The True Story of Curtis Turner: A Racing Legend (A Two –Time Hall of Famer) by Dennis Treece Curtis Turner won an incredible 360 races in various stock-car racing circuits from 1946 to 1965, and is widely recognized as one of the greatest dirt-track drivers in history. A true pioneer of the sport, Turner went from running moonshine for his father as a kid to earning the distinction of NASCAR’s first driver to grace the cover of Sports Illustrated. A 1992 inductee into International Motorsports Hall of Fame, Turner is without a doubt an all-time racing legend. It was more than Turner’s winning ways that cemented his legendary status with racing fans and fellow drivers. With a swashbuckling style both on and off the track, Turner was a partier, a playboy, and an innovative entrepreneur, who had an eager but edgy spirit that “drove him through one of the most cantankerous lives ever lived.” Told through the eyes of best friend and business associate Dennis Treece, The True Story of Curtis Turner: A Racing Legend (A Two-Time Hall of Famer) reveals never-before-told stories from Turner’s life, a life Treece describes as “momentous havoc.” From outrunning police during his moonshine days to out-racing NASCAR’s best drivers (including one year where he won a record 25 NASCAR events), Turner’s skill and moxie never waned behind the wheel. He earned the nickname “Pops” for his propensity to “pop” other drivers on the track. Turner attempted to organize a drivers’ union in 1961, earning a lifetime ban from NASCAR. (The ban was lifted in 1965.) Yet, off the track was where the real mayhem occurred. In one tragically foreshadowing story, Treece recounts one of Turner’s several brush-with-death experiences in the cockpit. An avid pilot—an indispensable hobby after he lost his driver’s license—Turner and a few business associates flew from Philadelphia to Charlotte in a brutal snowstorm. Landing on a snow-packed runway, his plane was estimated to carry 150 pounds of ice. After the precarious landing, Turner merely said to his passengers, “Hell of a day, ain’t it boys!” Dennis Treece also recounts Turner’s entrepreneurial zeal. A self-made millionaire buying and selling timberland, Turner often sought experimental ways to supplement his income, including his ill-fated attempt to broker a deal for The Ford Motor Company to purchase advertising space on U.S. Currency. Treece also poignantly recounts Turner’s final plane crash on October 4, 1970, the day “Lady Luck kissed my hero goodbye.” The True Story of Curtis Turner is a tale of a remarkable life and an ode to a missed friend.
Although it can stand alone, in order to fully appreciate the stories in this book, you really should read the previous books in the Shonak Series. These earlier books inform the reader about the Shonakians and their relationship with Earth. They are a very different race of people on an alternate version of our planet who have a very complex relationship with us and have had for many thousands of years. Most of that time, we knew nothing about them, but they knew everything about us. The Shonakians are a simple, placid people but so different from us that a great deal of background is provided in the first book, The Crown of Happenstance. That book introduces Bon of Shonak, who you will read more of in the following two books. There is also Itself, the over the spirit of the "Six Earths," and Atsa, a proto-Hopi and tribal chief. This is where you learn the details about Shonak and its people, about their monoculture, their boring, sexless lives, their phase-altering technology, their thirst for intellectual and technical conquest, and their love for Earth-watching. The second book in the series, It's About Time, discovers a new relationship between Earth and Shonak. Itself causes an otherwise inexplicable time shift that propels Earth 3210 years into its future while there is no time-change on Shonak. Because Earth is now an advanced, technological world, Shonak openly introduces themselves. They are willing to share much of their advanced technology with Earth but do not reveal their extensive surveillance operation on Earth with its blatant invasion of most everyone's privacy. CRIMISLE. Criminal Island. Formerly Prince Patrick Island in the Canadian Northwest Territories. It's the world's 55th largest island at more than six thousand square miles in area. It is an uninhabited polar desert often surrounded by sea ice. CRIMISLE I. The operation which used CRIMISLE to house the world's worst prisoners who were arrested and sentenced in special Purge courts. This first iteration of Criminal Island was active use from +2273 UAY to +2531 UAY. It was officially still on the books after that but national prisons were adequate to house the reduced numbers of criminals so there was no need for it. Outstanding features: No guards, no separation of inmates by the length of sentence, level of violence during the crime, or gender. Minors of course did not go to CRIMISLE. If there was time left on their sentence when they turned eighteen, they were eligible, and some magistrates did send them there. CRIMISLE II. The operation which used CRIMISLE the second time around for incarcerating all the world's prisoners with sentences of one year and a day to life. This operation was in conjunction with Purge II which began in +3036 UAY and continues to this day. Outstanding features: Inmates are separated by violent or nonviolent crime and non-life or life sentences and live in climate-controlled huts of up to fifty inmates each. There are copbots, medbots, and humbots among the inmate population to assist with law enforcement and emergency medical care as well as early warning intelligence and video production for Shonak's infotainment network.
