In a world where the human population has been decimated, self-reliance is the order of the day. Of necessity, the few remaining people must adapt residual technology as far as possible, with knowledge gleaned from books that were rescued and have been treasured for generations. After a childhood of such training, each person is abandoned by their parents when they reach adulthood, to pursue an essentially solitary existence. For most, the only human contact is their counsel, a mentor who guides them to find 'the one', their life mate as decreed by Fate. Lack of society brings with it a lack of taboo, ensuring that the Fate envisioned by a counsel is enacted unquestioningly. The only threats to this stable, if sparse, existence are the 'lost men', mindless murderers who are also self-sufficient but with no regard for the well-being of others, living outside the confines of counsel and Fate.
Is Fate a real force, or is it totally imagined, an arbitrary convention, a product of mankind's self-destructive tendency? Is it our responsibility to rebuke inherited 'wisdom' for the sake of envisioning and manifesting our own will?
In this allegory, David Col³n uses an alternate near-future to explore boundaries of the human condition and the extent to which we are prepared to surrender our capacity for self-determination in the face of apparently benevolent authoritarianism.
Industry Reviews
Deceptively quiet, a moral romance that puts fate, hope, and love onto the pyre of a future we all must consider possible. Lyrical, disturbing, real. Beginning with solitude, ending with ironic hope, every moment is challenged by the present. An extraordinary challenge to our present. Col³n's d©but offers a dark, disturbing allegory, one that recalls for contemporary fantasy the best traits of literary tradition. - Neil Easterbrook (SFRA 2009 Pioneer Award winner)
David A. Col³n's The Lost Men expertly evokes the mood of much recent post-apocalyptic fiction - think Cormac McCarthy's The Road or Colson Whitehead's Zone One - and yet also constructs an entirely original, weird, and wonderful world that always keeps us guessing. In this impressive debut, Col³n confronts us with the most difficult questions that can be asked - about fate, free will, and the foundations of justice. - Lee Konstantinou (author of Pop Apocalypse, a Possible Satire)