Lexington native shows write stuff to lead at MSU

Athletic director enjoys success, works on novel

By MATT SCHOCH  Times Herald  • May 8, 2009                                                   

His Michigan State Spartans football team made a New Year's Day bowl game; his men's basketball team made a magical NCAA Tournament run.

Even his Croswell-Lexington Pioneers made their deepest run in the high school football state playoffs this fall.

So why is Lexington native and MSU Athletic Director Mark Hollis wasting his time writing fiction when real life is working out so well?

"It's more to kill time than anything," Hollis, a 1980 Cros-Lex graduate, said. "It's pretty much laid out, but it needs a lot of editing.

"I do it more for stress relief rather than read all the time. It's one of those things. If it gets in the hands of a publisher, that would be great."

Hollis, 46, has spent a decade on his novel, which is set in Lexington. On the road with the Spartans, he's added to a short story until it became a full-length work, currently untitled.

"What I did is I took people I know and then buildings that I know," he said. "There's a real-estate office that I used to spend time around, the old red barn in the apple orchards, the cemetery there, the cliffs along the beach there and the harbor.

"They all have a different role and I use that memory and kind of made a fiction novel."

The plot centers on a young woman uncovering a governmental conspiracy.

"It's one of those where it's got the government and organized crime working together on an anti-chemical testing program," Hollis said. "A few people die along the way, a few people have fun along the way."

It's been quite a chapter in Hollis' own story lately as better-than-expected success in the two featured sports came to East Lansing.

Another notch will be added to his story Saturday, as Hollis is being presented by MSU's College of Communication Arts & Sciences with the outstanding alumni award. Dateline NBC correspondent Chris Hansen is among the other honorees.

"It really has been a good year," Hollis said. "Sometimes with the economic situation, we tend to focus more on negatives and failures.

"The Final Four in Detroit gave people a weekend of hope and a weekend of escape. That was a very enjoyable experience for our folks and those that became Michigan State fans."

Hollis, a former basketball and football captain at Cros-Lex, has been in charge of MSU athletics since September 2007.

Despite being swamped professionally, Hollis has continued to stay rooted.

Hollis attended a postseason football game during Cros-Lex's run to the state semifinals this fall. Next month, he is the guest speaker at a dinner for local high school athletes and administrators hosted by Cros-Lex at Fore Lakes Golf Club in Kimball Township.

"He was very supportive during that time period," Cros-Lex Athletic Director John Knuth said. "I know he's appreciative and certainly proud of his roots."

Knuth wasn't surprised to hear Hollis, who has engineered creative ways to get MSU on the national sporting stage, has a knack for prose.

"It doesn't (surprise me) because people like Mark usually have a very creative side," Knuth said. "Someone who is successful in that capacity, you also have to have a creative side."

Hollis' father-in-law, Emmett's John Donnellon, said he'd read the book if it got published.

"I know he's been working on it," Donnellon said, "but I don't know where he finds the time, to tell you the truth."

Storybook endings are nice for life and on paper to Hollis, but his real desire it to have his work hit the big screen.

"You do it to keep your mind hopefully sharp," Hollis said. "I'm a continuous thinker and that's kind of what it takes in this profession. You'll just have to see the movie when it comes out."

 

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STORYBOOK START: Michigan State University Athletic Director Mark Hollis has enjoyed plenty of success in his first years on the job, including strong seasons from the football and men's basketball teams. Hollis is a 1980 Croswell-Lexington graduate. (File photos by BECKY SHINK, The Lansing State Journal)

Hollis, a former basketball and football captain at Cros-Lex, has been in charge of MSU athletics since September 2007.

Despite being swamped professionally, Hollis has continued to stay rooted.

Hollis attended a postseason football game during Cros-Lex's run to the state semifinals this fall. Next month, he is the guest speaker at a dinner for local high school athletes and administrators hosted by Cros-Lex at Fore Lakes Golf Club in Kimball Township.

"He was very supportive during that time period," Cros-Lex Athletic Director John Knuth said. "I know he's appreciative and certainly proud of his roots."

Knuth wasn't surprised to hear Hollis, who has engineered creative ways to get MSU on the national sporting stage, has a knack for prose.

"It doesn't (surprise me) because people like Mark usually have a very creative side," Knuth said. "Someone who is successful in that capacity, you also have to have a creative side."

Hollis' father-in-law, Emmett's John Donnellon, said he'd read the book if it got published.

"I know he's been working on it," Donnellon said, "but I don't know where he finds the time, to tell you the truth."

Storybook endings are nice for life and on paper to Hollis, but his real desire it to have his work hit the big screen.

"You do it to keep your mind hopefully sharp," Hollis said. "I'm a continuous thinker and that's kind of what it takes in this profession. You'll just have to see the movie when it comes out."

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In Your Voice - Read reactions to this story

bwnative wrote:
I remember playing JV basketball against Cros-Lex with Mark on the Pioneers' starting five back in the '77-'78 school year. He was the epitome of sportsmanship and a class act as a player.          5/8/2009 11:03:08 AM
 
4merviking wrote:
Great news article! I would like the Times Herald to do more of these "homegrown" success stories. It would give students in the area good solid examples of how through dedication, hard work and succeeding in academics can open the doors to a great future. I look forward to reading more of these stories in future issues of the paper to balance out those of the "drive-by shooting" variety.
5/8/2009 10:05:02 AM

 

 

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