August 10, 2022

Page 14

Books

Former Congressman And Current Ithacan Mrazek Releases 12th Novel By Juli a Nage l

F

ormer five-term congressman Robert J. Mrazek, now an awardwinning author, released his 12th novel this week. The thriller, titled “The Dark Circle,” is the second in a series that details the adventures of former army officer Jake Cantrell and his beloved sidekick, Bug, a wolfhound he rescued while serving in Afghanistan. The novel begins with Cantrell working as a campus security officer at the fictional St. Andrews College, but he resigns when complaints arise after he uses force to break up a fight between two drug-crazed students. Jake doesn’t stay unemployed for long, though; Lauren Kennsiton, the editor of the “Groton Journal,” offers him $200 a day to investigate the mysterious disappearance of a gifted student musician.

14 T

H E

ITHAC A T IMES

As Cantrell travels around Upstate New York, he attempts to untangle a web of issues related to opioids, sex trafficking and corruption. Cantrell makes more than a few enemies as his investigation catches the attention of powerful New Yorkers. Loosely set in Groton, “The Dark Circle” weaves together fictional and factual details about Upstate New York. “Groton is really Ithaca. St. Andrews school is a smaller version of Cornell,” Mrazek explained. Readers will notice numerous local references in the novel, from landmarks like Ithaca’s Fall Creek and Rochester’s Kodak Tower, to Cornell University’s School of Hotel Administration and Cornell’s annual Slope Day music festival which is recast as the St. Andrews Slope Day festival in the novel. As a 1967 Cornell alum and someone that currently splits his time between

/AUGUST

10– 16 ,

2 0 2 2

Ithaca and Maine, Mrazek knows the area well and has watched it evolve over the decades. “The drugstores, hardware store, the courthouse, the Woolworth's five and dime: they're all gone. They're empty. The big engine in Upstate New York was the railroads. The railroads thrived up here for many years, and when the railroads left, the villages died,” Mrazek explained. “The tragedy of a waning set of small communities serves as an undercurrent to the novel, and a contrast to the physical beauty of the Finger Lakes,” Mrazek explained. According to Mrazek, one of the more difficult aspects of writing this novel was crafting a “worthy” villain. “Hopefully the reader is thrilled with what happens to him at the end after all of the tragedy that he causes,” Mrazek said.

Mrazek’s latest novel, “The Dark Circle”, is set in a fictional Groton, NY, that is largely based on Ithaca. (Photo: Samuel Stern)

Reflecting on his switch from politics to writing, Mrazek explained that his time as a politician was simply a detour from his true passion. “I ended up taking a 30-year detour, if you will, from what I wanted to do in life. But when I left Congress, I thought, ‘Okay, you wanted to be a writer. Let's see if you can be a writer,’” Mrazek said. Despite it being his true calling, the start to Mrazek’s writing career was far from smooth. His first two books — one of which took two and a half years to write Contin u ed on Page 19


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
August 10, 2022 by Ithaca Times - Issuu