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Sufferance

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Jeremiah Camp, a.k.a. the Forecaster, can look into the heart of humanity and see the patterns that create opportunities and profits for the rich and powerful. Problem is, Camp has looked one too many times, has seen what he hadn’t expected to see and has come away from the abyss with no hope for himself or for the future. So Jeremiah does what any intelligent, sensitive person would do. He runs away. Goes into hiding in a small town, at an old residential school on an even smaller Indian reserve with no phone, no Internet, no television. With the windows shut, the door locked, the mailbox removed to discourage any connection with the world, he feels safe at last. Except nobody told the locals that they should leave Jeremiah alone. And then his past comes calling. Ash Locken, head of the Locken Group, the multinational consortium that Jeremiah has fled, arrives on his doorstep with a simple proposition. She wants our hero to formulate one more forecast, and she’s not about to take no for an answer. Before he left the Locken empire, Jeremiah had put together a list of twelve names, every one a billionaire. The problem is the people on the list are dying at an alarming and unnatural rate. And Ash Locken wants to know why. A sly and satirical look at the fractures in modern existence,  Sufferance  is a bold and provocative novel about the social and political consequences of the inequality created by privilege and power—and what we might do about it.

310 pages, Hardcover

First published May 18, 2021

28 people are currently reading
1237 people want to read

About the author

Thomas King

103 books1,285 followers
Thomas King was born in 1943 in Sacramento, California and is of Greek and German descent. He obtained his PhD from the University of Utah in 1986. He is known for works in which he addresses the marginalization of American Indians, delineates "pan-Indian" concerns and histories, and attempts to abolish common stereotypes about Native Americans. He taught Native American Studies at the University of Lethbridge in Alberta, Canada, and at the University of Minnesota. He is currently a Professor of English at the University of Guelph, Ontario, Canada. King has become one of the foremost writers of fiction about Canada's Native people.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 199 reviews
Profile Image for Wanda Pedersen.
2,298 reviews367 followers
July 10, 2021
Thomas King recently claimed that this is his final novel. If that's true (and I have no reason to doubt him) I am sad, but he is certainly going out with a bang. I loved this book. It reminded me a lot of his earlier work The Back of the Turtle and in some ways of his Thumps DreadfulWater mystery series. I have loved all of those books.

Jeremiah is a great narrator, which is kind of hilarious as he refuses to speak. Like Gabriel, from The Back of the Turtle, he is fleeing corporate America and has ended up back on his ancestral reserve. As usual, King creates a quirky cast of characters to fill the small community. No matter where Jeremiah goes to be alone, someone tracks him down. As part of his final package when he left his corporate job, he was awarded the ownership of the residential school of his mother's reserve. He's been living there, creating rock markers for the cemetery, with only an unnamed cat for company. And the crows.

King seems to have a fondness for cats. In Thumps DreadfulWater’s life, there was Freeway. As more and more people start taking a meddling interest in Jeremiah’s life, this feline gets christened Pancakes. And like Thumps, Jeremiah has his habitual rounds of town, breakfast here, coffee there, home for a nap, work in the graveyard. King manages to comment on the global economy and the immorality of excessive wealth while also examining issues closer to home—lack of clean water and proper sanitation on reserves, mould in homes, unmarked graves behind residential schools, unreliable politicians, lack of affordable housing. It is all just part of the wall paper, while Jeremiah can go stay in the hotel care of his former employer when the residential school gets too crowded.

The crows are the star of the show. They have three simple questions: can we steal it? Can we eat it? Can we shit on it? As Jeremiah observes, not very different from capitalists. They are the chorus to this Greek tragedy (and King does have Greek ancestry).

Mr. King, thank you for hours of reading pleasure. I confess that I hope something else will be the piece of grit that causes you to write another pearl of a novel, but I will be thankful for what you have given us.

Cross posted at my blog:

https://wanda-thenextfifty.blogspot.c...
Profile Image for Paul Weiss.
1,467 reviews547 followers
June 11, 2025
“There’s also a brochure from Elections Canada on how to vote. Which might be useful if there was anyone on the ballot worth the effort.”

Regardless of what you might think of the novel, its story, or Thomas King’s writing style, there is no question that his ability to create biting political commentary and evocative, teeth-gritting, jaw clenching background on the excruciating treatment that Canada handed its first nation aboriginals through the residential school system is firing on all cylinders.

