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The Smaller Evil

ebook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available
Sometimes the greater good requires the smaller evil.
 
17-year-old Arman Dukoff can't remember life without anxiety and chronic illness when he arrives at an expensive self-help retreat in the remote hills of Big Sur. He’s taken a huge risk—and two-thousand dollars from his meth-head stepfather—for a chance to "evolve," as Beau, the retreat leader, says.
Beau is complicated. A father figure? A cult leader? A con man? Arman's not sure, but more than anyone he's ever met, Beau makes Arman feel something other than what he usually feels—worthless.
The retreat compound is secluded in coastal California mountains among towering redwoods, and when the iron gates close behind him, Arman believes for a moment that he can get better. But the program is a blur of jargon, bizarre rituals, and incomprehensible encounters with a beautiful girl. Arman is certain he's failing everything. But Beau disagrees; he thinks Arman has a bright future—though he never says at what.
And then, in an instant Arman can't believe or totally recall, Beau is gone. Suicide? Or murder? Arman was the only witness and now the compound is getting tense. And maybe dangerous.
As the mysteries and paradoxes multiply and the hints become accusations, Arman must rely on the person he's always trusted the least: himself.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 23, 2016
      With his drug-addicted father in and out of jail and his neglectful mother wishing him out of the house, 17-year-old Arman seeks solace and guidance in Beau, a charismatic adult who promises a way to free Arman from his feelings of inadequacy. Arman joins Kira, a fellow classmate, and Dale, her boyfriend, on a retreat with Beau. Instead of the campsite expected, the three find themselves on the Evolve compound, a center of more than 100 devotees committed to uncovering their truest selves through exercises that challenge their abilities and memories. When the compound’s leader disappears and factions within the camp turn ugly, Arman, Kira, and Dale must decide whether they are being manipulated and how to escape. Balancing Arman’s experience with Beau’s inner thoughts, Kuehn (Delicate Monsters) elevates the religious cult novel with this sophisticated psychological mystery centered on the concept of the double effect—that the “greater good outweighs the smaller evil.” Though certain characters are more archetypal than three-dimensional, the book’s philosophical undertones and uncertain ending are transfixing. Ages 14–up. Agent: Michael Bourret, Dystel & Goderich Literary Management.

    • Kirkus

      May 15, 2016
      Strange occurrences at a secluded self-help retreat threaten 17-year-old Arman's already fragile mental healthFor as long as he can remember, Arman has taken medications for numerous chronic physical and emotional ailments. So when Beau, a reassuring but mysterious man, invites Arman to a healing retreat in the hills of Big Sur, he accepts. He's nervous but eager for a chance to move beyond his sense of brokenness. At the retreat compound, Arman is among strangers, except for his classmate Kira, a black girl who is the daughter of a famous civil rights attorney, and her boyfriend, Dale. Like Arman and most of the other characters, Dale is white. Arman is at once comforted and confused by Beau's interest in him and by his encounters with a beautiful girl, a cook at the compound. But talk of "inoculation" and "quarantine" and the program's other odd rituals unnerve Arman, as effectively conveyed in Kuehn's third-person narration. When Beau disappears, Arman is the only witness to what may have been a murder or a suicide--he's not sure which, because he can't remember exactly what happened. Arman's tale of self-discovery is woven into the bigger mystery of Beau's fate, but the result of the latter is less than enthralling. More gripping is the insightful and empathetic look into the mind of a teen struggling to heal.Rich prose and a complex main character salvage this suspenseful but less-than-satisfying mystery. (Thriller. 14-18)

      COPYRIGHT(2016) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • School Library Journal

