TOP STORY: A Tale for All Ages: Lyme’s Faulkner Hunt Revives the Classic Spirit of Adventure in Debut Novel Published Sept. 23

Author Faulkner Hunt sits down at Ashlawn Farm Coffee in Old Saybrook on Sept. 11, 2025, in the leadup to the Sept. 23 publication of his first book.

LYME–Frustrated screenwriter-turned-author Faulkner Hunt’s first novel is a hardcover story for the ages in an era consumed with 30-second reels and 80-character posts on social media.

Hunt, a Texas transplant whose career spans the media and technology industries, has emerged with a back-to-basics approach that eschews the trappings of the digital world for pure storytelling.

“A book, at its worst, is a beautiful distraction,” he said. “At its best, it’s among the highest forms of art.”

The Ballad of Innes of Skara Skaill is set for release this month as an adventure story modeled after classics like Robert Louis Stevenson’s Treasure Island, Mark Twain’s Adventures of Huckleberry Finn and Rudyard Kipling’s The Jungle Book. Those are the bedtime tales he read to two boys and two girls, now grown, whose childhoods spanned decades. 

“I had kids in my house for 28 years,” he said of the 18th century farmhouse shared with wife Ann Lightfoot. “It felt like I was reading nonstop.” 

The couple, who met as students at Wallingford’s Choate Rosemary Hall boarding school, moved to Lightfoot’s hometown in Lyme in 2001. That was several jobs and two children after Hunt packed up his University of Texas degree and moved to New York just to be near Lightfoot again, “even though she may not have known it.” 

Their identical twin girls were born in Lyme. 

He described his own youth and time spent reading to their children as “classic training” in storytelling structure. But fast changing realities forced him to adjust his narrative view. 

“Look, if the world’s attention span is shorter, then you have to adapt to that,” he said. “And so this book is very much designed to be a page-turner. It’s written kind of like a screenplay is written, where there’s no wasted time, space, and you’re not meandering around listening to an author show off. It’s just very straightforward that way. It travels quick.”

Hunt’s years studying English and history at college, where he roomed with the now movie star Owen Wilson and traveled in the same circles as filmmaker Wes Anderson, helped forge an early affinity for screenwriting inspired by the burgeoning cinematic powerhouses. 

But when he couldn’t land a deal on any of several screenplays – including one project with Wilson’s backing about a scofflaw dad assigned by a judge to the Marine Corps – his plans changed. 

“I started thinking, well, maybe just write a book,” he said. After three years of writing, revising and pitching, he had it: 314 hardbound pages with cover art that revealed a Welsh woodcarving of the imaginary North Atlantic island of Skara Skaill. 

“It comes out September 23rd,” he said. “There it is; it’s the shape of a book.” 

The Ballad of Innes of Skara Skaill, published by Regalo Press, tells the story of a bereaved son, who takes up with two young brothers living on the village streets and moors of Skara Heath as they search for fortune and truth in the island’s buried past. 

Describing “a tale for all ages,” Faulkner said he sees the book as a story to be passed through the generations by word of mouth rather than marketed in a social media blitz. 

He admitted to a counter-revolutionary approach that comes at a time when authors, whether they land a traditional publisher or go the self-published route, must sell themselves aggressively online. 

“I have no social media presence, and I won’t,” he said. 

That doesn’t mean he won’t go on podcasts and talk with BookTok influencers. But he emphasized none of that outreach will point back to his own pages on the likes of X, Instagram and Facebook. 

His X account, going back to 2009, remains empty except for a profile picture of a father and child. 

“When I see a line of kids all together and they’re all staring at their phones, it literally just breaks my heart,” he said. “I think, ‘what are you missing?’ Everything! You’re missing it all.”

The Ballad of Innes of Skara Skaill goes on sale Sept. 23. Visit faulknerhunt.com for more information.

Editor’s Note: Visit this link to order a copy of the book.

Former Lyme Resident James R. Benn Releases 20th Billy Boyle Mystery Sept. 23

The latest Billy Boyle World War II mystery by former Lyme resident James R. Benn hits the shelves Sept. 23. 

“A Bitter Wind,” published by Soho Press, marks the 20th release in the series about an Irish-American cop from Boston who helps his “uncle” Ike Eisenhower in sensitive WWII military investigations in overseas Europe. 

The book description details Boyle’s journey from the Cliffs of Dover on Christmas Day in 1944, where he discovers the first of two dead bodies, to the wild mountains of Yugoslavia. The mystery is described by the publisher as a fascinating look into the secretive world of WWII radio espionage. 

