Lorna & Tristan #3
20th Century Historical Fiction / Romance
Date Published: 03-21-2023
Stephen feels he is marked from day one to lose the ones he loves. His mother dies giving birth to him, and his alcoholic father makes sure Stephen never forgets it. To block out his father’s hate, fists, and belt, young Stephen loses himself in his imagination. Stories become his closest companions and barricades against a family that never wanted him. Once he can look his father in the eye, Stephen swears he will never be the monster his old man is. He vows he will become a published author, if for no other reason than to prove his father wrong.
While his dreams of being a bestselling novelist and falling in love come true, Stephen has much to prove to himself before he can write his own happy ending. Set against the backdrop of Prohibition-era Cleveland, Stephen fights the same alcoholic demons that plagued his father as he tries to begin a life free from his family. He meets equally headstrong Julie and is smitten, but their marriage is as fractured as his career is solid. He can find ten ways to write about being in love, but he has a hard time translating love on the page to love in real life. Julie slips between his fingers like sand, and Stephen sees his father staring back when he looks in the mirror.
Try as he might to rewrite his life, even going so far as to change his name, he has to wonder if he is the author or the killer of love.
The Rock at the Bottom – Excerpt #1
My mother was the first person I killed. My
father made sure I never forgot it.
I
tried to forget. Oh, did I ever. As soon as I could read, I lost myself in
books at every opportunity. But as a six-year-old boy, who was reminded every
time my drunk old man took retribution out of my flesh, the hurled words became
etched on my soul.
You’re
the reason she’s dead.
You
took her from me.
You’re
a mistake.
You
weren’t supposed to be born. To exist.
You
aren’t supposed to exist.
Those
words cut into my being with every laceration on my back. Or every purple
bruise on my cheekbone—left or right, take your pick. Whichever side my father
was on when he struck.
But
he was never on my side.
I
was on my side. I and I alone. Sometimes, even I wasn’t on my side.
My
older brothers and sisters had their lives, and I wasn’t part of theirs. Twelve
years and a chasm separated me—the unwanted—from them—the loved.
When
printed words failed to cover my scars, I escaped to the only place I knew: my
imagination.
Review: Stephen was a boy that got abused by his drunk father and was able to find solace in his stories. The diary narrative of the boy was crafty and insightful—so full of somber honesty. The prose was nice—plain and simple—but it wasn’t too invigorating.
The boy’s only goal was to leave his house for good and start a whole new life for himself, which was understandable and commendable. After leaving his house, he buys a typewriter. The story is quite slow to progress. It takes a while for the romance to enter the picture, and, even when it does show, it’s a long road to get there.
The words were literary and emphatic—good for those serious fiction lovers. It’s not a light read, for sure. It’s a decent read, although not entirely my taste, but still pretty good.
Rating: 3 stars
About the Author
Cynthia Hilston is a stay-at-home mom of three young kids, happily married, and lives in the Cleveland, Ohio, area. Writing has always been like another child to her. After twenty years of waltzing in the world of fan fiction, she stepped away to do her debut dance with original works of fiction, although she still dabbles in fan fiction.
In her spare time – what spare time? – she devours books, shamelessly watches Hallmark movies and When Calls the Heart, pets her orange and black kitties, looks at the stars, drinks wine or coffee with good friends, and dreams of what other stories she wishes to tell.
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The book sounds intriguing. Great cover!
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