Dorinda Nicholson

Dorinda Nicholson_websmallDorinda Nicholson debuted in hula at age three dancing with her mother in Waikiki. When she was six years old, she and her father watched from their front yard as Japanese torpedo bombers flew so low over their house, she could see the pilots’ goggles.

Nicholson’s first book, Pearl Harbor Child, tells the story of the bombing of Pearl Harbor through the eyes of a child. An award-winning author, she believes it is her mission to write World War II stories for both students and adults to bring history to life.

Her day job to support her writing was as a Marriage and Family Therapist. Now retired, she tries to live within her means and travel beyond them.

Nicholson has been featured in People Magazine, NBC News, and most recently, was interviewed on the CBS Sunday Morning News Show sharing her story of the bombing of Pearl Harbor through the eyes of a child.

She is also a disaster mental health volunteer for the American Red Cross working mostly Yellow Ribbon Events for veterans being deployed or recently returned home.

Nicholson says she is the mother of 4 boys, and grandmother to 13 grandchildren and would love to be in a cage in a dive to see sharks up close.

Website is www.pearlharborchild.com

BOOKS:

Pearl Harbor Child – Pearl Harbor from Attack to Peace

Pearl Harbor Warriors – The Bugler, the Pilot, the Friendship

            Mark Twain List, IRA best N-F, American Library Association Best DVD

            Hawaii’s First simultaneous read aloud book – to over 10,000 5th graders

Remember WWII – Kids Who Survived Tell Their Stories – Social Studies List

The School the Aztec Eagles Built – A Tribute to Mexico’s Air Fighters

             October 2016 – Starred Kirkus review

2015 ~ Ella Dickey Literacy Award

2015 ~ Ella Dickey Literacy Award

Thursday, April 23 at 4:30 PM

Marshfield Assembly of God 

*Will also have local authors signing books

Dreama Denver ~ “Gilligan’s Dreams”

Dreama DenverActress, writer, radio station owner and personality Dreama Denver met her husband of almost 30 years, television icon Bob Denver (Gilligan of Gilligan’s Island, Maynard G. Krebs of Dobie Gillis), when she was cast as his love interest in the Woody Allen play, “Play It Again, Sam”. After marrying the popular television personality, Dreama continued her acting career, appearing in a Gilligan’s Island reunion movie with Bob, co-starring with him in a TV pilot titled “Scamps” and touring the U.S. and Canada successfully and happily with her husband for over a decade.

The birth of the Denver’s son Colin, diagnosed with severe autism, changed everything for Bob and Dreama, who retired from show business and moved back to West Virginia to devote the next two decades to Colin’s full time care. During this time, the pair also founded The Denver Foundation, which honors their son and is dedicated to assisting special needs children and their families.

The Denver Foundation and Little Buddy Radio, a nonprofit radio station owned and operated by the Foundation, were Bob’s last and most important legacies,” Dreama says, “and making these two entities as successful as possible became my mission after Bob passed away. His desire to give back to West Virginia was huge. He loved this area, considered himself an adopted West Virginian and was a tireless ambassador for the state. Regardless of how important and far reaching his television legacy was, and is, his love for our son and his desire to help other families like ours trumped even that.”

Since Bob’s death, Dreama has discovered new passions and new directions in which to take the foundation. Founding Always Free Honor Flight, WV’s first Honor Flight program, honoring WV veterans with free trips to Washington, DC to visit the memorials built to honor their service is especially close to Dreama’s heart. Leading the effort to have John Denver’s “Take Me Home Country Roads” adopted, successfully and unanimously, as an official WV state song ranks as one of the proudest days of her life, rivaled only by being chosen one of West Virginia’s Wonder Women by WV Focus magazine. The American Legion Riley-Vest Post #9 honored Dreama with their Outstanding Citizen Award in 2014 and this past January, the Princeton Mercer County Chamber of Commerce chose her as Citizen of the Year. In March, Dreama will be honored once again with the Sons of the American Revolution’s Outstanding Female Citizen of the Year.

Dreama’s recently published memoir, Gilligan’s Dreams, recounting her almost 30 year marriage to Bob, is her love letter to Bob and her gift to Bob’s fans. In detailing the Denver’s journey through autism with their son and Bob’s courage during the last 6 months of his life, Dreama allows Bob’s fans a personal glimpse of the man behind the iconic television characters he created.

“Bob would be proud,” Dreama says. “The life I had known for close to thirty years changed dramatically when Bob passed away, but I came to understand that honoring his memory meant living a full and happy life, carrying on the work we started with a heart as big as his.”