Newman’s (
The Heavens) latest, imagining a world in which all the men mysteriously disappear, will sit poorly with some for its halfhearted acknowledgment that a Y chromosome−targeting apocalypse affects more than men—trans women and girls, cis boys, nonbinary and intersex people are zapped into a Boschian torment realm, too. And of course, it passes over trans men and other nonwomen without the damning chromosome. Unlike Brian K. Vaughn’s
Y: The Last Man, centering on a sole surviving cis man or Christina Sweeney-Baird’s women protagonists in
The End of Men, Newman’s novel might have included those who’d had to fight for gender recognition. Rather, listeners follow cis white woman Jane through a long flashback to her disturbing history of sexual exploitation as both victim and victimizer and getting her perspective-from-privilege on American race relations when she meets Evangelyne, a charismatic, brilliant Black woman calling for change in the post-event power vacuum. Narrator Mia Barron summons authentic emotion and dramatic pacing for a performance that demands little accent craft or dialogue differentiation, rendering this hesitant approach to a familiar premise somewhat emboldened in audio.
VERDICT : With earnestness undercut by conventionality, this is a strictly optional purchase.
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