Sneak Peek

Dear Reader,

This blog is all about seeking fresh meanings in our common past. It says so in the tagline.

I also seek fresh meanings in our common past by writing fiction. Two historical novels have resulted: The Price of Passage, set in the Civil War era, and Izzy Strikes Gold!, set in the 1950s. My current work-in-progress is a World War II novel. 

Ant in amber. Photo © Anders L. Damgaard, http://www.amber-inclusions.dk/, licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0

But there will also  be a memoir, I hope—a memoir of four years as an enlisted man in the United States Air Force. It was the Vietnam era. We were voice intercept operators, eavesdropping on Chinese air force and civil air transport radio communications.

A memoir is non-fiction, but these days the best memoirs employ writing styles like those of fiction. So the difference between this memoir and my historical novels is that nothing in the memoir is made up. The events are real, fixed in my memory like ancient insects preserved in amber. 

Long ago, in a galaxy far away, the local movie house would sometimes hold a “SNEAK PREVIEW!!” The caps and double-bang were essential parts of the phrase. Sneak previews were a marketing ploy, meant to boost attendance when the full movie came to town.

Here is a SNEAK PREVIEW!! of my sooner-or-later-forthcoming military memoir:

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09 DEC 65

Forty boys, age eighteen and up, stand in four lines in a small room. At twenty, I may be the oldest boy.

Bare fluorescent tubes shine down on yellow-green walls. A man in a blue uniform stands at the front of the room. He points to a sign where the words of the oath are printed in large block letters. “Raise your right hands and repeat after me,” he says.

I . . . do solemnly swear, or affirm . . .  

Swear or affirm, who cares? I wish I were somewhere else. 

. . . defend the Constitution of the United States . . .

Defend America, shoulder-to-shoulder with these other sweaty guys? I’ve got to do it. No other choice.

. . . obey the orders of the President . . . and . . . the officers appointed over me . . .” 

That’s my new plan, the only one available.

. . . according to regulations and the Uniform Code of Military Justice, so help me God. . . . Lower your hands,” says the man in blue. “Take one step forward.”

We drop our hands. We step forward.

“Welcome to the United States Air Force.”

Plan B.

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They dispatched us in groups of six. One member in each group of motley adolescents was given the airline tickets for all six. 

We had time to kill at the airport, Billy Mitchell Field. We were to stay together, so we would all be at the gate when the one boy turned in the tickets. 

Of course, I was the one the government chose to hold the tickets. 

“Why don’t you just give us all our tickets?” said Truesdale, a big, assertive guy. “That’ll be simpler.” 

“We—uh, we’d better do it the way they said,” I stammered. 

I didn’t want to get on the wrong side of a dominant guy like Truesdale. Fear was native to my soul. I came into the Air Force pre-intimidated.

Minadeo, a round guy with a crewcut, solved my problem. “Look,” he said. “Pinballs!”

By luck or providence, we had plenty of dimes. We spent forty-five minutes playing the machines on the upper concourse of General Billy Mitchell’s airport. In the bliss of bouncing balls, flashing lights, and bumping bumpers, Truesdale forgot about the tickets. 

We all got on the plane together.

I had flown twice, both times in small planes, rigid with fear while dangled in a frail airframe a thousand feet above cornfields. Braniff Airlines was a whole different matter. Our DC-8 was sleek, well-upholstered, large, and fast. It flew high—miles above the corn, even above the clouds. 

Stewardesses in svelte designer outfits brought us supper, then coffee. 

Night had fallen. I looked down and watched the lights of Illinois and Missouri towns slide under our wings. Here is your new life, Mister Air Force Guy: Serene. Sophisticated. Not so bad after all.

At Abilene, we changed to a propeller-driven Lockheed Electra. The Texas plains were larded with storm clouds, which the Electra could not get above. We bounced and jounced.

I threw up in a paper bag.

More than once. Same bag. 

