About The Book

About The Book

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At its heart, Entitlement is a novel about power: how it is gained, justified, misused, and rationalized. Daniel Eiman once believed that standing firmly in his convictions made him morally unassailable. Years later, as a teacher guiding young minds, he begins to recognize how influence operates subtly, often invisibly, and not always ethically.

The narrative unfolds through charged classroom moments, intimate memories, and the lingering aftermath of political life. Daniel’s past as an activist resurfaces when a single interaction threatens to expose what he has worked to compartmentalize. As scrutiny intensifies, he is forced to confront whether his actions were driven by justice or by a belief that his intentions placed him beyond question.

Entitlement does not offer clear answers. Instead, it presents the reader with layered characters navigating loyalty, ambition, love, and regret. The novel explores how language can empower or manipulate, how authority reshapes identity, and how easily good intentions become self-serving narratives.

This is a story about accountability in a world that often rewards certainty over reflection. Thoughtful, unsettling, and emotionally precise, Entitlement invites readers to examine not only the choices of its characters but their own relationship with power, belief, and responsibility.

Why Read It

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This book is for readers who want context, not commentary.

Entitlement is for readers who want more than surface-level storytelling. This novel speaks to those interested in psychology, ethics, power dynamics, and the consequences of belief. It explores how influence shapes identity, how certainty can blind even the well-intentioned, and how the past resurfaces when left unresolved.

In an era defined by polarization and moral absolutism, Entitlement offers a thoughtful examination of what happens when conviction replaces reflection. It challenges readers to consider how authority operates quietly, how language influences perception, and how easily justification becomes entitlement.

This is a book for readers who appreciate complexity, emotional restraint, and narratives that do not resolve neatly. If you value stories that provoke thought, invite introspection, and stay with you after you finish reading, Entitlement belongs on your shelf.