By M.J. Rose

  • People Magazine Pick of the Week : THE MEMORIST - The Reincarnation Series continues

    People Magazine Pick of the Week : THE MEMORIST - The Reincarnation Series continues
    "Gripping… Rose once again skillfully blends past and present with a new set of absorbing characters in a fascinating historical locale." - Starred Review, Library Journal ------------------------------ "Rose's fascinating follow up to The Reincarnationist... skillfully blends past life mysteries with present day chills. The result is a smashing good read." -Starred Review, Publisher's Weekly

  • :


    THE REINCARNATIONIST. Starred Library Journal Review. Booksense Pick for September and 2007 Highlight List. Starred Publisher's Weekly Review. "A fascinating story of reincarnation that is one of the year's most ambitious and entertaining thrillers." - David Montgomery - Chicago Sun-Times

  • Finalist for the Gumshoe award for Best Thriller of 2006.: The Venus Fix

    Finalist for the Gumshoe award for Best Thriller of 2006.: The Venus Fix
    "One of the year's best thrillers." -- David Montgomery (reviewer for the Chicago Sun et al.) "M.J. Rose is a bold, unflinching writer and her resolute honesty puts her in a class by herself." - Laura Lippman

  • James Patterson: Thriller: Stories To Keep You Up All Night

    James Patterson: Thriller: Stories To Keep You Up All Night
    I'm a proud member of this anthology that's gotten stars from PW & Library Journal!

  • : Lying In Bed

    Lying In Bed
    After years of toying with the idea... my first erotic novel. In stores May 30th. Order now.

  • : The Delilah Complex

    The Delilah Complex
    "Erotic, suspenseful, impossible to put down. M. J. Rose acknowledges sexuality's power - and danger - in a highly original thriller that keepsyou guessing right up to its surprising final twist. I loved it." - Joseph Finder

  • Finalist for the Anthony Award: The Halo Effect

    Finalist for the Anthony Award: The Halo Effect
    "Utterly fascinating! Fans of Kay Scarpetta will be equally captivated by sex therapist Morgan Snow, whose job has her too often confronting the dark-side of human nature." - Lisa Gardner

    Finalist for the 2004 Anthony Award for Best Original Paperback

  • : Sheet Music

    Sheet Music
    "No one writes so simply and superbly about such lush things as food and sex as M.J. Rose -- and at the same time, gets deep inside the heart and mind of a wonderfully complicated heroine. Literate and page-turning." -- Caroline Leavitt - author of Coming Back to Me

  • Finalist for the CT Book Award: Flesh Tones

    Finalist for the CT Book Award: Flesh Tones
    "Intensely erotic and compelling, Flesh Tones explores the disturbing realm that lies between love and obsession." -- Tess Gerritsen, author of The Surgeon

  • : In Fidelity

    In Fidelity
    "Rose offers a well-crafted study of infidelity, wrapped within the context of a psychothriller. ... a fast paced-tale ... altogether a satisfying blend." --Kirkus Reviews

A Girl's Got To Eat!

Blog Worthy

June 2009

Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
  1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30        
AddThis Social Bookmark Button

« Katharine Weber's Backstory | Main | Eliza Graham's Backstory »

June 18, 2007

Simon Wood's Backstory

AN IDEA TO DIE FOR

By Simon Wood

      A fascination for the odd and the obscure drives my writing.  I’m always on the lookout for strange but real occurrences that would make for a really interesting story.  When I discovered the unusual business world of viatical settlements, lightning struck and I knew I had a novel.

Awth20072  So what are viatical settlements and what makes them so special?   In a sense, they’re a reverse insurance arrangement.  If you own a life insurance policy and you want to cash it in, you go to a viatical settlement agent who will find someone to buy it.  The buyer will give you pennies on the dollar for your policy and take over the monthly dues on your life insurance.  In return, they will become the beneficiary when you die.  The closer you are to the grave, the bigger the payout.

  Viatical settlements were aimed at the elderly and the terminally ill to cover final expenses and make their last days comfortable, but the industry really took off in the late 80’s and 90’s when HMOs weren’t covering AIDS and HIV patients.  Patients needed money for treatment and viatical settlements provided the perfect vehicle for that.  The industry hit the skids in the late 90’s when breakthroughs in AIDS drugs extended life expectancies and the payout times increased.

