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David Roy Montgomerie JOHNSON

Reading Can Be Fun

Those of us that read on a regular basis are the lucky ones. Books can educate and teach us valuable life lessons. My hope is that you will find my books silly as well. Smiling is good for you too.

Graduation Day! Just what the world needed, another Economist. But, on the other hand…

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

David Roy Montgomerie JOHNSON

Dave was born in Belleville Ontario back in 1955. At that time his father Roy, Canadian Army Military Polce, was stationed nearby at the Picton Base in picturesque Prince Edward County. The arrival of a baby brother to Joanne and Susan may or may not have been viewed as a positive. His mother, Daphne, a British War Bride, seemed OK with it.

The Army soon sent the Johnson clan out to Shilo Manitoba. Daphne did not like Shilo. Within a year of that posting Roy said adios to military life. He had signed up in 1939 at 15 years old and had served in World War II, The Korean conflict as well as in post war Japan.

Next stop was civilian life in Niagara on the Lake Ontario. All went well. The Johnsons were not in the top tier financially, but they all worked, and their food supply never ran dry. Eventually Roy found employment with General Motors in St Catharines and that steady paycheck kept the fiscal wolverines at bay.

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About The Book (1)

1968 – SOMEBODY ELSE’S War

by David Roy Montgomerie JOHNSON 

Somebody Else’s War by David Roy Montgomerie Johnson takes readers on an intense journey through the tumultuous year of 1968. Set against the backdrop of historical events, this gripping work of fiction blends intricate characters with the weight of personal and societal conflict. From Captain Sammy’s struggle with

haunting nightmares to the lives of intertwined small-town individuals, the story weaves together themes of duty, morality, and human connection. With authentic references to actual events of the era, the narrative immerses readers in a vivid portrait of a transformative year in global history.

About The Book (2)

An Illegal Smile:

Flying High in Niagara 1960 – 1980

I stole the name ‘Illegal Smile’ from a John Prine song. If you know what it means, congrats, you’ve lived a good life.

The book started life as a few silly stories that I had penned for my friends. Folks that heard me rattle off the old stories from Niagara on the Lake usually got a laugh. Not certain anyone believed them, but nothing I can do about that. They are true.

An Illegal Smile deals with my life from 1960 to the early 80’s. Some wild times. A much simpler world. There is some foul language included at no extra charge.

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About The Book (3)

1969 – SOMEBODY ELSE’S School (Coming Soon)

by David Roy Montgomerie JOHNSON 

1969 – Somebody Else’s School finds the gang in Newport on the Lake ready for one more year of silliness and sadness. Added to the cast of characters is a Barbadian Teacher, a scrum of alcohol fueled IRA sympathizers, a serial masturbator (at the helm of the local high school) on a misguided quest for Miss October 1968 and, to top it all off, psychic Xavier the Delphi. The background includes Nixon being sworn in as President, two men cavorting on the moon and Three Days of Peace, Love and Music in some farmers field in New York State.

About The Book (4)

LUCKY LINUS LOGAN

Linus ‘Lucky’ Logan gets by. He has a regular blue-collar job with General Motors. Nice little shack out in the country, nothing special. He even has a cute girlfriend and a dollar or two stashed in the bank. A good life. A simple life.

But stuff happens to Lucky. Bad stuff. The odd thing is, when the bad stuff happens, regular as the tides, the good stuff follows. Hence the name, Lucky Logan. A man doesn’t get awarded two Purple Hearts if the odds are stacked against him.

His dad, Abraham ‘Dishonest Abe’ Logan, has just found a dead fat guy near his weed plants. So, who does he call? Lucky Logan.

His Pastor at the local Baptist Church has a missing daughter. Who gets roped in to try and find her? Lucky Logan.

About The Book (5)

Uncle Tom's Quality Used Cars

by David Roy Montgomerie JOHNSON 

Gabriel Thomas Hardee passed in the spring of 1981. Known as ‘Uncle Tom’, proprietor of Uncle Tom’s Quality Used Cars to most, Hardee also quietly held numerous properties scattered about his hometown of Bird in Hand Bay and the surrounding areas of picturesque Bruce Peninsula which divides Georgian Bay from Lake Huron.

