If the Northwest Passage series was chaos, the American Journey series was order. For the first time as an author, I brought rhyme and reason to a collection of books. I built a series the right way.
I did so by tying five very different stories to a single protagonist, a secretive, personable physics professor named Geoffrey Bell. From 2015 to 2017, I wrapped a saga around a person and a portal.
The person was Bell, a childless, 52-year-old academic who looked and acted like Gene Wilder's Willy Wonka. The portal was a chamber in Bell's Los Angeles mansion, a subterranean passage that led from the basement to the backyard and became a wonder when activated by crystals.
Starting and ending the series in California was a deliberate decision. Though four of the books are mostly set in Texas, New Jersey, Indiana, and Tennessee, I wanted all to have ties to the Golden State. I wanted to retain possibilities and West Coast storylines I had worked out long in advance. Though my characters wander across America in the 20th and 21st centuries, they inevitably return to Los Angeles.
Jeanette Bell, Geoffrey's wife, also plays a key role. She softens her husband's rough edges, embraces the many travelers who access the time portal, and guides her spouse when his health fails at the end.
Building on the example I set in Wallace, Idaho, when writing The Fire, I made research pilgrimages to four settings in the American Journey series. I visited Galveston, Princeton, Evansville, and Chattanooga and gathered much from each trip. I learned about the fifth setting — Pasadena, California — through movies, books, and websites.
Here is a candid look at my second series. As with last week's Northwest Passage retrospective, beware of occasional spoilers.
SEPTEMBER SKY (2015): My sixth novel features a big story and a small one. The big story is the 1900 Galveston hurricane. The small one is the evolving relationships between reporter Chuck Townsend; his college dropout son, Justin; and the people they meet in the past.
I wrote September Sky with "epic" in mind. From the first page to the last, I wanted to overwhelm readers with history, suspense, storylines, thrills, and characters they would long remember. I aimed for lasting impact.
I started with a good foundation. As many know, the Galveston hurricane was more than a storm. It was a tempest that killed at least 8,000 people and nearly wiped a city of 40,000 off the map. That said, the characters, especially the secondary ones, carry the novel. Charlotte Emerson and Emily Beck, the Townsends' librarian love interests, bring spirit and compelling life stories. Wyatt Fitzpatrick, Chuck’s distant ancestor, shows grit and savvy as an innocent tycoon accused of murdering a lover.
When I visited Galveston in 2014, I saw reminders of the hurricane, including a massive seawall that stretches ten miles on the Gulf side of the island. Workers raised the city itself up to 17 feet in the years following the storm. Museums, memorials, and surviving structures still tell the tale of the natural disaster, one of many in my novels.
Favorite Quote: This passage, the beginning of Chapter 77, is perhaps the best I've ever written. It summarizes Emily's situation to a T.
Emily took a swig and passed the bottle to her mother. She didn't like whiskey. She didn't like the taste or the smell or what it did to men on a Saturday night. But when you rode out a hurricane with your parents in a dead woman's bedroom, you learned to like a lot of things.
MERCER STREET (2015): Speaking of violent weather, I finished Mercer Street on the "dark and stormy night" of July 4, 2015, and honed it in the aftermath of Hurricane Joaquin, which caused serious flooding in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, where I vacationed that October.
Of course, Susan Peterson, mother Elizabeth, and daughter Amanda walk into a bigger storm when they travel to New Jersey in the deceptively quiet months before World War II. Though the ladies find love, adventure, and purpose, they also find intrigue and danger.
Like September Sky, Mercer Street offers readers a feast. Set mostly in Princeton in 1938 and 1939, it gives them Albert Einstein, Orson Welles, The Wizard of Oz, the New York World's Fair, Eleanor Roosevelt, admirals, diplomats, college life, and young men with Nazi ties. I loved writing about The War of the Worlds broadcast, the fair, and the doddering genius who set the world of physics on fire.
I needed 294 days to produce Mercer Street, second only to September Sky's 307. When I finally released the book on October 22, 2015, I did so not at home, as with my other books, but rather at a Starbucks in Huntsville, Alabama. Daughter Amy proofed the last chapter and gave me a final okay and a hot coffee. It was publishing in the digital age.
Favorite Quote: In Chapter 51, Amanda Peterson assesses an unexpected breakfast guest, her grandmother's newest friend.
Amanda watched Einstein sit down and then pulled up a chair opposite him at the table for four. She took a moment to study the man and found him to be exactly as advertised – disheveled, uncombed, and a little distracted. He wore a shaggy blue sweater, baggy gray pants, and hair that wouldn't quit. Even at age sixty, he looked like his caricature.
INDIANA BELLE (2016): As an author, I like natural disasters. I have written about the 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens, the Big Burn of 1910, the 1900 Galveston hurricane, the 1889 Johnstown flood, the 1918 Cloquet fire, and the 1906 San Francisco earthquake.
In Indiana Belle, I gave the 1925 Tri-State tornado its due. I began my third-shortest book with a storm system that killed 800 people, injured 2300, and turned large parts of Missouri, Illinois, and Indiana into kindling.
