Stephen P. Byers

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About Stephen P. Byers
Stephen P. Byers (B.Eng McGill U. '49) achieved several notable accolades during his career in construction management. His monorail design for the installation of precast concrete wall panels on the 38-story Chateau Champlain Hotel in Montreal was the cover story on the July 1966 issue of Construction Equipment and Materials. In 1983 he won the Craftsmanship Award for carpentry work presented by the KC Chapter of The American Institute of Architects. By
this time, he had ventured into acting in community theater. His one-man two-hour presentation of Clarence Darrow was recognized as "one of the most enjoyable Resident Theater presentations in years." Stephen was 57 years old at the time and was involved in storytelling and volunteer work at the Shiloh Museum of Ozark History. In 1999 he received the prestigious "Friend of the Museum Award" and "Volunteer Excellence Award" from Governor Mike Huckabee. And then, at age 74, he took up creative writing.
In each of three novels--Bent Coin, Goad of Honor and The Naked jaybird--Stephen P. Byers examines three unrelated couples. In Bent Coin, Joe Haldimann pledges celibacy after his wife drowns, devoting himself to raising his four-year-old daughter Suzanne. Fearing the reappearance of characteristics of his unknown mother's oriental origin, he makes a tragic error steering Suzanne away from romance in her coming of age years towards a business career. The result is a highly-successful business woman who falls victim to a charlatan, yet beneath her strong exterior lies insecurity. Her lawyer directs her to a crippled Mafia lawyer for whom she develops sincere admiration. She finds solace in his wisdom, adores him, not as one cares for a lover but as one appreciates a prelate. A story of grief and greed, love and disappointment, vehemence and revenge.
Illegal whiskey production during prohibition lies at the heart of Goad of Honor. Sophie is the star of the novel, seen in a supporting role, but that's how it was with strong women in the thirties. Secure and confident, she instills in her husband the courage to face his destiny, inheriting the family business and exposing the illegal production during prohibition.
The Naked Jaybird is the story of Rolland and Dorothy Royce. She, a secure and confident psychologist believes he should pursue his natural artistic talent; he a white collar crime detective determined to follow his career path. Without realizing it, he is duped into to uncovering an intrigue that would destroy America. His assignment involves travel between Toronto, Vancouver and Taipei. Each time he returns home, he is consumed with jealousy when he finds an old college roommate has visited with his wife. The confrontation comes to head when he discovers the truth about his roommate, breaks the conspiracy case and realizes Dorothy has never been unfaithful.
Both men and women have found these novels captivating
Stephen's other books include two novels--Lost River Bridge and A Boy and His Horse; and two non-fiction works--Our Life In The Arts - Theater - Storytelling - Writing co-written with his wife Mary Elspeth and Beginning Creative Writing - A Learning Experience.
Details of all Stephen's work, including reviews, are available at www.booksbybyers.us
this time, he had ventured into acting in community theater. His one-man two-hour presentation of Clarence Darrow was recognized as "one of the most enjoyable Resident Theater presentations in years." Stephen was 57 years old at the time and was involved in storytelling and volunteer work at the Shiloh Museum of Ozark History. In 1999 he received the prestigious "Friend of the Museum Award" and "Volunteer Excellence Award" from Governor Mike Huckabee. And then, at age 74, he took up creative writing.
In each of three novels--Bent Coin, Goad of Honor and The Naked jaybird--Stephen P. Byers examines three unrelated couples. In Bent Coin, Joe Haldimann pledges celibacy after his wife drowns, devoting himself to raising his four-year-old daughter Suzanne. Fearing the reappearance of characteristics of his unknown mother's oriental origin, he makes a tragic error steering Suzanne away from romance in her coming of age years towards a business career. The result is a highly-successful business woman who falls victim to a charlatan, yet beneath her strong exterior lies insecurity. Her lawyer directs her to a crippled Mafia lawyer for whom she develops sincere admiration. She finds solace in his wisdom, adores him, not as one cares for a lover but as one appreciates a prelate. A story of grief and greed, love and disappointment, vehemence and revenge.
Illegal whiskey production during prohibition lies at the heart of Goad of Honor. Sophie is the star of the novel, seen in a supporting role, but that's how it was with strong women in the thirties. Secure and confident, she instills in her husband the courage to face his destiny, inheriting the family business and exposing the illegal production during prohibition.
