Hailed by ZZ Packer as "a master of tone, detail, and imagery", Andrew Siegrist's debut collection We Imagined it was Rain is a lovesong to Tennessee. These loosely connected stories are imbued with tenderness, seriousness, and an understanding of the human spirit. A young man moves to the the mountains and builds an heirloom chest in the wake of his son's death; a town official must make the decision to execute a circus elephant, two siblings help their father commit suicide; a preacher picks up the pieces of his ruined church, and his marriage, after a devasting flood; locals share stories of the girl with eyelashes so long she can braid them; a lonely man uses rain to paint. A striking and thoughtful debut, Siegrist demonstrates careful attention to the smallest moments, to the rain on a window pane. We Imagined it was Rain is the winner of our 2020 C. Michael Curtis Short Story Book Prize.
Andrew Siegrist is a graduate of the Creative Writing Workshop at the University of New Orleans. His debut collection of stories, We Imagined It Was Rain, was awarded the C. Michael Curtis Short Story Book Prize and published by Hub City Press in 2021. His work has appeared in the Mississippi Review, Arts & Letters, Greensboro Review, Pembroke Magazine, South Carolina Review, Bat City Review, Baltimore Review, and elsewhere. He lives with his wife and two daughters in Nashville, Tennessee.
We Imagined It Was Rain is a beautifully written collection of stories that continually mines the very real lives of its characters while it simultaneously explores the mystery and the mysteriousness that life offers all of us if we’re paying attention. A great debut for Andrew Siegrist. I highly recommend the book for anyone who loves short stories.
I enjoyed this more than I thought I would. It's got an elegiac bent--every story is being told after the fact of a loss or a death or a personal tragedy. But it's almost whimsical in the details, or at least idiosyncratic. And I'm jealous of how comfortable the author is with storytelling in the Southern idiom. As a lifelong southerner, I have some connection to the land but I'm too filled with cynicism about it to feel comfortable telling stories that aren't more damning. These stories aren't damning, but they are realistic about human relationships.
Siegrist writes some of the most gorgeous prose I've ever encountered. This book is a love letter to his home state of Tennessee. A must have addition to any reader of American Southern writing.