
๐ฌ Echoes of Emotion: What a Thoughtful Review Reveals About Reunion: Coda
When Thomas Wikman reviewed Reunion: Coda on his Leonberger Life blog, I expected kindness. What I didnโt expect was emotional precisionโthe kind that doesnโt just summarize a book but listens to its heartbeat.
Thomas called it โa love story complicated by life.โ That line alone felt like a mirror held up to Jim Garratyโs journey. He saw the dual timelines not as a narrative device, but as emotional scaffoldingโone built on memory, the other on the fragile hope of second chances. He noticed the serendipitous echoes between past and present, the way regret and renewal dance in quiet tandem.
But what moved me most was this: โWe recognize ourselves in the stories, and it helps us feel and grow.โ Thatโs the kind of feedback that makes the long nights of revision, the self-doubt, and the emotional excavation worth it.
๐ง The Comments: A Gentle Chorus

(C) 2025 Alex Diaz-Granados (To order the hardcover edition, click on the image above.)
The comments section became a kind of literary salonโwarm, curious, and emotionally generous:
- Jacqui Murray loved the simplicity of โa love story complicated by life.โ
- Gwen Plano and John Howell offered congratulations not just on the book, but on the emotional resonance it carried.
- Pete Springer, not typically a romance reader, found himself drawn to the theme of second chances.
- navasolanature reflected on the imperfection of life, especially while watching a loved one struggle.
- Even readers unfamiliar with my work, like The Fab Four of Cley, were intrigued enough to explore further.
And then there was Carla, who added Reunion: Coda to her TBR shelf after a quiet exchange about themes and emotional subtext. That kind of trustโreader to writerโis never taken for granted.
๐ช What I Learned

I donโt write with themes in mind. I write to make sure the emotional logic holds, that the characters feel real, that the quiet moments land with dignity. But when a reader like Thomas listens deeply, the subtext rises. Itโs there in the cadence, the choices, the silences between lines.
This review reminded me that fiction isnโt just storytellingโitโs emotional architecture. And when someone walks through that structure and feels at home, itโs the highest compliment a writer can receive.

Comments
6 responses to “Echoes of Emotion: What a Thoughtful Review Reveals About ‘Reunion: Coda’”
Thank you so much Alex for highlighting my review of your book and linking to the post. You wrote a wonderful book and I hope many more will buy it.
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Aw. It’s my way of thanking you for your steadfast support for my stories and me over the years. And your opinion matters, so….
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Thank you, Alex.
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You’re welcome, Thomas.
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I would like to align myself with the description of ‘recognizing ourselves’ in it. I know I did, which created the real feel. Well done, Alex.
–Scott
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Thanks, Scott. That’s nice of you to say. I’m glad you enjoyed Reunion: Coda. I hope you’ll read other “Jim Garraty” stories in the future. ๐
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