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On this episode, I chat with author Tova Mirvis about her novel, We Would Never, a psychological exploration inspired by a real murder case she discovered on Facebook.
Mirvis reveals how true crime reporting always left her hungry for the human story beneath the headlines, and how she carefully crafted characters who start as a typical family with typical problems before spiraling into darkness.
Having written a memoir about leaving Orthodox Judaism and her marriage, Mervis brings profound insight into the gap between our public and private selves. "What does it mean to not be the person you were expected to be?" she asks, a question that resonates throughout her fiction.
Mirvis says of writing We Would Never, "It taught me about the willingness to go dark," and the craft of creating suspense. Her insights into character development, the ethics of fictionalizing real events, and the thin line between ordinary people and extraordinary acts offer a valuable perspective for writers and readers alike.
Ready to explore the shadowy corners of family dynamics? Listen now, and discover why fiction reveals what true crime can never tell.
Tova Mirvis
We Would Never, Tova Mirvis
Orbital, Samantha Harvey
The Safekeep, Yael Van Der Wouden
Support the show
The Bookshop Podcast
Mandy Jackson-Beverly
Social Media Links
By Mandy Jackson-Beverly4.9
1919 ratings
Send us a text
On this episode, I chat with author Tova Mirvis about her novel, We Would Never, a psychological exploration inspired by a real murder case she discovered on Facebook.
Mirvis reveals how true crime reporting always left her hungry for the human story beneath the headlines, and how she carefully crafted characters who start as a typical family with typical problems before spiraling into darkness.
Having written a memoir about leaving Orthodox Judaism and her marriage, Mervis brings profound insight into the gap between our public and private selves. "What does it mean to not be the person you were expected to be?" she asks, a question that resonates throughout her fiction.
Mirvis says of writing We Would Never, "It taught me about the willingness to go dark," and the craft of creating suspense. Her insights into character development, the ethics of fictionalizing real events, and the thin line between ordinary people and extraordinary acts offer a valuable perspective for writers and readers alike.
Ready to explore the shadowy corners of family dynamics? Listen now, and discover why fiction reveals what true crime can never tell.
Tova Mirvis
We Would Never, Tova Mirvis
Orbital, Samantha Harvey
The Safekeep, Yael Van Der Wouden
Support the show
The Bookshop Podcast
Mandy Jackson-Beverly
Social Media Links

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