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Formats
Hardcover Details
  • 05/2023
  • 979-8-9879061-6-3 B0BXG4XSS9
  • 176 pages
  • $24.95
Ebook Details
  • 05/2023
  • 979-8-9879061-4-9 B0BXG4XSS9
  • 176 pages
  • $2.99
Paperback Details
  • 05/2023
  • 979-8-9879061-3-2 B0C5P7M5ND
  • 176 pages
  • $13.95
Audio Details
  • 05/2023
  • B0C3DFJSVJ
  • 176 pages
  • $19.95
Rafael Moscatel
Author, Editor (anthology), Service Provider
The Secret Adoption

Adult; Memoir; (Market)

This evocative and emotionally charged story—praised by Publisher’s Weekly and Kirkus Reviews—follows an illegitimate child placed with a powerful and eccentric Hollywood family after a scandalous affair.

When a notorious lawyer, at the request of a famed composer, meticulously conceals his origins, his adoptive mother takes every measure to bury the truth. Pulling strings and enlisting influential allies—including a television icon—she constructs a carefully crafted facade to ensure he never uncovers his past. But as he grows older, cracks in the carefully constructed facade begin to show, leaving him haunted by an unsettling sense that something is being hidden from him.

Set against the allure and shadows of Hollywood, this memoir explores the emotional depths of childhood trauma, family secrets, and the search for belonging. Through a powerful journey of self-discovery and healing, the author reflects on the fragile bonds that define family, weaving a story that is both deeply personal and universally resonant. Moments of connection, heartbreak, and transformation create a narrative that lingers long after the final page.

*Previously releaseed as The Bastard of Beverly Hills

Plot/Idea: 8 out of 10
Originality: 8 out of 10
Prose: 8 out of 10
Character/Execution: 8 out of 10
Overall: 8.00 out of 10

Assessment:

Plot:  Moscatel crafts a deeply engaging story that will undoubtedly resonate with readers. The author unravels the narrative and family secrets uncovered in a well-paced and entertaining manner.

Prose: Well-written with wit and honesty interspersed throughout, Moscatel comes to terms with his upbringing, his own identity, and his family's past. Through careful diction, his thoughts transform his feelings about his predicament.

Originality: Moscatel has a truly unique story to tell and does so with refreshing candor and emotional integrity.

Character/Execution: Readers who may be seeking their own answers about tangled family history will find much to appreciate in this narrative. As a character in his own story, Moscatel's emotional and psychological journey is significant and authentically portrayed.

Date Submitted: December 20, 2022

Reviews
Indie Reader

In THE BASTARD OF BEVERLY HILLS, Rafael Moscatel tells an amazing story about fighting his demons and dealing with lies, loss and rejection, while growing up in Los Angeles, the City of Angels. His journey evokes a rollercoaster of emotions, from admiration to laughter, to a deep feeling of empathy and comradery. His story is compelling, entertaining and inspiring, a beacon of hope for those lost in the darkness of the human condition.

Kirkus Reviews

Moscatel recalls living among the famous—and living with a secret—in this memoir.

The author, a film director, presents a brief but engaging and surprise-filled memoir of a man whose true identity was kept from him well into adulthood. The adopted son of Ray and Eleanor Moscatel, a Sephardic Jewish couple living in Beverly Hills, Moscatel was adopted after the tragic death of his parents’ natural son, Albert. Moscatel details how he had always been aware of the ambiguity of his origins (his parents at one point claimed was as a “test-tube baby”), and that it was only later in life that he found out the truth and began to heal from the psychological damage of his parents’ subterfuge. On a lighter note, Moscatel has plenty to share about living in Beverly Hills among the famous, some of whom were friends and neighbors to the Moscatel family. He recounts his family’s close friendship with actor Michael Landon and his family, as well as various members of the Gilbert family, whose oldest daughter, actress Melissa Gilbert, was an adoptee like him. He includes accounts of encounters, both minor and serious, with celebrities ranging from Frank Sinatra to Tony Roma (the latter was briefly his mother’s husband). The memoir is full of twists and turns—the surprise ending regarding Moscatel’s background also speaks to the stigma surrounding adoption that has only recently begun to abate. The author writes movingly of his parents’ own difficulties, displaying understanding and grace: “The emotional upheaval of a loss blurs a survivor’s memory. And their grief, from denial, to bouts of anger, guilt, bargaining, and ultimately acceptance, often ends with a little piece of them dying, too.” Moscatel does not offer the reader a pat happy ending, but his story reaches a satisfying resolution.

A memoir that starts slowly but reaches a powerful conclusion for the patient reader.

Formats
Hardcover Details
  • 05/2023
  • 979-8-9879061-6-3 B0BXG4XSS9
  • 176 pages
  • $24.95
Ebook Details
  • 05/2023
  • 979-8-9879061-4-9 B0BXG4XSS9
  • 176 pages
  • $2.99
Paperback Details
  • 05/2023
  • 979-8-9879061-3-2 B0C5P7M5ND
  • 176 pages
  • $13.95
Audio Details
  • 05/2023
  • B0C3DFJSVJ
  • 176 pages
  • $19.95
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