Sempre: Finding Home-bookcover

By: Raymond Silverthorne

Sempre: Finding Home

Pages: 188 Ratings: 5.0
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When an old man dies in a London park, a family heirloom slips from his finger, and is found by a young woman who is instrumental in reuniting the past with the present as old and new love stories are told.

Through these interweaving stories we witness destiny’s hand in both historic and contemporary Portugal and Britain, and the drama comes not from villains in black cloaks, but from situations which are out of the characters’ control. It is due to the trials of these ordinary people, and a happy ending that ties in so many of the plot’s strings, that this is one of those stories you will want to read a second time in order to fully appreciate how the characters’ lives overlap, and the hand fate plays.

This story owes a great amount to four songs: ‘Ordinary Girl’ by Alison Moyet; the author wanted to know why the protagonist of the ‘story’ thought she had to leave the way she did. ‘Take a Drunk Girl Home’; a country song about a man who takes a drunk girl home and doesn’t take advantage of the situation. ‘Symphony’ by Sarah Brightman; about the end of a love affair that leaves one half of the couple uncertain of what went wrong. The fourth song is, ‘If You Could Read My Mind’ by Gordon Lightfoot; it mentions ‘a ghost in a wishing-well’ and was a spur for writing about the mystery which the author feels has a place in all our lives…

Raymond Silverthorne is somebody who knows first-hand that certain events can leave us feeling we have no control over the direction in which our lives are going, but at other times we make conscious and deliberate choices. The author of Sempre: Finding Home worked, lived in and loved London for nearly 40 years, but as 2010 came to an end, newly married he moved with his husband to a small village in Portugal, a country that at that time neither of them knew much about. The life Ray began living there contrasted greatly with the one he’d had in London, and inspired him to write, contrasting and comparing his birth home with the one of his heart.

Customer Reviews
5.0
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1 reviews
  • Raymond Silverthrone

    This beautiful book speaks about the great life goal which in turn needs to be continuing singular present in act, actualizing in this way, a decision precious for once: choose the path within life goes on and so realizing history by being presence at all The writer intertwines two possibilities in all opposites to achieve the primordial end: finding home - sempre! Like Paramênides Poem in dialogue with his other by reader, everyone must have to make a simple choice which may allow them to get what it meant to be by knowing how to interpret their characters experiences, rather than that it could goes to another «surrounding echos» and stay without «space in time» In a conceptual kind, reading «in time» implies tree others tipe on meaning life-experience: knowing from where coming on; knowing who by whom it comes; and, being sure about destination for; By «knowing from where coming on» might consider already like being part in a history recognizable by conscious will in act; by «knowing who by whom it comes» might accept conscience with voluntary comprehensive reason; and, by «being sure about destination for» might realize the amount responsibility about being alive to The main symbol at the heart book is a «ring»: a call, a position, and, finally, a relation that makes all difference in world common A call means that somehow everyone, if attentive, may get it in response; a position means at first the singular determination about what really matters by particular in situation; and, a relation means at second first the life compromise with «old other anew» Like Horácio and Rose, Jennifer had made goods with Georg and with all hers friends and so she could integrate the past sentence with her presence in present like all great lovers stories Raymond must have to write in continue with just «silfor» by hands dating THANKS to lead paths go on in its end-wedding briefly and both are sure invited

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