When we arrived in San Antonio, they lined us up under an awning. It was past midnight. The rain had stopped, but the air was heavy. We sat on the concrete and waited in the dark, all forty of us. 

My stomach started to settle, but I was out of sorts. I had been treated rudely by the airplane. I wondered who to report it to.

After forty minutes, a dark school bus pulled up. We all got on.

The bus trundled down the road. It stopped at a gate. Guards waved us through. We drove down empty streets on Lackland Air Force Base, past dark buildings, and lurched to a stop. 

The driver opened the door. A tall, straight-standing dark man stepped up into the bus. He stood on the lowest step yet still towered over us. He wore a light tan uniform and a white hat with a black visor. 

In this black night, he wore dark glasses. How could he see? 

He stared straight at me. I could not see his eyes, but it must have been me he was staring at. The other thirty-nine guys might have thought it was them.

A flash of insight told me this man would not be the officer to receive my complaint, apologize on behalf of the U.S. Government, and cheerfully rectify the error.

“Get off the bus,” he said.

#

Your New Favorite Writer has posted another possible chapter, from later in the book, here . And if you have oodles of time, and a great thirst for knowledge of the era, you can find a 94-minute oral history interview here.

I hope that when at last my full memoir is published, you’ll rush out and buy it. You have my assurance it will be indispensable.

Blessings,

Larry F. Sommers

Your New Favorite Writer

First Lady of the Air

She survived the Spanish Flu of 1918 but was left with a sinus condition that plagued her for the rest of her life. 

Her sinuses did not stop her, however, from becoming the first woman to make a nonstop solo flight across the Atlantic Ocean, an act for which Congress awarded her the Distinguished Flying Cross.

Lindbergh. Public Domain.
Earhart. Public Domain.

With her strong physical likeness to Charles Lindbergh, she became “Lady Lindy” to the headline writers of the Fourth Estate—or “Queen of the Air,” dubbed so by the United Press wire service. 

She and navigator Fred Noonan went missing over the Pacific Ocean in July 1937, prompting a search of unprecedented scale. But the search came up empty. 

Rumors of her fate still tease us, almost ninety years later.

Amelia’s Early Life

Amelia Mary Earhart was born in Acheson, Kansas, in 1897 and grew up there and in Des Moines, Iowa. She and her younger sister, Muriel, got an unconventional upbringing, as their mother had no desire to raise “nice little ladies.” 

Amelia—nicknamed “Meeley” or “Millie”—sought out adventure and achievement. A voracious reader drawn to science and mechanics, she took charge of her own education. When her family moved to Chicago, she rejected the high school closest to home and instead went to Hyde Park High School, which had the best science program. 

According to Wikipedia, “she kept a scrapbook of newspaper clippings about successful women in predominantly male-oriented fields, including film direction and production, law, advertising, management, and mechanical engineering.” 

She continually sought advancement in fields then dominated by men. After stints as a nurse’s aide, a pre-med student, a photographer, truck driver, and stenographer, she took seriously to flying. In 1921, after twelve hours of flight instruction from female aviator Neta Snook, Amelia cropped her hair short and bought a leather flying coat. Almost as soon as she took up flying, she drew up plans for an organization of female aviators. 

Neta Snook, the Kinner Airster, and a young Amelia. Public Domain.

Her life became a blur of flying, coupled with nonstop promotion of flight in general and flight by women in particular. She went ahead and started her dreamed-of female fliers’ group, which came to be known as The Ninety-nines and today has 6,500 members.

Amelia and Putnam at home.

She had a gift for promotion. Merely flying the Atlantic as a passenger in a plane flown by pilot Wilmer Stultz was enough to merit a ticker tape parade in Manhattan, followed by a reception with President Calvin Coolidge at the White House. Publisher George Putnam sponsored a promotional campaign which included publishing a book she authored, arranging a series of lecture tours, and using her likeness in various product advertisements. Putnam, her senior by a decade, proposed marriage six times and eventually became her husband.

