Anonymous



Personal Information

Full Name:
Haskins, Michael
Home State:
FL
Personal Blog Link:
http://www.chasinthewind....

Author Bio

I grew up in North Quincy, Massachusetts, and went through the public school system. I wasn’t a student who stood out. If my English teacher in the ninth grade had not told me to put down a copy of Hemingway’s short stories (I had taken it off a bookrack during study class) because I was “too stupid to understand it,” I might never have wanted to read. Thank you Mr. Carlin! In my senior year, I talked my creative writing teacher, Mrs. Shapiro, into getting the school to allow us to publish a creative writing magazine, Point Counterpoint. Mr. Carlin barely passed me, Mrs. Shapiro gave me A’s! Go figure!

While in high school I worked as a stock boy at the Orbit Department Store in Dorchester, until I tried to help unionize the workers. I was fired for this. The Retail Clerks Union found a stock-boy position for me in Filenes’, an upscale department store in downtown Boston, at the time.

When I was sixteen, Jack Scanlon, a family friend, helped me be hired as the midnight-to-eight weekend office boy job at the Record-American, Sunday Advertiser, a Hearst Newspaper. Those two-nights a week began my education into the world of journalism and politics. What I learned from the men and women on the Record and Advertiser was more important than anything I learned in college. I was fortunate to enter the world of journalism in its gritty days, when reporters came up the ranks from office boy, to cub, to reporter. My early years were like a black-and-white noir movie, no kidding. There’s a book in those early adventures, and someday I expect to write it.

College taught me how you were supposed to put a news story together, but nights as a copy boy and my first years as a reporter, taught me how to dig up the facts and write the story. There were no Google searches, no Internet back then, it was legwork! Those days are long gone, when the police, and even politicians, had an understanding with journalists on how life worked. Journalism, nor the public, is not better off because those days have been lost. After high school, the paper put me through an editorial apprenticeship.

Because of my volunteer work at the Cardinal Cushing Center for the Spanish Speaking, I received a summer scholarship to the University of Puerto Rico’s “Social Welfare Workshop.” I spent that summer living at the Normandy Hotel in Old San Juan, and learning about the cultural and historical aspect of Puerto Rican life. It was an adventure and I wrote a couple of freelance pieces on Puerto Ricans in Boston, for the San Juan Star. Years later I learned that Hunter S. Thompson also wrote for the paper – long before I got there.

I left Boston and moved to Los Angeles, where I worked in TV and freelanced as a photojournalist for years. I served one year on the board of directors of the Press Photographers Association of Greater Los Angeles. I also married, fathered twin daughters (Seanan and Chela), and divorced, while in LA.

When I got fed up with Hollyweird, I moved to Key West, where I went to work for Bernard Hunt at the daily Key West Citizen. Bernie and copy editor Van Trotter forced me into the business editor/writer position and I don’t think I ever had the decency to thank them. The position gave me a unique opportunity to witness the inner workings of business in Key West. I spent more than five years at the Citizen.

I have spent another five years as the public information officer for the City of Key West. Add the inner workings of Key West politics to my knowledge of local business, and you could say I have an inimitable opinion and understanding of the workings of my island home. Education, I discovered long ago, comes with living life, not necessarily from the hallowed halls of universities. My ten plus years in Key West has been educational, in many ways. My mystery novel is fiction, but the city that looms in the background, the bars and restaurants and many of the characters that run through its pages are taken from real life. If you have visited the island, you will know this. If not, come on down and see for yourself.

I moved to Key West to sail and today I own a 1973, 36-foot Amel sloop. With friends, I have sailed to Cuba four times and flown from Miami once. Much of what I learned about Cuba is in my novel. While I wait for a political change in both the US and Cuba, I still sail the waters off Key West, expecting the day I can sail that 90-miles south will arrive soon. I would love to set a whole novel in and around Havana.

In my writing, I have tried to be faithful to the island and its businesses. I should remind you that my story is fiction, because crime as I write it does not happen in Key West. We are a long way from the mayhem and gangs of Miami, but with a vivid imagination, I have been able to create the situations needed for a political-murder mystery.

Hope to see you at the Hog’s Breath or Schooner Wharf one of these days.

Don’t pee into the wind.

Michael

Author blogs on this site

Bibliography

Free Range Institution
Author: Michael Haskins
Published: February 16, 2011 by Five Star
Series Name: A Mick Murphy Key West Mystery
Category: Mystery/thriller
Main Character: Liam 'Mad Mick' Murphy, Tita Toledo, Norm Burke

Free Range Institution


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Chasin' the Wind
Author: Michael Haskins
Published: March 19, 2008 by Five Star
Series Name: Mad Mick Murphy Mystery
Category: Mystery
Main Character: Laim Michael "Mad Mick" Murphy; Padre Thomas Collins; Tita Toledo; Norm Burke
When you think of Key West, what first comes to mind are likely beautiful sunsets, clear blue water, and cold beer enjoyed to a soundtrack of island music, not a man beaten half to death outside the clubhouse of a sailing club. But that's the way Michael Haskins introduces us to Key West in Chasin' the Wind. Local journalist "Mad Mick" Murphy finds the victim, a friend and one of a cast of idiosyncratic locals who populate Haskins' debut political thriller.
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