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What follows is a synopsis of my view of how formal education affected my writing through the years


A question that frequently gets asked me is this: “What sort of education best prepares a person for a career in writing hardboiled thrillers?” My short answer is that I do not think there is any degree program that could properly serve that purpose in any writer’s life. I think some writers write simply because they enjoy doing it, while others write because they sense that they have to.

 

Even though I do not credit my time spent in classrooms with providing me with what a writing career requires, neither do I discredit the role educational experience can play. Here is a summary of my academic background: 

 

In high school I was informed by my counselor that I had scored highest in my school on their IQ/aptitude test, and that considering my affinity for math and hands-on shop work, I should think about electronics upon graduation (which was to be from South Haven (MI) High School in ’62). 

 

So, after high school graduation, I spent about a year in Chicago at DeVry Technical Institute. But then I left and went to Evangel University.

 

At Evangel(CBC) I was editor of the college yearbook and graduated with a Bachelor’s Degree in Bible (in ’67). Academically, my GPA ranked me second highest in my class. I received a fellowship to study Semitic Languages at New York University. 

 

Even though my fellowship covered all tuition, and paid me a small stipend, I still sought out jobs on the side. One of these was working for a diamond wholesaler in Midtown Manhattan. I bought two pin-striped suits from a store called Brooks Brothers. They were nice suits— I got a conservative haircut and looked quite professional. 

 

I started out doing general office work, but then got asked to tackle another task there — that was as a diamond courier. I was assigned to pick up and deliver uncut diamonds from dealer to dealer throughout New York’s Diamond District. I knew that would be dangerous, so I told them I would do it, but only if I could dress as I wished, and be allowed to carry a walking stick for defensive purposes.

 

I had seen couriers from other houses come into our place, and they never dressed well—they looked almost like they were homeless.

 

I was granted permission. So, I switched from my pin-stripes to a navy pea coat, engineer boots, blue jeans, and a blue knit hat. I had no trouble growing my hair out.

 

I already had a walking stick, because our apartment at that time was in a very rough part of Lower Manhattan. We (my wife Evie and I) had rented an apartment on East 6th Street between Avenues A and B. The neighborhood was controlled by drug dealers and muggers. I carried a club that I had made from a shovel handle. I had cut it off walking stick length. I weighted the bottom down with a threaded brass pipe cap on the end, and filled it with melted solder. I then strapped the stick to my wrist with a piece of rawhide.

 

I worked for that diamond wholesaler for two years.

 

That stick had so impressed my landlady (when she saw me carrying it everyday for my job) that she asked me if I would be the “man of the building.” I asked her, “What does that mean?” She told me that instead of paying rent, I would work for her as the cop of the building — her enforcer. If anyone needed help with a burglary, rapist, domestic dispute, attacker, or a robbery, I would be the one she could call on. “Sounds cool,” I thought, so I accepted the offer.

 

As the Man of the Building I got to deal with knife wielders, gun totters, burglaries in progress, attempted rapes, and idiots on drugs. Sometimes I got to walk barefooted through broken glass, wearing only my boxer shorts, kicking guys out of the building and then getting shot in the face with tear gas for my effort. My shovel handle and I did the job quite successfully, and so I developed a reputation on the entire street. When the two New York City neighborhood police officers got shot and killed in front of my apartment my territory expanded and I inherited the title “Man of the Block.” That reputation stuck with me until I left the city.

 

I studied at NYU for three years. I received my masters degree (Hebrew Studies) from the school and was researching my PhD dissertation. My advisor there told me that I had received a perfect score on my comps—and that mine was the only perfect score he had ever seen. I was looking forward to receiving my doctorate from NYU, but that was when stuff started to unravel.

 

This was the summer of ’72 (maybe ’73). It was during a period of political turmoil throughout the US. That’s when the Black Panthers took over the NYU campus and effectively closed the school down for the entire summer. When it reopened in the fall, it did so without my program. 

