Guest Post by Thomas Block
Neither one of us is counting it up any longer, but since readers will probably want a number I’ll cipher one for you: as of today, Nelson DeMille and I have been close friends for slightly more than 62 years. Matter of fact, we both learned the beginning skills of reading and writing at precisely the same time. We sat next to each other in kindergarten and with crayons in hand, our teacher tried to show us how to make proper letters on a sheet of paper. Nelson got the concept right away but, frankly, his penmanship hasn’t gotten much better over the years (he should have been a doctor). I muddled along back then, but I guess that I instinctively knew that word processors were in my future, even though that future invention was still 30+ years away.
I was a ‘professional writer’ before Nelson DeMille became one because by the time he returned from his all-expense-paid tour of Vietnam courtesy of Uncle Sam and his US Army Lieutenant bars, I was writing monthly columns for Flying Magazine. Nelson had decided that he was going to become a professional novelist, so we began doing our writing stuff together, with me giving him a hand with the detective paperback originals that he began cranking out. The pay wasn’t much, but he was published and I was learning this novel stuff, too!
Years went by with Nelson getting better and more successful with each successive book, and me providing him with editorial assistance. Matter of fact, the plot elements for his big breakthrough novel – By The Rivers Of Babylon – were written in Nelson’s chicken-scratching on a yellow pad while he was helping me move furniture to Western Pennsylvania after the airline I was flying for closed the New York crew base.
Our mutual helping hands were always a two-way street. Nelson provided me with assistance in the creation of my first novel, Mayday, which went on to be an International bestseller in 1979. Years later, we took back that out-of-print project and worked on it together. We revised and update it, then republished Mayday again – this time, with both our names on the cover. That novel found a home on Nelson DeMille’s extensive backlist of stories, and it subsequently became a CBS Movie of the Week in October, 2005.
After Mayday I went on to write five other action/adventure novels that enjoyed pretty good success around the world, but I sort of drifted away from the novels and found myself concentrating more on my day (and often night) job – flying airliners around the US and, eventually, around a good part of the world. I liked steering those big airliners around the sky.
I retired from my airline pilot job in 2000, but I continued to help Nelson with his novels by being an on-going editorial assistant and technical advisor. Spending so many hours working with him on those novels must have gotten me inspired again because I soon discovered the rumblings of a storyline in the back of my thoughts and I couldn’t keep myself away from the keyboard. When my own writing dust had finally settled, I had created Captain – my seventh action/adventure novel (with a mere 20 years off between numbers six and seven – but who’s counting, right?). I sent Captain off to Nelson for his overview and here’s what he sent back:
“I just finished reading Captain; it’s a great novel, I loved it. Here’s a quote from me that you can use wherever you’d like:
‘Thomas Block is a retired airline pilot, a novelist, my co-author of Mayday and a childhood friend. Now, after a long hiatus from writing, Captain Block rejoins the ranks of legendary pilots-turned-novelists such as Ernest K. Gann (The High and The Mighty) and brings us Captain, one of the best aviation/adventure thrillers you will ever read.
Captain puts you in the cockpit, in the passenger cabin, and at airline headquarters with an intricate and intriguing array of characters. This novel is nothing short of the most frightening and heart-pounding Trans-Atlantic flight since Charles Lindbergh’s solo. Or will it turn out to be Amelia Earhart’s tragic Pacific crossing?
Captain is right up there with the best of the aviation thrillers; an edge of your seat story of what happens when something goes horribly wrong when there is no room for wrong. Captain Block knows his stuff, and it shows on every page. Welcome aboard.’
Tom, I meant every word of what I said in that quote – it’s certainly a very good read! Best of luck with Captain.
Nelson”
These days, I’m spending time marketing Captain and spending time helping with the finishing touches of Nelson’s newest novel, The Panther, which is due to be published in October. Nelson has an extensive audience that subscribes to his periodic Fan Newsletter, and the June issue that came out of his office had something in it that surprised me. Here’s an excerpt from that newsletter:
“………..Moving right along, my childhood friend, Thomas Block, has written a novel titled Captain. Tom, as you may know, was my co-author on Mayday, an airline disaster novel which is available in all formats, including a waterproof life raft edition.
Captain, too, is an airline disaster novel, and Tom, a former U.S. Airways captain, brings his thirty years of flying expertise into this edge-of-your-seat story of midair terror. Captain Block is also an accomplished writer and he blends both these skills into a flight to remember.
