From Publishers Weekly
In her 12th book, the British author of the two series featuring Adam Dalgleish and Cordelia Gray ( Devices and Desires and An Unsuitable Job for a Woman , respectively) poses a premise that chills and darkens its setting in the year 2021. Near the end of the 20th century, for reasons beyond the grasp of modern science, human sperm count went to zero. The last birth occurred in 1995, and in the space of a generation humanity has lost its future. In England, under the rule of an increasingly despotic Warden, the infirm are encouraged to commit group suicide, criminals are exiled and abandoned and immigrants are subjected to semi-legalized slavery. Divorced, middle-aged Oxford history professor Theo Faron, an emotionally constrained man of means and intelligence who is the Warden's cousin, plods through an ordered, bleak existence. But a chance involvement with a group of dissidents moves him onto unexpected paths, leading him, in the novel's compelling second half, toward risk, commitment and the joys and anguish of love. In this convincingly detailed world--where kittens are (illegally) christened, sex has lost its allure and the arts have been abandoned--James concretely explores an unthinkable prospect. Readers should persevere through the slow start, for the rewards of this story, including its reminder of the transforming power of hope, are many and lasting. 125,000 first printing; BOMC main selection.
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to the
Hardcover
edition.
This novel, in the category of apocalyptic fiction, is the story of humankind when all men become sterile and life is ending. Franklyn-Robbins does a partially voiced rendition of the male characters; his women's voices are not at all differentiated. The main voice does not mesh with the portrait of the main character, Theodore Faron, and narrator of the story. The characterizations are hard to tell apart, making the novel difficult to understand. An occasional lapse of voice between characters is not up to Recorded Books' usual standards. It's hard to tell whether the narrator spoiled the book or the book is just not right for the narrator's voice. E.F. (c)AudioFile, Portland, Maine