 

Somehow it was determined that the Department of Hebrew Studies was not backed up by an “Endowed Chair,” and therefore could be merged into another program if the University chose that route. So, my entire program was effectively terminated, and a Department of Black Studies was born. That provided me with a significant speed bump in my career options. 

 

My program then merged into the Department of Near Eastern Studies, and that was not at all what I had bargained for. To my knowledge all of my schoolmates accepted the merger, but I did not like it at all. So I asked what my options were. 

 

They told me that if I wanted, they could get me into a great program at the Dropsie School of Hebrew and Cognate Learning. I realize that the name looks more like a physical condition than the name of a university. But, Dropsie actually was a significant part of the University of Pennsylvania, an Ivy League school, and that if I took my studies there I would have access to tens of thousands of the original materials that were housed at Penn’s library and at the University Museum.

 

They also informed me that while there would be no fellowships available to me at Penn, they were sure they could arrange for some sort of scholarship for me there. That sounded like a great opportunity, so I opted for it. And, besides, it afforded Evie and me a new adventure (and we were always eager for new adventures).

 

My specific field of interest was Neo Sumerian, and Dropsie had an absolutely great professor heading up that program. All was good—or so it seemed. … This is where it began to soak in that my career was beginning to take another radical turn. 

 

The scholarship I was given was actually a working scholarship—it required that I work for the school. That was okay, though, because it was only for an hour or so per day, five days a week. All they wanted me to do was to open the mail. 

 

What this involved was for everyone to leave office area of the building, while only I would remain in it to open the mail.

 

What they were doing is assigning me to be the one to screen for special mail and special packages. I was tasked to open up all of it and determine what was acceptable and what was not. The materials deemed to be unacceptable could range from letter bombs to larger IEDs (improvised explosive devices). Other universities had been attacked in just that sort of fashion, and Dropsie wanted to be safe.

 

I took it on as a challenge. I viewed my new “canary in the coal mine” role as a superb source of excitement — better than two cups of subsidized espresso every morning!

 

There were, however, no manuals telling me how to do it. So, I pretty much had to develop my own system. I opened everything from the bottom, and in a very careful fashion. I would slit a small hole with a razor knife, and with a small flashlight take a peek inside. If I found no wires, spring-activated switches, or strange solid materials, I would open it all the way up.

 

That was my introduction into the world of security—a trade which I eventually developed into a successful business, and sometimes into a virtual art form.

 

During my two years in Philadelphia, I did take an active role on campus. I was elected president of the student body at Dropsie, plus, I edited the weekly newsletter and had my own private office. Things were again looking bright. I loved the challenge. I totally respected my professor, and was progressing quite nicely.

 

But then the bottom fell out of everything yet again. Something apparently cropped up between the head of the department and my professor. Whatever that something was I never learned. All I knew was that my professor was denied tenure. I protested because I thought that he (my professor) was superb.

 

Consequently, because I spoke up and published my opposing opinion in my newsletter, I was locked out of my office. I was not kicked out of the school, but I could see I had no future there. I climbed over the wall of my office, through the opening above the suspended ceiling, gathered up my private papers, and moved out of Philadelphia.

 

My professor resigned and became professor of Ancient Near Eastern and Judaic Studies at another Ivy League school (where he was granted tenure). He remained at that other school for the rest of his career.

 

I found it very hard to leave all my work behind, but I was totally sick of the politics in academia, and determined that I had to find another path for my life. I am quick to admit that I have a deep faith in God, and I have always believed totally in the providential nature of our lives. That belief never wavered. The issue with me was that I was just failing to find out where that providential purpose was leading me.

 

After a cooling off period, Evie and I moved back to Michigan and established new plans for our future.

 

I recalled how exciting I had found carrying around millions of dollars worth of diamonds for New York’s diamond wholesalers, fighting off the criminal element on the streets of Greenwich Village, and how much fun it was to search packages for bombs in Philadelphia. So, I told Evie that I’d bet that there’s a big need for security experts, and that it would not be so political. Of course, I realized that I was anything but an expert in security, but I also realized that I did know how to do sound research on most subjects. And so that’s what I did.

