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Stepping Outside: Where a Fight is the Path to Redemption

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She didn’t fight to win. She fought to protect.

And somehow, that changed everything.

When a muscular waitress named Jeannie confronts a menacing biker outside a roadside café, the town braces for a brutal clash. But what starts as a violent street fight turns into something far more unexpected—a story of mutual respect, quiet redemption, and the kind of courage that isn’t just physical.

Stepping Outside is a cinematic, emotionally charged tale about two hardened individuals forced to reevaluate who they are, and who they could be. Beneath the punches, there’s a pact. Beneath the conflict, a connection.

This is a story where strength meets restraint, tempers meet transformation, and a handshake can mean more than a victory.

73 pages, Kindle Edition

Published May 28, 2025

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Werner.
Author 4 books723 followers
July 7, 2025
This e-story (at 73 pages, it's at the longish end of the "short" story continuum) by my Goodreads friend, new independent author Theodore B. Ayn, is one of several recently-published works to his credit, and so far the only one of them that I've read. (I'm hoping eventually to read the rest.) While I didn't officially receive it as a review copy, I treated it as one (the author kindly extended a general offer of a free e-copy long enough to allow me to take advantage of it when I'd otherwise have missed out). When I started it, I'd intended to read only a short bit, and to return to it later; but I wound up finishing it in a single sitting. As that indicates, it was (at least for me) a page-turner, and a propulsively quick read.

Ayn has an obvious admiration and respect for women who are both strong and muscular physically and who have a matching moral and emotional strength (an attitude that I share); and based on the cover art and descriptions, this is exhibited in all of his works, not just this one. (Arguably, the description of this one provides information that would be better picked up by the readers as the narrative goes along, though it isn't a "spoiler" as such.) Basically, this particular story, set in a small Midwestern town that's never identified in any more detail than that, pits brawny waitress Jeannie against even brawnier ex-biker gang member Clyde (no last names given for either) in a physical confrontation brought on by his sexism, arrogance, and hot temper. That description, however, is deceptively simple. This is a character-driven story which isn't simple at an emotional level, and also isn't predictable. (It should also be stated at the outset that it's not an "enemies to lovers" romance; there's no romantic element in the tale at all, let alone between the two adversaries.) Both main characters are complex, and developed in surprising depth.

The prose style here is straightforward and direct. Overall, Ayn prefers straight narration over dialogue, though he provides realistic dialogue where it's needed to reveal character and move the plot. Technically, it could be claimed that, especially in developing his two lead characters' back stories, he uses a fair amount of telling rather than showing. But within the constraints of the short format and of the centralizing of the fight itself as the outward core of the story (though inward developments are taking place at the same time), there's no real alternative to that technique, and it's actually well-suited to the kind of effect the author successfully creates. This is descriptive fiction, with no speculative element. I've characterized it as general fiction, rather than as crime fiction or action-adventure, because the characters are ordinary civilians, neither career criminals nor law enforcement professionals; no guns are involved, the setting is mundane, and the situation is one that could easily occur in everyday life. We're in a very different atmosphere and milieu than that of, say, a typical Modesty Blaise adventure.

A word is in order about the art work here. While this isn't a graphic novel as such, it's greatly enhanced by, altogether, no less than 30 illustrations (some full-page) of particular scenes, in the same style as the cover art. These serve the same purpose that traditional book illustration always has, that of enabling the reader to more vividly visualize the characters and events of the story (and serve it very effectively!), but as the author confirmed to me in a personal message, they're AI-generated. Personally, I would argue that such a use of AI to supplement the author's creative vision is legitimate; it brings to life scenes he wants to depict in the way he wants them depicted, but with a draftsmanship he wouldn't actually be able to create by hand. (Though the ability to use AI to create it also requires an expertise of its own.)

Unless a reader is scandalized by the sight of bare female arms or legs, there's nothing salacious about the art here, and nothing suggestive or sexual about the story's content. Bad language is limited to a couple of d-words. While this isn't "Christian fiction," it is fiction written by an author who's a Christian; but it's not "preachy" in any sense. (The lead characters are secular, and their spiritual state is only referenced in a single sentence.) It is, though, fiction that focuses on a rough, no-rules street fight between a man and a woman, with an antagonist whose moral code doesn't include any scruples about hitting a woman, and a female protagonist who doesn't see her gender as disqualifying her from slugging or kicking a man if it's necessary. The author also has the kind of moral vision which can view a physical fight as an instrument, rather than an antithesis, of moral order. This story wouldn't be recommended for readers who would be repelled or triggered by that type of imagery, content, or messaging. However, I'm not numbered in that group; and for me the story proved to be ultimately wholesome, emotionally enriching, and rewarding.
Profile Image for Emma.
Author 7 books42 followers
June 17, 2025
I liked this story - a kind of warriors creed worked out in the sweat and blood of a fight.
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