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Trucking School
The more I pondered the mystery, the deeper it grew: big trucks
everywhere…around me every day of my life. Yet I found I knew
nothing about trucking or the people manning the cabs - outside
of one hokey Hollywood film that threw an ape in there with the
driver. How was anyone to get a true picture of truckers and
the people populating the industry? It seemed truckers didn't
write…and writers certainly don't truck….
The front axle and enormous steer tire of an idling
over-the-road giant sat opposite my open window as I waited for
a light on N.J. route 46. I had just left an angry agent in the
"Big Apple." She'd given up on placing my first novel, a saga
about the gambling resurgence in Atlantic City. Her advice,
after six major trade publishers had turned it down: "Cut it in
half!" After five years of writing, I wasn't going to halve 750
manuscript pages and maybe slice the heart out of my story…no
siree, bob! (Nor had
I enough distance from my work, at that point in time, to
rationally begin a reconstruction - if the story even demanded
it.)
Nine years later, I wouldn't have known I'd been staring at the
front axle of a W-900L Kenworth "K-Whopper." That day, when I
returned to my Pennsylvania home, I phoned a friend who owned a
big old Brockway dump truck and asked him to give me driving
lessons. I was itching to dig into what promised to be a
fantastic eye-opener, that BIG story - waiting out there on the
road - my second novel! Logically, I felt the only way I was
going to get at it was to become part of the trucking
industry…just for a spell.
After a few minutes of instruction, I took the wheel of my
friend's Brockway and began my studies. We got only a few feet
down his drive before I had another decision to make: I had no
idea that my attempt to shift his balky gear box would create a
metallic, grating scream of agony that nearly ended our long
friendship. He snapped, "Go ahead…wreck my gear box, or find
yourself a trucking school!" Deciding to keep a friend, I took
the advice on a school.
I settled on a trucking school down in the "Dutch Country"
southeast of Harrisburg and north of Lancaster, a quaint enough
place to while away a few summer months should the trucking
curriculum prove boring. Boring it was NOT. The school proved
to be an education in itself.
With about a hundred students, the bulk of them leaning on some
strange kind of PA educational grant, the academic tenor was
decidedly weird. Three of the young ladies enrolled in my class
had nothing less in mind than heavy partying with any
instructor who might show an interest (not a problem). I found
myself assigned to a crew that shrank daily, until I was left
alone in a creaky combo rig with our instructor and "Jackknife
Johnny" - a suicidal freak in his early twenties, who insisted
on slowly drifting the truck and trailer into the oncoming
lanes of any road we traveled. That straightened out when I
went to the school's director, demanding the return of my
tuition…it took two visits.
The apartment I rented in the nearby farming town of Marietta,
PA became a workshop for the setting of my book. The mood of
the place, its attitudes and localisms, later showed up in the
characters of "Old Ed" Rothermel and Abner Weaver - though
Abner was based mainly on three other characters who had never
set foot in Marietta.
Somehow, the prior experience with my friend's gear box hung
on. I had trouble with shifting from day one, but not nearly so
bad as did one gal, a former school bus driver. I think her bus
had an automatic transmission, and try as she might, she
couldn't master a nine-speed stick shift. One day she broke
down in tears and was never seen again. Her frustrations
reappear in Dawn - Chapter 11 - when Abner sits Dawn behind the
wheel for her first lesson. Dawn, however, pulls it off with
flying colors. As for me, it took two years over the road
before my shifting finally smoothed out; I could finally go up
and down the gears completely without the clutch, except for
the first shift from a standing start, surprising myself no
end.
The school possessed a half-dozen old trucks (tractors) and
trailers. By some great good luck while I was at the school, no
one, including "Jackknife Johnny," ever managed to smash one
up. (I later heard that "Jackknife" killed a family in a wreck
he'd had at his first - and last - place of employment.)
The school's rigs seemed to have quite a bit of snap. They
moved out smartly…and maybe this had something to do with the
difficulty a few of us had catching gears. I only mention this
because, while landing my first job, I was put behind the wheel
of a company truck and told to hook to a road trailer that sat
at rest in the yard. With a former State Police Officer in the
jump seat taking notes on my performance, I remarked that the
company truck seemed to have practically no power compared to
the ones at school. He grunted, "Maybe so….”"
When I became flustered on a highway ramp and began grinding
gears, he told me to calm down, saying he'd watched other
former students exhibiting the same problem. When we got back
to the yard, he broke out laughing: "Well, you finally caught
on - didn't you? Some day, I'm gonna phone those nitwits at
your school and tell them to graduate you guys on a full
trailer…" That’s when I learned I'd just pulled my first real
LOAD - 22 tons worth!
Maybe I was still grinding gears when I graduated, but I won
the school award for the most improved student driver in yard
work and docking. That was another joke. No dock out there in
the real world was that easy to hit squarely…and all of them
were different. But by the end of my career, I could do a 90
degree blindside jack into a crooked alley off a crowded
Brooklyn, NY street - and did so, many times…practice makes
perfect.
Oddly enough, I didn't write a word of 3 Aces while I logged
nearly a million road miles. I tried a tape recorder for a
while, then notes. But found myself too busy - and generally
too damned tired - to concentrate on writing about the
adventure that, in retrospect, provided one of the most
exciting and rewarding times of my life.
Instead, I carefully packed the sights, sounds, joys, and
tragedies of a nine-year, long-haul trucking stint into my
noggin in neat, little cubicles. I'd had the decided advantage
of finishing one long novel before hitting the road. I knew
what to look for, what to retain…and I'd thought long and hard,
over all those miles, about packing those experiences and
teachings from everyone I'd met and every place I'd been in the
forty-eight and Canada into a tighter, more exciting book.
And when I finally left the road, I pulled the plug and let it
all pour out. Did I capture what I’d set out to do? Let me hear
from you… please. Let me know….
by Richard Ide - 21st August 2008
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Richard Ide is a writer of realistic, action-adventure and
romantic-suspense fiction. On May 26th, 2008, Button Top Books
released 3 ACES, his first published work. Now available on
http://Amazon.com or by special order (ISBN: 978-0-615-15821-1)
in bookstores. For more information on Richard and 3 Aces,
visit: www.3acesthenovel.com
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Article Source: http://www.bb-articles.com
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