 

I read a couple books and then called a reputable security company that was looking for help, and I set up an appointment. I went into my meeting knowing more about the fine points of the industry than the fellow who was interviewing me. I told him about my experiences in New York and Philadelphia. And I got the job.

 

Within a year I was made general manager at that firm (which was one of the largest in West Michigan). And I was soon designing, installing and servicing systems for the Department of Military Affairs, and other large organizations and major corporations. 

 

Only a few years later I started my own firm. I ran that business for about 30 years. I continued doing contract work for the Military, the DEA (Drug Enforcement Agency), General Motors, and other large and small corporations, along with thousands of private individuals.

 

It was still while I was running my security firm that I wrote my first book. It was entitled WIND.  I believe that was over 20 years ago. I did it as a self-published book through Amazon (under the name Mike Carrier). 

 

WIND was a compilation of a series of articles I had earlier published weekly in local and regional newspapers. I wrote that column for over three years (also under the name “Mike Carrier”). It centered on the role that God played in the development of our nation since its inception. … For instance, not many people are aware of this, but 106 out of the first 108 institutions of higher learning in the US were founded specifically for the training of ministers of the gospel. … That is true even for all those elite Ivy League institutions (like the University of Pennsylvania). 

 

I did continue to run my security firm until about fifteen years ago. That was when I developed a heart condition and had to sell the business and move on. After my surgeries I quickly got bored with retirement and started writing hardboiled thrillers, which I marketed as “murder mysteries set in the Midwest.” I did this under the name “Michael Carrier.” To date I have published 18 Jack Handler hardboiled thrillers.

 

Well, that’s my story of how I got here, and what influenced me. I trust that readers can appreciate the fact that the role formal education played in my development as a writer was indirect at best. What the universities did for me is teach me to work hard and think harder. 


To China with Love Chapter One

Chapter 1
Outside, and directly to the right of the entry door to the diver lock-out chamber (AKA the wet-room), hung a waterproof monitor, and on it Henry, Jack’s good friend and sizable right-hand man, impatiently watched Jack make his way toward the tether cable via video captured by the permanently-affixed camera on the small deck of the mini-sub. But, just as was the case earlier with Agent One, as Jack approached the point of attachment, his image fell out of range of the camera, and so his activity fell off the monitor.
By “point of attachment,” I am referring to the place at which the sinking South Korean fishing boat was cabled to the mini-sub Jack and his SEAL team were using for their covert mission. The UOES3 Button 5.60, mini-sub selected for this operation was, at that time, headed against its will toward the bottom of the Yellow Sea under the tow of the ill-fated fishing boat.
Less than an hour earlier, one of the SEALs on board with Jack had attached a cable from the South Korean vessel so that the mini-sub could be secretly pulled out of the vicinity of the communist neighbor to the north. Those responsible for planning the mission thought it best if the mini-sub refrained from running any unnecessary mechanical equipment that might be detected by North Korean or Chinese patrols.
Unfortunately, even though they were now well south of the 38th parallel, a tenacious North Korean patrol boat had followed them across that imaginary line and sent the fishing boat toward the bottom by ramming it.
Henry took another look at his watch, and then impatiently addressed Agent Two.
“I’m gonna need some gear,” Henry said. “Can you fix me up? And in a hurry?!”
“Yes,” Agent Two said. “But you know what Jack said as well as I do. He told the both of us that if anything happened to him, while he was out there, give it half an hour, then cut him loose and, if at all possible, get the hell out of the area as fast as we can. … And, he also demanded that if for any reason, someone had to go back out, that it would be a SEAL, not you. He was very adamant about that. He gave you strict orders not to leave this sub. And he was, he is, the boss. I think it’s very clear that it’s my job to handle this from here. Not yours.”
Agent Two had also watched Jack disappear, but from a different screen.
“Listen to me!” Henry growled. “Jack said that I should be the one to pull him back in, if something goes wrong. So, just shut the hell up and help me get ready.”
“Have you ever done this before?” the agent asked.
“Of course,” Henry said. “I’ve dived a lot. Now, don’t waste any more of my time. Get that shit ready for me! And do it now!”
Agent Two knew that Henry was lying about everything. 
continued….

