James reveals 13 secrets to the art of writing family stories, memoirs and storytelling. The tips are especially important for those writing their first novel. This easy-to-follow guide provides writing tools and insight to create stories others will enjoy reading. Each chapter is short, easy to read and concisely written. The systematic process illustrates how professional writers create stories.
The following is an excerpt that appears in the Secret Formula chapter. For those who remember J. Edgar Hoover, you will appreciate this. Reader feedback is welcomed.
Growing
up with J. Edgar Hoover
by Robert James
As
the Second World War ended, the family returned from Lima, Peru. Within a
month, we secured a duplex in the Housing Projects of Cleveland, Ohio. Back
then, “The Projects” were reserved for those who had actively supported the nation’s
war efforts. At the start of that war, my mother went to work in a nickel-smelting
foundry, and my father trained Army Air Corps pilots.
Deemed
too old for combat flying missions, my father accepted an assignment with the Office
of Special Services (OSS). After a brief orientation at Langley, the entire
family of three relocated to South America. His secret mission was to help
track Nazi activity in places like Bolivia and Brazil. Ironically, many of
those same Nazis would later find a safe haven in the United States.
When
the war activities subsided, the returning entourage included an extra child,
Robert. Even though the war had technically ended, a battle continued to rage
over what constituted true Americans. This would not become a personal issue
until I entered the fourth grade.
Men
like Joe McCarthy and J. Edgar Hoover quickly defined for us who true-blue
Americans were and those who were not. I grew up with the understanding that no
one argued with J. Edgar Hoover—nobody. As far back as I can remember, whenever
Mr. Hoover’s name came up in polite conversation, everyone displayed great
reverence.
The
family lived in The Projects until I was half way through the fourth grade. Then
we moved to Lakewood, a Cleveland suburb. My parents had to re-enroll me in
school, and we had to fill out paperwork identifying who I was. This included a
brief notation as to my place of birth. School officials referred to the
document as my “permanent record.” Little did anyone realize that single
notation would be the genesis of great controversy.
By
the time I entered the fourth grade, the reigning director of the Federal
Bureau of Investigation had already outlasted foes and political tyrants alike.
According to Walter Winchell, a Hollywood gossip columnist, Mr. Hoover’s accomplishments
were nothing short of breathtaking.
Hoover
had ordered the deportation of thousands suspected of being disloyal. During
the war years, his agents, who Mr. Winchell dubbed G-men, had single-handedly
tracked down and smashed all the Fifth Columnists who were sabotaging our way
of life. Every true American was pound of that mindbogglingly accomplishment.
After
the war, Hoover’s Red List identified which Hollywood actors were Communists.
Now, in 1951, he came up with another awesome contribution. Some referred to it
as the ultimate crime-fighting tool of the century. Hoover called it his Ten
Most Wanted List. In my father’s eyes, Mr. Hoover was an American born marketing
genius, and he held the man in high esteem.
Nineteen-fifty-one
delivered an exciting year. That year, my father brought home our first
multimedia console, which my mother referred to as “the monstrosity.” The
console arrived at our house in a red, four-wheeled trailer, attached to the
bumper of the family car. A guy named Henry helped with the delivery. I
remember Henry because he was the first black man I had ever met face to face.
The
monstrosity required three able-bodied men to carry it up the one-step slab
porch, through the linoleum-covered kitchen and straight into the
square-shaped living room. My sixteen-year-old brother and father handled the
front end, while the dark-skinned Henry held up the other. Everyone seemed to
like old Henry. When he spoke, he sounded just like Rochester from Jack Benny’s
radio show.
The
new console occupied one wall. At one end, there was a lift-top record player.
You could stack a dozen records and play music half into the night without
having to attend to it. The problem with the record player was that we only had
two unscratched records, one of which played popular Christmas music sung by
Bing Crosby. That was fine during winter holidays, but this was July. Mother
did not want us playing off-season music—what with the windows being open all
the time. Mother worried a lot about what the neighbors might think. She was
not alone in her fears of what others thought.
At
the opposite end of the console, a multi-band radio had more channels than
anyone could listen to. Before television arrived, my favorite programs were
Superman, The Lone Ranger, and of course, Amos and Andy. Everyone listened to
Amos and Andy. Those who really wanted to know what was going on turned into
Walter Winchell on CBS radio news.
In
the middle of this piece of mahogany furniture, two doors swung open when you pulled
the brass knobs. Behind the doors was a 9-inch round television screen. We were
excited about the possibility of being able to see the world in true black and
white.
We
sat gathered around the new piece of furniture and overnight, stopped listening
to popular radio. In the alternative, we began the ritual of starring at test
patterns waiting for something to appear. Little did we realize how drastically
our lives were about to change. Not since the invention of movable type was
anything going to alter basic family values.
Much
to our surprise, television brought Mr. Hoover’s alarming messages about
communism right into our living room. One of the first things we learned was
that the entire nation had been infiltrated. Communists were hiding everywhere
and everywhere you turned; that is all people talked about. Neighbors who had
known one another all their lives began spying on each other. Even in my
fourth-grade class, Miss Higgins told us to be on the lookout. Naturally, I
wanted to stay in Mr. Hoover’s good graces, so like everyone else, I kept a
sharp vigilance.
