Tuesday, December 20, 2016

50 of The Brown and White

The Brown and White
Just a quick post to tell you that I have sold 50 of The Brown and White in my first month. That's pretty good in that I was so busy with another book, I had little time to promote the Brown and White in the first month. Let's hope its 500 in the second!

The Brown and White takes you back in a literary time-capsule. You're exposed to changes in many areas of life while the boys in the book carry out on their daily activity. These Catholic boys are carried back and forth on the Brown and White bus with its free spirited captain, Willie. Much changes, but hope prevails. In fact, faith prevails. 

Friday, December 2, 2016

McCaskey Speaks at Long Island Chapter of Legatus

McCaskey's Sports and Faith
Sporting Chance Press author and Chicago Bears Vice President Patrick McCaskey is schedule to speak at the Long Island Legatus Chapter on May 4, 2017. 

Founded in March 2004, the Long Island (N.Y.) Chapter  meets on the first Thursday of every month. Speakers have included author George Weigel, Sisters of Life Prioress Mother Agnes Donovan, America magazine editor Rev. Drew Christianson, Catholic University president emeritus Most Reverend David O’Connell, and the late Bowie Kuhn, former Major League Baseball commissioner. 

Legatus includes over 4,000 Catholic business leaders and spouses. 

Lessons and Humor in The Brown and White


I once got a school jacket from a neighbor that was old and worn out after it was "advertised" as practically brand new. My mother, although certainly doing her best, added insult to injury by knitting some clothes to go with it.  This is a funny lesson in my book The Brown and White. I have a number of episodes in the book that are funny, but a little painful as well. My life, and I suppose many other people, could be described as funny and painful. 

More than anything else, my book is funny! But when you write humor, it gets a little tricky at times.  I wrote The Brown and White over 40 years and sometimes I looked at things and made changes. My sensibilities changed.

I often think of humor as having no conscience. Things can be funny and cruel; funny and racist; and funny and just wrong. Hitler thought Roosevelt's letter suggesting he leave the rest of Europe alone (after he started his expansionism) as funny. To Hitler and thousands in the audience, Hitler's response was funny. To Roosevelt and most people concerned with Hitler's threats, it was something different all together. 

It occurred to me this morning that several of the incidents I have written about in The Brown and White are not only humorous, but on some level instructive. The instructive stuff is good, but I certainly didn't write the book for its lessons. I wanted people to know the way it was for us back in 1967-1968. And I wanted to give everyone in my past a kind of hug. The book is written for adults, although I do hope it gets a lot of play with young adults.

My book, The Brown and White, examines the life of a Catholic High School freshman who goes through some funny and scary times.  It's a good quick read that is based on fact. I've been working with books by other people for a long time and this is my first book. Maybe I will end up like Carole King, behind the scenes for years and break out into super stardom! Well, I can hope.


Tuesday, September 20, 2016

Our Ad for the Brown and White



Lawrence Norris
The Brown and White
Pub. Sept. 2016
Forty plus years in the making, The Brown and White is a fictionalized memoir that tells the story of Collin Callaghan's freshman year at a Chicago Catholic High School. Collin is a white boy who is living in turbulent times in a changing city. He clings to his neighborhood and his family as he heads out each day with his classmates on the Brown and White, the ancient school bus driven by free-spirited Willie. Memorable characters abound as this story unfolds. Collin's loveable family, especially his Irish Catholic policeman father and his Irish immigrant mother face life together. Collin and classmates blaze their own humorous and passionate trail through the late 1960s. A unique cast of terrific teachers are there to see the boys through. Laughs and life meet readers head on as they travel on the Brown and White.
 
The Brown and White is published by Sporting Chance Press and is available from Amazon and select stores.
·        Paperback: 190 pages
·        Publisher: Sporting Chance Press, Inc.; 1st edition (September 16, 2016)
·        Language: English
·        ISBN-10: 0981934277
·        ISBN-13: 978-0981934273
·        Product Dimensions: 5.5 x 0.4 x 8.5 inches
·        Shipping Weight: 10.7 ounces
See and buy book here at Amazon.

