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THE ODYSSEY OF FLETCHER by Erik Dargitz

THE ODYSSEY OF FLETCHER

by Erik Dargitz

Pub Date: Oct. 20th, 2023
Publisher: Edderkoppen Press

A nerd discovers he may be the only man to have survived a deadly plague in Dargitz’s debut satirical novel.

Twenty-two-year-old Fletcher Sinclair was never a prime specimen of masculinity—he was an introverted community college student with thick glasses, greasy hair, and a love of video games and energy drinks. Then a super-virus literally wiped out every other man on earth, leaving Fletcher the lone surviving example of manhood. After spending months in isolation following the deaths of his parents and brother, Fletcher is rescued from his house by a small group of female doctors who have been laboring to understand why the “Delilah” virus only targets men—a study that requires, of course, a living male subject. Fletcher provides them with bodily fluid samples, and he agrees to stay hidden at their compound so as to not become a target of the raiders, cultists, and other bad actors roaming the post-pandemic female wasteland. At first, it’s great to have some company, but after weeks of doing little more than rewatching Sleepless in Seattle in his hospital room, Fletcher begins to feel a bit coddled. He begins to wonder: Shouldn’t the last man on earth act a little more…manly? When violence strikes the hospital, Fletcher is forced to learn the hard way that being the last surviving man requires an unpleasant amount of surviving. The author’s comedic prose flows easily, managing to sneak in quite a bit of his character’s traumatized psychology: “[Fletcher] had developed a nice little defense mechanism during his isolation that acted as a firewall to most forms of sentimentality. When an apocalypse is at your door, wallowing is an indulgence you simply can’t afford. Because wallowing is just one little hop away from giving up…” The book is far too long, but the length does give Dargitz ample space to move beyond the sitcom-like premise and explore some deeper issues related to the concept of masculinity, in a narrative more timely than it may seem.

A comic interrogation of manhood set in a nearly man-free apocalypse.