Showing posts with label pandemic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pandemic. Show all posts

Monday, August 15, 2022

Review: The Reservoir

The Reservoir The Reservoir by David Duchovny
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

The Reservoir, David Duchovny, 2021

Interesting story, definitely gave me Hitchock vibes. Psychosis, crackpot conspiracy theories, a lady in red, a bear in the woods (not the kind you think-- wink wink), conflated in Covid-19 pandemic times, well, made a creative construct to tell the author's story.

The writing felt a tad bit forced, as if Duchovny was trying to prove his ability as a serious writer-- choosing almost-abstruse word pairings over simple eloquence for voice and stylization. 

I give it a 4 out of 5 stars.


View all my reviews

Saturday, March 12, 2022

Review: "High We Go in the Dark" by Sequoia Nagamatsu, 2022

How High We Go in the Dark How High We Go in the Dark by Sequoia Nagamatsu
My rating: 4 of 5 stars


How High We Go in the Dark is Sequoia Nagamatsu's debut novel about a climate change virus in 2030. The book has drawn a lot of comparisons to Mandel's Station Eleven. The book is a vignette of short stories interlinked loosely by people, themes, places, time, and death.


A 30,000-year-old arctic virus is released from permafrost around the 2030s and has effects rippling into humanity's future. All the stories center around death, letting go, and ways we as humans deal with the frailty of life.


There are certainly quite a few exciting ideas and inventions presented by the author that suggests science-fiction is the category this fits in. However, I think some of the science and circumstance is close enough to our time and current technology to be considered speculative fiction.


I think the essential stories bookend the novel, with the middle ones slouching, with the exception of the story detailing the USS Yamato and humanity's journey into the stars. I became excited at the halfway point when humans left to colonize another star system and hoped the author continued that thread. Instead, the timelines diverged, and we find ourselves in the past, picking up where the plague left off when the USS Yamato departed Earth. The story's trajectory and divergence seem to work together, but I don't feel the author quite brought everything together at the end.


I rate this 4 out of 5 stars.


View all my reviews

Sunday, November 21, 2021

"Station Eleven" by Emily St John Mandel, 2014

"Station Eleven" by Emily St John Mandel, 2014


This book has been on my shelf for a few years now after I picked it up from Barnes and Noble. I had no notion of what it's about, other than it is science fiction, a winner of various awards, and its callbacks to Star Trek: Voyager. Upon seeing commercials and learning of its adaptation to a television series, I decided now is the time to read the book before the tv series is released.


The story is less science and more fiction. "Station Eleven" is as much a mystery as it is a post-apocalyptic tale, and the author is pretty good at giving enough clues that thicken the plot to keep me reading. The stories of all the characters are told beautifully intertwined and in multiple timelines centering around Arthur Leander. The book opens at the onset of an outbreak of a virulent flu. In a matter of weeks, it will quickly decimate the world's population. In its wake is a place that is disconnected, desperate and dangerous, with small communities of people trying to make their way in this brave new world.


One of the things I struggled with reading this is wrapping my head around what was happening and when because it's set over so many timelines and tricky to track. Because so many past events influence future events, having a good idea of the chronological sequence is really important. The easiest way to trace the chronological order of events is by following the critical characters over time- make some notes or diagrams.



Where the book falters, I think, is in its imagination of disaster. Having accepted the science that says a flu pandemic is highly probable in our future, Mandel chooses a worst possible situation, a plague that results in the immediate and total collapse of civilization. But the survivors do not think, act or speak like people struck by such a cataclysm. For the most part, they do not behave very differently from people living in ordinary, civilized times. Hunger, thirst, and exhaustion are alluded to, but there is no penetrating sense of the day-to-day struggle of vulnerable human beings lacking the basic amenities of life.


On another level, Station Eleven is not so much about an apocalypse as about memory and loss, nostalgia and yearning; the effort of art to deepen our fleeting impressions of the world and bolster our solitude. Mandel evokes the weary feeling of life slipping away, for Arthur as an individual and then writ large upon the entire world. In Year Twenty, Kirsten, who was eight when the flu hit, is interviewed about her memories, and says that the new reality is hardest to bear for those old enough to remember how the world was before. "The more you remember, the more you've lost," she explains – a sentiment that could apply to any of us, here and now.


I give this book a 3 out of 5 stars.