Reader Score
86%
86% of readers
recommend this book
A medical crisis brings one man close to death--and to love, art, and beauty--in a profound and luminous novel by award-winning author Garth Greenwell.
A poet's life is turned inside out by a sudden, wrenching pain. The pain brings him to his knees, and eventually to the ICU. Confined to bed, plunged into the dysfunctional American healthcare system, he struggles to understand what is happening to his body, as someone who has lived for many years in his mind. This is a searching, sweeping novel set at the furthest edges of human experience, where the forces that give life value--art, memory, poetry, music, care--are thrown into sharp relief. Time expands and contracts. Sudden intimacies bloom. Small Rain surges beyond the hospital to encompass a radiant vision of human life: our shared vulnerability, the limits and possibilities of sympathy, the ideal of art and the fragile dream of America. Above all, this is a love story of the most unexpected kind.Advance Praise
"A priest of perception, Greenwell implicitly makes a moral claim about dwelling with details--a claim that reaches its apotheosis in Small Rain . . . This kind of looking not only consecrates the ordinary world, but makes a bridge between disparate ideas, bringing them to a level plane of existence . . . Literature is powerfully linked to life. The heart of the book beats in such resonances. Lush with literary references, the novel invites still more."