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Tom Epperson
Author
Once to Die (The Other Side of Dead Book 1)
He imagined his death would be the end, but there is no rest in the afterlife… Perry is homeless, and desperate to get off the streets, after losing his best friend Bobby to gang violence. When Perry witnesses a drug deal, he finds his own life in peril. Father John is exhausted. Burned out after fifteen years of ministry, he seeks a sign that he is on the right path. At the driest point of his spiritual life, a beautiful woman is tempting him. He knows he is a soul in danger. When a murder victim shows up begging for help, he fears all hell is breaking loose. A young man wanders an existential maze between heaven and hell, good and evil. He darts between worlds involuntarily, terrifying a Catholic priest, a college professor, and a world-famous musician. Evil wants him, and time is running out. Mind-bending events erupt to threaten the spiritual foundations of both the living and the dead. Life, sanity, and salvation hang in the balance. With the veil between here and there in tatters, the very fabric of the universe seems to be unraveling.
Reviews
“God wasn’t coming,” a character thinks after speaking a prayer, one of his first, at the darkest moment of this sweeping novel of faith, suffering, and street-life. As the blows rain down, Perry, an unhoused but entrepreneurial and community-minded young man realizes “This wasn’t going to be over till it was all the way over.” But Epperson—and God—have a surprise coming for Perry, who’s been made a target for what he accidently knows about a Boston drug lord’s business. Epperson’s fiction debut walks the line between life and death as Perry, in the warm mist of what comes next, gets a surprising chance to connect to the host of troubled characters populating this ambitious novel—and maybe find salvation.

God is coming, of course, just in mysterious ways. The story unfolds with Dickensian sweep, digging into the lives of Perry and his father, who live in an alley; the criminals after them; the penthouse executive who quite literally looks down on lives like these; the cops and district attorneys who can’t, for varied reasons, take meaningful action. The most convincingly dramatized lives here are the nun who helps a young woman find protection and support after a man close to the family rapes and impregnates her, and the demoralized priest facing the truth that the members of his congregation “are starving for faith.”

Perry laces through these lives in surprising ways, especially in the novel’s second half, which adds cosmic mystery to the realism of the first. The dialogue of street criminals meanwhile, is unconvincing, but the grind and difficulty of their tasks rings true. Epperson’s portrayal of a businessman who detests the unhoused and funds abortion groups has a satiric edge that contrasts with the heroism and decency of the restaurant and newsstand owners who aid Perry. Christian readers seeking redemptive fiction with compassion and a street edge will find much inspiration here.

Takeaway: This inspirational but gritty Catholic novel of street life and redemption is powered by compassion.

Great for fans of: Joseph F. Girzone’s The Homeless Bishop, Maya Sinha’s The City Mother.

Production grades
Cover: B+
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: B+
Marketing copy: A

Formats
Kindle Edition Digital Ebook Purchas Details
  • B0BNLTM9JS
  • pages
  • $
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