"The school has its own graveyard. Seventy-seven graves. Each marked with a wood cross. Originally, the crosses were white but now the wood is grey and weathered, the graves all but forgotten ... I've been pulling up the wood crosses and replacing them with limestone slabs ... in the belief that the children buried here deserve better than having their graves marked with the talisman of the cult that killed them."

SUFFERANCE is a fantasy, the story of Jeremiah Camp, a residential school survivor, who lives in his own mind, a silent world in which, for reasons undisclosed to the reader, he has chosen not to speak. But that mind is a brilliant one. He sees patterns and data. He makes connections and formulates forecasts and predictions so uncannily accurate that wealthy people are willing to pay king’s ransoms to obtain them. SUFFERANCE is also a mystery. One of the world’s billionaires is willing to hire Jeremiah to determine the reasons for the sequential death (murder?) of a number of her fellow billionaires around the world!

I opened the review with the comment, “Regardless of what you might think of the novel, its story, or Thomas King’s writing style …”, for a reason. Frankly, I thought it flighty, disjointed and more than a little difficult to swallow or follow. BUT, as I also said, I could read his political comments nodding my head vigorously in agreement all day long.

I may read more of Thomas King’s work but I admit that I won’t be running around chasing down copies with bated breath.

Paul Weiss
Profile Image for Lata.
4,929 reviews254 followers
November 7, 2022
Tom King’s trademark sly humour is on full display in a story about a man, Jeremiah Camp, who’s fled his job working for a very wealthy man, and hides out in a former residential school in a small town, swearing to never speak to anyone. Which he holds to, letting the colourful personalities around him fill in and interpret his silences.

Meanwhile, he’s set himself a task, which he carries out throughout the story, despite all the many intrusions from his former boss’ daughter, who employs him to discover why billionaires around the world are suddenly dying, and the various townspeople who eventually move in with him.

Jeremiah's self-imposed task was already horribly sad, even before the unsurprising real life news of dead and buried children found at the site of former real residential schools. Jeremiah's carefully chiselled headstones for each murdered child is touching and necessary and important, and a good counterpoint to his work scanning through billionaires’ lives.

This book is both funny, and very dark, and though there’s not an obvious wrap-up, I liked this a lot.
Profile Image for Enid Wray.
1,440 reviews77 followers
March 6, 2021
Thank you Thomas King for once again brightening up my day. For the past couple of weeks nothing I’ve read has made my cheeks hurt… so I turned to you looking to break that streak… and you came through for me.

I am going to avoid spoilers in this review - so my comments will be more vague than I’d like - because this is a book you want to read… This is classic King… exactly what you’ve come to expect without being either repetitive or derivative. Smart. Biting. Funny (crows playing Marco Polo is my favourite, or the guy caught looking like he voted for the NDP). Simultaneously subtle, and not so subtle. He challenges the litany of sins held against the Indigneous population, and skewers the living conditions on reserve, as well as the social and economic situation that is the reality for far too many Indigenous peoples. He questions the value of reconciliation - likening it to just another drug like religion - and the goals of the education system, but highlights the need for generosity, and especially community and remembrance.

As always, it is the characters that keep things moving and keep you reading. I’m having a hard time figuring out who my favourite is in this one… there are so many to choose from... Although I think my vote goes to either - or both - of Nutty and Lala.

Also, as you come to expect from any King novel, there are the references back to himself and his own work - which from most other authors just comes off as a conceit that bugs me to no end but with King they are always appropriate. My favourite here was the reference to the CBC radio show that gave away authentic Indian names… ‘but CBC cancelled it’ (p245). (Have I mentioned lately how I - still to this day - miss my weekend fix of Dead Dog Cafe (only every time I review a Thomas king title…)).

The plot in this one is over the top ridiculous - I’ll stay entirely mum about it - but, at the same time, all too real… and that, of course, is what makes it work so well as satire.

Thank you, again, Thomas King… and also to the publisher and Edelweiss for making this early digital review copy available to me.
Profile Image for Debbie Zapata.
1,980 reviews59 followers
September 2, 2022
Aug 31, 7pm ~~ Review asap.

