Blog Archives
Submarine Drama
Admiral McTavish is leading his fleet
but his mind is elsewhere in the Atlantic Sea
back in the last port
back with his feet on the dock
the cold wind, the salt in the air
His wife’s blue eyes, icy,
silently admonishing him
for his sudden interest
in Lieutenant Junior Grade Jones,
now standing an arm’s length away
at the controls of the HMS Terrapin
while depth charges
slowly
descend
upon
them
April Events
Hello, my friends, it has been awhile since I posted on my blog here. I’ve been extremely busy working on my next book, doing final interviews, transcribing, research, a million and one little details. It’s going well and I can kind of see the forest from the trees on this project now.
I have two events going on later this month that I’m real happy, real excited about.
First, I’ll be talking about Heroes in the Night at the next MKE Comic Book Meet-up, April 22. This is a cool group in Milwaukee that meets up on a regular basis to discuss comic books. The them for the next one is “Social Issues in Comics” and they kindly asked me to be part of it. The first part of the evening will be a discussion from 6:30-7:45pm about comics that have tackled social issues. People are encouraged to bring comics they’d like to talk about.
I will be talking about Heroes in the Night afterward from 7:45-9pm, particularly focusing on how the subject of the book (Real Life Superheroes) reflect their comic book counterparts. I’ll be showing some slides and I will have copies of the book available for a flat $16. This is going to be a fun time at Anodyne Coffee in Walker’s Point, a nice, casual environment.
Info: Tuesday, April 22, Anodyne Coffee Roasting Co., 224 W. Bruce St., Milwaukee 53204. Comic discussion 6:30-7:45pm, Presentation by Tea Krulos 7:45-9pm. Free, copies of Heroes in the Night available for $16.
Facebook event page: https://www.facebook.com/events/292877017537427/
Next, how cool is this– I’ll be hosting a panel at this year’s Chicago Comic & Entertainment Expo (C2E2)!
The panel is titled “You Can be a ‘Real Life Superhero!'” I’ll be moderating special guests Razorhawk, the Watchman, Crusader Prime, Crimson Catalyst, and Night Vision. We will also have a couple surprise guests appearing via video message. I will be showing some slides and we will be talking about what this Real Life Superhero business is all about. We also will have a Q & A session with the audience. Hulk Hogan will be at C2E2, but I can’t speculate if he’ll show up for the panel.
This will take place Sunday, April 27 2:30-3:30pm Room S401ab. Afterwards, I will be signing copies of Heroes in the Night at the Chicago Review Press booth from 4-4:45pm.
Besides the panel members, several other RLSH will be attending the con and my inside sources tell me the assembled RLSH will be joining forces and patrolling Chicago, handing out supplies to homeless people as they go. Good work, my super friends, good work!
Info: The panel takes place at C2E2 (South Building at McCormick Place) Sunday, April 27 2:30-3:30pm, book signing follows 4-4:45pm at the Chicago Review Press booth.
Here is the panel listing on C2E2’s site: http://c2e214.mapyourshow.com/5_0/sessions/sessiondetails.cfm?ScheduledSessionID=18ADCB
2013 Krulos in Review
Feb.-May 2013: I moved down to Arcadia, Florida. While there, I worked on what will now be a future book (maybe my third?) and did some freelancing for publications like The Guardian and M magazine. Things did not work out for me in Florida and I moved home to Milwaukee in May. I have no regrets. It was just another one of my hundred lives.
June 2013: Throughout the spring and summer I worked with my publisher on final edits of Heroes in the Night. They were pleased with the book and asked what I had in mind next. My initial idea was passed on (for now) but then I pitched the idea of doing a book that discussed the lives of paranormal investigators. They were into that idea, and the paperwork got signed in June. I immediately got to work. I made a connection with local group Paranormal Investigators of Milwaukee (PIM) and have been hanging out with them as much as I can since.
July 2013: First travel for new book to Vermont for “Champ Camp,” hosted by Believe It Tour @ Lake Champlaign.
August 2013: Me and David Beyer, Jr. set up a blog for our comic book collaboration, Ballyhoo. I wrote the script (a fiction set in a circus in 1955) and David has been working on the art. Progress on this project has been slow as we are both busy dudes. But page by page it is happening and David’s art looks absolutely amazing. Hopefully Ballyhoo will be rolling out issue one in 2014.
