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Book Review: The Alligator Man by James Sheehan

November 25, 2013 at 8:55 am by Claudia

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Today I am reviewing The Alligator Man by James Sheehan for TLC Book Tours. As always, I am provided with a copy of the book in exchange for my honest review.

About the book (from the publisher): Roy Johnson, the former CEO of Dynatron, preyed on smaller companies, swallowing them whole and spitting them out after taking huge profits. He left Dynatron with a one hundred million dollar golden parachute before the company took a nose dive, wiping out the jobs and benefits for all its employees. When Johnson goes missing and pieces of his clothing are discovered in alligator-infested waters, it is assumed he was murdered, and he’s dubbed the Alligator Man by a New York Times columnist. Billy Fuller, a former Dynatron employee who lost everything, including his wife, is just one of many who have a motive to murder Johnson.

Kevin Wylie, a lawyer in Miami, learns that his father, legendary trial lawyer Tom Wylie who he hasn’t spoken to in 28 years, is having surgery for cancer and may not survive. Kevin decides to visit his father in St. Albans, and hopefully, get some answers on why his father abandoned him. While there, Kevin learns that his childhood friend Billy is the chief suspect in Roy Johnson’s murder. All the evidence points to Fuller’s guilt, but both Kevin and his father believe in Billy’s innocence. They decide to reunite to fight the courtroom battle for Billy’s life.

My review: The Alligator Man is a thoroughly engaging story and one that I got hooked on immediately. Sheehan, a former trial attorney, knows his subject. He also knows Florida and his descriptions of Miami and the fictional towns of St. Albans and Gladestown are full of the kind of details that create a vivid picture of the novel’s world. Kevin Wylie is at a crossroads in his life after having worked for a law firm that tends to defend drug dealers. He’s also in a long-term relationship with a woman that just might be on its last legs, so he is more than ready to leave town and see his father once again. And that’s where the story begins.

The cast of characters, including some quirky eccentrics, is fully drawn. Using his words with care, Sheehan sometimes simply gives a few well-written details that manage to make the characters spring to life. Kevin is the protagonist, but we also hear the story from the point of view of the supporting cast, which I love because it creates a multi-layered story. The book is well plotted with rather short chapters that keep the action moving. Sheehan manages to do something gracefully that I often see other writers do clumsily; he weaves all the ‘legalese’ into the story naturally. You aren’t even aware that you’re getting valuable and necessary plot points about the law, the courtroom, judges, clients, briefs because Sheehan does it all so artfully. Often I see that kind of information presented as a kind of lecture that is tiresome and has the effect of taking me out of the story. Not with Sheehan.

Comparisons are not always helpful, but in this case, I think they are. Sheehan’s book reminds me of the best of John Grisham. They are both writers who write legal thrillers with compelling characters; the plot is always character driven. And back to the world of the novel: Sheehan has written it so deftly, so completely, that you can’t imagine the plot taking place anywhere else but in Florida.

I really enjoyed this book. I was throughly caught up in its pages right from the start. I think you’ll enjoy it, too.

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About the author:  Born and raised in New York City, Sheehan moved to St. Petersburg, Florida to attend Stetson Law School and was a practicing trial attorney in the Tampa/St. Petersburg area for 30 years. He is now the Director of the Tampa Law Center at Stetson University College of Law and is also a Visiting Professor of Law. Stetson is the author of three acclaimed legal thrillers, the best selling Mayor of Lexington Avenue, The Law of Second Chances and The Lawyer’s Lawyer.

Good news! One of you will win a copy of The Alligator Man. Simply leave a comment on this post and I will draw the winner’s name on Thursday evening. Good luck!

Happy Monday.

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Tagged With: book reviewFiled Under: TLC Book Review 27 Comments

A Brrrrrisk Sunday

November 24, 2013 at 9:13 am by Claudia

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Thank you for all the insightful comments on yesterday’s post. I learned a great deal from your thoughtful input – don’t you love the dialogue that takes place in the comment section? I do.

Of course, after I write a post like that, I sometimes reread it late in the day and fall prey to the inevitable worry that I sound pompous. I sincerely hope that is not the case. When I write that sort of post, I’m trying, through words, to clarify an idea that has been hanging around in my brain. My intent is write it down, see if it makes sense, and share it with you.

I’m very careful about the things I choose to write about my parents, especially my dad. We have a very complicated, but loving, relationship. His alcoholism defined and shaped much of my youth, as it did with my siblings. I won’t write about that in any detail until he is no longer with us. I’ve spent years working through the long lasting effects of living with an alcoholic parent. I have more to work through; it’s an ongoing thing. So I choose to protect my dad at this point in time because he’s still with us. Because I love him.

That photo you see at the top of the post was taken yesterday. Don and I went out to breakfast in a neighboring town. That is the retaining wall behind  a charming area of shops. I love the grasses that are planted along the top of the curving wall. The sky was a brilliant blue yesterday.

Today? Sunny but cold. The temperature is currently 21 degrees, but it feels like 8 degrees. Yikes. It’s very windy out there. Brrrrr. Or as Don says, “Raymond Burrrrrrrr.”

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Just across the road from the first photo – on the Rail Trail.  Our mountains are in the distance.

It’s pretty in these parts.

