REVIEW..A SEASON WITHOUT RAIN by JOE SCHWARTZ

Season

 

SYNOPSIS:

 

Jacob Miller is angry with himself, the world, and God. Life seems so unfair, so cruel, that he can’t imagine why anyone even tries. After having a nervous breakdown, selling his business, filing for bankruptcy, having a baby, and finding out he owes over twenty grand in taxes, he is hardly happy to be alive.

 

In the span of a year, Jacob will discover three very important things about life.

Things can always be worse.

There really is a God. And if you wait long enough anything can change.

 

A Season Without Rain explores that gray area between poverty and middle class life, the struggling underclass for whom there are no advocates. A powerful story told in a modern, everyday voice that will entrench readers in Jacob Miller’s black world of anger, hate, resentment, lies, and violence.

 

A Season Without Rain is Joe Schwartz’s first novel. His previous short story collections Joe’s Black T-Shirt, The Games Men Play, and The Veiled Prophet of St. Louis have been acclaimed vulgar as Bukowski and visceral as Carver. Joe lives and works in St. Louis happily writing stories exclusively about the Gateway City.

REVIEW

The gritty and despicable side of life can bring you to your knees, but it can always get worse! 

Lured in by the writing style, I quickly became immersed in this story.  I love the rawness of the characters and the realness of each situation.  Jacob is just your average guy next door where I come from, and his problems are a dime a dozen around here. What separates this novel is the author’s ability to remove the filter that most stories have. It was a refreshing change for me!

I loved it!


AUTHOR INFORMATION & LINKS

season author

 

A St. Louis native, I write exclusively about the Gateway City. I prefer the style of fiction deemed transgressive fiction. That is my stories protagonists generally find a solution to their problems through either illicit or illegal means. I personally prefer stories told through a criminal’s point-of-view. It is never the crime that fascinates me so much as the motivation to do it and the terrible, almost predictable outcomes to such actions. Just as I have an expectation of writing to be read I believe that it is as important, if not more so, that you as a reader should have the expectation of being entertained as you read. Anything less is such a disappointment.
Life is short. Stories are forever. -Joe

AUTHOR LINKS

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