Monday, July 10, 2023

Theo & Sprout by Joseph Gergen

 


Welcome to the tour for Theo & Sprout by Joseph Gergen! Read an excerpt and then download your copy so that you can see why reviewers keep giving this one five stars. The author also shares his thoughts on introversion and dialogue. Enjoy the read and follow the tour for even more! Best of luck entering the giveaway!



While Theo longs for some guidance through the perils of adolescence, the guidance he knew his family wouldn’t give him, he isn’t prepared for Sprout, his inner Divine Feminine, to present herself and offer it to him. In fact, he doesn’t appear to have a choice since Sprout, sassy and confident about her presence, won’t go away.


Read an excerpt:

When you grow up in a large family in a small house, you are never alone, you are never free. As an introvert, I could have just as well been in prison. Never free from prying eyes and perpetual observation, real or imagined. Those heavy shackles kept me from liberation.

“What is this?” I said. I’d lost my fetters, not even concerned she was there. “This isn’t normal.”

“This isn’t your normal. This is my normal, my way of looking at life. This is what your normal could be. Don’t you want this to be real? Isn’t it wonderful?”

Yes, it was wonderful. I noticed the park as I hadn’t noticed it since swinging beneath the trees as a child, flying up into the gigantic green trees and the endless blue sky. The colors, the shades of gray, the smells, the sounds of the birds. A lost world I was too busy to see anymore.

Books Available at:

“Theo and Sprout” available as eBook, paperback and audiobook Amazon:
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And Barnes and Noble as ebook and paperback:



Book Reviews:








Introversion and Dialog

Many of us enjoy some good witty repartee, whether participating in it or observing it. I’m personally quite fond of it, which explains my love for movies/plays such as “Rosencrants and Guildenstern are Dead,” where the banter is epic throughout.

I like writing witty repartee or even just some good solid dialog (whether I succeed is up to someone else to decide). I sometimes wonder where that comes from since I am not naturally a talkative person. But then I theorized one day that maybe it stems from the interior monologue trait that many of us has.

Many of have this inner voice so I’m not unique there. The voice in our head that is talking, whether to ourselves or to envisioned persons. For some it is a monologue but sometimes it is a dialog, the counterpoint being sometimes your voice and sometimes the voice of another.

Many of us you this interior dialog to work through a situation or to prepare for a future conversation.

Introverts are known to prepare for a conversation by rehearsing it in our heads. I think we do this to help frame our thoughts so we don’t have to do it on the fly (which some introverts are terrible at) and perhaps to ease the social anxiety, though sometimes I think I have just made the anxiety worse by going through dozen variations of the same conversation.

And then there is the other side of the puzzle. Rethinking a conversation that has happened. A real fun introvert trait, which too often turns quite critical on your performance. But nonetheless you rewind the conversation and thin about what you could have said or wanted to say but couldn’t in the moment. This sounds like a path to some good dialog.

Without the pressure of time, you can find yourself to be quite witty. I heard it referred to as “carriage wit” in some period British movie. Referring to riding home in the carriage and thinking of all the witty comebacks you could have used.

I have done countless pre-emptive and post-emptive dialogs in my head, especially when I was younger and was painfully shy. I had to practice communication somehow. And since I am also an empathetic introvert, placing myself in another’s position was normal and so I could lend authenticity to counterparts in my inner dialog, because having a dialog with yourself was only going to be bounded by the same point of view pinging back and forth and getting you nowhere.

So writing dialog is like the ultimate in carriage wit, since you can not only think it through in your head, you can write it down and sharpen it into a rapier of stinging word play. And that’s the fun of it.



Author of “Theo and Sprout”. Born and raised on the plains of North Dakota. Moved to Twin Cities because it’s actually warmer. Enjoy creating in whatever form it takes, including writing, painting, and furniture making. The enjoyment is in the doing. Looking to add a little magic to the world through art.

Other books include “Without a Pang” and “Methane Wars.”






“Without a Pang”

Available at Amazon as ebook and paperback:
https://amzn.to/44ppVq4


“Methane Wars”

Available at Amazon as ebook and paperback:
https://amzn.to/44ihRY1




One randomly chosen winner via rafflecopter will win a $25 Amazon/BN.com gift card. Follow the tour for more chances to win!

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3 comments:

  1. Thanks for hosting Theo and Sprout. Excited for people to learn about my book. If anyone has questions, please let me know. I hope you enjoy.

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