Tackling The Tough Issues |
A quarter of a century ago, 1990, my long time dream of
starting an alternative news weekly for Indianapolis came true. It was also a
passion of another guy, Larry Rainey. I didn’t know him. My good friend, Teri Thompson
Crane, who knew of our shared interest put the two of us together. We visited others who knew something about
such an undertaking, content, production costs, marketing, format, design and
distribution, He and I worked diligently
as editor and publisher, respectively, to create NUVO Newsweekly, a tabloid weekly that would interrupt the
unchallenged dominance of the famously conservative and jointly owned Indianapolis Star & News.
Cutting-Edge Style |
As it is with any start-from-scratch publication, the launch
of NUVO was rough and wasn’t without
its difficulties and soon after, its casualties. Months later, amidst
considerable turmoil, Kevin McKinney, who had critical access to funding in the
early stages, became publisher and eventually editor as well. He and his staff
have given Indianapolis an important alternative voice for 25 years — and
counting. Given the entrenched competition and rapidly changing media
technology, this couldn’t have been an easy task.
NUVO is
celebrating this unquestionable success this month. The full story of its birth is worth telling,
and I expect to provide perspective on those very early days at some point. But,
for now, an unqualified happy anniversary to NUVO!
The Early Shanahans |
As NUVO emerged in
1990, so did the Stone Veil. I was
honored to have the first in a series of my private eye mysteries set in
Indianapolis published by St. Martin’s Press. The book even had the cautious
blessing of The New York Times: “The
pragmatic investigator makes a good first impression,” it said. Twenty-five years and eleven Shanahan mysteries later, I can also celebrate its quarter-century anniversary with the
release of the series’ last novel — Killing Frost.
Writing the Shanahan mystery novels has strengthened the
link I have with the city of my birth. I
grew up on the city’s Eastside and spent many of my adult years working
downtown and living in Butler Tarkington and Broad Ripple. I also lived briefly
in Fort Wayne, South Bend and Bloomington.
I worked at Merchants National Bank travelling to small town banks all
over the state. I worked at Simon during the rebirth of downtown Indianapolis’
Circle Centre Mall project and later still, in state government during the
Bayh-O’Bannon administration. What I
observed and experienced in my work and in my personal life became part —
‘grist for the mill” – of Shanahan’s world. The mysteries, taken
retrospectively, reflect the history, or at least the feeling of both
Indianapolis and Indiana over 25 years as much, I think, as the newspaper I
helped bring to life. Both chronicle the
city’s history and — to a greater or lesser extent — are part of it.
I hadn’t thought of the historical aspect when I first
discovered that the 25th birthdays of NUVO
and the mystery series aligned, but it is clear to me that my connection to the
city was at the heart of both undertakings, not to mention that for many of us
the cities and towns of our youth are deeply part of who we are no matter where
we are.
The Last of the Shanahans |
I’ve since moved to San Francisco, writing books set here as
well as in Indianapolis. But as I rummage through old photographs, the earliest
issues of NUVO and in revisiting my
early Shanahan books to prepare them for digitalization, I realize how tethered
I am to the people and places in and around the city of my birth.
If the oldest memories die last, then most of mine will be
in Indianapolis: Summers at the pool at Ellenberger Park. Cheap matinees at the
Emerson Theater. Being a soda jerk at
Laughner’s Steer-In, now Harold’s Steer-In. Crab apples and switches from the
tree that bore them. My grandmother’s peonies in May, and the smell of hot
starch when she ironed. Riverside amusement park, where water fountains were labeled
“ white” and “colored.” My grandfather’s lemonade. Winter nights on my
newspaper route, delivering what would be a future rival, the Indianapolis News – Blue Streak Edition.
Two little chicks my brother and I got during a supermarket Easter promotion
grew up to be large, intimidating roosters that refused to let my mother into
her own backyard. It was downtown on Saturday afternoons. I remember lying about my age and sneaking
into the Fox Theater to see the sad, tail end of burlesque, in this case a live
show interrupted in the middle by a grainy film, Nudist Colony On The Moon. Other memories: My first visit to the
Betty K Club. My apartment at the Ambassador,
where I was introduced to Purple Haze — not the Jimi Hendrix classic, but
heroin laced LSD. My little studio was behind
the city’s grand, Central Library, where, in the stacks, I received my real
literary education, and a place I still revere as hallowed ground.
There was much more to follow, of course – the Army for one
and the whole San Francisco experience for another. But no matter where we end up, we take with
us in one form or another that which moved us
— family, friends, lovers, co-workers, experiences, what we’ve said,
what we’ve done and, for better or worse, how we’ve treated others. Roads
taken, and so many not taken.
Twenty-five years ago. Good luck NUVO. Farewell Shanahan. Thank you Indy.
7 comments:
I managed a tear at the mention of Ellenberger and the memories of Simon. You make me proud to have put together the unlikely combo of Tierney & Rainey, but look what it generated! I wish you 25 more years of Shanahan and Indy another 25 of NUVO Much love to you!
Thank you, Ron. Well said.
Indy needed a little shake-up and I'm so glad it was you. It was Harold's Steer when I illegally bought cigarettes out of the machine. The last cigarette machine on the East side.
Thanks Teri from one Eastside kid to another. I think NUVO will be increasingly dependent on its web site. A blog is as far as i can go.
Mere,
I need verification, but I remember going to the Steer-In corner way before any of the Steer-Ins. It ws drive in, the min building of which looked like it was made of ice. It might have been called The North Pole. I also worked at the Laughner's cafeteria across the street, and my grandmother lived 3 blocks away. Hope all is well in your wintery spot.
Damn fine milestones, Mr. T, I've always been a fan. From Simon days & Nuvo launch to Deets & crew, Frisco novels & more, can't wait to see where your adventures take you next. Cheers my friend!
P.S. You saw Nudist Colony on the Moon? Lucky dog.
Scott,
Thanks. And re: NUVO. Thanks for the great logo and publication design. Perfect. As far as Nudist Colony on the Moon — lots of volleyball!
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