After an apocalyptic meteor shower, Northfall, Minnesota, becomes the nexus of an SF gold rush in this genre-bending tale.
First, there is the cosmic event. On the night a meteor produces "a splash of molten metal like a muddy wave of lava," another tragedy occurs: Hawkin, a young boy, witnesses the murder of his father, then is swept up by the metal, which ultimately becomes absorbed into the deepest structure of his body. Five years later, there’s a rush to mine Omnimetal, a highly volatile substance that may be “the greatest energy source in the world.” Prodigal son John Frontier returns to his wealthy family, which is fighting the mercenary Black Dog Energy company for rights to Gunderson Woods, where the high concentration of Omnimetal has attracted a cult of people who snort space dust and wait to be raptured by an alien power. When John hears about Hawkin, who is being held at a Department of Defense facility and is subjected to terrible experiments, he feels moved to help him. As it turns out, John has secret powers of his own. There are constant echoes of history and pop culture as well as SF and mystery tropes, most notably from Watchmen—like John, Dr. Manhattan has the ability to cause great destruction with his power and must weigh the massive responsibility to safeguard life against his own disgust for human greed. The variety of tones and allusions is entertaining but also prevents the novel from ever settling into a deeper social commentary; there’s just so much, all the time.
It’s a Western! It’s a revenge play! It’s an environmental critique! Creative, for sure, but also a bit fragmented.