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Fiction Literary

The Unusual Lives: An Evildoer

by (author) Lana Guzman

photographs by Edgar Guzman

Publisher
NOBLE GRAY PRESS
Initial publish date
Nov 2022
Category
Literary, Family Life
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9781990070730
    Publish Date
    Nov 2022
    List Price
    $9.99

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Description

Tony is born into a very well-to-do family. Unbeknownst to him and probably before he was even born, his life had been planned out of him. He unsuccessfully tries to deviate from the plan, only to find himself trapped in his own enormous ambition. He travels the world, lives the life of luxury, seduces and drinks, and seduces again. His behemoth ego, his relentless greed, and his passionate, yet all too basic, desires consume him but never make him truly happy. His last shot at happiness is short-lived, and the decades of abuse catch up to him. His dying wish is as selfish and greedy as his whole life.

About the authors

Contributor Notes

Lana Guzman is an entrepreneur and a business consultant. She has authored three short novels in The Unusual Lives series, The Unusual Lives: A Victim(izer), The Unusual Lives: A Fool(er), and The Unusual Lives: An Evil(doer). Her other works are two more fiction series, The Country-Side Stories and The School Tales. She is also the author of two non-fiction books in the Get-It-Done series, The Get-It-Done Business Plan: Write a Business Plan That Will Get Your Business Financed and The Get-It-Done CV: Create a CV That Will Land You Your Dream Job. She lives in Toronto with her family and helps aspiring writers achieve their dreams.

Excerpt: The Unusual Lives: An Evildoer (by (author) Lana Guzman; photographs by Edgar Guzman)

Tony was the only son. His father felt that having a boy was a good enough thing for him as he had an heir. Also, he believed that having more than one child would deplete the resources of the family, which, according to him, were "not as infinite as one could think". Tony's mother felt that one successful pregnancy was more than sufficient as the pregnancy was rather difficult. That was probably the only thing that both of Tony's parents could agree upon. Nevertheless, Tony's mother loved her son dearly and spared no expense, both monetary and that in terms of her personal time and effort, to give her son anything and everything that he needed and desired. Tony's father tried to provide for the son as much as his mother, but only in monetary terms. At that point in time, his interest in his son's life was minimal.