The Red Road

A Novel

Fiction - Realistic
356 Pages
Reviewed on 08/24/2015
Buy on Amazon

This author participates in the Readers' Favorite Free Book Program, which is open to all readers and is completely free. The author will provide you with a free copy of their book in exchange for an honest review. You and the author will discuss what sites you will post your review to and what kind of copy of the book you would like to receive (eBook, PDF, Word, paperback, etc.). To begin, click the purple email icon to send this author a private email.

This author participates in the Readers' Favorite Book Donation Program, which was created to help nonprofit and charitable organizations (schools, libraries, convalescent homes, soldier donation programs, etc.) by providing them with free books and to help authors garner more exposure for their work. This author is willing to donate free copies of their book in exchange for reviews (if circumstances allow) and the knowledge that their book is being read and enjoyed. To begin, click the purple email icon to send this author a private email. Be sure to tell the author who you are, what organization you are with, how many books you need, how they will be used, and the number of reviews, if any, you would be able to provide.

Author Biography

Jenni Wiltz is an award-winning writer who works in multiple genres, including literary fiction, historical fiction, thrillers, and romantic suspense. Her short stories have appeared in The Portland Review, the Sacramento News & Review, Gargoyle, and several small-press anthologies. In 2011, she won the RWA Kiss of Death Chapter's prestigious Daphne du Maurier Award for Category Romantic Suspense.

She holds an MA in Creative Writing from California State University, Sacramento, where she won three Bazzanella Literary Awards in fiction and critical analysis. When she's not writing, she enjoys running, mixing overpowering cocktails, blogging, and doing genealogical research. She lives in Pilot Hill, California.

    Book Review

Reviewed by Tracy Slowiak for Readers' Favorite

Wow. Just, wow. That’s all I can say after finishing reading The Red Road: A Novel by author Jenni Wiltz. In this great addition to the field of literary fiction, we meet young Emma, a smart girl with big dreams. Her family life is stressful, but when her father gets a job working for the census bureau, they all hope that their luck may be changing. When he’s savagely beaten and left for dead in the course of his work in a downtrodden and dangerous neighborhood that’s been overtaken by gangs, Emma’s desires start to change from the relatively normal ones of a girl who hopes to improve her situation through her intelligence, to those of vindication and revenge.

The Red Road is simply a fantastic read. It is extremely well written, well-paced and intriguing from the very first page. Author Jenni Wiltz has incredible talent, and one of her greatest skills is her ability to develop her characters into such realistic individuals that you will start to feel they are people you have known and cared about. The Red Road will appeal to any reader who loves great fiction, and especially those who like a read that stays with them long after they’ve finished the book. Jenni Wiltz’s work will make you think, it will make you cry, it will make you angry and in the end, it will leave you satisfied. I cannot recommend The Red Road any more highly, and I look forward with great anticipation to reading whatever Jenni Wiltz puts out next.

Katie McCoach

This literary novel is a gripping, beautifully and meticulously well-written story of the way we cope with internal and external issues in our world. It tells the tale of what happens when you let obsession unravel the thread of oneself and family.

This story is told in Emma, a teenage girl’s perspective. The world around Emma becomes a harder, dangerous place even though it had been that way before. But now her family is involved and she can’t ignore the cruelty and injustice around her. We experience Emma’s unraveling choices and the reasoning behind each of them as she changes throughout this novel, trying to cope with the pain caused to her dad. Watching her change in this book was gripping and painful. I wanted someone to pull her back from the edge.

The family dynamics in this book were amazing. Each character had beautiful quirks and flaws. And it was brilliant the way food was used to convey the current state of relationships in the family. If Emma and her mother were fighting, Emma’s lunch the next day would be all her least favorite foods. They never ate before her father got home. Punishment was not eating at the table with the family. Every family has different ways of coping with issues, and this family’s was the control of food.

Sometimes I wanted to scream while reading. I give major kudos to Wiltz for that because she made me feel SO much while reading this novel. I was angry at the evilness, frustrated with Emma and the path she was heading down, and terrified where Wiltz was going to take this. Would this story have a happy ending? Could it get worse? How will Emma come out of all this? Can’t someone stop her for goodness sakes?! It was intense. And when I finished . . . well my heart sort of felt like someone gripped it in their fist and dug their nails in.

Jenni Wiltz is a talented author. There is not a thing I would change about this novel. You can tell that Wiltz went through every single sentence in this novel to make it as strong as possible. Everything was in place. Every detail was important. There were parts of the novel that I wanted to look away because it was so well written it made me queasy.

Sandra Price

In The Red Road: A Novel, a teenager in a predominantly Mexican town is forced to thrive among gangs, violence, and poverty. Emma, the main character, tries to make sense of her father’s brutal assault by a Mexican gang and distances herself from Via, Rachel, and her other companions. The author is extremely successful in creating an often dismal mood and sharp imagery, reflecting Emma’s pain and the seeming indifference of her mother and little sister. In dealing with her husband’s gruesome injuries, Emma’s mother chooses to feed her family rather than committing to medical care without health insurance coverage, so Emma fears that her father’s condition may deteriorate and realizes that the stress from his ordeal is causing him to wither inside. Convinced that she is the only one left who will stand up for her family, Emma resorts to violence to avenge her father’s attack and hopes to permanently remove the threat. This leaves readers shocked that the author of The Red Road: A Novel reconstructed Emma’s character into a fearless, reckless, and selfless individual and courageously catapulted the plot into a wall that, in the end, crumbles under a crime of passion.