cover image Anatomy of a Miracle

Anatomy of a Miracle

Jonathan Miles. Hogarth, $27 (368p) ISBN 978-0-553-44758-3

A military veteran’s miraculous recovery from a disabling injury is the springboard for Miles’s affecting novel. Twenty-six-year-old Cameron Harris has been a paraplegic for four years when, in the parking lot of a convenience store in his native Biloxi, he rises from his wheelchair and walks. The public’s response is predictably madcap: Cameron’s doctors are incredulous, the devout begin venerating the parking lot as a religious shrine, and everyone in the “crap bazaar” that follows seeks some way to capitalize on the phenomenon, from the store owner who starts hawking religious paraphernalia to the reality television director hoping to film Cameron’s story to the local politician who tries to persuade Cameron to run for office. Miles (Dear American Airlines) keeps a perfect poker face as he put his characters through one absurd situation after another, but he laces his tale with moments of philosophical seriousness in which Cameron ponders whether his miraculous healing obligates him to serve a higher purpose. Well-drawn characters and their witty repartee help to give the book’s wild and wacky events a very human frame of reference. [em](Mar.) [/em]