I have to finish a book today that is scheduled for review tomorrow. It’s a good one and I’m really enjoying it. I’m also going to do some work on the dollhouse. I had a mini crisis with the living room the other day. I was adding molding at the top of the fireplace wall when I slopped glue on a section of wallpaper. My attempts to make it go away just added to the problem. So I had to take down the trim around the door, strip a section of the wallpaper and redo the whole thing. Luckily I had some leftover wallpaper stashed away. All is well. But I don’t mind telling you that, for a moment, I was more than a little panicked!

Today is my late grandmother’s birthday. Thinking of you always, Grandma.

What are your plans for this Sunday?

(The winner of a copy of The Stranger You Know is Lori in Indiana. Lori, I will send you an email. Congratulations! Winners are always chosen by the Random Number Generator.)

Happy Sunday.

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Filed Under: Dad, dollhouse, mom 32 Comments

Shedding the Negative, Taking Responsibility and Moving Forward

November 23, 2013 at 9:34 am by Claudia

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I’ve been thinking about something off and on, especially for the past few days. Yesterday, I had a long phone conversation with my best friend Laural. Laural and I grew up together. In the course of the conversation, she asked about my parents. I tried to put into words what I sense about both of my parents; that as they grew older, they became more negative and more resentful. They perceived slights where there were none. They saw the cup as more than half empty.

Hey, I know. Old age isn’t for sissies, to paraphrase Bette Davis. It’s tough. My dad is ninety and he has lots of aches and pains and often feels overwhelmed by tasks and chores that he would have sailed through a decade or two ago. My mom is in a sort of limbo, half in this world, half out of this world, confined to a bed in a nursing home. None of this is anything to celebrate and none of it is anything I would wish for them. In my ideal world, they would still be in their prime, happy and healthy. And I can’t even begin to say I understand what it must be like for them at this point in their lives.

Both of my parents are good, kind and loving people. I need to be clear on that before I write the rest of this post. They have been devoted parents to the four of us. I love them more than I can say.

I’m really not talking about this moment in time. I’m speaking to something that started creeping in years ago. As my mother grew older, a little sliver of negativity that had been there all along grew to something much bigger. It made her unhappy. It permeated her life. My father’s tendency to embroider the truth grew by leaps and bounds. Our phone conversations often consist of me reminding him of what actually happened because he sees things through the skewed lens of a ‘victim.’ His perceptions are often wildly off-base. He sees ‘others’ as being the source of his problems.

And I find myself on guard, ever-watchful for little hints of that sort of thing within myself. I don’t want to be that way. I can very easily fall into the fear and worry that are just on the other side of the cliff. I, like everyone else on earth, rely on my perceptions about people and events, so I do my best to shove them under the harsh glass of reality to make sure I am not falling into the trap of victimhood or resentment or jealousy. If I am, I do my best to release those misperceptions, to release any trace of ‘poor me.’

Because I don’t want to be that way and I know I could be – quite easily. Let’s be completely honest here, I’ve most definitely fallen into that trap in the past.

I’ve known other people who tended to see everything from a negative point of view, whose take on anything came from a place of fear, whose negative energy permeated the room. And others who always managed to weave the story of their life from a victim’s point of view, conveniently omitting their culpability in the matter. My ‘lost’ sister, L, is one of them. My father is another. If you tell a story often enough, you start to believe it. Therein lies the danger.

Resentment poisons you. As do jealousy and fear. As do unreasonable expectations of others to supply our happiness. There is no way anyone else can make you happy at the core of your being. That has to come from within.

I firmly believe that it all comes down to taking responsibility for your actions. For every perceived slight or hurt in my life, I’ve learned that there is more to the picture. I’ve had to face some unpleasant facts about my part in the whole thing. Shining the bright light of honesty and truth on the situation often helps me to come to terms with something. If I ignore it, I can definitely tell you that it will come back to haunt me, again and again, until I take responsibility and, ultimately, forgive.

I don’t want to see things through a glass that is half-empty. It’s all too easy to do that, especially in view of the current state of our world. It’s all too easy to let fear’s poison take over our daily lives. I want to fight to remain positive, hopeful and thankful. I want to be less judgmental. I refuse to be a victim, for if I am a victim, then it will always be somebody else’s fault.

I take responsibility for my life; the good, the (perceived) bad, the ups and downs. I’m writing this to put into words something that I am growing increasingly sure of. I want to shape the way I move forward in my life. I want to see the world and the people around me from a positive point of view. I want to see the glass as half-full or maybe even completely full. Wouldn’t that be nice?

It’s an ongoing challenge, believe me. I often fail. But hopefully, with each new challenge, I will become a bit better at the whole thing. I am not a victim. I am responsible for my thoughts and actions. I shape my life. And everything that happens is an opportunity to come from a place of love and peace.

Happy Saturday.

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Filed Under: life 82 Comments

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Welcome!

Welcome!

I live in a little cottage in the country with my husband. It's a sweet place, sheltered by old trees and surrounded by gardens. The inside is full of the things we love. I love to write, I love my camera, I love creating, I love gardening. My decorating style is eclectic; full of vintage and a bit of whimsy.

I've worked in the theater for more years than I can count. I'm currently a voice, speech, dialect and text coach freelancing on Broadway, off Broadway, and in regional theater.

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