Benn lives on the Gulf Coast of Florida with wife Deborah Mandel, according to his biography on jamesrbenn.com. They have two sons and seven grandchildren 

A graduate of the University of Connecticut, he went on to receive a master’s degree in library science from Southern Connecticut State University. He is a member of the Mystery Writers of America and the Author’s Guild. 

Benn worked in the library and information technology fields for over 35 years before turning to full-time writing in 2011. 

James R. Benn

Readers will have the chance to learn more from the author himself at two upcoming events on the shoreline. 

Oct. 7: RJ Julia Booksellers, Madison

James R. Benn in Conversation with John Valeri

6:30 pm

Click here for details.

Oct. 8: Bank Square Books, Mystic

James R. Benn in Conversation with Rick Koster

6:00 pm.Click here for details.

Summer Season of Lyme Land Trust’s ‘Imagining Lyme’ Photo Contest Ends Sept. 30

This ‘Photo of Distinction’ by Rich Sanders is titled, ‘Late Summer at Uncas Lake.’ It was taken in September 2024 when, in the photographer’s words, “there’s still time for a late summer swim and a look see both above and below the water.”

LYME — Imagining Lyme is a photo contest organized by the Lyme Land Trust and photos can be submitted year-round.

Each season, three photos of distinction are chosen based upon the criteria of emotional impact and creative design. The deadline to be included in the current summer season is tomorrow, Sept. 30.

At the end of the year, the Annual People’s Vision Award allows everyone to vote for their favorite.

The contest encourages people to expand their visual awareness of nature and highlight the beauty of the Lyme Preserves by taking photographs prompted by inspiration from award winning photographer, Joe Standart and other artists.

This ‘Photo of Distinction’ by Athana Catlett is titled, “Winter Magic on Whalebone Cove” and was taken in January 2022 from Joshuatown Rd. after a snowfall.

In the Tips from Joe section, Joe Standart and guest artists offer guidance to help you improve your own photography while you think about new ways to see the world. Each tip will be short, simple and non-technical, suitable for any kind of camera or smart phone.

All submitted photos will be displayed in the Lyme Land Trust Imagining Lyme showcase galleries and may be featured in the Trust publications, webpage and other promotional materials.

Old Lyme Library Hosts Talk on “The Pirates of Penzance,’ Sept. 27

Salt Marsh Opera to present ‘Pirates,’ Oct. 17 & 19 in OS

James Kuslan.

OLD LYME— On Saturday, Sept. 27, from 11 a.m. to 12 p.m., James Kuslan will present a special talk titled, ‘The Pirates of Penzance: Flying the Flag of Fun‘ at the Old Lyme Phoebe Griffin Noyes Library. The talk will take place in the Community Room at the library, 2 Library Lane, Old Lyme, CT, 06371.

This talk is co-sponsored by TheGuild of Salt Marsh Opera, who will present The Pirates of Penzance at The Kate in Old Saybrook on Oct. 17 and 19.

The Gilbert and Sullivan operettas are unique in the Anglosphere for the often exalted music of Sullivan and the wit of Gilbert’s dialogue whose DNA indicates Restoration comedy paternity.

The Pirates of Penzance is not the most musically profound of the Savoy operettas. Neither is it Gilbert’s wittiest libretto.

What Pirates is is a masterpiece of a particularly English kind of silliness which sends up the conventions of grand opera while indulging itself in them at the same time.

All are welcome. The talk is free but registration is appreciated. Register to attend at this link.

Two New Shows on View at Lyme Art Association Through Nov. 6

Thomas Adkins’ oil painting, titled ‘Barnyard, Litchfield Hills,’ is the signature painting of the Lyme Art Association’s ‘New England Landscape’ exhibition openng Sept. 19.

‘New England Landscapes’ and ‘Timeless’ on View in LAA Galleries

OLD LYME—On Friday, Sept. 19, the Lyme Art Association (LAA) unveils separate exhibitions on New England landscapes and the timelessness of art.

A free, opening reception for New England Landscape and Timeless exhibitions will be held Sunday, Sept. 21, from 2 to 4 p.m.

The Association in a press release said New England Landscape is an annual member exhibition honoring the “many moods, colors, and textures that define New England’s natural splendor.”

Jim Laurino, ‘House in Cornwall’

The exhibit is supported by Ascend Bank in partnership with the Community Foundation of Middlesex County.

Timeless, the American Artists Professional League’s juried national member exhibition, will be on view simultaneously in LAA’s Goodman Gallery.

The LAA describes Timeless as a contemporary approach to realism, with artists rendering moments of life through the interplay of light, shadow, and form.

Both exhibitions will run through Nov. 6.

Hours at the 90 Lyme St. gallery are Tuesday through Sunday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., or by appointment. Admission is free; contributions are appreciated.

For more information, visit www.lymeartassociation.org or call (860) 434-7802.