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Michael J. Schumacher, author who
chronicled lives of Allen Ginsberg and Eric Clapton, dies at 75
[January 06, 2026]
By TODD RICHMOND
MADISON,
Wis. (AP) — Michael Schumacher, a Wisconsin author who produced a
diverse array of works ranging from biographies of filmmaker Francis
Ford Coppola and musician Eric Clapton to accounts of Great Lakes
shipwrecks, has died. He was 75.
Schumacher's daughter, Emily Joy Schumacher, confirmed Monday that her
father passed away on Dec. 29. She did not provide the cause of death. |

This undated photo released by Emily Joy Schumacher shows Michael
Schumacher, a Wisconsin author who produced a diverse array of works
ranging from biographies of filmmaker Francis Ford Coppola and musician
Eric Clapton to accounts of Great Lakes shipwrecks. (Emily Joy
Schumacher via AP) |
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Schumacher produced such varied biographies as “Francis Ford
Coppola: A Filmmaker’s Life;” “Crossroads: The Life and Music of
Eric Clapton;” and “Dharma Lion: A Biography of Allen Ginsberg”
— a prominent Beat Generation poet and writer.
Other biographies included “Mr. Basketball: George Mikan, the
Minneapolis Lakers & the Birth of the NBA” and ”Will Eisner: A
Dreamer’s Life in Comics.” Eisner was one of the earliest
cartoonists to work in American comic books and was a pioneer of
the graphic novel concept.
Though he was born in Kansas, Schumacher lived most of his live
in Kenosha, Wisconsin. He studied political science at the
University of Wisconsin-Parkside but left the school just one
credit short of graduating, his daughter said. He gravitated
toward writing at a young age, she said, and basically built two
writing careers — one focused on biographies and another on
Great Lakes lore.
Living on the shores of Lake Michigan in Kenosha, Schumacher
produced accounts of how the freighter Edmund Fitzgerald sank
during a storm on Lake Superior in 1975; a November 1913 storm
that claimed the lives of more than 250 Great Lakes sailors; and
how four sailors fought to survive on Lake Michigan after their
ship sank in a storm in 1958.
Emily Joy Schumacher described her father as “a history person”
and “a good human." She said he worked longhand, filling
countless flip notebooks and later transcribing them on a
typewriter. She said she still remembers the sound of the keys
clacking.
“My dad was a very generous person with people,” Emily Joy
Schumacher said. “He loved people. He loved talking to people.
He loved listening to people. He loved stories. When I think of
my dad, I think of him engaged in conversation, coffee in his
hand and his notebook.”
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