John's life took a sharp turn to the different on April Fools' Day 1991 when he accepted a position to teach computers and math at United Arab Emirates University located in the desert oasis city of Al Ain. On the Men's Campus his first year, he taught on the Women's Campus for the next seven, one of the first unmarried Western men permitted to do so.He returned to the UAE in 2001, the Higher Colleges of Technology hiring him to develop a CAD/Interior Design program at Sharjah Women's College. Where he met Sue, a native of Canada and his wife-to-be. With the program in place, John transferred to Dubai Women's College to again teach computers and math.In 2007, John and Sue retired, at the age of 44, moving to their riverfront property off a dead-end dirt (they aspired to gravel) road in the mountains near Vilcabamba, Ecuador, where they currently reside. In 2017, they purchased a property on the Haida Gwaii archipelago in British Columbia, Canada where they will one day make their last international move. A Wisconsin native, John graduated with honors from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee with a B.S. in Architecture, a B.A. in Economics, and a Master of Architecture degree. To help finance his education, for 10 seasons, he captained the Chief Waupaca, an authentic sternwheel paddleboat based at Clear Water Harbor on Waupaca's Chain O'Lakes.
BookLife Reviews Mister John's second in a continuing series at first appears to be an amiable collection of short, humorous essays on a variety of subjects-the difficulty of reading small print, the strangeness of foreign customs, the challenges that accompany older drivers-seemingly tailor-made for a certain cantankerous demographic. But it quickly becomes apparent that Mister John (the pseudonym for John Curran) is up to something broader and more ambitious: a cycle of vignettes detailing his eccentric life. That whiplash becomes part of the fun as readers gradually get a handle on the general timeline of John's travels and occupations. Mister John presents these tales out of chronological order, and often without context or connective tissue, which initially makes the far-flung peregrinations hard to track: readers are whisked from his time as a teacher in the United Arab Emirates to his stint as a boat pilot and tour guide in his native Wisconsin to a Canadian crabbing expedition with his wife's family, all without much fanfare or preparation. The subject matter is mostly humorous but can also be serious; one chapter briefly and effectively deals with the unexpected death of his future mother-in-law, early in his relationship with his then-girlfriend. Not every story here feels essential-an account of kicking a UAE student out of class for playing computer games, for instance-and Mister John's style can be overly elliptical, with one chapter about a favorite professor opening with the teacher lightly mocking the author's hat. But overall, each brief essay provides an enjoyable window into John's experiences, and readers will finish this entry eager for more. As Mister John writes: ""I purposely don't tell you what the big picture, the story of my life unexpected is... I want you to figure out how the pieces fit and what they mean, freeing you to find your answers."" Takeaway: Humorous essays exploring one man's charming and unusual life.