BLACK DAYS

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Daniel Fassett’s life has been a disappointing one filled with regret, but he sees a second chance in retirement from his factory job in Granbury, Vermont, his hometown. Expecting a generous pension after 30 years of employment, he buys a small cottage in Key Largo, Florida, eager to start life anew at 62 years of age. However, he loses control of his car and drives into a freezing river, where, for at least 20 minutes, he is unconscious before being rescued. When he awakens from his coma four months later, his life is in a shambles—facing a considerable rehabilitation, he discovers his pension was greatly reduced on the basis of a technicality; all but broke, he has no choice but to abandon his retirement home. Utterly despondent and terrified to face a long winter alone, he comes up with a crazy idea, one fantastically implausible but nevertheless fascinatingly developed by the author: Daniel decides he’d like to spend the winter suspended in hibernation and shares his plan with his old friend and physician, William Butcher. Butcher is initially incredulous, but then decides it can be done, and they freeze Daniel in a “hibernation casket” housed in an old sugar shack designed for the production of maple syrup. The plan works—Daniel wakes rejuvenated after nearly 119 days of slumber—but when the world learns what he has accomplished, it turns his life inside out. Ellis’ prose is simple and powerfully foursquare. When Ralphie, Daniel’s son, asks him why he froze himself, he answers plainly: “Desperation. Money. Sadness . . . loneliness.” This is a strange and marvelously unpredictable tale, one that raises provocative questions about the tension between scientific progress and moral goodness. The narrative is intelligently conceived and executed, and refreshingly original.

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