NYT Bestselling Author John U. Bacon on The Gales of November and Life Lessons that Outlast the Score
New York Times Bestselling Author John U. Bacon and Paige Kornblue
Some stories grip you because of the storm. Others stay with you because of what comes after.
New York Times bestselling author John U. Bacon has written more than a dozen books from leadership lessons drawn from coaching America's worst high school hockey team, to Michigan classics to his latest, The Gales of November, the untold story behind the Edmund Fitzgerald and the brutal, invisible world of Great Lakes shipping.
In this episode, John and I cover a lot of ground: what makes a leader worth following, why disaster is almost never one thing, the Colin Powell quote every boss should keep close, and why first drafts are supposed to stink. We talk about Bo Schembechler's secret superpower (it wasn't yelling), the wild west of college football today, and the parenting wisdom of getting out of the way and letting the kids play their own game.
We also share a tender moment about my parents who sat in John's University of Michigan classroom in retirement and lived a curiosity-first chapter that still shapes how I move through the world.
If you're navigating a curveball, building something new, raising kids, or just trying to figure out what to keep and what to let go… this one's for you.