Unusual derecho storm swept across Chesapeake region

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A massive tree that came down during the June 29, 2012 derecho weather event in Maryland.

From Chapter 17 of Great Storms of the Chesapeake

Derecho is a weather term one doesn’t hear much in the Chesapeake Bay region. But after the great wind storm of June 29, 2012, it’s a word no one will forget anytime soon.

According to weather experts, a derecho is a term coined in the 1880s to describe a peculiar weather phenomenon that produces a wall of wind and storm—some have described it as a hurricane over land.

While other areas of the country do experience a derecho-type storm at least once a year, it’s very rare in the Chesapeake region. The one that struck in 2012 actually originated in the midwest and charged all the way to the Atlantic in just about six hours. This was a vast, powerful storm that stretched across a front of about 240 miles. Experts say it was probably a long stretch of really hot weather that triggered this derecho.

Just before midnight, storm warnings were quickly posted online for the Maryland area of a storm with winds of up to 80 mph. This seemed incredible to local weather watchers, and there was a relatively short time to batten down the hatches before the storm arrived.

Many who were up that Friday night and watched the storm come in later expressed awe at the constant lightning, almost like strobe lights wielded by giants. Then came a wall of wind and heavy rain, threaded through by lightning. Some headed for their basements because the roar of the wind reminded them of a tornado. They were not far wrong.

The derecho produced powerful straight-line winds that approached tornado speed. Gusts of 60, 70, and 80 mph roared across Virginia, D.C., Baltimore, Chesapeake Bay and the Delmarva Peninsula. Winds measured 66 mph at the Chesapeake Bay Bridge Tunnel. A buoy in the upper Chesapeake Bay with a private weather station reportedly clocked a single wind gust of more than 100 across open water. It seems hard to fathom until one saw the wind damage. Trees came down everywhere, crushing cars, downing power lines and falling on houses. Millions in the mid-Atlantic region lost power and some had no electricity for days.

A handful of people died as a result of the derecho in the Chesapeake region when they were killed by falling trees. One man perished when his boat capsized in the bay at the height of the storm.

A radar view of the derecho hitting Maryland, courtesy of the National Storm Center.

In his weather blog for the Washington Post, meteorologist Jason Samenow wrote, “This derecho event is likely to go down as not only one of the worst on record in Washington, D.C. but also along its entire path stretching back to northern Indiana.”

In the wake of the derecho, it was generally agreed that this storm caused more damage than a hurricane—usually the most-feared storm in the Chesapeake region. In the annals of the Chesapeake’s Great Storms, it was the most recent entry in a list going back four centuries.

Storm damage in Baltimore County. Photo by Anne Lindenbaum Hoffman.

 

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Happy Independence Day!

Happy Independence Day!

A few words from Francis Scott Key, spoken on the Fourth of July nearly 200 years ago.

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Great Expectations, even greater characters

Click the image for an exciting recorded presentation!

What a sense of accomplishment! I finally finished reading “Great Expectations” by Charles Dickens (just in time to lead a book discussion on it, I might add). I have to admit that when I first started reading this long novel I had second thoughts about what I’d gotten myself (and our book group) into. When I first met Pip he was in a foggy graveyard being accosted by a convict. The convict’s dialect was hard to follow. It seemed very much like an old English novel … with the pages ahead of me stretching bleak as the marshes Pip described.

I had picked the book because it seemed like it was about time to read a classic. Most of the books for the group are more contemporary. Our last pick was “The Art of Racing in the Rain” by Garth Stein.

This being the 200th anniversary year of Dickens’ birth, this author seemed like a good choice for a classic novel. Charles Dickens was something of the James Patterson of his day, but his work has endured.

After a brief polling of fellow readers, most suggested reading David Copperfield …. but it’s such a huge book. “Great Expectations” seemed more manageable in terms of the time commitment.

That opening scene in the graveyard was off-putting to me as a reader, but I pressed on. Then something wonderful happened. Almost immediately, I was drawn into the book by the character of Pip … and also by the wry sense of humor throughout. This was a funny book. And did I mention the descriptions of everything from Pip’s house to the characters? They were just amazing.

One of our book group members shared an interview with John Irving that appeared recently in the New York Times in which he said reading “Great Expectations” was one of his most memorable experiences because Dickens’ descriptions had transported him right into the pages. How very true.

The book also has such a contemporary feel that it’s hard to believe it was published in 1861. Americans were in the throes of the Civil War with a president who had grown up in a log cabin, and here’s Dickens describing the refined life of an English gentleman in London. How vastly different those two cultures were at that time. Again and again, it’s clear what an old society he was writing about, with its class system and debtor’s prison.

Finally, I might just mention how much I loved the names in Dickens. Pip. Mrs. Joe. Pumblechook. Orlick. Mr. Jaggers. Wemmick. And of course, Miss Haversham. The author has created these utterly memorable characters we can enjoy 150 years later.

