The Ghosts of Stonewall: Clairvoyant Explores Stonewall Riot Karma in Gay Novel
As a clairvoyant, Alderin Ordell has seen glimpses of the afterlife.
Boyds, MD, July 11, 2012 --(PR.com)-- Now he taps that experience in his first novel, The Ghosts of Stonewall (ISBN 1475066856, CreateSpace, http://www.amazon.com/dp/1475066856/ref=rdr_ext_tmb), which explores a gay love story complicated by murderous karma amidst the 1969 Stonewall riots in New York.
Alderin drew from hundreds of hours of clairvoyant readings including gay and lesbian people affected by the riots. “The Stonewall karma is real,” the author said. “It affects all gay and lesbian people, even if they weren’t there. So I had to write about it.”
Karma is born from unresolved events in our lives. “It’s unfinished business,” said Alderin. “The Ghosts of Stonewall shows how past life karma manifests in the Stonewall riots, then the consequences of that karma are illustrated through four more lifetimes.”
Besides past lives and karma, The Ghosts of Stonewall explores the gay and lesbian struggle to love and be loved amidst the American culture of hate and discrimination of the past few decades. “Ultimately, the characters must choose whether to fight for what they believe in or to run and preserve their love,” said Ordell. “In the tension of that choice, they discover who they are in the deepest sense possible.”
Alderin drew from hundreds of hours of clairvoyant readings including gay and lesbian people affected by the riots. “The Stonewall karma is real,” the author said. “It affects all gay and lesbian people, even if they weren’t there. So I had to write about it.”
Karma is born from unresolved events in our lives. “It’s unfinished business,” said Alderin. “The Ghosts of Stonewall shows how past life karma manifests in the Stonewall riots, then the consequences of that karma are illustrated through four more lifetimes.”
Besides past lives and karma, The Ghosts of Stonewall explores the gay and lesbian struggle to love and be loved amidst the American culture of hate and discrimination of the past few decades. “Ultimately, the characters must choose whether to fight for what they believe in or to run and preserve their love,” said Ordell. “In the tension of that choice, they discover who they are in the deepest sense possible.”
Contact
The Ghosts of Stonewall
Alderin Ordell
707-326-3419
www.ghostsofstonewall.com
Alderin Ordell has a Masters in Psychology from the University of San Francisco. He interned at Positive Images in Santa Rosa, California, a support group for gay, lesbian, and bisexual youth; and at Matanzas Elementary School.
Contact
Alderin Ordell
707-326-3419
www.ghostsofstonewall.com
Alderin Ordell has a Masters in Psychology from the University of San Francisco. He interned at Positive Images in Santa Rosa, California, a support group for gay, lesbian, and bisexual youth; and at Matanzas Elementary School.
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