Monday 26 January 2015

Station Eleven

Station Eleven
by Emily St. John Mandel

First published in Great Britain in 2014.

A newspaper introduced me to this book.  Last year the Metro had a full page article about apocalyptic novels and how they were on the up, so I went through the article and highlighted the books it mentioned to add to my 'To Read List'.  For my birthday a friend got me one of these books - Station Eleven.  It was only out in hardback at the time but it's out in paperback now, incase you have a preference.

It's a story that goes back and forth in time, from a world readers would recognise as similar to ours to one set after a massive flu pandemic has caused the collapse of society.  There are several major characters in both the world before and the world after the collapse.  I particularly liked Jeevan, a man who's doctor friend warns him about the flu just in time.  He was the character I related to the most, as I often wonder what would happen if things like pandemics happened out of nowhere.  As I was reading this book the Ebola crisis was in the headlines every day, and was suddenly becoming a real fear that the world was having to deal with.  The book did make me think what I would do in the situation Jeevan faced.  I thought things like the news being read by cameramen because the newsreaders had died was very realistic and well written, and something I hadn't thought of.  Jeevan's story made me realise how much we take for granted in the way society is run, by so many people all playing their parts.   


Post-collapse, I found myself relating to Clark's character.  He is an older man who is stranded in Severn City airport when his flight is diverted due to the outbreak. He takes it upon himself to make a museum of sorts in the first class lounge, for items that are no longer needed but that people don't want to simply throw away.  It becomes full of everyday items, from high heels to mobile phones, and I felt I too would want to save some part of the world I had grown up in if it were me.  After sixteen years in the airport 'settlement', Clark is explaining to a sixteen year old what planes were and why airports existed.  She was born in the airport and has no knowledge of the world before the flu outbreak.  This was interesting and a bit strange to imagine, and I found myself wondering what people would think of our world if I had to try to explain everyday objects to them.

The Travelling Symphony was a brilliant little group that I felt I was travelling along with.  They are a group of survivors who have found each other wandering the country and go around performing Shakespeare to other survivors in towns as they pass through.  They do this simply to keep their love for acting and music alive, which I could very much appreciate.

This book stayed with me a long time after reading it (such a cliché I know) and I would definitely recommend it, whether or not you like post-apocalyptic fiction.  It has a good amount of time before and after the collapse, and the flu outbreak is detailed enough to make it seem worryingly realistic.  I felt the characters were well-rounded, even those who only said one line.  An example of this is a lone man who appears at the airport a hundred days after the outbreak.  He is crying.  When the other survivors ask him why, he says he thought he was the only one.  I felt his absolute relief at finding other survivors, and his few short lines made me imagine his struggle, believing that he was the last survivor on earth.

So to sum up, get Station Eleven added to your 'To Read' list right now!

Wednesday 7 January 2015

New Year, New Reading List

After a bit of a longer gap in posts than I meant (the festive season kinda took over life), the arrival of 2015 has made me think about the books I want to read this year.

I decided to put together a list of  twelve books, so that I can buy one each pay day and have plenty of time to read them even when times get hectic.  I've actually ended up with eleven, as I couldn't decide between about seven others to make twelve, so I'll add to this if/when I do choose.

In no particular order, here goes...

1. Wild by Cheryl Strayed.
This memoir of a young woman's solo trek along the Pacific Crest Trail is about to be released as a film, and although I want to see it, I reckon I'll get more from the book.

2. The Perks of Being a Wallflower by Stephen Chbosky.
This and the next on the list are simply books that I never got around to when they first came out.  They everybody was raving about them and I knew that would affect my reading, so I've waited a while to enjoy them more.

3. The Fault in Our Stars by John Green.

4. Thief's Magic by Trudi Canavan.
This was out last year and I was debating whether to wait until the whole trilogy was released so I could read them all in one.  I've now decided I can't wait and so will be buying this soon.

5. To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee.
This book has been on my 'To Read' list for a long time but has somehow never come to the forefront of my mind.  This is the year.

6. Mobile Library by David Whitehouse.
This one was in a magazine in their 'new books section and the very short blurb caught my eye.  It's apparently about the way that the books we read as children inspire us, so I'm looking forward to this one a lot.

7. A Fraction of the Whole by Steve Tolz.
A friend recommended this to me after I posted for ideas on Facebook.  Let's see how it goes.  I'm always a bit afraid of reading peoples' favourite books incase I don't like them (I feel very protective over my book choices) but then that's what makes the world interesting.

8. Fight Club by Chuck Palahniuk.
Another recommendation.  I liked the film and I'm interested to see how it works in a book.

9. The Library of Shadows by Mikkel Birkegaard.
This and the next book were recommended to me by www.openingthebook.com/whichbook and both sounded beautiful and magical.  I'm expecting similar to The Shadow Of The Wind and The Night Circus.

10. The Girl With Glass Feet by Ali Shaw.

11. A Lovely Way To Burn - Louise Welsh.
One from last birthday's wish list that I didn't end up receiving.  It sounds like a good bleak story of a modern plague in London with a murder mystery thread.  It's also the first in a trilogy, so I hope it'll be a good introduction.


What's on your 'To Read in 2015' list?