The Naked Jaybird is the story of Rolland and Dorothy Royce. She, a secure and confident psychologist believes he should pursue his natural artistic talent; he a white collar crime detective determined to follow his career path. Without realizing it, he is duped into to uncovering an intrigue that would destroy America. His assignment involves travel between Toronto, Vancouver and Taipei. Each time he returns home, he is consumed with jealousy when he finds an old college roommate has visited with his wife. The confrontation comes to head when he discovers the truth about his roommate, breaks the conspiracy case and realizes Dorothy has never been unfaithful.
Both men and women have found these novels captivating
Stephen's other books include two novels--Lost River Bridge and A Boy and His Horse; and two non-fiction works--Our Life In The Arts - Theater - Storytelling - Writing co-written with his wife Mary Elspeth and Beginning Creative Writing - A Learning Experience.
Details of all Stephen's work, including reviews, are available at www.booksbybyers.us
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Author Updates
Titles By Stephen P. Byers
Beginning Creative Writing: A Learning Experience
Feb 28, 2014
$2.99
I stress in my public statements that I am not competing with educational institutions. My purpose is to present a technique for aspiring writers, be they high school students lacking the means for higher education, or retirees who feel the urge to write, to achieve a reasonable degree of writing success. The truth is I'm not qualified in any sense to teach people how to write, but rather my aim has been to teach how to imagine. I believe a great deal of self-esteem may be garnered by actually putting words on paper, publishing them in some form, and selling a few copies at the church bazaar. For a number of years I led life-writing groups at local retirement communities encouraging older people to write their story, preaching the philosophy that an excellent way to maintain mental acuity can be found in creative writing.
I also offered free four-hour seminars in public libraries, lectuedto writing groups, and offered a five-week writing course.
"I learned more in Mr. Byers four-hour lecture than in a whale year at school," A high-school senior from grove, OK.
"The best lecture on creative writing I ever heard." An author from Mountain Home, AR
"Before Stephen's lecture, I never knew how to begin. He made it s simple." A housewife, Bella Vista, AR.
The theme of this book: Storyweaving = Storyforming + Storytelling
The art of developing characters' strengths, weakneses, conflicts and problems with defined guidelines that will keep you on track from beginning to end.
I also offered free four-hour seminars in public libraries, lectuedto writing groups, and offered a five-week writing course.
"I learned more in Mr. Byers four-hour lecture than in a whale year at school," A high-school senior from grove, OK.
"The best lecture on creative writing I ever heard." An author from Mountain Home, AR
"Before Stephen's lecture, I never knew how to begin. He made it s simple." A housewife, Bella Vista, AR.
The theme of this book: Storyweaving = Storyforming + Storytelling
The art of developing characters' strengths, weakneses, conflicts and problems with defined guidelines that will keep you on track from beginning to end.
Other Formats:
Paperback
$2.99
This is the story of a Civil Engineer and his wife who became involved in Community Theater, Storytelling and Creative Writing after relocating from Canada in 1972. Soon after his arrival, he became active on a variety of stages in community theater in Kansas City. At age 65 he retired to Arkansas, found storytelling, and at the age of 74 took up creative writing. He has published six books and continues his active writing career at age 89.
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Goad of Honor
Jan 3, 2014
$2.99
A story of subterfuge, murder and atonement
An illegitimate son, born in Germany in the first half of the nineteenth century, raised in aristocratic wealth by a well-to-do family, seizes the opportunity to escape to America, bringing a new identity, passing to his descendants a pretense of European nobility. Ninety years later, the lives of three young men intersect in Bordeau, Missouri, the community founded by the German immigrant.
In 1937, his great grandson, Jakob Kellermann IV, age 25, thrust into ownership of the family enterprise, searches to uncover the mysterious truth about his ancestors. Roger Gray Rock, age 18, a multitalented youth, struggles with emotional stress induced by the death of his parents. Gino Messino, age 25, an arrogant opportunist hungers for power and prestige. Hovering in the background, lawyer Ernest Quigley manipulates their lives for his own benefit.
