A young woman struggling with mental illness joins a colony of subterranean outcasts beneath Las Vegas.
Voices, hallucinations, and paranoia haunt Suzie Franks, a first-year college student in Portland, Oregon, who was diagnosed with schizophrenia as a child. She struggles with bouts of delusion and causes outbursts on campus. When confrontations with other students escalate, she’s given an ultimatum: Take medication or risk expulsion. Suzie, afraid of the drug’s side effects, which include weight gain, refuses to take it and slowly alienates her friends and supporters before disappearing entirely. She winds up on a bus to Las Vegas after meandering around the country—turning away from her supportive boyfriend and mother in the process—and she joins a clan of people who live in the flood channels beneath the city. The tension builds in the novel’s second half, with the terrifying “Wonderman,” who leverages power, drugs, and influence to control the other tunnel dwellers, serving as an ongoing danger. Another looming threat is a bad rainstorm, which could wash everyone away and which forces Suzie to either face her past or risk drowning. Despite all her flaws, Suzie is so likable that her ongoing struggles are harrowing to watch. Landt gives readers a clear sense of what life is like for Suzie, whose oppressive, imagined voices are clearly rendered. The structure of the novel doesn’t entirely work, however. The most involving section—the lead’s descent into mental illness and underground living—could have come earlier in the novel. Much of Suzie’s prior life, before running away to Las Vegas, is less interesting and gets undue attention. Also, pivotal relationships are left unexplored until the novel’s denouement. Still, Suzie’s is a unique, absorbing tale, full of drama and memorable scenes.
An uneasy, riveting glimpse at life in the shadows, anchored by a compelling main character.