In today's world we are all entrepreneurs...no matter what we do. The Covenant Secret delivers the master key to entrepreneurial and relationship success. Read it...Live It!
Reading John Feloni’s new book is genuinely a breath of fresh air. The Covenant Secret: The 7 Master Keys to Wisdom and Wealth is part leadership advice book, part Social Network-like techno thriller. Feloni has taken the two best aspects of the differing genres - being a page-turner, and genuinely good, old-fashioned common sense - marrying them in something that works as both and works because of both. Feloni’s chapter titles are the only things as a writer myself I found a little on the nose, but that’s just needless hectoring when it comes to creative aesthetic and the details. Adding to the pros is the dialogue, which is simple but effective. Sometimes it almost borders on a caricature - making fun of the world Feloni is simultaneously introducing the reader to the tenets for. On the other hand, it’s that kind of irreverence that makes the book’s introduction to said world so effective. Everything from the narrative itself to the narrative’s structuring is symbiotic in terms of the interconnecting relationships, and because of that Covenant Secret lives up to the sanctity of its verbose title. Passages like the one following illustrate the aforementioned traits highlighted about Feloni’s read, where good storytelling is never forsaken when it comes to acutely depicting the data. “Bill believed that the Internet was all about relationships and that the really solid relationships in business were offline and owned by ‘professionals’ like investment advisors, lawyers, and CPA’s. But these professionals had problems—their clients could now use the Internet to do their own research, get most of their questions answered and do business cheaply, if not for free,” he writes at the beginning of the story. “…He applied everything he had learned in business school and put together a business plan for the creation of RelationshipPro, Inc. He developed a patent-pending process he called Professional/Client Linkage that would put state-of-the-art technology in the hands of individual professionals and make them the gateway to the Internet for their clients. ‘I’m creating a whole new segment of the Internet.’ Bill would claim to anyone who would listen. ‘I’m calling it P2C, professional-to-client.’”
It feels effortless, the genuine integration of educational concepts about the book’s nonfiction topicalities seamlessly interwoven into the immediacy of the fictitious, analogous narrative itself. While an idea that is refreshing, part of what makes it the latter trait is the fact it’s easier said than actually done. Writers in the past have attempted the kind of naturalism Feloni portrays in necessarily dry subjects, with mixed and varying results. Part of this likely stems from Feloni’s own background, which makes it a nice coupling with his strong, storytelling skills. It makes passages like the one following ring true, not just in terms of the story but as just good, old advice: “(Bill) was angry. He never liked being told he couldn’t do something. He was like that his whole life. Even as a kid, his father would take advantage of that aspect of his personality to get him to accomplish things. It made him more determined. Without knowing it, (his) professor’s criticism succeeded in motivating Bill more than his marketing professor whose judgment of the business plan was so positive she personally invested in the company.”
"The Covenant Secret" is a great book, in my opinion, that shows a journey to finding the seven keys to finding wisdom and wealth. The author, Mr. Feloni, invites you to learn and follow the seven keys for personal and business growth. I am not a business owner but these keys can help my personal growth. It will help me build stronger relationships. I am forever grateful to Mr. Feloni for sharing these keys. I highly recommend this book. P. S. I received this book for free.