An Appreciation by John & Linda Lipman: "The real pleasure of this book lies in developing characters with supporting roles who portray insightful people in real life situations. Jakob's alleged great-grandfather who built the distillery one stone at a time; his son who took over and made a business of it; his grandson, inspired by his grandfather's craft and terrorized by the reality of management during those troubled times.
"These characters, and many others, contain much of the real power of this novel. Benny Gray Rock is far more than just Roger's dad. As his character develops, Benny changes from a stereotype sadistic thug to a gentle giant, the change making clear the actions of Gino and Roger.
"And then there's Sophie whose character is different from that of the others. If one complied the characteristics of Roger, Gino, and Jakob into a single character, Sophie would represent the exact opposite. Our image of her changes and enriches at a constant rate, not in plateaus the way the others develop, but from beginning to end her character gains complexity, while remaining steadfast in her convictions. Sophie is the star of the novel, seen only in a supporting role, but that's how it was with strong women in the thirties. And Sophie captures that theme."
An illegitimate son, born in Germany in the first half of the nineteenth century, raised in aristocratic wealth by a well-to-do family, seizes the opportunity to escape to America, bringing a new identity, passing to his descendants a pretense of European nobility. Ninety years later, the lives of three young men intersect in Bordeau, Missouri, the community founded by the German immigrant.
In 1937, his great grandson, Jakob Kellermann IV, age 25, thrust into ownership of the family enterprise, searches to uncover the mysterious truth about his ancestors. Roger Gray Rock, age 18, a multitalented youth, struggles with emotional stress induced by the death of his parents. Gino Messino, age 25, an arrogant opportunist hungers for power and prestige. Hovering in the background, lawyer Ernest Quigley manipulates their lives for his own benefit.
An Appreciation by John & Linda Lipman: "The real pleasure of this book lies in developing characters with supporting roles who portray insightful people in real life situations. Jakob's alleged great-grandfather who built the distillery one stone at a time; his son who took over and made a business of it; his grandson, inspired by his grandfather's craft and terrorized by the reality of management during those troubled times.
"These characters, and many others, contain much of the real power of this novel. Benny Gray Rock is far more than just Roger's dad. As his character develops, Benny changes from a stereotype sadistic thug to a gentle giant, the change making clear the actions of Gino and Roger.
"And then there's Sophie whose character is different from that of the others. If one complied the characteristics of Roger, Gino, and Jakob into a single character, Sophie would represent the exact opposite. Our image of her changes and enriches at a constant rate, not in plateaus the way the others develop, but from beginning to end her character gains complexity, while remaining steadfast in her convictions. Sophie is the star of the novel, seen only in a supporting role, but that's how it was with strong women in the thirties. And Sophie captures that theme."
Other Formats:
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The Naked Jaybird
Jan 2, 2014
$2.99
Description:
This story, the second edition of a tale first self-published in 1999, incorporates corrections and minor amendments, but it remains the same story, delivering the same message thirteen years later. Critic's appreciations and author's comments relating to this work follow.
From the first page to the last, this captivating book races, twisting and turning to capture the attention of even the most aloof reader. The Naked Jaybird is an exciting read. Patiently and methodically, Byers spares no detail in piecing together a complex multi-level plot into a plausible story of international conspiracy, espionage, and terrorism. The scale of this endeavor is enormous, but he manages it successfully. As in Bent Coin, another Byers novel, powerful characters expose underlying themes of social stratification, greed, and professional growth. Byers presents and develops credible characters whose motivation and perspective are well understood by the reader. thebookshelf.org Comments from the Author: The story germinated in July of 1997 after reading an article in McLean's, Canada's Weekly Newsmagazine, about the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, bearing the subtitle "Giving up on white-collar crime." In the fall of 1997, The Morning News of Northwest Arkansas printed an Associated Press release that contained the following statement: "Chinese military officials studying US forces are developing ways to overcome America's high-tech weaponry and defeat what they see as a superpower in decline. The Chinese strategy involves leveraging inexpensive technology to defeat expensive US technology." A book by a Chinese Army official states: "US military forces are vulnerable and even deeply flawed, and can be defeated with the right strategy."One has merely to scan our newspapers for reminders of the dangers we face: "At least five million people in the world die each year as a result of filthy drinking water." "In walrus country, unhappy Eskimo hunters say