SAULT – a thriller by Michael Carrier January 2, 2021 Action & Adventure Latest Jack Handler Thriller Deals With Soo Locks Explosion Review by Tyler R. Tichelaar

Sault: What Could be Worse than Great Lakes Erosion?  is the fourteenth Jack Handler novel by Michael Carrier. That said, it can be read as a stand-alone book with little trouble. I have not yet read all of Michael Carrier’s books, but I have read the first several, so I was basically familiar with many of the main characters. Carrier makes it easy to follow the story, because he gives short, catch-up briefings on characters and events. Also, as a rather clever marketing strategy, he lets you know which books in the series to read if you want to know more about a character who previously made an appearance. Furthermore, at the end of the book is a summary of all the major characters in the series (though I wish this had been at the beginning).

If they have read the previous books, readers might feel a tad impatient with some of the back-story descriptions in the opening chapters, but Carrier moves through it clearly for new readers before venturing into the main story. The book soon becomes a page-turner.

Sault is really one of the most ingenious and frightening books in this series. The premise is that an explosion has happened at the Soo Locks. At first, it’s not clear who caused it or why, but it’s clearly some sort of terrorist act, whether domestic or international. I was a little disappointed that the explosion was not experienced directly by the main characters—there was a bit more telling than showing—but that’s because our hero, Jack Handler, is in New York when it happens. He’s there hunting down killers, and the narrative switches to New York to catch us up as Jack seeks closure for past wrongs from previous books. An entertaining couple of stupid criminals are involved in this escapade that takes place just before Jack learns of the explosion at the Sault.

Once Jack is aware of the terrorist event, he quickly returns to Michigan because his two adopted sons went on a fishing trip with his friend, nicknamed Legend, and now they are all missing. The explosion blew up two locks, causing a tsunami-like overflow of water through the locks and Great Lakes, causing all trace of the boys to be lost.

As Jack and his colleagues search for the boys, we learn more about the events leading up to the explosion. For some time, Legend has been theorizing that the Great Lakes’ water levels are artificially high because businessmen are manipulating them to make more money by being able to haul heavier cargoes while not having to spend money on dredging. The problem is the higher water levels threaten the homes and cabins of many who own lakeshore property. While the connection between the blowing up of the Soo Locks and water levels in the Great Lakes is not clear at first, as the novel progresses, more and more answers are found.

I won’t give away more of the plot, but there’s plenty of action for Jack Handler and the other characters. People are shot to be kept silent—the people who shoot them are also shot to be kept silent—and others are left stranded to die. Criminals operate under false names, and a former First Lady of the United States is involved in a crime-ring.

Best of all, readers will enjoy revisiting these characters and journeying back to the U.P., even if it has become devastated in many ways. The novel suggests the iron industry will suffer as a result of the destroyed locks, and an economic depression may ensue, but at least Jack Handler is able to right a few wrongs and save a few lives. He may not be Superman, but he can certainly handle most problems that come his way, so his name rather suits him.

If you like a good thriller, Michael Carrier is an author to check out. His plots are engaging, sometimes nail-biting, and his characters are as attractive and believable as any by Michael Connelly, James Patterson, or Steve Hamilton. And best of all, a fifteenth book, starting a new series within the series, is in the works.

 

Review by Dr. Tyler Tichelaar, author of Kawbawgam

PhD and award-winning author of When Teddy Came to Town and Kawbawgam

Grissom: If you try and chase two rabbits you end up losing them both.