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Community Resilience
Posted by Literary-Titan

Beneath the Rings follows a veteran journalist who finds herself in the middle of an international incident when twelve athletes vanish from the Olympic Village. The premise feels disturbingly plausible. How close did you want this world to feel to our present reality?
My goal in crafting the story arc was to root it somewhat realistically. The kidnapping of the twelve athletes harkens back to the 1972 Munich Olympics hostage crisis, where the Palestinian militant group Black September carried out a terrorist attack on the Israeli team, resulting in the deaths of 11 athletes and coaches. While the premise of this recurring seems disturbingly plausible, the level of security at the Olympic Games now versus 54 years ago does require the reader to somewhat suspend disbelief. The likelihood of an attack like the one carried out in Beneath The Rings happening today is pretty slim. But, I guess you never really know, which is what builds the suspense.
Nova is a journalist rather than a spy or soldier, making her an intriguing choice for this role. What was your inspiration for this character?
Nova’s character weaves personal echoes, real-world colleagues, and legacies of trailblazing women who’ve redefined journalism. Drawing from my roots, industry friendships, and historical figures who turned adversity into ammunition, here’s what fueled her creation.
Nova’s foundation is deeply personal, honoring my Newark, New Jersey upbringing. While I grew up in the North Ward of the Brick City, Nova hails from the Weequahic neighborhood—a vibrant, middle-class Jewish enclave where family and community resilience shaped her. Running Newark’s streets became her ritual, mirroring my own experiences in that gritty city, instilling quiet fortitude. Her solitary runs defy an unmoored world.
Her parents—Judith, a sharp-witted public-school teacher, and David, a steady accountant—echo my nurturing yet expectation-filled home. My mother, Fran, was also a teacher; my father, Ted, an entrepreneur. They raised me and my sister, Jessica, with education as key. Nova attends Solomon Schechter Day School near Seton Hall Prep, which I attended. She heads to Syracuse—where my father grew up after emigrating from Italy—for journalism, but detours to law at Seton Hall, like my sister’s JD.
This pivot reflects practical pressures, but for Nova, it’s a cage. Her return to journalism after Manhattan practice draws from my friend Alan Abrahamson, who graduated from Northwestern’s Medill School before earning his law degree at UC Hastings. He spent 17 years at the Los Angeles Times. Alan sparked Nova as an independent Olympic journalist. As founder of 3 Wire Sports, he’s a beacon in Olympic coverage, blending analysis with honesty. We collaborated at NBC Olympics from 2008-2014, where I saw him peel back the Games’ layers—politics, ethics, human stories. Nova’s platform, OlymPulse, mirrors Alan’s independent voice: probing storylines mainstream outlets overlook. His influence makes her a veteran of 14 Olympics by 2040, her reporting a rebellion against gloss.
Nova’s grit—navigating harassment in Beirut or personal loss—draws from Lara Logan, the former CBS correspondent known for fearless war reporting. Logan’s 2011 assault in Egypt embodies resilience that refuses silence. Nova channels this: surviving the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing, shifting from runner to reporter amid chaos, and enduring the 2017 crash that kills her parents. Logan’s confrontation of danger sharpens Nova’s hyper-vigilance, turning trauma into journalistic fuel.
Historical figures add tenacity. Nellie Bly, the 19th-century pioneer who feigned insanity to expose asylums and circled the globe in 72 days, lends Nova audacious truth-seeking. Bly’s undercover work mirrors Nova’s infiltration of Olympic shadows, risking all for revelation.
Ida Tarbell’s muckraking exposés on Standard Oil—methodical takedowns of corruption—inspire Nova’s IOC probes, showing one woman’s research can topple empires.
In sports, Helene Elliott, the veteran LA Times writer who covered the Olympics for decades, layers Nova’s ethos. Elliott’s trailblazing—including the “Miracle on Ice” plus being the first female Hockey Hall of Fame honoree—fuels Nova’s focus on the voiceless. Her moral clarity cuts through hype.
Lesley Visser, the broadcasting pioneer first to cover Super Bowl sidelines and Olympics, embodies barrier-breaking. Visser’s poise and elevation of women’s voices shape Nova’s solitary ascent in a male-dominated field, turning isolation into a superpower.
Blending these created Nova and forged her into a truth sentinel. In Beneath the Rings, she navigates terrorism and conspiracy, a testament to how personal and historical forces birth unbreakable resolve.
If Nova resonates, it’s from real warriors who’ve shaped our world—and my path.
Beneath the action, the book raises questions about vengeance, historical grievance, and moral reckoning. How conscious were you of those themes while writing?
I was quite conscious of these themes in crafting The Obsidian Hand and the group’s motivation. I did weeks of research on conflicts in the Middle East and wanted to make sure that I was rooting the group as a whole and each individual to historically accurate discords so that their disenfranchisement felt real. Some of those details are spelled out in the book, but for more in-depth backstories on the characters themselves, you can read blog posts on each on my website, booksbybattaglia.com.
I greatly enjoyed following Nova, and it feels like she has more stories to tell. Do you see this as the beginning of a series?
Most definitely!
Author Links: GoodReads | X (Twitter) | Facebook | Website | Amazon
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: action, author, Beneath The Rings, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, Espionage Thrillers, fiction, goodreads, indie author, Joe Battaglia, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, olympic games, read, reader, reading, Sports Journalism, story, suspense, thriller, writer, writing
Beneath The Rings
Posted by Literary Titan

