Books by Eric Douglas

Thriller fiction and Non-fiction

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  • Mike Scott Thrillers
    • Held Hostage: Search for the Juncal
    • Water Crisis: Day Zero
    • Turks and Chaos: Hostile Waters
    • The 3rd Key: Sharks in the Water
    • Oil and Water: Crash in Curacao
    • Return to Cayman: Paradise Held Hostage
    • Heart of the Maya: Murder for the Gods
    • Wreck of the Huron: Cuban Secrets
    • Guardians’ Keep: Mystery below the Adriatic
    • Flooding Hollywood: Fanatics at the Dam
    • Cayman Cowboys: Reefs Under Pressure
  • Withrow Key
    • Lyin’ Fish
    • Tales from Withrow Key
  • Agent AJ West
  • About the Author
    • Publicity and Interviews
  • Nonfiction
    • For Cheap Lobster
    • Heart Survivor: Recovery After Heart Surgery
    • Oral History
      • Batter Up!
      • Memories of the Valley
      • WV Voices of War / Common Valor
      • Capturing Memories: How to Record Oral Histories
    • Dive-abled: The Leo Morales Story
    • Keep on, Keepin’ On: A Breast Cancer Story
    • WV Voices of War / Common Valor
    • Russia: The New Age
    • Scuba Diving Safety
  • Free Short Fiction
  • Other Fiction
    • Sea Turtle Rescue and Other Stories
    • River Town
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Running the race for the cure

April 29, 2015 By Eric Douglas

Pageflex Persona [document: PRS0000038_00053]A year or so ago, I spent time with Jean Hanna Davis while she went through chemotherapy for the second time in her life, almost exactly 10 years after her first round. I was sitting with a friend, but we also recorded our time together because Jean knew she had a story to tell. She wanted to give people (primarily women, but family members in general) a look inside what it meant to have a diagnosis of breast cancer.

The book that came from those sessions, Keep on, Keepin’ on, was a raw and informative look at breast cancer from the inside. Jean’s goal was to help women who had the same diagnosis know what to expect. There were good days and some rough ones. Some days she was up-beat and other days, it took every ounce of energy she had to hold it together. I imagine most women who have been told they have breast cancer feel the same way. The most important message in the book was those feelings are universal and you are not alone.

In Jean’s case, following the release of the book, the cancer came back again. She had more treatments and is presently in remission again.

Earlier this week I interviewed Jean for the Writer’s Block radio show. You can listen to the podcast of the interview on VoicesofAppalachia.com. I asked her what she learned in the process of revealing herself at that vulnerable time.

“I always wanted to tell the story and I wanted to let people who are diagnosed that isn’t initially a death sentence,” she explained.

I asked Jean what she learned about herself while writing the book. She explained that even though she is comfortable talking about herself, the entire process wore her down. She thinks a lot of women dealing with cancer feel the same way.

“When you are healthy, no one wants to ask if you are still healthy. But when you are sick, everyone wants to ask how it is going. You are talking about it constantly, you get tired of opening yourself up. It is very exhausting, emotionally.”

This weekend is the Susan G. Komen Race for the Cure in Charleston. I don’t know of anyone whose life hasn’t been affected by breast cancer in one way or another. Granted, there are loads of causes we can get involved with, and there is no possible way everyone can take on all of them. But, if you’re not doing anything this weekend, think about getting up Saturday morning and walking (or sleeping in) for the cure.

If you are interested in the book Keep on Keepin’ on, you can find it on Amazon in softcover and on Kindle and it is also available for sale at Tamarack.

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XUBXZUqAS6k.

Filed Under: Books, Documentary

Connect with your roots at a class reunion

April 22, 2015 By Eric Douglas

I have this mental image of a 30-year high school class reunion: men with bad comb-overs in polyester suits and women in floral dresses sharing pictures of their grandchildren. If that mental image is accurate, how did I come up to my 30th high school reunion this summer? I mean, c’mon, I’m not old…

Last week, a classmate from Nitro High School took the first steps to organizing a class reunion. My class has always had the advantage/disadvantage of falling in step with the Nitro High “All Class” reunions. I don’t think we’ve had a reunion of just our class since our 10 year. She created a Facebook group and started messaging classmates to see who was interested in doing something low-key the day after this summer’s all class reunion.

To help out, I started paging through my Facebook friends list to invite people who weren’t already in the group. That was an interesting exercise in itself. I’m sure I missed some people because I was trying to mentally sort through a friends list that has people on it from college, life after college, a professional career and classes before and after mine from high school. Several times, I saw a name on the list and had to stop and think “Were they in my class?”

Until Diana took the step to begin organizing a reunion, I was a bit apathetic. I mean, I’m still in touch with a few people from high school. But that was 30 years ago. What do we have in common now? And it’s not like I was the superstar high school student. It’s amusing to me just how little I am in my senior yearbook. Some people think of high school as the best time of their life. I had fun in high school. I had fun in college and I’ve definitely had fun since then. But I really don’t look back at high school with mist in my eyes.

Years ago, before I took off on some grand adventure, a good friend reminded me to “not get above my raising”. It was a simple admonition to remember where I came from and use that as a foundation. Paging through my friend’s list to find classmates, it hit me. High school is where we came from. High school was where it all started. I think a class reunion helps us to not get above our raising. It’s a great way to reconnect with the people we knew before life got in the way of our plans.

