New review at Oxyfication.net, + DISCOUNTS

oxylogonew2The folks at Oxyfication.net just keep getting kinder. Jason Kane has written an absolutely stunning review of Charactered Pieces. My hope, of course, is that reading this review will make you want to read Charactered Pieces. But in the least, I hope it motivates you to check out more reviews from their site.

Also, don’t forget to check out their forum, where for the month of December, Charactered Pieces is their book club pick. I’ll be poking in all month to add to the discussion. You should, too.

As a special, and this is only being announced in a few places, you can take $1 off of the price of either the print version or the .pdf eBook version. Maybe this will get your smelly ass over there to the discussion forums. Smelly, smelly ass.

Click here to get over to the forums.


$5 print version (regularly $6)

$1 PDF eBook version (regularly $2)

A bit from the review:

“These stories contain normal people crushed under the wheels of circumstance and the weight of guilt. The characters within are far beyond damaged– they are wrecked. Busted parents and screwed up kids; scarred, ruined, and weighed down with ten tons of remorse and pain wrapped in cancerous silence. Like individual flaws in the same junk diamond, they share some unspeakable pain in one way or another. But all this hurt isn’t dreamt up for the author’s detached amusement, or for the titillation of some nihilistic reader– this is a bid for communion where it is needed most. In each story the characters’ struggles are the result of some long-incubated despair, intimate and undeniable as a deathbed rasp.”


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Posted on by Caleb J Ross in Book News

About Caleb J Ross

began writing his sophomore year of undergrad study when, tired of the formal art education then being taught, he abandoned the pursuit in the middle of a compositional drawing class. Major-less and fearful of losing his financial aid, he signed up to seek a degree in English Literature for no other reason than his lengthy history with the language. Coincidentally, this decision not only introduced him to writing but to reading as well. Prior this transition he had read three books. One of which he understood.

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