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~ author D. S. Cooper

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Tag Archives: Carson Long Military Academy

The Covered Bridge

16 Thursday May 2019

Posted by Doug in A Writer's Life, Self Publishing, Self-publishing, This Writer's Life, Uncategorized, Writing

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Carson Long, Carson Long Institute, Carson Long Military Academy, Civility, Hate Speech, Racial discrimination


Sometimes events which seem to be of little import at the time can affect us afterwards in significant ways; long after the moments themselves fade from memory their effects may continue to circulate in our subconscious and shape our lives.

In 1965 I was a thirteen year-old in the junior school at Carson Long, a military boarding school for around 200 boys in Perry County Pennsylvania in the foothills of the Appalachian Mountains. We did not have television or video games so we found our fun outdoors; sometimes we hiked to the fossil pits, where a highway cut had exposed 400 million year-old seashells from the Silurian period which could be easily lifted out of the sandstone; or we might walk to the ice pond to go skating in winter. We had a rope swing from a giant tree on the slope of Dynamite Mountain and sometimes we climbed to the top just to gaze down on our school’s bell tower and the town of New Bloomfield. There was also a covered bridge on the other side of Dynamite and it was to there that I hiked one April afternoon with a small group of classmates. We climbed on the posts and beams of the structure and sat on the banks of the creek underneath to hear the tires of passing cars rattle the wood planks of the roadbed like a colossal xylophone over our heads, until we became bored and elected to hike back to school. A friend named Aron wanted to walk on a road rather than across the fields and I knew the way so he and I parted with the group and set off on a narrow country road. The day was warm and bright and the scenery was bucolic pastureland between rolling hills and we talked about all the silly and serious things that perk up from boys’ souls and come out of their mouths unfiltered at such times. We passed working farms with well-kept barns adorned with hex signs and sturdy stone farmhouses and the afternoon was brilliant until we walked past a run-down house which was perched on a slight rise close to the road. It looked as if it had been painted a long time ago in the buff and tan colors that the Pennsylvania Railroad used on their track-side buildings and there were broken boards in the facade and a scrapped cars and rusty farm machinery in the yard. We were fairly past this hovel when two boys half our ages came to the front door and began to yell at us, “Go away nigger! We don’t want no tar babies here!” These little boys were barefoot and clothed in filthy tee-shirts and their voices were high and nasally when they screeched “Ni-i-gger! Ni-i-i-gger!” like excited chipmunks.

This was confusing to me–a white boy from Long Island–since I had hardly noticed that Aron was a black boy from Miami. To a thirteen year-old the color of his skin didn’t seem any more significant than the color of other boys’ hair and eyes and the tones of their complexions, and I wanted to keep walking away. But Aron stopped and looked straight ahead for a short time before he turned around and went back to the house. He was a big kid, soft-spoken and articulate–I think his father was a doctor–and I was terrified for what might happen but I followed my friend onto the porch of the house anyway. My knees were shaking when a man came to the door and Aron calmly told him that he wanted to speak with those boys. This was refused, and the man said something like, “Go ahead and walk on the road, I ain’t going to stop you, you got a right to walk on that road and we got a right to say whatever we want in our own house, so you just keep on walking, boy.” Not much was said between us as we walked back to our dormitory. I don’t remember telling anyone about our roadside encounter and even though his dignity was intact, I believe that Aron was too embarrassed and humiliated by the event to speak of it again. I was sorry that he did not return to Carson Long the following year; he was a good kid.

I had completely forgotten that day until I was searching my memories while writing The Old Cadet, my spooky novel about a boy who is missing from a military school, so it wasn’t until that moment of reflection five decades later that I realized that those forgotten seconds on a country road were the exact genesis of lifetime of unshakable convictions about race, hate, and civility.

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On Dynamite Mountain

17 Thursday Sep 2015

Posted by Doug in D. S. Cooper Books, This Writer's Life

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Amazon Kindle, Amputee, Appalachian Folklore, Carson Long Military Academy, Ghosts, The Old Cadet, Writing

A brief excerpt from my second novel, The Old Cadet

They had not ventured far off the trail and into the forest when Derek stopped and pointed at the ground.

“Try not to step on it. This is one of the oldest living things on Earth.”

Lulu bent down and took a closer look at the vines.

“Blueberries?”

“No,” Derek said with a hint of reverence, “this is a box huckleberry plant.”

