My newest book is almost here! Crash Harrison: Tales of a Bomber Pilot Who Defied Death will be released at the end of July, and I am SO EXCITED!
It's been 12 years since I wrote a full-size
book.
Since my last full-size book (Never Leave Your Wingman: Dionne and Graham Warner's
Story of Hope) was launched in June 2011, I have written
and published The
Sailor and the Christmas Trees (which is an
inspiring 48-page Christmas story) and pieces in seven other books about farming and aviation.
Writing and putting together this 176-page Crash Harrison book, however, has been its own unique and interesting
journey.
The story is about Reginald "Crash"
Harrison, a 100-year-old gentleman in Saskatoon who was a bomber pilot during
the Second World War. He's had many fascinating adventures, including surviving
several crashes and close calls, and has made some lifelong connections because
of his time as a Second World War bomber pilot.
The printed proof of Crash Harrison arrived last week, and I am still a little overwhelmed by the reality of it all. The book is being printed! It will be here in late July! |
Reg is a gentle, kind man. He doesn’t consider himself to be a hero. That alone makes him more worthy of the honour than most. For the first Flight book, I wrote about Reg’s wartime adventures and a little about his life after the war. Over the last couple of years, as I was contemplating which book I would write next and who it would be about, I couldn’t get Reg and his life story out of my mind. I knew I had to write his story and share it with a wider audience.
We spent many hours talking in person and on the phone, adding more details to my first interviews about his wartime and after-the-war activities. We also talked in depth about his growing-up years on the Prairies and what it was like to walk three miles to school, herd cattle in the dust storms of the Dirty Thirties in Saskatchewan, and do homework by the dim light of a coal oil lamp. He told me about the first airplane ride he ever took – as a teenager – and how he paid for that flight with weasel skins, how his parents kept their family fed during the Great Depression, and how he was never scared while doing his job as a bomber pilot.
Reg became one of the few Canadians in the famed “Guinea Pig Club” after receiving reconstructive skin graft surgery during the war. And he was named an “Honorary Snowbird” by the renowned Canadian Forces’ Snowbirds aerobatics display team, which flies under the same squadron number as Reg served during the war.
I wrote the book
in Reg’s voice, as thought he is telling his own story.
The book is
educational, with captivating tales of Reg’s adventures and his life. I am
certain that Crash Harrison: Tales of a Bomber Pilot Who Defied Death
will be enjoyed by readers from teens to seniors and I’m looking
forward to launching it this summer and sharing it with all of you in the days and
months ahead.