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Small Rain: A Novel Hardcover – September 3, 2024
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Winner of the PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction
Long-listed for the National Book Critics Circle Award for Fiction
Named a Best Book of the Year by The Washington Post, Financial Times, New Statesman, Vox, Elle, Publishers Weekly, and BookPage
A New Yorker Recommended Read of the Year
A New York Public Library, Los Angeles Public Library, and Chicago Public Library Best Book of the Year
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.
- Print length320 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherFarrar, Straus and Giroux
- Publication dateSeptember 3, 2024
- Dimensions5.7 x 1 x 8.55 inches
- ISBN-100374279543
- ISBN-13978-0374279547
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From the Publisher
Praise for Small Rain: A Novel by Garth Greenwell
Editorial Reviews
Review
“Reading [Small Rain,] you feel as though you were holding a single grain of rice in your hand which, upon examination under a microscope, reveals itself to be engraved with the history of the world . . . Greenwell’s protagonist is sustained by this determination to offer up work that will provide sustenance, and in giving us this vivid, generous novel, Greenwell himself has made just such an offering.”
―Lauren J Joseph, The Observer
“A quiet but forceful novel about the beauty of ‘pure life,’ and the wonder of paying attention to details.”
―Francesca Peacock, The Spectator
“Small Rain was one of the most profound reading experiences I’ve ever had . . . A novel about a man stuck alone in a hospital bed should be inert, but Small Rain is anything but, a reminder of the wonder available in our individual humanities should we take the time to look and listen.”
―John Warner, Chicago Tribune
“There are few authors who make me feel as alive and rooted in my body as he does . . . Greenwell’s writing also adeptly captures how it feels to think. His gloriously winding sentences, in which art becomes a ‘laboratory for thinking,’ are as thought-provoking as they are pleasurable.”
―Ruth Madievsky, Interview Magazine
“Propulsive . . . As [the narrator] tries to understand what is happening, he bonds with one caretaker over medieval music and recoils from another’s frighteningly incompetent care as we’re immersed in his dazzling mind.”
―Marion Winik, People
“Greenwell is a master sensualist on the page, drawing the reader into the physical experiences of the characters, whether it be a visual appreciation of a common sparrow’s beauty, the soaring emotion evoked by the sound of an opera singer’s voice, or even the burning pain of an IV needle shoved into a vein.”
―Samantha Dunn, The Orange County Register
”At its core, Small Rain is a novel about life and death and about the need for empathy in a fragile world. Heady stuff, but Greenwell presents it beautifully in this lyrical work.”
―Michael Magras, Bookpage (starred review)
“Small Rain is more than a medical chronicle. The writing regularly digresses into personal memories and meditations on art, always circling the theme of life’s inherent fragility. Poetry and music have long been the disciplines that have helped the narrator ’undull’ his senses to the miracle of being, and the novel’s tight focus elevates the emergency into a kind of poetic happening, marked by terror and grace.”
―Sam Sacks, The Wall Street Journal
“The ethos of Small Rain . . . is to set one’s head against the weather―to refuse the expedient and efficient, to insist that the only self-worth celebrating is one undone and remade, not pandered to in its narrow appetites . . . A welcome call to action―to pause and think about how art, almost alone, has the capacity to revise and renew.”
―Andrew van der Vlies, Times Literary Supplement
“An affecting portrait . . . The novel crafts a portrait, both tender and abject, of life lived in close proximity to death under medical care, with art (especially poetry and music) and human connection as vitally buoying.”
―Adam Eli, Cultured
“Small Rain manages―sort of incredibly, ecstatically, if you think about it―to be utterly unsentimental despite technically being an illness narrative. It is also very moving. It is not any kind of drama that makes the love story at the center of the book―because what do you do in your hospital bed except consider the love story at the center of your life―but tenderness.”
―Emily Temple, Literary Hub
“Small Rain is not a book about the hospital or the medical system, however; it unfurls internally, in the consciousness of a character, a consciousness aware of itself evolving, shaped by a terrible new pain and knowledge . . . This is the real setting of Greenwell’s fiction―not the hospital, the classroom, the night clubs in Sofia, but this space that exists within them, within ordinary life, a realm unlatched by those forked sentences, in which time is slowed, and a deep, receptive kind of contact with the other, with the self, is permitted to bloom.”
―Parul Sehgal, The New Yorker
“An exquisite addition to the literature of illness . . . Few writers at work today can think the body onto the page with as much complexity and reality as Greenwell does in this book.”
―Meghan O’Rourke, Yale Review
“Profound . . . A paean to some of life’s most meaningful pleasures . . . A daring, mysterious work that audaciously and successfully marries the physical and the metaphysical. As in all great novels, its philosophical insights are spliced with details that root the work in a specific time and place but do nothing to diminish its timelessness.”