September 2013: Second whirlwind trip took me to Point Pleasant, WV, Wilder, KY, Portland, ME (where I spent part of my birthday at one of my new favorite places on earth: the International Cryptozoology Museum) and Ochopee, FL (as well as a visit to Arcadia.)
October 2013: Oct. 1 was official release date for Heroes in the Night. How exciting! I had a great hometown reception at Boswell Book Company w/ after party at Stonefly Brewery. Good local press, including various bits in Shepherd Express, Onmilwaukee.com, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, Milwaukee mag, and The Onion’s local A.V. Club (R.I.P.) I also made in-store appearances in Chicago (Quimby’s), Madison (Westfield Comics), and Saint Paul (Common Good Books, with good attendance due in part to a feature in the Minneapolis Star-Tribune.) Friends from around the country posted photos of them with the book at various bookstores around the country. Such a cool moment in my life.
November 2013: Tabled at Milwaukee Zine Fest with my friends David Beyer, Jr., Lance Orr, and Michelle from Skill Shot MKE zine. I had a zine of goofy poetry I wrote titled Palookaville. This is currently being expanded from 16 to 36 pages and will be available as a chapbook/ e-book in 2014. Also did an event at Barnes & Noble in Brookfield Square.
December 2013: Participated with Milwaukee Real Life Superheroes The Challengers at their annual Christmas charity toy drive.
I’m now at about the halfway point for my paranormal book. I have accomplished a lot on it, but there is still a lot of work to go to get to the June 2014 deadline. I will be doing another trip, to Arizona this time, in February and have some other small trips and interviews and a lot of final drafting to do. I also have a couple side projects, we’ll see what happens with those.
I could really use a team of unpaid interns right now!
After I turn this book in, I’m not quite sure what my main focus will turn to, but I’ve got a couple of ideas. I’ll be reworking some old ideas and trying some new ones, too.
A salute to 2013, and cheers to 2014!
Adios, A.V. Club
This week saw the last print edition of “America’s Finest News Source,” The Onion and the end of the local Milwaukee A.V. Club. I always enjoyed the A.V. Club. Although I didn’t contribute a prolific amount, I did pen three articles for them in 2011-2012. Matt Wild was the A.V. Club’s last editor and did an excellent job.
Here’s links to my small contribution to a large legacy…
From 2011, “5 Incredible Moments in Globetrotter History”
http://www.avclub.com/milwaukee/articles/smashing-the-color-barrier-and-saving-gilligans-is,66497/
From 2012, “Rock You Like an Octogenarian: 5 Musicians Over 75 That Are Still Hitting the Road”
http://www.avclub.com/milwaukee/articles/rock-you-like-an-octogenarian-5-musicians-over-75,70763/
And last, also from 2012, “Tasty Disaster: Milwaukee Recreates the Last Meal of the Titanic”
http://www.avclub.com/milwaukee/articles/tasty-disaster-milwaukee-recreates-the-last-meal-o,72297/
Also, in October of 2013, A.V. Club featured an interview with me about my book, Heroes in the Night. It was written up by A.V. Club contributor Thomas Michalski and you can read it here:
http://www.avclub.com/milwaukee/articles/milwaukees-tea-krulos-unmasks-the-reallife-superhe,83907/
The Mushroom Cloud
As soon as I entered the school system it had become painfully obvious I had nothing in common with my fellow classmates in that wretched slab of lakefront real estate, Port Washington. Due to an eccentric personality at even a young age and overprotective, heavily religious parents, here were my interests as a young man: The Marx Bros., Abbott and Costello, Godzilla, The Muppets, Doctor Who, Robert Louis Stevenson, Batman, classic horror and sci-fi movies,“Weird Al” Yankovic, and The Three Investigators, a series of mystery books for juveniles.
I dressed in a style that might be popular with hipsters today but at the time was just plain nerdy: striped polo shirts, corduroys, t-shirts with the California Raisins on them.
One of the funniest attempts to blend-in was my Freshmen year.
“This is it,” I thought. “I can change. No one will know I’m the same person.”
