Review of Adam Orser: Chronicles of Evolution by Daniel Armand

Adam Orser: The Chronicles of Evolution
by Daniel Armand
Paperback
Publisher: Two Harbors Press
Price: $17.95
ISBN: 9781937928100
Pages: 312
Release: April 2, 2012

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Adam Orser seems to be a regular guy, leading a fairly successful life in Toronto as a psychologist with a loving girlfriend, Jazmin.

But there is nothing ordinary about Adam.

Fate interrupts his planned marriage proposal, and a serious car accident thrusts him into a metaphysical reality behind a deep coma that holds his physical body in check. Through an advanced system of training and evolution created by the celestial realm, Adam is called to a dangerous mission with profound implications for the world he knows, and life and death consequences for one missing nine-year old girl, who is no ordinary kidnapped child. Fantastical forces are at work on both sides of the veil between the world we recognize and those yet to be discovered.

Destiny compels Adam to freely choose the part he will play in a no-limits competition between good and evil. Questions of existence, causality, and truth converge as Adam struggles to find his way back to Jazmin and a life that will never be the same.

Review by Brooke Marie

This book starts out with just a simple scene and soon develops around a funny character named Adam Orser, a funny man who doubles as a smart psychologist. This book flips between multiple characters but they are all connected within a web, they all tie back to Adam. When a kidnapping case evolves in the story needing his experience with the criminal pychi, Adam is called away at a tender moment with his beloved Jazmin. On the way Adam is in a terrible car accident that leaves him in a coma. While he is in the coma he finds out the truth behind many things while the outside world waits for his return. Adam learns this isn’t the first life he lead. He learns this from what he recognizes as angels. When a young man, an ex-lover of Jazmin’s, shows up at the hospital where Jazmin is waiting for Adam to awaken, he tells Jazmin that Adam will wake up different then before-knowing things that he shouldn’t know, being able to change and do things that no one should be able to. Jazmin doesn’t believe him at first but much to her surprise, this young man spoke truth. Why is Adam at the center of the web? How does he learn these amazing things from his dream angels? Find out in Daniel Armand’s “Adam Orser: Chronicles of Evolution.’

Just like everything in the world this is only an opinion, some might love or hate this book and that is up to you. Though I found this book enjoyable, but confusing. This was a very good book, with a very interesting idea that has yet to be overdone. Adam starts out as a very funny, out-spoken person, and we watch him slowly learn and become something far greater. Adam becomes knowledgeable. This book was well written but if you are looking for an easy read I don’t believe this is the book for you. While reading you need to be very focused because the book changes stories and characters and you aren’t always able to pick up the change into much later. So in that the book could have been clearer, but then pieces you read are very good, riddle-like.  After a while you start to get the rhythm of the changes but it still can be confusing at times. Nonetheless this was a good book, you grow to want more-connect the web if you will.

Claps for Mr. Daniel Armand’s “Adam Orser: Chronicles of Evolution.”

 

 

Daniel Armand Bio:

Daniel Armand lives in Toronto, Ontario. His inspiration behind Adam Orser: Chronicles of Evolution originated during the summer of 1983, after a near death encounter offered an incredible insight into the obscured aspects of life, love, and the progression of the human spirit.

Daniel is currently working on the next novel of the Adam Orser saga. “I truly hope this novel will help inspire readers all over the globe, to embrace their spirituality. It is through clarity of mind and understanding that we may one day ‘bloom’ into harmony and unlock our limitless potential.”

 

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Guest blogger: Molly Best Tinsley

The cover of my memoir Entering the Blue Stone features a photo of my parents soon after they were married, back in the 1940’s during the war. My father, the future general, looks a bit skinny in his lieutenant’s uniform; my mother shows no trace of the strain that the challenges of a nomadic military life would place on her.

They met during the summer at a resort in the Pennsylvania Poconos. My mother, the daughter of an immigrant from Spain, had finished her freshman year as a non-resident scholarship student at Barnard and was working for a vacationing family as a baby-sitter. My father, the son of a Brooklyn physician, was between his sophomore and junior years at Princeton, and staying in his family’s summerhouse. Somehow they struck up a conversation in a candy shop. Unfortunately, I never asked who spoke first and what they said. I do know my mother was considered a “go-getter”—one of those “most likely to succeed” types—whereas my father was shy; so I suspect she was the more vivacious and aggressive. Without question, they both fell head over heels in love.

Their courtship lasted three years—until my mother graduated from college. When my father showed up at the fifth-floor, walk-up apartment in Yonkers where my mother’s family lived, my grandfather would screen himself with the newspaper and grunt monosyllabic responses to my father’s polite overtures.

My mother hinted to me that their premarital romance was passionate but chaste—that she would have been amenable to complete physical intimacy, but my father wanted to do things right. That difference perfectly captures them—my mother, emotional, impulsive, and given to episodes of iconoclasm; my father, rational, deliberate, faithful, and playing by the rules. As happened in many relationships of that generation, the longer they were together and the more they merged, the more polarized they became—my mother doing the emotional and interpersonal work on behalf of both of them, my father keeping the finances, earning the living, and working hard to achieve advancement. Even when his 24/7 military responsibilities absorbed too much of him, the word was that he was doing it all for my mother, and the four children that came along at planned intervals.

Despite their diametric differences, my parents forged a powerful bond in the process of unmaking then remaking their home every couple years. Neither had strong friendships with other adults, and moving all over the world, we hardly ever saw members of our extended family. As Entering the Blue Stone shows, the family created its own world. Meanwhile, there was the constant pressure on all of us to present a flawless front. For if an officer can’t control his own family, how is he effectively going to lead his troops? Thus life became a performance—we acted out the drama of the perfect family. When Parkinson’s disease then Alzheimer’s struck my parents, it’s an understatement to say that no one had any idea what to do.

 

Entering the Blue Stone
ISBN: 9780984990818
Pages: 195
Release: May 2012
Price: $14.95 paperback, $9.99 ebook

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Summary:

What happens when one’s larger-than-life military parents–disciplined, distinguished, exacting–begin sliding out of control? The General struggles to maintain his invulnerable façade against Parkinson’s disease; his lovely wife manifests a bizarre dementia. Their three grown children, desperate to save the situation, convince themselves of the perfect solution: an upscale retirement community. But as soon as their parents have been resettled within its walls, the many imperfections of its system of care begin to appear.

Charting the line between comedy and pathos, Molly Best Tinsley’s memoir, Entering the Blue Stone dissects the chaos at the end of life and discovers what shines beneath: family bonds, the dignity of even an unsound mind, and the endurance of the heart.

Molly Best Tinsley’s Bio:

Air Force brat Molly Best Tinsley taught on the civilian faculty at the United States Naval Academy for twenty years and is the institution’s first professor emerita. Author of My Life with Darwin (Houghton Mifflin) and Throwing Knives (Ohio State University Press), she also co-authored Satan’s Chamber (Fuze Publishing) and the textbook, The Creative Process (St. Martin’s). Her fiction has earned two fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Sandstone Prize, and the Oregon Book Award. Her plays have been read and produced nationwide. She lives in Oregon, where she divides her time between Ashland and Portland.

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