You Can’t Fix This, God follows the life of a young boy whose world is shattered when his parents are killed in a sudden car accident. Left alone and confused, he is placed into the foster care system, where he is passed from home to home without stability, love, or a sense of belonging. Each move deepens his anger and mistrust, leaving him convinced that God—if God exists at all—has abandoned him.
As he grows older, the boy drifts toward the wrong crowd, finding acceptance in destructive behaviors that eventually lead him to prison. There, stripped of freedom and distractions, he confronts the pain and resentment he has carried since childhood. It is in this unlikely place—one he never thought to look—that he encounters faith, not as a solution to fix his past, but as a presence willing to sit with him in his brokenness.
The book is a raw exploration of grief, rage, and grace, challenging the idea that faith prevents suffering. Instead, it suggests that healing sometimes begins only after everything else has fallen apart—and that God is found not in fixing what is broken, but in walking with those who are.