Sep 1, 745pm ~~ My final stand-alone novel by Thomas King. And supposedly the last one he will write. He has said that writing takes more energy than he now has. But we'll see. Even though there are certain aspects of the book that make me wonder if he is sending all of his loyal readers a message. But we'll get to that in a bit.

I did not expect to devour this book as quickly as I ended up doing. But I simply could not put it down.(And I am already looking forward to the day I reread it!) From the first page I was intrigued by our silent narrator Jeremiah Camp and his lifestyle. Why is he living all alone in a huge abandoned school building? Why does he never speak? Not a single word out loud throughout the entire book. How did he manage that?! Even if I could manage to not speak to any other person, I would still mutter to myself at times and to the plants in the garden. I doubt I could ever be as completely silent as Jeremiah was in this story.

One mystery is why was he so silent? He made a decision one day to stop talking and kept it up for years, and probably will for years after the final page in the story. But he was at one time involved with a giant corporation, and there lies a question. When the long corporate arm reaches out to try and ensnare him again, how will he respond?

And what will those crows do? I was expecting some sort of major feathered offensive (a la The Birds), judging by the cover and the way they are always hovering around keeping an eye on things.

Jeremiah was hiding from the world. A desire I have had more than once ever since 2016. But somehow the world never quite lets a person go, have you ever noticed that?

Getting back to my thought in the first paragraph, about why the narrator of this book never actually spoke. Was King telling his readers that he has nothing more to say? That this really is his final book?

I know I am reading a lot into things, but I wonder if anyone with such strong opinions as King has, and the ability to express them in creative ways, could ever really stop writing?

I guess time will tell.




Profile Image for Robyn.
456 reviews21 followers
June 18, 2021
I have mixed feelings about this book. I didn't like it as much as I expected to, being a Thomas King novel, but after finishing it yesterday it is taking up considerable space in my brain (being a Thomas King novel). I would call it a 3.5 but I'm rounding up because I think that the more I sit with the story the more I will appreciate it. Definitely not a "fly through and forget about it" type of story. I did find it a bit slower moving toward the ending, and I am still quite confused about the resolution - no spoilers but if you read it you may get why I don't understand why ___ did ___ if ___. Unless I completely missed an important plot point which is entirely possible.

I hope my book clubbers like it but I suspect it's one that people will be mixed on. At the same time, there will be no shortage of things to discuss.
Profile Image for Virginia.
1,288 reviews166 followers
May 26, 2024
The school has its own graveyard. Seventy-seven graves. Each marked with a wood cross. Originally, the crosses were white, but now the wood is grey and weathered, the graves all but forgotten. … I think of my efforts as a reconciliation project, even though I don’t believe in reconciliation any more than I believe in religion.
Jeremiah Camp certainly foretold this one: the day I started reading this book, the mass graves of 215 Indigenous children were located on the grounds of a residential school in Kamloops, British Columbia on Canada’s west coast. Not a surprise to anyone since thousands of children disappeared from these schools over the 160+ years they were in operation in Canada. I was relieved to see this book come out because of the elegiac nature of Thomas King’s last book Indians on Vacation; it read like a farewell to, well, everything. (And I just found out that it has been awarded the 2021 Stephen Leacock Memorial Medal for Humour, a major Canadian literary award.) Sufferance was a wonderful, funny, painful, hopeful read. Not a book to rush through looking for the jokes, though, although there were plenty of lovely lines and deceptively light-hearted chatter. It’s all entertaining, it’s all relevant, and it all hurts. There are also very astute observations about political corruption as well.
What is it about public office that turns decent people into political cartoons?
I guess that’s one thing we understand in Canada - politicians, every stinkin’ one, are all heart and sincerity until they get into office, and then they develop corruption like a poison oak rash. It goes along with their custom-made desk chairs and the name plates on their doors.

The 215 little bodies are only the beginning. Things are changing. As Jeremiah says,
All the fires in the world will not burn history clean.
Profile Image for Joel Hill.
109 reviews1 follower
July 11, 2021
I actually finished this a while ago and forgot to update Goodreads.

This is honestly such a hard book to boil down to a simple number. I found the plot to be slow and maybe even a little uninteresting, however the plot was almost irrelevant though since most of what was interesting in Sufferance was Jeremiah's perspective on the world. He had cynical and sarcastic view that I found to be mostly really funny but also incredibly depressing at times. I didn't care what happened next, but I was always looking forward to seeing what Mr. Camp thought of it.