Over the summer before the school year started, I asked my mom to help me with some money to buy some new clothes. The Chicago Bulls were popular that year, according to my research, so I got some tough looking Chicago Bulls jerseys and a baseball cap. I got a San Jose Sharks t-shirt, which was sort of a compromise because I liked sharks, but not hockey. I got some Nikes, the freshest style. I went to a haircutting chain and found a mugshot of someone who looked like one of the assholes who walked the halls of my high school in their display. I pointed at it.
“Make me look like this,” I begged them.
But it was a vain attempt. The sports gear, the haircut, the Nike super- duper pumps could not hide the volatile nerd underneath. This was made even more clear to me when I joined the basketball team at the start of the school year. I had been encouraged by a coach to join simply because I was tall and Port Washington is a city full of Napoleon complex. I thought it would be fun and that maybe I would make new friends and that coveted word—belong– to something. Of course every single person on that team was a rotten motherfucker to me and I never fit in and quit because of emotional distress halfway through the season.
Later my freshmen year I began to get into “alternative music,” especially what several trendsetters had dubbed “grunge.” It was Nirvana in particular that changed the direction of my life. The anger and pain and anxiety in Nirvana’s music really appealed to me in that moment. I started to grow my hair long. I sold my Chicago Bulls gear at a rummage sale and started buying Nirvana and Pearl Jam t-shirts. I suddenly took an interest in my dad’s old flannel shirts. I ripped holes in my jeans and pissed my mom off by staining the bathtub purple while trying to dye my hair.
The music and attitude gave me something to help me make it through High School, which was constantly getting worse for me. But now let’s talk about a good moment, an important moment in my life.
One noon hour I had arrived in the school cafeteria early for lunch. I was waiting for a couple friends to arrive so we could get a table together.
As I stood there holding my books, I noticed a student walking quickly into the lunchroom with a determined look on her face. She was carrying a stack of papers in her arms and her head darted around with a serious look of caution. She had a hemp string hairnet and a handmade hemp necklace, hoop earrings, and a sundress with a fuzzy green sweater over it. She walked up to a lunch table and placed a stack of papers on it, then walked to the next table and placed a stack on it, carrying on through the lunchroom. I was the only one watching her.
Intrigued, I walked over and picked up a paper. It was a newsletter-style photocopied publication titled Mind Rape. It was about six pages long and contained some essays about existentialism, moody poetry and artwork. I placed my copy in my folder.
A minute later, the assistant principal walked into the lunchroom. I forget his real name, but the student body had nicknamed him “Rat Man,” due to physical features that made him appear rodent-like. He was famous for antics almost bordering on 80s comedy subplots. He would angrily chase truant students around town and then hand down excessive punishments for their unruly behavior, all to a Kenny Loggins soundtrack .
As “Rat Man” entered the lunchroom, he spotted a stack of Mind Rape papers on a lunchroom table. He walked over and ripped them all up thoroughly, throwing a pile of paper confetti into a wastebasket closest to him. Then he walked to the next lunchroom table, again hand shredding the publication. His face was flushing red with anger and the strenuous ripping activity. I watched him rampaging from table to table ripping the newsletters apart and I felt my copy of the newsletter through my folder.
“This must be pretty good.” I thought.
I can’t tell you if it was or wasn’t, I don’t remember too much of the specific contents. What had inspired me more than the publication’s writing was the fact they had done it themselves. I had already had a brief attempt at working on the school newspaper, but my interest there had been short lived. Port Washington (at that time anyway) had a strict, heavily Catholic parent-teacher board.
The student newspaper had to send proofs of the paper to the board, who would scrutinize it, red markers anxiously waiting in their itchy hands. This had all started when the paper had published a candid essay debating pro-life and pro-choice positions on abortion. The op-ed piece had caused an uproar throughout the sleepy town, several people were disciplined for daring to speak on such a topic, and new guidelines were handed down. There was to be no more reports on abortion, birth control, AIDS, homosexuality, anything to do with the birds and the bees.
“What a bunch of bullshit,” I told one of my colleagues, after hearing the policy. I was getting my first burn out with the biz at the tender age of 15.
I could see why Rat Man was going nuts over Mind Rape, then. No one had approved it or the words it contained inside, like “fuck,” “shitbird,” and “prophylactic.”
