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Writing Fiction in the Age of COVID

Tuesday, December 20th, 2022

Author of The Mad. Mad Murders of Marigold Way (October 2022), Raymond Benson discusses the concept and writing process behind his timely and darkly comedic thriller.


When the Covid-19 pandemic began, there was much discussion on social media and the like among writers, especially those who write thrillers and mysteries, regarding whether or not we should include the coronavirus in our fiction. Should fictional characters who are investigating a murder be wearing masks? Do they practice social distancing? Should they be mindful of health and safety protocols? Or do we pretend the pandemic doesn’t exist and just write the book with no mention whatsoever of a global disease that has impacted every person on the planet?

When I wrote The Mad, Mad Murders of Marigold Way (Beaufort Books), it was very early in the pandemic. It didn’t even occur to me that writing a murder mystery with the pandemic in the background might be a concern. I came up with a darkly comic murder mystery that took place in the thick of it. In searching for the right tone for the story, I was likely inspired by Thornton Wilder’s Our Town and the works by the sardonic Coen Brothers.

It was May 2020 and my wife and I were in lockdown at home with Covid-19 raging outside. At that time, no one knew what the future would hold. There was no vaccine in sight, and there was still so much that was unknown about the virus. The geographical environment in the story mirrors where we were living (fictionalized, but yes, we live on a street not unlike “Marigold Way” and in a town very much like “Lincoln Grove”). As with most writers, my imagination, fueled by the fever dream of the paranoia and bizarre life we were leading during the lockdown, took off. The book was written over the next two to three months.

My existence at the time was pretty close to the protagonist’s (Scott Hatcher) daily life—staying home, going for walks, social distancing, wearing masks at the grocery store and such—but I certainly am not as stupid as he is! Being happily married, I was not in the rather shattered mental state that encourages him do the irrational and impulsive things that push the story forward. I had no reservations about the setting at all. History is history. Especially now, nearly three years later, the pandemic is a part of the world’s timeline and it can’t be ignored. I, for one, will have trouble buying into any novels, movies, or television shows that supposedly take place recently or “now” that do not acknowledge in some way that we’ve been through this experience.

Alas, my literary agent and I were rather shocked to receive some resistance from publishers, even though editors proclaimed how much they liked what I’d written. It took some time, but eventually we found a publisher. Luckily, the folks at Beaufort Books had no problem with the subject matter. That said, these attitudes seem to be lifting. I’m seeing more authors write tales set during the pandemic. I’m thinking of Michael Connelly and Jodi Picoult, among others.

Mind you, my book really isn’t about the pandemic. It’s merely the backdrop, the “special world” of the story that informs how the characters behave. When one is frightened, paranoid, and uncertain about the future, a person might do some crazy things. The Mad, Mad Murders of Marigold Way is about some of those crazy things. Or perhaps it’s more about the hidden underside of suburbia and the dark recesses of the human heart. There is a labyrinth of a mystery that is the backbone of the novel, but it is placed against the larger “Mystery of Life” itself, all with a touch of down-home humor.

And a virus.


WHEREABOUTS UNKOWN News!

Monday, May 9th, 2022

Richard Probert interviewed on NNY 360 by Chris Brock

SACKETS HARBOR — Richard E. Probert’s new novel, much like his 2016 novel, “That Good Night,” features a character going off on a journey of discovery. But while “That Good Night” involved sailing — something Mr. Probert is very familiar with — “Whereabouts Unknown” features characters who broke new horizons for the author.

For example, one of the characters in “Whereabouts Unknown” is a stone carver.

“I was always interested in that,” Mr. Probert said. “But I’m not sure how that character came about.”

But it helps when the characters he envisions begin “talking” to him. Some of those characters are easy to relate to, while others are hard for Mr. Probert to get through to.

To read the rest of the article on NNY 360, click here.

To learn more about Richard Probert, click here.

To learn more about Whereabouts Unknown, click here.

LACIE’S SECRETS News!

