Pages: 369
Release
Date: 1st
January 2014
Publisher:
S&S
Edition:
UK paperback,
review copy
One
Saturday morning the world wakes to discover that the rotation of the earth has
begun to slow. As birds fall from the sky and days grow longer, people start to
flee – but there is nowhere on earth to escape to.
Julia
is already coping with the disasters of everyday life. And then there’s Seth:
tall and quiet and always on his own; the skateboarding boy who knows all about
disaster. As the world faces a catastrophe, Julia and Seth are facing their
very own unknown.
I’d had The Age of Miracles in my sights for a while – it came out in the
US in 2012! - so I picked it up very shortly after it arrived in a surprise
package, and I loved it.
With the influx of dystopia and
post-apocalyptic novels over the last few years, I was unsure how much
originally there was left when it came to the end of the world, but Karen
Thompson Walker delivered. The slowing of the Earth’s spinning seems a subtle
idea that surely can’t have the catastrophic effects of the usual
disaster-ridden ends of the world, right? Nope. Some of the things that the
lengthening hours of day and night affected were so unexpected: crops, the
weather, the atmosphere, sleep and a syndrome resulting in the change in the
magnetic field and gravity on the Earth.
I loved how nothing really
seemed all that different at first and then it suddenly started to snowball. The
day got longer with each rotation of the sun, eventually reaching over fifty
hours. It’s unimaginable. As The Age of
Miracles was written in retrospect from Julia in her mid-twenties there was
a constant feeling that it would only get worse, but the world would adapt. The
entre novel is riddled with bad omens, hints and foreboding comments about what
was to come, and yet Julia’s story still felt like an ode to humankind. The incredible
resilience of human life, the fragile balance of our planet and how we take it
for granted all slammed down on me every couple of pages. And yet, as one
person, all of the things we could do as the inhabitants of Earth wouldn’t
really do much to help at all.
None of this is really even
touched on in the synopsis and it seems as if the romance between Julia – who at
11/12 was way younger than I was
expecting – and Seth would be the main focus of the story. But it built slowly
and beautifully, the two of them having very little contact until the world had
changed entirely and the novel was two-thirds done. It felt refreshing and
uncertain and innocent and it sat against an ever-changing backdrop perfectly.
I really loved The Age of Miracles and I’m already feeling
the niggle to re-read it...
Thanks to S&S for the
review copy!
Sophie
Ooh this sounds so good! I also received it in a surprise package and thought it sounded pretty good but wasn't sure so glad to hear you enjoyed it so much :D
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