So sad. I find another interesting author just as he dies. He sounds like another author I would have loved to follow if I could have found him 20-30 years ago.I hope you will report on the autobiography when it comes out. Jim On Tue, Oct 29, 2024 at 6:07 PM R Kent Rasmussen < [log in to unmask]> wrote: > It is with great sadness that I pass along the news that my dear friend > Tim Champlin died quietly in his home last Thursday. Many of you knew Tim > as a long-standing member of the forum and a regular attendee at Mark Twain > conferences in Elmira and Hannibal. Though not himself a scholar of Mark > Twain, Tim had a deep interest in the man and used both him and some of his > characters in at least a half dozen of the nearly forty novels he published > over the past four decades. Most of his novels are set in the 19th century > West. He also published a highly regarded nonfiction book about the works > of Louis L'Amour. > Tim reached his 87th birthday earlier this month and enjoyed exceptionally > good health through most of his life. He and I communicated frequently over > the past twenty years or so, and I always marveled at his robustness, > despite the fact he was six years (to the day!) older than me. He > frequently sailed boats, played tennis, bicycled, walked with his dogs, and > engaged in other vigorous activities until a rare and currently incurable > liver disease called polycythemia vera took over his life earlier this > year. Though he never really complained, Tim occasionally expressed dismay > about how odd it felt so suddenly to go from playing tennis and boating to > being reduced to spending his days sitting in a chair from which he could > barely stand up to walk across a room. > Despite his severely declining strength, one of the last things Tim did > was write an autobiography (which I shall probably help prepare for > publication in some form--possibly a print-on-demand book). For a man who > spent most of his working career pushing pencils and listening to veterans' > complaints for the Veteran's Administration (a job he loathed), Tim led a > surprisingly adventurous life that he describes well in his memoir. > For those of you who enjoy adventurous fiction--particularly stories set > in the Old West--I strongly recommend you dip into Tim's novels. Most of > his older books are available on Amazon in Kindle editions, which can be > accessed through this link: > Amazon.com : tim champlin > > | > | > | | > Amazon.com : tim champlin > > > | > > | > > | > > > Some of his books are available in audiobook editions--including _Mark > Twain: Speaking from the Grave_, narrated by fellow forum member Richard > Henzel-- and _The Secret of Lodestar_ narrated by the prolific audiobook > reader George Guidall: > > Amazon.com : tim champlin > > | > | > | | > Amazon.com : tim champlin > > > | > > | > > | > > > I am providing this information about Tim's books in the hope they will > make more people aware of the fine qualities of his writing. If Tim had > written back in the era when what might be called the traditional Western > genre was far more popular, his name might now rank alongside those of > L'Amour, Max Brand, Walter van Tilburg Clark, and others. Tim had a > wonderful feel for the Old West, which his books described with an > exceptional eye for authentic detail. He also had an exceptional knack for > writing dialogue. This is especially evident in the time-travel novels he > wrote about Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn--_Tom and Huck's Howling Adventure_ > and its two sequels. (In a strictly personal aside, I can't forbear > mentioning that the time traveler in those lively stories is my own > grandson Zane Rasmussen.) > As I mentioned, Tim was a dear friend. He was an important part of my > life, and I shall miss him greatly. >