Lone Star Lit Pop-Up Blog-Hop: Rip the Sky by Mark Packard

RIP THE SKY

by

Mark Packard

Speculative Fiction / Fantasy / Science Fiction

Publisher: Bluestreak Publishing

Page Count: 317 pages

Publication Date: August 21, 2023

SCROLL DOWN FOR GIVEAWAY!

After a shocking courtroom tragedy, a disturbed Vietnam veteran and the vindictive judge who sent him to prison become an unlikely pair of time travelers in a chaotic multiverse. The fallen angel who rescues them wants to guide them to a radiant new life. But first they must return to the scene of a ghastly crime.

Billy Worster was a naïve teenager ill-prepared for the gruesome realities of war. The sole survivor of a deadly massacre in a Vietnamese jungle, he avoided certain death only because he ran away when the shooting started. Riddled with guilt, he comes home to a dusty Texas farm with post-traumatic stress disorder and the crazy notion that he can fly in and out of parallel worlds.

As Billy struggles with addiction and questions his sanity, he is arrested on a drug charge and ends up in the courtroom of Judge Madeline Johnston, a bitter old judge tormented by a dark secret surrounding her father’s death. She callously tosses Billy into prison, but when a greedy executor files a lawsuit to steal his inherited land, Billy is hauled back to her courtroom in chains, where a stunning twist of fate launches them into the sky on an odyssey of discovery and healing. Spanning forty years from the jungles of Vietnam through infinite, parallel worlds, Rip the Sky examines how the power of forgiveness can lead us toward a better life, no matter how many worlds we may live in.

Purchase on Amazon!

5 stars!

A deeply evocative story of choices made and unforgiven acts.

Rip the Sky by Mark Packard, a recently released work of speculative fiction, tells the life story of Billy Don Worster, a simple boy from a hardscrabble farm in the Texas Panhandle. Addressing tough subjects such as battlefield experiences, PTSD, alcoholism, and drug addiction, Billy’s story is, at once, emotional, fantastical, and riveting.

The story is complex, as are the emotions drawn as Billy’s struggles unfold. His generation of veterans had a very different service experience than those of previous wars or that came after for several reasons: the absence of a deeply patriotic cause to enlist and serve, divided leadership, lack of support for the war by the general public, at least as depicted by the media, are a few. They were often reviled upon their return, not receiving the welcome home recognition and appreciation. Nor was the recognition and treatment for PTSD very advanced. Billy self-medicates with booze and weed rather than prescription drugs under his doctor’s care. His fight with addiction will be life-long and is a vivid and visceral storyline. His 30-day coin presentation just about gutted me.

Billy’s war experiences and subsequent hallucinations and nightmares were frighteningly real; the action and descriptions of the settings were easy to visualize to the point of feeling like I was there. His life is tragically altered forever by what he went through and how he reacted, never forgiving himself for what he perceived as his failures. Billy’s experiences also lead to his ability to leave his body and fly to doors in the sky, opening to other worlds or versions of his life had he made different choices. The truth of this ability to fly is left ambiguous. Is it a manifestation of his psychological problems or a tumor? Or is it a special gift or curse? However, since he shares the ability with Judge Madeline Johnston, I am leaning toward it being an actual gift. Common threads link him and the judge: how they reacted to the adversity in their lives, choices made, paths taken or avoided, and the capacity to forgive.

The story covers a lifetime and a full spectrum of human interactions: the horror of war; the goodness of people such as Butch Crowley and Rachel Wheeler; their capacity for meanness as shown by Judge Johnston’s courtroom management, demeanor, and judgments; and greed as depicted by Delbert Reynold’s and Stewart Thompson’s despicable actions. It is a story readers won’t soon forget.

I recommend RIP THE SKY to readers of speculative fiction who enjoy stories with science fiction and fantasy elements.

Mark Packard spent the last 38 years as a trial attorney and is now retired from the courtroom and working as a mediator. In a life before lawyering he was a journalist and regrets waiting far too long before returning to his roots to write his first novel, Rip the Sky. Though he knows he should have jumped off the merry-go-round years ago, he hopes to hang around long enough to craft a few more tales. Connect with the author:

Website AmazonGoodreads LinkedInFacebookBookBub

——————————————————————————

GIVEAWAY! GIVEAWAY! GIVEAWAY!

ONE WINNER

Signed hard copy of Rip the Sky + $50 Amazon gift card

(US only; ends midnight, CST, 10/13/23)

a Rafflecopter giveaway

CLICK TO VISIT

THE LONE STAR LITERARY LIFE TOUR PAGE

FOR PARTICIPATING BLOGS, ADDED AS THEY POP UP.

blog services provided by

2 Comments

Filed under Book Reviews, Fantasy, Fiction, Sci-Fi, Speculative Fiction

2 responses to “Lone Star Lit Pop-Up Blog-Hop: Rip the Sky by Mark Packard

  1. Wow! What a detailed review and deeper perspective into the social climate that Billy was experiencing as a Vietnam vet. Thanks for sharing your recommendation. sounds like an excellent story.

  2. Mark Packard

    Thanks so much for taking the time to read and review my book. I’m so happy that you enjoyed it!

Leave a comment