Not my favorite book and I might hesitate to recommend it to others, but I REALLY want to read more from Thomas King.
Profile Image for Stephanie.
87 reviews1 follower
July 10, 2021
Four stars is a generous rating - I gave it a bump because i enjoyed it more than I expected to. It was a bit of a romp with an unusual premise and hard to put down!

That said, the second half fell flat for me. The ending seemed over simplistic and rushed. Plus the narrative style grated after awhile. The juxtaposition of wry internal observations of mundane things with intense things going on around the narrator is a device that should be used sparingly at best IMO.
Profile Image for Chantel.
490 reviews356 followers
September 22, 2024
I think, perhaps, I missed the gist of the excitement & mystery in this novel. King is a very good writer but he has a very specific writing style & it requires me to be in a very specific mood to read his books. Thankfully, I was in just such a mood when I decided to read this one. I will therefore advise anyone who is thinking of reading this book that the flow is jumbled; the main character does not talk, we read his thoughts & these are often placed in between other people's dialogues. I didn't find this to obstruct the flow of the story but, again, I was in a specific mood & was able to appreciate it.
 
This is a story about a man who sees patterns. Possibly because life is a very heavy task to endeavour, he stops speaking. There were times when I wondered how people around him, especially those who didn't know him, made their way to conclusions whereupon he had no impact in leading them there. We often read of strangers making conversation with him without any input & without knowing that he had chosen a vow of silence. I can't speak for everyone but I might find myself being a bit perturbed if the person I was speaking with never said anything & was always staring off at, literally anything else, while I was speaking.

Though I appreciated that his peers didn't push him on the speaking issue, I did feel a bit uncomfortable with their pushing his physical boundaries. They invite themselves to live where he resides without asking & I acknowledge that culturally this is not something you need to ask of people who care about you. However, as I am very similar to our main character I felt stifled.

I can't say that I really saw the purpose in everyone needing to move into the school. Perhaps, are we meant to read this scenario as being that those who put people into the school & then decided to take them out, forced those same people to return again when they made their communal life unbearable? I chose to see it that way. We are perpetually stuck in a cycle whose axis turns by the actions of others & so are others, stuck in a cycle whose axis turns by our actions, etc. The sufferance of life; the entirety we carry with us throughout the years whether we speak it or not.
 
I appreciate those who say that this book was timely as an unmarked grave was recently dug up & 215 children were found inside but, let me say that this story is always timely because the graves remain there whether or not the powers that be acknowledge them or not.

These things have already happened therefore speaking in a fictional book about black mould & powerless reserves & graveyards filled with children is not only timely because the news highlights it as being so; it's timely because it's real. It was real yesterday, 30 years ago & it will be tomorrow as it is today. I hope that by a variety of readers choosing to learn about such things in a way that might feel less overwhelming, we are not kept in such a cycle as the characters in this book.
 
I appreciate the tone employed by King throughout this book & would recommend it to others. Do not engage in reading this story thinking that it will be a thriller or a great dark mystery. It explores the realities of a specific community which reflects the realities of many. Overall, I am glad to have read this book. It was not my favourite but, it is one that will reside in the corners of my mind for some time.
Profile Image for Mary Anne.
616 reviews21 followers
June 2, 2021
A heart-breaking novel about a man who has seen the abyss and feels nothing. His replacing crosses from the graves of a residential school with river stones upon which he carves the dead child's name seems to suggest there is some hope at the end but ...
Profile Image for Colin Gooding.
221 reviews3 followers
July 16, 2021
The majority of the reason I enjoyed this book is in the prose. There is a really interesting mix of this sort of melancholy tone interspersed with both strange humor and some sinister/forboding moments, all wrapped within a bit of film noir trappings. It almost feels like a few tonal steps away from something like the movie Fargo? It's fascinating to read, even though by the end I thought some of the writing patterns showed themselves a bit too plainly (but were still mostly effective).

I did love the choice to have the POV character never speak. It reminded me of a video game like Half Life or Chrono Trigger, and it added to that noir tone. It also forces the supporting cast to reveal their character a little more freely, I thought it worked extremely well.

