A Sad Meeting

In October 2020, Rebels managed to come together amidst very sad and surprising news. John Wirebach, a founding member of the group, had passed away suddenly and unexpectedly earlier in the month. We all lost a good colleague and a friend. John was a talented writer, had a scholarly knowledge of literature, and could be depended on as a colorful compatriot in our pursuit of the writing game. He will be sorely missed from what feels like our little writing family. John had been a faithful member of Rebels for some 15 years.

The group commiserated over and mourned his loss. We were due on this night to critique the first 100 pages of John’s current novel project, a crime story set in Bucks County during World War II. It introduced detective Harry Cooper and served as a prequel to his earlier-completed manuscript of Harry’s service in Paris later in the war. All agreed that John may have been doing his best and tightest writing in this latest work, adding even further to the untimely sense of this loss.

While it was difficult to carry on the business of the group at our October meeting, we soldiered on, as John would have wanted us to. We critiqued Dave’s short story, “One Good Word,” an offering reticent of fine southern literature. We encouraged Dave’s plan to use the story as the introductory chapter of his planned novel about an African American faith leader who comes to Philadelphia.

The group also brainstormed on how we might keep John’s writing alive and put some steps into play to preserve it.

Steady work across a long year

Rebels have been at it since fall of 2019, across a long winter followed immediately by the COVID period.  Rebs have met by Zoom, kept their projects moving forward, and critiqued each other’s work.

• Chris has been working with a script writer on a screenplay of his novel Jane’s Baby.  Several of his novels are now are now available in audio and he is working on a sequel to his crime-cleaning novel Hiding Among the Dead.  He is also pitching his new novel that involves the gun issue and an art heist.

• Dave completed a short story, “Fleeting Sky” and finished a first draft of his novel F-land, set in Philadelphia and Western Pa. and featuring a Catholic priest dealing with the drug scourge, economic issues, and other church topics.

• John published a letter in Mystery magazine and has been working with the Neshaminy literary journal.  He has continued to work on his novel Refugees as well as his crime novel set in Bucks County in 1943.

• Jackie has has continued to develop the outline of her novel set at the Jersey shore and involving a family and a missing child in the 1950s.  Meanwhile she has been finishing and submitting short stories for submission to literary journals.

• Martha has queried her salty novel, Killing Tides, set in Sarasota, Florida and has been working on outlining and drafting the initial sections of a sequel to that novel. She is also in early stages of a new novel project set in a preparatory boarding school.

• Russ has completed his novel set on the Delaware Bay and Sussex County, Del. during WWII.  He has also excerpted and adapted a chapter of his novel set in Native America and submitted it as a short story for publication.  He finished another revision of his “harlots club” novel and has been querying several of his completed novels.  Additionally, he is working with an established co-writer/producer on a detailed treatment for a movie or mini-series in anticipation of moving this concept to screenplay form.  

More successes in 2019

Rebels met through the spring and summer of 2019, sharing work, moving projects forward, and achieving new milestones.

Chris’ multiple book-publication schedule through Severn River Publishing has continued apace.  His new novel Hiding Among the Dead, a Blessed Trauma Thriller, the crime-scene-cleaners novel launched this summer.  His newest novel, the bounty-hunter novel Binge Killer, is now available for purchase.  He is working on a sequel to this one, to create a series with the Counsel character.  His earlier novel Scars on the Face of God has also been reissued.  He continues some speaking/signing/reading appearances.  Huge congrats to Chris.  Amazing!

John moved his mystery Refugees forward, taking advantage of an extensive critique of the opening chapters by the group.  The book depicts a group of friends from the 1960s who get caught up in an event of murder and drugs in the 1990s.  He is also trying to re-initiate interest in and progress with his WWII Harry Cooper detective set of two novels, working on the one that serves as the prequel, a murder mystery set in Bristol, Pa.

Dave’s novel projects –– one set in the Revolutionary War (Coryell’s Ferry), one about a charismatic black preacher, and one about scandal in the Catholic church and the opioid epidemic (Fancyland) –– remain active.  Congrats to Dave to placing two excerpts adapted from his colonial era manuscript in the Bucks Co.-based literary/historical magazine Neshaminy.  One of Dave’s contributions took the bronze prize in the contest that fueled the first issue of this very nice new publication, available for purchase on Amazon.

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Martha has queried her Florida-based mystery novel.  Her vocation of teaching is at the core of her story-telling interest.  She is working on a quasi memoir mystery-thriller based at a boarding school.

Russ is continuing to refine his WWII novel, and currently has a couple of full manuscripts of his other novels out for consideration by agents.

This summer, Melissa Sullivan stepped away from the group and Jackie Nash joined.  Welcome Jackie.