Rice puts a wicked spin on near-death experiences.
While camping with their father in Glacier National Park, Claire Huntley follows her younger brother, Poe, into the woods, where they’re attacked by an unknown force that changes their lives. The authorities say they’ve been attacked by a bear, but her father’s claim that it was aliens ruins his marriage and separates Claire, who stays with her mom, from Poe, who lives with his father. Years later, when Claire’s a teacher in California and Poe’s an artist and drug addict in New York, Poe’s plane crashes on a trip to visit his sister, and their mystical connection is dramatized when she feels his pain. Back at the crash site, Vernon Starnes, a deeply disturbed man who’s living in a nearby shack, investigates and discovers a seat covered in a blue shimmer that takes over his body, changing him into a powerful, dangerous killer. Thus begins a tale of coverups, government agents, private muscle, and a Nazi past hidden in Montana. Even in death Poe continues to communicate with Claire in different ways, calling her and Margot Hastings, their father’s ex-girlfriend, to travel to Montana to see him. There, they meet Randy Drummond and his friends, keepers of years’ worth of harrowing secrets that are slowly revealed as Claire and Poe work with them to contain a global threat.
An adventurous, provocative story that would have been enhanced by judicious pruning.