If we get another dog or cat, let’s just say he’s going to be named Wemmick or Pumblechook (Pumble for short).

I don’t know that I’m going to charge off and read another Charles Dickens novel just yet like a literary Don Quixote, albeit armed with a Kindle. I plan on savoring the echo of this novel for a while … while I polish off a nice, light M.C. Beaton mystery.

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How to market a bestseller in five easy steps … sort of

It’s always a puzzle how some writers hit the big time, and others struggle to be noticed.  That’s about to change for you, my literary friend, with these five easy tips for how to market your way to the best-seller list!

Step 1. Who are you? A best-selling writer needs a strong identify. Adopt a pen name so that you will share shelf space in book stores and libraries with best-selling authors. Then, when readers have run through all the Stephen King, they can run right into the books by … James Kingston! It helps to be writing in the same genre, so if you pen adventure stories consider writing under the name Robert Custer—you’ll be right next to the Clive Cussler!

Step 2. Whoever first said that you can’t judge a book by its cover was completely right … and so completely wrong. A cover says a lot about the content of one’s book and can send subliminal messages to readers. If you have any say in the matter, be sure to go with a bold color—red is best if you’ve written a thriller. Why? Walk through the shelves of your bookstore or library and notice the colors of books by Daniel Silva, Tom Clancy, and other “name brands.” Red gets read.

Step 3. Make sure your main character is a vampire … or a werewolf … or a mermaid. One would think this trend had run its course, but readers never seem to tire of blood-sucking vamps or various mythical creatures. Can’t seem to successfully pitch that bake shop mystery that features recipes for blueberry muffins? Time to “raise the stakes” and re-write it as a bake shop vampire mystery with recipes for red velvet cake. Look out, Charlaine Harris! Another recent variation is to write books about trolls and faeries, and while it’s true that some people do choose to read about trolls and faeries, just as some people choose to drive a Prius, give us a good-ol’ bloodsucker any day instead.

Step 4. The title can also make a big difference. Again, the motto here should be “don’t mess with success.” My recommendation is to go with a title that contains the word “daughter” or “wife.” If you check the best-seller list, you can see that other authors have had a great deal of success with titles such as “Ahab’s Wife,” “The Beekeeper’s Daughter,” “American Wife,” and so on. There’s room for more! This is a crowded field, but there is always a way to be creative. “The Wal-Mart Greeter’s Wife” or “The Stamp Collector’s Daughter” aren’t taken yet, for example, and you may have them for free. BONUS: Give your book a title along the lines of “The Cheesemaker’s Wife’s Daughter” for added sales. With luck, your wife’s daughter’s step-sister’s aunt’s best friend may just give it a good review on amazon.com!

Step 5. Finally, this last bit of advice overlaps somewhat with tip number five, but let’s just make it very clear that you can’t go wrong to title your book “Fifty Shades of (fill in the blank here)” or similar variations. Throw in a few lurid sex scenes  and you’ve nailed it, so to speak. (Just make sure your mom doesn’t get her hands on a copy.)

There you go, valuable free advice on writing a bestseller. Take it for what what it’s worth, which isn’t much! And make this the summer the best-seller list happens for you!

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An 1812 Goodreads giveaway!

 

Click on the photo for a handy way to enter.

If you are a Goodreads fan, be sure to mosey on over and enter the giveaway for a signed copy of 1812: Rediscovering Chesapeake Bay’s Forgotten War.

 

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Finding good photos for history books is challenging

A postcard of the moonlit Baltimore wharves in the early 1900s, courtesy of The Historical Society of Cecil County.

There’s something about finding good images for history books like GREAT STORMS OF THE CHESAPEAKE or DELMARVA LEGENDS AND LORE that requires a totally different thinking process from the actual writing and research for the writing. I find that writing these books draws a lot on storytelling—being able to take historical facts (or sometimes the whiff of historical fact … let’s call it myth) and sharing it in a way that is entertaining and informative.

 

Images are much more straightforward. There is no interpreting them for the reader, who is perfectly capable of seeing them and drawing his or her own conclusion—with a little help from the image caption. That’s why it’s important to have great images in these books because they must stand on their on. And finding the best images takes a lot of detective work.

 

It also takes enormous amounts of time digging through files of photos, old books, or trolling the internet. What’s available online remains limited, but it’s far more accessible and efficient. But hours and hours of late night research might turn up one or two useful images.

 

For the uninitiated, there can be a shock value in the cost of obtaining a good picture. Some archives and small museums are quite reasonable, but others are outrageously expensive. It’s hard to fathom at times. The Maryland Historical Society has such steep fees that most authors now steer clear of even bothering with them. Recently, after a great deal of research and preliminary expense in obtaining copies of the images, I had to pass on two nice images from the Associated Press because the rights to use the photos would have been more than $300. Mind you, that was for the publication rights alone because I already had good copies of the photos taken back in 1972.