In order to fully appreciate the story this book contains, you really need to read the previous books in the Shonak Series. There you will learn about this very different race of people on an alternate Earth and their complex relationship with the people of Earth. The Shonakians are a simple, placid people but so different from us that a great deal of background is provided in the first book, The Crown of Happenstance. That book introduces Bon of Shonak, who you will read more of in the following two books. There is also Itself, the over spirit of the "Six Earths", and Atsa, a proto-Hopi and tribal chief. This is where you learn the details about Shonak, and its people, about their phase altering technology, about their thirst for intellectual and technical conquest, and about their love for Earthwatching. The next book, It's About Time, discovers a new relationship between Earth and Shonak. Itself causes an otherwise inexplicable time shift that propels Earth 3210 years into its future while there is no time-change on Shonak. Because Earth is now an advanced, technological world, Shonak openly introduce themselves. They do not reveal their extensive surveillance operation and its invasion of privacy on Earth, which has turned the planet into a virtual zoo for Shonak's voyeuristic pleasure. They do, however, think they owe Earth something for it. They offer their assistance in areas of crime control, better agriculture, using ocean water for crops and drinking, cleaning the oceans, etc. All the while Shonak continues to expand its surveillance of everyone and everything, everywhere, using their massive fleet of surveillance bots, some of which look like rocks or trees, while others look like beetles, birds, dogs and cats, and people, among other things. The human-looking bots, the humbots, are perfect in every detail. There is eventually a scandal over the humbots, once Earth discovers them, and this causes Earth to sever all ties with Shonak for one hundred years. Book Three contains a series of bot-collected vignettes, or short stories of Earther behavior prepared for young Shonakian students in the final quarter of their formal, forty-year education. These people live beyond 1600 years so forty years of schooling is not a significant sacrifice and there is so much to learn before they can join the adult society on their own. These vignettes are designed to prepare the young, pre-adult Shonakians for their long life of Earther vid-watching. Every Shonakian enjoys watching the very different people of Earth go about their complex, difficult, conflicted lives and join VidWatch clubs that specialize in different aspects of life on Earth they find particularly interesting. Book Four shows how Earth catches up to Shonak in terms of their most impactful technologies: compact battery packs of enormous power, phase-change, and anti-gravity flight. Earth also develops a way to detect every kind of Shonakian surveillance device, from the rock to the human, and they are amazed and unhappy to find the true extent of the integration of humbots in Earth society with millions of them in operation. They also have many more billions of static collection devices and countless animals and insects all designed to watch and record and entertain the multitude of Shonak's Vid-Watch clubs. While Earth has known that they collect video and audio of life on Earth they had no idea how large an effort this had become. This latest book discovers how Earth responds to this latest bot scandal. It's payback time!