Reading Mind Rape was an exciting moment. I could create my own publication! What fun! I now had something to do. I was ahead of my own time at this point, because this was before I had any idea what a “zine” was and had only the vaguest idea that underground newspapers other than Mind Rape had existed. My influences for my own newsletter were two publications: The Onion, which was fairly new (about 4 years old) and which I had seen just a couple issues of, and my favorite newspaper at the time, the Weekly World News. In addition to stories about Bat Boy and the world’s fattest cat, I had been particularly amused by the Weekly World News coverage of the 1992 presidential election. They featured a series of cover stories with doctored photos of candidates Bill Clinton, George Bush, and Ross Perot shaking hands with extra-terrestrials. I thought this was comedy gold.
I chose the name for my new publication after flipping through the school libray’s encyclopedia set during study hall. My page flipping fell across what I thought would be an appropriate chaotic title: the Mushroom Cloud. For the cover of the first issue, I decided to emulate the Weekly World News with a story about our school principal, Miss Krueger, meeting with a space alien. I stole a picture of her shaking hands with an outgoing principal from the yearbook photo archive and grabbed a copy of the Weekly World News. After a lot of trial- and- error by enlarging and shrinking the two photos on a photocopier, cutting with a pen- knife and rubber cementing (the olden days before Photoshop) I matched the two images up. It was crude, but it passed. The headline screamed:
KRUEGER MEETS ALIEN ADVISOR!
I filled a few more pages with equally ridiculous, bogus news items relating to the High School. I made about 50 copies of the newsletter on an old photocopier my granddad had in his home office and distributed them, Mind Rape-style in the lunchroom, library, hallways, any spot that looked inviting. This was during the last month of my Froshmen year.
I thought that reception to the first issue of the Mushroom Cloud went well. I’m not sure what criteria I based that on, other than seeing some people reading it and laughing in the hallway. That is all any troublemaker needs for motivation: an audience.
Over the summer break I spent a lot of time sitting at the desk in my room, thinking of a supply of new zingers to fill the fall issues. I came up with some standard, sub-par jokes, some High School humor 101, jokes about the cafeteria food, the boring math classes. When the beginning of the sophomore year rolled around, the Mushroom Cloud was back and it was a hit. I soon had students approaching me asking if they could contribute funny articles or artwork. One student wrote a cover story on how the History teacher bore an uncanny resemblance to Sam the Eagle from The Muppets.
The History teacher found a copy of this issue in his class, it was reported to me, and began ranting and raving about respecting your elders. It was good publicity. The issues came out steadily every month. One of our contributors, Mike, had a mom that worked for the school district. Glad to see her nerdy son participating in something, Mike’s mom offered to make copies of the Mushroom Cloud for free after hours on the school district’s photocopies. Our circulation increased.
Like any group of hot dogs, we started to get comfortable in our roles. We got cocky. The Mushroom Cloud began to print stories that dropped the F-bomb, described “shitty” school policies and printed satire that was admittedly vicious in tone. It was too bold for Port Washington.
All of the contributors had chosen bogus pen names and so speculation grew among the students and teachers on who was involved. One day after class me and my “assistant editor,” Andy, were working on the library computers, typing up Mushroom Cloud copy when we overheard teachers talking at a meeting by some library conference tables nearby. It droned on in the background, but then we heard the principal telling the teachers this:
“Now, as far as the Mushroom Cloud…” He paused to some polite laughter from the teachers. “Don’t worry, we’ve spoken to the people involved and they’ve assured us that they will tone it down.”
Me and Andy looked at each other in shock. We closed out what we were working on and stepped into the hall.
“Did you talk to someone about this?” He asked me.
“No!” I said. “They are totally bullshitting!” We both laughed. It was good to be infamous.
After about 7 monthly issues (plus the one from my Freshmen year) the Mushroom Cloud ended in an explosion worthy of the title. I still remember that day very well. I was taking a siesta during second hour Spanish class when a messenger delivered a notice to my teacher. He nudged me and placed the piece of paper on my desk. It read “come to the principal’s office IMMEDIATELY.” The text of the message was circled with a red marker. I stuffed the note into my pocket and headed to the office. I knew something bad was awaiting me there.
