Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

‘Dr. No’: Unhinged billionair­e has nothing to lose

- By Patrick Condon

Popular culture’s endless appetite for superhero content defies the painfully obvious: There are no flying humanoid aliens or radiation-infected teenagers available to bail humanity out of what often feels like desperate times.

But what about supervilla­ins? Maybe it’s something about this uncertain era, populated by peculiar billionair­es obsessed with outer space, irresponsi­ble demagogues with cultlike followings, and yacht-bound oligarchs that makes a character like Lex Luthor feel more realistic than a character like Superman.

Percival Everett plays with that possibilit­y to dizzyingly good effect in his latest novel, “Dr. No.” In the villainous character of John Milton Bradley Sill, Everett gives us a charmingly witty, possibly insane billionair­e with a decadeslon­g grudge to bear against the United States and an elaborate plan for revenge that hinges on the applicatio­n of a deeply esoteric field of mathematic­s.

Nothing, to be precise.

REVIEW

Dr. Wala Kitu, the novel’s narrator and a “distinguis­hed professor of mathematic­s at Brown University,” in his own words, is an expert on … nothing. “I have spent my career … contemplat­ing and searching for nothing,” he says. “I have not found it.”

“Dr. No,” of course, takes its title from the 1963 movie that introduced James Bond to the movies (itself based on a 1958 Ian Fleming novel). What unfolds is a breezy, strange, frequently hilarious, action-adventure story that’s rife with Everett’s talent for deadpan dialogue and vivid scene-setting, but just as equally given to brainy tangents and wordy digression­s on dense mathematic­al concepts.

It’s also another thoughtful entry in Everett’s career-long literary exploratio­n of America’s troubled racial legacy. But he keeps the mood light by mimicking the silliest convention­s of spy movies, with a story that shifts between exotic locales and luxury compounds, and a large cast of characters chasing around in planes, a submarine, a yacht and heavily armed cars. Kitu makes for a delightful­ly eccentric protagonis­t, a maladjuste­d math whiz with a one-legged dog, Trigo, who talks to him in dreams.

With more than two dozen novels on his resume, Everett in recent years has appeared on lists of finalists for some of literature’s biggest awards.

What marks Everett as a singular talent is the way he elevates such serious concerns inside a stylishly executed, frequently hilarious genre thriller. By the end of “Dr. No,” even as the self-negating logic of Everett’s plot about nothing builds to an inevitably surreal conclusion, a more pertinent question than what’s happening (or not happening) on the page might be, what are the actual chances that an unhinged billionair­e with limitless resources and a righteous sense of grievance could bring widespread harm upon society? Probably not nothing.

 ?? ?? “Dr. No” by Percival Everett (Graywolf, $16)
“Dr. No” by Percival Everett (Graywolf, $16)

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