Even though we were classmates since kindergarten, Tom is twenty years older than me, and he brings that maturity to his writing. Also, Tom is my technical advisor on many of my novels and he’s also written articles for aviation journals, and penned a number of other novels on his own, so he understands this flying stuff, like lift, drag, thrust, and why airline food sucks.
Captain is now available online with great customer reviews. Visit Tom’s website at: www.ThomasBlockNovels.com.”
To set the record straight, Nelson is LOTS older than me – almost two years, with me being about the youngest in our high school graduating class and Nelson being about the oldest. But that’s beside the point, since I’m certainly not going to be upset with a guy that’s been a good friend for those 60+ years. To sum it up, let me quote Nelson DeMille again – this time, from the acknowledgement page of one of his most recent novels, The Lion:
“As in many of my past novels, I want to thank US Airways Captain Thomas Block (retired), contributing editor and columnist to many aviation magazines, and co-author with me of Mayday, as well as the author of six other novels. Tom and I have known each other since grade school, and we used to be able to finish each other’s sentences, but now we can’t even finish our own sentences. Nevertheless, when it comes to research and writing, Tom provides the answers to all those pesky technical questions a novelist needs to ask to give the fiction it facts.”
And speaking of facts, here’s one that I was recently alerted to: by the inexplicable and cosmic powers that come out of computers, Amazon has recently linked two novels together on a sales page by announcing that “People who bought (the pre-order) of Nelson DeMille’s The Panther have also bought Thomas Block’s Captain.” The Amazon website even had a “Buy Both For…” price.
Now, that’s a fact that both Nelson and I can live with!
Welcome to another great Karma Media Book Tour, where you will find honest reviews and insights into today’s authors and books.
Each tour stop is unique, so remember to check back with the tour daily. View the entire tour schedule here:
This tour will feature:
About the Author:
Thomas Block has written a number of aviation-oriented novels, many which have gone on to acquire best-seller status in numerous countries. His novel writing began with the publication of “Mayday” in 1979. That novel was rewritten with his boyhood friend, novelist Nelson DeMille in 1998 and remains on DeMille’s extensive backlist. “Mayday” became a CBS Movie of the Week in October, 2005.
Other novels by Block include “Orbit” (a top bestseller in Germany, among other nations), “Airship Nine”, “Forced Landing” (also done as a radio serializatoin drama in Japan), “Skyfall”, “Open Skies” and “Captain”. Thomas Block is still writing both fiction and non-fiction, and has edited and updated his earlier novels into ebooks of all the major formats and also into new full-sized (trade soft cover) printed versions.
About the Book:
‘Captain’ is his most ambitious, intricate and action-packed aviation tale yet . It is a chilling and all-too-real story about a routine Trans-Atlantic airline flight that suddenly turns absolutely insane. In the doomed airliner’s cockpit, inside the passenger cabin and on the ground, a complex array of characters have been propelled at jet speed into a sudden and frantic race for survival. ‘Captain’ is about the individual and collective struggles of each of these men and women as they attempt to deal with and ultimately fight against the odds and circumstances that are stacked against them.
‘Captain’ is a novel that pits man against man while also pitting man against machine. It is a story about the need for human judgments, hard-learned experiences, gut feelings and unbridled perseverance in an effort to rise up against a world where the strict adherence to written rules, regulations and procedures have been accepted as the norm.
‘Captain’ is about the way real airline pilots think, feel and react, especially after those giant airliners that they’ve strapped themselves to have suddenly turned vicious and unpredictable.
Disclosure: As a participant of this book tour, I received a copy of the book in hardcopy or ebook format for the purposes of sharing my honest review with you.
Lena - @elenka29 says
Looks like a great addition to any library
Alaina Bullock says
It sounds like a great book! i’ll keep my eye out for it next time I need a new one! Thanks!
ashleigh walls says
I hate the idea of flying but I could totally settle down and read this book. Perfect topic for someone with his experience, thanks for sharing.
Catherine L. says
Sounds like a great read, especially for those who are into aviation.
Christy Newell says
30 years of flying experience… wow…
Jessica p says
Sounds like a great book my step father would really enjoy.
melissa says
Sounds like an awesome book. I am heading on vacation so I will definitely be picking this up!