
On p. 32 of the March, 2012 edition of QST that came out this week, I am pleased to see a review of The Road Home, a novel written by Andrew Baze, AB8L. Coincidentally my son and I just finished reading this book, and we thoroughly enjoyed it. Despite a few typos and minor grammatical errors (specifically, the use of the indicative mood where the subjunctive mood should have been used), it is very well written. The plot is plausible and captivating. Mr. Baze makes ham radio (2m FM and APRS) an integral part of the story, and he makes it work — it doesn’t seem at all as though he were straining to slip it in somehow. Furthermore he displays a high degree of competence in operating procedures, emergency preparedness, and even defensive tactics.
While this book is light reading, there is still some character development of the young man who is the main character of the story. Refreshingly, the boy’s father is his guide (rather than being marginalized or vilified as parents often are in teenage fiction). Not only does Mr. Baze inspire a young person to get a ham radio license, he succeeds in developing the moral imagination of his readers. The Road Home cultivates an affection for such admirable qualities as diligence, perseverance, courage, level-headedness, familial love, compassion, and a chivalric desire to avoid violence yet defend women from evil with deadly force when necessary.
You can read this book for free, if you have a Kindle and an Amazon Prime account, by borrowing it from the Kindle Owners’ Lending Library for Amazon Prime Members.
Other novels that my children and I have enjoyed are those written by Cynthia Wall, KA7ITT: Night Signals, Hostage in the Woods, Firewatch!, Easy Target, Disappearing Act, and A Spark to the Past. These six books are a series chronicling the adventures of fictional characters Kim Stafford, KA7SJP, and her boyfriend Marc, KA7ITR. They are definitely aimed at children, but if you’re like me you’ll still read them — it’s so hard to find novels incorporating ham radio that you just can’t pass these up.
Another novel that incorporates ham radio is Cornbread Road, by Jeff Davis, KE9V. Mr. Davis released it as an audio-book in a series of podcasts in 2010-2011, and my wife and I enjoyed listening to it together. The podcast is not currently available but hopefully it will be back up soon. Cornbread Road is aimed at adults. The main character is a ham who gets involved with a secret society of ham radio operators led by a mysterious figure with a past, a ham who is an inventive genius and who is himself caught up in a web of international intrigue. While the plot may tax your ability to suspend disbelief, it is still an amusing story and throws in a little of everything in ham radio.
Do you have any ham radio novels to recommend? I dimly recall one or two that I nearly wore out as a child (back in the days when I would ride my bicycle to the local library and read my favorite books over and over), but I couldn’t tell you much about them now. If you know of any — and where to find them — please chime in with a comment!
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Some years ago Walter A. Tomkins, K6ATX, came out with a series like Cynthia Walls, gear from young readers but great for hams of any age.
They included:
SOS at Midnight
DX Brings Danger
CQ Ghost Ship
Grand Canyon QSO
Murder by QRM and maybe one more.
ARRL used to sell individually or as a set but now out of print. Some still out there available on Amazon etc.
73
Jamie, KL7WP
Thanks, Jamie! I’ll see if I can track these down.
73,
Todd, NØIP
Amateur radio plays a pivotal role in foiling a covert military project to breed super soldiers in the novel “Relic”.
Mike Polia, AB1AW, writing as Jonathan Brookes, spins a fast-paced tale of intrigue, murder, and clandestine cloning projects.
Disturbingly close to the truth, Relic describes a world in which human soldiers are replaced with something much deadlier, and much more uncontrollable, with consequences that could spell the end of humanity as we know it.
The book is available at the ARRL website, as well as from Amazon.
I read a book while in high school in the 60’s called “Isle Royal Calling”. About a park ranger on Isle Royal. His kids used ham radio regularly. Books author was a yl ham first name was Hellen. I have a copy and its most likely not in print. Best, Chuck wd9gte
Today I Am a Ham – October, 1974
by Ethelyn M. Parkinson
Try ‘Hardy Boys #25’
Perhaps the book that may have started it all?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Short-Wave_Mystery
Hi Jamie,
Great info…thanks! I read a couple of those books back in the day.
There’s also this new short story:
It was written by W. A. Taylor, and published on our website with his permission. He said it could be freely distributed.
We received many enthusiastic comments when this appeared on the Elecraft email reflector. Of course the story is a bit Elecraft-centric, so they may be biased 🙂
Enjoy….
Wayne
N6KR
Regarding _The Road Home_, you allege, “You can read this book for free, if you have a Kindle and an Amazon Prime account, by borrowing it from the Kindle Owners’ Lending Library for Amazon Prime Members.” Not so. I have a Kindle and an Amazon Prime membership but cannot read the book for free without joining Kindle Unlimited.
–Noel N9CJT
Thanks for the update. It’s been a few years, so I’m not surprised it’s changed.