The plotting here is very strange as well. It seems like the A plot is a slice of life story of a the struggles of small reserve community, and then the B plot is a grandiose billionaire murder conspiracy. Both are compelling, but I'm not sure that either of them were completely successful. I'm sure there are layers of the allegory I'm missing, but I still wanted to see what would happen next and tore through the last half of the novel, so it certainly worked at some level.

I'll have to add some more Thomas King to my backlog, as this was my first of his and he is clearly a talented writer.
Profile Image for Jane Mulkewich.
Author 2 books18 followers
June 6, 2021
I do love Thomas King and this is one of his best books yet - when I saw him online discussing this book a couple of days ago, he said he thought it was most mature work yet. Once again, King gives a light and humorous touch to huge and deadly issues. This book is about a main character who now lives in a building that was a former residential school, and one of the things he does in the story is to commemorate the childrens’ graves at the school. Tom King has managed to release a book that is so very timely with regards to current events, as people are feeling grief and outrage over the 215 children found in an unmarked grave in Kamloops, and yet that is only one of the reasons to read this book. Memorable characters, that will stay with you for some time to come, and an absurd story that at the same time gets at many truths.
Profile Image for Ben.
2,737 reviews232 followers
June 3, 2021
This was a great read.

Fun and enjoyable, but also had lots of meaning to it.
Probably my favorite King novel yet!

Would recommend this.

3.9/5
Profile Image for Peter.
162 reviews3 followers
September 18, 2021
It's been a while since I've enjoyed reading book so much. There's not much action but plenty of social critique in this mystery. Together, the two would normally be a turnoff. But the gentle intolerance of the curmudgeonly and silent narrator is infectious. And irresistible.
Profile Image for Jay.
371 reviews21 followers
April 13, 2021
I received this book from the publisher. This in no way changes my opinion and all the words below are my own.

4.25 stars
The other book I've read by King is non-fiction, and I have to say as much as I did enjoy it, I loved his fiction writing even more. Everything just flows so well, you can tell Thomas King is a natural storyteller who has elevated his skill by gifting us with full-length novels. Sufferance is the perfect mix of slice of life and the underlying plot of "is it magic or is he just a really cool guy?". Which is perhaps not a terribly professional way of wording it, but it's true.

While the book really hits on such important topics without making them overdramatized or too real to be compelling in a fictional work, what really carries the story is the characters. Thomas King created a giant cast of characters that he really brought to life with ease. They are real, and interesting and imperfect all at once. I was sad to be done living in their little world when I finished the book.
Profile Image for Brahm.
597 reviews85 followers
July 24, 2021
I liked Thomas King's writing and will check out some of his other books, but I wasn't wild about this one.

The two plotlines - what was going on at the town and reserve, and what was going on with the Locken Group and the billionaires - didn't quite seem to stick together.

Not a fan of the silent narrator. Maybe I missed a key paragraph but I didn't feel like his vow of silence was well-established, so I felt he was being a bit of a jerk.

Looking forward to discussing with book club!
Profile Image for Maria.
306 reviews40 followers
June 10, 2021
I was aware of Thomas King's The Inconvenient Indian: A Curious Account of Native People in North America and thus interested in listening to Sufferance when it came up in the library's new aquisitions. And I enjoyed it a lot. It's more of a genre type thing. the main character does not speak, which is a really nice device. And the book made me want to learn more about crows. maybe I'll look at In the Company of Crows and Ravens.

