The novel's central character is Gabriel Quinn, a successful scientist of
First Nations descent working for the multinational chemical company Domidion. Gabriel returns to Samaritan Bay and Smoke River, the
Indian reserve in
British Columbia, planning to commit suicide because he is distraught over his role in the community's destruction where GreenSweep, the
defoliant product he helped to develop for the company, destroyed the local environment and killed or drove away the community's residents.[3] Gabriel is drawn into a journey of spiritual redemption after jumping into the water to save a group of people from drowning while he is trying to drown himself in the Pacific Ocean. While in Samaritan Bay, he meets Mara, a young woman who lost her family in "The Ruin" that Gabriel helped to create. While Gabriel meets the few people left in a seeming folk-tale-like ghost town, in
Toronto, Domidion CEO Dorian Asher is drawn into a media frenzy as the company is implicated in another unfolding environmental disaster in the
Athabasca Oil Sands.[4]
Background
King began writing the novel in the early 2000s while teaching at the
University of Guelph,[1] but set it aside for several years to write his non-fiction book The Inconvenient Indian,[1] which won the
RBC Taylor Prize earlier in 2014.[5]