cover image Bunyan and Henry; or, the Beautiful Destiny

Bunyan and Henry; or, the Beautiful Destiny

Mark Cecil. Pantheon, $29 (352p) ISBN 978-0-593-47116-6

Cecil’s boisterous debut functions as both origin story and revisionist portrayal of American folk heroes Paul Bunyan and John Henry. Saddled with debt, Bunyan toils somewhere out west in the mines of Lump Town in what feels like the late 19th century, unearthing the energy source known as Lump. When one of the mineral’s side effects causes his wife, Lucette, to fall deathly ill, Bunyan skips town to the Windy City in search of El Boffo, the magnate who runs Lump Town. Rumor has it El Boffo has developed a machine that uses Lump to cure all ailments, and Bunyan hopes his boss will use it on Lucette before it’s too late. Before Bunyan manages to gain an audience with El Boffo, however, he meets and befriends Henry, who’s the run from the law for reasons not immediately specified, and their journeys intertwine as obstacles pile up. Cecil leans on some thread-worn tropes (for example, Lucette exists solely as damsel in distress), but he makes up for it with a fresh depiction of his legendary protagonists, portraying the wealth gap faced by Bunyan and the racial inequities that plague Henry. He also writes with a playful flair for language, dubbing El Boffo’s scientific showroom the Wondertorium and his healing machine the Simulorb. There’s plenty of substance to this fun romp. Agent: Chad Luibl, Janklow & Nesbit. (Mar.)