Published Ferris Professor

by Published: Apr 21, 2010

Aside from his usual teach­ing duties, one Ferris pro­fes­sor has taken it upon him­self to expand the job descrip­tion of a typ­i­cal professor.

Dr. Andy Kantar, a pro­fes­sor in the English Department and the direc­tor of the Ferris Writing Center, not only teaches, but is a pub­lished author as well.

However, he doesn’t write just for fun. He does so because he sees it as an exten­sion of his job.

“I don’t really see myself as an author on the side,” said Kantar. “As a teacher of young-adult lit­er­a­ture and tech­ni­cal writ­ing, I believe that writ­ing books is an impor­tant part of my job.”

Kantar said that he has always been fas­ci­nated by non­fic­tion. His books focus on the ship­wreck sto­ries of the Great Lakes.

“I find the human inter­est qual­ity of sto­ries involv­ing sur­vivors to be espe­cially inspir­ing,” he said. “The resiliency of the human spirit is pow­er­ful tes­ti­mony to the will to survive.”

He said he is also touched by the sto­ries from fam­ily mem­bers and the pain they have endured over the years from los­ing their loved ones.

His most recent book, “Deadly Voyage,” revolves around the S.S. Daniel J. Morrell, a 600-foot freighter that sank in a deadly storm at the tip of Michigan’s “thumb” on Lake Huron in November 1966. Only one crew­man, Dennis Hale, survived.

“Deadly Voyage” is a con­ver­gence of three sto­ries: the story of the ship and its strug­gle against the forces of nature, the mirac­u­lous sur­vival of Dennis Hale against insu­per­a­ble odds, and a sub­plot on Bethlehem Steel, the Morrell’s owner and their fail­ure to report the ship miss­ing for 36 hours.

Kantar’s other books, “29 Missing” and “Black November,” also focus on ship wrecks of the Great Lakes.

“29 Missing” is about the S.S. Edmund Fitzgerald lost on Lake Superior in 1975 and “Black November” con­cen­trates on the S.S. Carl D. Bradley that was lost on Lake Michigan in 1958.

“29 Missing” was a Read Michigan Selection, “Black November” was selected as a final­ist for the ForeWord Book of the Year Award, and “Deadly Voyage” was fea­tured for the “One Book, One County” library ini­tia­tive spon­sored in part by the Michigan Humanities Council.

Besides see­ing being an author as an exten­sion of his teach­ing job, Kantar said he finds writ­ing “pro­fes­sion­ally invig­o­rat­ing.” n