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The Partner Who Believed in My Novel Before I Did

Lindsay Marie Morris and Matthew Sirolly in Porticello, Sicily, Lindsay's ancestral home

Today, I celebrate 19 years of marriage to Matt Sirolly, my greatest champion, critique partner, and friend. Without Matt, The Last Letter from Sicily might never have been completed. I might never have received the two-book publishing deal that also brought Beneath the Sicilian Stars into the world.

I started writing what would become my debut novel in a creative writing class, inspired by my grandparents' story of being separated during World War II. After writing several thousand words, I shared with Matt that it might have the potential to become a novel. He agreed and encouraged me to keep going.

I wrote on and off, but eventually, I set it aside. Who was I to think I could finish a novel, let alone publish one?


Later, over our anniversary dinner, Matt asked, "How's the novel coming along?" I shook my head. In my mind, there was no longer a novel. But he told me not to give up, and I didn't want to let him down.


So I picked it back up and returned to it in earnest. When I reached the part set in Cagliari, Sardinia—where my grandfather had been stationed—I struggled. I had never been there, and the scenes felt hard to bring to life. Matt suggested we travel to Sardinia and rent an apartment for a month. That trip turned out to be exactly what I needed. I finished the novel in a Marina District apartment, and we even toured World War II bunkers with a professor from the University of Cagliari.

Of course, finishing a novel is only part of the journey. Publishing is another challenge. I queried a few dozen agents and received rejections because, as one agent put it, "No one's buying World War II fiction." I felt discouraged. Matt suggested we create our own press and publish it ourselves. I loved the idea.

But then I discovered Storm Publishing, a UK-based traditional publisher that had just signed Lelita Baldock for her heartwarming World War II novel, The Baker's Secret. I decided to pitch them.

Within a week, I was able to share their enthusiastic reply with Matt. The commissioning editor loved the story's angle, the Sicilian setting, and the fact that it was inspired by my grandparents.

I had only one name in mind when I wrote the novel's dedication.

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So today I raise a glass to Matt, on this special day and always. Everyone deserves someone like him. I just happened to be lucky enough that he chose me. I look forward to all the chapters ahead, knowing we are in this together.

 

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Matt and Lindsay on their wedding day in Temescal Gateway Park, Pacific Palisades, California

 

 


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Homecoming: A Return to Wisconsin

Front page of the February 12, 2025, edition of Racine's Journal Times

Freezing temperatures and about a half a foot of snowfall greeted us as we stepped off the plane in Milwaukee. But I'd come prepared in a new coat and pair of boots, having braved many winters in the Dairy State. 

 

I was born in Milwaukee, the place where my grandmother's family settled after emigrating from Sicily in the late 1930s. She spent the war years separated from the man she loved as he served in the Italian army, and she worked in a garment factory, each enduring their own struggles. They married in Sicily after the war, and he accompanied her back to Milwaukee, where they made a home and raised a family.

 

Their story inspired The Last Letter from Sicily. So, it was only fitting that my first public appearances for the novel would be in Wisconsin. 

 

My first event was held at Vintage and Modern Books in Racine, where I was raised and where my author journey truly began. I began writing poetry at an early age, winning an award at 12 for a poem called "Song of the Forest." I continued writing, and one day, my Horlick High School freshman English teacher, Brian Kelly, recommended I join the Herald newspaper. Writing and reporting on the staff of that paper under the guidance of advisor Dianne Belland ignited a passion for storytelling that would lead me to pursue journalism.

 

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Lindsay (second from left) with the Horlick High School Herald staff

 

Boswell Book Company hosted my second event in Milwaukee, where I earned my degree in Communications at Marquette University while moonlighting as an editorial assistant at the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.

 

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Author event at Boswell Book Company

 

I was grateful to have family and friends in attendance at both events. And it was wonderful to connect with readers. I look forward to sharing more and continuing to honor my grandparents' legacy.

 

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Lindsay with her mother, Santa Maria Morris, at Racine's Vintage and Modern Books