“When I left the city, I decided I would stop talking. Completely. That was easy enough. I also decided to stop paying attention to what was happening in the world.
That was harder.
At the Locken Group, I was paid to collect the flotsam and jetsam of humanity. Collect it. Sort it. Process it. And finally, to squeeze out patterns from the distillate.
A great many people are fond of saying that information is power.
It’s not.
Thomas Locken knew that information by itself was worthless, that the only value was in the patterns that information revealed. Understanding those patterns, being able to predict how and where they would form and the effect they would have, that was power.
Seeing the patterns. Recognizing their significance. Forecasting. That was my job.”
Profile Image for Gail Barrington.
1,022 reviews2 followers
June 2, 2021
Enjoyable as always and such sly humour. We laugh at what hurts the most, a great gift that King has. And what prescience--the tragedy at the residential school in Kamloops was just revealed as I was reading this book. At least in the fictional graveyard, the children had crosses to mark their graves although their names were only saved in the church records. That courtesy was not extended to the 215 children who were buried in Kamloops, nameless and unmourned. The reality overwhelmed the story in this case.
Profile Image for Marianne.
25 reviews
May 19, 2025
Ja also irgendwie check ich nicht. Hab ned so unfassbar aufmerksam gelesen, war lustig teilweise, glaub ich? Aber lol....mehr kann ich ned sagen, hätte eventuell besser aufpassen sollen hihi
Profile Image for Virgil.
7 reviews
August 1, 2025
I genuinely have no idea how to describe this book but I think the most interesting part of it is that the main character doesn’t say a single word. I usually don’t like first person present but the way it was used in this book made me forget that I myself wasn’t the main character. Crazy experience
Profile Image for Riley Zammit.
1 review2 followers
December 11, 2023
Sufferance is undoubtedly a book written by an author. If you like words, maybe check this out. Thomas King uses lots of words to talk, but it feels as if the book doesnt progress or really go anywhere. The novel is not short of abstract ideas, as King loves to throw in random sentences about absolute nonsense. I used to never be able to fall asleep until I started reading this book, now I get a page in and hibernate for entire seasons. If I had a choice between reading this book and watching my entire family slowly boiled in a massive stew pot, I would choose the latter. I do not like this book. I do not recommend this book.
Profile Image for Dolank.
238 reviews1 follower
July 9, 2021
I'm embarrassed to admit that this is my first Thomas King, and now, I want/need to read more. He left me with so many questions, and wanting to know more, wanting the story to continue and follow the side characters of this book.
Profile Image for Lorraine.
147 reviews6 followers
June 2, 2021
Thomas King always has so much to say and brings out real world issues in humor and great story telling.
Profile Image for Megan.
1,080 reviews
October 27, 2023
I really liked this book. Thomas King has an interesting view of the world. I always appreciate the glimpse into how his brain works but it also reminds me that I’m not sure I’m smart enough to keep up. I loved some of the choice King made in this book: that the main character doesn’t speak at all, the use of an old residential school as a home/community shelter, the removal of crosses in the residential school graveyard as a kind of therapy/penance. I loved the res characters and the community as well as the depiction of the town and its self-serving and clueless actions. I was intrigued by the forecaster storyline but am not sure I ultimately understood what the author intended here. I might need to read this again.
44 reviews
October 28, 2023
It's definitely not a book for everybody, but overall, I enjoyed it. It took a while for me to get into it as the writing is a bit unusual. Once I really got into it though, I read it quite quickly and found it engaging. It's written from a first person perspective and is largely the protagonist's stream of consciousness; however, the protagonist refuses to speak to anyone. This choice makes the book at bit frustrating at times because the protagonist refuses to speak even though it would help to clarify things and he often does not tell the reader what his thoughts or feelings about a conversation or interaction are. It reminded me a bit of the absurdity of Camus' "The Stranger" mixed with King's comedy and political insight. I've only read King's nonfiction books (The Truth About Stories and The Inconvenient Indian), but I enjoyed this as well and I'd be interested in his other fiction works. I did find the ending a bit disappointing but I also think it was in line with the character.
249 reviews
August 29, 2021
I really enjoyed this book. This is only the second book by Thomas King that I have read, and I am really enjoying his writing style. This book had relatable characters and an interesting story line. At first I worried I would not be able to keep all the characters straight, but in the end it was no problem at all, since as a reader I quickly felt I knew them all and where they fit in the town and in the story. The book touches on lots of topics that touch on the challenges and tensions we face as a society, and yet not in an way that leaves the reader overwhelmed or lacking hope. A great read that I would highly recommend.
Profile Image for Susan.
407 reviews4 followers
April 10, 2022
"We exist through the sufferance of others."

Jeremiah Camp, the Forecaster for a billionaire, is able to forecast the future and is paid to do so, until he sees too much and decides to essentially run away from society. He goes back to his birthplace, stops talking, has no phone, internet or mail service. He lives alone in an abandoned residential school, filling his time with replacing the crosses on the graves of the children who died while at the school. His only wish is to be left alone. And then the daughter of his previous employer finds him and needs him to forecast yet again because billionaires are dying under mysterious circumstances. Meanwhile, the people who live on the reserve and who refuse to leave Jeremiah on his own, have no liveable homes, no electricity or running water.
King has said that this would be his last book, but if it is, he is going out with a bang. Lots to grapple with.
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