That
same year, I began accompanying my father to our local Post Office. Once there,
I could see for myself the photos of criminals who had committed heinous
atrocities. Some had stolen pieces of U.S. mail, or assaulted a federal
employee, but most of the criminals were wanted for bank robbery.
At
first, there was a line of people waiting to see whom Mr. Hoover had identified
as the country’s most ruthless lawbreakers. After a half dozen Post Office
visits, I noticed the line kept getting shorter. By my ninth trip, I became the
only one in line. I was shocked. It was one or two visits later when I asked my
father, “How come there are no pictures of war fugitives or communists on the Ten
Most Wanted List?”
Father
mumbled something under his breath I did not understand, but his demeanor told
me he was not pleased about something. The Ten Most Wanted List was supposed to
solve the nation’s crime problems. My father, who had put all his faith and
trust in the most respected man in America, no longer wanted Mr. Hoover’s name
mentioned in his presence. Again, I was shocked.
I
suspected my father and Mr. Hoover might have had a falling out. With all the
budding curiosity of an inquisitive fourth-grader, several inquiries proved
fruitless. I was unable to obtain a straight answer.
In
grade school, things were different. We started each day by singing God Bless
America. When that was over, we turned and faced the Stars and Strips to recite
the Pledge of Allegiance.
As
a constant reminder to impending danger, each week air raid sirens sounded a
wailing alarm. We practiced duck-and-cover procedures in the hallways in the
event those filthy communists decided to sneak up and drop an atomic bomb on
us. My homeroom teacher, Miss Higgins, took these rituals seriously. She warned
us to report anyone whom we suspected of being a communist. The implication was
that any information we provided would be turned over to none other than Mr.
Hoover himself.
We
had a notorious troublemaker in my homeroom. The kid’s name was Billy, but I
referred to him as Billy the Bully. In addition to his eagerness to fight,
Billy also liked to brag a lot. One day, Billy boasted that his father knew who
the communists were because his father was a member of a secret order.
According to Billy, the organization was so secret; it was only to be referred
to by repeating the letter K three times.
Puzzled
by this new revelation, I raised my hand and asked Miss Higgins, “What do
communists look like?”
My
question brought a scowl to her face. Finally, after what seemed like a lapse
in time, she replied to my question. “A communist could be anyone. He might be
a Negro, or someone who speaks with a funny accent.” Then, almost as an
afterthought, she added, “Or he could be someone foreign born.”
With
that, my jaw dropped and my eyebrows jumped to the top of my forehead. Oh-my
God! I was foreign born. I had to be a communist! A sleepless night followed:
How could I have lived so long and never realized this?
The
following day, Miss Higgins pointed to me and announced to the class, “Roberto
over there was born in Lime-ma, Pare-u.” The way in which she mispronounced
my place of birth was annoying, but I was powerless to correct her. Like Mr.
Hoover, Miss Higgins did not appreciate being challenged on anything. She
instructed me to say something to the class in what she referred to as my
“native language.”
Time
froze. I was speechless. I knew that if I said anything that remotely sounded
foreign, my questionable identity would be exposed. I replied by shaking my
head, hoping she might change the topic of conversation. It was not to be.
“Say
something in Peruvian,” she ordered.
All
eyes were upon me. I wanted to run out the door, but my legs refused to
cooperate. Finely, in an effort to end the inquisition, I said, “Solemente locos dicen la verdad.”
On
cue, troublemaker Billy turned to those closest to him, and in a loud whisper
said, “I’m telling my father. Roberto is a communist.” Those who heard him
gasped in horror.
Miss
Higgins’ eyes narrowed with renewed suspicion. At recess, she summoned me to
her desk by wiggling her index finger. The wiggling ‘come see me’ gesture
usually meant you were in trouble.
“Tell
me, Roberto, what exactly do your parents do for a living?” This was followed
by, “Where were they born?” Finally, she asked, “Do you know any other foreign
aliens like yourself?”
She
asked the questions politely, but she carefully recorded my answers. That
troubled me. She ended our five-minute session by mentioning that the
information would be made part of my permanent record.
I
was certain she would alert Mr. Hoover and that would result in my being
deported. For that brief moment, I felt a distant bond between Henry and myself.
He could no more change being black any more than I could change my place of
birth.
Before
my father passed away, I discovered why he had turned against Mr. Hoover. Some
of it had to do with Hoover’s Ten Most Wanted List. Apparently, Hoover missed a
few criminals like Nazi war fugitives, Mafia aficionados and Ku Klux Klan
members. As far as the Fifth Columnists were concerned, they never posed a
serious threat. Hoover had used the illusion of a threat to hire additional
agents. Those truths did not emerge until long after Hoover’s demise.
I
had not given much thought to my growing up years with J. Edgar Hoover until
one night while watching television. Comedian, Flip Wilson, summed up those
years and brought back a flood of memories. Flip, in his beguiling smile
quipped, “A lie is just as good as the truth if you can get enough people to
believe it.”