Author Kevin S. Giles: Famous people I knew, or saw, and a few I wish I had met

By Kevin S. Giles

Soon after Dances With Wolves won Best Picture, as I drank beer in a Tucson hotel with fellow newspaper editors, a man watching fish in the nearby aquarium caught our attention. I recognized him even without the feathers.

He resembled Graham Greene, who played Kicking Bird in Kevin Costner’s epic. That very moment, Beau Bridges walked past with a woman on each arm. He wore a tuxedo. I went to the front desk to claim my room. A tall silver-haired man stood next to me. He was Lloyd Bridges, dad to Beau and Jeff, and star of Sea Hunt, a 1960s TV drama I watched in boyhood. Minutes later, I went to the elevator.

“Hold the door!” someone called. In walked Terrance Knox, an actor from TV’s St. Elsewhere and a subsequent Vietnam war drama, Tour of Duty. He stuck out his hand. “Hi, I’m Terry,” he greeted me. Being face to face with the TV doctor who became a serial rapist in the basement morgue of the St. Eligius hospital (the actual name of St. Elsewhere) gave me pause.

Continue reading

Mystery behind the mysteries: Simple plots, made exciting with sleight of hand

Page shows text of 'Masks, Mayhem and Murder'

I wrote “Masks, Mayhem and Murder’ in the pulp fiction genre.

By Kevin S. Giles

The other night I watched the original Psycho movie. It features Janet Leigh, Anthony Perkins, a lonely forbidding motel that a new highway bypassed, and a beckoning second-story light shining from a creepy Halloween-style house.

And there’s producer and director Alfred Hitchcock, the brain behind the 1960 movie’s tense scenes.

I can’t recall watching Psycho all the way through when I was younger. Maybe I stopped at the shower scene.

clearing up the mystery

This time, I paid attention to how Hitchcock crafted the plot. He started with a crime, invented an escape, confused the viewer with some misdirection and, finally, brought a psychiatrist into the final scene to explain what had happened.

When I began writing mysteries a few years ago, I learned it was no easy take to mimic the masters. I learned something else, too.

Continue reading

In search of stories: A young Montana filmmaker seeks projects full of emotion

 

¶ ‘In a film, each frame should be a masterpiece. That’s why I look for the beauty all around me.’

Haylie Sunshine, Films of the Human Heart

By Haylie Peacock

Early beginnings of Haylie Sunshine

John Denver and Three Dog Night floated around my childhood home through the 2000s, bumping my little hips back and forth while I head-banged with Dad, the horrific green carpet our backdrop. The treasured cassette stereo worked day in and out to keep up, while the boxy TV gathered dust a few inches to the left.

I grew up living a life that didn’t need television. It was better than anything you would see on screen: grandiose mountains of Glacier National Park rose above my backyard, an escaped elephant from the local circus at the backdoor, daily adventures with my grandparents, and riding horses bareback through the woods hardly left time for sitting inside.

Continue reading

Revival of closed Montana hotel back on track after a discouraging year

Hotel Deer Lodge, Montana

Hotel Deer Lodge as it looked soon after it opened. The building, now shuttered, dominates the Deer Lodge, Montana, business district.

By Kevin S. Giles

The pandemic and a $400 city fine nearly killed the latest effort to restore Hotel Deer Lodge, an abandoned 33,000-square-foot brick structure at the heart of a western Montana town’s business district.

“When they shut us down it took the wind out of our sails,” said Kip Kimerly, who leads the nonprofit venture to revive the long-shuttered hotel that opened in 1912 to a burst of civic celebration.

Now, he’s promising a renewed effort to bring the historic building back to life.

Continue reading

The woeful Montana tale of mysterious boy killer Lee Smart, riot ringleader

Photo shows riot ringleader Lee Smart

Lee Smart, a teenage murderer, was 19 years old when he joined with Jerry Myles in a violent takeover of Montana State Prison on April 16, 1959.

By Kevin S. Giles

(c) copyright Kevin S. Giles

(I derived the following material from my prison memoir, Jerry’s Riot: The True Story of Montana’s 1959 Prison Disturbance. My investigation into Lee Smart included personal interviews with people who knew him and research of documents related to his crimes. Jerry’s Riot, written from interviews with dozens of eyewitnesses, remains the only authoritative and copyrighted source of information about the riot.)

Photo shows cover of the book 'Jerry's Riot: The True Story of Montana's 1959 Prison Disturbance'

Jerry’s Riot tells the story of the 1959 takeover of Montana State Prison by career criminal Jerry Myles and his 19-year-old boyfriend, Lee Smart.

Today’s criminal laws would prohibit sending a 16-year-old boy to prison where he mingled with adult men. Yet that very thing happened in 1956 in the strange case of murderer Lee Smart.

