The Water Fall
by
Book Details
About the Book
John Benumeane, a budding solar engineer who’s just moved to Southern California, learns the hard way how cruel and unrelenting Mother Nature can be. It’s the winter of 2004; an El Niño is back with a vengeance. A horrific weather-related accident—a car collision with a two-hundred-year-old eucalyptus tree—lands John in the hospital, where he’ll spend the next two years in a coma, locked in a struggle between life and death. He awakens in a different world than the one he left. Although he suffers no physical impairment from the terrible accident, he finds he has a supernatural power that slowly takes control of his life. His own impetuous behavior is rivaled only by that of his wife—who in her own bid to survive the lonely years without him, has reinvented herself in ways that defy description. The challenge for the two young lovers is to find common ground that will lead them back to the life they once knew. But that ground is elusive and unstable, prompting John’s wife to turn to John’s old college friend for help—and when she does, the plot thickens. By then a drought has gripped the Lower Forty-Eight and the real estate market is hyperventilating from reckless malfeasance, with John’s wife in the center of it all. The people she works for want to own John and the very special gift he’s come to possess, but she has other ideas. Her story-within-a-story has twists and turns that will keep you guessing till the very end.
About the Author
If you ever thought of writing a novel than you owe it to yourself to read the newest release by John Goscinski called “The Water Fall.” He may be just like you, an accomplished author of numerous peer review publications in his chosen field of expertise when one day he decides to step out of his comfort zone and take a shot at creative writing. As the saying goes, everyone has one book in them, but for John this will be his second experiment following the release of “The Street Gamble,” in 2007— this time he has the chemistry just right. His newest effort tells a clever, suspenseful story centered on our most precious commodity, water and to what lengths depraved and devious minded individuals will go to control it. The story could take place at any time in our future but our author chose the 2004-2007 timeframe characterized by unprecedented drought conditions in the U.S. and what we now know was a self inflicted real estate bubble that eventually created a long and protracted financial crisis. Our author has a humorous way with words making the story all the more enjoyable especially when he describes some of the shenanigans in Washington and on Wall Street which brought the house down. But the story offers much more. Intertwined in “The Water Fall” is life’s most perplexing question— where do we go from here and while we’re here why should we even care to do the best for ourselves and our fellow man?