Sunday, January 26, 2014

The Violin Diary by Eric Norcross - An Outstanding First Novel

"The Violin Diary" is a abrupt adulation adventure told simply, from the point of appearance of Ezzie, a adolescent man experiencing his aboriginal absolute love. We are with him if he aboriginal meets Carmen, the appealing Colombian woman he has been acquainted at work. We feel his affliction as he struggles to appoint her in able conversation; You're new here, right?' I'm a genius.") We are captivated with him as he notices her response; ("She was searching me anon in the eyes. They never attending me in the eyes. Women.") We anguish with his annoyance if he misses an befalling to ask her out; ("I am such an idiot. I bang opportunities abroad like a bedrock in the street.") We've all been there. Each of us has acquainted those things. Eric Norcross lays them out on the page as active memorials to his aboriginal love, and ours.NUX PG-2 Like Ezzie, we are captivated by Carmen's aboveboard and amusing conversation, and her adorable emphasis lilts off the page to our minds' ears. Early in the adventure it is accessible to us (and it may be to Ezzie, on some level) that Carmen has a activity plan, and Ezzie is not axial to it. But we chase the friendship/romance area it leads us, because we accept to; the aboriginal date, the aboriginal kiss, the first... Well, no acumen for this analyst to blemish it for you. The accord seems bedevilled to die if Carmen leaves to abstraction art in Germany ("Under accustomed circumstances, that would accept been it for me"), but Ezzie amazes himself by advancing Carmen to Europe, a footfall that leads to sometimes painful, sometimes blissful self-growth. There is attenuate adorableness in the artlessness of the adventure and the assignment it teaches. In "The Violin Diary" Eric Norcross has accounting a memorable and adorning novel. Title: The Violin Diary Author: Eric M. Norcross Publisher: Norcross Media ISBN: 978-0-557-02264-9

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