Cryptid: n. subject of Cryptozoological scrutiny; animals of unexplained form or size, or unexpected occurrence in time or space.
Opening with the alleged suicide of Meriwether Lewis, Cryptid takes the reader two hundred years into the past in order to set the stage for a page-turning, conspiracy theory thriller. The circumstances around Lewis’ death, and the missing journals from the Lewis and Clark expedition, have enough unanswered questions to keep the speculation flying, and author Penz uses this to great advantage.
It doesn’t take long for Penz to move his story into the present time and almost immediately after that he introduces the key player, Gigantopithecus. Long known to be extinct, fossilized remnants of this Giant Ape are concentrated mainly in China, where the natives grind them up to use in various health-giving potions.
Paleontologist Samantha Russell has spent her career seeking the truth about Gigantopithecus, excavating tiny fossilized bits and pieces out of the ground. When a packing crate arrives at her dig site only moments before Chinese government officials escort her out of the country, she barely has time to register that the specimens inside the box are bone, not stone. This discovery prompts her to seek out the sender, cryptozoologist Dr. Jon Ostman, a man virtually excommunicated from the scientific community for his interest in subjects such as the American Sasquatch.
A specimen so recently deceased would be a gold mine and a feather in the cap of whomever published the proof. It would also be an environmental nightmare for the forestry industry, as logging would have to be stopped in the fertile Olympic forests of Washington while an impact study is done. Herein lies the controversy: Big Business and the US Government are teaming up to stop the scientists while other private industries attempt to push forth the exact same discovery.
The story brilliantly balances between scientific theory and heart-pounding thrill. Cryptid mingles science fact with history into a story that equals the best historical mysteries. Some of the best and most plausible information is entirely fictitious, but is handed out in such a manner that the reader will ingest it just as easily as the real thing.