cover image The Apotheosis

The Apotheosis

Darrell Lee. Progressive Rising Phoenix, $16.95 trade paper (378p) ISBN 978-1-946329-80-6

A wealth of nonessential detail and pernicious misogyny and bigotry spoil this futuristic novel from Lee (The Gravitational Leap). When John Numen’s father dies, John inherits an enormous fortune hidden in offshore accounts, and a sizable share in the family pharmaceutical company, leaving him free to pursue his hobby of human cloning experiments. At a company holiday party, John meets Amira, the wife of Ethan, a caricatured Orthodox Jewish man who manages the company and controls his family with dogma. Ethan and John view each other as intellectual and professional threats. Amira and John begin an affair, but when Amira tries to leave Ethan, he attacks her and inadvertently kills their daughter. Amira and John attempt to clone the child, which ends in Amira’s sudden death. Untethered by his loss, John puts his newfound knowledge to work in order to extend his own life, kidnapping and murdering women to enable his experiments across generations. Though fans of antiheroes may be drawn to John’s deadly rampage, the chauvinism and prejudices underlying the story will turn most readers away. (May)

This review has been updated to remove spoilers.