All of the sudden, I’m looking forward to my reunion this summer. But if I see anyone in a pastel polyester suit, I’m so out of there….

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Talking about ‘Return to Cayman’

April 19, 2015 By Eric Douglas

Talking with Greg the Divemaster from Scuba Radio about “Return to Cayman” and the upcoming release party at Sunset House.

listen to ‘Return to Cayman discussion on Scuba Radio’ on audioBoom

Find out more about the book on the Return to Cayman page.

And more about the release party on this post!.

Filed Under: Adventure, Books, Diving, New Releases

The family that fishes together…builds memories

April 15, 2015 By Eric Douglas

Ralph DouglasOne of my earliest memories is fishing with my dad on a river. It was probably a creek, really. At this point, 40 years after the fact, I have no idea where we were or any more details about the day. Just a memory of sitting on the edge of a stream and drowning bait. I have no idea if we caught anything or if we kept anything. But that’s not the point. I remember doing it.

I’ve been been able to take my daughters fishing many times over the years. We aren’t avid anglers, desperate to fish for hours any chance we get, but generally they’ve been fishing a couple times a year since they were three or four years old. And they remember it. Of course, now that they are in their early teens, they might deny it, but that has more to do with being teenagers than anything else. As an added bonus, most of the times they’ve been fishing, they’ve also gone with their grandfather. My dad. I think that is a great example of life coming full-circle.

I recently read an article titled “The Science of Why You Should Spend Your Money on Experiences, Not Things”. The short version is when we buy things, we might be happy about them for a short time, but then we get used to whatever we bought and the happiness goes away. That leads to the need to buy more things to be happy again. It is a continuous cycle.

When we experience something, it becomes part of who we are. Even years later, we tell stories that start with phrases like “Well, the time I was in Paris…” or “There was this time I was fishing with my dad…” Occasionally they start with “Hey y’all, watch this…” but that’s a different discussion.

The great thing about experiences is they don’t have to cost a lot of money. Most of the time, it just means taking the time and doing “something”. They do take time and a little thought, however. Going fishing with your kids can be a fairly inexpensive day, for example. A couple fishing rods, some bait and your fishing license is all you need. (Kids under 15 don’t need a license.) You can probably pick up the rods at a yard sale if you need one. And then you just need a body of water with (hopefully) some fish in it.

The conclusion of the article was that doing things and building experiences is a much better use of our time and money than buying things. We build memories and make ourselves happier in the long run.

Considering that today is Tax Day, maybe we all need to take a day and go fishing. But don’t forget your fishing license.

If I could just remember where I put it….

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Reader’s Choice Cover Art

April 13, 2015 By Eric Douglas

Selecting the cover for Return to Cayman

We’ve just about finished narrowing down the cover art for the latest Mike Scott thriller “Return to Cayman”. But we want your thoughts.

Option 1
Option 1
Option 2
Option 2 

[poll id=”2″]

Many thanks to Brenda Pinnell from Hepcatz Design for her patience with me for finding just the right combination. The aerial photograph is courtesy of Sunset House, Grand Cayman’s Hotel for Divers, by Divers. If you’d like to join in for the kickoff party, May 30-June 6, find out more!.

Filed Under: Books, Diving, New Releases

Book Release Party in Grand Cayman

April 10, 2015 By Eric Douglas

Option 1It’s time to “Return to Cayman”. Even if you’ve never been there!

For the 10th anniversary of my first novel, Cayman Cowboys, Mike Scott is going to “Return to Cayman” and so can you! The first week of June, (May 30-June 6) I’m going to Sunset House and going diving. I plan to sign copies of the new book Return to Cayman (due out soon) while I’m there, too. One hundred percent of the proceeds from the Return to Cayman books that I sign on the island will be donated to the Cayman Magic Reef Restoration project. I’m also planning to donate a portion of online sales for copy of Return to Cayman sold through the end of July. So, if you can’t make it, you can still get a fun read and help support the reef restoration project at the same time.

In case you don’t know, on August 27, 2014 the cruise ship Carnival Magic dropped its anchor in a restricted area near Don Foster’s dive shop. The grounding tore up more than 12,000 square feet of coral reef.

IMG_1333Volunteer divers from dive operations all over the island are coming together to clean up the reef and reattach surviving coral. Divers have worked to clear off the torn up coral, salvaging the still-living pieces and moving them to an underwater nursery to keep it growing until the site can be cleaned and repaired. Once everything is ready, the volunteer divers will reattach the coral to the reef using a specially-developed marine epoxy. In spite of the volunteer labor, the repair bill will likely run into the millions of dollars. They need money for equipment and supplies for the reef restoration.

Read this article from Scuba Diving Magazine.

If you’re interested in going diving that week, come on down. Contact Sunset House and tell them you are coming down for the “Return to Cayman” release party. The book will be available soon, so stay tuned!

You can find out more information about Sunset House on their website.

****

On a mostly unrelated note, the Kindle version of the third Mike Scott novel, Guardians’ Keep, is on sale for just $.99! Get it while it’s hot. (There might just be a tie-in to Return to Cayman as well, but you didn’t hear that from me…).

Filed Under: Adventure, Books, Diving, New Releases

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Real Thugs: A Cult of Murder — Small groups of travelers have disappeared all over the mid-Atlantic without a trace. When bodies turn up with what appear to be ritual markings, FBI Agent AJ West is on the hunt for what might be a serial killer. Or something even more sinister. It’s a race against […]

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