In order to fully appreciate this book you need to read the previous books in the Shonak Series. The Shonakians are a simple, placid race of people but so different from us that a great deal of background is provided in the first book, The Crown of Happenstance. The book introduces the three main protagonists in the book; Bon of Shonak, Itself the over spirit of the "Six Earths", and Atsa, a proto-Hopi and all around honest, caring, spiritual human, with profound interests. This is where you learn about Shonak, and its people, about their phase altering technology, about their thirst for intellectual and technical conquest, and about their love for Earth-watching. The next book, It's About Time, discovers a new relationship between Earth and Shonak. Itself causes an otherwise inexplicable time shift that propels Earth 3210 years into its future while there is no time-change on Shonak. Because Earth is now an advanced, technological world, Shonak introduces itself to them. They do not reveal their invasion of privacy on Earth, which has turned the planet into a virtual zoo for Shonak's voyeuristic pleasure, but they do think they owe Earth something for it. They offer their assistance in areas of crime control, better agriculture, using ocean water for crops and drinking, cleaning the oceans, etc. All the while Shonak continues to expand its surveillance of everyone and everything, everywhere, using their massive fleet of surveillance bots, some of which look like rocks or trees, while others look like beetles, birds, dogs and cats, and people, among other things. The human-looking bots are perfect in every detail and are known as humbots. There is a scandal over the humbots, once Earth discovers them, and this causes some issues between the planets. Book Three contains a series of bot-collected vignettes of Earth behavior prepared for young students in their final quarter of their forty-year education. These people live beyond 1600 years so forty years of schooling is not a significant issue, and there is much to learn before they can join adult society on their own. These vignettes are designed to prepare these young, pre-adult Shonakians for their long life of vid-watching. Every Shonakian enjoys watching the very different people of Earth go about their complex, difficult, conflicted lives and join Vid-Watch clubs that specialize in different aspects of life on Earth. Book Four shows how Earth catches us to Shonak in terms of their most impactful technologies; phase change and anti-gravity flight. Earth also develops a way to detect every kind of Shonakian surveillance device, from the rock to the human, and they are amazed and unhappy to find the true extent of their integration in human society with over a million humbots. They have many millions of static collection devices and countless animals and insects all designed to watch and record and show the multitude of Shonak's Vid-Watch clubs. While Earth has known that they collect video and audio of life on Earth they had no idea how large an effort this had become. But rather than destroy these devices or ban them Earth decides that there is money to be made from this situation. They decide that if Shonak wants to watch Earthers they can pay for the privilege. It's payback time!
The True Story of Curtis Turner: A Racing Legend (A Two –Time Hall of Famer) by Dennis Treece Curtis Turner won an incredible 360 races in various stock-car racing circuits from 1946 to 1965, and is widely recognized as one of the greatest dirt-track drivers in history. A true pioneer of the sport, Turner went from running moonshine for his father as a kid to earning the distinction of NASCAR’s first driver to grace the cover of Sports Illustrated. A 1992 inductee into International Motorsports Hall of Fame, Turner is without a doubt an all-time racing legend. It was more than Turner’s winning ways that cemented his legendary status with racing fans and fellow drivers. With a swashbuckling style both on and off the track, Turner was a partier, a playboy, and an innovative entrepreneur, who had an eager but edgy spirit that “drove him through one of the most cantankerous lives ever lived.” Told through the eyes of best friend and business associate Dennis Treece, The True Story of Curtis Turner: A Racing Legend (A Two-Time Hall of Famer) reveals never-before-told stories from Turner’s life, a life Treece describes as “momentous havoc.” From outrunning police during his moonshine days to out-racing NASCAR’s best drivers (including one year where he won a record 25 NASCAR events), Turner’s skill and moxie never waned behind the wheel. He earned the nickname “Pops” for his propensity to “pop” other drivers on the track. Turner attempted to organize a drivers’ union in 1961, earning a lifetime ban from NASCAR. (The ban was lifted in 1965.) Yet, off the track was where the real mayhem occurred. In one tragically foreshadowing story, Treece recounts one of Turner’s several brush-with-death experiences in the cockpit. An avid pilot—an indispensable hobby after he lost his driver’s license—Turner and a few business associates flew from Philadelphia to Charlotte in a brutal snowstorm. Landing on a snow-packed runway, his plane was estimated to carry 150 pounds of ice. After the precarious landing, Turner merely said to his passengers, “Hell of a day, ain’t it boys!” Dennis Treece also recounts Turner’s entrepreneurial zeal. A self-made millionaire buying and selling timberland, Turner often sought experimental ways to supplement his income, including his ill-fated attempt to broker a deal for The Ford Motor Company to purchase advertising space on U.S. Currency. Treece also poignantly recounts Turner’s final plane crash on October 4, 1970, the day “Lady Luck kissed my hero goodbye.” The True Story of Curtis Turner is a tale of a remarkable life and an ode to a missed friend.
Thank you for visiting our website. Would you like to provide feedback on how we could improve your experience?
This site does not use any third party cookies with one exception — it uses cookies from Google to deliver its services and to analyze traffic.Learn More.