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THE LAND by Thomas Maltman

THE LAND

by Thomas Maltman

Pub Date: Oct. 13th, 2020
ISBN: 978-1-641-29220-7
Publisher: Soho

A troubled young man in search of his lost love finds himself involved with White supremacists in this novel set in the uncertain days leading up to Y2K.

Lucien, the unappealing hero, has been withdrawn ever since recovering from a car accident, spending his days pretending to still be a college student. An offer to act as a winter caretaker for a house whose owners have left for warmer climes becomes an opportunity to investigate a nearby Christian Identity church whose pastor is the husband of Maura, the woman he loved. Lucien met her when the two of them worked at a bank, and he has not seen her since she disappeared at the same time the bank found $5,000 missing. If that weren't premise enough, the novel features mystic-religious visions that seem more inspired by the covers of Christian metal LPs than anything else. In addition, there's the mysterious long-lost daughter of the couple Lucien is caretaking for and a collection of books containing art looted by the Nazis, none of these anything but distractions from the main plot. At times, the book seems to be about how easy it is to be seduced into racism, but Lucien's flirtations feel too naïve to be believable or for the reader to have a stake in his going astray. A speech toward the end rebuking the White supremacists for perverting Christ's true message is the final mawkish touch.

There's nothing solid in the foundation of this book.