The 57th PGA Championship is best remembered for the miraculous 16th hole play that won the trophy for Jack Nicklaus. But for Tierra Verde writer Janis Froelich, that event will forever be linked with something far more sinister - the brutal murder of her friend, 27-year-old Linda Mae McLain.
The year was 1974 when Froelich, then a 28-year-old mother
of two, accepted a temporary job as an office assistant for the Professional
Golf Association in Akron, Ohio, home of the prestigious Firestone Country
Club. It was there that Froelich met fellow PGA staffer Linda McLain, herself a
young mother with three small children. The two had much in common and soon
became friends. Unfortunately, their friendship was short-lived – brought to a
sudden and horrific end when Linda was stabbed to death by her husband. The
shadow of this tragedy would continue to haunt Froelich for the next three
decades.
Since that dark February day in 1975, Froelich has gone on to lead a full and
interesting life. Following in her father’s footsteps, she pursued a career as
a writer. “As a student, I faltered in math but got A’s in English,” she says.
“In school, if you’re not a cheerleader or a majorette, being editor of the
school paper puts you right up there.” She took a job with the Akron Beacon
Journal where she worked for over ten years until moving to Florida to be near
her parents. She spent eleven years as a food writer and then TV critic for the
St. Petersburg Times. Then she moved to Iowa where she worked as the TV editor
for the Des Moines Register. In 1995, she married photographer Ray Bassett
(owner of Maddock Photography in St. Petersburg) and returned to Florida to write
for the Tampa Tribune.
In 2008, Froelich was laid off from her job at the Tribune,
but she didn’t take a hiatus from writing. Inspired by an article she had
penned for the St. Pete Times, she spent the next two years writing a book that
would help her exorcise the ghost of her murdered friend. Part memoir, part true crime story, My Life Looking Back at a Murder revisits
the circumstances surrounding the McLain tragedy and explores the ripple
effects of domestic violence. “The story is a sort of stream of consciousness,
with my life paralleling what Linda would have been experiencing in hers,”
Froelich explains. “I also wanted to re-examine the case to see if I could find
something new.” The hardest part for Froelich was talking to Linda’s family and
seeing for herself the long-term effects of domestic violence.
Froelich hopes My Life
Looking Back at a Murder will help raise awareness of the epidemic of
domestic violence. “While there is more help available today, domestic violence
is a social problem that still hasn’t been solved,” she says. “Three women are
murdered by their significant others every day.” She would like to see
relationship classes taught in high schools, and thinks parent-child dialogue
about domestic violence would be helpful. To do her part to address the problem,
Froelich is donating a portion of the profits from her book to The Spring of
Tampa Bay and the Domestic Violence Center of Greater Cleveland.
Froelich’s latest book, Team
Shop, takes an insider’s look at another popular sport – baseball. Team Shop chronicles the Tampa Bay Rays’
sensational 2011 season. “I was working for the Rays, the MLB,” she says. “Well,
that’s not quite right. In my dreams, I guess. I actually sold t-shirts and
cowbells in the team shops around Tropicana Stadium.” She decided to take notes
on the season to use for her writing class at Eckerd College. By the time the season ended, she realized
she had enough material for a book. “When the Rays made their unlikely comeback
in 2011, I had a rare home stand vantage point. Not only did I witness the
muscle, sweat and steel nerves played out at the Trop, all kinds of life
experiences rumbled in front of me under the dome.” Team Shop looks at sexual romps in the dressing room, puking in the
bushes, picky managers implementing strict drink cup rules, distraught
co-workers pushing mops long after the game, and the constant foam finger
drama.
A much more serious drama was playing out in Froelich’s real
life at the time. In late September of that same year, she was diagnosed with
breast cancer. She includes an account of this very personal experience in Team Shop and donated $500 from the
proceeds to the Morton Plant Mease Foundation that provides free mammograms for
women in need. She also hopes the book will inspire others to write down their
thoughts. “You never know what’s down the road,” she says, “and writing helps
immensely to clarify your thoughts and feelings.”
For more information, visit the author’s website at www.janisfroelich.com.
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