Here’s what had happened: that nerdy kid I mentioned, Mike, who had a mom that let us photocopy the Mushroom Cloud at her workplace had been busted. He had decided to assemble and staple some extra copies of the newsletter in the school library during study hour. An eagle-eyed librarian spotted him at work and called the principal. The principal hauled him into the office and decided to go bad cop all the way. He told this kid he must confess to who was in charge of the offending publication, or he would have a mark on his permanent record. The kid talked.
When I entered the office, I saw Andy sitting across the desk from the principal. He was crying. The principal’s face was beet red. I had never seen anyone with a face that was actually the color red from anger before. I sat down. He looked at us.
“Fuck you, Ratman?” He shouted at us. “FUCK YOU, RATMAN?! You think we’re going to allow that?!”
It became clear now. A student had written an op-ed piece for the Mushroom Cloud about the assistant principal with the not-so-eloquent title “Fuck you, Ratman.” It was the straw that broke the camel’s back.
The principal angrily outlined our downfall: a student brought a copy of the Mushroom Cloud home where her poor mom was “horrified” to read words like “fuck you” and “hump me, baby” and got on the phone to call another mom. Then that mom called a mom, and another mom, and so on. Soon the principal had two phone receivers to his ears at once with calls about the “filthy, obscene” literature being distributed to the young minds at Port High.
“And here we are,” he said. I tried in vain to say something along the lines of, “well, like, we have, like, first amendment rights, you know.”
“Not in High School, you don’t!” the principal shouted at us. I tried explaining that I didn’t understand why we were being punished for a creative venture that encouraged students to write and– albeit crudely–voice their opinion. The principal angrily told us we should have joined the staff of the official school newspaper. When I mentioned how boring the paper was and the parent-teacher board of Catholic moms armed with red markers, the principal shrugged angrily.
“Wake up! That’s life!” He hurled out. Me and my colleague were given a three day, out of school suspension, the most severe punishment. We were told that if we participated in any extra- curricular activity that wasn’t school approved, we would be recommended for expulsion.
We were sent home. Several Mushroom Cloud staff members went to the principal the next day to tell him that his verdict was unfair and that they would protest outside of the school. The principal shot down that plan by telling them that doing so would give each of them a three day out of school suspension. The school sent my parents a copy of the Mushroom Cloud with every offensive word highlighted brightly. Although my parents admired my creative output, the profanity offended them and they grounded me for a lengthy period of time. With the expulsion threat and a pair of angry parents I decided my career in the underground press needed to go on hiatus for awhile.
When I returned to school in the fall of my Junior year, though, I found a surprise in the hallway—a photocopy of a newsletter called Mushroom Cloud. “We’re back from the dead, and under new management,” it said on the cover, which had clipped the logo from an old issue of the newsletter. To this day, I have no idea who was responsible. Inside this mysterious new publication was Mushroom Cloud– style satire, which I thought was not as clever or well laid out as the original, as I pointed out to the principal when I found myself back in his office with a demand to explain it.
Still, I suppose, imitation is the best form of flattery.
A Crazy Fun October

That’s me with some Real Life Superheroes at a Heroes in the Night promotional appearance at Common Good Books in Saint Paul.
Wow, what a month! I’ve really been burning the candle at both ends.
October 1 was the official release date of my book, Heroes in the Night: Inside the Real Life Superhero Movement. It was a really proud day for me– I did it! I got a book out, you can find it at a lot of bookstores. It’s also available online here: http://www.ipgbook.com/heroes-in-the-night-products-9781613747759.php?page_id=21
To promote the book, I did four bookstore appearances. I was at Quimby’s Bookstore in Chicago on 10/05. My big hometown appearance was 10/11 here at Boswell Book Company in Milwaukee. A lot of family and friends were there and we had a fun after party at Stonefly Brewery.
I appeared at Westfield Comics in Madison on 10/19 and Common Good Books in Saint Paul, MN on 10/20. All cool stuff. I was joined by people featured in my book at all stops, so I big thanks to Wraith, Citizen Prime, the Watchman, Geist, Razorhawk, Misery White, and Blue for joining me at Q and A sessions. It was really great to get out, see old friends, and meet new ones, too.