  I saw the beauty and the beast in this arrangement.  Viaticals give people a second shot at life, or at least a comfortable end, allowing them to live out their life worry free.  On the other hand, viatical settlements are a truly ghoulish proposal.  Some companies ran late-night advertisements telling people how they could make money quick.  See a 25% return on your money in 12 months or less.  To the investor, that sounds great.  But to achieve that return, someone has to die.  There is no way to ignore the fact that the policy buyer is profiteering off the dead.

  I came across viatical settlements on a TV news magazine show.  The feature was well done.  The story covered all the parties involved in one of these arrangements. They interviewed a person with HIV who had sold their life insurance as well as a retired couple who had purchased several policies through a middleman who arranged the sales.  It was great to see a person who’d had one foot over the threshold of death’s door come back from the brink after selling his policy.  It was shocking watching the retired couple that had sunk their retirement fund into viatical settlements. They displayed vehement disgust for the people they’d paid good money to who hadn’t had the good graces to die as predicted.

The news clip ended with a kicker and it was that kicker that really grabbed my attention. The middleman is supposed to keep the identities of the buyer and seller confidential.  The man with HIV who’d sold his life insurance produced a birthday card.  It had arrived unsigned on his last birthday.  The message was simple and to the point.  It said: Why aren’t you dead yet?

I couldn’t let this go. There was a book here. Viatical settlements presented a very interesting concept. Criminals aren’t the only ones with a price on their heads.  Everyone is worth more dead than alive, thanks to their life insurance.  And what if the beneficiaries can’t afford to wait to inherit? A murder would lead someone to the beneficiary, but an accidental death wouldn’t.

For Accidents Waiting To Happen, I stretched the rules concerning viatical settlements a bit to create a cat and mouse thriller. I made rules surrounding viaticals much more far ranging. Essentially, anyone could qualify. In the book, Josh Michaels takes a bribe to pay for his newborn child’s medical expenses. His secretary blackmails him when she learns of the bribe. To pay her off, Josh sells his life insurance policy. Years later, when the bribe, the blackmail and the policy sale are long forgotten, he’s driving home when he’s forced off the road by another vehicle into a river. Instead of helping Josh, the driver gives him the thumbs-down gesture and drives off. Josh survives the accident and learns he’s not the only having accidents. The one thing these people have in common is that they’ve all made a viatical settlement in their past.

Simon_author_small1 Usually, truth is stranger than fiction, and I love that, but if I can get a hold of it, I’ll make that fiction a little stranger.

To learn about Simon Wood, please visit his website.

Comments

Wow, Simon, this sounds gloriously creepy! I knew about the book because I read Murderati, but hearing the backstory has me even more interested.

If I'm good at anything, it's the creepy stuff. :-)

hello world!

hello world!

hello world!

hello world!

hello world!

hello world!

hello world!

hello world!

hello world!

Verify your Comment

Previewing your Comment

This is only a preview. Your comment has not yet been posted.

Working...
Your comment could not be posted. Error type:
Your comment has been posted. Post another comment

The letters and numbers you entered did not match the image. Please try again.

As a final step before posting your comment, enter the letters and numbers you see in the image below. This prevents automated programs from posting comments.

Having trouble reading this image? View an alternate.

Working...

Post a comment

Do You Have A Backstory?

  • If you are an author with a backstory, please write us at "backstorypost (at) gmail (dot) com" and follow these directions to the letter:)
    Because Backstory is a labor of love we can't edit your posts or respond to queries. If you've written a novel or a short story collection, and you have an interesting Backstory, we'll post it. Just email your 500-800 word Backstory and include your name, the book title, the pub date, and your website address. The backstory should be pasted within the body of your email. Put "BACKSTORY POST" in the subject line of your email along with the pub date so a book coming out May 16 would say "BACKSTORY POST -MAY 16th." Attach your author photo, website and book cover (Jpeg). Your novel or story collection must be available for purchase at bookstores.

Look Who's In Our Archives

  • In recent months all kinds of wonderful authors have posted their backstories here: Katherine Neville, Lee Child, Jennifer Egan, Tess Gerritsen, Marcia Talley, Gayle Lynds, Elizabeth Letts, Laura Lippman, Jacqueline Winspear, Linda Fairstein, Caroline Leavitt, Jon Clinch, Denise Hamilton, Lev Raphael, Jason Starr, Lisa Tucker, J.A. Konrath, Robert Ferrigno, Doug Clegg, Carol Goodman and more. So be sure to check in often. Discover what inspired these novelists to write what you love to read.

Bookstore Friendly


  • All books featured here can be purchased at your local bookstore.