Selected Works

LAY THAT TRUMPET IN OUR HANDS
"Reminiscent of To Kill A Mockingbird... McCarthy realistically portrays race in a small [Florida] town, showing how good people are tainted by generations of hate... a tale of growth and triumph." ~Library Journal
TRUE FIRES
"In McCarthy's insightful, fervent second novel... flawless dialogue, warm characters and compassionate wit service a moving story about the powers of love and justice." ~Publishers Weekly

ABOUT SUSAN

VO-MAC GROVES, PLYMOUTH, FLORIDA
Susan Carol McCarthy was born and raised in the rolling grovelands of pre-Disney Florida. The daughter of independent citrus growers, she recalls "picking fruit, packing bushel baskets and pouring fresh-squeezed orange juice for the tourists" beside busy Route 441.

A graduate of University of South Florida (BA in English Literature), McCarthy wrote advertising for newly-opened Walt Disney World in Orlando. Later, after successful stints at McCann Erickson Advertising in Atlanta and San Francisco, McCarthy married a Californian and settled in San Diego as a full-time freelancer.

In 1991, McCarthy's writing life took a dramatic turn. A batch of news clippings from the Orlando Sentinel and a startling letter from her father detailed a series of shocking race crimes that occurred in Florida in 1951-1952. (Records of an FBI investigation, a Grand Jury hearing, and KKK indictments had been sealed for 40 years.) Her father's account of his daring cooperation with the FBI became the basis for McCarthy's award-winning debut novel, Lay That Trumpet In Our Hands.

Her second novel, True Fires, was inspired by true events that occurred in Lake County, Florida in 1954. Kirkus Reviews called the book "a vivid portrait of mid-century corruption and of some brave enough to risk everything for justice."

Her third novel, called PERILOUS, will be published next year and is set in Orlando during the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis.

In a recent interview, McCarthy explained, "I'm drawn to the stories of ordinary people who, when backed into a moral corner, choose, often at great risk, to do the right thing. Where do they get such extraordinary courage? How do they achieve that level of grace?"


"I'm drawn to the stories of ordinary people who, when backed into a moral corner, choose, often at great risk, to do the right thing. Where do they get such extraordinary courage? How do they achieve that level of grace?"