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The Garden of What Was and Was Not
The Autobiography of X
By David Stone
Published by iUniverse
Pages: 250
Size: 6x9
Hardcover $26.95
Paperback $16.95
E-book $6.00
ISBN: 9780595439454
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Book Review by Robert Berryhill
Copyright 2009 Robert Berryhill


A remarkable fictional autobiography of a teenaged boy coming of age in the turbulent 1960s and 70s has been written by David Stone.

The Garden of What Was and Was Not - The Autobiography of X, has been published by

It is a must read for anyone wanting to recall the events that forever changed our culture, or for anyone under 40 who did not live through those events.

David Stone nails down his premise this way: "Trying to follow the track of a life backward to some defining moment is an exercise in creating myth . . ."

The Garden of What Was and Was Not follows Peter McCarthy edging into adulthood while his world is violently changing daily.

David Stone begins the journey in the hot July of 1964, the first summer after Peter McCarthy heard about the assassination of President Kenney over the school PA system. David Stone uses razor-sharp images to convey the shifting moods of the country as it stumbles toward the tragedy of 9-11 almost 40 years later.

Jack Ruby has killed Oswald, LBJ has taken the reins from the fallen JFK, and "that ugly old Lyndon was about to toss a few hundred lives into the cauldron of hell in Vietnam . . ."

Although Roy Orbison has crooned "Pretty Woman" into the fasted selling record ever, some upstarts from Britain, the Beatles, come to America and explode before thousands of screaming girls.

Peter and a friend, both 16, are chasing after their first girlfriends in 1964. The boys ended the long summer day by taking the girls to a secluded spot in the dark park. They "necked until there was nowhere else the girls would let us go except home."

While following the girls home the young frustrated Peter concludes: "Girls stuck together and outsmarted us."

But girls aren't the main focus of Peter's goal in life. His quest is for a place to write the poetry and stories that are crowding his heart and soul. His journey from upstate New York to escape a skeptical father and a deadening job takes him to the San Francisco bay area where the Beat Generation and the peace movement hold sway.

"Romance and visions of the ordinary life we all once thought our inheritance, both doomed illusions waiting for the Sixties to destroy them," Peter concludes.

Peter loses friends along his journey. People, including a wife and family, drop out of his life as new friends enter. Peter even has some leave forever, dead in traffic accidents or at the hands of a mugger.

"Life is thinner than you think," author David Stone writes, "and sometimes it goes away easily."

David Stone has a remarkable way of crafting images throughout his book. Growing up, he writes, is like falling uphill."

Years later, as the country marks the second anniversary of the 9-ll tragedy, the main character Peter McCarthy is much wiser wearing the cloaks of adulthood.

"In 1966, no one saw all that the decades ahead delivered, for good or ill, but all events are cumulative as much as sequential. In 2003, we can see every event that brought us here, every action, every accident, every twist of the stars, everything we did or didn't do."

Book Review

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Europa: Rise of the Cornelians

By Jason Gehlert
Published by Stonegarden.net Publishing
ISBN 1-60076-138-0
Available at www.stonegarden.net
http://europa2045.blogspot.com
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Review by Robert Berryhill

When you've crafted six novels in the horror genre before the age of 30, you can take a much needed break. Just breathe easy for awhile.

Not Jason Gehlert. Although he had the successful Quiver series and Contagion to his credit, he was still scratching a 10-year itch to move into the Sci-Fi field.

So he planted himself in front of the TV and watched the Discovery and Science channels. For days. For months.

He soaked up technical information about the fragile state of life on Earth, natural disasters, space exploration. He worked up a cast of about 14 characters, ranging from a mysterious and crafty billionaire, to a newly elected President of the United States, and a scientist who is a pain in the butt to complacent bureaucrats.

Jason Gehlert ignites his first Science Fiction novel with a conference about an impending bang. A Big Bang. The long overdue eruption of North American's biggest volcano, smack in the middle of Yellowstone Park.

