Jim Chambers – Recollections: A Baby Boomer’s Memories…

Title: Recollections: A Baby Boomer’s Memories of the Fabulous Fifties

Author: Jim Chambers

ISBN: 978-0557091003

Page count: 144

Genre: History/Memoir

Price: $12.60

Author Bio:

I was born  in Atlanta, Georgia, on July 22, 1946, exactly nine months and five days after my father returned home from England, where he had served with the U.S. 8th Air Force during World War II. After a relatively undistinguished twelve years in public schools, I went on to the Georgia Institute of Technology, where I earned bachelor’s and master’s degrees in civil engineering. After that, I went to work with the Georgia Department of Transportation, where I designed highways for thirty-four years. I retired in 2001.

I’m an avid reader, reading a little of everything, but I prefer action novels, history and historical fiction, and biography. My wife Deborah and I love to travel, but scuba diving and underwater photography are our real passions. Deborah shoots video, and I shoot stills. I’ve managed to win or place in several major international underwater photography competitions, and my underwater photography has been published in magazines such as National Geographic and Popular Photography. Unfortunately, due to medical problems, I’ve recently had to give up scuba diving.

Tell us about your book:

As one of the first post-WWII Baby Boomers, my childhood and early teenage years were in the 1950s, a remarkable decade for the United States that saw enormous political, technological, and cultural changes. Although many books have covered the headline-making events of the era in great detail, few of these books give the reader a real feel for what daily life was like for Americans living in that decade, especially for kids growing up then. I remember the little nuts and bolts things of daily life for families during the fascinating decade known as the Fabulous Fifties. “Recollections” perfectly blends paying homage to the little day-to-day rituals with a larger scale examination of social issues and mores of the times, and it’s equally entertaining on either level. “Recollections” is a warm, lovingly honest, and fascinating portrait of America in the mid-20th Century.

How long did it take to write the book?

Approximately six months

What inspired you to write the book?

One of my favorite books is The Life and Times of the Thunderbolt Kid, a humorous memoir by Bill Bryson of his childhood years growing up in the 1950s and early 1960s. Bill did a marvelous job of describing how it was to be a kid in the United States during that period. I was born in 1946, so the 1950s were my coming of age decade too. There were some major differences in our lives, however. Bill grew up in the Midwest (Des Moines, Iowa), and I was born and raised in the South (Atlanta, Georgia), so we had somewhat different perspectives on our times.

Many of the incidents in The Life and Times of the Thunderbolt Kid were reminiscent of my own youth, and they brought back a flood of recollections. Reading the book brought back a lot of childhood memories that I had forgotten, memories of what it was like to grow up in that exciting decade. World War II had ended a few months before I was born, and I was one of the first Baby Boomers.

Talk about the writing process. Did you have a writing routine? Did you do any research, and if so, what did that involve?

I’m retired, so I have a lot of time available to write. I didn’t have a regular writing routine, but I typically wrote for 3-4 hours a day from Monday through Friday. Occasionally, I took a break from writing for a week or so. Most of the book came from memory, but I did a lot of online research to check dates and spelling of names.

What do you hope your readers come away with after reading your book?

My purpose in writing the book was to reminisce a bit about life in the United States during the mid-20th century. In many ways, the 1950s was a kinder, gentler era, sandwiched between twenty years of depression and war in the 1030s-1940s and the explosive social changes of the 1960s. It was an exciting era to live in, and I wanted to give readers a look at the 1950s, particularly from a kid’s point of view. The book has been received very well by both young people who are interested in American history, and older people who lived in that era. Recollections was written as an historical account of the 1950s decade, but there are enough personal memories that some readers have compared it to a memoir.

Where can we go to buy your book?

Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/Recollections-Boomers-Memories-Fabulous-Fifties/dp/0557091004/ref=tmm_pap_title_0

Excerpt:

From Chapter 2 – The Family:

I still remember one incident when I was twelve years old. I had gotten a .22 caliber rifle (a Marlin Model 57 lever action, a really sweet rifle) for my birthday. You couldn’t discharge firearms in our suburban neighborhood of course, but I was on the back steps just loading it and unloading it when the rifle accidentally discharged and a bullet went into the wall. I heard my mother scream, and I ran inside to the kitchen, where plaster dust was everywhere (walls were plaster then, not the sheetrock drywall that would come later). The bullet had grazed the plaster and made a very noticeable crater. Fortunately for me, the crater was behind the refrigerator and wasn’t very noticeable, especially with the stack of old newspapers on top. My mom calmed down, cleaned things up, and sat me down to explain that if my dad ever found out what happened, he would kill me instantly and without remorse. Therefore, she said, as long as he’s alive, we’ll keep this refrigerator so he never sees the wall behind it. My father died thirty-two years later, and my mom kept that refrigerator going with duct tape and baling wire. I contributed by praying for the refrigerator’s continued health. My dad must have wondered why my mom was so attached to the refrigerator, but he never said anything, and since he was a bit of a cheapskate, it was okay with him to not have to buy a new refrigerator. My mom got a ton of points for that, and afterwards, I upgraded her birthday present considerably from the usual soap-on-a-rope or chocolate-covered cherries. After my dad died, I bought her a new refrigerator, a deluxe model with all the frills. It was worth every penny.

NOTE: A Kindle edition of the book is also available for $0.99:

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B002H9XTWI

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comments (2) | Leave a Reply
  1. I read Jim’s book and thoroughly enjoyed it. He covers a lot of ground, but gives readers a great idea of what life was like in the fifties–the bad as well as the good. I loved the humorous touches.

  2. I can relate to this book being a baby boomer myself. My how times have changed! Can’t wait to read it.

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