Grief can do terrible things to us. It can hold us still in time and skew our perspective. That is the case with William Maldonado, who grieves the loss of his father as a child to war; the loss of his mother as a young adult to an illness; the loss of an opportunity to pursue a doctoral degree, and the loss of his professional reputation to an accusation of committing insurance fraud. Subterranean sorrow leads Maldonado to make wrong-minded decisions that eventually lead him to prison and then to a half-way-house. One day, as he tries to understand his grief, he blames the world, and, in particular, a former business partner. Full of rage, he returns to the city where he experienced his deepest wounds. Upon his return, he discovers that his former business partner, now a Pentecostal minister, emerged unscathed from the insurance fraud scandal that sent him fleeing for a decade. That discovery thrusts Maldonado on a path of revenge and into the roiling world of church politics, where he joins a secession group that wants to fire his former partner. It takes the whims of fate and new friendships for Maldonado to experience clarity of purpose. Luis Perez deploys a novelist's lucidity and a pastor's heart in telling Maldonado's story. This itinerary of redemption, not thedeus ex machinaof wishful thinking, but the grittier, twisted tangle of life in a broken world and a flawed church, takes us into--and through--the jumble of our own hearts. --Bruce Chilton, author ofChristianity: the Basics Dickens could be jumping for joy. Perez introduces a potpourri of singular characters bumping up against each other in religion, philosophy, language, culture, motive, and behavior. Out of this human brew arises a strong story of redemption. --Albert Crum, M.D., author ofThe 10-Step Method of Stress Relief: Decoding the Meaning and Significance of Stress; President of The ProImmune Company, LLC Catharsisfollows the external and internal dialogue of many people--seekers, clĂ,