The Ellison Effect is a passionate psychological depiction and defense of the world's last remaining legend. Avra Amar Filion has earned the reputation of being a portrait writer with this controversial portrayal of Lawrence Joseph Ellison. Bringing light to one of the most complex personalities to walk on this earth and presenting him, as she described "A Self-Made Perfection." Speaking out on the injustice, and wrongful persecution and the media created image of Larry Ellison. She unfolds bit by bit his inner-self and for the first time we are able to see through her depiction, her eyes the man everyone so carelessly over-looked and wrongfully attacked. She washed away the graffiti that other authors and bold accusers painted over the father of technology. Being a lecturer she speaks her opinions with integrity and straight-forwardness to defend and stand for a man she respects, and on a personal level she built the foundation for all the rest of us to see the Self-Standing Architecture that is Larry Ellison.
Genre: BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / GeneralJust Launched -- Top Biography Release in Fall 2014
There comes a point in life… where it takes one moment, one
object or better yet one person to reveal the truth within each and every
one of us that we try so desperately to mask with religion and hypocrisy.
Could someone be both a blessing and the apple of discord at the
same time without even meaning to? Could someone walk into a room
and make a silent frenzy of greed and unfilled dreams burst into flames
in everyone's heart, making them push aside any morals they once knew
for the possibly of "Just Maybe"?
I discovered, one can! One person sits as an idle salvation that's
unreachable, and yet hated by all at the same time of being loved for all
the wrong reasons. I had the privilege to meet this one person--- For a
moment in time to remove the veil that has been painted of him and meet
someone truly remarkable.
Before I go into my actual writing.. I want you to know a little
something about me before I speak of him. I once attended a party and
started speaking of politics to an Indian man-- at the end of our very
unfair debate (I had the winning hand of course), he chuckled and said:
“Well, I see your name describes you perfectly. The definition doesn’t do
you enough justice.”
I asked what he meant; he went on to say---