I haven’t seen exact figures, but the publisher tells me the book is doing good. I’ll be continuing to promote it with media appearances through the holidays (and beyond.) Next place I’ll be is here in town for Milwaukee Zine Fest Nov. 9 (website: http://milwaukeezinefest.org/2013/index.php) I’ll have copies of the book and a little zine of wacky poetry I did titled Palookaville.
I’ve also been working hard on my (as yet untitled) second book, which is about people who study the paranormal. I took a hectic trip east to do field work for the book, travelling to West Virginia, Kentucky, Maine, and Florida over a ten day stretch. I’ve been writing about some of this for Onmilwaukee.com. You can read about my Kentucky adventure here: http://onmilwaukee.com/myOMC/authors/onmilwaukeecomstaffwriters/milwghoststorybobbymackey.html
Last thing I wanted to mention is an article I wrote for Third Coast Daily about Arkham House, a little known but important Wisconsin publishing house. They published the first works by H.P. Lovecraft and Ray Bradbury, among others. I worked on it on and off for a long time, and it was well timed to appear just before my favorite holiday, Halloween.
Here’s the article: http://thirdcoastdaily.com/2013/10/the-horror-of-sauk-city-arkham-houses-weird-fiction-legacy/
Below is a picture included in the article of Arkham House founder and prolific Wisconsin writer August Derleth. Happy Halloween!
SPACE COLLECTOR s/t

From the August 2013 Riverwest Currents
The Space Collector sound—imagine this, a heavy metal pterodactyl flapping its wings and shrieking violently, then lazily sailing along on a current of power chords. They stomp like a tyrannosaurus, sting like a velociraptor. Is this prehistoric metaphoric ooze—“From Fin to Foot” too much? Okay then, lets move it into space.
Interlude: DUN DUN DUN DUN! Dundadundaladalada dun—DUN DUN DUN DUN!
In the dystopian future, the world is a junk heap. Hope is lost, but that interlude you just heard was the “Flight of the Space Collector.” It’s a lost space cruiser collecting cosmic debris with the most bumpin’ boombox in the galaxy. The captains of this ship are Ed Osburg (bass/ vocals), Chris Valenti (guitar/ vocals), Miles Harbury (guitar/vocals), and Patrick Haga (drums/vocals.) They’ll lead you through a self titled album of controlled chaos, math metal tracks like “Gnomeland Security/ Pretension Bracket,” “Nothing Survives in a Vacuum,” and “Grandma Ash.”
Some of the songs are for headbangers, others are for philosophers.
My favorite tracks include the previously mentioned heavy stoner sludge “From Fin to Foot,” and the instrumental roller coaster “Flight of the Space Collector,” but the whole album is great and works well in its entirety in addition to individual tracks.
One more thing about this album—volume must be cranked to 11.
–Tea Krulos
Thing of Beauty
When I moved back to Milwaukee in May, I had something on the back of my mind– I wanted a typewriter. I thought I could use it for some sort of ritual where once a week I would bust it out, pour a stiff drink, set some atmosphere with some tunes and work on beatnik poetry or whatnot.
Maaaan, I thought, that would be sweet.
You can imagine my surprise and delight at the inner workings of the universe when I was walking around Riverwest (my neighborhood) about two days after being back. I happened to perchance upon a black plastic case sitting by the curb with a note taped to it– “FREE! Not sure if it works.” I opened it up and it was a solid looking Olympia typewriter.
And it did work– it just needed a new ribbon. I found a typewriter ribbon online for a few bucks and that, my friends, is that.
If you’re walking down my block Sunday evenings and hear what sounds like sporadic machine gun fire, that’s just me doing my Lawrence Ferlinghetti impersonation.
Heroes in the Night Blog Back Up and Running
My book Heroes in the Night will be out in October. Meanwhile I’ve relaunched the book’s blog, which you can find here: http://www.heroesinthenight.blogspot.com
It’ll feature a weekly Hero Profile every Thursday and various news and updates about the book.
World War II Love Letter
The Arcadia Opera House is a beautiful building and the Opera stage and ticket booths are still in order, but it’s rooms are now packed with ten decades of various artifacts. The building, not surprisingly, is considered haunted and a favorite investigation spot for local ghost hunters. A group named the Peace River Ghost Tracker has recorded what they claim are spooky sounding ghost whispers.
