Her first novel,
Vanished, was written over ten-year period with only her husband and children aware of her writing effort. [6] It was rejected by numerous publishers and agents before an agent, Jean Naggar, helped her sell it to Viking Press. [7] It was published in 1988 to favorable reviews and was a finalist for the National Book Award [8] and the PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction [9].
Her 1991 novel,
A Dangerous Woman, was named by Time Magazine as one of the
Five Best Novels of the Year [10] and as one of the best books of the year by American Library Association (
ALA) Library Journal. As a result of
A Dangerous Woman, Morris won the
Barnes and Noble Discover Great New Writers Award. [11] The novel also was the basis for a 1993 movie of the same name which starred among others Debra Winger, Gabriel Byrne, David Strathairn, Barbara Hershey, Maggie Gyllenhaal and Jake Gyllenhaal.
Her 1995 novel (her third) Songs in Ordinary Time, sold one and one-half million copies; was a New York Times Bestseller; was a selection of Oprah's Book Club [12]; and was made into a CBS made for television movie starring Sissy Spacek and Beau Bridges.
Her 2000 novel, her fourth,
Fiona Range was published to critical acclaim. A reviewer for The New York Times Book Review stated about Morris' writing: "She can bring the ordinary to life with the sheer clarity of vision. She knows how a house with children in it sounds at night, what the heat and bustle in a kitchen feel like before a family dinner and how indiscretions arise in a dining room when everyone is flushed with wine."
Morris' fifth novel, published in 2004 was entitled
A Hole in the Universe and tells the story of what happens when a man returns to his community after serving 25 years in prison for murder. The Washington Post wrote the following: "Morris is a master at sympathetic portraits of those clinging to the peripheries of society. And nowhere is her talent more evident than in her extraordinary new novel, A Hole in the Universe. Morris [is] a superb storyteller...and [her] undeniable compassion for and intuitive understanding of her characters' lives make us know and care about these people, too."
Her sixth novel,
The Lost Mother was published in 2005 and from the perspective of a 12 year old boy tells the story of what happens when the boy's mother leaves him, his sister and his father in the midst of the Great Depression. The Boston Globe described the book as "wonderful and absorbing" while The Washington Post wrote "The Lost Mother is the quietest, subtlest novel that ever kept me up into the small hours of the night, unable to look away."
Mary McGarry Morris stated the following about
The Lost Mother:
"Inspiration was easy because it was during those same years that my grandmother abandoned her husband and three children. The day she left, she brought her four-year-old daughter and youngest child, my mother, to a friend's house, then, dressed in her very best clothes, my grandmother climbed into a taxi and rode away forever. The image of that little girl watching from the window as her mother deserted her would come to me whenever there was sorrow in my mother's life. Forgiving by nature, my mother tried to understand what had happened, but because she felt such love and fierce loyalty to her own children, her mother's actions remained a painful, troubling mystery. Growing up, I was keenly aware of the loss my mother felt as well as the great love and admiration she had for her father, a quiet country man who raised his three children alone in those desperate times, often working day and night to support them." [13]