In 1932, she made her own solo crossing of the Atlantic in a Lockheed Vega 5B. 

She continued to push for the acceptance of women in all aviation-related roles, from passengers to pilots and engineers. She flew in air races, served as an official of the National Aeronautic Association, and set a world altitude record of 18,415 feet at the controls of a Pitcairn PCA-2 autogyro.

In 1935 she joined Purdue University “as a visiting faculty member to counsel women on careers and as a technical advisor to its Department of Aeronautics.” In that same year she began to promote “one flight which I most wanted to attempt—a circumnavigation of the globe as near its waistline as could be.” 

Circumnavigation

It took a couple of years to get the project together. In 1936, with financing from Purdue, she acquired a custom-built Lockheed Electra 10E, a twin-engined monoplane, its fuselage modified to accommodate many additional fuel tanks. 

Earhart’s Lockheed Electra. Public Domain.

She chose Captain Harry Manning to accompany her on the round-the-world flight as navigator. Later, with reservations about Manning’s navigating skills, Amelia replaced him with Fred Noonan, a licensed ship’s captain and experienced marine and airline navigator. He had recently left the employ of Pan American Airlines, having laid out and pioneered most of Pan Am’s routes for flying boat service across the Pacific, as well as training the other navigators who would fly those routes regularly.

Amelia Earhart and Fred Noonan. Public Domain.

After her first attempt, flying east to west, failed due to an accident on the ground in Honolulu, Earhart had the plane repaired and then took off with Noonan, this time flying west to east. They flew from Miami and after a month-long series of hops across South America, Africa, the Indian subcontinent and Southeast Asia, arrived at Lae, New Guinea, on June 29, 1937.

They departed from Lae on July 2, bound for Howland Island in the mid-South Pacific, some 2,500 miles away—the longest leg of the journey. The flight was expected to take about twenty hours and would use up most of the plane’s 1,100 gallons of aviation gasoline, leaving little room for navigational error.

Earhart and Noonan’s planned route, mapped by SnowFire , illustration licensed under CC BY 4.0.
USCGC Itasca. Public Domain

Besides Noonan’s vaunted skill at celestial navigation using a nautical sextant, there was a provision for radio navigation, based on a homing signal from the U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Itasca, which was parked off Howland Island for that precise purpose. 

At the expected arrival time, the Itasca heard Earhart’s voice in a loud, clear signal indicating she was nearby, but two-way communication could not be established. She stated she could not find the radio homing signal.

O3U-3 Corsair biplane. Public Domain.

An hour after Amelia’s last message was received, Itasca began to search north and west of the island, assuming the plane had gone down in the ocean nearby. They found nothing. Over the next three days the U.S. Navy sent other assets to the search area, finally dispatching the battleship Colorado from Hawaii, where it had been in the middle of a summer training cruise for Naval ROTC students from Washington and California. The Colorado’s three O3U-3 biplanes flew search patterns around Howland Island. They also searched the Phoenix Islands south of Howland Island, focusing on Gardner Island (now called Nikumaroro). 

Nothing was found. 

The official search ended July 19, just five days short of Amelia’s fortieth birthday. After the Navy called off the search, her husband, George Putnam, ordered further searches with chartered boats. A year and a half after her last radio call, Amelia Earhart was declared legally dead. 

And So?

There are half a million theories on what went wrong. The most prominent ones are summarized at great length by Wikipedia. What it all boils down to is . . . nobody knows.

The most recent lead comes from Deep Sea Vision, a Charleston, South Carolina company that operates unmanned underwater vehicles. Early this year, their underwater drone captured a plane-like image of the right size on the sea floor about 16,000 feet underwater, in the ocean near Howland Island. But another expedition will be required to corroborate or invalidate the find. 

For now, pending new updates, she remains in that role, as apostrophized in song by Red River Dave McEnery: “Farewell, First Lady of the Air.”  

Blessings,

Larry F. Sommers

Your New Favorite Writer