Monday, April 11th, 2022

Lacie’s Secrets reviewed by Criminal Element.

Big Little Lies meets The Haunting of Hill House in Lacie’s Secrets, the latest psychological thriller from writing duo Teresa Sorkin and Tullan Holmqvist, authors of the award-winning thriller The Woman in the Park. Read Janet Webb’s review!

Kate hasn’t seen her mother for eighteen years, not since the mysterious and tragic disappearance of her younger sister Lacie. Susan, her mother’s caretaker, phones Kate to tell her that Grace is dead. It seems that Kate’s long self-imposed exile from Villa Magda, the gorgeous, sprawling oceanside estate in Maine where she spent every summer of her girlhood, is coming to an end. Months later, accompanied by family friends, Kate, her husband Charlie and their son Andrew make the trek to Maine: she’s determined to sell Villa Magda and put that part of her life behind her. 

Time slips away when Kate sees Villa Magda again: Kate is flooded with memories from the day her sister disappeared. Grace was an inveterate party-giver. Kate recalls, “her mother was hosting one of her magical parties for Lacie—”this year’s theme was Alice in Wonderland—and she was giddy. Kate only saw her mother really happy when she was in the middle of preparing and hosting a party, with Susan always by her side helping with the food, cutting flowers, and checking the guest list.” Unfortunately, the party went terribly wrong. 

To read the review on Criminal Element, click here.

To learn more about Lacie’s Secretsclick here

To learn more about Teresa Sorkin, click here.

To learn more about Tullan Holmqvist, click here.

LACIE’S SECRETS News!

Friday, February 18th, 2022

Publishers Weekly released their review for Lacie’s Secrets

Kate Williams, the protagonist of this riveting thriller from Sorkin and Holmqvist (The Woman in the Park), travels from her Connecticut home to Villa Magda, her family’s Maine home where she spent summers until her sister, Lacie, disappeared there almost 20 years earlier. Accompanying Kate are her husband and their teenage son. Kate’s visit brings back vivid memories of how the media coverage at the time painted Kate as the jealous older sister. Then strange things start to happen, including a former gardener breaking into her room to warn her away from the house. To complicate matters, her son discovers a blog accusing Kate of being complicit in Lacie’s disappearance. When Kate discovers a body in the pool after an alcohol-fueled night, she fears Villa Magda’s tragic history is repeating itself. The stakes rise as Kate becomes convinced that the same person responsible for Lacie’s disappearance had something to do with the recent death. The authors keep the suspense high as they slowly dole out the mansion’s sinister secrets. Fans of gothic novels will be pleased. Agent: Jane Wesman, Jane Wesman Public Relations. (Apr.)

To read the review on Publishers Weekly, click here.

To learn more about Lacie’s Secrets, click here.

To learn more about Teresa Sorkin, click here.

To learn more about Tullan Holmqvist, click here.

ANCHORED News!

Thursday, February 3rd, 2022

A great review from Kirkus Review is in for Anchored

Crim reflects on his successful career as a journalist and his perennial struggles with his religious faith.
Crim grew up in Hamilton, Ohio, dreaming of becoming a preacher and following in his father’s footsteps. By the age of 16, he was an evangelist holding crowds in rapt attention, and he was an ordained a minister before he turned 18. He was also plagued by doubts about his faith, reservations that waged within him like an “intellectual war.” He discovered early on that his experience performing, as well as the fact that he “blessed with a good set of pipes,” could translate into a career on the radio. He got his start as a DJ at KLCN in Blytheville, Missouri. Eventually, he branched out into television, landed a job at ABC, and shared an office with Ted Koppel. The author became a notable anchorman in Detroit, a post he would hold for nearly two decades, all while continuing to host popular syndicated radio shows. Notably, Crim was the inspiration for Will Ferrell’s now iconic character, Ron Burgundy. The author candidly discusses not only his impressive professional career, but also his personal life, including his marriage. He furnishes a thoughtful assessment of the ways American journalism has changed, undermined by a “drift toward sensationalism” that has resulted in a diminishment in the public’s trust. Crim’s perch is a rare one—he’s experienced the industry from top to bottom and has witnessed its transformations from the inside. Moreover, Crim’s discussion of his religious faith is admirably forthcoming as well as thoughtful: “The fast-paced, competitive life of television news kept me moving, but I couldn’t outrun my anxieties about God. Sometimes in church, and sometimes in the quiet dark of a restless night, the questions would surface and trouble me.” While the remembrance runs a touch long—it’s overloaded with granular detail—it nonetheless provides an astute peek into the world of American journalism.
A fascinating recollection, edifying and entertaining.

