Yanagihara's immersive debut, many years in the making, charts the trajectory of a Nobel laureate's reputation and subtly underscores the inadvisability of equating status with credibility. Consequent to discovering the source of a Micronesian tribe's unique longevity, Dr. Norton Perina gains significant power over more than one fragile domain whose future ultimately hinges upon his integrity. Within such worlds—pristine jungles, sterile labs, guileless native settlements, wary academic environs, his bizarrely assembled household—Perina's interactions propel the narrative toward admonitions against the hubris of scientific adventuring. News articles and footnotes effectively read by Erin Yuen and William Roberts grace Arthur Morey's suave, accomplished rendering of Perina's memoir.
VERDICT Recommended for all literary fiction listeners, followers of Barbara Kingsolver, and fans of Mark Helprin's Memoir from Antproof Case. ["Yanagihara's work, which appears to be loosely based on the life of Nobel Prize-winning scientist Daniel Carleton Gajdusek, is fast-moving and intriguing, although it does darken toward the end," read the review of the Doubleday hc, LJ 5/1/13.—Ed.]
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