out his life and the circumstances of his death. Several very interesting story elements are already in hand. I found a wedding announcement in the Seattle Times stating that he had married a Seattle girl, Kathleen Martha Finn, just days before he shipped out of San Diego for his fatal adventure. Then, oddly, an announcement of the birth of their daughter Susan Kathleen Yeager more than a year later in May of 1944! This strongly suggested that my old family story was in error about his death. However, when I googled after combat deaths in World War II, I found Yeager listed among the honored war dead for Cowlitz County, Washington, his home county.

It will take more research to get this all sorted out, but a blockbuster story is definitely in the offing. If you know of a handy Hollywood agent, maybe we should talk.

[Note added October 10, 2013: Well…..it wasn’t Yeager. He’s listed, not among war-dead, but among deceased veterans. He came home from the war and lived a long life. His presence on the evacuation ship on the same day as Herb was just a coincidence. So he’s the wrong guy. That’s the breaks in researching old information. On the other hand, I have finally identified Herb’s real crew-mates. They were pilot Joe Riddle, who died in the crash, and radioman Bill Owen, who survived the crash but didn’t make it home. More in future posts.]

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Now thatsa martini!

I was serving up one of my favorite martinis the other day and I decided to snap a photo. Pretty photogenic little potion, wouldn’t you say? With springtime finally showing up around here, what better way to celebrate than tip back a couple of Green Weenie Martinis?

I’ve written before about the ingredients and means of making this concoction invented by the lead character in my mystery stories, Peyton McKean, but nothing shows off its beauty better than a snapshot. Not only is it obviously the greenest drink you’ll find, but it’s the limey-est as well. Triple lime, including fresh squeezed lime juice, Rangpur gin and that hardest to find of ingredients, Green River Soda. I import that last ingredient from Chicago via the Internet. Hopefully some of you out there have closer sources, like the supermarket. I used to be able to find it around Seattle but my sources have dried up.

Anyway, you’ve probably noticed the odd garnish and realized by now that it’s the petit cornichon that gives this drink its name. No, petit cornichons are not frankfurters, they’re pickles. Floating at the bottom of the glass, one of these little cuties gives a pretty evocative expression of the name. Some folks add a pair of olives to really make the visual impression shout, but I personally think that’s taking things a little too far.

Do yourself a favor on a hot summer day. Try one of these. You’ll be refreshed. The recipe is here.

Disclaimer: You must be 21 or older to suck one of these down; pregnant or nursing women should think twice and maybe just try a little sip; excess consumption of Green Weenie Martinis may cause hilarity, social mayhem, and getting on your lips.

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