To learn more about Anchored, click here.

To learn more about Mort Crim, click here.

RED DECEPTION News!

Monday, September 13th, 2021

Red Deception Reviewed by Midwest Book Review

Synopsis: When terrorists bomb bridges across the country and threaten the Hoover Dam, the vulnerability of America’s infrastructure becomes a matter of national security. But Dan Reilly, a former Army intelligence officer, predicted the attacks in a secret State Department report written years earlier — a virtual blueprint for disaster, somehow leaked and now in the hands of foreign operatives.

With Washington distracted by domestic crises, Russian President Nicolai Gorshkov sends troops to the borders of Ukraine and Latvia, ready to reclaim what he feels is Russia’s rightful territory. Tensions in Europe threaten to boil over as a besieged American president balances multiple crises that threaten to upend the geopolitical order. With the US at the mercy of an egomaniacal leader, and reporters and covert agents on his tail, Reilly may be the one man who can connect the dots before an even bigger catastrophe unfolds.

Critique: The second volume in the second book in authors Gary Grossman and Ed Fuller’s the Red Hotel series, “Red Deception” is another deftly crafted suspense thriller/action adventure novel from first page to last — and unreservedly recommended for community library Mystery/Suspense/Espionage/Terrorism fiction collections. It should be noted for personal reading lists that “Red Deception” is also readily available in a digital book format (Kindle, $9.49).

To read the full review, click here.

To learn more about Red Deceptionclick here.

To learn more about Gary Grossman and Ed Fuller, click here and here, respectively.

A FEW WORDS ABOUT WORDS News!

Monday, August 16th, 2021

Joe Diorio interviewed on Book Q&As with Deborah Kalb

Joe Diorio is the author of the new book A Few Words About Words: A Common-Sense Look at Writing and Grammar.

Q: What inspired you to write A Few Words About Words?

A: The book traces its roots to a compilation of my monthly email newsletter of the same name. Each issue is only about 700 words or so. I had been writing the newsletter on and off for nearly 30 years and figured I may have enough material for a book.

More important, though, is that I wanted to reach a broader audience (The newsletter had a readership of about 5,000 at the time; it’s up to about 7,000 now. You can subscribe at my website – Joe Diorio Writer, editor. – Words on paper. That’s me. (joedioriowritereditor.com)) and I thought having a book could create opportunities to share a message to a bigger audience.

In my case the message is that yes, I’m bad at English grammar, but with work and perseverance I – and anyone for that matter – can become proficient. I decided to inject humor into the book to make it unique.

There seem to be plenty of books about overcoming educational deficiencies. Tara Westover’s Educated comes immediately to mind, and I don’t want to replicate that. I wanted to create something that tells readers that yes, writing can be hard sometimes. But writing can also be fun.

To read the rest of the interview, click here.

To learn more about A Few Words About Words, click here.

To learn more about Joe Diorio, click here.

THE IMAGE News!

Wednesday, August 11th, 2021

Willa Cather meets Cormac McCarthy in the Iconoclastic Controversy

Like many reverts to the faith, my second conversion, as it were, was prompted in no small part by an intense study of the Church Fathers and encounters with Beauty. Not one to have given much of a second glance to sacred art before that time, I remember quite clearly my immediate reaction to finishing The Dialogues of St. Gregory the Great: I commissioned an icon.

