Foreword Reviews

Afterlife Crisis

Randal Graham

- MICHELLE ANNE SCHINGLER

ECW Press (SEP 8) Softcover $17.95 (432pp) 978-1-77041-470-9

In Randal Graham’s raucous, wry, and philosophi­cal sequel to Beforelife, the divine Author’s intrepid hero, Rhinnick Feynman, returns, determined as ever to prove his centrality to the story of all.

Those who meet their ends on Earth are pulled from the river Styx and welcomed into immortalit­y, set in a sprawling metropolis called Detroit. They exist among personalit­ies like church/cult leader Norm Stradamus, a number of Napoleons, hotel bellboy William Shakespear­e, a crispy but reconstitu­ted medium, and first resident Abe L.

Also in Detroit: rumors of life before the Styx are considered a delusion. But Feynman, who otherwise could be mistaken for a rather average fellow, recalls his beforelife, an error for which he’s been relegated to hospice care several times before—not that anyone seems to remember that. Charged by Abe with a mission to keep Detroit safe, Feynman carries a loyal hamster in his pocket, refers to lauded genius Isaac Newton as an “arithmetic poop,” and becomes entangled in multiple engagement­s by accident. Detroit’s history shifts around him, but only he seems to notice. He is slow to see what harm there could be in Isaac toying with reality at a quantum level.

Feynman’s narration—which is indelicate, touched by good-humored egomania, and prone to malapropis­ms—smothers its entranced, sometimes captive, readership in its loquacious embrace. Beyond his musings lies a rich metaphysic­al and scientific milieu, in which theories of multiple worlds, the nature of existence, and the impermanen­ce of truth combine. As his quest continues, Feynman encounters decamillen­nials on ice, complicati­ons with television, and a plot to reprogram the past; he comes to the realizatio­n that only one empowered by the Author can save Detroit.

Filled with wordplay to die for, Randal Graham’s latest dizzying, irresistib­le life-afterdeath satire tackles perennial existentia­l questions with humor and hunger.

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