Chuck Schwerin is a serial entrepreneur, co-founder of several medical device and biotech startups, and mentor in his role as Managing Director of Business Services at Ithaca Area Economic Development. He holds three patents on geographic information technology and was an adjunct professor, teaching entrepreneurship at Binghamton University. As a committed environmentalist, Schwerin’s volunteer work reflects those passions. Through his editorship, he transformed Adirondack PEEKS magazine for the Adirondack 46ers and is currently on the Board of the Edward L. Rose Land Conservancy and responsible for their online newsletter. He is also a cofounder of the Alpine Stewardship Center (ASC), a U.S. affiliate of the World Trails Network that promotes mountain conservation education and trail stewardship for the entire northeast. Through Schwerin’s fundraising efforts for ASC, and a pre-eminent educational institution—Lake Placid-based Camp Treetops/North Country School—he is connected to a luminary network of outdoors enthusiasts and wilderness philanthropists. His passion for mountains is not only reflected as a central theme in The Ghosts of Glencoe, but has been the impetus for climbing trips on his own, as well as guiding children, to mountain ranges in many parts of the world.
Ghosts of Glencoe combines a gripping narrative with a lush and lyrical description of the landscapes they are set within. Mountains and characters come alive in this work that has the finest elements of expedition story, coming-of-age novel, and thrilling adventure. --Julia Goren, Deputy Executive Director, Adirondack Mountain Club Suspenseful, gripping, and fast-paced with adept scene shifting: some unlikely ninth graders from an unusual school collide in a deadly encounter with two escaped convicts in the winter-deep Adirondack woods. Safe-guarded secrets clamor to spring loose, challenging the head-of-school to come to terms with his own shameful past. --Laura Waterman, author of Starvation Shore The Adirondacks are magical, but also more complicated than many visitors ever realize. This book helps capture the majesty and the complexity of one of the world's great places. --Bill McKibben, Author of Radio Free Vermont Ghosts of Glencoe is a gripping tale with its roots in the Adirondacks that the writer knows so well. The plot begins with many descriptive and disparate strands which the author weaves expertly into a fascinating tale of challenge and growth. A thoroughly entertaining read! --Philip Corell, Treasurer of Adirondack Forty-Sixers, contributing author, Adirondack Archangels and Heaven Up'Histedness Ghosts of Glencoe is a thrillingly plotted, utterly authentic coming-of-age story of what we can all learn from wilderness, at any age. I cared what happened to these characters, and couldn't stop reading until its most satisfying conclusion. --Marion Nestle, Professor of Nutrition, Food Studies, and Public Health, Emerita, New York University, and author of books about food politics Ghosts of Glencoe is truly authentic adventure story set in the wilderness of the Adirondack mountains, a place where I spent countless hours as a kid and camp counselor. Readers will enjoy the suspenseful outcome of the main protagonists: a 63-year-old headmaster and a 15-year old 9th Grader, who struggle with personal accountability for shadows they themselves created. This compelling tale is set at a unique boarding school, where children are key contributors to its operation, where experiential education is paramount, and where the utilization of technology is healthy and suitably limited. --James Steyer, Founder, Common Sense Media, civil rights attorney, professor, and author Riveting and wise, a page-turner with ratcheting suspense, stunning mountains, and a big heart; characters with painful secrets and self-doubts find their own strength as they push the limits of physical endurance. Chilling bad guys, pathless woods, and extreme winter conditions threaten three teens from an Adirondack school and challenge its headmaster in an edge-of-the-cliff adventure that changes lives. --Susan Strehle, Distinguished Service Professor of English at Binghamton University