BY: REBECCA MARKS It’s April 2001. Boston attorney, Maggie Jones, is reeling from the after-effects of an abusive marriage. Having been pushed back into the dating scene by her best friend, Maggie reluctantly participates in a Revolutionary War reenactment in …Continue reading →
BY: REBECCA MARKS It is 1967. Bostonian John Griffin has been discharged from the US Navy, and he’s ready to start a job as a policeman in Washington, DC. His father died when John was very young, and his mother …Continue reading →
BY: REBECCA MARKS It’s mid-July. Former NYPD detective, Dana Cohen is very pregnant, several weeks away from her due date, and planning her wedding. Her father Sam is declining much more rapidly in the nursing home and hardly recognizes her …Continue reading →
BY: REBECCA MARKS Dana Cohen, a forty-three-year-old, hard-drinking NYPD detective, spent twenty-two years on the force before retiring to Long Island. Now Dana’s best friend, Marilyn, is directing a local musical theater production. Dana’s estranged lover, and the father of …Continue reading →
BY: REBECCA MARKS Rushing to work in New York in the winter of 2016, Melanie Swift is hit by a truck on the icy city street. Drifting in and out of consciousness, she “wakes up” on a freezing bench in …Continue reading →
BY: REBECCA MARKS At forty-two, Dana Cohen has retired from her twenty-two-year career as a detective in the NYPD and moved back home to the rocky cliffs above Long Island Sound to take stock of her life. Her drinking has …Continue reading →
Rebecca Marks practiced law and worked as a technical writer in Boston for years. With her husband Frank, a policeman-turned-glassblower, she raised six kids, performed in many choral groups, and trained and showed their German Shepherds and Belgian Tervuren dogs. …Continue reading →
BY: REBECCA MARKS A year after retiring from the NYPD as a decorated detective, and helping to solve two grisly murders in her home town on Long Island’s north fork, Dana Cohen’s life has settled down. She is trying to …Continue reading →