the frozen sea is breaking up early these days." "Water quality in Eastern Oklahoma is being threatened by rapid population growth, industry in Missouri and Arkansas and an influx of poultry farms." And the arrogance of our response: "A House panel voted to sharply restrict the Clinton Administration's ability to implement parts of the Kyoto global warming accord.""Business, labor and agriculture all worry that the treaty will raise domestic energy costs and make American exports less competitive." "Auto makers meet with President Clinton to voice opposition over proposed global warming treaty; they say it would be bad for jobs and the economy."Perhaps, somewhere behind the scene and far away from the rhetoric, environmental and foreign forces are silently at work so blithely disregarded that one day America may awake to an uncontrollable catastrophe.The 2012 update:Thirteen years later, nothing has changed; our lifestyle, even our existence, continues to be threatened by environmental catastrophe, while our treasury is desecrated by pointless wars, our politics suffers stagnation, and our international concerns are directed to terrorism and the economy. Meanwhile, we ignore the real threat facing us. News reporters' and pundits' continuous appeal for action fail to excite our leaders into action. Here is a recent sample; DROUGHT EXPANDS, INTENSIFIES ACROSS US: Almost 61% of the contiguous U.S. is now in drought, the highest percentage in at least 12 years, federal climate scientists said Thursday. Twelve states—Nevada, Arizona, Utah, New Mexico, Colorado, Arkansas, Missouri, Iowa, Kentucky, Illinois, Indiana and Ohio—are completely in drought, or are considered “abnormally dry” according the US Drought Monitor. USA Today 07/13/2012.
This story, the second edition of a tale first self-published in 1999, incorporates corrections and minor amendments, but it remains the same story, delivering the same message thirteen years later. Critic's appreciations and author's comments relating to this work follow.
From the first page to the last, this captivating book races, twisting and turning to capture the attention of even the most aloof reader. The Naked Jaybird is an exciting read. Patiently and methodically, Byers spares no detail in piecing together a complex multi-level plot into a plausible story of international conspiracy, espionage, and terrorism. The scale of this endeavor is enormous, but he manages it successfully. As in Bent Coin, another Byers novel, powerful characters expose underlying themes of social stratification, greed, and professional growth. Byers presents and develops credible characters whose motivation and perspective are well understood by the reader. thebookshelf.org Comments from the Author: The story germinated in July of 1997 after reading an article in McLean's, Canada's Weekly Newsmagazine, about the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, bearing the subtitle "Giving up on white-collar crime." In the fall of 1997, The Morning News of Northwest Arkansas printed an Associated Press release that contained the following statement: "Chinese military officials studying US forces are developing ways to overcome America's high-tech weaponry and defeat what they see as a superpower in decline. The Chinese strategy involves leveraging inexpensive technology to defeat expensive US technology." A book by a Chinese Army official states: "US military forces are vulnerable and even deeply flawed, and can be defeated with the right strategy."One has merely to scan our newspapers for reminders of the dangers we face: "At least five million people in the world die each year as a result of filthy drinking water." "In walrus country, unhappy Eskimo hunters say the frozen sea is breaking up early these days." "Water quality in Eastern Oklahoma is being threatened by rapid population growth, industry in Missouri and Arkansas and an influx of poultry farms." And the arrogance of our response: "A House panel voted to sharply restrict the Clinton Administration's ability to implement parts of the Kyoto global warming accord.""Business, labor and agriculture all worry that the treaty will raise domestic energy costs and make American exports less competitive." "Auto makers meet with President Clinton to voice opposition over proposed global warming treaty; they say it would be bad for jobs and the economy."Perhaps, somewhere behind the scene and far away from the rhetoric, environmental and foreign forces are silently at work so blithely disregarded that one day America may awake to an uncontrollable catastrophe.The 2012 update:Thirteen years later, nothing has changed; our lifestyle, even our existence, continues to be threatened by environmental catastrophe, while our treasury is desecrated by pointless wars, our politics suffers stagnation, and our international concerns are directed to terrorism and the economy. Meanwhile, we ignore the real threat facing us. News reporters' and pundits' continuous appeal for action fail to excite our leaders into action. Here is a recent sample; DROUGHT EXPANDS, INTENSIFIES ACROSS US: Almost 61% of the contiguous U.S. is now in drought, the highest percentage in at least 12 years, federal climate scientists said Thursday. Twelve states—Nevada, Arizona, Utah, New Mexico, Colorado, Arkansas, Missouri, Iowa, Kentucky, Illinois, Indiana and Ohio—are completely in drought, or are considered “abnormally dry” according the US Drought Monitor. USA Today 07/13/2012.