Lawrence Norris is an author, an editor, and a publisher. He started working with books as a teenager at the legendary Kroch's and Brentano's Bookstores and he worked for decades for a major international publishing firm. He has written several books, edited a couple dozen, and published books as well under his own company, Sporting Chance Press. Norris surrounds himself with books and he especially loves the simple stories of people who try to make a difference. His heroes are policemen, firemen, janitors, librarians, teachers, moms, dads, grandparents, nuns, ex-nuns, and humble priests.  Sporting Chance Press, 1074 Butler Drive, Crystal Lake, IL 60014. www.sportingchancepress.com

Saturday, September 17, 2016

BROWN AND WHITE IN PRINT

BROWN AND WHITE
NOW IN PRINT NOW IN PRINT NOW IN PRINT NOW IN PRINT NOW IN PRINT
Forty plus years in the making, The Brown and White is a fictionalized memoir that tells the story of Collin Callaghan's freshman year at a Chicago Catholic High School. Collin is a white boy who is living in turbulent times in a changing city. He clings to his neighborhood and his family as he heads out each day with his classmates on the Brown and White, the ancient school bus driven by free-spirited Willie. Memorable characters abound as this story unfolds. Collin's loveable family, especially his Irish Catholic policeman father and his Irish immigrant mother face life together. Collin and classmates blaze their own humorous and passionate trail through the late 1960s. A unique cast of terrific teachers are there to see the boys through. Laughs and life meet readers head on as they travel on the Brown and White.

Saturday, September 3, 2016

The Brown and White Finally Goes to Print

The Brown and White
I sent The Brown and White to print yesterday.  I will have the book up on my site at sportingchancepress.com after I know the schedule a little better.  I am selling it at $12.50 a copy and it works best for me when you order copies from my web site although it is also on CreateSpace and on Amazon itself.  On my website, I get your order and ship same day usually. I use PayPal that can take an order via credit card or funds from your PayPal account and I never see your credit card info--it goes right to PayPal. If you have any problems at all or you want to order a bunch of books, write me at lmj.norris@gmail.com and I will take care of things myself right away. 

When you produce a book through Createspace, you pay them for the printing and you pay them 20% for any orders they take on their store. If the order goes to Amazon, again you pay for the book and then you pay Amazon a 40% commission for sales on their store. It cost me a few thousand dollars to get my web site up and a few hundred dollars a year, but when you order it on my web site, I get a fair return. When you order it through my website using PayPal, it is secure and I benefit the most. 

I have had The Brown and White in many different versions over the 40 plus years I have been writing it. In some ways, I thought time had passed me up as I continued to write the book, but now it seems more on point than ever before. The Brown and White covers the times from for the perspective of a white boy going to school in trouble times. A few times over the years, I found myself talking briefly about the black perspective and I thought that was really a mistake so I was careful not to go there. As a school boy we read a half dozen books on the experience of blacks during the time, but our assigned reading was never anything on ourselves. I loved the John Powers books and wanted to do something that spoke to people who loved John's stuff only a decade or so later in a more turbulent times. 

Despite the troubled times, The Brown and White is about in large part my teachers, classmates, and home life rather than the social circumstances of the day--although those times loomed over the story.  It is a book of humor, innocence, faith, and I think love. 

Despite how difficult it is today in many areas, we really cannot go back regardless of what people are saying, because there is real connection these days between the races and it is called "family." Many of our families are intertwined. In the 1960s, it was more likely you knew people from other races from school or work.  Today, you may have a grandson of mixed race and that gives you a whole different perspective on things regardless of your own race. You love that boy with all your heart and have a close personal reason to see that his future is the best it can be. 


Thursday, August 18, 2016

Brown and White Book Author Writes on Catholic Boys Schools

My book, The Brown and White is a fictonalized memoir of Collin Callaghans freshman year at a Catholic Boy's high school. The Brown and White tells the story of Collin Callaghan's freshman year at a Chicago Catholic High School. Collin is a white boy who is living in turbulent times in a changing city. He clings to his neighborhood and his family as he heads out each day with his classmates on the Brown and White, the ancient school bus driven by free-spirited Willie. Memorable characters abound as this humorous story unfolds.

But today, I wanted to write about a serious and important topic--related to the Brown and White.


