6. If you could change one event in the story, what would it be and why?
7. Some of the characters hide things about themselves in order to fit in with others. What were a few examples of these actions? How did they impact the character's story?
8. What story revelation surprised you the most? What reactions or emotions did that revelation elicit in you?
9. Some of the villains turn out to not be completely evil in the end. Why do you believe they changed? Do you think their actions in the end make up for their conduct earlier in the story?
10. Throughout the story, references and hints are offered about the previous generation of heroes and why they are no longer around. Why do you think they are gone? What do you think might have happened to them?
Some Other Books By PFP / AJAR Contemporaries
Blind Tongues - Sterling Watson
the Book of Dreams - Craig Nova
A Russian Requiem - Roland Merullo
Ambassador of the Dead - Askold Melnyczuk
Demons of the Blank Page - Roland Merullo
Celebrities in Disgrace - Elizabeth Searle
(eBook version only)
"Last Call" - Roland Merullo
(eBook "single")
Fighting Gravity - Peggy Rambach
Leaving Losapas - Roland Merullo
Girl to Girl: The Real Deal on Being A Girl Today - Anne Driscoll
Revere Beach Elegy - Roland Merullo
a four-sided bed - Elizabeth Searle
Revere Beach Boulevard - Roland Merullo
Tornado Alley - Craig Nova
"The Young and the Rest of Us" - Elizabeth Searle
(eBook "single")
Lunch with Buddha - Roland Merullo
Temporary Sojourner - Tony Eprile
Passion for Golf: In Pursuit of the Innermost Game - Roland Merullo
My Ground Trilogy - Joseph Torra
What Is Told - Askold Melnyczuk
This is Paradise: An Irish Mother's Grief, an African Village's Plight and the Medical Clinic That Brought Fresh Hope to Both. - Suzanne Strempek Shea
Talk Show - Jaime Clarke
"What A Father Leaves" - Roland Merullo
(eBook "single" & audio book)
Music In and On the Air - Lloyd Schwartz
The Calling - Sterling Watson
The Family Business - John DiNatale
Taking the Kids to Italy - Roland Merullo
The Winding Stream: The Carters, the Cashes and the Course
of Country Music - Beth Harrington
http://www.pfppublishing.com
https://www.facebook.com/PFP.AJARContemporaries
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