The teenager’s romantic interest in a hardened career criminal more than twice his age led to a deadly takeover of Montana State Prison in April 1959.

Smart, 19, and his co-conspirator Jerry Myles seized the prison for thirty-six hours. Myles, a recognized sociopath, wanted glory. Smart’s motive hinged on his mistaken belief that Myles would help him escape.

Continue reading

Boyhood memories of my Montana hometown library, a place of imagination

Postcard shows Montana library

An early postcard shows the Kohrs Memorial Library in Deer Lodge, Montana. An addition was built in recent years to accommodate the broadening of services.

By Kevin S. Giles

When I was a boy in western Montana I discovered the wonders of our local library. Granite steps led upward between a pair of sleek double pillars to heavy glass-and-brass doors. Behind those doors awaited a place of enforced quiet where the stern librarian tolerated only occasional whispers and the ticking of an ancient clock. There was a reverence about the place. To a book lover, ascending into that magnificent entrance felt like swinging open the gates of heaven. Or so I speculated, having no practical experience with the afterlife beyond the lessons at Sunday school at the Presbyterian Church.

Fines and admonitions

Books, all of the hardcover variety, filled rows of shelves in our town library. I came to appreciate how the struggle to learn the Dewey Decimal system in the public schools up the street had its merits.

Continue reading

Tell it like it is? Life experiences, all of them, make fodder for good novels

By Kevin S. Giles

Did you know most of you are writers? Potentially writers, at least?

(And no, I’m not your long-ago English teacher coming to haunt you, so relax.)

Writing doesn’t require any qualifications, certifications, degrees or pedigrees.

But life experience? Yes.

Who doesn’t have life experience? It’s the cornerstone of all writing. For purposes of example, let me take you back to English class (painful as this journey might be) for just a moment.

Continue reading

Fate (her title): My teenage granddaughter reflects on her cancer journey

The Background …

(A leukemia diagnosis the summer before Kimberly’s sophomore year in high school led to a series of aggressive medical treatments. She participated in an experimental CAR T-cell trial at Stanford University in California that achieved partial success. Eventually she received a bone marrow transplant in Denver in 2018. She spent 70 consecutive days in the hospital to recover. Subsequent tests showed no evidence of cancer cells. Kimberly graduated from her Montana high school in early June. She now studies at the university toward her goal of becoming a nurse. She wrote the following poem for her high school English class. Kimberly is our granddaughter, our oldest daughter’s daughter, the third oldest of seven grandkids.— Kevin S. Giles)

Cancer survivor Kimberly Peacock

From Kimberly: “These beads, called ‘Beads of Courage,’ are a physical representation of my journey as a cancer patient and a bone marrow transplant recipient. Each bead stands for a different procedure, occurrence, or action while I went through treatment and recovery. For example, black beads represent needle pokes, red beads represent blood transfusions, and yellow beads represent overnight hospital stays. There are hundreds of beads on this string. It stretches over 20 feet long.”

 

By Kimberly Peacock

1.
time holds no significance
surrounded by people
you are dying
falling
flying through clouds of
oblivion
seeing is believing (1)
isn’t it?

2.
watch your life climb and fall
anxiously fragile
jolting awake at every bump (2)
there’s a snake on your arm (3)
squeezing
resting
you are too warm
too cold
too late.

Continue reading

Liquor company owner takes over shuttered Montana hotel, promises revival

Photo of Hotel Deer Lodge.

Hotel Deer Lodge, standing at the center of the city’s business district, opened in 1912 as “one of the finest accommodations in Montana.” (Photos courtesy of Deer Lodge Preservation, Inc.)

By Kevin S. Giles

The chief executive officer of a Montana-based liquor company will lead a historic hotel revival with a plan to create a five-star destination.

Kip Kimerly, of Precious Vodka USA, Inc., took charge of Hotel Deer Lodge preservation in a deal struck Jan. 23, 2020.

The hotel remains owned by Deer Lodge Preservation, Inc., but the group will be represented by a new board of directors that Kimerly will lead as president, said Kayo Fraser, one of the former board members.

Kimerly envisions a nonprofit project to restore the empty building for hotel use on the upper floors, with retail space and a banquet room created on the ground floor.

Continue reading

Rules of the rails: A 20-point guide to Amtrak travel, St. Paul to Whitefish, Montana

By Kevin S. Giles

•  You’ll see some of the best creative graffiti in America in the switching yards of Minnesota, North Dakota and Montana.

•  You’ll see some of the best forgotten (rusted) classic cars anywhere huddled in rows on farm property alongside the tracks.

•  Riding “coach” on Amtrak’s Empire Builder improves your tolerance for snoring, nose-blowing and occasional disruptive cell phone chatter (especially at night).

Continue reading