Saturday, December 16, 2023

Review: On the Brink by Michael A. Sisti


 Genre: Coming of Age/Action-Adventure

Description:

“At age eleven, Dave Powers concludes a profitable but error-ridden venture selling illegal fireworks that leaves him brimming with confidence and captivated by the promise of entrepreneurship.

Over the next few years, a series of tragic events shatters his world. Dave must learn to navigate life's challenges, including basic survival, business, and love. Upon entering the advertising world during the Mad Men era, he struggles to find his way amid the excesses of nepotism, alcohol consumption, and the exploitation of women. Can Dave find the maturity to achieve his dreams? Or are his scars too deep to overcome?

Based on true events, On the Brink is a novel for young readers beginning their own journey, nurturing adults trying to soften their failures, as well as seasoned entrepreneurs and business executives.”

Author:

“Michael A. Sisti is an author, branding and marketing consultant, and serial entrepreneur, having founded over twenty-five companies since age eleven. An International Book Award winner for his debut novel, Executive Crumple Zone, he has published five other novels, three humor books, and a popular self-help book. He recently co-authored a pilot for a TV drama series, and he provides design, editing, and production advice for several other authors. He also writes and lectures on branding, marketing, creative thinking, and entrepreneurship and has earned hundreds of regional and national awards, including National Brand Excellence awards for Blue Cross Blue Shield. He created an Emmy-nominated series on Rhode Island NBC affiliate Healthcare Directions and published a companion magazine. Mike also created and wrote an online column called Local Color. Now semi-retired, Mike continues to advocate for entrepreneurs, volunteering as a lecturer at schools and universities and providing pro bono services to small businesses.”

Appraisal:

It would be fair to say that I’m conflicted about my thoughts on this book. This is far from this author’s first book. He has a small publisher involved that presumably provided people with editorial expertise to polish things up. There is a page of “praise” from various dignitaries prior to the story praising what you’re going to be reading which is even labeled “Praise Page” in the Table of Contents. Yes, I’ve read thousands of books in my life and reviewed hundreds, but I found myself questioning my thoughts on this book, wondering if I got it wrong, all those “experts” got it wrong, or maybe our opinions just didn’t line up. I’ll probably ramble a bit below, but the short version of the review is I liked the main character in spite of his flaws, and in many ways it was a good story, but I found myself hitting patches where the author’s writing style grated on me or the story was too over the top for me to suspend disbelief. If you want more detail, read on.

One issue I had was a tendency to give too much information about something in a way that while accurate, bogged things down. For example, early in the book Dave Power, the main character, was taken by his father on a week long camping trip. An entire chapter of the book (to be fair, it was a short chapter, roughly 700 words), did nothing but passively describe the area where they were camping and the preparations that Brad, Dave’s father, went through prior to the trip. This description mentions that the area has abundant wildlife (enough to give the reader a decent feel), but then lists several specific animals, birds, and fish that are among those that populated this area. The way this was approached felt like a brain dump that violated the author’s maxim to “show, don’t tell.” The reader definitely got told instead of shown here and there were several other places where this sort of thing happened.

My other issue was that I found I had way too much trouble “suspending disbelief.” This is something a reader needs to do to get into a story. Some genres, science fiction or fantasy for example, as a reader you recognize that the story world is vastly different from the real world and learn to deal with it. However, when the story takes place in the real world it can’t get too far out there or the reader is more likely to struggle. Maybe the old cliché about truth being stranger than fiction applies here since the story is said to be “based on truth.” The dedication to what I’m guessing is the author’s wife says that she “shared most of the experiences described in this book.” However, I suspect the true story got stretched a bit in some places (if not, the author is lucky to have not suffered any legal repercussions).

I did find myself getting drawn into Dave’s story. It’s intense with constant ups and downs. Dave had a lot of smarts and skills in the areas he worked in, but it seemed as though every time those combined with hard work got him to a good place that something happened to cause things to come crashing down. After a few cycles of this I was wondering if it was ever going to stop and it also stretched my ability to buy into it.

There is definitely a good story in here hidden among the not-so-good parts. Those of us who are older (Dave was born in the early 50s, so much of the story happened many decades ago) will have some flashbacks to the olden days, which might be a good thing. You kids who are into stories from the olden days might enjoy a story that mostly takes place in a time when cell phones weren’t a thing. Go ahead and give it a shot and see what you think.

Buy now from:            Amazon US        Amazon UK

FYI:

Some adult language.

Format/Typo Issues:

This review is based on a pre-release “advance reviewer copy” so I can’t gauge the final product in this area.

Rating: *** Three Stars

Reviewed by: BigAl

Approximate word count: 65-70,000 words

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