      Starred review from June 1, 2016

      Gr 9 Up-High school senior Arman Dukoff is in serious need of help. He hates his awkwardness, his social timidity, and how he feels trapped in his own head. When he meets Beau, who seems to see so much more potential within Arman, the protagonist jumps at the chance to follow him and his group. Once at the Compound, though, Arman is confronted by a confusing whirlwind of incomprehensible rituals and strangely technical jargon-but most confusing of all is Beau's sudden disappearance during the program. Arman is devastated not just because of Beau's insistent, optimistic belief in his potential but also due to a mysterious encounter they had right before he went missing. The teen is determined to find his friend and get answers-about Beau and himself. Young fans of the hairpin plot twists and turns of psychological thrillers will be drawn to Kuehn's latest offering. In particular, readers familiar with her previous titles will find echoes of similar themes at work here-a teenage male protagonist who is also an unreliable narrator. Kuehn's specialty in depicting mental illness and her sharp, quick writing are on display in her latest novel, but it is her satirical integration of New Age hippie rituals with the pseudoscientific jargon of the self-help retreat world that is the most compelling addition. VERDICT Fans of the author's work will find familiar material in this book. Readers interested in a Gillian Flynn-style take on cults and self-help retreats will also be intrigued.-Evelyn Khoo Schwartz, Georgetown Day School, Washington, DC

      Copyright 2016 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      May 1, 2016
      Grades 9-12 Arman quickly agreed to spend a week at Beau's campground in the California mountains, a place he believed would help him solve his myriadand acutely realproblems. But while the charismatic man's homily of social order sickness and cultural syndromes initially made sense, in the confines of the compound, surrounded by Beau's followers and their intense, vaguely mystical rhetoric, Arman's not as convinced. After a difficult night of confrontational therapy, he's had enough and decides to split. On his walk home, though, he discovers Beau's bloodied body and quickly returns to the compound for help. Only, once he gets everyone's attention, Beau's body and the van it was in are nowhere to be seen, and Arman is missing a few hours of memory. Kuehn effectively builds a confounding, cult-like atmosphere in the compound and a convincing conspiracy swirling around Arman's experiences. While the ultimate pay-off leaves quite a few questions frustratingly unanswered, the eerie atmosphere of the compound, Kuehn's skillful hand at characterization, and the twisty scheme should nonetheless hook readers.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2016, American Library Association.)

    • The Horn Book

      January 1, 2017
      While attending a "retreat" called Evolve, seventeen-year-old Arman can't shake a bad feeling. He sneaks away from the compound, and then things take a suspenseful turn. Manipulated psychologically and sexually, drugged, trying to comprehend a surreal and frightening situation, Arman can't trust anyone--or his own perception. Foreboding builds inexorably to a conclusion that feels both tragic and inevitable.

      (Copyright 2017 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

    • The Horn Book

      July 1, 2016
      Seventeen-year-old Arman is anxious, self-loathing, mostly ignored by his mother and stepfather, and ashamed of his incarcerated father. He makes an easy mark for Beau, the charismatic founder of a remote "retreat" called Evolve, whose mission is to inoculate participants against "social order disease." Although Beau takes a particular interest in Arman (because, it's later revealed, Beau is seeking a successor), Arman can't shake the bad feeling he has about Evolve and sneaks away from the compound. Beau catches up with him, but then things take a surreal, suspenseful turn. Manipulated psychologically and sexually, drugged without his knowledge, trying to comprehend a situation that appears to involve conspiracy, murder, and even the paranormal, Arman can't trust anyone -- or even his own mind. Interspersed with events at the compound are disturbing second-person, present-tense vignettes that relate the recruitment of a young woman. Kuehn's novels (Charm & Strange, rev. 11/13; Complicit, rev. 7/14; Delicate Monsters, rev. 7/15) frequently explore the unreliability of perception and memory, as well as the human mind's ability to protect itself from harmful information and situations, and this book is no exception. The reader experiences Arman's profound disorientation and panic along with him, even as details provided by his experiences and in the vignettes call his judgment into serious question. Foreboding builds inexorably to a conclusion that feels both tragic and inevitable. katie bircher

      (Copyright 2016 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

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