Europa: Rise of the Carnelians takes place in the near future, about 30 years down the road. It is a strong story of survival of the human race as it escapes to Europa, one of the moons of Saturn. But Europa is not a new Garden of Eden. It houses a very nasty form of alien life called the Carnelians.

When Yellowstone finally erupts on Christmas Day, 2045, a crew of scientists and engineers use the billionaire's innovative spacecraft to escape the global-spanning disaster. Their destination is a space station at Europa designed to colonize the Saturn moon.

When they climb into their cyrogenic berths to hibernate for the long journey, they don't know what awaits them. Contact with the Europa space station crew has been lost for several months. Not even a distress call has been heard.

A few years later the fleeing earth crew awakens to dock with the space station. But something is amiss. Where are the Europa space station crew members? Why are there bloody hand prints on the walls?

Jason Gehlert weaves his story with smooth patches of taunt dialogue that is often spiced with humor. He has mined such a wealth of research, and crafted such a likeable cast of characters, that he is now emarked on a sci-fi trilogy.

Europa: Rise of the Carnelians is the first shot of the trilogy that is sure to build him a audience of Science Fiction readers.

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Even Dead Men Play Chess

by Michael Weitz

Lachesis Publishing
ISBN-10 1-897370-93-8
ISBN-13 978-1897370933
$14.95

Also available in multi-book formats
www.lachesispublishing.com
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Review by Robert Berryhill

Do you want to create a readable mystery?

Michael Weitz of Arizona cleverly crafted his debut novel Even Dead Men Play Chess by creating

- an unusual method of murder not used in mysteries

- a low-key lead character who can grow into a series of future exploits

- sharp descriptions that jump off the page

- a supporting cast both interesting and likeable

Novice authors are often well advised to write about what they know. Michael Weitz does this with skill by spicing his novel with tidbits about his favorite pastime, the game of chess which provides the title of his work.

The main character of Even Dead Men Play Chess is Ray Gordon, a chess master in Seattle who ended his career as a cop after he fatally shot a suspect. Ray Gordon volunteers his chess skills at a youth center and also teaches adults the finer nuances of the game.

You are grabbed from the first page of the novel with the death of Erica Minor on her seventh birthday. She was a girl who needed help long before her death. Her parents were meth heads who made, used and sold the drug that is so dangerous you can become addicted on first use.

Ray Gordon travels to Yakima to visit a fellow chess player who is making Ray a chess board in his wood working shop. But he has unexpectedly died in his shop. Police assume it's an accident.

Ray however, doesn't buy it. His friend was 65 with only two addictions, chess and woodworking. Using his skills of analyzing chess games, Ray starts to unravel the mystery of how dead men play chess.

Author Michael Weitz cleverly builds up tension with realistic nail-biting fight and chase scenes that race to the final pages.

Clues are artfully placed throughout his book, but the author keeps the identify of the killer hidden until the end. That's where everything about chess and meth come together in an exciting climax.

I hope Michael Weitz is busy crafting a second novel. He has a lot to contribute to the mystery field.

BOOK REVIEWS

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Book Reviews will be published here beginning this month.

The book review will also be submitted to your publisher's website, and Amazon and Barnes & Noble if they list your book.

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Temperance Hill

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TEMPERANCE HILL begins with a duel in 1880 between a newspaper editor and a powerful politician. The story continues in present day in a small Southern town with the newspaper still the battleground between descendants of the editor and the politician. The after effects linger over 100 years when a new editor takes over the newspaper which is now on its last legs. The new editor pulls the mask off small-town scandals as he fights to redeem his own soul from alcoholism and lingering guilt from a bad marriage to an amoral nymphomaniac. TEMPERANCE HILL peels back the layers of a small town to reveal lust, sex, crooked politics, permissive judical systems, murder, divisive race relations.
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The Prologue was taken down today.
Chapter One will be posted later today.
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TEMPERANCE HILL

A Novel by Robert Berryhill
(C) Copyright 2009 Robert Berryhill
All Rights Reserved

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