What’s the link or relationship there? Though I didn’t have it explicitly worked out at the time, it seems obvious to me now: I had (to paraphrase a line from Stephen King’s The Dark Tower series) forgotten the face of my father. Reading the Fathers had brought me back into the territory of my Father’s Kingdom, but who could reveal His face? Intuitively, I reached for an icon—and a store-bought one, no matter how impressive the provenance, would not do.

The process of commissioning an icon was more involved than I at first supposed. The icon writer, who was Orthodox, had a two-year waiting list, which I took to be a good sign, if not one that would help me grow in patience. He asked me to agree to a set of conditions ahead of time, including where the icon would reside, what might happen to it in the future, under what circumstances it should be covered or revealed, what my intentions were for it, and the like. He made sure I understood that he undertook the writing of an icon within the disciplines of prayer and fasting, and he encouraged me to do the same.

Clearly, the writing of an icon was spiritually serious business. And that holy fear—the wonder and awe of what goes into asking to cooperate with our Lord in the creation of an image through which He gazes upon us—was exactly the recovery and rejuvenation my soul was craving.

Something of this awesome sense of divine gravity permeates Steven Faulkner’s short novel The Image.

Click here to read the rest of the article from Catholic World Register.

Click here to learn more about The Image.

Click here to learn more about Steven Faulkner.

RED DECEPTION News!

Wednesday, June 30th, 2021

Gary Grossman and Ed Fuller Interviewed on WFSB Channel 3’s Better Connecticut

To watch the five-minute-long interview, click here.

To learn more about Red Deception, click here.

To learn more about Gary Grossman and Ed Fuller, click here and here, respectively.

RED DECEPTION News!

Thursday, June 24th, 2021

Red Deception, Geopolitical Thriller Released

Blending the experiences of his long career in the international tourism industry, having retired after 40 years with Marriott Lodging, the last 22 as President & Managing Director of Marriott International, and his first-hand knowledge of global politics, Ed Fuller partnered with acclaimed author, Gary Grossman to captivate readers once again as they draw a chilling portrait of the fragile fault lines in Europe and the players poised to seize power.

When terrorists bomb bridges across the country and threaten the Hoover Dam, the vulnerability of America’s infrastructure becomes a matter of national security. Once again, Dan Reilly, a former U.S. Army intelligence officer, predicted the attacks in a secret State Department report written years earlier – a virtual blueprint for disaster, that was somehow leaked and is now in the hands of foreign operatives.

Washington is distracted by domestic crises as Russian President Nicolai Gorshkov sends troops to the borders of Ukraine and Latvia, ready to reclaim what he feels is Russia’s rightful territory. Tensions in Europe threaten to boil over as a besieged American president balances multiple crises that threaten to upend the geopolitical order. With the U.S. at the mercy of an egomaniacal leader, and reporters and covert agents on his tail, Reilly may be the one man who can connect the dots before an even bigger catastrophe unfolds.

To read the full review, click here.

To learn more about Red Deception, click here.

To learn more about Ed Fuller and Gary Grossman, click here and here, respectively.

RED DECEPTION News!

Wednesday, June 16th, 2021

Fast-Paced Thriller “Red Deception” Paints Chilling Portrait of Our Times

What would happen if all the major bridges in the U.S. were bombed, all commerce came to a dead stop, and the nation’s natural resources, such as our water supply, were cut off?

The importance of protecting America’s critical infrastructure has rarely been depicted so powerfully as in Ed Fuller and Gary Grossman’s new fast-paced thriller, “Red Deception,” the follow-up to 2019’s Red Hotel.” And it’s a timely read, considering President Biden’s current emphasis on improving the nation’s infrastructure.

Fuller and Grossman’s novel posits a scenario that could potentially destroy much of it.

Blending career insight with first-hand knowledge of global politics, Fuller, a global executive and crisis management expert, and Grossman, a TV producer and author, have once again drawn a chilling portrait of the fragile fault lines in Europe and the players poised to seize power.

