Oil Finder Shifts Focus to Writing

Same Talents, Different Venue

It all started so early. Gary Penley, a geologist who has experienced several extraordinary achievements, did not have what most would call an ordinary upbringing.

Raised by his mother and grandfather on a cattle ranch in the remote area of Clay Creek, Colorado, Penley nurtured a tenacious curiosity that would later lead him to profound discoveries both on and off the oilfield.

On the oilfield, the discoveries were prolific, and if they were the sum total of his accomplishments over the 30 years he explored as a petroleum geologist, they are enough to place him in the upper echelon of petroleum geologists.

Off the field? There's more, much more, in Penley's personal biography — experiences that range from literally the depths of the oceans to the tops of the mountains — and including his recent successful career as an author.

Penley, like so many other AAPG members, has gained national celebrity as an author — not a writer of geologic or technical papers, but of novels, memoirs and non-fiction exposés that have been called dramatic, compelling and important.

His style is self-taught, and his books, even the novels, come out of his personal experiences and are "from the heart," he says — which makes that childhood in a dirt-floor house even more remarkable.

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It all started so early. Gary Penley, a geologist who has experienced several extraordinary achievements, did not have what most would call an ordinary upbringing.

Raised by his mother and grandfather on a cattle ranch in the remote area of Clay Creek, Colorado, Penley nurtured a tenacious curiosity that would later lead him to profound discoveries both on and off the oilfield.

On the oilfield, the discoveries were prolific, and if they were the sum total of his accomplishments over the 30 years he explored as a petroleum geologist, they are enough to place him in the upper echelon of petroleum geologists.

Off the field? There's more, much more, in Penley's personal biography — experiences that range from literally the depths of the oceans to the tops of the mountains — and including his recent successful career as an author.

Penley, like so many other AAPG members, has gained national celebrity as an author — not a writer of geologic or technical papers, but of novels, memoirs and non-fiction exposés that have been called dramatic, compelling and important.

His style is self-taught, and his books, even the novels, come out of his personal experiences and are "from the heart," he says — which makes that childhood in a dirt-floor house even more remarkable.

His childhood home was a study in simplicity. With no electricity, few modern conveniences and a sparse existence, Penley spent most of his time working beside his beloved grandfather, a man he describes as "a real life John Wayne who picked himself up by his bootstraps and — at the age of 60 with virtually no money — cultivated a thriving cattle ranch."

That setting, Penley says, fostered in him a deep connection to the land, and a boundless need to solve nature's mysteries.

Detective Story

Shortly after his grandfather's death, the teen-age Penley left his boyhood home and entered the U.S. Navy, where he soon discovered a penchant for intricate mechanical operations.

He spent six years on a nuclear submarine as a mechanical nuclear power plant operator — an experience that gave him the confidence to enter Weber State University and begin his studies.

"Because of my upbringing, I was going to be a forestry major," Penley recalled, "but I took one physical geology course, and I was hooked."

So hooked, in fact, that he completed the master's program at the University of Kansas in record time, then set off on a 30-year career as a respected petroleum geologist.

Over the years, Penley established himself as a proven practitioner of development geology throughout Kansas, Colorado, Texas, Oklahoma and the Gulf Coast regions. In a career filled with accomplishment, Penley:

  • Developed 11 geologic basins.
  • Discovered a field in northwest Kansas that produced over 314 million barrels of crude.
  • Worked with a team of Amoco geologists that hit its reserve replacement for a year in only six months of drilling — all largely due to his exploration and development work.

"(He's) a grease seeker who knows how to find it," said former colleague and current AAPG geoscience director Jack Thomas, "a true marvel with amazing focus that serves him extremely well in all areas of his life."

Penley's response to such praise is humble as the man himself, noting that his colleagues are all gifted with an intense focus, single-mindedness that is a part of their nature, and an essential professional skill.

"Petroleum geologists are essentially detectives," he said. "It's half science and half art, and they are unique individuals."

A Curious Situation

By all accounts, Penley's talent as a geologist is the stuff that dreams are made of in the oil and natural gas industry. That is why peers were stunned when, at the age of 55, he decided to make a radical career shift and enter the world of publishing.

That move left his colleagues wondering: What makes a man with an obvious connection to the physical nature of things delve into the abstract world of literature?

"The same qualities that make a great geologist are the same qualities that make a great writer," he answered. "Curiosity. The need to delve beneath the surface and discover what's at the heart of things. Unearthing mysteries and piecing together stories from a few scattered clues."

With the encouragement of a close friend, the savvy of a skilled editor and an understanding wife, Penley mastered literary form and quickly navigated the many obstacles associated with publishing a first novel. Two years and three drafts later Gary's first novel, a work based on his own childhood titled Rivers of Wind: A Western Boyhood Remembered, won top honors at the 1998 Colorado Book Publisher's Awards.

The literary honor served only to fuel his burgeoning passion, as Penley set out on a new life course. He soon completed a second novel that was based on the life of a friend: A "normal" woman who was mistakenly placed in a mental institution for 20 years.

That book, the acclaimed Della Raye: A Girl, Who Grew Up in Hell and Emerged Whole, is now under consideration as a possible movie.

In recent months Penley has been on a nationwide promotional tour of his latest work, Jubal, a semi-biographical novel exploring the still relevant issue of racism.

However, if you ask the author today what he's most excited about, he would tell you his focus has shifted once again to a new project — a work in progress whose subject matter is very dear to his heart.

"I'm working on a new novel," Penley said. "The main character is an investigator. I wanted him to be intelligent, creative and well traveled. So I made him a retired petroleum geologist."

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