'Comings and Goings' Makes Its Kindle Debut!
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© 2025 Alex Diaz-Granados |
Sometimes, our best-laid plans find themselves quietly rewritten by the world around us. I originally intended to hold onto Comings and Goings until the fall of 2025, letting anticipation build in step with the turning seasons. But with so much uncertainty close to home and across the globe, I decided the story’s quiet light might be needed now, not later. So, as of yesterday, Comings and Goings is available in Kindle format for $2.99, and the paperback ($9.99) will arrive on July 1.
Boston, 1984. A party Jim Garraty never wanted to
attend. A girl who didn’t look away. A night stitched together by mixtapes,
quiet courage, and the ache of choosing to stay.
Jim isn’t chasing romance—he’s just trying to outrun the noise. But when Kelly
Moore enters the room with her drink, her Rachmaninoff references, and her
uncanny ability to see without pressing, everything shifts. Over cassette tapes
and Heineken beer, conversations deepen, touch becomes language, and for the
first time, intimacy feels less like performance and more like breath.
Comings and Goings – The Art of Being Seen is a quietly luminous companion
to the Reunion Duology, capturing one night’s transformation from awkward
beginnings to the kind of closeness that rewrites your inner dialogue. It’s
about music, memory, and the rare kindness of someone meeting you where you
are—with patience, humor, and unexpected grace.
This isn’t a story about first love.
It’s a story about the first time you didn’t have to explain yourself.
If you found yourself moved by Jim Garraty’s journey through
the Reunion Duology, don’t miss this poignant new chapter—a story distilled to
the shimmer of one unforgettable night. Comings and Goings isn’t about the
sweep of years or the tangles of old love; it’s about the first time Jim
experiences the gentle astonishment of being truly seen. Let Kelly Moore’s
quiet brilliance and Jim’s tentative hope draw you in. Turn the page and
discover how, sometimes, connection arrives not with fireworks, but with the
tender hush of understanding. This is the story you didn’t know you were
waiting for.
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