4 // COASTWEEKEND.COM
‘TIPPED OVER’
Upbeat musician Dale Peterson, from Ocean Park, Wash., writes about global apocalypse
By PATRICK WEBB
FOR COAST WEEKEND
“TIPPED OVER”
D
A novel by Dale Peterson
Kitsap Publishing
www.kitsappublishing.com
$16.95
ale Peterson has spent 70 years putting check-
marks on his bucket list.
The longtime musician and TV production
member has written music, made a movie about an
historic Northwest event and earned a patent from the
U.S. government.
Now he has published a novel.
The Ocean Park resident is proudly marketing an
imaginative work of fiction. “Tipped Over” is set in
2051, when the economy is collapsing and the su-
per-rich live in ghettos protected by the military.
“It’s not going to be a bestseller, ever,” he said. “I
write all the time, but I am not sure if I’m going to
publish again.” Gesturing to the paperback’s cover
which features the White House and its three lead
characters. “I always wanted to write a book. I’m hap-
py with it,” he said. “It looks nice … intriguing.”
The book is available online through Kitsap Pub-
lishing in the Seattle area. Fellow musician Richard
Thomasian of Astoria’s online review noted it was
“written from a very human and easily shared view-
point.”
Thomasian, who has played with Peterson, report-
ed the story is “a direct and ruthless look at a possible
future that may not be so far away.”
Almost inevitably, the fictional drama features
Seattle, where Peterson was born.
He and his brother and sister followed his father’s
military postings, which took them to Okinawa and
Newfoundland. He spent his high school years in
Iowa, but the greater Seattle area, specifically a family
farm in Snohomish, was his longtime home base.
“I always had this pull back to the Northwest,”
he said, reflecting he was the ideal age to revel in the
intensity of the Sixties’ counterculture.
“In the 1960s, Seattle was ‘hip,’ the population of
Seattle was on a par with the Haight-Ashbury and the
Sunset Strip, with some good places in Portland,” he
said, smiling at the memory.
Well traveled
Peterson admits his path has taken some not-so-
good turns. Years ago, he had a daughter; later he
married, although his wife died.
Early in life, he trained as a journeyman mechanic
with an uncle in Montana, then returned to Seattle.
But a spell of heroin addiction and related complica-
tions landed him in jail for a year.
Virginia, Maryland and North Carolina, savoring
gospel, blues, jazz, rock and country styles. Upset that
he was once not allowed to take his bulky guitar on
an airplane, he invented a collapsible guitar kit and
successfully submitted it for a 1999 U.S. patent.
‘Proud’
PATRICK WEBB PHOTOS
As a musician, the first thing Dale Peterson checks out
when he goes for coffee at the Berry Patch in Ocean
Park is the antique Wurlitzer juke box, complete with
tunes from another era.
‘IF YOU HAVE NEGATIVE
THINGS IN YOUR LIFE … LIKE
REGRET, YOU HAVE ANGER
AND THAT JUST HURTS YOU.’
— DALE PETERSON
WRITER AND MUSICIAN
Later, he went to Sacramento, overcame more drug
issues, and later was able to put aside the “adversari-
al” relationships of his youth and spend more than a
decade caring for his parents in their final years.
All the while, he developed his musical skills; as
well as being a songwriter, he sings, plays guitar, bass,
keyboards and drums.
Performing has taken him to Arkansas, Iowa,
Working behind the scenes with film companies
brought him back to the Seattle area and Klamath
Falls, Oregon. The biggest highlight was being on
a crew with filmmakers Otto Seiber and Russell
Johnson during the 1980 Mount St. Helens eruption.
Peterson was involved in creating a movie and wrote
the title song, “Keeper of the Fire.”
“The film got made and I am proud of it,” he said,
telling hair-raising stories of confrontations in the blast
zone with law enforcement officials and smuggling
undeveloped film out using devious means.
“Mount St. Helens was just amazing,” he said.
“The raw power. It sounded like a car without a muf-
fler.” Hauling heavy camera gear took all his strength.
“The ash was like wet concrete.”
Two versions appear on You Tube called “Mount
St. Helens: Keeper of the Fire” and “The Eruption of
Mt. St. Helens – 1980,” both with Peterson featured in
the credits
Still playing
Six years ago, he broke his wrist and found himself
in Castle Rock, where he met his partner, Andrea.
“We bought a house at the beach and we are doing
the ‘happily-ever-after thing’” he smiled.
That includes playing as part of a four-member
band called Just Us (a play on “justice”), which has
performed in Astoria and Ocean Park.
The style is country rock, Peterson said. “We get
together and have a good time and do what we want to
do.” The band plays 4 to 7 p.m. Sundays at the Astoria
Moose Lodge. People do not have to be a member to
attend
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