The young heir to a pharmaceutical fortune and his friends band together to bring down an evil billionaire in Hawley’s near-future thriller.
It’s a few years after the Covid-19 pandemic, and things in America have not been going well. Political strife continues to worsen as climate change progresses, and all of a sudden teenagers start dying of suicide in droves. Simon Oliver’s older sister, Claire, was one of these cases, overdosing on the very opioids produced by their family’s company. In the months after Claire’s death, Simon becomes so anxious his parents have him admitted to a high-end mental health facility for the children of the wealthy. There, a mysterious boy who goes by the name the Prophet convinces Simon to escape the hospital with a few other misfits. Louise, one such misfit, tells Simon of “the Wizard,” a Jeffrey Epstein–like figure named E.L. Mobley. Like Epstein, Mobley is notorious for abusing young girls and getting away with it because he has too much money to be held accountable. The Prophet believes Mobley must be brought down, but what can a group of kids do against a vicious billionaire? Hawley is a TV veteran, and he knows how to quickly establish character, maintain pacing, and write excellent action scenes. But this very long book is stuffed with far too many characters, half-developed ideas, and asides from the author that would be more at home in an op-ed than a novel. Almost everyone who's mentioned gets a chapter from their own perspective, resulting in either a promising thread that goes nowhere or a passage that could easily have been skipped without losing anything pertinent to the story.
Simultaneously too much and not enough.