Blogs

Notes, Reflections, and Behind-the-Scenes Stories

Welcome to the blog—a place for readers to go beyond the page. Here you’ll find reflections on writing, story development, character relationships, historical inspiration, and the themes that shape Life of Rawley.

Some books invite you gently into their world. Others seize your attention from the opening scene and refuse to let go. Life of Rawley (The Professor) by James Garrett belongs firmly in the second category.

Setting can do many things in a novel. At its most basic, it tells us where the story happens. But in the best fiction, setting does far more than provide coordinates. It creates atmosphere. It shapes emotion. It deepens meaning. In Life of Rawley (The Professor), Gettysburg is not simply the place where events unfold. It is part of the novel’s identity.
What makes a relationship real? Is it shared history? Emotional recognition? Memory? Daily devotion? In Life of Rawley (The Professor), James Garrett builds a compelling novel around these questions and turns them into something both intimate and suspenseful.