Washington Novelist and Network News Insider Who Witnessed Watergate Firsthand Finds That Reality Is Far Scarier Than Fiction
Washington, DC (PRWEB) December 30, 2014
Terry Irving, the Washington DC based author of the breakthrough thriller âCourierâ and an Emmy award-winning television news producer, has found while researching his latest book that, to his surprise, Richard Nixonâs criminal betrayal of the nation was far beyond anything anyone but the most radical would have thought in the 1970âs.
âI can remember reading Hunter S. Thompsonâs coverage and thinking that statements like âRichard Nixon was an evil manâ¦utterly without ethics or morals or any bedrock sense of decencyâ were paranoid and irrationalâ said Irving, who worked for ABC News during the scandal and witnessed firsthand many of the now legendary events.
However, Irvingâs attitude changed dramatically during his extensive research for his breakthrough thriller âCourierâ. The critically acclaimed novel tells the story of a Vietnam veteran and Washington DC motorcycle courier for a major network news organization who picks up a reel of film and finds himself the target of a shadowy government kill squad determined to keep this story from the American public.
Irving himself rode a BMW for ABC News during Watergate and had a front row seat for events ranging from the âSaturday Night Massacreâ to Spiro Agnew admitting he took bribes in the Vice Presidentâs office. Irving said that as he wrote the book, he thought the central secret in âCourierââ"that Nixon was taking money from the South Vietnamese in 1972 to prolong the warâ"was great as a novelâs plot device but a bit unlikely in reality.
âLike everyone else, Iâd moved on to other stories and believed Watergate was a somewhat minor and predominately political affair. Wow, was I wrong.â Irving said. âWhat amazed me most in doing the research for âCourierâ was the increasing realization that Richard Nixon truly was âa crookâ despite his famous denial and his administration was a criminal enterprise far beyond anything I could have imagined.â
Much of Irvingâs information comes from new books that have reviewed and analysed notes, tapes, and trials that became public years after Nixonâs resignation. Here is an example from Ken Hughes recent book âChasing Shadowsâ âFrom those documents and recordings, Itâs now clear that Nixon made a deal with South Vietnam to pull out of the Peace Talks only days before the 1968 election, winning him the presidency and, arguably, leading to the deaths of over 21,000 American servicemen. President Johnson had ordered illegal surveillance to get to the bottom of this and warned Nixon through GOP Senator Everett Dirksen in a conversation a few days before the election,â said Irving. A damning portion of that conversation is as follows:
President Johnson: Now, Iâm reading their hand, Everett. I donât want to get this in the campaign.
Dirksen: Thatâs right.
President Johnson: And they oughtnât to be doing this. This is treason.
Dirksen: I know.
In addition to Nixonâs violation of the Logan Act, Irving also found:
Many of these revelations have previously been reported, but Irving believes that most Americans have forgotten the sheer enormity of truly criminal acts involved in Watergate and think todayâs political scandals are comparable.
âWatergate canât be looked at in a Republican versus Democratic way. It was a criminal cabal that used the entire Federal government as a personal cash cow and a political weapon of frightening power. There is nothing happening today that comes anywhere near.â
About COURIER:
It's 1972, the Watergate scandal has Washington on edge and Rick Putnam, a Vietnam veteran and courier for one of the capital's leading television stations, is trying to get his life back together after his nightmarish ordeal in the war. When Rick picks up film from a news crew interviewing a government worker with a hot story, his life begins to unravel as everyone involved in the story dies within hours of the interview and Rick realizes he is the next target. When he discovers a rogue CIA agent has orchestrated the killings, Rick isn't surprised when his road to the truth leads directly to 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.
Praise for COURIER:
"An action-packed tale of murder and political intrigue set in the politically turbulent 1970s.... Irving portrays [courier Rick Putnam] as a classic pulp-fiction hero: a chiseled, chain-smoking ex-soldier who's always ready with snappy quips. ... Irving's story is relentlessly paced, punctuated by bursts of action and violence, and driven by artfully unfolding suspense.... Exciting and gritty." -- Kirkus Reviews
"Kudos to one of television's best producers for writing the thriller of the year." -- Sam Donaldson, longtime ABC News White House Reporter
"If the phrase 'a crackling good yarn' evokes an era before Twitter, Facebook, cell phones, videotape, DVD's or cable television, welcome to Terry Irving's fast-paced thriller." -- Ted Koppel, anchor for ABC News Nightline, now senior news analyst for National Public Radio and contributing analyst to BBC World News America and NBC
About The Author:
Terry Irving is a four-time Emmy award-winning writer and producer. Irving has also been awarded three Peabody Awards, three DuPont Awards and has served as a producer, editor or writer with ABC, CNN, Fox and MSNBC, worked closely with top network talent including Ted Koppel, Sam Donaldson and Don Imus as well as developed many of the earliest forms of online media. You can find Terry online at http://www.TerryIrving.com | http://www.Facebook.com/TerryIrving | @TerryIrving
To interview Terry Irving or to request a reviewer copy of âCourier,â contact Allen Media Strategiesâ Burke Allen at burke@allenmediastrategies.com or call 703-589-8960.
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