Author Richard F. Wright Updated His Blogger Profile
Richard F. Wright is a New England writer and independent publisher who
turned to full-time authorship after a long career in the corporate world.
Working from a distinctly Massachusetts vantage point, Wright writes in several
registers — memoir, local travel guide, cultural polemic, and investigative
political non-fiction — yet his voice is consistently plainspoken, curious
about people and institutions, and willing to move from affection to blunt
critique when the subject calls for it. His books are widely available online,
including through Amazon, and have found a small but steady readership across
genres.
The World’s Seven Biggest Liars — cultural polemic
In this short, provocative book Wright takes on the grand myths that he
believes shape—and too often mislead—modern life, with a particular focus on
organized religion and the social power of enduring falsehoods. The book reads
like a restless essay: part personal argument, part cultural diagnosis.
Wright’s tone here is argumentative and satirical; he writes as someone trying
to pry open comfortable assumptions rather than soothe them. The title and
framing make the book appealing to readers who enjoy contrarian, idea-driven
criticism.
Worcester’s Winter Hill Farm — memoir and place
Wright’s Worcester memoir is a warm, detail-rich account of growing up with an
“urban farm” on Winter Hill that shaped his early life and imagination. The
book mixes small domestic scenes (animals, neighbors, school) with a wider
curiosity about technology and science that later became part of his
intellectual life. It’s the most personal of his titles, written in the
reflective, anecdotal mode readers expect from place-based memoirs of New
England childhood. Anyone interested in Worcester history or the texture of
mid-century New England family life will find it especially rewarding.
A Vacationer’s Guide to Rural New England Bookstores — a reader’s road map
This compact guide collects Wright’s recommendations for independent and rural
bookstores across New England. It’s practical, conversational, and aimed at
travelers who want to combine a scenic road trip with bookshop browsing. With
an author who clearly loves both place and print, the guide functions as a map
for bibliophiles who prefer local shops to chains, and it showcases Wright’s
knack for curating small, characterful destinations. The book first appeared in
digital/paper formats and has been used by readers planning literary excursions
through the region.
The John Fresolo Saga — investigative political non-fiction
Wright’s most recent and highest-profile book is a deep dive into Massachusetts
politics. Written as an investigative account, The John Fresolo Saga examines
the resignation of a well-known Massachusetts state legislator and the tangled
mixture of personal scandal, local power, and political consequence around it.
This volume demonstrates Wright’s shift into reportage and political analysis;
it’s longer, more documentary in tone, and aimed at readers interested in
statehouse intrigue and the mechanics of local American politics. Reviews and
listings show it marketed as a serious look at political conspiracy and
institutional behavior inside the Massachusetts State House.
Common threads and strengths
Across these four books, two strengths stand out. First, Wright is an observant
localist: whether describing a Worcester childhood, a chain of rural
bookstores, or the corridors of the Massachusetts State House, he writes with
an eye for the small detail that reveals larger character and consequence.
Second, he’s versatile — able to switch from memorial warmth to polemical heat
to investigative cool without losing an accessible, conversational tone.
Readers who prefer straightforward, idea-driven prose and who have an appetite
for New England place, local politics, and contrarian cultural essays will find
his work congenial.
Where to find the books
All four titles — The World’s Seven Biggest Liars; Worcester’s Winter Hill
Farm; A Vacationer’s Guide to Rural New England Bookstores; and The John
Fresolo Saga — are listed on Amazon and on several bookseller sites (Goodreads,
Books-A-Million, Walmart), making them easy to order in print or digital
formats.
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