cover image Shock Induction

Shock Induction

Chuck Palahniuk. Simon & Schuster, $26.99 (240p) ISBN 978-1-6680-2144-6

In the latest bracing satire from Palahniuk (Fight Club), a wave of high school suicides roils the country. The narrative centers on Samantha Deel, a brilliant and resourceful teenager who’s hit hard by the suicide of her boyfriend, Garson. When her excellent academic record attracts the notice of an organization called Greener Pastures, she agrees to enter its mysterious program. Passages from the group’s “Guide,” which blends calls for Stepford Wives–esque conformity with a vision for a new order (“The family is over”), are interspersed throughout the novel. The excerpts provide an eerie contrast to Sam’s dangerous odyssey as a complex series of events brings the teen, who is secretly pregnant with Garson’s baby, to the Orphanage, an affiliate of Greener Pastures, where her process of “induction” begins. The patchwork structure accommodates periodic sidebars and ironic observations on references high and low, from Hitler to Captains Courageous, as the narrator muses on totalitarianism and mind control. Many of the one-liners target low-hanging fruit, but there’s a cleverness to the depiction of Sam as a survivor (“Unlike Jay Gatsby,” Palahniuk writes, “Samantha Deel would live beyond her early infatuation”). Die-hard Palahniuk fans will lap this up. Agents: Sloan Harris and Dan Kirschen, ICM Partners. (Oct.)