Having enjoyed Brad Parks Say Nothing, I was delighted to pick up his latest thriller set in Richmond, Virginia. However, I confess to being disappointed with it, the premise that drives it just does not work for me, straying into too far out territory. Lawyer Nick Lovejoy is happily married to the far more gifted, high flying lawyer, Jenny Welker, a partner at the most prestigious law firm of Carter, Morgan and Ross. He is the stay at home husband looking after their adorable young daughters, 3 year old Parker and 18 month old Cate, and he loves his role. The novel opens with Nick having been drugged and abducted, awakening in what appears to be a museum with priceless artworks hanging on the walls.
Nick's life veers off track when he meets Lorton Rogers, a man who appears to be normal and stable, but who relays an unthinkable task that he must carry out if he and his children are to survive. Vanslow DeGange is an extremely wealthy man with prescient abilities, he can see into the future, he and the powerful secret cult The Praesidium, act for the greater good, organising to save the lives of countless millions, if not billions, by ensuring the deaths of those who represent a threat to humanity in the future. Jenny has been working her socks off on a pro bono case for 2 years, determined to see justice served. She has put together a mass action tort claim, representing clients from a area where abnormally high rates of terminal cancer and respiratory diseases proliferate, caused by the toxic coal burning fumes emitted by the Commonwealth Power and Lighting Company plant. Rogers tells Nick he must kill Jenny, the only way to stop the class action, so countless others can be saved in the future.
Needless to say, Nick is a sceptic, how can anyone see into the future? However, Rogers provides what looks like cast iron proof, what is Nick to do? Ethical and philosophical debates are had, although Nick doesn't really have a choice, the ruthless Praesidium cult has no intention of letting his wife live and Nick must protect Parker and Cate. This is a thriller for those more willing to enter fantastical territory and buy into the questionable ideas that underlie this novel, I have no doubt there will be many who will enjoy it. Unfortunately, I am not one of them. Many thanks to the publisher for an ARC.