Jason
Stover is a high school physics teacher living with his wife Kristina and
daughter Nikki in Lake Royale, North Carolina. They have a good life. Jason is
even becoming interested in his wife’s faith, and has been attending a Bible
study with several friends from church.
Then
comes the day he walking in his yard, and the air cracks and sizzles. Jason
wakes up a day later, still in the yard, and goes looking for his family. But
they’ve vanished. So have most of the other members of their Bible study. So
have a lot of people.
Jason
does find some of his friends, and together they begin to try to understand
what’s happened. People all over the world are reported missing. Some are
saying the vanishings suggest the rapture in the Bible. Jason and his friend
begin to map it out. It looks like it might be that, but there are still
unknowns.
Law
and order begin to break down. A second physical disruption happens. And Jason
begins to realize the planet is losing power, and that food no longer had the
nutritional value it did before. Earth is dying, and the people left are dying
with it.
This
is the story of Rapture’s
Rain by Chris Pennington.
I
usually don’t read apocalyptic literature. I never read any of the Left Behind series by Jerry Jenkins and
Tim LaHaye. But I read Rapture’s Rain,
and I kept reading through workouts on the elliptical and treadmill at the gym,
while waiting for my computer to power up, and at night before I went to bed. I
read it almost straight through. It’s a riveting story.
But
more than that, it is also (surprisingly) realistic. Instead of describing the “macro”
viewpoint of what’s happening in the world, Pennington focuses on the up close
and personal, the “micro” view of what happens to ordinary people caught up in
extraordinary circumstances. And questions of faith – and what happens to faith
– abound.
Thoroughly
engaging, Rapture’s Rain is also,
simply a good story.
Photograph by George Hodan via Public
Domain Pictures. Used with permission.
I'm not into apocalyptic lit either Glynn. Like you (and maybe only us two) I have NEVER read any of the Left Behind books. Have absolutely no plans to. But you make this book sound interesting to consider.
ReplyDeleteThis does sound good.
ReplyDeleteDitto on Left Behind. I thought I was alone on that one ... so many people I knew loved those books, but I had no interest.
No "Left Behind" reading here either. This one does sound tempting though.
ReplyDelete