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VOL.33, NO.9
From storyteller to bestseller
Virginia roots
Because his father was in the U.S. Navy,
SEPTEMBER 2021
I N S I D E …
PHOTO BY ED SZROM
By Katherine Mahoney John Gilstrap has created stories for most of his life. As a child, he invented stories for neighborhood friends to inhabit while playing together. As an adult, he writes for hundreds of thousands of readers worldwide. Gilstrap, 64, is a New York Times bestselling author from Fairfax, Va., whose background in volunteer fire service and Master of Science degree in safety engineering help him craft realistic thrillers. “I’ve been shot at, I’ve been threatened with knives, I’ve fallen through floors, I’ve been scared,” Gilstrap said in an interview with the Beacon. “Having that kind of exposure to the breadth of human emotions — the laughter and sadness and having to be in a very sad situation, having to be the one who is strong…I think that informs my fiction a lot.” Gilstrap has published more than 20 novels, most recently Stealth Attack, released in June. The 13th book in Gilstrap’s Jonathan Grave series, the novel follows Grave, a freelance hostage rescue specialist and former Delta Force operator who puts himself in harm’s way to return hostages to their families. After a friend’s son and his girlfriend are kidnapped, Grave travels to El Paso, Texas, entering the worlds of cartels and human trafficking. In addition to Stealth Attack, Gilstrap released Crimson Phoenix in February of this year. This is the first novel in a new series about a West Virginia member of the U.S. House of Representatives, Victoria Emerson, who, while a nuclear war threatens, must decide between leaving her three teenage sons behind to enter a secure bunker or stay with them to prepare for the aftermath of the war.
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L E I S U R E & T R AV E L
Snorkel with sea turtles in the Turks and Caicos Islands; plus, reflect at the memorial sites on the 9/11 Trail, and learn what to pack in the age of COVID travel page 33
ARTS & STYLE
Bestselling author John Gilstrap writes thrillers from his home in Fairfax, Virginia. He’s already published two new novels this year, but still finds time to teach writing workshops online, at local libraries and the Smithsonian.
Gilstrap lived in several place before the family settled in the D.C. area in the early 1960s, when he was 7. “I was kind of a free-range child,” he said. “I spent a lot of time in my head, making up
stories. That’s what I would do even when I played with my buddies. When I was growing up, I was always sort of the storyteller.” See NOVELIST, page 42
Listen to stories of social justice leaders in Howard University’s new podcast series; plus, journals to inspire you, and Bob Levey’s origins page 39 FITNESS & HEALTH 4 k Some warnings on supplements k The latest on booster shots LIVING BOLDLY k Newsletter for D.C. seniors
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