Estranged brother Earl Cain Hardee was certain those properties would soon be his. He was mistaken. Uncle Tom had left his holdings to a variety of charities and humans, none named Earl.

Local Mayor and certified weasel Freddy ‘Skin’ Flint and Alderman Jack ‘the Rat’ Gerwin had been hoping to use Earls inherited land to turn Bird in Hand Bay into yet one more tourist port-a-potty in a string of tourist port-a-potties strung along the Niagara Escarpment. Once word had filtered down the men, with poor old Earl as sidekick, commenced with plan B. Plan B involved a phony historical hospital, historical sights now being the flavour of the month, tourista-wise. Former historian and present-day shoe salesman Dr. Felix Worthington-Jones was, for a fee, more than happy to supply them one. And, not just any historical hospital, but one that had served in The War of 1812. That the plot of land now known as Bird in Hand Bay had been miles and miles and miles from any actual battles mattered not to Flint and The Rat.

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1969 – SOMEBODY ELSE’S SCHOOL

Emily Harper

Emily teaches U.S. and world history at a public high school. She is passionate about helping her students see history not as dry facts, but as lived human experience. Outside the classroom, she’s active in her local teachers’ union and loves historical fiction that blends personal stories with political upheaval.

Review:
“As a history teacher, I’m always looking for works that make turbulent times feel real to my students and to me. This book doesn’t just tell history, it breathes it. When I read the section about Jackie Robinson’s debut in Montreal, ‘That day Robinson was not a black player. He was just a player. A very good player. Montreal welcomed him with open arms.’ I was moved to tears.

It reminded me of discussions I’ve had with my students about courage and dignity in the face of prejudice. I grew up in a union family myself, so passages on labor struggles, like ‘A good union is a gift to men and women who labor night and day in factories and fields and on the roads between to earn a living. A corrupt union is a cancer.’, hit home for me in a deeply personal way.

This isn’t just a novel it’s a mirror of history, showing us the resilience and contradictions of the late 1960s. For teachers, students, and anyone who wants to feel history, it’s indispensable.”

1969 – SOMEBODY ELSE’S SCHOOL

Marcus Reynolds

Marcus worked at the GM plant from the late 1970s until the early 2000s before it closed. Now retired, he volunteers at a community center mentoring young men entering the workforce. He gravitates toward books that validate working-class struggles and connect personal identity with larger social changes.

Review:
“This book felt like my life on the page. I couldn’t believe how accurately it captured the dignity and the loss of industrial America. When I read: ‘The GM factory complex where I worked (1977 to 1991) once employed over 13,000 men and women. It now employs just over 1,000.’ I literally had to put the book down and breathe. That was my story.

The depiction of unions, their power and their corruption, rang true. My father used to say, ‘The union giveth and the union taketh away,’ and this book nailed that balance.

But beyond politics, it’s the people in the story who resonate with me. Their humor, their fights, their everyday hopes. It reminded me that our struggles weren’t just about jobs, but about community. Reading it was like being back in the breakroom, hearing stories over coffee. For anyone who lived through the rise and fall of America’s industrial heartland, this book is a time machine and a reckoning.”

1969 – SOMEBODY ELSE’S SCHOOL

Samantha “Sam” Vega

Sam is researching counterculture movements of the 1960s for her thesis, focusing on how women navigated gender roles during social upheaval. She’s also a second-generation Canadian whose mother worked in food service, so she is drawn to working-class female perspectives in fiction.

Review:
“I was drawn into the voices of women in this story their resilience, humor, and quiet power. April May, juggling work at the ice cream parlour and being pulled into the swirl of counterculture, spoke directly to me. ‘Assistant manager? At 15 years old? Did that qualify as a promotion?’ that moment of youthful pride mixed with labor exploitation hit me hard. My mother started waitressing at 14, and I saw her in April May.

Another line that stuck with me: ‘Her brain hurt. As boring as cone scooping and burger frying might be it was a nice way to get paid while she thought. And April May had a lot to think about.’. It reminded me of how women’s intellectual lives often bloomed while they were doing work society dismissed as menial.

This book gave me both an academic lens and a personal shoutout. It shows how young women, even those deemed ‘ordinary,’ were living extraordinary lives shaped by war, politics, and culture. For me, it was not just a book, but a companion in my own research journey.”

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