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Lost River Bridge
Jan 2, 2014
$2.99
This is a wholesome tale, free of profanity and vulgarity; the story of an isolated Ozark Mountain community founded in the nineteenth century, struggling against extinction through the twentieth century into modernity. Elijah Taber, a Canadian WWII veteran, in hopes of healing his shattered nerves, visits his long-lost relatives in the Mountains of Missouri. In 1946, he spends two months in Lost River Bridge where he learns the century-old legend of Granny Sarah’s St. Christopher medallion, meets his cousin Emery and a legion of storytellers each with a “true” story to tell. “Yes,” they say, “seen it with my own eyes,” even if the event took place before the teller was born.
Elijah returns to Canada, completes his education, finds employment as a construction manager, and comes back to retire in the Ozarks forty-two years later. He discovers a disintegrating community. In the years that follow, he faces trails and tribulations searching for a way to rejuvenate the community, his efforts ultimately resulting in a young married couple accepting the challenge, rewarded by a gift from Elijah of Granny Sarah’s long-lost St. Christopher medallion, the symbol that has haunted the community since Granny’s death in 1841.
Everyone in Lost River Bridge has a story to tell. Their tall tales and true will sometimes make you laugh, while their struggles for existence perhaps will make you cry.
Elijah returns to Canada, completes his education, finds employment as a construction manager, and comes back to retire in the Ozarks forty-two years later. He discovers a disintegrating community. In the years that follow, he faces trails and tribulations searching for a way to rejuvenate the community, his efforts ultimately resulting in a young married couple accepting the challenge, rewarded by a gift from Elijah of Granny Sarah’s long-lost St. Christopher medallion, the symbol that has haunted the community since Granny’s death in 1841.
Everyone in Lost River Bridge has a story to tell. Their tall tales and true will sometimes make you laugh, while their struggles for existence perhaps will make you cry.
Other Formats:
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$2.99
On his 17th birthday, August 30, 1860, Kade Zachary left Berea, Kentucky, arriving in San Antonio, Texas at the end of February; 1,200 miles in 180 days, an average of 6.7 miles a day. A boy and his horse, alone in the wilderness, no marked trail, not even a map, nothing except sun and stars to guide them on an incredible journey, like Davy Crockett and Daniel Boone making their way through the wilderness dependent on their wits and fortitude to achieve their objectives. Today, we find such a venture difficult to imagine, yet in the days before internal combustion engines thousands of pilgrims and fortune hunters crossed America seeking new beginnings or escaping misfortune.
The Autobiography of Kade Zachary is a fascinating tale of determination about a boy motivated by his father on his death bed.”to get an education … it’s the only way to get ahead.”
He learns to read and write while apprenticing in the blacksmith trade. As his story unfolds through good fortune, he meets understanding mentors: He writes:
“Another curious matter was how good fortune kept replacing Poppa with new guardians, always men who liked me, wanting to help my learning, each different in his own way. Mr. Fee, the learnéd professor; Mr. McCreith, the perfectionist; and now, a weathered old cowpoke who'd lived his whole life in the wild west, willing to take me on, to teach me the trials and perils of the trail, demanding nothing in return except a little sympathy and no talk while recovering from binges. Why did these men take me on, I wondered, never realizing their common denominator until years later? Despite the wide difference in skills, learning and personalities, each was a lonely man, wifeless, childless, or abandoned by offspring, alone, filling the void with alcohol, books of learning, endless hours of toil, wanting desperately to share what they had. Suddenly, a youth appears, independent, capable, responsible, asking nothing except to learn, to some degree a replica of how they imagined themselves at my age, igniting the smoldering memories of family, teaching and loving.
And I was the beneficiary.”
An inspirational story well worth reading.
The Autobiography of Kade Zachary is a fascinating tale of determination about a boy motivated by his father on his death bed.”to get an education … it’s the only way to get ahead.”
