From Publishers Weekly
In Blumlein's haunting literary SF novel, Payne, a "Grotesque" (or "Tesque"), can draw disease from patients into his own body, then extrude the sickness as an abstractly shaped "Concretion" from an organ in his side. Few Tesques—whose misshapen appearance from a bump on the skull distinguishes them from normal humans—develop the ability to heal. Taken from his family to train as a physician, Payne imagines the fulfillment to be found in helping others, despite the prejudice most people have against Tesques. Driven by idealism, he attempts to cure a fellow healer of "the Drain," an affliction that's slowly destroying her talent. But Payne reverses the problem, leaving her too sensitive to work. Later, searching for forgiveness, he works to save a small church, only to be rejected by its new congregation. "Sometimes a patient had to be brought to the very brink of death before... he could be healed," Dr. Blumlein (
The Movement of Mountains) tells us, and this original, surreal and extraordinary book shows why. Blurbs from Kim Stanley Robinson and Peter Straub, as well as the author's status as a finalist for World Fantasy and Stoker awards, bode well for sales.
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From School Library Journal
Adult/High School–This haunting work takes place in a well-imagined world populated by two races: humans and grotesques. Although essentially human, grotesques are looked down upon because of their unsightly cranial ridges and distorted, asymmetrical bodies. A small number of them develop the ability to heal others by pulling infected or diseased material into their own bodies and then expelling it through an orifice in their chests. This places these special grotesques, dubbed healers, in high demand and enslaves them to the needs and whims of humans. Overworked, most healers have a short life span–a small blessing. The novel tracks Payne, starting with his recruitment. He spends his early days working for a mining colony, healing the odd broken limb or respiratory problem. Then his superiors discover that he is one of the most skilled and powerful healers in generations, and he becomes a pawn for both human rulers and grotesques fighting for their independence. Payne rarely makes real decisions for himself. The dark and disturbing ending, however, develops fully out of a difficult choice he does make, delivering a glimmer of hope for him and for the world in which he lives. Fresh and surprising, the conclusion delivers a message that lingers.
–Matthew L. Moffett, Northern Virginia Community College, Annandale Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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