 

It’s all a treasure hunt. I’m glad to say that I found some really nice images for the Delmarva Legends book and for the upcoming Great Storms, mainly thanks to the help of some wonderful local history buffs, artists and amateur photographers. I can’t thank them enough.

 

We are in the process now of getting the images ready for the Great Storms book. There are 68 images and I think readers will really enjoy them as they dip into the history of the Chesapeake Bay’s legendary hurricanes, blizzards, fogs and freezes.

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Visit to Dachau prompted idea for Time Reich novel

It’s hard to say where stories come from. But I do know how Time Reich got its start. The first catalyst was a trip I took to Germany back in 1991. I was there to visit friends, but they worked, so during the weekdays I saw the sights courtesy of a Eurail pass and Youth Hostels. My favorite city turned out to be Munich—beautiful and friendly, there was a party every night at the beer halls. One day I decided to take the S-bahn out to Dachau to visit the infamous concentration camp. There was no particular reason other than that I’ve always been a history buff, and that was one of the few World War II-related sites I had come across. For the most part, though the memory of the war was still fresh, there was little in Germany to acknowledge the war had even taken place.

It was a cold, raw day. The camp was basically being allowed to fall into ruin, but there was a good museum and interpretive center to tell the sad story of what took place there. The weedy grounds and crumbling brick buildings made quite an impression and, needless to say, my writer’s imagination went right to work.

The second impetus for Time Reich came years before that trip, when the wonderful author William Styron visited our college campus. His book “Sophie’s Choice” had come out not long before. He told us how he had become obsessed with the idea of writing a holocaust book and flew to Poland to visit Auschwitz. The idea for his iconic character grew out of that trip.

Yes later, visiting Dachau, I understood what Styron meant about the power of place. But there would be a final catalyst for Time Reich in the form of news articles about some of the last Nazi war criminals being brought to trial. Working as a news editor at a newspaper, these stories would come across the Associated Press wire (in those days there was still a wire, rather than the Internet). There was a flood of arrests in the 90s brought on by the fall of the Iron Curtain because old war records were suddenly made available from many of the Slavic countries that had fallen under Communist rule. It was captivating that more than one former camp guard who had been living in obscurity, maybe working a factory job in one of the Rust Belt cities in America, had finally been found out when this windfall of wartime records revealed his true identity.

Some additional research into the Office of Special Investigations and the help of an agent I interviewed helped me understand OSI’s role in bringing war criminals to justice. Thus, OSI agent Kate Crockett was born.

All these pieces of a story had been floating around, and now page by page, scene by scene, Time Reich came together. Ultimately, there would be a lot of changes, a lot of revision, a lot of putting this story down and coming back to it later. In some ways it’s a story that has been twenty years in the making, but it’s been worth the wait.

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Chesapeake Writers’ Workshop to help writers get writing

If this were a chapter in a book, we’d begin with a character. Let’s call him Warner. He’d like to write a novel—or a short story or a memoir—if he could only find the time and figure out how to get beyond the first three chapters. He has a lot of good ideas and loves to write.

Imagine our new friend Warner, scruffy, wearing fuzzy slippers because it’s Saturday, maybe he’s still in his pajamas, pouring a second cup of coffee and then visiting the library website to discover just what he’s been looking for to help him write his book … the Chesapeake Writers’ Workshop.

Next stop for Warner, the bestseller list!

If you are like Warner and don’t know where to begin, or if you have a few chapters written of your novel or memoir, or you’ve written a short story or some poems, this upcoming writers’ workshop is for you.

We’ll be meeting monthly to share our work and to take part in the occasional writing exercise to keep the creative juices flowing.

In a workshop, writers come together to share their work in a positive setting. Participants will read other workshop participants’ writing in advance, and then come to offer constructive feedback. A writing workshop is a judgment-free zone in that the goal is to build on our strengths and work together to improve one another’s writing. Typically, we go around the table and focus on one person’s work at a time.

A workshop can be helpful on many levels. First, there’s honest feedback about one’s writing from other writers. Second, it helps to have a deadline as motivation to get writing done in time for the next workshop. Third, there will be coffee and cookies.

The most important aspect of a writers’ workshop is that it helps to build a sense of community. It’s good to know you are not the only one motivated to put words on paper. That community can help you become more comfortable with your own writing. It’s a place to share your own enthusiasm for writing, discuss your favorite writers, and share tips.