“Explain, please.”

“All this is one plant,” Derek pointed to low vines spread among the trees in the distance. “The box huckleberry reproduces by spreading roots and cloning itself. Individual trees and bushes come and go, but these same vines might have been clinging to this hillside for a thousand years. Maybe more.”

“And why does some mountain man care about these scraggly vines?”

“I have no idea why. But, find the box huckleberry, and you might see boomer.”

Lulu stood up. Then she turned and yelled, “Boomer! Boomer! Come out and talk to me!”

“I told you,” Derek laughed as her words echoed down the hillside. “He’s deaf.”

She gave Derek an exasperated look and bent down to grasp a sprig of the plant.

“What do you think you’re doing?”

“You may believe in folklore. I do not. I want to have this plant identified by an expert.”

“I’m serious. That really is one of the oldest living things on Earth. I wouldn’t take it.”

“You’re not one to talk,” she said as she broke off a few inches of vine. “You murder innocent animals for trophies.”

“I have a covenant with the animals. You haven’t spent enough time in the wilderness to understand it.”

“I have a master’s degree in electrical engineering, Mister Yeager,” Liu Chen said as she as she tucked the sprig into her collar. “Please don’t tell me what I don’t understand.”

“Fine,” Derek said, walking back to the trail. “Suit yourself.”

When they reached the trail, they took off running uphill again.

“So,” Lulu asked as they ran, “what is the other thing Boomer cares for?”

“I’ll tell you later.”

“Why not now?”

“You’re too smart for me, Lulu.”

They stopped at the clearing on the top of Dynamite long enough to look back at the town of New Manor and the Ethan North campus. The spire of the chapel, the roof of Founders Hall, and the crown of the bell tower were below them among the trees. Then Derek led Lulu down the path on the backside of the mountain, which took them to the abandoned farmhouse and down to the covered bridge across Sherman’s Creek.

There was not much traffic on the back road. They walked into the shadows inside the bridge and examined the beams of the ancient structure. The sun shone through the gaps between the barn-board sheathing and illuminated the interior in pinstripes of light.

“Let’s take a break down here,” Derek suggested and led her to the grassy bank under the bridge. They sat against the stone underpinnings of the bridge, and he took apples and bottles of water from his rucksack.

“There are two things I wish to tell you, Derek.”

“Shoot.”

“First, there is … was … a man in my life.”

“Good for you,” Derek bit into his apple.

“Secondly, Jonathan was very happy at Ethan North. He loved the school.”

“Good for him.”

When a car came by, the timbers of the roadway over their heads rattled and rang in succession like the keys of a giant xylophone.

“Now, what brought you to Ethan North, Mister Derek Yeager?”

“Things weren’t so great at home,” Derek shrugged.

“You were happier here?”

“I was. It was like growing up with one hundred and sixty equally screwed-up brothers, Lulu.”

“That’s exactly what Jonathan told me,” she laid back on the grassy bank and ate her apple. “Except that he omitted the screwed-up part.”

Amelia Dupont photo, by permission

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Phantoms I Have Known

04 Tuesday Aug 2015

Posted by Doug in D. S. Cooper Books, This Writer's Life

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Carson Long Military Academy, Cult, Ghosts, Kidnapping, Kindle, Phantom Pain, Self Publishing, Writing

Old Cadet Cover

Like my character Kevin O’Connor, I have known phantoms.

They often come in the night, bringing tingling sensations to my right leg, which was amputated above the knee three years ago. These visits by a limb which no longer exists in the physical world are not always unpleasant. Sometimes the illusion that my leg has returned is so convincing that I must reach down and touch the end of my stump to prove to my senses that there is nothing there. On occasion, there is searing pain, like a prolonged electric shock, which causes muscles that are no longer alive to brutally convulse. And while these most severe bouts of phantom pain are infrequent, I have learned that resistance is futile. I just get up and read and watch TV and listen to music through the night. By morning, the phantoms will have left me.

Civil War physician and writer Silas Weir Mitchell (1829-1914) gave a nod to the ghostly nature of the phenomena when he coined the term phantom limb, writing that “thousands of spirit limbs were haunting as many good soldiers, every now and then tormenting them.”

So when I decided to put a supernatural twist on my novel about the kidnapping of a boy from a military prep school in Pennsylvania, at least one of the characters — Kevin O’Connor — had to know the same phantoms which I have known.

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