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Taking Risks
Posted by Literary-Titan
John B. Peoples follows a drifting man who, after splitting a lottery ticket with his boss, wins $40 million, only for his boss to disappear with all the winnings, sending him on a worldwide chase to reclaim his share. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?
The inspiration for the story in John B. Peoples came from what might be considered an unusual place, given the book’s plot. The inspiration arose from how my mother-in-law faced her losses bravely and without compromise. In her case, a beautiful woman in her early 90s, she was stricken with cancer of the mouth. As the cancer grew, it took away her beauty and mobility. Yet she remained positive, telling me once that she was happy as long as she woke up and could wiggle her toes. That led me to want to write about how people deal with loss. Then, a “bolt of lightning” hit me and I thought about how one would feel if they won the lottery, but someone tried to take that away. A reader of John B. Peoples will see other types of loss included/covered throughout the book.
As John’s options narrow, he turns to increasingly extreme measures, including organized crime. How did you approach that moral progression?
In John’s past, even before thinking his lottery winnings had been taken, he had suffered a knee injury that made him lose out on continuing his dream of playing college football. After that he failed in marriage and lost custody of his daughter. Then, as we find him at the start of the book, he is facing the challenges of barely getting along as a divorced father with an unrewarding job and child support obligations in Los Angeles where he lives in a one-room converted garage. Finally, as he seeks to recover his share of the lottery jackpot, he becomes more and more frustrated with the limits of the justice system and the other impediments he encounters. That frustration leads John to be willing to take more and more aggressive and risky steps to obtain the justice and fairness which he feels life has too often denied him.
The novel explores the frustration of living in a society where success is unequally distributed. How consciously did you engage with that theme?
This was very conscious, at least regarding how that frustration served to motivate John. Of course, who among us, as blessed and fortunate as they might be, does not feel or see how success can be a matter of birth or luck or kissing up or devious behavior or any “unfair” circumstances?! However, when writing John B. Peoples, I did not consciously think about people and society in general, but rather about John’s character and why he might act the way he acts.
What does the novel suggest about access to justice in the modern world?
For most, the justice system, even if one can afford or be able to access it (for example through a contingency fee agreement rather than through exorbitant hourly fees), is a confusing and frustrating maze. It may be one’s first or only experience with lawyers and judges. For example, how should one choose a lawyer? What kind of lawyer would serve me best? What is a typical fee arrangement? Can the justice system get me what I want or is the system of laws and remedies limited? John B. Peoples explores all of that. And it could be suggested that it is not worth even trying to access the justice system, or that self-help may be a better or the only solution to a problem.
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During his quest, John suffers a debilitating spine injury and struggles to heal physically and emotionally. Yet he continues pursuing White from Los Angeles to Paris to Marseille. Along the way, he tries navigating the legal system, meets a woman he believes he can only dream about, and eventually engages the help of organized crime. Ultimately, he is faced with the question of how far he is willing to go to retrieve and protect what is his.
John B. Peoples is more than the study of a character out to correct an injustice. It takes us on a powerful journey while examining loss, personal growth, and the everyday challenges of life in America today.
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, crime thrillers, Disability Fiction, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, John B. Peoples, kindle, kobo, literary fiction, literature, Michael Cowan, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, writer, writing
John B. Peoples
Posted by Literary Titan

John Peoples’ life has unraveled. He is divorced, stuck in a converted garage, and drifting without any real sense of purpose. Then fortune appears to intervene. He and his boss share a lottery ticket and win a staggering $40 million jackpot. For a brief moment, John believes everything is about to change. Instead, his boss disappears, seemingly intent on claiming the winnings alone. John gives chase, only to suffer a catastrophic spinal injury. Even that does not break him. He presses on through a globe-spanning pursuit, with his share of the money always just beyond reach.
John B. Peoples, by Michael Cowan, is a work of contemporary fiction built around a familiar yet compelling figure. John may call to mind the biblical Job, a man battered by forces that seem arbitrary, relentless, and impossible to make sense of. Trial follows trial. Misfortune arrives without warning. Any promise of stability vanishes almost as soon as it appears.
John is portrayed as an essentially decent man. He has flaws, certainly, but nothing that justifies the endless chain of setbacks that defines his life. He seems marked by misfortune, as though he has been fated to struggle while others move easily toward comfort and success. Yet he refuses to surrender. He is determined to recover what is his, and his vanished half of the lottery winnings becomes more than money. It becomes justice. It becomes dignity. It becomes the embodiment of everything he has been denied.
In many ways, John stands in for the person who grows up in a prosperous society and still never quite manages to get ahead. Cowan taps into that quiet resentment, that weary longing produced by watching others enjoy wealth, security, and privilege while one’s own life is shaped by random, punishing turns. When the possibility of a better life hangs so close, so visible, so maddeningly attainable, how far would someone go to seize it? That is the question at the heart of the novel. Cowan answers it through a character study that feels persuasive, human, and deeply affecting.
Pages: 304 | ASIN : B0D8DS2BW1
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Posted in Five Stars
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, crime thriller, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, John B. Peoples, kindle, kobo, legal thriller, literature, Michael Cowan, mystery, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, thriller, writer, writing





