K-PAX: Finally, A Science Fiction Masterpiece That “Could Happen”
“He calls himself prot (rhymes with goat). Is he man, alien or savior?”
First of all, let me say what a truly suspenseful and awesome beach read this is! Wow! I saw the movie poster at the theater in 2001 when the film came out. My dad rented it on VHS, and rented Dune—Frank Herbert’s science fiction masterpiece—a little later on, also on VHS. My dad was always a big fan of horror-type sci-fi (called SF for short). He liked movies like the Alien series of horror films … you remember, Sigourney Weaver fighting aliens with acid blood that exploded out of peoples’ stomachs.
Ewe.
And he liked Predator—you remember that one, Arnold Schwarzenegger fights a humanoid alien in the jungles of South America, and wins.
Since then they have combined both series having the two creatures fight each other … just like on the hit video games.
Yuck.
But I never did share my dad’s interests wholly—except with K-PAX and Dune. (See my review for Frank Herbert’s book if that’s what you want; this review will focus on Gene Brewer’s wonderful little book). While most sci-fi concentrates on the “hard” sciences like physics or astronomy, K-PAX concentrates on the lighter “softer” sciences like sociology and psychology.
The movie poster shows a man wearing sunglasses and looking thoughtfully upward. The glasses have become a symbol for the story, like the weapon of the lightsaber in the Star Wars art.
Let me say that K-PAX is more than a bestseller … it’s a phenomenon! Able to stand alone in spite of four sequels, the book works in nearly every level. It is a psychological thriller, a love story much like Starman, and a great sci-fi novel. I should say at the outset that I have not read the sequels, but I will be soon checking out On a Beam of Light, also by Brewer. Unlike authors like Ludlum and Clancy, Gene Brewer writes all his own books solely on his own, no collaboration. And what a good book it is!
K-PAX concerns a perfectly reasonable man arrested by Manhattan police after giving “daffy” answers to the station interview questions. So they book him in a psych ward with a dozen other mental cases. Only he maintains his bizarre delusion (a fixed false belief) that he is from the planet K-PAX in the constellation Lyra. And he convinces all his fellow patients that he is really from outer space—and he is taking one of them back with him when he goes “home”!
His doctor, incidentally named Gene Brewer—probably to lend the story an autobiography-realistic-like feel—works diligently with him but finds himself more and more changed by this mysterious man who says he is from another world.
K-PAX is a great deal like the concept of Heaven, except there’s no God there to commune with—only plenty of aliens. No government. No sex. No crying. No pain. No more war. No vice or sin of any kind. And it’s twilight all the time. Sounds nice, right? Well, Brewer makes a detailed thesis that there may really be a K-PAX paradise somewhere out there. He even includes an extensive glossary (!) and prot’s report to K-PAX(!)—this last can be found in the annotated screenplay available online, (I haven’t yet read it).
But I bought the movie starring Jeff Bridges as Gene’s character (remember him in Starman?) and Kevin Spacey (American Beauty) as prot—the mystery man. The movie is very good, though I will say some aspects of prot’s message change from the book. There’s even an allusion to Data from The Next Generation TV show (Star Trek). The soundtrack (see my review) also was very good presenting a very New Age relaxation feel that fit in with the themes of the book. The concepts of human failures, law failures, religion and governmental failures. People still hurt and clutch at straws. People still go to war. Why?
Well, K-PAX proposes a very detailed and plausible answer. Thus this story—a man with a delusional thought that just won’t go away— could conceivably really happen. But reality would have to be stretched a little so stuff like having every possible mental illness manifested all in one hospital. And prot’s keen eyesight ability to see ultraviolet light and have a virtual encyclopedic knowledge of space all in his head.
Anyway, the book is a very good beach read and one you’ll definitely not want to miss. I’m not going to spoil the ending but you will probably be either pleased, sad, or even angry. So I wholeheartedly encourage you to get out your Kindle and download this book. Or if you’re like me, go and buy a hard copy to read. You won’t be sorry you did.
So pleasant reading to you and yours. And thanks for stopping by!
(Stay tuned as I track down the whole series and blast my way through).