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Noticing the Small Things
Posted by Literary_Titan

The Star Thrower follows three recent graduates on a trip to Bali, where they abandon their expected paths to pursue ones that give them purpose, learning along the way that small actions can make a big impact. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?
The story and setup stems from the Loren Eiseley’s “The Star Thrower” (or “starfish story”) is part of a 26-page essay. In that story, a man sees a boy throwing stranded starfish back into the ocean. When told he can’t save them all, the boy replies, “It made a difference to that one.” I wanted to explore how “Generation Z” or recent grads or really anyone—who often feel paralyzed by the scale of global problems—can find agency by focusing on the “one” thing in front of them rather than the “everything” they can’t control.
Bali feels transformative rather than decorative. What made it the right setting for this moment of awakening?
Bali is often called the “Island of the Gods,” but its power lies in its Tri Hita Karanaphilosophy—the harmony between people, nature, and the spirit world. It introduces a paradox and a stark visual and spiritual contrast to the “corporate ladder” or the rigid academic structures the graduates just left that plays out throughout the book. The setting isn’t just a backdrop; the physical environment and getting lost force the characters to slow down and notice the “small things” they overlooked in their fast-paced lives back home.
Each character finds a different path, yet their journeys remain interconnected. What interested you about that balance?
I wanted to highlight the importance of friendship. Even as we travel paths, our growth is often fueled by the people who knew us before we changed. It highlights that “purpose” isn’t a one-size-fits-all destination. By keeping the characters interconnected, it shows that when one person finds their light, it makes it easier for their friends and others to find theirs, too. It’s a “rising tide lifts all boats” philosophy.
The novel is openly hopeful. What do you hope readers carry with them after finishing the book?
I hope readers can feel less overwhelmed by the “grand plan” of their lives and more empowered by their daily choices. Hope isn’t a feeling; it’s an action. The Star Thrower is presented as a disciplined choice and sometimes that choice involves making changes and perhaps finding a new direction. It’s not that the characters ignore the world’s problems; they simply choose to address them one “starfish” at a time. The “Star Thrower” isn’t a person who fixes everything; the “Star Thrower” is someone who refuses to do nothing. If you finish the book and feel like you can do one small, kind thing for your community, the book has done its job. What is one “starfish” action a reader can take today?
Author Links: GoodReads | Website
Their summer of self-discovery takes a sharp turn when they become entangled in a legal battle against a powerful corporation responsible for a massive environmental spill. The stakes are immediate and personal: their coastal community’s health, its economy, and the survival of endangered wildlife.
The friends emerge victorious. While the community celebrates the win, the friends’ ultimate reward is deeper than the legal triumph. By protecting life and bringing a corporation to justice, Ava, Sam, and Leo discover their true purpose, realizing that their combined talents are the ‘how’—the essential tools—for the greater ‘why’—the fierce protection of their world. The book celebrates the profound benefit of teamwork, illustrating that true purpose is often found not in solitude, but in collaboration for a cause greater than oneself.
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: action, adventure, author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Coming-of-Age, contemporary, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, Kathleen Welton, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, The Star Thrower: A Novel, writer, writing
The Star Thrower: A Novel
Posted by Literary Titan

The Star Thrower is a contemporary coming-of-age novel that blends personal reinvention with environmental activism. It starts with Ava Wainwright at graduation, caught between her father’s expectation that she pursue law and her own quieter pull toward art, storytelling, and wildlife. From there, the book opens outward through a trip to Bali, where Ava and her friends Sam and Leo begin to see their lives with fresh eyes and, just as importantly, begin to imagine futures that actually belong to them.
I liked that the novel knows exactly what kind of story it wants to be. It’s earnest, idealistic, and driven by purpose. Bali isn’t just a scenic backdrop. It becomes the place where the three friends start naming what matters to them, and the title image of the star thrower gives the whole book its moral center. When the old man on the beach says, “It matters to this one,” the novel makes its argument plainly and effectively: individual acts may be small, but they still count.
The book also works because it gives each member of the trio a distinct path. Ava moves toward writing and illustration, Leo toward forensic science and evidence-based advocacy, and Sam toward community action and ocean-centered leadership. That structure gives the novel a nice forward motion, because each character’s growth feeds the larger plot about pollution, corporate misconduct, and public pressure. I also appreciated that the book keeps returning to the question of purpose.
In style, the novel is direct, sincere, and easy to read. It wears its heart on its sleeve, and I think that openness is part of its appeal. The dialogue is often used to clarify where each character stands emotionally, and the scenic descriptions of beaches, forests, and wildlife give the story a steady sense of atmosphere. The courtroom and activism sections shift the novel into a more issue-driven register, but they still connect back to the characters’ search for meaning, which keeps the book grounded in human stakes rather than abstract causes.
The Star Thrower is a hopeful novel about choosing a life that feels true, then learning how to defend it. It’s about friendship, grief, vocation, environmental responsibility, and the way conviction grows from small moments of attention. More than anything, it’s a book that believes people can change course and that communities can change too. That belief is what gives the novel its warmth. By the end, it feels less like a story about grand destiny and more like a story about finding your bearings and moving toward them, one choice at a time.
Pages: 136 | ASIN : B0GQL5NMGG
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: action, adventure, author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Coming-of-Age, contemporary, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, Kathleen Welton, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, The Star Thrower: A Novel, writer, writing




