Documentary filmmaker Gretta Wing Miller inherited letters and artifacts from her father’s military service as a pilot after both parents had passed away. Until that time, she did not know of these treasures’ existence. A labor of love for family, she carefully transcribed the letters, scanned the photos and envelopes and other memorabilia, and produced a digital book using Apple’s free word processing application, Pages. Pages allows users to write, design, and format books and export them directly in the EPUB format for publishing to Apple Books or other e-readers. Gretta then shared the digital book with family and friends.
But time passed, and Gretta began to wonder how she could get a physical copy of the 324-page book. To capture the feel of the time-aged envelopes, photographs, and newspaper clippings, she knew it needed to be printed in color–an expensive proposition with traditional printing.
I suggested she use Lulu.com, a print-on-demand service I have used with my clients. Print-on-demand services have the advantage of being affordable for print runs as small as one, but creators must choose from standard templates. Gretta was in luck–her 11 x 8.5 page size and desire for a spiral binding fit one of the templates Lulu offers. She uploaded her Apple Pages document and ordered printed copies. Now her family can page through their heirloom book in either digital or physical format.
Books have been around for nearly 2000 years. While the convenience and flexibility of digital publishing are important advances, when we think of treasures, we still think of objects we can hold in our hands.
Here are a few pages of Gretta’s book about her father, Richard Roy Miller, followed by the Introduction she wrote.




Introduction
NANCY WING MILLER MARCH 30, 2015
“Take as much as you want, but eat all you take.” Chow line adage quoted often in the Miller household.
The father I knew, and that my siblings knew, was never a pilot, he was not a ‘war hero’. He always had a bad back, was always adventurous and fun to go places with. And, yes, addicted to alcohol.
I have known bits and pieces of this 3 year Air Corps story for most of my life, and in fact, my earliest visual memory is of the khaki shirtfront with the khaki tie tucked into the starched placket.
As a child, I did know of my father’s mid-air collision, although I called it his ‘plane crash’.
I read Jess Arnold’s Maxwell Post article many times, but it was only from the World War II Flight Training Museum Preservation Society (in Douglas, Ga.) database that I learned that the other pilot was killed, and that his name was Lt. Michael A. Wood.
It was chilling to read his name in my father’s letters and hear him described as “my good friend.”
As I put this memoir together, I have been intrigued at how much this period had influenced my father in the rest of his life. He obviously loved to fly, and loved looking at the world from the air. Yet I can’t imagine him bombing and strafing.
He worked on many shows for American Turner’s in Detroit, but I did not know he had had so much Master of Ceremonies’ experience in Special Service.
My godfather is Ivan Tors (the creator of ‘Flipper’). He and my father had met in the Air Corps, and Tors predicted that I would go by the name of ‘Wing’ when I grew up. I did not know the extent of the big names from show business that he palled around with in the service.
I knew Harry Gorden and Marge Chase and Carl Sienel, but the only war story I heard from them was that Harry had been a prisoner in the war and didn’t like to talk about it, so don’t ask him anything. After the war he had gone over to talk to a buddy’s widow to tell her of her dead husband’s heroism, and that’s how he met Yvonne and they got married.
My father took me several times to flight lines at various airports. One time we climbed up into an open cockpit, me in the pilot seat with Dad teaching me how to pull the stick back to make the nose go up, and how the pedals worked the rudders to go left or right, and I remember asking him if this was the airplane he flew. He said, “No, but I wanted to.”
As we walked back across the tarmac, I asked him why he didn’t fly a plane now. I didn’t get an answer.
I remember standing on an observation deck at Willow Run Airport watching planes take off and land, smelling the jet fuel and exhaust fumes. My father told me that they built the war planes right in this factory and flew them out the door straight off to the war.
Transcribing these letters led me to wonderful archives that I didn’t know existed.
The World War II Flight Training Museum Preservation Society in Douglas, Georgia has a database of all the Cadets who trained there.
When I finished this memoir, I donated the original copies to the Center for American War Letters Archive at Chapman University in California.
I inherited these letters and artifacts only after both my parents had passed away, and until that time, I did not know of their existence, so I have had no opportunity to ask questions or get any more information than you will read here.
The photos add so much to the immediacy of the letters, and I guess my siblings and I will forgive Dad now for all the boring, endless minutes we had to stand posing for yet another photograph.
Dick’s father, Earl Miller, had passed away in 1934 of complications from rheumatic fever as a child. He had been a small-businessman: Miller Peanuts: Freshest in Town. (Miller Peanut Butter was reputed to be more popular in Detroit than the bigger brand Velvet according to Miller family mythology…)
With no pension or Social Security, Ruth Miller was forced to send her young daughter, Marilyn to live with her sister Marion and her husband Hazen Franz while she looked for employment.
A big part of Dick’s letters to his mother are spent trying to help solve some of the emotional and financial problems stemming from this heart-breaking separation.
© 2026 Gretta Wing Miller
Gretta Wing Miller has been a film & video editor and instructor since 1978, working mostly on documentary television series and specials, and independent projects. She has taught film editing at Hunter College (CUNY), Final Cut Pro tutorials, and Digital Filmmaking through the UW-Madison Education Outreach. As Downtown Dailies, we create documentary and advocacy video on local and regional issues for non-profits and independent artists.














