Don Phelan's Blog: A Little Light Reading - Posts Tagged "novels"
Welcome to my blog
Here's a nice review I received on Amazon:
5.0 out of 5 stars "Transports you right smack-dab in the middle of an alternate reality that's filled with emotional power and life."
By Tammy Adams, May 15, 2016
"Your writing is excellent. Your readers want more and more because we can intuitively feel the inner emotions of your characters and we can feel the mood in the air with every scene. You're poetic and captivating. You make your readers hold their own breath and lose track of their own space and time as you transport them right smack-dab in the middle of an alternate reality that's filled with emotional power and life."
http://www.amazon.com/The-Beech-Tree-...
5.0 out of 5 stars "Transports you right smack-dab in the middle of an alternate reality that's filled with emotional power and life."
By Tammy Adams, May 15, 2016
"Your writing is excellent. Your readers want more and more because we can intuitively feel the inner emotions of your characters and we can feel the mood in the air with every scene. You're poetic and captivating. You make your readers hold their own breath and lose track of their own space and time as you transport them right smack-dab in the middle of an alternate reality that's filled with emotional power and life."
http://www.amazon.com/The-Beech-Tree-...
Published on May 21, 2016 06:29
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Tags:
books, new-releases, novels, summer-reads
Beware of Good Reviews. Bad Ones, too.
As an author, the danger of reading reviews of your book is that you might actually believe them.
The good ones are easy to agree with, as you strut about your cramped writing room, punctuating your solitary chest-bump with “Yeah, baby, that’s what I’m talkin’ about!” They are even capable of drawing a tear when you discover your work has had some meaningful impact on one of your readers.
The bad ones are simply tough. They can make you feel ten times worse than those good ones make you happy. That’s the risk of sharing your work with others.
Then there are some – oddly, many seem to be by professional critics – which miss the point of the book entirely. Today, I read one which described the outcomes of the characters’ lives in The Beech Tree as “predictable,” as if that was a bad thing.
“Predictable.” Predictable. Yes, upon considerable thought, they are predictable. After all, I didn’t set out to write a mystery, thriller or suspense novel. No twists, turns and switchbacks like an Italian road racing course.
There are no superheroes. No divine intervention. No damsels in distress nor knights in shining armor. There are no characters who rise from nothing to lead armies into battle or sorcerers whose magic saves the day. There are no vampires, or zombies or malformed humanoids living high in the mountains.
It is fiction, not fantasy.
The Beech Tree is a story about real people whose only connection to one another in life was that they had been at the same place – the beech tree – at different times. The characters are everyday people who are faced with challenges just as we all are. Sometimes, they get it right. Other times, they don’t.
Life is predictable. We are born. We live. We die. The path we follow in the meanwhile is what makes the difference.
Life can be hard. It can be heartbreaking. Life can be brutal. It can be unfair. Getting through those heartaches, struggling to find joy and making decisions to stand up against injustice requires courage. For good men and women, though, it is a predictable outcome. And therein lies the triumph in their lives … predictably.
I can live with that description of The Beech Tree. In fact, it’s not bad at all.
The Beech Tree
The good ones are easy to agree with, as you strut about your cramped writing room, punctuating your solitary chest-bump with “Yeah, baby, that’s what I’m talkin’ about!” They are even capable of drawing a tear when you discover your work has had some meaningful impact on one of your readers.
The bad ones are simply tough. They can make you feel ten times worse than those good ones make you happy. That’s the risk of sharing your work with others.
Then there are some – oddly, many seem to be by professional critics – which miss the point of the book entirely. Today, I read one which described the outcomes of the characters’ lives in The Beech Tree as “predictable,” as if that was a bad thing.
“Predictable.” Predictable. Yes, upon considerable thought, they are predictable. After all, I didn’t set out to write a mystery, thriller or suspense novel. No twists, turns and switchbacks like an Italian road racing course.
There are no superheroes. No divine intervention. No damsels in distress nor knights in shining armor. There are no characters who rise from nothing to lead armies into battle or sorcerers whose magic saves the day. There are no vampires, or zombies or malformed humanoids living high in the mountains.
It is fiction, not fantasy.
The Beech Tree is a story about real people whose only connection to one another in life was that they had been at the same place – the beech tree – at different times. The characters are everyday people who are faced with challenges just as we all are. Sometimes, they get it right. Other times, they don’t.
Life is predictable. We are born. We live. We die. The path we follow in the meanwhile is what makes the difference.
Life can be hard. It can be heartbreaking. Life can be brutal. It can be unfair. Getting through those heartaches, struggling to find joy and making decisions to stand up against injustice requires courage. For good men and women, though, it is a predictable outcome. And therein lies the triumph in their lives … predictably.
I can live with that description of The Beech Tree. In fact, it’s not bad at all.
The Beech Tree
Published on July 14, 2016 11:57
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Tags:
books, fiction, literary-fiction, novels, women-s-literature
No. 1 on BookDaily.com
I am pleased to announce The Beech Tree, was No. 1 on TODAY'S List of BookDaily .com's Featured E-Books for the SECOND month in a row.
It is No.1 on Goodreads Listopia's list "2016's Best Summer Reads" and No. 5 on Goodreads Listopia's "2016 MUST READS!"
https://www.amazon.com/Beech-Tree-Don...
The Beech Tree
It is No.1 on Goodreads Listopia's list "2016's Best Summer Reads" and No. 5 on Goodreads Listopia's "2016 MUST READS!"
https://www.amazon.com/Beech-Tree-Don...
The Beech Tree
Published on July 21, 2016 12:24
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Tags:
bestseller, books, new-releases, novels
#1 on BookPromo's MUST READS for August
The Beech Tree was ranked at the top of BookPromo's August list of MUST READS. On Listopia, it is #5 on 2016 MUST READS and #1 on 2016's BEST SUMMER READS.
Read an excerpt at http://bookpromo.net/book-excerpts/be...
Available in all formats -- paperback, Kindle, iBook and more -- on Amazon.com, Smashwords, Apple iBooks, Barnes & Noble, Kobo and more.
The Beech Tree
Read an excerpt at http://bookpromo.net/book-excerpts/be...
Available in all formats -- paperback, Kindle, iBook and more -- on Amazon.com, Smashwords, Apple iBooks, Barnes & Noble, Kobo and more.
The Beech Tree
Published on August 03, 2016 12:06
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Tags:
books, fiction, literary-fiction, novels, women-s-literature
A Little Light Reading
This blog complements my Facebook page "A Little Light Reading." (Visit and "like," please!)
I'll share some reviews I receive on "The Beech Tree" as well my real estate book, "You Gonna' Sell Real Est This blog complements my Facebook page "A Little Light Reading." (Visit and "like," please!)
I'll share some reviews I receive on "The Beech Tree" as well my real estate book, "You Gonna' Sell Real Estate or What? The Guerrilla Guide to Real Estate today."
I'll post a few excerpts and announce the upcoming releases of my children's poetry books, two series of poems written for my daughters by their tooth fairies, Mary and Penny. ...more
I'll share some reviews I receive on "The Beech Tree" as well my real estate book, "You Gonna' Sell Real Est This blog complements my Facebook page "A Little Light Reading." (Visit and "like," please!)
I'll share some reviews I receive on "The Beech Tree" as well my real estate book, "You Gonna' Sell Real Estate or What? The Guerrilla Guide to Real Estate today."
I'll post a few excerpts and announce the upcoming releases of my children's poetry books, two series of poems written for my daughters by their tooth fairies, Mary and Penny. ...more
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