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Formats
Ebook Details
  • 06/2024
  • 9798223653110
  • 177 pages
  • $2.99
Paperback Details
  • 06/2024
  • 9798223371700 B0CSV95RYC
  • 177 pages
  • $11.99
Kevin Landt
Author
The Mole People
Kevin Landt, author
In the glittering city of Las Vegas, where fortunes are won and lost on a single roll of the dice, there exists a world unseen by the pleasure-seekers above. It’s a community of outcasts who dwell in the shadows, beneath the twinkling lights and towering casinos, beneath the thin veneer of glamour. Here, in the labyrinthine tunnels below the city streets, live the Mole People. Plagued by schizophrenia and alienated from her loved ones, Suzie Franks abandons her college life in Oregon and ends up in this dark world beneath Las Vegas. Here, amidst the threats underground, her struggle for survival becomes as much physical as it is mental. "The Mole People" is a gripping tale that tests the boundaries of resilience, courage, and the unyielding human spirit. As Suzie grapples with her mental illness and the stark realities of life underground, her journey takes her from the brink of despair to the heights of determination. This isn't just a story about mental illness or life among the Mole People. It's a raw exploration of what it means to face overwhelming odds and the extraordinary challenges that come with them. Will Suzie find a way out of the tunnels and overcome her demons? Or will she succumb to the crushing darkness of her new world?
Reviews
Landt (author of Myface) chronicles one woman’s journey into an unhoused life when her schizophrenia leads her to distrust those closest to her. Despite fears of becoming zombie-like or losing “the good thoughts,” Suzie Franks, a college student in her hometown of Portland, Oregon, agrees to take the medications prescribed for her when she's threatened with expulsion after throwing a chair at a fellow student. But Suzie stops her meds, believing that they are causing weight gain, and becomes convinced that her boyfriend, Robbie, and her mother, Dana, want to institutionalize her unfairly. Suzie runs away, winding up in in Las Vegas, where she meets Wonderman, the leader of “Mole People” who live in Vegas’s underground tunnels. A community of compelling characters like Jazz and Judy make this dark refuge inviting, but Suzie soon faces assault and other terrors.

Suzie’s sense of isolation and certainty that Robbie has broken her trust drive this pained story, which makes literal, in its subterranean escape, the figurative “deep, dark hole” that Suzie feels she has been “crawling into” ever since she chucked her meds. “Here one minute, and then, gone,” she thinks, of the people in her life; Landt’s intimate third-person account of her journey plunges readers into a mind that is convincingly “grateful,” in the darkness of the tunnels, that “she couldn’t see the condition of the mattress, or the walls, or floors.” Moments like that offer brief respite as Suzie faces escalating dangers, like flooding and discord among a vividly characterized group of mole people.

Landt provides a convincing, upsetting, but ultimately humane look at schizophrenia and how it complicates the lives of those who have the disorder as well as those trying to help them. And this view of Las Vegas highlights the great contrast between those living in the glittering world of the casinos and those who find refuge in the “dark underworld” below it.

Takeaway: A student with schizophrenia faces danger in the tunnels below Las Vegas.

Comparable Titles: Ishmael Beah’s Little Family, Matthew O’Brien’s Beneath the Neon.

Production grades
Cover: A
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A
Marketing copy: A

Formats
Ebook Details
  • 06/2024
  • 9798223653110
  • 177 pages
  • $2.99
Paperback Details
  • 06/2024
  • 9798223371700 B0CSV95RYC
  • 177 pages
  • $11.99
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