Coming of Age, Outcasts Bond: Tears of the Phoenix
Debut novelist Lonnie
Beerman convincingly recreates the dark side of a small southern
town in this coming of age
story of three young boys who are able to band together as
outcasts in a forbidding
world of prejudice and bigotry.
McKinney,
TX - Jan 16, 2012 - Author Lonnie Beerman has released Tears
of the Phoenix.
Beerman's novel is the carefully told tale of three boys moving toward manhood
while sorting out their relationships with their fathers and with the sometimes harsh
adult world they are wondering how best to enter.
Each
of the three young heroes of Beerman's debut novel has found himself an outcast among
his peers, isolated by playground taunts and by being the butt of every ill-
tempered
joke at school. One day a violent
playground assault by bullying boys suddenly brings
the three of them together and -- no longer isolated -- they find they now each have
someone they can call a friend.
The
compressed world of isolation they have been living in opens up for them that summer
as their new friendships with each other blossom and they bond happily in the shared
adventures of warm vacation days.
Soon
old prejudices and bigotries of their small town return, however, and the boys struggle
to cope with a once again dark world, despite their new solidarity
together. Then one
hateful remark reveals a secret that threatens to destroy one of the boy's
worlds, and the
others must grapple with new questions they find difficult to sort out.
The
boys' families have also begun to draw closer together and while personal
tragedies change
their lives, all draw closer together and all find new shoulders to lean on
during these
heartbreaks. The boys' mothers, in
particular, discover new friendships of their own
and begin to discover more about themselves as they watch their sons grow.
Beerman
shows how at that age boys are forced to ponder their relationships with their fathers,
or the lack of a relationship with one, and the new novelist engages readers
well in
the tragedies and family secrets that prompt these three boys to wonder what it
means to
be a man and what it will mean to them eventually to be fathers.
About
the author:
Lonnie
Beerman is married and is the father of a daughter and a son. He's a dog lover and
an avid car enthusiast. In this first
novel Lonnie delves into the complexities of family
relationships and social bigotries and offers insight into the importance of
love, friendship
and acceptance.