―Charles Arrowsmith, The Washington Post
“Prodding and prismatic in the ways it reflects our collective values of love and art in new light, Small Rain is a triumph of genuine vulnerability, crafted by an author who has already delivered some of the most memorable characters in modern fiction.”
―Michael Welch, Chicago Review of Books
“Garth Greenwell is unafraid to depict plainly what often goes unspoken, and his third novel, Small Rain, makes glorious progress toward filling in Dickinson’s blank . . . These sections cast a spell over the reader even in the most clinical moments . . . Inspiring acts of kindness and moments of mundane bureaucracy are depicted with the same tender attention . . . Small Rain’s sentences transform the clinical narration of a hospital stay into the soothing murmur of a prayer, or the steady sound of rain.”
―Walt Hunter, The Atlantic
“An illuminating vision of human connection and the enduring power of art. Author Garth Greenwell’s lyrical prose and deep empathy shine through on every page, making Small Rain both an unforgettable story and a poignant meditation on what it means to live fully in the face of life’s greatest challenges.”
―Apple Books (Best of the Month)
“As we can expect from Greenwell, [Small Rain] is a complex and beautiful queer love story that tackles art, memory, and more.”
― Kayla Kumari Upadhyaya and Riese, Autostraddle
“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.”
―Rhoda Feng, Boston Globe
“In Garth Greenwell’s acutely observed and sensitively embodied newest, a poet lies in a hospital room, afflicted by the sudden onset of an excruciating pain. Amid IVs and paper cups of pills, a series of intimate relationships unfurl.”
―Keziah Weir, Vanity Fair
“Throughout Small Rain, Greenwell’s massing, vascular prose, arranged in paragraphs that span many pages, deftly forces the reader to slow down and concentrate. His sentences are parataxic and branching, as organic and surprising as a network of veins . . . Greenwell’s great gift: finding forms for the representation of thought, much as the Impressionist painters, more than a century ago, found new forms for the representation of light . . . The novel [has] blazing universality and grace.”
―Sarah Thankam Mathews, New York
“[A] great American novel . . . The best of Greenwell’s writing brings to mind an overflowing container, a surfeit of emotion and insight.”
―Hannah Gold, The Nation
“[A] novel about what it really means to be alive.”
―Shannon Carlin, TIME
“This propulsive novel is set in the ICU, where our narrator spends 11 days for an injury to his aorta that mystifies his doctors and terrifies his partner (they were set up by colleagues as the only two gay poets in Iowa City). As he tries to understand what is happening, he bonds with one caretaker over medieval music and recoils from another’s frighteningly incompetent care as we’re immersed in his dazzling mind.”
―People(Book of the Week)
“Art, Greenwell shows us, expands and humanizes us. How the mundane (a sparrow, a cup of coffee, an avocado-oil chip!) can be charged with meaning, ‘absolute bliss.’ Against a backdrop of anger and confusion―over masks and vaccines, police brutality and protests, the ‘terrible slow catastrophe’ of climate crisis―Small Rain asserts the astonishing beauty of life.”
―Jessica Olin, Oprah Daily
“There's an unshowy genius to Garth Greenwell's prose that feels genuinely peerless among contemporary American novelists . . . Small Rain is a classic, a dawn serenade, a little miracle of exigent joy. I'll be rereading it the rest of my life.”
―Kaveh Akbar, author of Martyr!
“The virtuosic first-person narration, devoid of dialogue, places the reader front and center in the narrator’s bracing account . . . serving as a palpable reminder to never take one’s health for granted, and it builds to a cathartic and unforgettable conclusion. It’s a luminous departure from Greenwell’s spare and erotic earlier work.”
―Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“Garth Greenwell is one of our best contemporary prose stylists (due in part, no doubt, to his previous life as a poet), and a new book from him is always a cause for celebration. This novel, in fact, concerns a poet, who suddenly, and with no explanation, finds himself in incredible pain. No doctors can find the source, which makes the book hum with urgency, but of course the real questions Greenwell tackles here are much more metaphysical, though no less urgent―all of the questions of life, love, time, mortality, consciousness made crystalline.”
―Emily Temple, Lit Hub (Most Anticipated Books of 2024)
“Greenwell―such a finely tuned, generous writer―transforms a savage illness into a meditation on a vital life.”
―Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
“I just didn’t put it down . . . Very romantic, incredibly moving.”
―Miranda July, author of All Fours
“A fierce, beautiful novel about loving, living, dying, caring and being cared for. Greenwell’s sentences crackle with contained energy.”
