Layman's Report by Eugene Marten

A fictionalized account of the story of inventor Fred A. Leuchner

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(Strange Light)

He comes to fix your photocopier, but really, Fred's an inventor. At night, he goes to work. He has goals, ambitions, and when offered the task of building a better electric chair, he jumps at the chance. People have to die—he believes in the occasional necessity of evil—but what if we could kill them more humanely?
A death specialist, first in his field but forever under-appreciated, he's charmed when a new generation of fascists come calling for his expertise. A Holocaust denier is on trial in Toronto—could Fred prove the gas chambers never existed?
Newspapers descend. Talking heads have their say. A documentarist makes a film. Everyone will know his name, though some things society will simply not abide. Dishonoured, discredited, disgraced. But Fred's work does not stop, and the world may yet be reminded of the dangerous truth that some men are driven by forces far more powerful than shame.
First published in 2013, this is the updated and definitive edition of Eugene Marten's chilling masterwork of transformational historical fiction. (From Strange Light)
Eugene Marten is a writer born in Winnipeg who grew up in Cleveland and is currently living in Albuquerque. In 2014, Marten won a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship for an excerpt of Layman's Report.

Other books by Eugene Marten

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