Then I ventured into the world of flappers, bootleggers, and the KKK and sent two characters to a distant, Orwellian future. I dove into mystery, intrigue, and hard science fiction. I also set a story from coast to coast, expanded Professor Bell's personal story, and used a photo of a real person on my stock-art cover. I gave graduate student Cameron Coelho and society editor Candice Bell a ride to remember. In countless, creative ways, I broke new ground.
I loved drawing Candice, Geoffrey Bell's great-aunt. She was as much fun to write as Virginia Jorgenson and Annie Carpenter, my other fearless female journalists. Like Virginia and Annie in The Mirror and Annie's Apple, she gave a story added spirit, depth, and beauty.
I end Indiana Belle with a letter that spans time. In the message, Cameron defends his life choices to his handlers. Jake Maclean does the same in Let Time Fly. Some ideas are too good to use just once.
Favorite Quote: In Chapter 14, Cameron notices a fellow refugee as he rides out the 1925 Tri-State tornado in a lighted storm cellar.
Cameron lowered his eyes and stared at the floor as a spider raced toward the door. He watched it closely as it stopped near his foot and appeared to weigh two unpleasant options — death by tornado or death by shoe. Like a deer in the headlights, it stayed where it was.
CLASS OF '59 (2016): Like many, I am fascinated with the 1950s. I watched Happy Days as a kid and loved movies like Grease, Back to the Future, and Pleasantville. I pictured heaven as a malt shop filled with jukeboxes, red vinyl booths, and Fonzies and Peggy Sues.
[Speaking of "The Fonz," is there an American male over 50 who did not jump – or dream of jumping – over four or five trash cans on his chopper bike in the 1970s? I know I did.]
In any case, I love the Fifties. So when I finally got a chance to squeeze a 1950s story into a series, I seized it. I threw everything into a novel that was a sheer pleasure to write.
In Class of ’59, Mary Beth and Piper McIntire, sisters from 2017, meet Mark and Ben Ryan, brothers from 1959, through the magic of Professor Bell’s Tunnel of Love, setting off a romp filled with romance, danger, angst, and adventure. They find their own Happy Days.
If this story sounds familiar, it should. I flipped the script in the Stone Shed trilogy and sent two brothers to the past. Only the names (Noah and Jake Maclean, Abby and Rachel Ward) and dates (2024, 1776) were changed to protect the innocent. I loved using this trope.
In addition to sock hops, gangsters, and a cameo by Marilyn Monroe, Class of ’59 features a LOT of time travel. My amorous couples travel between 2017 and 1959 at least a dozen times. In most of my other books, the main characters travel only once or twice, if at all.
Bloopers: I must report two. First, the discs in the jukebox on the cover are CD-ROMs, not vinyl records. [I still like the cover.] Second, when Donna Ryan, Mark and Ben's mother, joins her sons in the future, she forgets to bring Charlotte, the family cat. You can't win them all.
Favorite Quote: In Chapter 34, Piper tells Mark about a time when Mary Beth defended her from a pack of grade-school bullies.
"She threatened them. She said, 'If you don't leave my sister alone, I'll have you all spayed and neutered.' Mary Beth didn't even know what the words meant. She heard them on a TV commercial. But her warning worked. The bullies never bothered me again."
HANNAH'S MOON (2017): As an author, I am often reminded to write what I know. In Hannah's Moon, I did just that. I told the tale of Ron and Claire Rasmussen, a couple battling infertility. I began by showing the two cradling their first child — a stillborn son named Ronnie.
On November 8, 1993, my wife, Cheryl, gave birth to a stillborn child — a four-pound, 18-inch, 33-week-old boy named Douglas Kyle. We endured a hardship that no parents, even in literature, should ever have to bear.
I needed three weeks to write that first chapter. Even with a solid command of the subject, I needed time to describe a hospital scene that demanded patience, care, and detail.
When I finished, I used my experience as an adoptee and an adoptive father to guide Ron and Claire in what became one of my best novels. I turned life into art.
Of course, Hannah's Moon is more than a sentimental journey about parenthood. It is a thriller set in 1945, a book that details the hopes and fears of Americans in the tense final months of World War II.
Hannah Rasmussen, Ron and Claire's adopted daughter, is the star of the show. Inspired by Tabitha Stephens, the towheaded toddler in the 1960s sitcom Bewitched, she was the first character to get her name on a book. [See Caitlin's Song and Annie's Apple.] I dedicated the novel itself to my daughter, Heidi, whom Cheryl and I adopted in 1992.
Though most of Hannah's Moon's is set in Chattanooga, seven chapters are set on or near the USS Indianapolis, a heavy cruiser that sailed into history in July 1945. I spent several weeks researching the doomed ship, which remains the most compelling of my book settings.
Favorite Quote: In Chapter 62, I describe the guests that greeted helpless sailors, including Ron Rasmussen, on July 31, 1945.
The sharks that came on Monday did not go away. Many struck in groups, terrorizing sailors for hours. Others hunted alone, picking off individuals with reckless abandon. Some gave warning by approaching along the surface. A few struck without notice from the depths. By sunset on Tuesday, the cold, conscienceless killers had maimed or consumed dozens of men and harassed or terrified countless more.
In the American Journey series, I pushed boundaries, pushed myself, and opened doors for future works. By the time I published the last book, I no longer looked at novel writing as a hobby. It was a passion, one with a life of its own. Next: The Carson Chronicles series.






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