The first Chesapeake Writers’ Workshop will be held at 1 p.m. Tuesday, June 19 at the Chesapeake City Branch Library. From then on, we’ll be meeting on a regular basis to share our work.  At future workshops, you are welcome to bring another chapter from the same work, or share something new.  This is a free workshop offered by the Cecil County (Maryland) Public Library and moderated by David Healey. You can sign up here.

That first day, we’ll be getting acquainted and taking part in a writing exercise. Bring your passion for writing and your good ideas. Fuzzy slippers optional.

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Why book reviews are like Cool Whip

A penny for your thoughts …

My daughter turned the tables on me one night last week at dinner time. We are very traditional about dinner at our house—we all come together, cook and eat a real meal, turn off the TV and turn on some music. Then we sit around and chat about our day, the fall of the Roman Empire, Mitt Romney’s disturbing teen-age thuggery, or that Cool Whip is tasty but kind of weird. In other words, we have a conversation. It’s my favorite time of day.

Daughter informed me that in her spare time at school she had been “googling me” and came across the reviews of my books at Amazon. Most were positive, and some were not. How could two people read the same book and have a completely different experience? I guess a book review is like Cool Whip—some people love it, some hate it.  Like that non-dairy dessert topping, books inspire strong opinions.

And it’s a little weird to read a review. The thought of someone you don’t know, reading something you’ve written, and then posting what they thought of it is a little strange.

As a longtime newspaper editor and reporter, I’m used to “feedback” in one form or another. Sometimes it was an angry phone call or the appearance of an irate person at the newspaper. Other times, happy readers sent a note or homemade cookies. At the newspaper, however, one could step back from a story. There wasn’t a great deal of emotional attachment because we were reporting on something, not dreaming up a story out of our imaginations.

A book reveals a bit of one’s soul. Many people are very kind with their reviews on Amazon, Barnes and Noble and Good Reads. It’s hard not to take it personally when someone posts a negative review. My mind knows better than that, but not always my heart. At the same time, I try to learn from the honest comments and complaints, even if they have that same greasy aftertaste as Cool Whip.

People have always had opinions about products, books, music and the news. We now live in an age when it’s very easy to share our opinions with the world. In this interactive age, writers need to have a thick skin.

So here’s an invitation … if you’ve read one of my books, please write a review of it over at Amazon or B&N or Good Reads. Your feedback is appreciated! It might even be the stuff of dinnertime conversation.

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Meteorologist Bernadette Woods plans to write introduction for Great Storms of the Chesapeake

I’m very excited to announce that Emmy Award-winning meteorologist Bernadette Woods has graciously accepted the invitation to write an introduction for GREAT STORMS OF THE CHESAPEAKE. Ms. Woods of Baltimore’s WJZ Channel 13 now has the (rough!) draft and is looking it over. I’m hoping she will share some of her own weather stories as we introduce readers to the legendary hurricanes, blizzards, fogs and freezes of the Chesapeake Bay region.

For me, as someone who has been delving strictly into weather history for this book, I think it’s going to be pretty cool to include the perspective of a professional meteorologist who presents the “here and now” of the weather on a daily basis. This is going to be a fun book for anyone who loves local history, and having a contemporary weather forecaster comment adds a great perspective.

It’s very kind of Ms. Woods to be so generous with her time. Writing an introduction isn’t always so easy. I know, because I’ve had some experience writing introductions. A few years ago I was asked to write one for Robert Hazel’s wonderful book, The Chesapeake and Delaware Canal: Chronicles of Early Life in Towns Along the Historic Waterway.

Writing that here, the title sounds a bit dry, but the book itself is actually full of lively first-person accounts. It’s a wonderful example of what I would call journalistic history … actually going out and capturing through interviews memories and events that might otherwise fade into the past.

I was honored to be asked to write the introduction, but also a bit daunted. Bob is a retired English teacher and great writer, a thorough researcher, and has lived almost within sight of the canal all his life. How could I possibly add anything of value to what he had written? Let’s just say I did the best I could in the shadow of Bob’s own words.

Here’s a bit about Bernadette Woods from the WJZ website: “Meteorologist Bernadette Woods graduated from Penn State University with a B.S. degree in meteorology. She furthered her studies at L’Universite des Sciences Humaines in Strasbourg, France.

Bernadette launched her career at AccuWeather, piloting a daily streaming weather video segment and forecasting for hundreds of media clients throughout the U.S.

Bernadette then moved into television, where she has been involved in some extreme weather, in particular, keeping viewers informed during record-breaking severe weather outbreaks in both Fayetteville, Arkansas and Lexington, Kentucky.

Bernadette received a 2006 Emmy Award for Best Weathercaster.

Community connection is important to Bernadette, who participates in several groups and causes, particularly Meals on Wheels of Central Maryland. She also visits numerous schools, speaking with kids about the world of weather.”

I’m sure whatever Ms. Woods writes will be a wonderful introduction to 400 years of “stormy” Chesapeake history!

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