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Monday, July 7, 2025

Blog Tour: MAD SEASON: ELLES GARITY'S STORY by Gregory Armstrong

 


MAD SEASON: ELLES GARITY'S STORY

Gregory Armstrong

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GENRE
:  Literary Fiction

 

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BLURB:

 

Fifteen years ago, Elles Garity’s world came crashing down, in more ways than one. Now in her mid-twenties, long since removed from the small island town that she grew up in and never dealing with the pain of her loss, life is calling her back home. In the affirmant of recent unfortunate events Elles finds herself at a turning point once more. This time though, she’ll be forced to confront both her unresolved grief and the people and places she left behind. It won’t be easy. Along the way Elles will learn the truth behind a new friend’s dark connection to her tragic past and be the last to uncover unthinkable family secrets that will unravel everything she ever knew about the family she thought she lost.

 

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Excerpt One:

 

Now, I was questioning all of it. I didn’t deal with things well. I didn’t allow anyone to help me deal with things. My life, the road I was on, the lane I had shifted into when I took the wheel, to put it quite figuratively, looked dark and dismal. I was solely responsible for switching my life into cruise control before ever giving myself a chance to learn to drive the damn car.

 

All these things ran through my head. I didn’t speak to Loyal about any of it. Where would I start? How could she possibly understand my position? Not that I gave her a fighting chance. Time sort of stood still as I sat there frozen, empty. I started this. I made this mess. I had no fucking clue how to fix it. I closed my eyes for a while, and when I opened them, it hit me like a slap to the head. The answer was staring me in the face. Where it all went wrong is where it needed to begin again.

 

“Grace, I’m worried about you.”

 

She had never said those words to me before. Ironic, though, how it came across, how I took it—her spotting the wreckage and expressing concern to the very person who was entangled in the heap. Out of upheaval, I took solace in a clouded idea to uproot myself once more. I emerged partially from my funk, oddly enough,

 

with a wayward smile and slightly brighter outlook. I turned to Loyal, sincere. “Everyone must think I’m horrible.”

 


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AUTHOR Bio and Links:

 

Born in Westerly, Rhode Island, and a Connecticut native all my life, my family eventually moved to Norwich in 1977, where I grew up. I attended and graduated from Norwich Free Academy in 1991. It was there, in my final two years, where I acquired a passion for writing. At the time, the school provided a writing center, a classroom filled with computers, designated as a creative writing outlet for the students, and overseen by the now accomplished author Wally Lamb. Here, we were free to use our time working on our own projects, developing, learning, and sharpening our writing skills. Each class, we would gather in a circle to show and share our work with Mr. Lamb and the rest of the class by either reading or having our material read aloud, and hearing feedback from our peers.

 

Mr. Lamb’s writing center instilled a desire in me to one day write a book and become an author, just as he was doing, putting the final touches on his debut novel, She’s Come Undone. Unfortunately, for me, that is when that dream of mine became a struggle that would last decades. At the age of three, I contracted meningitis, which caused me to go completely blind and left me hospitalized for several weeks. Despite doctors believing my vision would never return, it did, slowly and to a certain degree, although my optic nerve had sustained too much damage and I was declared legally blind.

 

Growing up was a struggle. Socially, I was quiet, shy, uncomfortable knowing I was different from all of the other kids, because of my physical limitations and lack in self-confidence. Reading was also a challenge. Even though I soon got my first pair of glasses, which made my vision clearer, being able to see the print on a page was still a major issue. For those reasons, I have never been much of a reader, and how does someone who doesn’t read, who doesn’t study the art of literature through books, because it was a strenuous activity on my eyes, learn how to write?

 

The fact that I found myself stuck, without the necessary tools and unsure of my own talents and abilities to be a quality writer, all the other insecurities of my childhood at play, I gave it up for a time. My active imagination for storytelling did not. As I got older, and into my teenage years I started listening to more music to fill a void. The more I listened, the more I began to broaden my tastes in artists, groups and genres, and the more I heard stories in the songs. Music, along with television and movies, were combining to strengthen my inspiration to be an aspiring author.

