In the years since his graduation from St. Marquis University, Blake Yourrick has fled his family and Milwaukee, rotating from job to dead-end job-working the Bakken oilfields in Dakota and even signing on as the night caretaker of a rural abbey graveyard. Deep in student debt and estranged from his misanthropic, alcoholic father, Blake is haunted by the memory of his mother's death-and by his relationship with his college mentor, a defrocked priest named Theo Hape, who is known for his adventurous theological ideas as well as for the uncanny, seductive power he wields over his students. When Hape, learning of his former charge's desperate straits, proposes a perverse exchange of services, Blake finds himself tempted to test the professor's radical theories in real life. What follows is a metaphysical duel reminiscent of the novels of Dostoevsky and Bernanos, pitting a modern-day anti-Christ against a reckless but resilient young man and his well-meaning, dysfunctional kin.
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Joshua Hren’s Infinite Regress will linger on the margins of mainstream literary attention as the best “Catholic novel” of the past two years. https://www.theamericanconservative.com/a-book-from-the-brink/?utm_term=Autofeed&utm_medium=Social&utm_source=Twitter#Echobox=1657952423
Los Angeles Review of Books
"Hren and Carl’s novels question how we can square Tolkien’s notion of a eucatastrophic reality with the everyday evils that surround us." John-Paul Heil reads Katy Carl's “As Earth Without Water” & Joshua Hren's “Infinite Regress.” https://t.co/ShI4Q402S5 https://t.co/n6L9PRdkoI