David Sklar’s new book, "Atlas of Men" (Volcano Cannon Press), with a release date of October 16, 2018, should delight readers of medical thrillers, mysteries, and boarding school/coming of age tales—as well as all lovers of well-written fiction. "Atlas of Men" raises important ethical questions about research with live human subjects and science’s relationship to race and identity. But beyond that, it is simply a well-written, compelling story about scandal and secrecy at a prestigious private school and of the boys who, as men, transcend what happened to them while students there.
It’s a great read, with compelling characters, page-turning pacing balanced with contemplative passages, and an often gut-wrenching, always riveting plot about what happened to students at an upscale boarding school in the 1960s. There’s also a lovely second-chance-at-romance storyline in the novel. Inspired by true events that happened to the author, the narratives and dialogues ring with authenticity. With his crisp, on-point and well-worded sentences, Sklar takes readers right smack into the heart of the story—and into the heart and mind of the protagonist, the enigmatic, brilliant, and compassionate Dr. Robert Thames.
Robert Thames is a medical doctor specializing in infectious disease research. Born in the Philippines of a Filipino mother, Robert was adopted by American medical missionaries who lived there. As a teen, he was sent to the USA to a mostly-white, upper crust all-boys boarding school (modeled after the author’s own alma mater). While there, he was subjected to humiliating and unethical so-called scientific research that left him and his classmates traumatized for years.
As the story opens, Robert, as a never-married and somewhat lonely adult several decades past his boarding school days, works in a government research job and learns his position is to be cut due to funding issues. Soon after that, he mysteriously receives three boxes of old records pertaining to the unethical research conducted on him and his classmates at the boarding school. Painful memories resurface, and he decides to pursue the matter further. As part of his own investigation, Robert tracks down his four closest friends from the school. Together, he hopes they can uncover the truth of the so-called scientific research, long buried by the faculty, the school, and many of the boys themselves.
Robert locates the man who was his closest friend at the school and who is now married to the girl Robert had fallen in love with while they were all teens. To Robert’s dismay, he learns that this former best friend is dying. As a last request, his dying friend asks Robert to bring together for one last time their group of close friends from the school days. Robert agrees, though he is unsure how to locate one of them.
Robert is not only driven to reunite the friends for one final time, but also to bring some peace to himself and his dying friend. But he encounters threats and discouragement from the school’s officials once they learn he has the boxes of research. The school has much to lose if Robert publicizes the materials and the knowledge he has gained since reviewing the boxes.
Told in a combination of contemporary times and flashbacks to the boarding school days, "Atlas of Men," moves at an energetic pace, building suspense and compassion for the boys who were humiliated in the name of science. The flashbacks to the time when the boys were required to strip completely naked in front of classmates while they were individually photographed is heartbreaking, but told with candor and empathy. What becomes of the naked photographs in the wrong hands provokes anger, and Robert struggles with a desire for retribution and revenge. But he also understands much harm –including embarrassment and injury to innocent persons—could result if he goes public with what he has learned. Robert’s internal conflict over whether to expose the school for its past sins creates a compelling element of the book. The woman who was his first love offers to help him with whatever he decides to do. A new bond begins to develop between them, though much stands in their way.
The author, who is drawing upon personal experiences, knows exactly how to frame the plot and put the reader right there in the action. Readers will care, and care deeply, for Dr. Robert Thames, his classmates, and his lost love.
Part medical thriller, part boarding school drama, and part second-chance romance, Atlas of Men is an engaging, gripping novel, well-written and insightful, which deserves a wide audience of readers. I received an Advanced Readers Copy of the book through an online review magazine (not through the author or the publisher), but the opinions here are strictly my own.