 

One such movie, which mirrored many of my own self-imposed hurdles, was Eddie and the Cruisers. The character of Eddie Wilson, lead singer of a fictional rock and roll band, was consumed by the notion that his music was never good enough, that if they were going to be a band, they had to be great, if they were going to release an album, it had to be great as well. I had obviously grown-up learning and hearing about the great authors and novelists of all time, the great classic books. I had always put that pressure on myself, the same way Eddie Wilson did. I was convinced that I didn’t know how to write, and even if I did, would it be good enough? I had been told, taught by teachers and others, that there were rules to the writing game, including creating a story outline, character development, a whole assortment of proper steps to follow and processes before the writing even began.

 

Over the years, I started a novel a time or two, hating it, and giving up again. I met my future wife, got married, started a family, and quit my average job to become a stay-at-home dad. Through all of it, thirty-plus years, that ever-present need to write gnawing at me, the urge still there, my vivid imagination still running wild—I couldn’t ignore it anymore. I had to let that creativity out and give it a real and focused purpose. With the rough idea of a plot in mind, I sat down at the computer and finally let all of those insecurities go. With a shot of determination and a relaxed mind, I slowly but surely discovered my own writing style, and found my storytelling voice. To hell with all the rules, the unrealistic expectations I placed upon myself, the result—a deeply, emotionally charged story of tragedy, personal reflection, and redemption, that is Mad Season.

 

https://gregoryarmstrongbooks.com

https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61561749654997

 

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43 comments:

  1. Sounds like a great read.

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  2. Thank you for featuring MAD SEASON: ELLES GARITY'S STORY today.

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  3. Thank you for the book blurb - sounds like an interesting read.

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    1. I appreciate it. Thank you so much!

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    1. The excerpt has my favorite line in the book and one of my favorite scenes between the main character and her best friend. I love writing emotional content.

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  5. Question for Author--What inspired you to become a writer?

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    1. That is a loaded question for sure! A lot of the answer is included in my full bio. But I would say it was more of a calling than a conscious decision to say, hey I want to be a writer. I think my life in general as a legally blind individual and, how that came about and all the struggles growing up that came with that played a big role in me needing an outlet to express myself and something to turn to emotionally and creatively to fill a void in my life when I didn't have a lot going on or thinking I didn't have a lot to look forward to in times when things weren't going well or I felt like an outsider or odd ball out in social situations and with peers etc. Writing was that place where I could create my own world and could escape all of the issues I had in the real world for me.

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  6. I enjoyed the blurb and excerpt. Sounds like a good story.

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    1. Thank you very much. I appreciate the compliment. Blurbs/synopsis writing for my debut novel was and is a challenging work in progress for me, how to sum up an entire story and grab people's attention making them want to read more. It took me a while to learn how to do that. I think this is my best blurb version I've done.

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  7. Sounds like a very interesting book. Thank you for the excerpt! :)

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  8. Looks interesting!

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  9. I loved this book, can’t wait for the next one!

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    1. Thank you so much. Have you visited my website to sign up for updates on the prequel?

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  10. Thanks for the great blurb and excerpt. The book sounds intriguing, my kind of read.

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    1. Thank you for the compliments and hope you enjoy!

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  11. How do you name your characters?

