everett-author-photoAs far as jobs, Everett De Morier’s favorite was a summer as a pool bartender in the Catskills. His most interesting was traveling with a standup comic and getting the laughter started from the crowd.

De Morier became a professional writer in 1994, when he sold a copy of his  son’s ultrasound picture along with an article entitled, My wife is having the reincarnation of Elvis, to The Weekly World News. For this he received fifty dollars and a Bat Boy t-shirt.

De Morier has appeared on CNN, Fox News Network, NPR, ABC, as well as in The New York Times and The London Times. He is the author of Crib Notes for the First Year of Marriage: A Survival Guide for Newlyweds, and Crib Notes for the First Year of Fatherhood: A Survival Guide for New Fathers, both from Fairview Press.De Morier has appeared on CNN, Fox News Network, NPR, and ABC, as well as in The New York Times and the London Times. He has also written for In-Fisherman, Florida Keys, Bride, and Parenting.

De Morier’s first novel, Thirty-Three Cecils, was published in 2015 and it won the top fiction prize at the London Book Festival, was named book of the year by Heroic Magazine, and was required High School reading.

Everett currently writes for 543 Magazine, and his best-of articles have been complied into a book entitled The Invention of Everything: Insights on Life, Food, and One Good Thermos, which was released in 2018 by Blydyn Square Books.

De Morier wrote seven original musical scripts that were all produced and performed by Cornerstone Drama of Dover, Delaware: Dover: A Christmas Story (2009 and 2010), A Gift to Remember (2011), Loockerman Letter (2012), The Mollywood Tree (2013), Finding Sergio (2014), A Little of That from Me (2015), and Welcome to Castlewood (2016).

De Morier was born in Binghamton, New York, which lead him to write and co-direct the documentary about the city’s art scene entitled Binghamton: Valley of Creativity. The film premiered in Binghamton in 2019 and then was released free online.

Everett De Morier currently lives in Dover, Delaware, with his wife and two children. There, he enjoys Lost in Space reruns and getting out of putting miniblinds up.