PREFACE
The reader may wonder about the
title of this book, so allow me to clear up that point right away. I was born
in Denver, Colorado
and was raised in a home for children. I was there from the age of about two
years when my mother died until I graduated from high school at the age of
seventeen. I knew nothing of my father,
alive or dead. So I grew up as an
orphan.
The word, Odyssey, derived from
Homer’s story of Odysseus, or Ulysses, as the legendary hero is known, has come
to mean a prolonged adventure. And I have come to look upon my life as a sort
of prolonged adventure or odyssey. As I grew up identifying myself as a “home
boy”, I pictured this book as a kind of chronicle of a home boy’s journey
through life.
My particular journey, or my
memory of the journey , began in the Home where I was
raised. Eventually I became a Criminalist and became a teacher of this forensic
science, both in the United
States and throughout Latin
America and the Caribbean region.
Why write a book about my life,
about the world as I have known it? A good question. A challenging question. I imagine that everyone during a lifetime has
experienced tragedy, adventure, comical moments, and a great deal of ordinary,
mundane living. Everyone has suffered or enjoyed his or her unique, personal
experiences. And most people have formed views, interpretations, and
philosophies relating to their lives and times. In other words, it is
conceivable that most people have the material to write a book. And the books
which are finally printed would appeal to some and not to others. Of course,
the risk which any writer takes is that his or her book might not be acceptable to people. Writing
requires a willingness to expose one’s thoughts and feelings to public view.
And the result could be ridicule, rejection, or maybe even acclaim. The worst
case is that all of that creative effort could be completely ignored by an
uncaring world. For me, however, the very act of writing makes it all worth the
while. Writing helps me to enjoy the memories and the reliving of past
adventures. It pleases me to philosophize and to indulge my sense of wonder
about things and events, my sense of wonder about life.
A few years ago I did write a
book about the Home where I grew up as a child. But that was written for a very
specific audience, the other kids, now greying
seniors, who
grew up with me. And their reaction was
so enthusiastic that the experience proved to be very rewarding. The origin of
this book was quite different.
I do not look upon this book as a
traditional autobiography. Actually, I did not embark
upon a project of writing that kind of book.
I had been writing a series of articles and stories for a weekly
newspaper, the
“Weekend”. And these short stories and
articles seemed to evoke an enthusiastic response from friends and colleagues
who urged me to put them into book form.
As I reviewed these works, I realized that most of them were
drawn from my life, and might even be
placed in some sort of chronological sequence representing my particular
journey through life. In a rough way, I could organize most of these writings
into certain phases of that journey. It
appeared that I already possessed a lot of material for the writing project. And so with some travail and agonizing, this
book came into being.