Hoosiers in the Heartland
Real Stories About Indiana People, Places and Things
by
Book Details
About the Book
This is a collection of stories I wrote when my family was young and the world was more naive. This is a record of life in and around the Heartland before 9/11. These are some stories I told that people seemed to remember. My heroes have always been storytellers, like the late Charles Kuralt of CBS’s On The Road and Sunday Morning. He was inspired by the great Hoosier war correspondent Ernie Pyle. Today, there’s the great American raconteur Bob Dotson. Not long ago when the NBC Today Show reporter spoke to a group of our students at Indiana University, he reminded us of the wonderful stories that have made our country great. He said to remember, “The reason you got here is because of all those who came before.” We are not cut from one cloth, he said. He’s not talking about retelling the day-to-day murder, mayhem and politics journalists must cover, but looking under rocks and beside creeks to find stories about folks who work hard, play hard and pray hard. These are people who fly under the celebrity radar, but who are the sturdy foundation of our country. A lot of folks like that can be found in Indiana. I’ll never be able to take you on the remarkable journeys that Bob does with his words, but I can share what it is about Indiana people, places and things that I’ve come to hold dear in my world. Much of it revolves around my family, which is probably a lot like yours. What I wrote was the mood and passion of my heart at that time, in that place. It is true that precious people and things reveal themselves in passing from us. I’d like to share some of my precious memories from the past. Maybe it will stir your memories and help encourage us all to appreciate the here and now.
About the Author
Marty Pieratt is an Emmy award-winning television reporter who has also won honors in newspaper and radio and as a business entrepreneur. He owned seven radio stations and various other businesses. He is a visiting faculty member at the Indiana University School of Journalism. Since 2008, he has taught 11 different journalism classes on the Bloomington and IUPUI campuses, and at the National Sports Journalism Center at Indianapolis. He spent most of his career around Cincinnati, Ohio, and Northern Kentucky. He is pursuing a doctoral degree in Folklore and Ethnomusicology at IU. When not in Bloomington, he is at his farm in Southern Indiana where he was raised. This is his third book to be published. His work includes First Black Red: The Story of Chuck Harmon, the First African-American to play for the Cincinnati Reds.