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    1. Great question because it is one of the things about writing that I really dislike lol. For whatever reason coming up with character names does not appeal to me or come easily. For mad season I invoked a lot of family names and people close to my family growing up. For example, the "Garity" name came from a teacher who taught my maternal grandfather in school when he was little. She contributed to possibly saving his life during the hurricane of 1938 in Connecticut. She saw him walking home from school during the hurricane and picked him up to give him a ride home as the chaos began. The Garity's remained family friends while I was growing up and we visited their house every Christmas. Other names in mad season came from my father's side of the family, an aunt who passed away and of course the main character Grace. As I do many times when I am stuck for names, I refer to my extensive family tree on ancestry that I spent a few years building. Grace was the sister of my father's father, who was discovered upon my research, previously unknown to anyone in the living family at the time because of family dynamics and situations where they were from in Illinois and my father not knowing much about his father or family beyond that and where they came from, as he told me once before he passed away in 2007 before I started the family tree in 2010. Other than using ancestry and the thousands of names available, I often browse movie and television credits at the end. My ears perk up if I happen to hear mention of a unique name in casual conversation etc. I am also always open to name suggestions, if anyone has any they would like to share or would like their name used in a story I would be open to that as well. The inspiration for names I take from anywhere I can.

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  12. Was there an author that inspired you to write?

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    1. There was one that fueled my passion and desire to write. Wally Lamb was a teacher at my high school and he also ran the writing center there while writing his first book.

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  13. Do you have any hobbies besides writing?

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    1. I enjoy watching sports and the outdoors..My biggest hobby that has always inspired my writing is music, listening and collecting.

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  14. Do you prefer dogs or cats?

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    1. I am a cat person 100% There has never been a time in my life I when I didn't own at least one.

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  15. At what age did you start writing?

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    1. Hmm, Well, I remember a class project in grammar school where we all had to write a short story and we got to actually make and bind our own little storybook. I wish I still had it. It was a Halloween murder mystery that included all the kids in my class. Beyond that, I got serious about it in high school but came across a lot of road blocks and personal issues that I let hold me back. It was a few years ago when I had to finally put it all behind and make it work.

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    2. Gregory, Thanks for the reply. Very interesting. You've given me some encouragement. Thanks

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  16. This should be an excellent novel. Thanks for sharing.

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    1. Thank you so much for the compliment. If you should decide to purchase a copy, please be sure to also visit my website and sign up for updates and the newsletter. If I may, I would also ask that you consider leaving a written book review on amazon or anywhere you can as one of the biggest struggles as a new writer trying to grow an audience and fan base is getting and compiling reviews to help attract new readers. Thank you so much.

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  17. How long did it take you to come up with the title? Was it an easy or difficult process?

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    1. That is a story in itself. So this particular story, I believe was born back when I was in high school and first developing an idea for a plot. It was a tragic story then as well, of a different nature though. Over the years and decades that followed, struggling through my own personal difficulties and struggling in my writing due to those and other issues, the story went through a series of changes and transformations as I picked it up and put it down time and time again. I recall using a working title of "The Windy Season" once probably because of my love for the autumn season in New England. Ironically, as my love for music had grown and was always a great inspiration for my writing ideas, one band in particular, Matchbox Twenty became a favorite of mine among many. Once I finally made the commitment to sit down and cast all of my personal issues aside and write the book I always wanted to, the story started taking more shape. It was then that the song "Mad Season" by Matchbox Twenty seemed to keep speaking to me. Once I really took noticed of the lyrics and listened, then heard Rob Thomas explain what the song was about to him when he wrote it, it all made sense. As he put it, "Everything's gone kinda crazy and let's see what kind of a person you are now." That sums up the main character of Elles Garity perfectly and the song itself mirrors that sentiment. Thus, The Windy Season eventually became "Mad Season" As referred to in the book by Elles, Mad Season, in part, refers to a turbulent period of her life, comparing it to periods of life in general that always change like the seasons and sometimes tend to come back around again, change for the better or worse, etc. for a time until it does again and so on. So, Elles Garity suffered this great tragedy as a child before her teenage years, and she didn't deal with it well. Fifteen years later when it all came back around, she started to realize she needed a change again. She needed to make up for the life she left behind and come to terms with the feelings she didn't deal with. In a sense, figure out what kind of person she is now after after life went tkinda crazy and she tried to escape and run away from her grief.

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    2. Thank you so much for the answer. It's very interesting to hear from you. I'm enjoying myself a lot. Thanks, thanks, thanks.

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  18. What is your favorite food?

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