―Sarah Moss, author of Summerwater
“An exquisitely human novel which confronts death and meets it with poetry, art and love . . . An utter triumph of expression.”
―The Bookseller
“Small Rain is a marvel, one of America’s greatest writers working at the top of his game, moving into new territory with force and grace and wisdom and overwhelming beauty.”
―Phil Klay, author of Missionaries
“Greenwell writes tenderly about what it is to be subject to the crises of the body. Small Rain is a document of searching, an interrogation of love, care, and time, daring in its refusal to be abstract about the concrete facts of life and death.”
―Raven Leilani, author of Luster
“Greenwell writes with exquisite precision about pain and loss―but his novel is equally a meditation on joy, beauty, and above all, love. Small Rain is a triumph, one of the most deeply moving books I have read in a long time.”
―Katie Kitamura, author of Intimacies
“Small Rain is a marvelous novel: exceptionally vivid, real, and true. Garth Greenwell’s sensibility is rich and generous―the narrator's memories are haunting, and his experiences of both illness and love are deeply affecting. You are in the room with him. This is a true achievement, written with engaged humanity and a great command of style.”
―Colm Tóibín, author of The Magician
About the Author
Product details
- Publisher : Farrar, Straus and Giroux (September 3, 2024)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 320 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0374279543
- ISBN-13 : 978-0374279547
- Item Weight : 14.3 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.7 x 1 x 8.55 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #46,671 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #40 in LGBTQ+ Literary Fiction (Books)
- #1,825 in Literary Fiction (Books)
- #2,036 in American Literature (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
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Customers praise the book's pacing, with one review highlighting its poignant observations and another noting how it works with human emotions. The writing quality receives positive feedback, with one customer describing the prose as poetic.
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Customers appreciate the pacing of the book, with one review noting its beautiful moments and poignant observations, while another describes it as a rumination on angst.
"...In Garth’s hands, this medical diary becomes a rumination on angst, Art, regret, love, life, rage, hurt and transcendence...." Read more
"...At its best, Small Rain is beautifully poetic and filled with poignant observations from a man facing a serious medical condition that may well end..." Read more
"...This is a superb work of art." Read more
"...A fierce intellect driving forward. Paired with a tender compassionate heart, not so sure about embracing the full momentum without complicating it..." Read more
Customers appreciate the writing style of the book, with one customer noting its poetic prose.
"...An exceptional writer, who, with this new direction of work, is signaling us that greater works are yet to come." Read more
"...So while I enjoyed moments of this book for its poetic like prose, overall, I didn't love it." Read more
"...The feeling is always pleasant, but the author gets it right...." Read more
"Absorbing, well written. I could not put it down. Life in America through one man’s stay in a hospital for an undetermined ailment." Read more
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Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on February 16, 2025Garth Greenwell is the contemporary writer who is, for me, head and shoulders above everyone else. SMALL RAIN should be a bore: It’s about a guy’s stay in a hospital during a serious health scare and the daily minutiae of his treatment. In Garth’s hands, this medical diary becomes a rumination on angst, Art, regret, love, life, rage, hurt and transcendence. Long paragraphs without breaks should be unreadable in the Age of Digital ADD; and yet Garth turns run-on sentences into “lieder,” soaring music you can’t stop experiencing. An exceptional writer, who, with this new direction of work, is signaling us that greater works are yet to come.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 4, 2025Small Rain is, in ways, one of the most relatable books I have read in quite some time. As someone who spent some time in the hospital waiting for answers to numerous terrifying questions, I felt the worry and the strain of wondering what was going on. I also really related to the rambling mind: Small Rain is written in long paragraphs and chapters. Typically, I find myself a little intimidated by these things, as I love reading short chapters for extended periods of time before finally calling it a night. Here, it was “okay… one more paragraph.” But there is a purpose to it. These paragraphs and chapters establish our narrator’s state of mind. There is a bit of a meandering that happens in the mind when faced with a situation like this. You worry about what is happening, you dread being alone in this sterile room, and add the terror of COVID to it all, it really clicks and becomes truly immersive. Small Rain has a love story at its heart, too, but not your typical romance — this is a love that is long and lasting; the fireworks may have faded, but that feeling of comfort and stability is so very much here. I really enjoyed this book; like nothing else I have read recently, but it shows me that I can find a lot of joy in going outside my genres of preference.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 6, 2024There's a moment late in this book where the unnamed narrator, who has been in the hospital for a few weeks, is eating potato chips in complete ecstasy. He spends well over a page describing his joy in munching on these chips. He is well aware that they exist nowhere in nature, that they are a complete man-made creation "perfectly tuned to our pleasure," yet he enjoys them nonetheless.