I found a neatly wrapped bundle of letters. It was labelled- “Cliff and Fran- WW II Love Letters- $40.” I asked the store owner about the bundle.
“Oh, they’re great,” he said. “They’re all from 1945, one half of the correspondence, just the letters from Cliff, just gushing his heart out to Fran.” He added that there were 34 letters spanning 1945 in the stack. I thought it was interesting and we left.
I couldn’t stop thinking of the letters and that night I had a dream I was reading them and was amazed by the contents. I went back and bought them. Since then, every few days I transcribe one of the letters while I drink my morning coffee. I found out more about the letters: they were written by Cliff, stationed somewhere off the West Coast, to Fran, back home in Portland, Maine.
A gear had turned in my head that a book collecting these letters might be possible. Although something along those lines could happen, there are two challenges:
1. There are already LOTS of books collecting WWII correspondence and love letters in particular out there. I found at least two dozen on Amazon. I’m not sure if that is a good sign or a bad one.
2. Good old Cliff isn’t the most eloquent writer, and a very repetitive one, as he himself admits in a letter. The “Passed by Naval Censor” stamp on each envelope insures that Cliff goes into no detail about his location or mission and so the letters mostly consist of him telling Fran how much he loves her and can’t wait to marry her a dozen different ways.
Still, I think there might be something here– perhaps these would be part of a bigger collection of writing from WWII or the basis of a fiction story line… it’s hard to tell why you’re drawn to something and what the forest might look like from the trees. Until I figure it out, I’ll keep transcribing with the morning coffee.
Anyway, the following is a letter I transcribed today. I left the spelling/ punctuation as is in the letter. The only explanation I’ll add to is a joke about a laundry business– in a previous letter, Cliff is complaining about having to do his own laundry, which Fran is obviously giving him some grief over.
Sunday, 3 June, 1945
Dearest Fran,
Well Darling, I guess this will be the last letter you’ll receive for quite some time. I’ll be thinking and loving you just the same Sweet and writing every nite. I received one from you today Darling. I loved every word in it honey.
It’s been a dull Sunday Darling. I’ve missed you terribly. I never thought it would be this bad. I love you Darling very much and hope you’ll marry me when I come back. I live for that day honey and the day we’re together again.
What do you mean don’t I ever work. Darling you would be surprised. After we’re married you won’t have to work Sweet. I’ll take care of that end. You just be at home waiting for me. I agree hon that the only solution to your stopping work is to get married and I hereby suggest myself as the lucky fellow. I’ll be glad when you will be able to give me the final answer. You know how much I love you. I know you want that day to come as quick as I do.
You are right Darling when you say I love to hear you say that you love me. It really makes me feel nice. It’s nice knowing you think it will be wonderful being married to me Darling. Honest Hon, I love you so very much it’s torture being away from you.
What do you mean you wonder what the reason is for saving my money now. As if you wouldn’t guess sweet.
Okay Darling—if I can’t find a job in Portland we’ll keep out of N.H. and VT. I hope I can find one in Portland Sweet for you. I’d love to live there Darling. But then anywhere would be heaven with you Darling.
That was pretty clever about the laundry business after the war. I must congratulate you Darling and remind me about it the next time we’re together. I’ll get even with a certain somebody. You’re lucky I’m not there right now. I’d tickle you until you cried. Honest, Darling, I do love you with all my heart and you are wonderful Darling.
You really have the time of our last kiss don’t you. Do you keep a diary Hon? Not me. I’d love to kiss you good-bye tonite like I did then.
I’ll be closing for tonite Darling but I’ll be writing every nite just the same. Take care of yourself Hon and keep loving me. I miss you Sweet very much. I love you Darling with all my heart- always.
All my love- all my life
Yours forever Hon,
“Cliff”
P.S. Say hello to everyone for me. Everyone’s fine at home. Don’t forget the good-nite kisses Darling. I’ll be looking at the moon everynite and thinking of you Sweet wishing we were together.
P.P.S. from Tea– my first book, Heroes in the Night, is now available for pre-order. You can also add it on Goodreads. More info in post previous to this one.









