“If you will practice being fictional for a while, you will
understand that fictional characters are sometimes more real than people with
bodies and heartbeats.”—Richard
Bach
Born in Illinois on this date in 1936, Bach authored
some of the 1970s' biggest sellers, including Jonathan Livingston Seagull
(also made into a popular film) and Illusions:
The Adventures of a Reluctant Messiah.
A renowned pilot and student of aviation who started flying at age 17,
he has written numerous non-fiction flight-related titles.
A pilot in both the Naval Reserve
and Air National Guard, he also served as a technical writer for Douglas
Aircraft and a writer for Flying Magazine. After mastering operation of World War I
aircraft, he did a stint as a “Barnstormer” at numerous air shows and then was
chosen as a stunt pilot for the movie Von
Richthofen and Brown. And he was the
driving force behind a documentary film, Nothing by Chance, based on his
book and centering on barnstorming in the U.S. during the 1970s.
The author of 19
books – several of them interwoven through smaller “novellas” – Bach often writes from his own experiences and said that has been a key factor in his
success.
“You are never given a wish,” Bach said, “without also being given the power to make it
come true. You may have to work for it,
however.”
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