It's a gorgeous tangent and one of the high points of this book.
At its best, Small Rain is beautifully poetic and filled with poignant observations from a man facing a serious medical condition that may well end his life early. Unfortunately, for me, those moments, are too few and far between. After 300 pages there is no resolution to his story. Will he survive? If so, how will his life be changed after this? I'd've liked some closure but author Garth Greenwell offers nothing of the sort. So while I enjoyed moments of this book for its poetic like prose, overall, I didn't love it.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 13, 2025"Small Rain" by Garth Greenwell starts in the claustrophobic confines of an American emergency room during the pandemic's peak. I, for one, am thankful for having never experienced that firsthand. After the ER, we ended up in a hospital room, explained by the dizzying stream of consciousness accented by page-long paragraphs.
We meander from the nameless narrator's abusive upbringing and difficult early adulthood, the kinds of things that one ponders when considering one's mortality. It all adds up to a dizzying experience when we do not precisely know what to feel. If discussing your health led to concerns about your mortality, you may relate to many of the narrator's thoughts. He has no name, and his loved ones only have initials.
The articles describe the book as an indictment of our healthcare system, but the writer does not blame the employees. The bare-bones budget does not engender a fault-free atmosphere. The uncertainty allows the patient to think about the pride of homeownership and his understanding of poetry. The mind goes here when the doctors try to solve multiple mysteries simultaneously.
The process seems like a dream, how we envision one's life passing before one's eyes. What memories did your mind catalog, and which would be necessary when you start thinking about "the end"? Even when you face the possibility of going home, patients feel like they are institutionalized and fear the next steps. The feeling is always pleasant, but the author gets it right.
I would marvel at horror movies that did not seem like much as I watched them but made me nervous walking out into the regular world. "Small Rain" works like that. The author may appear to be rambling, but the story stays with you when you think about life. I was on the journey with him.
- Reviewed in the United States on April 6, 2025Absorbing, well written. I could not put it down. Life in America through one man’s stay in a hospital for an undetermined ailment.
- Reviewed in the United States on October 9, 2024This is a great telling of a life and death experience and the accompanying journey through the American health care system at the depth of the COVID pandemic. For that alone this book will be read for decades. How did they put up with such a primitive uncaring health care system, people will ask. Yet the great heartbeat of this novel is humanity in its inexorable struggle with life and love and sickness and death. The luminous, surprising end brought a lump into my throat and tears to my eyes. This is a superb work of art.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 3, 2024I am a retired nurse and since I am 87 years old, I was taught to always look at your patient as a full human being and not just a diagnosis. I appreciated his insights, however I am not a fan of poetry, I did not know the authors other work and frankly have not finished the book. Frankly, in todays medical world I think he is fortunate that his very serious aortic tear was discovered and treatment started as soon as it was so I consider him a very lucky man.
Top reviews from other countries
- Vaibhav SunderReviewed in India on October 28, 2024
4.0 out of 5 stars Naked what>
I guess in a typical "brown hash" city, you cee aay en - can imagine people being excited around you when you read something outside ordinary, not my family I speak of. Excited, failed and running by the airport, the exhileration with which marriages broke before and after the epidemic on the pretext of globalisation are aplenty - Read that army doctor from India - one fore pleasure, paperback if you like the idea of martyrology of ideals - especially North ((blot)) (((biotech))). Why do people think classical music, Russian and Espaniola are alight? French will always systemically differ (you cannot even cross Poland to Bulgaria since a long time). This is the farthest personal Left of States I read, it begins from Chomsky and Tool (band) in college. It ends with Moonlight (movie on Netflix) and Hanna Yanagihara. Hint - I ain't a poser but there is a cool mountain called Shasta der. And I do not defend any terrorising nation. Just deal with the Tibetan cave man underground and be real!
- DOUGLASReviewed in Canada on January 5, 2025
3.0 out of 5 stars MEH...
Pretentious and verbose.
- L. M.DReviewed in the United Kingdom on November 13, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars Beautiful book
Beautifully written. Really enjoyed this book. There were parts I re-read because they were such relevant thoughts on life and how we perceive and experience it. I recommend the book wholeheartedly.
- Mr C J BaskervilleReviewed in Australia on October 4, 2024
4.0 out of 5 stars sensitive writing
Medical insurance pays for an extended visit to hospital. The author reflects on the items which enrich his life. They are not overdone. The sensitive writing is impressive.
- UjjawalReviewed in India on October 28, 2024
2.0 out of 5 stars Not impressed
It might sound harsh, but I could not understand why this book was written. It failed to evoke any emotions in me and felt simply mundane. Even everyday mundane can interesting, but this did not even feel that.