A novel about the end of cheap energy features compelling characters, dysfunctional families and a good dose of black humor. Set against the lush backdrop of Tampa Bay, Fla., this novel combines the politics of peak oil and economic apartheid with characters and situations that rival Carl Hiaasen’s in their absurdity and black humor.
Liz Delaney, recently widowed and inching herself back into life in a new career as a mental health professional, meets Bud Jackson, a renegade journalist whose discoveries about the truth behind the worldwide energy economy land him in a mental institution. What ensues is seven days of hectic revelations about the potential collapse of everyday life, brushes with death, social commentary, examinations of power and an arch look at our healthcare system. Added to the mix are Liz’s blackmailing and murdering quadriplegic brother, his nymphomaniac wife, an evangelical plastic surgeon who runs the Born Again Clinic and a wise professor in a mangrove swamp, among other memorable characters. And yes, there is a hurricane. Despite of—or because of—these elements, this surreal narrative works. Strong descriptions of patients and staff make the hospital and institutional settings compelling in their compassion and humanity. Wry humor in discussions of consumer behavior and greed relieves the polemic that drives the novel.
While the main narrative is an apocalyptic one, larger-than-life characters and wacky situations—like the huge hired bomb maker who wears a bright yellow shirt and is interrupted, twice, while trying to set a car bomb—engage the reader. Humor and family dysfunction diminish as the story reaches its climax. Action-packed scenes and plot turns excite, but character development and dialogue become mired down with sociopolitical rhetoric: “people are placated by dreams of wealth while a distant upper stream actually benefits from their labors.” Still, a taut plot, hilarious characters and a vivid portrayal of different aspects of health—mental, environmental and cultural—provide a rollicking read.
A merry romp through an end-times conspiracy.
Post, B. T. THE NOAH COUNTDOWN BookSurge (268 pp.) $18.99 paperback October 13, 2008 ISBN: 978-1419690648Kirkus
From Caryl Johnston
The Noah Countdown: A fast-paced novel that unspins the threads between peak-oil reality and end-time speculation. The author portrays the institutional deterioration in American life, which fosters the infantilization of the public and the inability of leaders to act intelligently in the face of the sinister forces arraigned against us today. Author B.T. Post dares to connect the dots on moral issues that many “end-time” writers would rather avoid. In this sense, The Noah Countdown is a thriller, a frightening parable of a modernity that has become the victim of its own successes. Yet it is also more. A call to historical awakening, The Noah Countdown is a true “apocalypse” or unveiling, reminding us that mankind cannot live without truth. Where there is truth, there can be hope. A thoughtful novel with a fine moral sense!
Caryl Johnston, After the Crash: An Essay-Novel of the Post Hydro-Carbon Age.