Author/Poet Denise Longrie Reviews 'Comings and Goings' on Amazon
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© 2025 Alex Diaz-Granados |
When a Reader Sees What You Meant to Say
There are moments in a writer’s life that feel like exhaling
after holding your breath for years. Reading Denise
Longrie’s review of Comings and Goings was one of those moments.
“The story is not a romance, but rather an enjoyable,
insightful journey into empathy and the importance of human connection.”
In that single sentence, Denise captured what I most hoped
this story would communicate. Jim and Kelly’s conversation—quiet,
non-performative, and deeply human—isn’t about flirtation or clever repartee.
It’s about being seen. About recognition amid loneliness. And Denise saw that.
She saw Jim’s discomfort, his tepid beer, his sense of
invisibility. She noticed Kelly’s confidence—not as bravado, but as an
invitation. She appreciated how music threads through their moment, not just as
time-stamp nostalgia, but as emotional texture. Denise didn’t just read the
story—she inhabited it.
“Kelly listens and does not push, mock, or judge (other
than to call Budweiser ‘horse piss.’)”
A line like that makes me smile—not because it’s colorful,
but because it speaks to the kind of sharp tenderness Kelly embodies. Denise
understood that nuance. She understood what college often feels like:
first-time-away emptiness paired with fleeting chances for real connection. She
got it.
To have a reader reflect a story back to you in such clear
and thoughtful terms is a gift. I’m grateful, moved, and encouraged. Denise’s
review isn’t just kind—it’s illuminating. For any artist wondering whether
their work will be understood, this kind of engagement is everything.
Thank you, Denise. You saw Jim. You saw Kelly. And you saw
the heart of what I was trying to say.
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