From Booklist
Coomer's memoir is part of the University Press of Kentucky's Ohio River Valley series, books that examine and illuminate the region and its people. Written over a lengthy period of time, Life on the Ohio is Captain Coomer's chronicle of his personal and professional odyssey as a third-generation pilot, a career that spanned 30 years. Coomer divides the book into his early apprenticeship as a harbor manager, his years on the towboats that go from Pittsburgh to Cairo, the time he spent aboard a 12-foot skiff cruising the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers, and a year spent working a self-built harbor tug in New Orleans. There's a lot of maudlin dialogue ("That's a fer piece," "Howdy," "Reckon I will," etc.), but for readers that can get through the hackneyed prose, the book is worth the trip. George Cohen
Life on the Ohio FROM THE PUBLISHER
When young James Coomer was offered a job as deckhand on the tugboat Pat Murphy at a dollar an hour, he took his first smell of diesel fuel and knew he was hooked. Life on the Ohio puts the reader in the pilot's seat as Coomer wrestles with runaway barges, navigates through ice and fog, pacifies angry crew members, and contends with the loneliness of working a thirty-day stretch. A third generation river captain who grew up on the Ohio, Coomer has been observing and participating in life on the inland waterways for nearly fifty years. A modern counterpart to Twain's account of life as a steamboat pilot, Life on the Ohio depicts the working river as it is today with its immense towboats, gigantic locks and dams, and millions of tons of cargo. Coomer captures the movement of the boats and the colorful language of river people. He reveals that life on the river today is every bit as adventurous and humorous as it has ever been, and not likely to change.