Showing posts with label Post-Apocalyptic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Post-Apocalyptic. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 8, 2021

Deciding Between Two Worlds: A Review of The Space Between Worlds by Micaiah Johnson

The Space Between Worlds
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Stories about multiverses and post-apocalyptic societies are staples of science fiction and fantasy, even if multiverses are only just entering the cultural zeitgeist thanks to the Marvel Cinematic Universe. But this is the first novel that I have read that has tried to combine both a multiverse and a post-apocalyptic story into one. And while it takes some time for Ms. Johnson to decide which lane to stick to, once she does the bang up is extraordinary.

Set in a post-apocalyptic world where the privileged live in pristine Wiley City and the poor live short, violent lives in shanty towns around it, a scientist and businessman discovers how to send travelers to other worlds in the multiverse.  The only catch is that travelers cannot go to a world where their doppelgänger is still alive.  Thus, the only people who can travel to these worlds are the less privileged as they tend to have shorter, more violent lives.  Our protagonist Cara is an excellent candidate to travel between worlds because she has died in nearly every other world.  But she also harbors a secret and when she miraculously survives traveling to another world where her doppelgänger wasn’t quite dead yet, it sets of a chain of events that will consequences on her world and others.

This book has a very fascinating premise with its in-your-face metaphor about gross inequality and its attempt to combine both a multiverse and a post-apocalyptic story into one.  But Ms. Johnson’s attempts at this synthesis does not always gel very well, especially at the beginning.  At times I found myself confused at who was who and the inner workings of this society, especially since the differences between the worlds are sometimes very subtle and not very easy to identify.  Indeed, the background doppelgängers are so close to each other that it becomes difficult to figure out who is who and what is going on.

That said, once this book enters the third act, Ms. Johnson begins to find her footing and the narrative starts to come together.  Cara’s discovery of key figure’s past lives and future plans collide into a wonderful climax.  By the end, I found myself very invested in Cara and those she was closest to.

Overall, this book has a wonderful premise, but it takes the author a little while to find her narrative footing.  Once she does though, it turns into a spectacular novel.  I would recommend this book to fans of both the Mad Max movies and alternate dimension novels.

Wednesday, February 12, 2020

God is Change: A Review of Parable of the Sower by Octavia Butler

Parable of the Sower

My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Once again, I find myself being drawn to bleak speculative fiction and books don't get much bleaker than this. I've heard it compared to George Orwell's 1984 and Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale, and truly this is one of the great modern classics of dystopian fiction that feels a little too prophetic for comfort.

Set in 2024 Southern California, America is right on the edge of societal collapse. Rule of law is virtually non-existent, politicians promise to restore the country's greatness, but everyone is let to fend for themselves. Living in the middle of this is Lauren Olamina, a teenage girl born with hyperempathy, the ability to feel another person's pain. As the world and her walled-off community continue to crumble, Lauren rejects the religion her father and begins to develop one of her own based on the central idea that God is change. When her walls are breached, Lauren and her followers must trek across the broken landscape of California to find a new home.

This is an incredibly bleak novel. Nothing and no one ever stay safe for long and people are hurt or killed in horrible ways. The fact that our main character can feel that pain makes it worse. But what is so striking about this book is how it eerily parallels the future. The politician promising to restore America's greatness sounds an awful lot like Pres. Trump on the stump. And the main cause of societal breakdown, climate change, is unfolding itself before our eyes in many places around the world. And the fact that Ms. Butler wrote this book back in 1993 is all the more striking.

Though this book could be read swiftly, you really should take your time. Ms. Butler writes very compellingly anther descriptions of how to navigate a post-apocalyptic landscape are incredible. 

This is truly a gripping read and one that fans of post apocalyptic novels like Cormac McCarthy's The Road should not miss.

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