Boys Catholic High Schools are expensive! Many range between $8,000-$12,000 a year. There are certain student aid programs that help of course. If a boy finds a job, he may be able to contribute a few thousand himself, but for the most part, parents have to pick up the cost.  And once the student finishes his education at his college prep school, he and his parents have a bigger financial fish to fry with a college education. Still, Catholic High Schools are surviving, but it just can't be easy. 

If a parish feeds students into a Catholic High School, they may be able to have a collection or two for the program, but chances are they are having a hard enough time as it is themselves. Never-the-less, I believe that a high school, a grade school, the local Catholic bookstore, parish organizations and the parish church itself are all part of a faith continuum. The distinct pieces need to be fed for the health of the whole.  I can't help but believe that when the schools fall off the radar, that church membership is likely to drop over time.  When schools are healthy, I suspect the church is going to do well. A local Catholic bookstore that carries merchandise also helps support the faith continuum. Catholics who pass by the Catholic gift and bookstore for their Communion and Confirmation gifts are not helping the cause. In this troubled time, you must be "in for a penny, in for a pound."

I think it's funny that many people think that the Catholic Church is rich.  I suspect they have this belief based on the Vatican treasures and properties in places like Rome. But frankly, if they get to Rome, they will find that these treasures are for the entire world not church property like a parish bank account. When some of the great Catholic churches have burned and needed costly rebuilding and renovation, it might surprise many people that donations frequently came from people from many different faiths--including Jews and Moslems. 

And on some level, Catholic Schools have also been very ecumenical as well. In some ways, this can be disturbing to some Catholics, but by doing so, it supports an opened mindedness and does not put the breaks on true charity. When I was a kid way back in the dark ages, we had a couple Jewish kids in Catholic School with us. The nuns did their best to teach the Catholic program, but at the same time tried to be kind to the students of other faiths.  This must have been difficult when you consider there was a Catholic slant built into practically every subject in its textbooks and curriculum.

As neighborhoods changed in Chicago, for example, it became more difficult in that Catholic Schools sometimes served more Protestants than Catholics. Many of the schools were serving middle class people, but some found themselves in poorer areas. I find it disturbing when a Catholic home for children, a hospital or some other institution that serves mostly non-Catholics, receives government funds to help it provide for services (at much cheaper rates than the public organizations) and people have criticisms for the serving organization. 

When schools came to serve poorer minority populations, the Sisters and other teachers shifted their curriculum somewhat and wanted so badly to make a contribution to help these poor kids move up and out of poverty. In some cases it worked and if it didn't work, it had more to do with society at the time than the teachers. My sister taught in schools like this in Detroit. 

At the same time, you can find yourself in a no-win situation.  At my high school, one of its most prominent Protestant students remarked that there was a certain teacher who harassed him (I suppose like in racism). The kindest thing he had to say was that  "the teachers did not try to convert him." A generous man no doubt.

Most Catholic institutions have come back to tighter Catholic curriculum, but they retain their respect for the other faiths of  their non-Catholic students.  Catholics criticized schools when they found their kids were graduating without even a fundamental understanding of the "Roman" faith.  To maintain their appeal however, the schools today must show their academic excellence. Producing good Catholics with bad ACT scores is not an option. 

But if the whole Catholic Faith continuum is to survive, people have to support all the Catholic institutions.  The people that whine about this institution is too liberal or this one is too conservative are just expressing their views and it's their right. But again, I think we need to be "in for a penny and in for a pound" on Catholicism. If  you are waiting for just the right pope, bishop or priest to come along before you support the Church, good luck with that.

I think Catholic High Schools can use some help. I have a hard time thinking that we will be judged by whether we gave to a conservative or liberal one. We might be judged if we could have given and didn't because they were too liberal or conservative for our taste.

Copyright 2016, Sporting Chance Press


Saturday, January 9, 2016

My Neighborhood was Irish

My neighborhood was Irish.  My uncles, a little removed from Ireland by time and distance, would sing Irish tunes in the Irish bars in the South Side Chicago. My Irish grandmother on my father's side had stopped by England with her parents before swinging over to America.  She was at home here with her Mc's and O'this and O'that. My mother's parents were from Ireland as well, and they were part of a migration of Irish who went to Scotland's shipbuilding centers and then on to America to make their new lives.  

