Confessions of a Self-Help Writer The Journal of Michael Enzo |
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Author:
| DeHaven, Benjamin |
ISBN: | 978-0-9899126-8-6 |
Publication Date: | Jul 2014 |
Publisher: | Lagniappe Publishing
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Book Format: | Hardback |
List Price: | USD $22.95 |
Book Description:
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2015--Finalist--Foreword Reviews' 2014 INDIEFAB Book of the Year Award 2015--Winner-Best New Fiction-USA Book Award2014--Short List--Los Angeles Times BOY Finalist2015--Winner-1st Place Best General Fiction-Midwest Book Awards2015--Winner---Best Visionary Fiction USA Today Book Award#1 Most-Wished-for-Book of 2014 on Indie Bound for over 10 weeks!Lunge into a funny, audacious, and devastating work of fiction based on factual events. As much a comedy as a tragedy, "Confessions is a...
More Description2015--Finalist--Foreword Reviews' 2014 INDIEFAB Book of the Year Award 2015--Winner-Best New Fiction-USA Book Award2014--Short List--Los Angeles Times BOY Finalist2015--Winner-1st Place Best General Fiction-Midwest Book Awards2015--Winner---Best Visionary Fiction USA Today Book Award#1 Most-Wished-for-Book of 2014 on Indie Bound for over 10 weeks!Lunge into a funny, audacious, and devastating work of fiction based on factual events. As much a comedy as a tragedy, "Confessions is a unique piece of literature to be remembered for its originality as much as for its significance as a statement about living life in today's harsh reality." Explore the psyche of one of the world's most profound advisors: a Quixotic adventurer who admits freely to lurid depravity, substance abuse, and emotional complexity. Despite personal demons, he's fooled adherents into a unique reverence and might be responsible for saving more souls than Mother Teresa and Gandhi combined. Hypocrite isn't a strong enough word for someone who writes self-help books purely for profit. Two of the world's ten wealthiest used Enzo as a ghostwriter and while they attribute their status in life to Enzo's words, not a single one willingly admits to knowing him. DeHaven, a patsy in Enzo's schemes and a recurring voice, shares his own perspective and often times paints himself in a very negative light, which adds a layer of credibility to such a fantastical story. Brief moments of compassion and insight are even more powerful and poignant from this perspective. The most disheartening admission presented is that Enzo would only fall back on his tremendous gift, of writing self-help, as a last act to pay debtors and sustain a ridiculous lifestyle. The reader of "Confessions" is forced to question DeHaven's motivation in publishing this journal. Does he truly want to ruin Enzo's legacy or is this an act of love? Reaching out to someone who is still lost. Enzo, wherever you are, pick up a self-help book and give it a read. Who knows, you may have written it.