The Doha 2040 Summer Olympics promise spectacle and grandeur. That illusion shatters fast. Twelve Lebanese and Israeli athletes vanish, seized by a shadowy organization known as the Obsidian Hand. Their demand lands like a thunderclap: a ransom of $500 billion. Veteran journalist Nova Mendelsohn steps into the chaos, and the stakes spike with every passing hour. The Olympic Village becomes her launching point, yet the real peril lurks beyond its perimeter. The desert holds secrets. Vengeance brews. Lives hang by a thread. Unless Nova unearths the truth, the kidnapped athletes will not survive.
Beneath the Rings, by Joe Battaglia, evokes echoes of Argo while carving out its own identity. Set in a near-future landscape that feels disturbingly plausible, the novel imagines a world only a few steps removed from our present timeline.
At its center stands Nova Mendelsohn. Once the narrative machinery locks into place, the spotlight rarely shifts from her. Intelligent, relentless, and remarkably resourceful, she becomes the ideal guide through this pressure cooker of danger. Readers may catch glimmers of Dan Brown’s puzzle-laced adventures or the high-velocity grit of the Jason Bourne films, yet Battaglia builds a narrative ecosystem all his own, one defined by crisp storytelling and an inventive delivery of essential clues.
Momentum never lags. Once the plot kicks into gear, it drives forward with remarkable speed. The mystery elements hook the reader early, while the dialogue sharpens the tension. Mini cliffhangers pepper the chapters, each one engineered to tug the reader deeper into the story. Putting the book down becomes a challenge.
The Obsidian Hand also stands apart from typical thriller antagonists. As their identity and purpose come into focus, their motives, while extreme, gain a faint, unsettling logic. This complexity grants the novel an unexpected emotional undercurrent, prompting readers to consider where justice ends and fanaticism begins.
The result is a high-stakes thriller with international scope and literary ambition, a potboiler elevated by thoughtful execution. Battaglia delivers a gripping ride, and further stories featuring Nova Mendelsohn would be more than welcome.
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: action, adventure, author, Beneath The Rings, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, crime, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, International Mystery & Crime, Joe Battaglia, kindle, kobo, literature, mystery, nook, novel, olympic games, read, reader, reading, sports thriller, story, suspense, Suspense Action Fiction, thriller, writer, writing
Hike the Course
Posted by Literary Titan

Hike the Course by Barbara Ann Cochran offers a unique glimpse into the world of competitive skiing and the mental fortitude required to excel in sports. Cochran, an Olympic gold medalist, draws from her own experiences and those of her siblings, Marilyn and Bob, collectively known as “the First American Family of Skiing.” The narrative details their early introduction to skiing under their father’s guidance, emphasizing the rigorous training and mental preparation that propelled them to the pinnacle of their sport. Cochran’s book delves into the techniques that helped her succeed, such as course rehearsal, physical training, and mindset strengthening. More than just a sports memoir, it provides valuable insights into mindfulness, visualization, goal setting, and habit formation. These elements are woven into an engaging narrative that extends beyond the realm of sports, offering universally applicable lessons on personal and professional growth.
For readers intrigued by the psychological aspects of competitive sports, Cochran’s candid account of her struggles with pressure and self-doubt is particularly compelling. She shares an instance of overcoming mental hurdles during a crucial competition, using affirmations to regain focus. This anecdote, among others, illustrates the importance of mental resilience in high-stakes environments. The book is a testament to the Cochrans’ dedication to skiing and serves as a practical guide, replete with worksheets and exercises designed to enhance mental strength. Its applicability extends beyond athletes, providing valuable insights for anyone aiming to excel in their respective fields. The lessons imparted are especially relevant for those striving to balance personal bests with external perceptions.
As a skiing enthusiast, I found Hike the Course both enlightening and inspiring. It bridges the gap between a sports biography and a motivational guide, making it a compelling read for anyone seeking to achieve excellence, whether in sports or other life pursuits. This book is highly recommended for individuals aspiring to realize their potential and for sports enthusiasts eager to understand the mental aspects of athletic achievement.
Pages: 214 | ASIN : B0CMC9T7JS
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: author, Barbara Ann Cochran, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, goodreads, Hike the Course, history of sports, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nonfiction, nook, novel, olympic games, read, reader, reading, Self-Help, snow skiing, sports memoir, story, winter skiing, Women in sports, writer, writing






