Review
Crazy for the Storm: A Memoir of Survival by Norman Ollestad
Although the narrative core of the memoir remains the horrifying plane crackup into the San Gabriel Mountains, its warm, complex soul is conveyed by the loving relationship between the former FBI agent father and his son, affectionately called the Boy Wonder, during the golden childhood years spent in wild, freewheeling Malibu and Mexico in the late 1970s. Ollestad's unyielding concentration on the themes of courage, love and endurance seep into every character portrait, every scene, making this book an inspiring, fascinating read. g All rights reserved.. Anton, Austria, Early 1970's St. Anton with Dad Me, Ski racing Skiing with Dad Puerto Vallarta, 1975 Three generations of Normans, 1977 In a spare, brisk prose, Ollestad tells the tragic story of the pivotal event of his life, an airplane crash into the side of a mountain that cost three lives, including his father's, in 1979. Only 11 years old at the time, he alone survived, using the athletic skills he learned in competitive downhill skiing, amid the twisted wreckage, the bodies and the bone-chilling cold of the blizzard atop the 8,600-foot mountain. Stories of secret waterfalls and secluded isthmuses that Grandpa and Grandma had discovered around Vallarta. It all starts with a good story. Somewhere along the line his reading voice changed--he was gobbling up the sentences, his voice alive with inflection. Once he'd experienced the pleasure of going on that narrative ride, reading became second nature, like paddling for a wave. Noah was hooked on stories, like I got hooked on riding waves. Photographs from Crazy For the Storm g My first surfboard, Topanga Beach, 1968 Mom, Dad, and Me, Topanga Beach, 1968 Dad in St. And thats when it hit me--it was very simple: the essence of my love for reading really emanates from my love for stories. "How about I tell you a story tonight," I whispered with great zeal to Noah. He'd broken through. His eyes lit up and he smiled. "What kind of story?" "Any kind," I said. "A story about a magic skateboard would be cool," he suggested. Progressively, Noah's topics became more elaborate, and soon he was giving me outlines for stories. Stories about helping a Mexican family after a hurricane hit Puerto Vallarta. As I spun the impromptu tale, he rolled onto his side and stared at me, totally focused. She advocated patience, and encouraged me by tirelessly pointing out things in each story that I might relate to. Stories about an inland village where Grandpa went twice a week to buy ice for their fridge, to keep their food cold. There was no single thing. In order to help Noah find that love, I searched for a seminal moment in my past that had transformed me. The following night I made a bargain with him: "First read five pages, then I'll work up a story about whatever you want." Before I got myself nestled beside him, he was halfway through the first page. They had retired to Puerto Vallarta and their letters were filled with stories. I had wished my dad could work the same kind of magic he did with surfing: he'd push me into the waves so that I could simply enjoy the ride, eliminating the most arduous, frustrating part of surfing--paddling for the wave. My father was always asking my mother, who was a grade-school teacher, why I wasn't a better reader. I just wanted to hear the story without having to work for it. He glared at me with his brown eyes. "It's okay," he mumbled. But during my reminiscences I flashed on Dad reading aloud my grandparents' monthly letters from Mexico. My father was killed when I was eleven, so he never got to witness my eventual love of reading. It was a long few months. When I was Noah's age I also disliked reading. I was resting beside him in his bed and I saw his whole life crumble--a slew of poor report cards and father-son arguments, ending in long term unemployment. "What about Dr. Seuss?" I reasoned. He almost has too much to tell: a way-larger-than-life father--former child actor, FBI man (who took on Hoover in a controversial book), and surfer who drove his son to test his limits in the surf and on the slopes; a youth spent in the short-lived counterculture paradise of Topanga Canyon; a stepfather who could give Tobias Wolff's a run for his money; and of course the crash. He proceeded to read at a snail's pace and I pointed out that it would take him twice as long as usual to get through the required five pages. But writing 30 years later, Ollestad is wise and talented enough to focus his story on the essentials, cutting elegantly back and forth between a moment-by-moment account of the crash and his memories of the difficult but often idyllic year leading up to it. I grabbed the book and told him we'd be reading all weekend to make up for his lack of cooperation. More than a story of survival, it's a time-tempered reckoning with what it means to be a father and a son. --Tom Nissley Amazon Exclusive Essay: It Starts With a Good Story by Norman Ollestad It was time for my eight-year old son, Noah, to read before bed. "Eh," he groaned. "Reading is so boring. But it's the way that Norman Ollestad tells his tale that makes Crazy for the Storm a memoir that will last. He stared at it, mute. "Noah," I said from my lowest register. Amazon Best of the Month, June 2009: The story itself could take your breath away: an 11-year-old boy, the only survivor of a small-plane crash in the San Gabriel Mountains in 1979, makes his way to safety down an icy mountain face in a blizzard, using the skills and determination he learned from his father. I opened the book he was reading for his class and handed it to him. So he ran the words together, not even stopping at periods. It sucks." Hed been reciting this same mantra for months.