To read the full review, click here.

To learn more about Red Deception, click here.

To learn more about Ed Fuller and Gary Grossman, click here and here, respectively.

SCHOOL CHOICE: A LEGACY TO KEEP News!

Monday, May 10th, 2021

Black Mama Magic: TV Movies Where Black Motherhood Shines

Miss Virginia, the movie based on Virginia Walden Ford’s memoir School Choice: A Legacy to Keep, was featured in Ebony’s Mother’s Day article “Black Mama Magic: TV Movies Where Black Motherhood Shines.”

To read the article, click here.

To learn more about School Choice: A Legacy to Keep, click here.

To learn more about Virginia Walden Ford, click here.

SCHOOL CHOICE: A LEGACY TO KEEP News!

Thursday, May 6th, 2021

Virginia Walden Ford’s moving memoir named a 2020 Silver Nautilus Book Awards winner for the Memoir & Personal Journey category

Congratulations to Virginia Walden Ford! Her inspiring memoir, School Choice: A Legacy to Keep, won a Silver Award in the 2020 Nautilus Book Awards.

School Choice: A Legacy to Keep, tells the dramatic true story of how poor D.C. parents, with the support of unlikely allies, faced off against some of America’s most prominent politicians—and won a better future for children.

To see the full list of winners, click here.

To learn more about School Choice: A Legacy to Keep, click here.

To learn more about Virginia Walden Ford, click here.

YOU LOOK LIKE THAT GIRL News!

Tuesday, May 4th, 2021

Mrs. Doubtfire Star Lisa Jakub Expertly Answers What ‘Happened To Her’ Question

Lisa Jakub, an author and former child actor who memorably played Lydia in comedy Mrs. Doubtfire, had a perfect response to a headline questioning what “happened” to her since the movie’s 1993 release: a lot of stuff, duh. 

On Friday, the author and mental wellness coach shared a screenshot of an article on entertainment site Nicki Swift, with a headline that read: “Whatever Happened To The Actor Who Plays Lydia in Mrs. Doubtfire?”

“Well, ummm, I mean, a lot of stuff has happened since 1993 so you’re gonna need to be more specific,” Jakub tweeted in response.  

The author later tweeted a follow-up, sharing that one of her books, You Look Like That Girl: A Child Actor Stops Pretending and Finally Grows Up, tackles why she decided to quit acting after a career spanning 18 years. 

To read the rest of the article, click here.

To learn more about You Look Like That Girl, click here.

To learn more about Lisa Jakub, click here.

RED DECEPTION News!

Monday, April 26th, 2021

A great review from Publishers Weekly is in for Red Deception

“Grossman and Fuller’s exciting sequel to 2019’s Red Hotel finds Dan Reilly, the president of the International Kensington Royal Hotel Corporation, in a taxi during morning rush hour in Washington, D.C., when two stalled trucks loaded with explosives blow a huge hole in a bridge over the Potomac, killing nearly 100. Simultaneous bombings occur in New York City and St. Louis. Meanwhile, Russia is massing troops on the borders of Ukraine and Latvia, preparing to invade. A former army intelligence officer who later worked in the State Department, Reilly is soon up to his neck investigating these incidents, because at the State Department he prepared a report detailing possible terrorist attacks on America’s infrastructure that closely match the three attacks. Meanwhile, he becomes involved with a woman but remains strangely unaware that she clearly has hidden agenda. The authors keep the multiple plot lines moving swiftly ahead with rapid scene shifts, and the behind-the-scenes look at the high-end international hotel world lends authenticity. Reilly is a believable, able hero, though many thriller readers will shake their heads at his romantic naiveté. Hopefully, he’ll be back soon for more adventures.”

To see the review on Publishers Weekly, click here.

To learn more about Red Deception, click here.

To learn more about Gary Grossman and Ed Fuller, click here and here, respectively.