Second honeymoon
It had been a long day of traveling when brothers Franz and Kurt
Wisner found themselves where no vagabonds want to be: stuck in a
customs office trying to negotiate their Saab over the Syrian border.
They had spent a half an hour passing out $20 bills to make their
way into the office of the head official, a stoic fellow who seemed
irritated the pair had interrupted his viewing of the 2000 U.S.
presidential debate between George W. Bush and Al Gore.
Sensing an opportunity, Wisner slowly rose and grabbed a picture
of himself posing with Bush, taken at a fundraiser during his former
corporate days at the Irvine Co.
The official, apparently a Bush fan at the time, was so impressed
that he sent the men through, waiving the exorbitant fees required to
take a car into the country.
âThat trick doesnât work in Syria any more,â Franz Wisner joked
Tuesday. âAt the time we also carried a picture of Al Gore. We were
bipartisan vagabonds.â
Colorful stories like this make up Franz Wisnerâs book âHoneymoon
with My Brother,â the true tale of a Corona del Mar man abandoned at
the altar who decides to take his brother along on his prepaid
honeymoon.
That trip turned into whirlwind world tour for the pair, who
trekked across the continents for years, romancing women in the Czech
Republic and chucking their guidebooks in Vietnam for a taste of
culture.
On Oct. 20, the pair will be appearing at the Huntington Beach
Central Library to promote the book and talk about how their journey
around the world changed their lives.
âIt felt good to shed everything,â Franz said, recalling how he
sold his beachside home and sports car to help pay for the trip. âI
spent my whole life accumulating. You get into that upward climb and
it starts to become addicting; itâs a pattern thatâs hard to fight.
This trip helped me to begin to shed those layers. To realize the
importance of the simple life.â
Before his life-changing trip, Franz Wisner worked as a lobbyist
for the Irvine Co. His brother Kurt was a self-proclaimed slumlord in
Seattle.
Franz said his almost-marriage to the woman identified as Annie in
his book was his attempt to complete his âperfect life,â or so he
thought.
Just three days before the big event, she broke things off,
crushing his heart and sending him into a tailspin that sent him
traveling around the world, spending any free moment talking about
his ex.
âA lot of people ask me, âDo you still love her?ââ Franz said. âOf
course I do. Without her there would be no âHoneymoon with my
Brother.â It would just be âHoneymoon with My Wife,â and no one wants
to read that.â
Although it took months to get a publisher to buy the book, within
weeks of publication âHoneymoon with my Brotherâ became a hit. And
the two were to be on âOprahâ and âThe Today Show.â
They scored a photo shoot in Vanity Fair, cover stories in
countless newspapers across the country and a big movie deal with
Sony Pictures to adapt âHoneymoon with my Brotherâ into a feature
film.
Now they both work full time on projects related to the book,
which is in its eighth printing. Franz handles much of the creative
side, and Kurt sets up book club meetings and does the
behind-the-scenes work.
âWe really like doing book clubs and public groups,â Franz said.
âWhatâs driven the book is word of mouth. Media really brings us nice
exposure, but itâs the readers that really give it legs.â
Since the book has premiered, Franz has met a new leading lady,
actor Tracy Middendorf, and the two were recently married. Thatâs
left Kurt with a monopoly on the fan mail and groupies. He said he
recently got a letter from a Canadian woman informing him that they
were a perfect match because she had no debt, no kids and more than
$500,000 in the bank.
âI wrote her back and asked her if they were Canadian or American
dollars,â he said.
The pair also plan to write another book together, this one a
nonfiction piece about love and romance in the developing world.
Franz said he just got back from a few months in Botswana, studying
marriage proposals that often involved dozens of heads of cattle.
Kurt spent a few months in Brazil, learning about the local
courtship customs.
âIâve probably interviewed over 100 people -- itâs the way I like
to travel,â he said. âI wouldnât spend as much time in gay bars in
Rio if I didnât do this.â
And even years later, Kurt said heâs still not sick of hearing his
brother talk about his ex-fiancee or inspiring people to pick up and
go.
âThe rewarding thing is when you receive the e-mails and they say
that theyâre going to call their brother to go travel, or connect
with a friend and take a trip to another country,â he said.
âIt may seem overwhelming at first, but I tell people to not get
caught up worrying that you need all kinds of money. If you stick to
third-world countries, you should be all right.â
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.