My dad was a big husky man with reddish hair and a big smile that masked an Irish temper.  He was an Irish Policeman and happy to gab with those on the beat.  But he never played the Irish card. He was who he was and he kept it simple.

Being Irish in my neighborhood was like having two hands or two legs, not much to brag about with everyone being Irish! I did come to appreciate it later in life.  As an adult, when I read the Breastplate of Saint Patrick and I felt the fear and the desperate need for God from the words of a desperate shepherd boy and slave, I appreciated my Irish roots.  You could throw away all the male tenor versions of Danny Boy I heard as a child in heap, but when I heard Jamie O'Reilly sing it purely and sweetly, I felt the song and felt the Irish and the sadness of having to leave their land. 
But I want to tell you about  the time that I went to Billy Donovan's house, the most Irish of all Irish boys in the neighborhood. His parents were so new to the America that they had brogues.

But first I must tell you that my family, the Callaghan's, had a kind of shabby house that was suitable for a family with one child and we had six.  My brother and I slept on the unheated back porch and one of my sisters often slept on the front porch, which was technically enclosed in windows but had been an outdoor space.  The other girls in the family shared a room and when the weather changed, the cold-room kids slept on the dining room floor and on the living room couch.  Luckily, there was a bit of space between the oldest three and the youngest three, and before long the older moved out to nurses training and the convent. So we lived in shifts.

We were growing up with a little bit of Eisenhower and then John Kennedy.  Some of my neighbors were sporting new cars and few bucks in their wallet so it was not quite "in" to be shabby. We were what Americans called  "shanty Irish," some of our neighbors were trying to be more like the "lace curtain" Irish. Aside from our friends on the block who had known us since we were very young, it was a little more difficult to reach and touch some of the others in the neighborhood who might be a step above our lowly socioeconomic rung on the ladder.

But Billy Donovan had been a good school friend and he had invited me over to his house.  Billy was the most decent guy you would want to know. Never course or unkind, a good student and good baseball player. Billy had a younger brother and sister. He lived in a very nice little brick house that was a block away from Saint Cajetan School. Everything about Billy's house was what our house did not have.  It was brick.  It had a second floor where there was three bedroom in which the family could fit comfortably.  It was decades newer than our house and the grounds were neat and trim.  So my entry into the Donovan's house had expectations. I knew it would be just like the Cleavers' of Leave it Beaver and ours was like the Beverly Hillbillies before the move out west. But I was wrong.

You see Billy's dad had come over to America with some baggage.  Not suitcases and trunks, but the baggage of pain, anger and alcohol. And Billy's mother was what today would be called an enabler. As I entered the living room, any joy that I had in my soul left me. The room was tidy and clean enough, but completely devoid of furniture except for a few pieces that were used by Mr. Donovan in the center of the room.   A TV set stood on a table opposite Mr. Donovan.  The "King of the Castle" was sitting in a brown reclining chair. A tray table was at his side with an open bottle of beer. Upon our entry into the house, Mrs. Donovan came into the room carrying the King's dinner and another beer.  Billy Donovan and I were like flies in the room; worth a few seconds of Mr. Donovan's annoyance, but little else.  Mr. Donovan said nothing to us, but nodded and went back to some television program.  This was the Donovan's nice house. 

Billy and I ran up the stairs to the room he shared with his brother.  We sat around for a few minutes and talked.  I was nervous and jumpy.  And then it was time for me to leave and never come back to the Donovan's house.  I wanted to get home to our shanty Irish home and the people I loved. 

Copyright 2016, Sporting Chance Press
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Lawrence Norris is the publisher of  Sporting Chance Press Books and the author of the eBook, The Brown and White. The Brown and White is a fictionalized memoir that tells the story of Collin Callaghan's freshman year at a Chicago Catholic High School. Collin is a white boy who is living in turbulent times in a changing city. He clings to his neighborhood and his family as he heads out each day with his classmates on the Brown and White, the ancient school bus driven by free-spirited Willie. Memorable characters abound as this story unfolds. Collin's loveable family, especially his Irish Catholic policeman father and his immigrant mother face life together.