Posts

Audible Milestone: Six Units Sold

Image
Audible Milestone: Six Units Sold One week after the Garratyverse stepped into audio, we’ve reached our first milestone: six units sold across Audible and Apple Books.  Comings and Goings leads with four copies, while Reunion: A Story adds two more. Three were direct purchases, one came through Apple Books , and two were redeemed with Audible credits. It may sound modest, but in the world of independent publishing, every unit matters. Each listener is a pioneer, experiencing Garraty’s journey in a new medium. And with no returns, the response so far has been encouraging. This milestone reminds me that audiobooks are not just products—they’re invitations. Six listeners have accepted that invitation, and I couldn’t be more grateful. The Garratyverse is finding its voice, one listener at a time.    

📣 Audiobook Release Announcement: Reunion: A Story

Image
© 2025 Alex Diaz-Granados/ADG Books 📣 Audiobook Release Announcement: Reunion: A Story I’m delighted to share that Reunion: A Story: A Novella (The Reunion Duology Book 1) is now officially available on Audible and Amazon , with Apple Books availability coming in just a few days. Produced by Brandon Padilla , this audiobook has successfully passed ACX’s rigorous quality assurance reviews—cover design, metadata, and audio files—ensuring that narration, production, and technical standards all meet professional benchmarks. 📖 About the Story Reunion: A Story takes us back to June 1983 , where Jim Garraty is a senior at South Miami Senior High. A staff writer for the school paper and a college‑bound scholar with dreams of becoming a historian, Jim is well‑liked by peers and teachers alike. His future looks bright—except for one lingering matter of the heart. The girl he loves from afar, Marty, is also graduating. Rumor has it she’s leaving for the summer before...

What Readers Are Saying About 'Comings and Goings - The Art of Being Seen' (And...the Audiobook is Available Now!)

Image
© 2025 Alex Diaz-Granados    Comings and Goings – The Art of Being Seen A Jim Garraty Story | Now Available on Audible and Amazon Narrated by Bryan Haddock Written by Alex Diaz-Granados “A lovely tale of empathy.” – Denise Longrie, Amazon Reviewer In this quietly powerful companion to the Reunion Duology, Jim Garraty returns—not with fanfare, but with emotional fluency and the ache of being truly seen. Comings and Goings – The Art of Being Seen is a story about memory, connection, and the small gestures that shape a life. Now available as an audiobook, this intimate novelette is brought to life by Bryan Haddock’s warm, nuanced narration. Whether you’re revisiting Jim’s journey or discovering it for the first time, this is a story that invites you to pause, reflect, and feel. © 2025 Alex Diaz-Granados What Readers Are Saying “A lovely tale of empathy.” Denise Longrie’s review captures the heart of the story—a quiet, emotionally resonant explorati...

Waiting for My Own Words: The Emotional Lag of Print-on-Demand

Image
© 2025 Alex Diaz-Granados Waiting for My Own Words: The Emotional Lag of Print-on-Demand There’s a peculiar irony in being the author of a book and still having to wait—sometimes indefinitely—for a copy of your own work to arrive. Not a retail copy, mind you. Not something ordered by a stranger in Wisconsin who stumbled across your novel during a midnight scroll. No, I’m talking about an author’s copy. The kind Amazon prints on demand, ships at its leisure, and labels with the charmingly opaque tag: MOD Non-Retail. I ordered my updated hardcover edition of Reunion: Coda on September 20. As of this writing—October 14—it remains in the “Not Shipped” purgatory of my Amazon orders queue. Estimated arrival? Allegedly Sunday. But I’ve learned not to get emotionally attached to those dates. They’re more aspiration than promise. Now, I understand that author’s copies aren’t Amazon’s top priority. They don’t generate royalties. They don’t count toward sales metrics. They’re essentially the lit...

Still Writing, Still Believing: Notes from a Quiet Friday

Image
  October 10, 2025 – Orlando, Florida It’s Friday again. Another week winding down, and I wish I had more to show for it. Progress on the deluxe edition of The Jim Garraty Chronicles —the omnibus collecting Reunion: A Story , Reunion: Coda , and Comings and Goings – The Art of Being Seen —has slowed to a crawl. Not a single edit this week. Part of the blame falls on Kindle Create, which seems determined to mangle my subheadings. But if I’m honest, the deeper culprit is doubt. Why release the collection now, when sales of the individual books have been... let’s say, modest? Back when I was writing Reunion: Coda , especially through that frigid New Hampshire winter, I held onto hope. I imagined fans of Reunion: A Story rallying—leaving glowing reviews, spreading the word, giving my writing career a gentle nudge. Some did. A few loyal readers picked up Reunion: Coda in hardcover, paperback, and Kindle formats. But overall, sales have been underwhelming. And yes, it’s dimmed my spark...

October Reflections: Royalties, Audiobooks, and the Quiet Triumphs of Creative Care

Image
  This morning brought a small but welcome surprise: a modest uptick in my Kindle Direct Publishing royalties. Someone picked up a paperback copy of Save Me the Aisle Seat , my first self-published book—a collection of movie reviews originally written for the now-closed site Epinions. I’ve always had mixed feelings about that book. Of the four titles I’ve published, it’s the one I’m least fond of—not just because I rushed it out in 2012 so my mom could see it while she was still with us, but also because I believe it doesn’t measure up to my fiction work: Reunion: A Story , Reunion: Coda , and Comings and Goings – The Art of Being Seen . Many of the reviews weren’t edited as carefully as they should have been, and I gave away more plot points than I intended. Still, the introduction—written specifically for the book—feels true and heartfelt. That part came from a place of love. Sometimes I consider retiring Save Me the Aisle Seat , but I probably won’t. Despite its flaws, readers s...

Book Review: 'The Ultimate Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy: Five Novels in One Outrageous Volume'

Image
  ©2002 Del Rey Books The Ultimate Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy: Five Novels in One Outrageous Volume  By: Douglas Adams Publisher: Del Rey Publication Date (Reissue): April 30, 2002 Genre: Humor, Space Opera, Science Fiction   🪐 Do You Know Where Your Towel Is? If you do, congratulations—you’re already ahead of 99.9% of Earth’s population when it comes to surviving spontaneous planetary demolition. According to the gloriously illogical logic of Douglas Adams’ five-volume “trilogy,” knowing the whereabouts of your towel is the first step toward interstellar competence. It means you’re ready to hitch a ride off Earth one fateful Thursday afternoon, just before the Vogons arrive to pulverize the planet in favor of a hyperspace bypass. It helps—immensely—if your best mate turns out to be from Betelgeuse rather than an out-of-work actor from Guildford. It helps even more if his name is Ford Prefect and he moonlights as a field researcher for the most wildly unreliable ...