He learns to read and write while apprenticing in the blacksmith trade. As his story unfolds through good fortune, he meets understanding mentors: He writes:
“Another curious matter was how good fortune kept replacing Poppa with new guardians, always men who liked me, wanting to help my learning, each different in his own way. Mr. Fee, the learnéd professor; Mr. McCreith, the perfectionist; and now, a weathered old cowpoke who'd lived his whole life in the wild west, willing to take me on, to teach me the trials and perils of the trail, demanding nothing in return except a little sympathy and no talk while recovering from binges. Why did these men take me on, I wondered, never realizing their common denominator until years later? Despite the wide difference in skills, learning and personalities, each was a lonely man, wifeless, childless, or abandoned by offspring, alone, filling the void with alcohol, books of learning, endless hours of toil, wanting desperately to share what they had. Suddenly, a youth appears, independent, capable, responsible, asking nothing except to learn, to some degree a replica of how they imagined themselves at my age, igniting the smoldering memories of family, teaching and loving.
And I was the beneficiary.”
An inspirational story well worth reading.
Other Formats:
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Bent Coin
Mar 11, 2012
$2.99
He who lacks honesty and integrity, who deceives and cheats, is naught but a bent coin.
A well-intentioned father, extraordinarily successful, blames himself for the accidental drowning of his wife on July 4, 1898. Disrespectful of his father’s rakish lifestyle, conscious the characteristics of his unknown Asiatic mother might reappear in succeeding generations, he vows to follow a celibate life, devoting himself to raising his four-year old daughter, directing her away from boys and romance into a business career. He places her in a girl’s Catholic school, then on to university where she acquires a master’s degree in finance and economics. He establishes a business for her under the umbrella of his own enterprise. At the age of twenty-seven, already a budding success in the world of commerce, the sudden death of her father devastates her, leaving her to face life on her own, managing her huge inheritance. A chance encounter on a snowy evening leads her into the arms of a suave charlatan who captivates her. Seeking information about her new acquaintance, her esteemed lawyer directs her to an underworld character who warns her about the nature of her challenging new paramour. Alas, blinded by first love, she misinterprets the cautionary advice. The resulting marriage is a story of altruism and greed, naiveté and deceit, forgiveness and revenge as their lives become inextricably entwined. They crave each other’s company for foolish and selfish reasons. Founded on false foundations, their union crumbles. Even as they live their separate lives, they cannot escape, each obsessed with loathing in their hearts for their former partner. Their son, born with the appearance of his unknown ancestor, grows to a fine young man who assesses his parent’s union as a battle of inflated egos in a marriage void of affection. Each of his parents blames the other, until they ultimately face the reality of their own failure to create a sincere relationship. In the end, an insatiable desire for revenge destroys them.
A well-intentioned father, extraordinarily successful, blames himself for the accidental drowning of his wife on July 4, 1898. Disrespectful of his father’s rakish lifestyle, conscious the characteristics of his unknown Asiatic mother might reappear in succeeding generations, he vows to follow a celibate life, devoting himself to raising his four-year old daughter, directing her away from boys and romance into a business career. He places her in a girl’s Catholic school, then on to university where she acquires a master’s degree in finance and economics. He establishes a business for her under the umbrella of his own enterprise. At the age of twenty-seven, already a budding success in the world of commerce, the sudden death of her father devastates her, leaving her to face life on her own, managing her huge inheritance. A chance encounter on a snowy evening leads her into the arms of a suave charlatan who captivates her. Seeking information about her new acquaintance, her esteemed lawyer directs her to an underworld character who warns her about the nature of her challenging new paramour. Alas, blinded by first love, she misinterprets the cautionary advice. The resulting marriage is a story of altruism and greed, naiveté and deceit, forgiveness and revenge as their lives become inextricably entwined. They crave each other’s company for foolish and selfish reasons. Founded on false foundations, their union crumbles. Even as they live their separate lives, they cannot escape, each obsessed with loathing in their hearts for their former partner. Their son, born with the appearance of his unknown ancestor, grows to a fine young man who assesses his parent’s union as a battle of inflated egos in a marriage void of affection. Each of his parents blames the other, until they ultimately face the reality of their own failure to create a sincere relationship. In the end, an insatiable desire for revenge destroys them.
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