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East Texas Flavor

J. Andrew Rice Author Interview

What Is Unseen is a tender, character-driven story set in East Texas, where three lives intertwined by loss and moral struggle seek redemption and meaning amid faith, pain, and unseen grace. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?

I live in East Texas. I have seen these stories manifested in the lives of people I know. The culture, in its own unique way, has common threads with other human joys and struggles throughout time. I wanted people to hear these stories in a compelling and literary fashion with a uniquely East Texas flavor. I also want to share these stories with my grandchildren and generations to come.

What were some driving ideals behind your character’s development?

Hope, faith, love, fortitude, courage, justice, and kindness.

What were some themes that were important for you to explore in this book?

I was primarily interested in showing how the East Texas heroes in this story used the driving ideals mentioned above to combat the following evils:
Envy
Greed
Racism
Corruption
Pride
Laziness

What is the next book that you are working on, and when will it be available?

An anthology of short stories, Tales from the Texas Timberlands, Volume 2.

It should be available by May 2026.

Author Links: GoodReads | Facebook | Website | Amazon

Kyle Luman is on the abyss of deep despair. After the loss of his wife, he sees no point to his life other than being the obligatory father to his two children.

Living with his family in Connecticut had been his life. Without her, he has no hope. His mother invites him and the children to live with her in Three Oaks, Texas, his hometown. In Three Oaks, he finds renewed friendships, spiritual awakening and love. But he, his friends and his newfound love are also battered by the unseen evils of self-centeredness, envy, jealousy, greed, racism, power-grabbing and political corruption.

Kyle discovers an unseen hope and with his friends leads the battle to overcome the evil pervading their community.

What Is Unseen

J. Andrew Rice’s What Is Unseen weaves together the stories of people wrestling with grief, faith, morality, and redemption in small-town Texas. The novel follows several characters, Kyle Luman, a grieving widower; Phylicia Jones, a civil rights attorney returning home after loss; and Ben Mueller, a hardworking man dealing with betrayal and corruption. Their paths cross in a world where hope and pain walk hand in hand, and where unseen forces, faith, conscience, and community, shape every life. The story unfolds gently, yet it builds momentum through layered perspectives and a shared struggle for meaning. Rice uses East Texas not just as a backdrop but as a living presence, a place heavy with history, heat, and hidden grace.

Reading this book hit me harder than I expected. The writing has an easy rhythm, simple but deep, like someone telling you their story over coffee on a quiet porch. Rice doesn’t rush his characters or their pain, and that patience made me care about them. Kyle’s loss felt real, almost raw, and his slow climb out of grief was both painful and uplifting. The dialogue felt like a homegrown conversation, unpretentious and familiar. At times, though, the story takes its time, and some descriptions felt more like journal entries than storytelling. Still, there’s beauty in the way Rice captures human resilience. The message about hope, faith, and the unseen hand that steadies us is one that sticks with you.

I’ll admit, I didn’t expect to feel so attached to these people. Rice brings out a kind of emotional honesty that sneaks up on you. The novel reminded me that good and bad often live side by side, and sometimes the right thing is murky, not shining. The characters are flawed, sometimes unlikeable, but always relatable. There’s something tender about that. The way grief meets faith, how bitterness bends toward forgiveness, it all feels earned, not forced. The story doesn’t preach, but it does nudge you toward reflection. It made me think about what I hold onto and what I let go of.

I’d recommend What Is Unseen to anyone who likes stories about redemption, faith, or small-town life with real heart. It’s perfect for readers who enjoy character-driven fiction and don’t mind a slow burn. This isn’t a thriller or a love story, it’s a quiet journey through brokenness toward light. For those who’ve lost something or someone and are still figuring out what comes next, this book will feel like a friend.

Pages: 364 | ASIN: B0F861FZ9Z

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